1910 Giro d'Italia explained

1910 Giro d'Italia
Date:18 May  - 5 June 1910
Stages:10
Distance:2987.4
Unit:km
Time:114h 24' 00"
Speed:26.08
First:Carlo Galetti
First Nat:ITA
First Natvar:1861
First Team:Atala-Continental
Second:Eberardo Pavesi
Second Nat:ITA
Second Natvar:1861
Second Team:Atala-Continental
Third:Luigi Ganna
Third Nat:ITA
Third Natvar:1861
Third Team:Atala-Continental
Team:Atala-Continental
Team Nat:ITA
Team Natvar:1861
Previous:1909
Next:1911

The 1910 Giro d'Italia was the second edition of the Giro d'Italia, a Grand Tour organized and sponsored by the newspaper La Gazzetta dello Sport. The race began on 18 May in Milan with a stage that stretched 388km (241miles) to Udine, finishing back in Milan on 5 June after a 277.5km (172.4miles) stage and a total distance covered of 2987.4km (1,856.3miles). The race was won by the Italian rider Carlo Galetti of the Atala-Continental team, with fellow Italians Eberardo Pavesi and Luigi Ganna coming in second and third respectively.[1]

Eberardo Pavesi was the first rider to lead the race after winning the first stage into Udine. After the second stage, Carlo Galetti took the lead of the race. Galetti then successfully defended the lead all the way to the race's finish in Milan. En route to his overall victory, Galetti won two stages. The Atala-Continental team finished as winners of the team classification.[2]

Changes from the 1909 Giro d'Italia

One major change was made to the calculation for the general classification before the start of the second Giro d'Italia.[2] Originally a point was given to each rider for his placing on each stage,[3] but the organizers chose to give the riders who placed 51st or higher in a stage 51 points and keep the point distribution system the same for the riders who placed 1st through 50th in a stage.[2] [4]

The organizers chose to increase the length of their race after the success from the first edition.[2] [5] The original race was eight stages long and the 1910 edition was increased by two stages, to ten.[2] [5] The overall length of the race was increased to close to 3,000 kilometers,[5] which made the race close to 500 kilometers longer than the inaugural edition of the race.[2]

Participants

See main article: List of teams and cyclists in the 1910 Giro d'Italia. A total of 101 riders started the second Giro d'Italia out of the 118 that signed up to participate.[5] Of the 101 riders that began the Giro d'Italia on 18 May, twenty of them made it to the finish in Milan on 5 June.[2] Riders were allowed to ride on their own or as a member of a team.[2] There were six teams that competed in the race: Atala-Continental, Atena-Dunlop, Bianchi-Dunlop, Legnano-Dunlop, Otav-Pirelli, and Stucchi-Pirelli.[2]

The notable participants included the reigning champion of the Giro d'Italia, Luigi Ganna.[2] The peloton also contained some of the most famous Italian cyclists at the time in Carlo Galetti, Ezio Corlaita, Giovanni Rossignoli, and Eberardo Pavesi.[2] Two-time Tour de France champion Lucien Petit-Breton rode the Giro for the second straight year, along with his fellow countryman Jean-Baptiste Dortignacq who had been successful in the Tour.[2] The Giro also saw its first German participants, neither of whom completed the race.[2]

Race overview

The first stage of the second Giro d'Italia began with a large send off in the start city of Milan.[5] The finish in Udine was hotly contested as five riders came to the finish line in a pack.[5] Ernesto Azzini managed to out-sprint the other four riders in the leading group to win the stage.[5] The next stage saw the first non-Italian stage winner in the history of the Giro d'Italia, the Frenchman Jean-Baptiste Dortignacq.[5] [6] [7] Dortignacq managed to breakaway from his fellow group member Carlo Galetti and then solo to the stage victory while five other riders chased close behind.[2] [5] Galetti's second-place finish on the stage was high enough for him to take the lead of the race.[5] The French success enraged the Italian fans and led the competing riders to ban unite against the foreign riders.[2] The third stage saw three major Italian riders, Luigi Ganna, Carlo Galetti, and Eberardo Pavesi, and attack early on in the stage.[2] [6] The three riders then rode together all the way to the finish in Teramo.[6] [8] Galetti went on to win the stage, with Ganna and Pavesi following in quick succession.[8]

The Giro's fourth stage saw a tough stage with poor conditions for the riders, which ultimately led to the withdrawal of many riders including the likes of Lucien Petit-Breton - who was ranked third overall at the time.[8] The peloton's pace was slower due to the w poor conditions, which caused the riders to arrive two hours later than expected in Naples.[8] Pierino Albini beat out the Frenchman Maurice Brocco by 36 seconds for stage victory.[2] [8] Prior to the fifth stage's start, Frenchman Jean-Baptiste Dortignacq withdrew from the race after citing an illness.[2] [8] The police suspected foul play and looked into the situation, but their results are disputed through contradicting stories.[2] Due to impassable roads, the start of the fifth stage was moved from Naples to Capua and decreased the distance of the stage from 224.1km (139.2miles) to 192.3km (119.5miles).[8] Eberardo Pavesi won the fifth stage after leading for most of the race.[8]

The peloton remained intact for roughly the first half of the sixth stage.[9] Luigi Ganna and Carlo Galetti broke away from the pack and made it to the finish in Rome where Ganna then edged out Galetti for the stage victory.[9] During the next stage, a group of six riders lead for the most part before Galetti and Ganna broke away again.[9] The two riders made their way to the finish in Genoa, where a large crowd of spectators came to see the finish.[9] Ganna went on to win his second consecutive stage, while Galetti extended his lead over the rest of the field.[9] The race's eighth stage contained some harsh climbs, most notably the Giovi.[2] [9] The finish of the stage was hotly contested as Galetti, Ganna, and Eberardo Pavesi finished at the same time, with Galetti winning the stage in the end.[9]

Eberardo Pavesi dominated the difficult ninth stage that contained the major climbs of the Nava, Tenda, and San Bartolomeo.[2] [9] Pavesi went on to win the stage by close to six minutes over the second-place finisher Luigi Ganna.[9] The race's tenth and final stage was marred by rain.[1] Race leader Carlo Galetti crashed into a hay wagon early on in the stage and sustained some heavy wounds,[6] he would get back on his bike and finish the stage in fifth place.[1] [2] Despite the rain in Milan, many spectators still came to watch the riders arrive.[1] Luigi Ganna was the first rider to cross the finish line in Milan and in doing so, he won his third stage of the 1910 Giro d'Italia.[1] [2] Carlo Galetti won the Giro d'Italia by a margin of eighteen points over Pavesi.[1] Galetti and his team, Atala-Continental, won the team classification.[2]

Final standings

Stage results

Stage results
StageDateCourseDistanceType[10] WinnerRace Leader
118 MayMilan to Udine388km (241miles)Plain stage
220 MayUdine to Bologna322.4km (200.3miles)Plain stage
322 MayBologna to Teramo345.2km (214.5miles)Plain stage
424 MayTeramo to Naples319.5km (198.5miles)Stage with mountain(s)
526 MayNaples to Rome192.3km (119.5miles)Plain stage
628 MayRome to Florence327.5km (203.5miles)Stage with mountain(s)
730 MayFlorence to Genoa263.5km (163.7miles)Stage with mountain(s)
81 JuneGenoa to Mondovì218.1km (135.5miles)Stage with mountain(s)
92 JuneMondovì to Turin333.4km (207.2miles)Stage with mountain(s)
105 JuneTurin to Milan277.5km (172.4miles)Stage with mountain(s)
Total2987.4km (1,856.3miles)

General classification

There were 20 cyclists who had completed all ten stages. For these cyclists, the points they received from each of their stage placing's were added up for the general classification. The cyclist with the least accumulated points was the winner. Ezio Corlaita won the prize for best ranked isolati rider in the general classification.[11]

Final general classification (1–10)[12]
RankNameTeamPoints
1Atala-Continental28
2Atala-Continental46
3Atala-Continental51
471
5Otav-Pirelli77
6 Atala-Continental87
7Otav-Pirelli102
8Otav-Pirelli114
9120
10132

References

Citations

Notes and References

  1. News: La Vuelta De Italia . es . 16 June 1910 . 3 . El Mundo Deportivo . El Mundo Deportivo S.A. . 27 May 2012 . PDF . The Giro d'Italia . https://web.archive.org/web/20140303073547/http://hemeroteca-paginas.mundodeportivo.com/EMD02/HEM/1910/06/16/MD19100616-003.pdf . 3 March 2014 . dead .
  2. Web site: McGann . Bill . McGann . Carol . 1910 Giro d'Italia . Bike Race Info . Dog Ear Publishing . 10 July 2012. https://web.archive.org/web/20140223035301/http://www.bikeraceinfo.com/giro/giro1910.html . 23 February 2014.
  3. Web site: McGann . Bill . McGann . Carol . 1909 Giro d'Italia . Bike Race Info . Dog Ear Publishing . 10 July 2012. https://web.archive.org/web/20140304151837/http://www.bikeraceinfo.com/giro/giro1909.html . 4 March 2014.
  4. Web site: The Second Giro in 1910 . Cycling Revealed . Barry Boyce . 2004 . 16 April 2013 . https://web.archive.org/web/20150923212125/http://www.cyclingrevealed.com/timeline/Race%20Snippets/GdI/GdI_1910.htm . 23 September 2015 . dead .
  5. News: La Vuelta De Italia . es . 26 May 1910 . 5 . El Mundo Deportivo . El Mundo Deportivo S.A. . 27 May 2012 . PDF . The Giro d'Italia . https://web.archive.org/web/20140430082920/http://hemeroteca-paginas.mundodeportivo.com/EMD02/HEM/1910/05/26/MD19100526-005.pdf . 30 April 2014 . dead .
  6. Web site: Eugenio Capodacqua. it. 10 May 2007. La storia del Giro d'Italia (1909-1950). La Repubblica. Gruppo Editoriale L’Espresso. 27 December 2007 . https://web.archive.org/web/20071224103726/http://www.repubblica.it/2007/05/speciale/altri/2007giroditalia/storia-3/storia-3.html. 24 December 2007. live. The history of the Tour of Italy (1909-1950).
  7. News: El inicio . es . El País . Ediciones El País . 27 May 2013 . The Start . https://web.archive.org/web/20140704190436/http://www.elpais.com/deportes/ciclismo/giro-de-italia/historia/1909-1914/ . 4 July 2014 . dead .
  8. News: La Vuelta De Italia . es . 2 June 1910 . 5 . El Mundo Deportivo . El Mundo Deportivo S.A. . 2 June 2012 . PDF . The Giro d'Italia . https://web.archive.org/web/20160304114850/http://hemeroteca-paginas.mundodeportivo.com/EMD02/HEM/1910/06/02/MD19100602-005.pdf . 4 March 2016 . dead .
  9. News: La Vuelta De Italia . es . 9 June 1910 . 2 . El Mundo Deportivo . El Mundo Deportivo S.A. . 27 May 2012 . PDF . The Giro d'Italia . https://web.archive.org/web/20160304112120/http://hemeroteca-paginas.mundodeportivo.com/EMD02/HEM/1910/06/09/MD19100609-002.pdf . 4 March 2016 . dead .
  10. In 1910, there was no distinction in the rules between plain stages and mountain stages; the icons shown here indicate that the fourth, fifth, sixth, seventh, eighth, ninth, and tenth stages included major mountains.
  11. Web site: I vincitori delle categorie speciali. Corriere dello Sport. 14 June 1950. 6. 7 July 2013. it. The winners of the special categories. https://web.archive.org/web/20141222201219/http://dlib.coninet.it/bookreader.php?&c=1&f=7924&p=5. 22 December 2014. live.
  12. Web site: Giro d'Italia 1910 . Cycling Archives. 16 April 2013.