It's been a while since I added to my Giro, so let's recap.
1 - flat stage in München
2 - intermediate stage around Garmisch-Partenkirchen with a cat.4 climb 16km out
3 - slightly uphill TTT
4 - entering Italy via the Brennerpass, then a short uphill finish after Valparola and Fedaia (Fedaia!)
5 - descending to the Adriatic with a flat finish
6 - mostly flat with a couple of hills in the run-in
7 - 40km flat ITT
Stage 8: Rimini - Cagli (Monte Petrano), 200km
GPM:
Monte Nerone (cat.1) 13,7km @ 8,5%
Monte Catria (cat.1) 15,5km @ 6,5%
Monte Petrano (cat.1) 10,4km @ 7,8%
Traguardo Volanti:
Cagli, 189km
As we enter the second weekend of the race, the GC should already have been shaken up somewhat by the chronos and the tricky Val di Fassa stage. With that stage having an easy finale to try to entice moves on Fedaia (Fedaia!), today is the first real mountaintop finish, as we head into the Apennines. The start is just a brief stroll across the Adriatic coast from the finish of the ITT, so we're being kind to the riders with zero transfer. And the first half of the stage is mostly flat along the coast or gradually rolling uphill inland. Part of the early running of the stage follows the route of the
2013 ITT along the coast near Pesaro, which had a difficult rolling parcours and was won by Movistar's Alex Dowsett, which is arguably his career peak thus far, at least on the road (there's the Hour, of course). After passing through the town of
Fano the riders turn inland, and then it's a long and gradual uphill through the valley carved by the Metauro until reaching the small town of
Piobbico. It is here where the stage changes style and the high mountains begin.
The Nerone-Catria-Petrano combo will obviously remind everybody with the memory of the by-default-thanks-to-weather-problems-on-stage-10 queen stage of the 2009 Giro:
That stage, over 240km and 7 hours in the saddle, was a spectacular event (in fact so spectacular there's even a
monument to it!) which was won by Carlos Sastre and included the moment which passed into cycling lore, when Sastre, Menchov, di Luca, Leipheimer, Basso and Pellizotti were off the front and Lance Armstrong put in a herculean effort to battle across to the leading group, only for, literally two seconds after he made the junctino, Sastre - the man who Armstrong had disrespected in justifying his comeback - attacked again and dropped the Texan forevermore. The reigning Tour champion was on strong form in week 3 that year, and won the stage solo, which you can
relive here. I have somewhat cloned the closing stages of that stage, however because of the direction of the approach I am taking a harder ascent of Monte Nerone than was climbed that day, instead choosing the narrow and brutal
Piobbico side of the climb, which averages 9% for its first 10km. This will hopefully negate the impact of the shorter stage when it comes to the closing stretches.
After Nerone, there is an uncategorized climb (it could perhaps be categorized in earlier stages or in other races, but the Giro has quite the tradition of not giving out mountain points even for quite distinct climbs!), before Monte Catria. This ascent's statistics are rather misleading thanks to the false flat beginnings; there are two distinctive stretches averaging around 9% that ramp up the difficulty, as you can see
from the profile; with the summit just 33km from the line there's the potential for the speculative dart from strong climbing riders who are not a GC threat, and also GPM contenders. The bonus seconds available at the intermediate sprint in
Cagli come just 11km from the end, all of which are uphill. Monte Petrano is far from the hardest climb the Giro has - or indeed this Giro will have - but at
10km at 8% it is enough to let the flyweights put down a marker and we can really start to see who has the form and who doesn't. And of course, with this being arguably the fourth GC riders' test in the first week (after Garmisch, Rifugio Monti Pallidi and the ITT yesterday) there's every possibility that riders gambling on peaking for the final week will have a lot to make up.
Rimini:
Monte Petrano: