Former champion Ivan Basso of Liquigas powered into contention for the Giro d’Italia’s pink jersey after a stunning display of fluid climbing on the 222km 15th stage on Sunday.
Overnight leader David Arroyo of Spain managed to retain the race lead despite losing over four minutes to Basso on the 10.1km-long Zoncolan climb, whose average gradient was a punishing 11.9 percent.
However the Spaniard, an unlikely winner of the second biggest stage race in the world, is now under threat.
PHOTO: REUTERS
“I don’t know about winning the Giro, there were a lot of time losses today,” Arroyo said.
Italian Basso — who dominated the race in 2006, but was handed a two-year doping ban which only allowed him to return in 2008 — had started the day more than seven minutes behind Caisse d’Epargne rider Arroyo, but the Spaniard was one of several big names left trailing once the going got tough on the Zoncolan, a beast of a climb featuring passages with gradients of 20 percent, where an earlier four-man break was easily reeled in.
Shaking off the close attention of world champion Cadel Evans in the final 4km, Basso went off on his own to beat the Australian into second and claim his first Giro stage victory since 2006.
“It’s been a marvelous day for me,” Basso said. “The most beautiful since my return to the peloton [in 2008].”
Evans finished 1 minute, 19 seconds behind, with Italians Michele Scarponi and Damiano Cunego, Alexandre Vinokourov of Kazakhstan and Spaniard Carlos Sastre taking places three to six.
Although Arroyo leads another Australian, the surprising Richie Porte of Saxo Bank, by 2 minutes, 35 seconds, Basso is third overall 3 minutes, 33 seconds behind and first among those considered bona fide victory contenders.
Cervelo’s Sastre, the 2008 Tour de France champion who moved back into contention several days ago after a mediocre start, is fourth, 4 minutes, 21 seconds back, with BMC leader Evans fifth 4 minutes, 43 seconds behind.
Basso’s Liquigas team had sacrificed their own chances of making it to the finish by imposing a punishing pace on the peloton on the way to the foot of the climb and the Italian was quick to pay tribute.
“I have to thank the whole team for all the work they did for more than 100km, leading to Monte Zoncolan,” Basso said.
“Each member knew what he had to do at a precise moment and executed it with 110 percent,” he said.
Asked about his attack on Evans, Basso said: “I know this climb really well and I knew I had to approach it with a fast, but consistent rhythm — a bit like in a time trial, but it was a really difficult climb.”
Coincidentally, both riders share the same coach — Italian Alberto Sassi, who was diagnosed with a brain cancer last month.
Sassi said recently the pair were like “sons” to him and predicted one or the other would win the Giro.
Basso, meanwhile, had a good word for the Australian.
“He’s a great champion, one of the most tenacious riders I know,” the Italian said. “He’s hard to beat and he’ll be hard to beat until the end.”
■TOUR OF CALIFORNIA
Reuters, THOUSAND OAKS, California
Michael Rogers of Australia won the Tour of California on Sunday to claim his second stage race of the year.
Rogers sealed the win by finishing eighth in the concluding 134.4km stage, a four-lap circuit race.
Ryder Hesjedal of Canada emerged from a four-rider sprint to claim the final stage win in 3 hours, 21 minutes and 56 seconds. George Hincapie of the US was second in the stage, with Carlos Barredo of Spain third.
Rogers, 30, a former three-time world time-trial champion riding for the HTC-Columbia team of the US, held the race lead for the final four days and was victorious by nine seconds over David Zabriskie of the US, who placed ninth in the stage.
“Certainly, it was a tough day,” Rogers said. “Usually, final circuit races are walks in the park. I was lucky to have two teammates with me early, but I also knew the others would attack.”
Levi Leipheimer of the US, who won the previous three California races, finished third, trailing Rogers by 25 seconds after his seventh-place in the final stage.
The top three pushed each other all the way in the waning kilometers, but Zabriskie and Leipheimer were unable to ride clear of Rogers to gain finish-line bonus time.
“I just had to conserve,” Rogers said. “I could not worry so much about the others, but I had to make sure Levi and Dave didn’t get away from me.”
Rogers, who earlier this season won the Ruta de Sol stage race in Spain, assumed the Tour of California lead over Zabriskie via a tiebreaker after finishing second to Slovakian Peter Sagan in the fifth stage.
A Tour de France race leader in 2007, Rogers maintained his race lead with third place in the sixth stage and second place in the seventh stage.
The victory also solidified Rogers’ return to the top level of cycling. While leading the Tour de France in 2007, Rogers crashed and fractured his collarbone.
A sumo star was born in Japan on Sunday when 24-year-old Takerufuji became the first wrestler in 110 years to win a top-division tournament on his debut, triumphing at the 15-day Spring Grand Sumo Tournament in Osaka despite injuring his ankle on the penultimate day. Takerufuji, whose injury had left him in a wheelchair outside the ring, shoved out the higher-ranked Gonoyama at the Edion Arena Osaka to the delight of the crowd, giving him an unassailable record of 13 wins and two losses to claim the Emperor’s Cup. “I did it just through willpower. I didn’t really know what was going
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