Dutchman Steven Kruijswijk tightened his grip on the Giro d’Italia’s maglia rosa on Sunday after a 15th stage time trial won by Russian Alexander Foliforov and which could prove fatal to Italian Vincenzo Nibali’s victory hopes.
Foliforov, a Russian who rides for the Gazprom-RusVelo team, stunned the field with a winning time of 28 minutes, 39 seconds for the tough 10.8 km uphill time trial between Castelrotto and Alpe di Suisi in the Alto Adige.
“It’s a dream come true. I came here prepared for this stage because I’ve always been good at uphill time trials, but I didn’t expect to win,” Foliforov said.
Photo: AFP
His time was fractions of a second quicker than LottoNL-Jumbo’s Kruijswijk, who rode into the maglia rosa on Saturday and boosted his overall victory hopes for the second successive day after leaving 2013 champion and race favorite Nibali more than two minutes in his wake.
Astana’s Nibali was already trailing Kruijswijk by more than 30 seconds by the time he suffered a mechanical problem and a bike change 25 minutes into his effort. The incident is estimated to have cost the 2014 Tour de France champion a further 30 seconds, but Nibali was also hindered by well-meaning fans who ran, sometimes dangerously close, next to him on several occasions.
At one point, a particularly protective Nibali fan body-checked another out of Nibali’s way and, further on, the Italian rider lashed out with his arm at another as he also chased too close.
By the end Nibali saw his 41 second overnight deficit grow to 2 minutes, 51 seconds after he finished in 30 minutes, 49 seconds. It dropped him to third overall, with Colombia’s Esteban Chaves of Orica-GreenEdge moving up to second, 2 minutes, 12 seconds behind Kruijswijk.
Worse for Nibali, Spanish rival Alejandro Valverde, who tumbled down the overall standings on Saturday’s “Queen” stage in the Dolomites, bounced back in impressive fashion to finish third on the stage, 23 seconds behind Foliforov.
The Movistar team leader has moved up to fourth overall and although he is 3 minutes, 29 seconds behind Kruijswijk, the Giro debutante is now just 38 seconds behind Nibali.
It was a huge blow for Nibali, but Kruijswijk looks to be going from strength to strength.
The Dutchman, who was pipped to victory on Saturday by Chaves, said: “I heard towards the end that I was close to the victory, but most importantly I gained time over my rivals on GC [general classification].”
“I did everything for that and I’m confident that I’ll be able to defend the maglia rosa during the last week,” he said.
After a third and final rest day yesterday, the battle for overall victory in Turin on Sunday moves up a gear today with another hard day in the mountains on stage 16.
Stages 17 and 18 hold little opportunity for Nibali to claw back time, meaning stages 19 and 20 will be decisive before the final, celebratory ride into Turin.
Stage 19 is a 162km run from Pinerolo which takes the peloton over the tough Col d’Agnello — the highest peak in this year’s 99th edition — before a long descent into France and the subsequent climb to a summit finish in Risoul, where the Italian won a stage on the 2014 Tour de France.
The decisive stage of the 99th edition is likely to come on Saturday, when the peloton tackles the Vars, Bonette and Lombarda climbs in an otherwise short 132km penultimate stage.
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