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2009 Giro d'Italia, Stage 1 to Stage 11

The 2009 Giro d'Italia began on 9 May, with Stage 11 occurring on 20 May. The first stage, like it had been since 2007, was a team time trial, a stage where each member of the team raced together against the clock. Like most cycling Grand Tours do, the beginning of the 2009 Giro included a string of flat stages that were contested by sprinters. These stages were contested by Alessandro Petacchi and Mark Cavendish, among others, with Petacchi in victory becoming one of the only riders to defeat Cavendish in a sprint in the 2009 season.

Overview of the stages; red lines represent distances covered in the individual stages, while green lines are the distances between the stages

At the end of the race's first week and beginning of its second were three hilly medium-mountain stages. These stages took the Giro through Austria and Switzerland before returning to Italy. Each of these stages took more than five hours to complete, and the rain that fell each day combined with the difficulties presented by the numerous ascents and descents made the courses potentially unsafe in the riders' opinion. This opinion was perhaps validated by the life-threatening injuries sustained by Pedro Horrillo in the eighth stage after he crashed while descending a mountain. While the ninth stage was meant to be a showy criterium in celebration of this being the 100th anniversary of the Giro d'Italia, the riders collectively protested the safety conditions of that stage and the ones before it. This meant it would be neutralized, with every rider receiving the same finishing time as the stage winner regardless of when they finished.

The tenth stage was the longest of this year's Giro, and one of its most mountainous. It, along with a stage later in the race, were both called the race's queen stage, its most difficult stage. Danilo Di Luca won this stage to pad his overall lead going into the second half of the Giro.

Legend[1]
     Denotes the leader of the General classification      Denotes the leader of the Mountains classification
     Denotes the leader of the Points classification      Denotes the leader of the Young rider classification
   s.t. indicates that the rider crossed the finish line in the same group as the one receiving the time above him, and was therefore credited with the same finishing time.

Stage 1 edit

 
Team Columbia–High Road in the starthouse in Lido

9 May 2009 — Lido (Venice), 20.5 km (12.7 mi) (team time trial)

The 2009 Giro began, as it had since 2007, with a team time trial (TTT). The 20.5 km (12.7 mi) ride over a perfectly flat course in Venice decided who would wear the first pink jersey.[2]

Team Columbia–High Road was the first team to ride the course, and wound up being the stage winners. They all finished together, which is relatively uncommon (especially for a winning team: only Caisse d'Epargne, which took the course nearly a minute slower, managed to also have all nine riders cross the finish line together). Garmin–Slipstream, who had said previously it was their goal to replicate their TTT victory from the 2008 Giro d'Italia, finished officially 6 seconds back of Team Columbia–High Road, but they had only the minimum of 5 riders finishing together (the team's time is taken for the fifth rider to cross the line). As the first Team Columbia–High Road rider to cross the line, Mark Cavendish was awarded the first pink jersey as general classification (GC) leader; he was also awarded the white jersey as youth classification leader.[3]

Stage 1 result
Team Time
1 Team Columbia–High Road 21' 50"
2 Garmin–Slipstream + 6"
3 Astana + 13"
4 LPR Brakes–Farnese Vini + 22"
5 ISD + 27"
6 Team Katusha + 35"
7 Rabobank + 38"
8 Liquigas + 40"
9 Lampre–NGC + 42"
10 Team Milram + 49"
General classification after stage 1

Stage 2 edit

10 May 2009 — Jesolo to Trieste, 156 km (97 mi)

This stage was very flat. It had only one categorized climb, at low elevation, near the end. This climb award the first points in the mountains classification and thus, the first green jersey awarded to its leader. The riders took three laps of an 11 km (6.8 mi) finishing circuit in Trieste, with the points for the climb taken on their second time over the hill at Montebello.[4]

Leonardo Scarselli was free of the main field for most of the stage after escaping early in the morning. The bunch caught him with 31 km (19 mi) to race, though. David García won the climb in Trieste to become the first wearer of the green jersey, and Alessandro Petacchi won the group sprint to the line, narrowly edging out race leader Mark Cavendish.[5]

A crash on the third pass over the Montebello hill meant the field was broken, with only 51 riders together for the sprint finish. The rest of the peloton finished 13 seconds back, and since this crash occurred outside 3 km (1.9 mi) from the finish line, all time lost stood as lost. Notables among those who lost 13 seconds were Levi Leipheimer and Ivan Basso.[6]

Stage 2 result
Rider Team Time
1   Alessandro Petacchi (ITA) LPR Brakes–Farnese Vini 3h 43' 07"
2   Mark Cavendish (GBR)   Team Columbia–High Road s.t.
3   Ben Swift (GBR) Team Katusha s.t.
4   Allan Davis (AUS) Quick-Step s.t.
5   Tyler Farrar (USA) Garmin–Slipstream s.t.
6   Oscar Gatto (ITA) ISD s.t.
7   Francesco Gavazzi (ITA) Lampre–NGC s.t.
8   Davide Viganò (ITA) Fuji–Servetto s.t.
9   Manuele Mori (ITA) Lampre–NGC s.t.
10   Dries Devenyns (BEL) Quick-Step s.t.
General classification after stage 2

Stage 3 edit

11 May 2009 — Grado to Valdobbiadene, 198 km (123 mi)

This stage was also flat, and ended in a mass sprint.[7]

A five rider breakaway, which had a maximum advantage of seven minutes, took the points at the one intermediate sprint and the one categorised climb of the day, but were caught with some 38 km (24 mi) remaining. A number of crashes occurred starting at the 50 km (31 mi) remaining mark, and a series of attempted breaks meant that the peloton was fragmented, and Alessandro Petacchi took a second successive stage from a depleted group sprint.[8]

The biggest victim of the repeated crashes was Garmin–Slipstream leader Christian Vande Velde, who had to retire from the Giro with a broken rib and a hairline fracture of his pelvis.[9] The crashes also made it so Mark Cavendish was not with the main peloton as it approached the finish line; he came to within 15 seconds of the group before abandoning the attempt to reach them, and essentially conceding the pink jersey. Petacchi's second straight stage win gave him the race leadership.[10]

Stage 3 result
Rider Team Time
1   Alessandro Petacchi (ITA)   LPR Brakes–Farnese Vini 4h 45' 27"
2   Tyler Farrar (USA) Garmin–Slipstream s.t.
3   Francesco Gavazzi (ITA) Lampre–NGC s.t.
4   Dario Cataldo (ITA) Quick-Step s.t.
5   Damiano Cunego (ITA) Lampre–NGC s.t.
6   Philippe Gilbert (BEL) Silence–Lotto s.t.
7   Oscar Gatto (ITA) ISD s.t.
8   Michael Rogers (AUS) Team Columbia–High Road s.t.
9   Anders Lund (DEN) Team Saxo Bank s.t.
10   Stefano Garzelli (ITA) Acqua & Sapone–Caffè Mokambo s.t.
General classification after stage 3
Rider Team Time
1   Alessandro Petacchi (ITA)    LPR Brakes–Farnese Vini 8h 50' 06"
2   Tyler Farrar (USA)   Garmin–Slipstream + 8"
3   Michael Rogers (AUS) Team Columbia–High Road + 18"
4   Thomas Lövkvist (SWE) Team Columbia–High Road + 18"
5   Lance Armstrong (USA) Astana + 31"
DSQ   Danilo Di Luca (ITA) [11] LPR Brakes–Farnese Vini + 40"
7   Yaroslav Popovych (UKR) Astana + 44"
8   Levi Leipheimer (USA) Astana + 44"
9   Andriy Hryvko (UKR) ISD + 45"
10   Francesco Gavazzi (ITA) Lampre–NGC + 52"

Stage 4 edit

12 May 2009 — Padova to San Martino di Castrozza, 162 km (101 mi)

This was the first mountain stage of the Giro, with a high climb coming at 123 km (76 mi) and a mountain finish at San Martino di Castrozza.[12]

A group of 6 riders escaped after just 5 km (3.1 mi). This group comprised Serafín Martínez, Francesco Bellotti, Davide Viganò, Ian Stannard, Francesco De Bonis, and Jens Voigt. They attained a maximum advantage of six and a half minutes, and with a healthy pace of 45 km/h (28 mph) through the stage's first three hours, it appeared possible that one of them would be the stage winner. The pace caught up with the group as they reached the foot of the day's final climb, and only Voigt and Bellotti remained together as the climb began. Two kilometers into the climb, Voigt attacked again and tried to solo to victory over the last 8 km (5.0 mi).

The top GC men in the peloton and the specialist climbers formed a chase group that overhauled Voigt in the final 3 km (1.9 mi). The attacks of Colombian climber Mauricio Soler had been responsible for driving this group to catch the remnants of the breakaway, and he attacked again in the final 2 km (1.2 mi), quickly getting a gap over the competition and appearing poised for the stage win. As Soler had been the one who caused the crash that kept Mark Cavendish from potentially defending the pink jersey the day before, his combativeness on this stage was described as his "redemption".[13] 2007 Giro d'Italia winner Danilo Di Luca timed his sprint to the line just right and overtook Soler for the victory. Sixteen riders finished with the same time as Di Luca, ten more were six seconds back, and a further 26 were inside a minute of his winning time. Thomas Lövkvist, who finished in the same group as Di Luca, took a narrow lead in the overall classification after the stage.[14] However, Di Luca later tested positive for EPO and was stripped of his victory. The stage win was subsequently awarded to Stefano Garzelli, the runner-up.

Stage 4 result
Rider Team Time
DSQ   Danilo Di Luca (ITA) [11] LPR Brakes–Farnese Vini
1   Stefano Garzelli (ITA) Acqua & Sapone–Caffè Mokambo 4h 15' 04"
DSQ   Franco Pellizotti (ITA) Liquigas s.t.
4   Mauricio Soler (COL) Barloworld s.t.
5   Gilberto Simoni (ITA) Diquigiovanni–Androni s.t.
6   Levi Leipheimer (USA) Astana s.t.
7   Thomas Lövkvist (SWE) Team Columbia–High Road s.t.
8   Ivan Basso (ITA) Liquigas s.t.
9   Denis Menchov (RUS) Rabobank s.t.
10   David Arroyo (ESP) Caisse d'Epargne s.t.
General classification after stage 4
Rider Team Time
1   Thomas Lövkvist (SWE)    Team Columbia–High Road 13h 05' 28"
DSQ   Danilo Di Luca (ITA)  [11] LPR Brakes–Farnese Vini + 2"
3   Michael Rogers (AUS) Team Columbia–High Road + 6"
4   Yaroslav Popovych (UKR) Astana + 26"
5   Levi Leipheimer (USA) Astana + 26"
6   Lance Armstrong (USA) Astana + 28"
DSQ   Franco Pellizotti (ITA) Liquigas + 32"
8   Damiano Cunego (ITA) Lampre–NGC + 42"
9   Marzio Bruseghin (ITA) Lampre–NGC + 42"
10   Carlos Sastre (ESP) Cervélo TestTeam + 49"

Stage 5 edit

13 May 2009 — San Martino di Castrozza to Alpe di Siusi, 125 km (78 mi)

This was one of the shortest road race stages in the 2009 Giro, but its profile was quite unusual. It saw the riders start where they ended the previous day, on the mountaintop at San Martino di Castrozza, climb some 400 m (1,300 ft) for a categorized climb at Passo Rolle, and then descend over 1,700 m (5,600 ft) before climbing most of that distance right back for another mountaintop finish at Alpe di Siusi.[15]

A seven-man breakaway was clear over the Passo Rolle climb and took a maximum lead of four and a half minutes in the valley between peaks. Giovanni Visconti was briefly race leader on the road, as he began the stage just under three minutes behind pink jersey wearer Thomas Lövkvist in the General Classification. The peloton, paced by Liquigas, caught them without about 15 km (9.3 mi) left to race, leading the way for Sylwester Szmyd and then Ivan Basso to try to fracture the field before the finish. Six riders were able to keep his pace to the finish, with Denis Menchov the first to Alpe di Suisi for the stage win. The other six in the leading group kept close to the stage winner, with only Carlos Sastre losing more than ten seconds. Danilo Di Luca became the new race leader after his second place on the stage.

Damiano Cunego, Lance Armstrong and Stefano Garzelli, all of whom had been considered as possible favorites for overall victory in the Giro, all lost more than two minutes on this stage, being unable to take Liquigas' pace on the way up to Alpe di Suisi. As they, along with Michael Rogers, had shown weakness on the climb, one report named as the only remaining possibilities for Giro champion Menchov, Di Luca, Lövkvist, Basso, Levi Leipheimer, and Sastre.[16] The victory gave Menchov stage wins in all three Grand Tours for his career, and his team Rabobank its first ever Giro d'Italia stage win.[17]

Stage 5 result
Rider Team Time
1   Denis Menchov (RUS) Rabobank 3h 15' 24"
DSQ   Danilo Di Luca (ITA)  [11] LPR Brakes–Farnese Vini + 2"
3   Thomas Lövkvist (SWE)   Team Columbia–High Road + 5"
4   Ivan Basso (ITA) Liquigas s.t.
5   Levi Leipheimer (USA) Astana + 9"
6   Chris Horner (USA) Astana s.t.
7   Carlos Sastre (ESP) Cervélo TestTeam + 19"
8   David Arroyo (ESP) Caisse d'Epargne + 22"
9   Michael Rogers (AUS) Team Columbia–High Road s.t.
10   Fredrik Kessiakoff (SWE) Fuji–Servetto s.t.
General classification after stage 5
Rider Team Time
DSQ   Danilo Di Luca (ITA)   [11] LPR Brakes–Farnese Vini 16h 20' 44"
2   Thomas Lövkvist (SWE)   Team Columbia–High Road + 5"
3   Michael Rogers (AUS) Team Columbia–High Road + 36"
4   Levi Leipheimer (USA) Astana + 43"
5   Denis Menchov (RUS) Rabobank + 50"
6   Ivan Basso (ITA) Liquigas + 1' 06"
7   Carlos Sastre (ESP) Cervélo TestTeam + 1' 16"
8   Chris Horner (USA) Astana + 1' 17"
DSQ   Franco Pellizotti (ITA) Liquigas + 1' 27"
10   David Arroyo (ESP) Caisse d'Epargne + 1' 41"

Stage 6 edit

14 May 2009 — Brixen to Mayrhofen (Austria), 248 km (154 mi)

This stage was one of the longest in the 2009 Giro. The first half of the stage was undulating, without a categorized climb. The second half featured two short climbs with a flat 22 km (14 mi) valley in between them. The descent from the second climb, Gerlospass, left a flat 11 km (6.8 mi) to race before the finish in Austria.[18]

The day's breakaway comprised five riders, and it formed after 55 km (34 mi) in the saddle. Their maximum advantage was just under eight minutes. Michele Scarponi and Vasil Kiryienka shed their mates on the second climb of the day, about 60 km (37 mi) from the finish. Scarponi dropped Kiryienka 50 km (31 mi) later and went it alone for the stage win. The pink jersey group absorbed all the other members of the morning breakaway and finished half a minute behind Scarponi, with six from that group gaining four seconds on race leader Danilo Di Luca at the finish. Lance Armstrong lost even more time, finishing 43 seconds behind second place man Edvald Boasson Hagen.[19]

Stage 6 result
Rider Team Time
1   Michele Scarponi (ITA) Diquigiovanni–Androni 5h 49' 55"
2   Edvald Boasson Hagen (NOR) Team Columbia–High Road + 32"
3   Allan Davis (AUS) Quick-Step s.t.
4   Filippo Pozzato (ITA) Team Katusha s.t.
5   Matthew Goss (AUS) Team Saxo Bank s.t.
6   Philippe Gilbert (BEL) Silence–Lotto s.t.
7   Enrico Gasparotto (ITA) Lampre–NGC s.t.
8   Michael Rogers (AUS) Team Columbia–High Road + 36"
DSQ   Danilo Di Luca (ITA)  [11] LPR Brakes–Farnese Vini s.t.
DSQ   Tadej Valjavec (SLO) Ag2r–La Mondiale s.t.
General classification after stage 6
Rider Team Time
DSQ   Danilo Di Luca (ITA)    [11] LPR Brakes–Farnese Vini 22h 11' 15"
2   Thomas Lövkvist (SWE)   Team Columbia–High Road + 5"
3   Michael Rogers (AUS) Team Columbia–High Road + 36"
4   Levi Leipheimer (USA) Astana + 43"
5   Denis Menchov (RUS) Rabobank + 50"
6   Ivan Basso (ITA) Liquigas + 1' 06"
7   Carlos Sastre (ESP) Cervélo TestTeam + 1' 16"
8   Chris Horner (USA) Astana + 1' 17"
DSQ   Franco Pellizotti (ITA) Liquigas + 1' 27"
10   David Arroyo (ESP) Caisse d'Epargne + 1' 41"

Stage 7 edit

15 May 2009 — Innsbruck (Austria) to Chiavenna, 244 km (152 mi)

The race returned to Italy, after also passing through Switzerland, in another long stage. The one climb of the day occurred a little over 200 km (120 mi) into the stage, the Passo Maloja. The entire stage to that point was on a slight increase in elevation, while the finish was on a long and drastic descent into Chiavenna. Its profile made it seem an inviting stage for breakaway attempts.[20]

This stage saw numerous breakaways get away and stay away for a time. The first of them comprised four riders, coming clear after 24 km (15 mi). This group attained a maximum advantage of over nine minutes, but the peloton was able to catch them before the Passo Maloja. Right at the summit, Alessandro Bertolini attacked and came free for a time. He was able to lengthen his escape somewhat by descending the Passo Maloja in an extremely aerodynamic position, out of the saddle with all his weight over the handlebars. A crucial four-man break took place 12 km (7.5 mi) from the finish line, with Bertolini able to stay with them as they caught him, making it a five-man leading group. Andriy Hryvko tried to make his way up to them after they were well away, but could not make it. Despite the presence of more experienced riders and riders noted as sprinters in the break, it was young Norwegian Edvald Boasson Hagen who made it to the line first.[21]

Controversy had arisen before the Giro when it was revealed that many of Astana's sponsors in Kazakhstan had not paid their full obligations to the team, and that the riders had therefore not been paid their full salaries to that point in the season.[22] In protest, the team wore new jerseys beginning with this stage, that had the names of those underpaying sponsors faded out to the point of being unreadable.[23]

Stage 7 result
Rider Team Time
1   Edvald Boasson Hagen (NOR) Team Columbia–High Road 5h 56' 53"
2   Robert Hunter (RSA) Barloworld s.t.
3   Pavel Brutt (RUS) Team Katusha s.t.
4   Davide Viganò (ITA) Fuji–Servetto s.t.
5   Alessandro Bertolini (ITA) Diquigiovanni–Androni s.t.
6   Andriy Hryvko (UKR) ISD + 31"
7   Matthew Goss (AUS) Team Saxo Bank + 40"
8   Allan Davis (AUS) Quick-Step s.t.
9   Robert Förster (GER) Team Milram s.t.
10   Ben Swift (GBR) Team Katusha s.t.
General classification after stage 7
Rider Team Time
DSQ   Danilo Di Luca (ITA)    [11] LPR Brakes–Farnese Vini 28h 08' 48"
2   Thomas Lövkvist (SWE)   Team Columbia–High Road + 5"
3   Michael Rogers (AUS) Team Columbia–High Road + 36"
4   Levi Leipheimer (USA) Astana + 43"
5   Denis Menchov (RUS) Rabobank + 50"
6   Ivan Basso (ITA) Liquigas + 1' 06"
7   Carlos Sastre (ESP) Cervélo TestTeam + 1' 16"
8   Chris Horner (USA) Astana + 1' 17"
DSQ   Franco Pellizotti (ITA) Liquigas + 1' 27"
10   David Arroyo (ESP) Caisse d'Epargne + 1' 41"

Stage 8 edit

16 May 2009 — Morbegno to Bergamo, 209 km (130 mi)

There were two categorized climbs on this course, including a fairly tall and steep one at Culmine di San Pietro after 64 km (40 mi). However, the amount of flat racing after the descent suggested that the type of finish this stage would see was far from certain.[24]

Between the 30 km (19 mi) and 40 km (25 mi) marks in this stage, a ten-man breakaway slowly formed. Their maximum advantage was just over four minutes as they neared the day's second climb, the Colle del Gallo. A group of GC favorites and domestiques from their teams were first over this climb, with race leader Danilo Di Luca not among them at first, almost a minute back. As the leading group seemed unwilling to work together, Di Luca was able to bridge the gap and make it to them. Kanstantsin Sivtsov made the decisive attack of the day, coming clear some 15 km (9.3 mi) from the line, and though he never held even half a minute's advantage, he managed to stay away for the stage win.

This stage also saw a dramatic and life-threatening crash from Pedro Horrillo, on the Culmine di San Pietro. His bike skidded on wet leaves during the descent, causing him to lose control of his machine, slide into a guardrail, and tumble head over heels down the mountainside.[9] Horrillo fell 60 m (200 ft) and sustained fractures to his thighbones, kneecaps, and T12 and C3 vertebrae, as well as a punctured lung and internal bleeding. He was airlifted off the mountain and was then taken by ambulance to a nearby hospital. Horrillo woke up in the ambulance, but was put in a chemically induced coma to aid his treatment.[25] He was taken out of the coma the next day, with scans revealing no brain damage.[26] The peloton's protest of Stage 9 the next day was largely in reaction to Horrillo's serious injury.

After spending some five weeks in hospitals both in Italy and his native Spain, Horrillo eventually recovered.[27]

Stage 8 result General classification after stage 8
Rider Team Time
DSQ   Danilo Di Luca (ITA)    [11] LPR Brakes–Farnese Vini 33h 13' 35"
2   Thomas Lövkvist (SWE)   Team Columbia–High Road + 13"
3   Michael Rogers (AUS) Team Columbia–High Road + 44"
4   Levi Leipheimer (USA) Astana + 51"
5   Denis Menchov (RUS) Rabobank + 58"
6   Ivan Basso (ITA) Liquigas + 1' 14"
7   Carlos Sastre (ESP) Cervélo TestTeam + 1' 24"
8   Chris Horner (USA) Astana + 1' 25"
DSQ   Franco Pellizotti (ITA) Liquigas + 1' 35"
10   David Arroyo (ESP) Caisse d'Epargne + 1' 49"

Stage 9 edit

17 May 2009 — Milan, 165 km (103 mi) (Milano Show 100)

 
Danilo Di Luca in the pink jersey during the Milan city stage.

This stage was a circuit race. The field took 10 laps of a 16 km (9.9 mi) course in Milan (there was a 5 km (3.1 mi) run-in before the circuits began). The course was flat, and the stage figured to be a major sprinters' battle.[28]

The character of this stage changed drastically after the dramatic injury sustained by Pedro Horrillo the day before brought attention to safety conditions on this and other courses in the Giro. With the course passing over numerous different surfaces, including tram tracks and cobblestones, the peloton collectively protested racing this course, and as such it was neutralized, with everyone receiving the same time as the stage winner and no points were awarded for the points classification as had been planned. There were also parked cars at the side of the road in many places, forcing the riders into narrow tunnels to get through them.[29]

Originally, the result of the riders' protest was only that the stage times would not count.[30] The peloton rode the first four laps very slowly, about 20 km/h (12 mph) slower than previous stages, and at the end of the fourth lap, the race stopped altogether as race leader Danilo Di Luca took a microphone to address the crowd and explain why they were riding so slowly.[31] Lance Armstrong, who along with Di Luca had been considered the voice of the peloton in the protest,[32] apologized to the fans for the effect it had on what was supposed to be a grand spectacle,[33] but also contended that it was the correct decision for the peloton to make.[34]

The pace did eventually pick up, on the last lap, and the finish was contested in a bunched sprint, won by Mark Cavendish.[35]

Stage 9 result
Rider Team Time
1   Mark Cavendish (GBR) Team Columbia–High Road 4h 16' 13"
2   Allan Davis (AUS) Quick-Step s.t.
3   Tyler Farrar (USA) Garmin–Slipstream s.t.
4   Matthew Goss (AUS) Team Saxo Bank s.t.
5   Alessandro Petacchi (ITA) LPR Brakes–Farnese Vini s.t.
6   Robert Förster (GER) Team Milram s.t.
7   Robert Hunter (RSA) Barloworld s.t.
8   Davide Viganò (ITA) Fuji–Servetto s.t.
9   Saïd Haddou (FRA) Bbox Bouygues Telecom s.t.
10   Markus Fothen (GER) Team Milram s.t.
General classification after stage 9
Rider Team Time
DSQ   Danilo Di Luca (ITA)    [11] LPR Brakes–Farnese Vini 37h 29' 48"
2   Thomas Lövkvist (SWE)   Team Columbia–High Road + 13"
3   Michael Rogers (AUS) Team Columbia–High Road + 44"
4   Levi Leipheimer (USA) Astana + 51"
5   Denis Menchov (RUS) Rabobank + 58"
6   Ivan Basso (ITA) Liquigas + 1' 14"
7   Carlos Sastre (ESP) Cervélo TestTeam + 1' 24"
8   Chris Horner (USA) Astana + 1' 25"
DSQ   Franco Pellizotti (ITA) Liquigas + 1' 35"
10   David Arroyo (ESP) Caisse d'Epargne + 1' 49"

Stage 10 edit

19 May 2009 — Cuneo to Pinerolo, 262 km (163 mi)

After the rest day, the riders were faced with the Giro's longest stage, with numerous high mountain climbs along the course and the distinction of being the race's queen stage.[36] It was originally scheduled to include the Col d'Izoard, which has been featured numerous times in the Tour de France as an hors catégorie climb. Race officials later decided to alter the course, staying on the Italian side of the Alps, believing the stretches that were to take place in France were too remote and that radio communication in the area could not be assured.[37] The course as it originally was designed mimicked exactly a course used in the 1949 Giro d'Italia.[38]

The resulting alterations caused the course to be even longer than first planned, 262 km (163 mi) rather than 250 km (160 mi), with a small categorized climb just under 10 km (6.2 mi) from the finish. This came after a 50 km (31 mi) long descent from what became the course's principal climb, Sestrière. The race's overall contenders were expected to distinguish themselves on this stage.[39]

A surprisingly fast beginning to the stage, with a first hour that covered over 50 km (31 mi), managed to keep any breakaways from going clear for over two hours. Twelve eventually came ahead of the peloton, with seven in the lead and five chasing between the leaders and the peloton. The third group on the road eventually dwindled to a select contingent of overall favorites, which included race leader Danilo Di Luca. Former Giro champion Stefano Garzelli attacked from this group on the day's first climb and got to the leading group of five before the summit, claiming maximum points on it and on Sestrière to gain leadership of the mountains classification at the end of the day. Garzelli's maximum advantage, at the summit of Sestrière, was just over six minutes.[36]

A group of most of the top riders in the GC, paced by the race leader himself, caught every one of the twelve initial leaders, and subsequently Garzelli just before the day's last climb, Prà Martino. Di Luca's aggressive descent of Prà Martino gave him a gap over the elite group of riders who had been able to hold his wheel to that point, and the stage win. The day saw a big winner in time gains and a big loser: Lance Armstrong finished 29 seconds behind Di Luca in the same group as the man finishing sixth on the stage, gaining seven places in the GC, while Thomas Lövkvist lost over a minute and fell from second to eighth in the GC.[40]

Stage 10 result
Rider Team Time
DSQ   Danilo Di Luca (ITA)  [11] LPR Brakes–Farnese Vini 6h 30' 43"
DSQ   Franco Pellizotti (ITA) Liquigas 6h 30' 53"
1   Denis Menchov (RUS) Rabobank 6h 30' 53"
4   Carlos Sastre (ESP) Cervélo TestTeam s.t.
5   David Arroyo (ESP) Caisse d'Epargne + 16"
6   Mauricio Soler (COL) Barloworld + 19"
7   Ivan Basso (ITA) Liquigas s.t.
8   Levi Leipheimer (USA) Astana s.t.
9   Joaquim Rodríguez (ESP) Caisse d'Epargne s.t.
10   Michael Rogers (AUS) Team Columbia–High Road s.t.
General classification after stage 10
Rider Team Time
DSQ   Danilo Di Luca (ITA)   [11] LPR Brakes–Farnese Vini 44h 00' 11"
2   Denis Menchov (RUS) Rabobank + 1' 20"
3   Michael Rogers (AUS) Team Columbia–High Road + 1' 33"
4   Levi Leipheimer (USA) Astana + 1' 40"
DSQ   Franco Pellizotti (ITA) Liquigas + 1' 53"
6   Carlos Sastre (ESP) Cervélo TestTeam + 1' 54"
7   Ivan Basso (ITA) Liquigas + 2' 03"
8   Thomas Lövkvist (SWE)   Team Columbia–High Road + 2' 12"
9   David Arroyo (ESP) Caisse d'Epargne + 2' 35"
10   Gilberto Simoni (ITA) Diquigiovanni–Androni + 2' 58"

Stage 11 edit

 
Mark Cavendish popping a champagne bottle on the podium in Arenzano after his victory.

20 May 2009 — Turin to Arenzano, 214 km (133 mi)

The Passo del Turchino, famous for its use every year in the classic one-day race Milan–San Remo, was visited 19 km (12 mi) from the end of this stage. The climb is not difficult enough to be at all selective, so pre-stage analysis led to expectations that either a mass sprint would occur or a breakaway of riders deep down in the GC would finish first on this stage.[41]

Astana rider Chris Horner did not start the stage due to a leg injury sustained in a fall in Stage 10, leaving Levi Leipheimer and Lance Armstrong without their usual support rider. At the 56 km (35 mi) mark, Caisse d'Epargne rider Joaquim Rodríguez dropped out after a 9th-place finish in the previous stage.

A break formed after 65 km (40 mi), including Gustavo César, Cameron Meyer, Dmytro Grabovskyy and Alessandro Donati. Soon after, Levi Leipheimer crashed, but was unhurt. The break was caught, and a solo break was formed by Vladimir Isaichev. Astana drove the peloton up the Turchino, the day's lone climb, with Armstrong leading the descent and race leader Danilo Di Luca somewhat surprisingly coming forward to hold Armstrong's wheel. Some riders tried to escape for victory on the way into Arenzano, but the sprinters' teams worked to keep the field together, and Mark Cavendish took another bunched sprint win over Tyler Farrar and Alessandro Petacchi.[42]

It was after this stage, on the eve of the Cinque Terre time trial, that Danilo Di Luca gave his first of two positive tests for continuous erythropoiesis receptor activator (CERA),[43] the results of which became public after the Giro was over.

Stage 11 result
Rider Team Time
1   Mark Cavendish (GBR) Team Columbia–High Road 4h 51' 17"
2   Tyler Farrar (USA) Garmin–Slipstream s.t.
3   Alessandro Petacchi (ITA) LPR Brakes–Farnese Vini s.t.
4   Allan Davis (AUS) Quick-Step s.t.
5   Sébastien Hinault (FRA) Ag2r–La Mondiale s.t.
6   Davide Viganò (ITA) Fuji–Servetto s.t.
7   Edvald Boasson Hagen (NOR) Team Columbia–High Road s.t.
8   Alexander Serov (RUS) Team Katusha s.t.
9   Oscar Gatto (ITA) ISD s.t.
10   Robert Förster (GER) Team Milram s.t.
General classification after stage 11
Rider Team Time
DSQ   Danilo Di Luca (ITA)   [11] LPR Brakes–Farnese Vini 48h 51' 28"
2   Denis Menchov (RUS) Rabobank + 1' 20"
3   Michael Rogers (AUS) Team Columbia–High Road + 1' 33"
4   Levi Leipheimer (USA) Astana + 1' 40"
DSQ   Franco Pellizotti (ITA) Liquigas + 1' 53"
6   Carlos Sastre (ESP) Cervélo TestTeam + 1' 54"
7   Ivan Basso (ITA) Liquigas + 2' 03"
8   Thomas Lövkvist (SWE)   Team Columbia–High Road + 2' 12"
9   David Arroyo (ESP) Caisse d'Epargne + 2' 35"
10   Gilberto Simoni (ITA) Diquigiovanni–Androni + 2' 58"

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Jerseys appearing in the table on the left of the page indicate those worn by the cyclist during the particular stage, while those appearing in the table on the right of the page indicate those awarded to the cyclist after the stage.
  2. ^ "Stage 1 – Saturday, May 09: Lido di Venezia (TTT), 20.5km". Cycling News. Future Publishing Limited. 2009-05-09. Retrieved 2009-05-09.
  3. ^ Anthony Tan (2009-05-09). "A tale of two teams, as Columbia puts Cavendish in pink". Cycling News. Future Publishing Limited. from the original on 21 June 2009. Retrieved 2009-05-09.
  4. ^ "Stage 2 – Sunday, May 10: Jesolo – Trieste, 156km". Cycling News. Future Publishing Limited. 2009-05-09. Retrieved 2009-05-09.
  5. ^ Anthony Tan (2009-05-10). ""Lazy" Cavendish learns the hard way, but keeps maglia rosa". Cycling News. Future Publishing Limited. from the original on 18 June 2009. Retrieved 2009-05-10.
  6. ^ Andrew Hood (2009-05-10). . VeloNews. Competitor Group, Inc. Archived from the original on 2009-06-21. Retrieved 2009-10-15.
  7. ^ "Stage 3 – Monday, May 11: Grado – Valdobbiadene, 198km (preview)". Cycling News. Future Publishing Limited. 2009-05-09. from the original on 5 May 2009. Retrieved 2009-05-09.
  8. ^ Anthony Tan (2009-05-11). "Silenzio! Oh Ale-Jet, how good can you get?". Cycling News. Future Publishing Limited. from the original on 1 October 2009. Retrieved 2009-08-26.
  9. ^ a b Juliet Macur (2009-05-16). "Spanish Cyclist in Serious Condition After Crash". New York Times. Retrieved 2009-10-15.
  10. ^ Andrew Hood (2009-05-11). . VeloNews. Competitor Group, Inc. Archived from the original on May 17, 2009. Retrieved 2009-10-15.
  11. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n Di Luca tested positive for EPO during the Giro. Subsequently, all his results were declared void.
  12. ^ "Stage 4 – Tuesday, May 12: Padova – San Martino di Castrozza, 162km". Cycling News. Future Publishing Limited. 2009-05-09. Retrieved 2009-05-09.
  13. ^ Andrew Hood (2009-05-12). . VeloNews. Competitor Group, Inc. Archived from the original on May 18, 2009. Retrieved 2009-10-15.
  14. ^ Anthony Tan (2009-05-12). "Di Luca still the cold-blooded killer". Cycling News. Future Publishing Limited. Retrieved 2009-08-26.
  15. ^ "Stage 5 – Wednesday, May 13: San Martino di Castrozza – Alpe di Siusi, 125km". Cycling News. Future Publishing Limited. 2009-05-09. Retrieved 2009-05-09.
  16. ^ Anthony Tan (2009-05-13). "Six firm favourites". Cycling News. Future Publishing Limited. from the original on 29 June 2009. Retrieved 2009-05-18.
  17. ^ Andrew Hood (2009-05-13). . VeloNews. Competitor Group, Inc. Archived from the original on 2016-03-03. Retrieved 2009-10-15.
  18. ^ "Stage 6 – Thursday, May 14: Bressanone/Brixen – Mayrhofen (Aut), 248km". Cycling News. Future Publishing Limited. 2009-05-09. from the original on 18 June 2009. Retrieved 2009-05-09.
  19. ^ Anthony Tan (2009-05-14). "Confession leads to absolution: Scarponi repays the faith". Cycling News. Future Publishing Limited. from the original on 24 June 2009. Retrieved 2009-05-18.
  20. ^ "Stage 7 – Friday, May 15: Innsbruck (Aut) – Chiavenna, 244km". Cycling News. Future Publishing Limited. 2009-05-09. from the original on 18 June 2009. Retrieved 2009-05-09.
  21. ^ Anthony Tan (2009-05-15). "Boasson Hagen the big boss of Chiavenna And set to move out of Hushovd's shadow". Cycling News. Future Publishing Limited. from the original on 18 June 2009. Retrieved 2009-05-18.
  22. ^ Andrew Dampf (2009-05-06). "Lance Armstrong's Astana cycling team in financial crisis". Associated Press via Yahoo! Sports. Retrieved 2009-07-07.[dead link]
  23. ^ Andrew Hood (2009-05-15). . VeloNews. Competitor Group, Inc. Archived from the original on 2009-05-19. Retrieved 2009-07-06.
  24. ^ "Stage 8 – Saturday, May 16: Morbegno – Bergamo, 209km". Cycling News. Future Publishing Limited. 2009-05-09. Retrieved 2009-05-09.
  25. ^ Anthony Tan (2009-05-16). "Do what we may: Columbia has another gem in Siutsou". Cycling News. Future Publishing Limited. from the original on 20 June 2009. Retrieved 2009-05-18.
  26. ^ . VeloNews. Competitor Group, Inc. 2009-05-17. Archived from the original on 21 June 2009. Retrieved 2009-07-14.
  27. ^ Susan Westemeyer (2009-06-22). "Horrillo set to leave hospital". Cycling News. Future Publishing Limited. from the original on 30 September 2009. Retrieved 2009-10-10.
  28. ^ "Stage 9 – Sunday, May 17: Milano Show 100, 165km". Cycling News. Future Publishing Limited. 2009-05-09. Retrieved 2009-05-09.
  29. ^ Nigel Wynn and Stephen Farrand (2009-05-17). "Riders stage go-slow protest during Giro stage in Milan". Cycling Weekly. Retrieved 2009-08-28.
  30. ^ Stephen Farrand (2009-05-17). "Milan riders' protest: Justified or a farce?". Cycling Weekly. Retrieved 2009-10-10.
  31. ^ Eurosport (2009-05-17). . Yahoo!. Archived from the original on May 23, 2009. Retrieved 2009-10-10.
  32. ^ "Armstrong, leader Di Luca spark protest". ESPN. Associated Press. 2009-05-17. Retrieved 2009-10-10.
  33. ^ Juliet Macur (2009-05-19). "Armstrong Apologizes to Fans for Cyclists' Protest at Giro d'Italia". New York Times. Retrieved 2009-10-10.
  34. ^ Andrew Hood (2009-05-19). "Armstrong defends rider protest". VeloNews. Competitor Group, Inc. Retrieved 2009-10-10.
  35. ^ Anthony Tan (2009-05-17). "Cavendish wins a stage left wanting". Cycling News. Future Publishing Limited. from the original on 21 June 2009. Retrieved 2009-05-18.
  36. ^ a b Andrew Hood (2009-05-19). . VeloNews. Competitor Group, Inc. Archived from the original on June 21, 2009. Retrieved 2009-10-15.
  37. ^ "Giro d'Italia – Organisers re-arrange Giro stage". Yahoo! Sport. Reuters. 2009-04-08. Retrieved 2009-04-09.[dead link]
  38. ^ "The greatest Italian duo ever?". Cycling News. Future Publishing Limited. 2009-05-21. Retrieved 2009-09-15.
  39. ^ "Stage 10 – Tuesday, May 19: Cuneo – Pinerolo, 262km". Cycling News. Future Publishing Limited. 2009-05-09. Retrieved 2009-05-09.
  40. ^ Anthony Tan (2009-05-19). "Leave no stone unturned: Di Luca più forte (the strongest) in Pinerolo". Cycling News. Future Publishing Limited. from the original on 25 June 2009. Retrieved 2009-05-29.
  41. ^ "Stage 11 – Wednesday, May 20: Torino – Arenzano (Genova), 214km". Cycling News. Future Publishing Limited. 2009-05-09. from the original on 20 June 2009. Retrieved 2009-05-09.
  42. ^ Anthony Tan (2009-05-20). "Cavendish "floats" to second sprint win". Cycling News. Future Publishing Limited. from the original on 18 June 2009. Retrieved 2009-05-20.
  43. ^ Cyclingnews (2009-07-22). "Di Luca positive for CERA in Giro". Cycling News. Future Publishing Limited. Retrieved 2009-07-22.

2009, giro, italia, stage, stage, 2009, giro, italia, began, with, stage, occurring, first, stage, like, been, since, 2007, team, time, trial, stage, where, each, member, team, raced, together, against, clock, like, most, cycling, grand, tours, beginning, 2009. The 2009 Giro d Italia began on 9 May with Stage 11 occurring on 20 May The first stage like it had been since 2007 was a team time trial a stage where each member of the team raced together against the clock Like most cycling Grand Tours do the beginning of the 2009 Giro included a string of flat stages that were contested by sprinters These stages were contested by Alessandro Petacchi and Mark Cavendish among others with Petacchi in victory becoming one of the only riders to defeat Cavendish in a sprint in the 2009 season Overview of the stages red lines represent distances covered in the individual stages while green lines are the distances between the stagesAt the end of the race s first week and beginning of its second were three hilly medium mountain stages These stages took the Giro through Austria and Switzerland before returning to Italy Each of these stages took more than five hours to complete and the rain that fell each day combined with the difficulties presented by the numerous ascents and descents made the courses potentially unsafe in the riders opinion This opinion was perhaps validated by the life threatening injuries sustained by Pedro Horrillo in the eighth stage after he crashed while descending a mountain While the ninth stage was meant to be a showy criterium in celebration of this being the 100th anniversary of the Giro d Italia the riders collectively protested the safety conditions of that stage and the ones before it This meant it would be neutralized with every rider receiving the same finishing time as the stage winner regardless of when they finished The tenth stage was the longest of this year s Giro and one of its most mountainous It along with a stage later in the race were both called the race s queen stage its most difficult stage Danilo Di Luca won this stage to pad his overall lead going into the second half of the Giro Legend 1 Denotes the leader of the General classification Denotes the leader of the Mountains classification Denotes the leader of the Points classification Denotes the leader of the Young rider classification s t indicates that the rider crossed the finish line in the same group as the one receiving the time above him and was therefore credited with the same finishing time Contents 1 Stage 1 2 Stage 2 3 Stage 3 4 Stage 4 5 Stage 5 6 Stage 6 7 Stage 7 8 Stage 8 9 Stage 9 10 Stage 10 11 Stage 11 12 See also 13 ReferencesStage 1 edit nbsp Team Columbia High Road in the starthouse in Lido9 May 2009 Lido Venice 20 5 km 12 7 mi team time trial The 2009 Giro began as it had since 2007 with a team time trial TTT The 20 5 km 12 7 mi ride over a perfectly flat course in Venice decided who would wear the first pink jersey 2 Team Columbia High Road was the first team to ride the course and wound up being the stage winners They all finished together which is relatively uncommon especially for a winning team only Caisse d Epargne which took the course nearly a minute slower managed to also have all nine riders cross the finish line together Garmin Slipstream who had said previously it was their goal to replicate their TTT victory from the 2008 Giro d Italia finished officially 6 seconds back of Team Columbia High Road but they had only the minimum of 5 riders finishing together the team s time is taken for the fifth rider to cross the line As the first Team Columbia High Road rider to cross the line Mark Cavendish was awarded the first pink jersey as general classification GC leader he was also awarded the white jersey as youth classification leader 3 Stage 1 result Team Time1 Team Columbia High Road 21 50 2 Garmin Slipstream 6 3 Astana 13 4 LPR Brakes Farnese Vini 22 5 ISD 27 6 Team Katusha 35 7 Rabobank 38 8 Liquigas 40 9 Lampre NGC 42 10 Team Milram 49 General classification after stage 1 Rider Team Time1 nbsp Mark Cavendish GBR nbsp nbsp Team Columbia High Road 21 50 2 nbsp Marco Pinotti ITA Team Columbia High Road 0 3 nbsp Edvald Boasson Hagen NOR Team Columbia High Road 0 4 nbsp Michael Rogers AUS Team Columbia High Road 0 5 nbsp Thomas Lovkvist SWE Team Columbia High Road 0 6 nbsp Mark Renshaw AUS Team Columbia High Road 0 7 nbsp Kanstantsin Sivtsov BLR Team Columbia High Road 0 8 nbsp Morris Possoni ITA Team Columbia High Road 0 9 nbsp Michael Barry CAN Team Columbia High Road 0 10 nbsp David Zabriskie USA Garmin Slipstream 6 Stage 2 edit10 May 2009 Jesolo to Trieste 156 km 97 mi This stage was very flat It had only one categorized climb at low elevation near the end This climb award the first points in the mountains classification and thus the first green jersey awarded to its leader The riders took three laps of an 11 km 6 8 mi finishing circuit in Trieste with the points for the climb taken on their second time over the hill at Montebello 4 Leonardo Scarselli was free of the main field for most of the stage after escaping early in the morning The bunch caught him with 31 km 19 mi to race though David Garcia won the climb in Trieste to become the first wearer of the green jersey and Alessandro Petacchi won the group sprint to the line narrowly edging out race leader Mark Cavendish 5 A crash on the third pass over the Montebello hill meant the field was broken with only 51 riders together for the sprint finish The rest of the peloton finished 13 seconds back and since this crash occurred outside 3 km 1 9 mi from the finish line all time lost stood as lost Notables among those who lost 13 seconds were Levi Leipheimer and Ivan Basso 6 Stage 2 result Rider Team Time1 nbsp Alessandro Petacchi ITA LPR Brakes Farnese Vini 3h 43 07 2 nbsp Mark Cavendish GBR nbsp Team Columbia High Road s t 3 nbsp Ben Swift GBR Team Katusha s t 4 nbsp Allan Davis AUS Quick Step s t 5 nbsp Tyler Farrar USA Garmin Slipstream s t 6 nbsp Oscar Gatto ITA ISD s t 7 nbsp Francesco Gavazzi ITA Lampre NGC s t 8 nbsp Davide Vigano ITA Fuji Servetto s t 9 nbsp Manuele Mori ITA Lampre NGC s t 10 nbsp Dries Devenyns BEL Quick Step s t General classification after stage 2 Rider Team Time1 nbsp Mark Cavendish GBR nbsp nbsp Team Columbia High Road 4h 04 43 2 nbsp Mark Renshaw AUS Team Columbia High Road 14 3 nbsp Michael Rogers AUS Team Columbia High Road 14 4 nbsp Thomas Lovkvist SWE Team Columbia High Road 14 5 nbsp Edvald Boasson Hagen NOR Team Columbia High Road 14 6 nbsp Tyler Farrar USA Garmin Slipstream 16 7 nbsp Alessandro Petacchi ITA nbsp LPR Brakes Farnese Vini 16 8 nbsp Christian Vande Velde USA Garmin Slipstream 20 9 nbsp Bradley Wiggins GBR Garmin Slipstream 20 10 nbsp Lance Armstrong USA Astana 27 Stage 3 edit11 May 2009 Grado to Valdobbiadene 198 km 123 mi This stage was also flat and ended in a mass sprint 7 A five rider breakaway which had a maximum advantage of seven minutes took the points at the one intermediate sprint and the one categorised climb of the day but were caught with some 38 km 24 mi remaining A number of crashes occurred starting at the 50 km 31 mi remaining mark and a series of attempted breaks meant that the peloton was fragmented and Alessandro Petacchi took a second successive stage from a depleted group sprint 8 The biggest victim of the repeated crashes was Garmin Slipstream leader Christian Vande Velde who had to retire from the Giro with a broken rib and a hairline fracture of his pelvis 9 The crashes also made it so Mark Cavendish was not with the main peloton as it approached the finish line he came to within 15 seconds of the group before abandoning the attempt to reach them and essentially conceding the pink jersey Petacchi s second straight stage win gave him the race leadership 10 Stage 3 result Rider Team Time1 nbsp Alessandro Petacchi ITA nbsp LPR Brakes Farnese Vini 4h 45 27 2 nbsp Tyler Farrar USA Garmin Slipstream s t 3 nbsp Francesco Gavazzi ITA Lampre NGC s t 4 nbsp Dario Cataldo ITA Quick Step s t 5 nbsp Damiano Cunego ITA Lampre NGC s t 6 nbsp Philippe Gilbert BEL Silence Lotto s t 7 nbsp Oscar Gatto ITA ISD s t 8 nbsp Michael Rogers AUS Team Columbia High Road s t 9 nbsp Anders Lund DEN Team Saxo Bank s t 10 nbsp Stefano Garzelli ITA Acqua amp Sapone Caffe Mokambo s t General classification after stage 3 Rider Team Time1 nbsp Alessandro Petacchi ITA nbsp nbsp LPR Brakes Farnese Vini 8h 50 06 2 nbsp Tyler Farrar USA nbsp Garmin Slipstream 8 3 nbsp Michael Rogers AUS Team Columbia High Road 18 4 nbsp Thomas Lovkvist SWE Team Columbia High Road 18 5 nbsp Lance Armstrong USA Astana 31 DSQ nbsp Danilo Di Luca ITA 11 LPR Brakes Farnese Vini 40 7 nbsp Yaroslav Popovych UKR Astana 44 8 nbsp Levi Leipheimer USA Astana 44 9 nbsp Andriy Hryvko UKR ISD 45 10 nbsp Francesco Gavazzi ITA Lampre NGC 52 Stage 4 edit12 May 2009 Padova to San Martino di Castrozza 162 km 101 mi This was the first mountain stage of the Giro with a high climb coming at 123 km 76 mi and a mountain finish at San Martino di Castrozza 12 A group of 6 riders escaped after just 5 km 3 1 mi This group comprised Serafin Martinez Francesco Bellotti Davide Vigano Ian Stannard Francesco De Bonis and Jens Voigt They attained a maximum advantage of six and a half minutes and with a healthy pace of 45 km h 28 mph through the stage s first three hours it appeared possible that one of them would be the stage winner The pace caught up with the group as they reached the foot of the day s final climb and only Voigt and Bellotti remained together as the climb began Two kilometers into the climb Voigt attacked again and tried to solo to victory over the last 8 km 5 0 mi The top GC men in the peloton and the specialist climbers formed a chase group that overhauled Voigt in the final 3 km 1 9 mi The attacks of Colombian climber Mauricio Soler had been responsible for driving this group to catch the remnants of the breakaway and he attacked again in the final 2 km 1 2 mi quickly getting a gap over the competition and appearing poised for the stage win As Soler had been the one who caused the crash that kept Mark Cavendish from potentially defending the pink jersey the day before his combativeness on this stage was described as his redemption 13 2007 Giro d Italia winner Danilo Di Luca timed his sprint to the line just right and overtook Soler for the victory Sixteen riders finished with the same time as Di Luca ten more were six seconds back and a further 26 were inside a minute of his winning time Thomas Lovkvist who finished in the same group as Di Luca took a narrow lead in the overall classification after the stage 14 However Di Luca later tested positive for EPO and was stripped of his victory The stage win was subsequently awarded to Stefano Garzelli the runner up Stage 4 result Rider Team TimeDSQ nbsp Danilo Di Luca ITA 11 LPR Brakes Farnese Vini1 nbsp Stefano Garzelli ITA Acqua amp Sapone Caffe Mokambo 4h 15 04 DSQ nbsp Franco Pellizotti ITA Liquigas s t 4 nbsp Mauricio Soler COL Barloworld s t 5 nbsp Gilberto Simoni ITA Diquigiovanni Androni s t 6 nbsp Levi Leipheimer USA Astana s t 7 nbsp Thomas Lovkvist SWE Team Columbia High Road s t 8 nbsp Ivan Basso ITA Liquigas s t 9 nbsp Denis Menchov RUS Rabobank s t 10 nbsp David Arroyo ESP Caisse d Epargne s t General classification after stage 4 Rider Team Time1 nbsp Thomas Lovkvist SWE nbsp nbsp Team Columbia High Road 13h 05 28 DSQ nbsp Danilo Di Luca ITA nbsp 11 LPR Brakes Farnese Vini 2 3 nbsp Michael Rogers AUS Team Columbia High Road 6 4 nbsp Yaroslav Popovych UKR Astana 26 5 nbsp Levi Leipheimer USA Astana 26 6 nbsp Lance Armstrong USA Astana 28 DSQ nbsp Franco Pellizotti ITA Liquigas 32 8 nbsp Damiano Cunego ITA Lampre NGC 42 9 nbsp Marzio Bruseghin ITA Lampre NGC 42 10 nbsp Carlos Sastre ESP Cervelo TestTeam 49 Stage 5 edit13 May 2009 San Martino di Castrozza to Alpe di Siusi 125 km 78 mi This was one of the shortest road race stages in the 2009 Giro but its profile was quite unusual It saw the riders start where they ended the previous day on the mountaintop at San Martino di Castrozza climb some 400 m 1 300 ft for a categorized climb at Passo Rolle and then descend over 1 700 m 5 600 ft before climbing most of that distance right back for another mountaintop finish at Alpe di Siusi 15 A seven man breakaway was clear over the Passo Rolle climb and took a maximum lead of four and a half minutes in the valley between peaks Giovanni Visconti was briefly race leader on the road as he began the stage just under three minutes behind pink jersey wearer Thomas Lovkvist in the General Classification The peloton paced by Liquigas caught them without about 15 km 9 3 mi left to race leading the way for Sylwester Szmyd and then Ivan Basso to try to fracture the field before the finish Six riders were able to keep his pace to the finish with Denis Menchov the first to Alpe di Suisi for the stage win The other six in the leading group kept close to the stage winner with only Carlos Sastre losing more than ten seconds Danilo Di Luca became the new race leader after his second place on the stage Damiano Cunego Lance Armstrong and Stefano Garzelli all of whom had been considered as possible favorites for overall victory in the Giro all lost more than two minutes on this stage being unable to take Liquigas pace on the way up to Alpe di Suisi As they along with Michael Rogers had shown weakness on the climb one report named as the only remaining possibilities for Giro champion Menchov Di Luca Lovkvist Basso Levi Leipheimer and Sastre 16 The victory gave Menchov stage wins in all three Grand Tours for his career and his team Rabobank its first ever Giro d Italia stage win 17 Stage 5 result Rider Team Time1 nbsp Denis Menchov RUS Rabobank 3h 15 24 DSQ nbsp Danilo Di Luca ITA nbsp 11 LPR Brakes Farnese Vini 2 3 nbsp Thomas Lovkvist SWE nbsp Team Columbia High Road 5 4 nbsp Ivan Basso ITA Liquigas s t 5 nbsp Levi Leipheimer USA Astana 9 6 nbsp Chris Horner USA Astana s t 7 nbsp Carlos Sastre ESP Cervelo TestTeam 19 8 nbsp David Arroyo ESP Caisse d Epargne 22 9 nbsp Michael Rogers AUS Team Columbia High Road s t 10 nbsp Fredrik Kessiakoff SWE Fuji Servetto s t General classification after stage 5 Rider Team TimeDSQ nbsp Danilo Di Luca ITA nbsp nbsp 11 LPR Brakes Farnese Vini 16h 20 44 2 nbsp Thomas Lovkvist SWE nbsp Team Columbia High Road 5 3 nbsp Michael Rogers AUS Team Columbia High Road 36 4 nbsp Levi Leipheimer USA Astana 43 5 nbsp Denis Menchov RUS Rabobank 50 6 nbsp Ivan Basso ITA Liquigas 1 06 7 nbsp Carlos Sastre ESP Cervelo TestTeam 1 16 8 nbsp Chris Horner USA Astana 1 17 DSQ nbsp Franco Pellizotti ITA Liquigas 1 27 10 nbsp David Arroyo ESP Caisse d Epargne 1 41 Stage 6 edit14 May 2009 Brixen to Mayrhofen Austria 248 km 154 mi This stage was one of the longest in the 2009 Giro The first half of the stage was undulating without a categorized climb The second half featured two short climbs with a flat 22 km 14 mi valley in between them The descent from the second climb Gerlospass left a flat 11 km 6 8 mi to race before the finish in Austria 18 The day s breakaway comprised five riders and it formed after 55 km 34 mi in the saddle Their maximum advantage was just under eight minutes Michele Scarponi and Vasil Kiryienka shed their mates on the second climb of the day about 60 km 37 mi from the finish Scarponi dropped Kiryienka 50 km 31 mi later and went it alone for the stage win The pink jersey group absorbed all the other members of the morning breakaway and finished half a minute behind Scarponi with six from that group gaining four seconds on race leader Danilo Di Luca at the finish Lance Armstrong lost even more time finishing 43 seconds behind second place man Edvald Boasson Hagen 19 Stage 6 result Rider Team Time1 nbsp Michele Scarponi ITA Diquigiovanni Androni 5h 49 55 2 nbsp Edvald Boasson Hagen NOR Team Columbia High Road 32 3 nbsp Allan Davis AUS Quick Step s t 4 nbsp Filippo Pozzato ITA Team Katusha s t 5 nbsp Matthew Goss AUS Team Saxo Bank s t 6 nbsp Philippe Gilbert BEL Silence Lotto s t 7 nbsp Enrico Gasparotto ITA Lampre NGC s t 8 nbsp Michael Rogers AUS Team Columbia High Road 36 DSQ nbsp Danilo Di Luca ITA nbsp 11 LPR Brakes Farnese Vini s t DSQ nbsp Tadej Valjavec SLO Ag2r La Mondiale s t General classification after stage 6 Rider Team TimeDSQ nbsp Danilo Di Luca ITA nbsp nbsp nbsp 11 LPR Brakes Farnese Vini 22h 11 15 2 nbsp Thomas Lovkvist SWE nbsp Team Columbia High Road 5 3 nbsp Michael Rogers AUS Team Columbia High Road 36 4 nbsp Levi Leipheimer USA Astana 43 5 nbsp Denis Menchov RUS Rabobank 50 6 nbsp Ivan Basso ITA Liquigas 1 06 7 nbsp Carlos Sastre ESP Cervelo TestTeam 1 16 8 nbsp Chris Horner USA Astana 1 17 DSQ nbsp Franco Pellizotti ITA Liquigas 1 27 10 nbsp David Arroyo ESP Caisse d Epargne 1 41 Stage 7 edit15 May 2009 Innsbruck Austria to Chiavenna 244 km 152 mi The race returned to Italy after also passing through Switzerland in another long stage The one climb of the day occurred a little over 200 km 120 mi into the stage the Passo Maloja The entire stage to that point was on a slight increase in elevation while the finish was on a long and drastic descent into Chiavenna Its profile made it seem an inviting stage for breakaway attempts 20 This stage saw numerous breakaways get away and stay away for a time The first of them comprised four riders coming clear after 24 km 15 mi This group attained a maximum advantage of over nine minutes but the peloton was able to catch them before the Passo Maloja Right at the summit Alessandro Bertolini attacked and came free for a time He was able to lengthen his escape somewhat by descending the Passo Maloja in an extremely aerodynamic position out of the saddle with all his weight over the handlebars A crucial four man break took place 12 km 7 5 mi from the finish line with Bertolini able to stay with them as they caught him making it a five man leading group Andriy Hryvko tried to make his way up to them after they were well away but could not make it Despite the presence of more experienced riders and riders noted as sprinters in the break it was young Norwegian Edvald Boasson Hagen who made it to the line first 21 Controversy had arisen before the Giro when it was revealed that many of Astana s sponsors in Kazakhstan had not paid their full obligations to the team and that the riders had therefore not been paid their full salaries to that point in the season 22 In protest the team wore new jerseys beginning with this stage that had the names of those underpaying sponsors faded out to the point of being unreadable 23 Stage 7 result Rider Team Time1 nbsp Edvald Boasson Hagen NOR Team Columbia High Road 5h 56 53 2 nbsp Robert Hunter RSA Barloworld s t 3 nbsp Pavel Brutt RUS Team Katusha s t 4 nbsp Davide Vigano ITA Fuji Servetto s t 5 nbsp Alessandro Bertolini ITA Diquigiovanni Androni s t 6 nbsp Andriy Hryvko UKR ISD 31 7 nbsp Matthew Goss AUS Team Saxo Bank 40 8 nbsp Allan Davis AUS Quick Step s t 9 nbsp Robert Forster GER Team Milram s t 10 nbsp Ben Swift GBR Team Katusha s t General classification after stage 7 Rider Team TimeDSQ nbsp Danilo Di Luca ITA nbsp nbsp nbsp 11 LPR Brakes Farnese Vini 28h 08 48 2 nbsp Thomas Lovkvist SWE nbsp Team Columbia High Road 5 3 nbsp Michael Rogers AUS Team Columbia High Road 36 4 nbsp Levi Leipheimer USA Astana 43 5 nbsp Denis Menchov RUS Rabobank 50 6 nbsp Ivan Basso ITA Liquigas 1 06 7 nbsp Carlos Sastre ESP Cervelo TestTeam 1 16 8 nbsp Chris Horner USA Astana 1 17 DSQ nbsp Franco Pellizotti ITA Liquigas 1 27 10 nbsp David Arroyo ESP Caisse d Epargne 1 41 Stage 8 edit16 May 2009 Morbegno to Bergamo 209 km 130 mi There were two categorized climbs on this course including a fairly tall and steep one at Culmine di San Pietro after 64 km 40 mi However the amount of flat racing after the descent suggested that the type of finish this stage would see was far from certain 24 Between the 30 km 19 mi and 40 km 25 mi marks in this stage a ten man breakaway slowly formed Their maximum advantage was just over four minutes as they neared the day s second climb the Colle del Gallo A group of GC favorites and domestiques from their teams were first over this climb with race leader Danilo Di Luca not among them at first almost a minute back As the leading group seemed unwilling to work together Di Luca was able to bridge the gap and make it to them Kanstantsin Sivtsov made the decisive attack of the day coming clear some 15 km 9 3 mi from the line and though he never held even half a minute s advantage he managed to stay away for the stage win This stage also saw a dramatic and life threatening crash from Pedro Horrillo on the Culmine di San Pietro His bike skidded on wet leaves during the descent causing him to lose control of his machine slide into a guardrail and tumble head over heels down the mountainside 9 Horrillo fell 60 m 200 ft and sustained fractures to his thighbones kneecaps and T12 and C3 vertebrae as well as a punctured lung and internal bleeding He was airlifted off the mountain and was then taken by ambulance to a nearby hospital Horrillo woke up in the ambulance but was put in a chemically induced coma to aid his treatment 25 He was taken out of the coma the next day with scans revealing no brain damage 26 The peloton s protest of Stage 9 the next day was largely in reaction to Horrillo s serious injury After spending some five weeks in hospitals both in Italy and his native Spain Horrillo eventually recovered 27 Stage 8 result Rider Team Time1 nbsp Kanstantsin Sivtsov BLR Team Columbia High Road 5h 04 34 2 nbsp Edvald Boasson Hagen NOR Team Columbia High Road 21 DSQ nbsp Danilo Di Luca ITA nbsp 11 LPR Brakes Farnese Vini s t 4 nbsp Michael Rogers AUS Team Columbia High Road s t DSQ nbsp Franco Pellizotti ITA Liquigas s t 6 nbsp Stefano Garzelli ITA Acqua amp Sapone Caffe Mokambo s t 7 nbsp Damiano Cunego ITA Lampre NGC s t 8 nbsp Jackson Rodriguez VEN Diquigiovanni Androni s t 9 nbsp Marzio Bruseghin ITA Lampre NGC s t 10 nbsp Thomas Rohregger AUT Team Milram s t General classification after stage 8 Rider Team TimeDSQ nbsp Danilo Di Luca ITA nbsp nbsp nbsp 11 LPR Brakes Farnese Vini 33h 13 35 2 nbsp Thomas Lovkvist SWE nbsp Team Columbia High Road 13 3 nbsp Michael Rogers AUS Team Columbia High Road 44 4 nbsp Levi Leipheimer USA Astana 51 5 nbsp Denis Menchov RUS Rabobank 58 6 nbsp Ivan Basso ITA Liquigas 1 14 7 nbsp Carlos Sastre ESP Cervelo TestTeam 1 24 8 nbsp Chris Horner USA Astana 1 25 DSQ nbsp Franco Pellizotti ITA Liquigas 1 35 10 nbsp David Arroyo ESP Caisse d Epargne 1 49 Stage 9 edit17 May 2009 Milan 165 km 103 mi Milano Show 100 nbsp Danilo Di Luca in the pink jersey during the Milan city stage This stage was a circuit race The field took 10 laps of a 16 km 9 9 mi course in Milan there was a 5 km 3 1 mi run in before the circuits began The course was flat and the stage figured to be a major sprinters battle 28 The character of this stage changed drastically after the dramatic injury sustained by Pedro Horrillo the day before brought attention to safety conditions on this and other courses in the Giro With the course passing over numerous different surfaces including tram tracks and cobblestones the peloton collectively protested racing this course and as such it was neutralized with everyone receiving the same time as the stage winner and no points were awarded for the points classification as had been planned There were also parked cars at the side of the road in many places forcing the riders into narrow tunnels to get through them 29 Originally the result of the riders protest was only that the stage times would not count 30 The peloton rode the first four laps very slowly about 20 km h 12 mph slower than previous stages and at the end of the fourth lap the race stopped altogether as race leader Danilo Di Luca took a microphone to address the crowd and explain why they were riding so slowly 31 Lance Armstrong who along with Di Luca had been considered the voice of the peloton in the protest 32 apologized to the fans for the effect it had on what was supposed to be a grand spectacle 33 but also contended that it was the correct decision for the peloton to make 34 The pace did eventually pick up on the last lap and the finish was contested in a bunched sprint won by Mark Cavendish 35 Stage 9 result Rider Team Time1 nbsp Mark Cavendish GBR Team Columbia High Road 4h 16 13 2 nbsp Allan Davis AUS Quick Step s t 3 nbsp Tyler Farrar USA Garmin Slipstream s t 4 nbsp Matthew Goss AUS Team Saxo Bank s t 5 nbsp Alessandro Petacchi ITA LPR Brakes Farnese Vini s t 6 nbsp Robert Forster GER Team Milram s t 7 nbsp Robert Hunter RSA Barloworld s t 8 nbsp Davide Vigano ITA Fuji Servetto s t 9 nbsp Said Haddou FRA Bbox Bouygues Telecom s t 10 nbsp Markus Fothen GER Team Milram s t General classification after stage 9 Rider Team TimeDSQ nbsp Danilo Di Luca ITA nbsp nbsp nbsp 11 LPR Brakes Farnese Vini 37h 29 48 2 nbsp Thomas Lovkvist SWE nbsp Team Columbia High Road 13 3 nbsp Michael Rogers AUS Team Columbia High Road 44 4 nbsp Levi Leipheimer USA Astana 51 5 nbsp Denis Menchov RUS Rabobank 58 6 nbsp Ivan Basso ITA Liquigas 1 14 7 nbsp Carlos Sastre ESP Cervelo TestTeam 1 24 8 nbsp Chris Horner USA Astana 1 25 DSQ nbsp Franco Pellizotti ITA Liquigas 1 35 10 nbsp David Arroyo ESP Caisse d Epargne 1 49 Stage 10 edit19 May 2009 Cuneo to Pinerolo 262 km 163 mi After the rest day the riders were faced with the Giro s longest stage with numerous high mountain climbs along the course and the distinction of being the race s queen stage 36 It was originally scheduled to include the Col d Izoard which has been featured numerous times in the Tour de France as an hors categorie climb Race officials later decided to alter the course staying on the Italian side of the Alps believing the stretches that were to take place in France were too remote and that radio communication in the area could not be assured 37 The course as it originally was designed mimicked exactly a course used in the 1949 Giro d Italia 38 The resulting alterations caused the course to be even longer than first planned 262 km 163 mi rather than 250 km 160 mi with a small categorized climb just under 10 km 6 2 mi from the finish This came after a 50 km 31 mi long descent from what became the course s principal climb Sestriere The race s overall contenders were expected to distinguish themselves on this stage 39 A surprisingly fast beginning to the stage with a first hour that covered over 50 km 31 mi managed to keep any breakaways from going clear for over two hours Twelve eventually came ahead of the peloton with seven in the lead and five chasing between the leaders and the peloton The third group on the road eventually dwindled to a select contingent of overall favorites which included race leader Danilo Di Luca Former Giro champion Stefano Garzelli attacked from this group on the day s first climb and got to the leading group of five before the summit claiming maximum points on it and on Sestriere to gain leadership of the mountains classification at the end of the day Garzelli s maximum advantage at the summit of Sestriere was just over six minutes 36 A group of most of the top riders in the GC paced by the race leader himself caught every one of the twelve initial leaders and subsequently Garzelli just before the day s last climb Pra Martino Di Luca s aggressive descent of Pra Martino gave him a gap over the elite group of riders who had been able to hold his wheel to that point and the stage win The day saw a big winner in time gains and a big loser Lance Armstrong finished 29 seconds behind Di Luca in the same group as the man finishing sixth on the stage gaining seven places in the GC while Thomas Lovkvist lost over a minute and fell from second to eighth in the GC 40 Stage 10 result Rider Team TimeDSQ nbsp Danilo Di Luca ITA nbsp 11 LPR Brakes Farnese Vini 6h 30 43 DSQ nbsp Franco Pellizotti ITA Liquigas 6h 30 53 1 nbsp Denis Menchov RUS Rabobank 6h 30 53 4 nbsp Carlos Sastre ESP Cervelo TestTeam s t 5 nbsp David Arroyo ESP Caisse d Epargne 16 6 nbsp Mauricio Soler COL Barloworld 19 7 nbsp Ivan Basso ITA Liquigas s t 8 nbsp Levi Leipheimer USA Astana s t 9 nbsp Joaquim Rodriguez ESP Caisse d Epargne s t 10 nbsp Michael Rogers AUS Team Columbia High Road s t General classification after stage 10 Rider Team TimeDSQ nbsp Danilo Di Luca ITA nbsp nbsp 11 LPR Brakes Farnese Vini 44h 00 11 2 nbsp Denis Menchov RUS Rabobank 1 20 3 nbsp Michael Rogers AUS Team Columbia High Road 1 33 4 nbsp Levi Leipheimer USA Astana 1 40 DSQ nbsp Franco Pellizotti ITA Liquigas 1 53 6 nbsp Carlos Sastre ESP Cervelo TestTeam 1 54 7 nbsp Ivan Basso ITA Liquigas 2 03 8 nbsp Thomas Lovkvist SWE nbsp Team Columbia High Road 2 12 9 nbsp David Arroyo ESP Caisse d Epargne 2 35 10 nbsp Gilberto Simoni ITA Diquigiovanni Androni 2 58 Stage 11 edit nbsp Mark Cavendish popping a champagne bottle on the podium in Arenzano after his victory 20 May 2009 Turin to Arenzano 214 km 133 mi The Passo del Turchino famous for its use every year in the classic one day race Milan San Remo was visited 19 km 12 mi from the end of this stage The climb is not difficult enough to be at all selective so pre stage analysis led to expectations that either a mass sprint would occur or a breakaway of riders deep down in the GC would finish first on this stage 41 Astana rider Chris Horner did not start the stage due to a leg injury sustained in a fall in Stage 10 leaving Levi Leipheimer and Lance Armstrong without their usual support rider At the 56 km 35 mi mark Caisse d Epargne rider Joaquim Rodriguez dropped out after a 9th place finish in the previous stage A break formed after 65 km 40 mi including Gustavo Cesar Cameron Meyer Dmytro Grabovskyy and Alessandro Donati Soon after Levi Leipheimer crashed but was unhurt The break was caught and a solo break was formed by Vladimir Isaichev Astana drove the peloton up the Turchino the day s lone climb with Armstrong leading the descent and race leader Danilo Di Luca somewhat surprisingly coming forward to hold Armstrong s wheel Some riders tried to escape for victory on the way into Arenzano but the sprinters teams worked to keep the field together and Mark Cavendish took another bunched sprint win over Tyler Farrar and Alessandro Petacchi 42 It was after this stage on the eve of the Cinque Terre time trial that Danilo Di Luca gave his first of two positive tests for continuous erythropoiesis receptor activator CERA 43 the results of which became public after the Giro was over Stage 11 result Rider Team Time1 nbsp Mark Cavendish GBR Team Columbia High Road 4h 51 17 2 nbsp Tyler Farrar USA Garmin Slipstream s t 3 nbsp Alessandro Petacchi ITA LPR Brakes Farnese Vini s t 4 nbsp Allan Davis AUS Quick Step s t 5 nbsp Sebastien Hinault FRA Ag2r La Mondiale s t 6 nbsp Davide Vigano ITA Fuji Servetto s t 7 nbsp Edvald Boasson Hagen NOR Team Columbia High Road s t 8 nbsp Alexander Serov RUS Team Katusha s t 9 nbsp Oscar Gatto ITA ISD s t 10 nbsp Robert Forster GER Team Milram s t General classification after stage 11 Rider Team TimeDSQ nbsp Danilo Di Luca ITA nbsp nbsp 11 LPR Brakes Farnese Vini 48h 51 28 2 nbsp Denis Menchov RUS Rabobank 1 20 3 nbsp Michael Rogers AUS Team Columbia High Road 1 33 4 nbsp Levi Leipheimer USA Astana 1 40 DSQ nbsp Franco Pellizotti ITA Liquigas 1 53 6 nbsp Carlos Sastre ESP Cervelo TestTeam 1 54 7 nbsp Ivan Basso ITA Liquigas 2 03 8 nbsp Thomas Lovkvist SWE nbsp Team Columbia High Road 2 12 9 nbsp David Arroyo ESP Caisse d Epargne 2 35 10 nbsp Gilberto Simoni ITA Diquigiovanni Androni 2 58 See also editReferences edit Jerseys appearing in the table on the left of the page indicate those worn by the cyclist during the particular stage while those appearing in the table on the right of the page indicate those awarded to the cyclist after the stage Stage 1 Saturday May 09 Lido di Venezia TTT 20 5km Cycling News Future Publishing Limited 2009 05 09 Retrieved 2009 05 09 Anthony Tan 2009 05 09 A tale of two teams as Columbia puts Cavendish in pink Cycling News Future Publishing Limited Archived from the original on 21 June 2009 Retrieved 2009 05 09 Stage 2 Sunday May 10 Jesolo Trieste 156km Cycling News Future Publishing Limited 2009 05 09 Retrieved 2009 05 09 Anthony Tan 2009 05 10 Lazy Cavendish learns the hard way but keeps maglia rosa Cycling News Future Publishing Limited Archived from the original on 18 June 2009 Retrieved 2009 05 10 Andrew Hood 2009 05 10 Petacchi clips Cav s wings VeloNews Competitor Group Inc Archived from the original on 2009 06 21 Retrieved 2009 10 15 Stage 3 Monday May 11 Grado Valdobbiadene 198km preview Cycling News Future Publishing Limited 2009 05 09 Archived from the original on 5 May 2009 Retrieved 2009 05 09 Anthony Tan 2009 05 11 Silenzio Oh Ale Jet how good can you get Cycling News Future Publishing Limited Archived from the original on 1 October 2009 Retrieved 2009 08 26 a b Juliet Macur 2009 05 16 Spanish Cyclist in Serious Condition After Crash New York Times Retrieved 2009 10 15 Andrew Hood 2009 05 11 Petacchi wins stage and jersey as Cavendish gets gapped by a crash VeloNews Competitor Group Inc Archived from the original on May 17 2009 Retrieved 2009 10 15 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n Di Luca tested positive for EPO during the Giro Subsequently all his results were declared void Stage 4 Tuesday May 12 Padova San Martino di Castrozza 162km Cycling News Future Publishing Limited 2009 05 09 Retrieved 2009 05 09 Andrew Hood 2009 05 12 Di Luca wins Giro stage 4 VeloNews Competitor Group Inc Archived from the original on May 18 2009 Retrieved 2009 10 15 Anthony Tan 2009 05 12 Di Luca still the cold blooded killer Cycling News Future Publishing Limited Retrieved 2009 08 26 Stage 5 Wednesday May 13 San Martino di Castrozza Alpe di Siusi 125km Cycling News Future Publishing Limited 2009 05 09 Retrieved 2009 05 09 Anthony Tan 2009 05 13 Six firm favourites Cycling News Future Publishing Limited Archived from the original on 29 June 2009 Retrieved 2009 05 18 Andrew Hood 2009 05 13 Menchov wins stage 5 Di Luca in pink VeloNews Competitor Group Inc Archived from the original on 2016 03 03 Retrieved 2009 10 15 Stage 6 Thursday May 14 Bressanone Brixen Mayrhofen Aut 248km Cycling News Future Publishing Limited 2009 05 09 Archived from the original on 18 June 2009 Retrieved 2009 05 09 Anthony Tan 2009 05 14 Confession leads to absolution Scarponi repays the faith Cycling News Future Publishing Limited Archived from the original on 24 June 2009 Retrieved 2009 05 18 Stage 7 Friday May 15 Innsbruck Aut Chiavenna 244km Cycling News Future Publishing Limited 2009 05 09 Archived from the original on 18 June 2009 Retrieved 2009 05 09 Anthony Tan 2009 05 15 Boasson Hagen the big boss of Chiavenna And set to move out of Hushovd s shadow Cycling News Future Publishing Limited Archived from the original on 18 June 2009 Retrieved 2009 05 18 Andrew Dampf 2009 05 06 Lance Armstrong s Astana cycling team in financial crisis Associated Press via Yahoo Sports Retrieved 2009 07 07 dead link Andrew Hood 2009 05 15 Astana changes jersey over money row VeloNews Competitor Group Inc Archived from the original on 2009 05 19 Retrieved 2009 07 06 Stage 8 Saturday May 16 Morbegno Bergamo 209km Cycling News Future Publishing Limited 2009 05 09 Retrieved 2009 05 09 Anthony Tan 2009 05 16 Do what we may Columbia has another gem in Siutsou Cycling News Future Publishing Limited Archived from the original on 20 June 2009 Retrieved 2009 05 18 Rabobank s Pedro Horrillo is brought out of his coma no brain injury evident VeloNews Competitor Group Inc 2009 05 17 Archived from the original on 21 June 2009 Retrieved 2009 07 14 Susan Westemeyer 2009 06 22 Horrillo set to leave hospital Cycling News Future Publishing Limited Archived from the original on 30 September 2009 Retrieved 2009 10 10 Stage 9 Sunday May 17 Milano Show 100 165km Cycling News Future Publishing Limited 2009 05 09 Retrieved 2009 05 09 Nigel Wynn and Stephen Farrand 2009 05 17 Riders stage go slow protest during Giro stage in Milan Cycling Weekly Retrieved 2009 08 28 Stephen Farrand 2009 05 17 Milan riders protest Justified or a farce Cycling Weekly Retrieved 2009 10 10 Eurosport 2009 05 17 Giro d Italia Cavendish wins farcical stage Yahoo Archived from the original on May 23 2009 Retrieved 2009 10 10 Armstrong leader Di Luca spark protest ESPN Associated Press 2009 05 17 Retrieved 2009 10 10 Juliet Macur 2009 05 19 Armstrong Apologizes to Fans for Cyclists Protest at Giro d Italia New York Times Retrieved 2009 10 10 Andrew Hood 2009 05 19 Armstrong defends rider protest VeloNews Competitor Group Inc Retrieved 2009 10 10 Anthony Tan 2009 05 17 Cavendish wins a stage left wanting Cycling News Future Publishing Limited Archived from the original on 21 June 2009 Retrieved 2009 05 18 a b Andrew Hood 2009 05 19 Race leader Danilo Di Luca stomps wins the Giro s Queen Stage with a solo attack VeloNews Competitor Group Inc Archived from the original on June 21 2009 Retrieved 2009 10 15 Giro d Italia Organisers re arrange Giro stage Yahoo Sport Reuters 2009 04 08 Retrieved 2009 04 09 dead link The greatest Italian duo ever Cycling News Future Publishing Limited 2009 05 21 Retrieved 2009 09 15 Stage 10 Tuesday May 19 Cuneo Pinerolo 262km Cycling News Future Publishing Limited 2009 05 09 Retrieved 2009 05 09 Anthony Tan 2009 05 19 Leave no stone unturned Di Luca piu forte the strongest in Pinerolo Cycling News Future Publishing Limited Archived from the original on 25 June 2009 Retrieved 2009 05 29 Stage 11 Wednesday May 20 Torino Arenzano Genova 214km Cycling News Future Publishing Limited 2009 05 09 Archived from the original on 20 June 2009 Retrieved 2009 05 09 Anthony Tan 2009 05 20 Cavendish floats to second sprint win Cycling News Future Publishing Limited Archived from the original on 18 June 2009 Retrieved 2009 05 20 Cyclingnews 2009 07 22 Di Luca positive for CERA in Giro Cycling News Future Publishing Limited Retrieved 2009 07 22 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title 2009 Giro d 27Italia Stage 1 to Stage 11 amp oldid 1199031115, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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