Stage 8 was the de facto "queen stage" - not really much of one, but certainly the cumulative climbing - lots of slopes and ascending gradually in multiple steps, as well as the toughest uncategorized climb of the race - made it the hardest in terms of that. RAI's
highlights package opens up with some touching footage of race director Giuseppe Rivolta talking with the remaining Valcar-PBM riders, who look pretty devastated in light of their teammate's horrendous injuries yesterday. Cretti appears to have been operated on successfully and for much of today has remained in an induced coma (don't know at time of writing if there's any further news) but the expectation is there will be some permanent brain damage. The team, to their credit, were given the option of withdrawing for personal reasons, but all raced on save for 19-year-old Marta Cavalli who appeared to have been a planned exit anyhow. Other non-starters were Amélie Rivat and Roxane Fournier, with few stages suiting them to come.
The stage itself was difficult to follow even by women's cycling standards; poor reception in the rugged terrain the race was passing through meant garbled or out-of-sync messages on race progress, plus some unusual developments within the race also helped make it difficult to get to grips with what was going on. The main major move of the day was initiated by Lensworld's Tetyana Riabchenko, the Ukrainian being a more than useful climber with plenty of experience and, given that she's raced most of her career on Italian or Italian-based teams, a deep familiarity with racing such roads as these. She hasn't won outside of her homeland since 2013, but she has been 12th, 13th and 12th in her last three tilts at the Giro, finishing top 10 on San Domenico twice, so she's got plenty of skills for a stage like this, so it was relatively dangerous to allow her to go even though the GC threat she posed was limited. Behind, a counter-move made by Lucinda Brand left the Dutch all-rounder in a strong position on the road given her descending skills, while the pace set by Amanda Spratt in service of team leader van Vleuten broke the splintered remains of the péloton into two potentially significant halves; all of the GC top names made the front group, however.
The descent was very, very technical, with some horrible cambers to add to multiple hairpin bends and some variable surfaces; Brand stalked her prey throughout and with 3km remaining, made the junction to Riabchenko (the conflicting and confusing nature of live tweeting clarified - which the pictures from RAI alone can't show us - Brand had caught the Ukrainian, crashed at 10k to go, caught her again at 3k to go, then attacked to win; it's only when you see her rinsing her wounds after the stage finishes that you see that Lucinda has been down). Meanwhile, Astana were setting the pace to try to gain some time for Arlenis Sierra, potentially in the time bonuses. The final, uncategorized ramp up to the line proved the end of the spent forces of Tetyana Riabchenko, the lengthy solo taking its toll on her and as Brand, who of course won both a sprint stage and a mountainous solo escape in the 2015 Giro, rode up to her wheel confidently, it was clear immediately which of the two would take the stage; the Sunweb rider made light work of her adversary, dropping her in a matter of metres, but the Ukrainian made it hard for her, making a lot of the time back to Lucinda and really pressurizing her; unfortunately for Lensworld, however, she ran out of climb, and as a result was unable to bring the Dutch rider back, allowing Brand to pick up Sunweb's first win at the Giro since Kirchmann took the prologues last season.
Astana were still pacing the péloton coming into the final climb, but Boels were becoming a bit uncomfortable, with Spratt, van Vleuten, Niewiadoma, Lichtenberg and Longo Borghini all nudging them down the line in anticipation of the final slopes. Unfortunately we didn't get to see who initiated hostilities, due to following Brand and Riabchenko's battle for the stage win, but given the race to date I'd suggest it's quite likely to have been either ELB or Annemiek; less likely Anna as she has the maglia rosa or Kasia as she's usually very keen to attack but hasn't had optimal form here, but either way Astana's work was for nought as a group of eight came to the line together featuring all the big favourites - van der Breggen, Guarnier, Canuel, van Vleuten, Spratt, Niewiadoma, Longo Borghini and Lichtenberg, with Meg winning the sprint to deny any bonus seconds to rivals of van der Breggen's lead (the highlights of this will show you just how much Claudia struggles in a sprint as well, losing a good couple of seconds) while they simultaneously put 15" into the other half of the group, led home by Arlenis Sierra and featuring other all-round talents like Cecchini, Blaak, Koster, Yonamine, Stultiens, Leleivyte and, perhaps most impressive of all, Hannah Barnes. The second péloton came in a little over half a minute further back, with Ludwig, Nosková, Gillow, Vysotska and Guderzo; the rest were over 10 minutes down.
So, what does this mean for the GC? Well, it's pretty interesting. Obviously at the top things are unchanged other than that Guarnier inches another 4" closer to the lead, but she's still some way off ELB and Annemiek and her teammate still has a comfortable-looking lead. However, Lucinda Brand's escapades today see her rocket up into 5th place overall, nudging ahead of Amanda Spratt by virtue of the 10" stage win bonus and taking advantage of the softer Giro parcours that is far more within her remit than any other we've seen in recent years; it also brings Sunweb back into the GC fold as, despite having nudged into the top 10 thanks to yesterday's escape and the intermediate bonuses picked up, Sabrina Stultiens drops back out of the top 10 today thanks to that late split; she had been ahead of Claudia Lichtenberg on countback but the 2009 Giro winner made the maglia rosa group today while Sabrina could not. Missing the selection drops Shara Gillow out of the top 10 as well, while Lichtenberg's strong performance at the end leapfrogs her a few seconds ahead of Arlenis Sierra. Outside the top 10, the maglia bianca moves shoulders as Floortje Mackaij was dropped today and lost over 10 minutes; the jersey now rests on the shoulders of the pre-race favourite to take it, Cecilie Uttrup Ludwig, so Cervélo have done pretty well out of the race with a stage win and potentially also a jersey, considering after a couple of stages they'd had a catastrophic TTT and lost their GC leader. Cecilie won't be unchallenged, though, as Nosková and Bertizzolo are both within striking distance (Beggin dropped away today too) although the latter is liable to be sacrificed as Astana are working hard to preserve Arlenis Sierra's GC position; however this was the stage liable to produce the biggest problems for the young Dane and definitely the Torre del Greco stage suits her well, and so taking that jersey off her is unlikely. Elsewhere it looks like it's pretty much nailed on Elisa is going coast to coast with the maglia azzurra, while van der Breggen is highly likely to reclaim the WT leaders' jersey from Niewiadoma at the end of the weekend. Five more riders dropped out during the stage, most prominent among them probably Eugenia Bujak, the Pole who came close to the stage win yesterday but paid for her efforts on today's lengthy (140+km) odyssey.
Stage:
1 Lucinda Brand (Team Sunweb) NED 3'46'10
2 Tetyana Riabchenko (Lensworld-Kuota) UKR +12"
3 Megan Guarnier (Boels-Dolmans) USA +1'33"
4 Annemiek van Vleuten (Orica-AIS) NED +1'33"
5 Elisa Longo Borghini (Wiggle-High5) ITA +1'33"
6 Anna van der Breggen (Boels-Dolmans) NED +1'33"
7 Katarzyna Niewiadoma (WM3 Energie) POL +1'33"
8 Amanda Spratt (Orica-AIS) AUS +1'33"
9 Karol-Ann Canuel (Boels-Dolmans) CAN +1'33"
10 Claudia Lichtenberg (Wiggle-High5) GER +1'36"
GC:
1 Anna van der Breggen (Boels-Dolmans) NED
2 Elisa Longo Borghini (Wiggle-High5) ITA +1'03"
3 Annemiek van Vleuten (Orica-AIS) NED +1'39"
4 Megan Guarnier (Boels-Dolmans) USA +3'07"
5 Lucinda Brand (Team Sunweb) NED +3'26"
6 Amanda Spratt (Orica-AIS) AUS +3'32"
7 Katarzyna Niewiadoma (WM3 Energie) POL +4'02"
8 Karol-Ann Canuel (Boels-Dolmans) CAN +4'22"
9 Claudia Lichtenberg (Wiggle-High5) GER +5'05"
10 Arlenis Sierra Cañadilla (Astana) CUB +5'15"
PS Brand's one-side dismount celebration is cool.