Skip to content
Tom Dumoulin's leg after the crash. AP/PA Images

More drama at Giro D'Italia as Dumoulin the big loser in mass fall while Carapaz takes stage four

Not ideal for 2017 champion Tom Dumoulin.

MOVISTAR’S GIRO D’ITALIA contender Richard Carapaz won stage four on Tuesday as a mass fall in the peloton seven kilometres from the finishing post cost 2017 champion Tom Dumoulin a devastating four minutes in the overall standings.

Dumoulin came second at both the Giro d’Italia and the Tour de France in 2018, as well as winning the 2017 Giro and the 2017 world championships time-trial, making him a chief contender in all major tours and races.

The fall saw a small group of eleven riders get away from the peloton, including overall leader Primoz Roglic and two of his chief contenders to win the Giro, Britain’s Simon Yates and Astana’s Miguel Angel Lopez.

Ecuador’s Carapaz made a long-range sprint for the line from more than 400 metres out with only Australia’s Caleb Ewan and UAE’s Diego Ulissi capable of challenging and ending second and third respectively.

Roglic, a former ski jumper, finished two seconds behind this trio, gaining 16 seconds on all his chief rivals for the 2019 title.

Dutchman Dumoulin freewheeled most of the way to the finishing post after his fall with blood streaming from a knee, with his chances of winning the title in tatters.

He was then whisked away to hospital for x-rays as he said he was unable to bend his knee.

Sunweb sports director Michiel Elijzen admitted Dumoulin’s chances had been massively compromised.

Italy Giro Cycling Carapaz celebrates. AP / PA Images AP / PA Images / PA Images

“It looks like its over for the GC,” he said referring to the overall standings.

“It’s hard. We came here to win the Giro,” he said.

“But after four stages if you are four minutes off the leader…”

“We just have to wait and see if he can continue in the Giro,” he said.

Ireland duo Eddie Dunbar and Conor Dunne finished 127th (6:04.12) and 162nd (6:11.09) respectively today, leaving them 98th and 165th in the general classification.

Wednesday’s fifth stage is a short 140km run from Frascati, just south of Rome, to Terracina where a 1.5km home straight should provide a perfect platform for a spectacular sprint finish.

The stage and general classifications can be found here.

© — AFP 2019

Subscribe to our new podcast, The42 Rugby Weekly, here:

Author
View 5 comments
Close
5 Comments
This is YOUR comments community. Stay civil, stay constructive, stay on topic. Please familiarise yourself with our comments policy here before taking part.
Leave a Comment
    Install the app to use these features.
    Mute mel roberts
    Favourite mel roberts
    Report
    Sep 2nd 2022, 8:46 AM

    Wouldn’t be like Brendan to try engineer his way out of a club. He’s looking sacked and that payday

    50
    Install the app to use these features.
    Mute Mister Gooey
    Favourite Mister Gooey
    Report
    Sep 2nd 2022, 9:16 AM

    @mel roberts: definitely pushing for the redundancy package! He certainly is not trying to motivate the squad he has, which has some fine players.

    39
    Install the app to use these features.
    Mute Thomas O' Donnell
    Favourite Thomas O' Donnell
    Report
    Sep 2nd 2022, 1:47 PM

    @mel roberts: He engineered the lack of transfers in?

    8
    See 1 more reply ▾
    Install the app to use these features.
    Mute Gerry Campbell
    Favourite Gerry Campbell
    Report
    Sep 2nd 2022, 9:33 PM

    @mel roberts: Worked for cardiganman think You nailed it….

    1
    Install the app to use these features.
    Mute Simon Dwyer
    Favourite Simon Dwyer
    Report
    Sep 2nd 2022, 12:04 PM

    What a few years can make. If the manager guess on. Which he is entitled to speak. The owners can fire him. I fear for the club.

    8
Submit a report
Please help us understand how this comment violates our community guidelines.
Thank you for the feedback
Your feedback has been sent to our team for review.

Leave a comment

 
cancel reply