2005 Giro d'Italia, Prologue to Stage 10
The 2005 Giro d'Italia began on May 7, 2005, with the tenth stage occurring on May 10.
Prologue
The prologue was a 1.15 kilometer time race. It was won by the Australian Brett Lancaster with a 0.289 second advantage over Matteo Tosatto, who scored second. After the last rider, Mario Cipollini received the homage of the Italian cycling world, doing the 1.15 kilometer race out of competition. He had announced his retirement just ten days before.
Prologue Result
|
General Classification after Prologue
|
1st stage
At the beginning of the first stage, a four-man breakaway formed and led by almost ten minutes at one point. Thorwald Veneberg was finally captured again about 20 kilometers before the end. However, his efforts paid by giving him the first maglia Verde of the Giro. On the last kilometer Paolo Bettini managed to get away on a very steep gradient.
Stage 1 Result
|
General Classification after Stage 1
|
2nd stage
Having been defeated by Paolo Bettini and Robbie McEwen on the previous stage, Italian favorite Alessandro Petacchi failed yet again in the bunch sprint in Santa Maria Del Cedro. This time, he claimed, he had been forced to change his direction because of Estonian Jaan Kirsipuu.
Stage | Tour (Maglia Rosa) | |||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
# | Name | Team | Time | # | Name | Team | Time | |
1 | Robbie McEwen (Aus) | Davitamon–Lotto | 4:34:47 | 1 | Robbie McEwen (Aus) | Davitamon–Lotto | 9:45'14" | |
2 | Isaac Gálvez (Esp) | Illes Balears–Caisse d'Epargne | 0" | 2 | Paolo Bettini (It) | Quick-Step–Innergetic | 8" | |
3 | Robert Förster (Ger) | Gerolsteiner | 0" | 3 | Alessandro Petacchi (It) | Fassa Bortolo | 14" | |
4 | Alessandro Petacchi (It) | Fassa Bortolo | 0" | 4 | Isaac Gálvez (ESP) | Quick-Step–Innergetic | 27" | |
5 | Baden Cooke (Aus) | Française des Jeux | 0" | 5 | Paolo Savoldelli (It) | Discovery Channel | 30" |
3rd stage
Just as in the first stage, the sprinter's teams were not able to stop a breakaway in the last kilometers of the race. This time, it was a group of fifty riders which included all the GC important riders. Danilo DI Luca, in a great form in season 2005, beat fellow Italian Damiano Cunego in the sprint for the stage victory.
Stage | Tour (Maglia Rosa) | |||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
# | Name | Team | Time | # | Name | Team | Time | |
1 | Danilo DI Luca (It) | Liquigas–Bianchi | 5:24'17" | 1 | Paolo Bettini (It) | Quick-Step–Innergetic | 15:09'35" | |
2 | Damiano Cunego (It) | Lampre–Caffita | 0" | 2 | Danilo Di Luca (It) | Liquigas–Bianchi | 9" | |
3 | Stefano Garzelli (It) | Liquigas–Bianchi | 0" | 3 | Damiano Cunego (It) | Lampre–Caffita | 17" | |
4 | Mirko Celestino (It) | Domina Vacanze | 0" | 4 | Stefano Garzelli (It) | Liquigas–Bianchi | 23" | |
5 | Francisco Ventoso (ESP) | Saunier Duval–Prodir | 0" | 5 | Paolo Savoldelli (It) | Discovery Channel | 26" |
4th stage
Paolo Bettini won the sprint at the end which was fought between five cyclists. But in this process he caused Baden Cooke to fall and was declassified because of this. Luca Mazzanti, who came in second, inherited the victory. After the stage, Bettini threatened to abandon the race, but it turned out to be an empty threat.
Stage | Tour (Maglia Rosa) | |||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
# | Name | Team | Time | # | Name | Team | Time | |
1 | Luca Mazzanti (It) | Ceramica Panaria–Navigare | 5:10'09" | 1 | Paolo Bettini (It) | Quick-Step–Innergetic | 20:19'44" | |
2 | Dario Cioni (It) | Liquigas–Bianchi | 0" | 2 | Danilo Di Luca (It) | Liquigas–Bianchi | 13" | |
3 | Michele Scarponi (It) | Liberty Seguros–Würth | 0" | 3 | Luca Mazzanti (It) | Ceramica Panaria–Navigare | 16" | |
4 | Paolo Bettini (It) | Quick-Step–Innergetic | 0" | 4 | Dario Cioni (It) | Liquigas–Bianchi | 19" | |
5 | Mirko Celestino (It) | Domina Vacanze | 0" | 5 | Damiano Cunego (It) | Lampre–Caffita | 21" |
5th stage
Danilo DI Luca got his second stage victory in 2005 Giro d'Italia, notching this win ahead of Fassa Bortolo's Marzio Bruseghin. Otherwise, this stage had no important influence on the fight for General Classification.
Stage | Tour (Maglia Rosa) | |||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
# | Name | Team | Time | # | Name | Team | Time | |
1 | Danilo Di Luca (It) | Liquigas–Bianchi | 6:01'18" | 1 | Danilo Di Luca (It) | Liquigas–Bianchi | 26:20'55" | |
2 | Marzio Bruseghin (It) | Fassa Bortolo | 0" | 2 | Paolo Bettini (It) | Quick-Step–Innergetic | 3" | |
3 | Mauricio Alberto Ardila Cano (Col) | Davitamon–Lotto | 2" | 3 | Luca Mazzanti (It) | Ceramica Panaria–Navigare | 25" | |
4 | Bjoern Leukemans (Bel) | Davitamon–Lotto | 2" | 4 | Dario Cioni (It) | Liquigas–Bianchi | 28" | |
5 | Ivan Basso (It) | Team CSC | 2" | 5 | Damiano Cunego (It) | Lampre–Caffita | 30" |
6th stage
Just as Danilo DI Luca had done the previous day, Australian Robbie McEwen took his second win in this year's Giro. This time, he did not have to beat Alessandro Petacchi, since the Italian's Torino biancoblù de-railed, causing the fall of some of the Fassa Bortolo riders, and forcing "Ale-Jet" to halt to a stop. McEwen's teammate Henk Vogels attacked in the last kilometer, but was surpassed just at the finish line by up to four other cyclists.
Stage | Tour (Maglia Rosa) | |||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
# | Name | Team | Time | # | Name | Team | Time | |
1 | Robbie McEwen (Aus) | Davitamon–Lotto | 3:37'17" | 1 | Paolo Bettini (It) | Quick-Step–Innergetic | 29:58'09" | |
2 | Jaan Kirsipuu (Est) | Crédit Agricole | 0" | 2 | Danilo Di Luca (It) | Liquigas–Bianchi | 3" | |
3 | Volodymyr Bileka (Ukr) | Discovery Channel | 0" | 3 | Luca Mazzanti (It) | Ceramica Panaria–Navigare | 28" | |
4 | Isaac Gálvez (Esp) | Illes Balears–Caisse d'Epargne | 0" | 4 | Dario Cioni (It) | Liquigas–Bianchi | 31" | |
5 | Henk Vogels (Aus) | Davitamon–Lotto | 0" | 5 | Damiano Cunego (It) | Lampre–Caffita | 33" |
7th stage
After a long breakaway, lasting throughout most of the stage, Spaniard Koldo Gil was the first to arrive at the finish line in Pistoia. Damiano Cunego, who was second, leading a pursuing group, celebrated thinking he had won the stage, not knowing that Gil had already taken the victory. Ivan Basso, who had been forced to change his bicycle because of a puncture in the last climb of the day, lost thirty seconds to his rivals for GC.
Stage | Tour (Maglia Rosa) | |||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
# | Name | Team | Time | # | Name | Team | Time | |
1 | Koldo Gil Perez (Esp) | Liberty Seguros–Würth | 5:08'17" | 1 | Danilo Di Luca (It) | Liquigas–Bianchi | 35:06'41" | |
2 | Damiano Cunego (It) | Lampre–Caffita | 20" | 2 | Damiano Cunego (It) | Lampre–Caffita | 26" | |
3 | Danilo Di Luca (It) | Liquigas–Bianchi | 20" | 3 | Mirko Celestino (It) | Domina Vacanze | 54" | |
4 | Mirko Celestino (It) | Domina Vacanze | 20" | 4 | Gilberto Simoni (It) | Lampre–Caffita | 54" | |
5 | Patrice Halgand (Fra) | Crédit Agricole | 20" | 5 | Dario Cioni (It) | Liquigas–Bianchi | 1'06" |
8th stage
The eighth stage was a time trial. Danilo DI Luca came in tenth and was able to keep the Maglia Rosa. Otherwise, this stage meant the victory for American David Zabriskie, and the revival of his teammate Ivan Basso, second in the time trial, and who made up for all the time he had lost the day before and even more. On the other hand, this was a very bad day for both Lampre riders Damiano Cunego and Gilberto Simoni.
Stage | Tour (Maglia Rosa) | |||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
# | Name | Team | Time | # | Name | Team | Time | |
1 | David Zabriskie (USA) | Team CSC | 58'31" | 1 | Danilo Di Luca (It) | Liquigas–Bianchi | 36:06'47" | |
2 | Ivan Basso (It) | Team CSC | 17" | 2 | Ivan Basso (It) | Team CSC | 9" | |
3 | Paolo Savoldelli (It) | Discovery Channel | 44" | 3 | Paolo Savoldelli (It) | Discovery Channel | 35" | |
4 | Marzio Bruseghin (It) | Fassa Bortolo | 48" | 4 | Damiano Cunego (It) | Lampre–Caffita | 1'15" | |
5 | Serhiy Honchar (Ukr) | Domina Vacanze | 51" | 5 | Dario Cioni | Liquigas–Bianchi | 1'27" |
9th stage
Alessandro Petacchi got his first victory in the 2005 Giro. Paolo Bettini and Swiss Aurélien Clerc had a great performance at this stage, surpassing pure sprinters such as Robbie McEwen or Erik Zabel.
Stage | Tour (Maglia Rosa) | |||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
# | Name | Team | Time | # | Name | Team | Time | |
1 | Alessandro Petacchi (It) | Fassa Bortolo | 3:15'32" | 1 | Danilo Di Luca (It) | Liquigas–Bianchi | 39:22'19" | |
2 | Paolo Bettini (It) | Quick-Step–Innergetic | 0" | 2 | Ivan Basso (It) | Team CSC | 9" | |
3 | Aurélien Clerc (Sui) | Phonak | 0" | 3 | Paolo Savoldelli (It) | Discovery Channel | 35" | |
4 | Robbie McEwen (Aus) | Davitamon–Lotto | 0" | 4 | Damiano Cunego (It) | Lampre–Caffita | 1'15" | |
5 | Erik Zabel (Ger) | T-Mobile Team | 0" | 5 | Dario Cioni (It) | Liquigas–Bianchi | 1'27" |
10th stage
On the stage after the race's first rest day, Robbie McEwen took vengeance on Alessandro Petacchi in a bunch sprint. The bunch spring had to be solved with the aid of the photo-finish, which determined that the Australian had beaten the Italian by a mere question of millimeters.
Stage | Tour (Maglia Rosa) | |||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
# | Name | Team | Time | # | Name | Team | Time | |
1 | Robbie McEwen (Aus) | Davitamon–Lotto | 5:29'21" | 1 | Danilo Di Luca (It) | Liquigas–Bianchi | 44:51'40" | |
2 | Alessandro Petacchi (It) | Fassa Bortolo | 0" | 2 | Ivan Basso (It) | Team CSC | 9" | |
3 | Stuart O'Grady (Aus) | Cofidis | 0" | 3 | Paolo Savoldelli (It) | Discovery Channel | 35" | |
4 | Erik Zabel (Ger) | T-Mobile Team | 0" | 4 | Damiano Cunego (It) | Lampre–Caffita | 1'15" | |
5 | Paolo Bettini (It) | Quick-Step–Innergetic | 0" | 5 | Dario Cioni (It) | Liquigas–Bianchi | 1'27" |