The Giro d’Italia is still in the south of Italy but the overall contenders face their first major test of the race and of their form on today’s mountain finish to Roccaraso in the Apennines.
Stage 6 is relatively short at 157km but includes the long-but-gradual early climb to Bocca della Selva after 54km. The descent takes the race into the Molise and Abruzzo hills, passing Isernia on the way to Castel del Sangro.
The small town, made famous by Joe McGinniss' book about its football team, sits at 797m and marks the start of the climb to the finish. Il Garibaldi, the Giro roadbook, describes the climb as being 17km long with an average gradient of 4.8 per cent, but that fails to explain that the road to the finish is divided in two. After seven kilometres at seven per cent, there is a four-kilometre flat section that breaks up the climbing, which then resumes with three kilometres at 7.5 per cent followed by an easier gradient of 3.5 per cent in the final few kilometres to the finish. The stage ends with the final 500 metres at eight per cent, offering a chance for a final attack to try to take the 10-6-4 time bonuses.
As Gazzetta dello Sport journalist Claudio Gregor recalls in today’s newspaper, the climb has long been part of the Giro d’Italia, and was the high point of the 1909 race. Back then it was a dirt road when bikes weighed 15kg. The first ever finish in Roccaraso was in 1952, with Giorgio Albani – later to become Eddy Merckx's directeur sportif at Molteni – winning the stage. Bernhard Hinault won his first ever Giro d’Italia stage in Roccaraso in 1980, with Moreno Argentin wining the most recent finish in 1987.
This year the climb to Roccaraso will host the first showdown between the overall contenders and also test Tom Dumoulin’s form as he tries to retain the pink jersey.
You can read more at Cyclingnews.com
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