Giro d’Italia 2015: Stage 20 Preview

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Stage 20: Sint Vincent › Sestriere – 196km

After Fabio Aru stormed back into 2nd place overall with his Stage 19 victory, only one GC-oriented stage remains in the 2015 Giro d’Italia. Stage 20 is all about the Colle delle Finestre, one of the hardest climbs the professional peloton will ride all year.

Stage 20 opens with 150km of flat, which will put some exhaustion into the legs before the brutal ascent to the Cima Coppi, the highest point in the Giro d’Italia. The Colle delle Finestre is 18.5km long with a 9.2% average gradient, and after a very steep short opening stretch, it’s pretty steady all the way up. About halfway to the top, however, the pavement runs out—the final 7.8 kilometers are undertaken on a dirt road. Interestingly enough, after the riders finally make their way to the top, they’ll have more racing to do. The summit is followed by a short but steep descent and then another climb, the 9.2km, 5.4% Cat. 3 ascent to the finish line in Sestriere.

The breakaway may get a lot of space early on in the day, but as this is the last opportunity for any GC riders to get anything done, the pace could kick up at a moment’s notice as the final climb looms—and it’s not over after that. A strong break will have a chance, but enough favorites could be looking to pick up stage wins in the Giro in this last opportunity that the pack will have a good chance of catching the riders up the road.

Alberto Contador has one final chance to win a stage in the race he’s dominated. Just as was the case on Stage 19, the only question on Stage 20 is whether or not he wants to put in the effort. If he does, he should be able to take the victory here—on the incredibly difficult Colle delle Finestre, he should be able to distance his rivals if he is so inclined.

If Contador doesn’t go on the attack, there will be a strong favorites to take up the task. Fabio Aru now has his stage win and he’s back in 2nd place. He seems to have refound some form after a few days of weakness but he might not want to risk his 2nd place with an attack on these unforgiving challenges. Mikel Landa, out of contract for next year and back to 3rd, may have more incentive to go on the move, and if Contador is back to focusing on Aru, that could spring Landa for another stage victory.

Ryder Hesjedal has been very strong these past few stages, but for all his efforts, he’s still outside the Top 5 on GC and lacking a stage win. Expect the same type of aggressive Hesjedal we’ve seen over the last week. He has one last opportunity to make something happen here, and it’s a good one, given the way he’s been going lately.

Steven Kruijswijk has lost the KOM jersey and is in a similar boat to the one Hesjedal is in, outside the Top 5 and without a stage victory, despite some great riding in this Giro. He’ll be a rider to watch as well. Another rider to watch: Yuri Trofimov had a bad day (relatively speaking) on Stage 19 but don’t count out the former mountain biker on the dirt road climb here on Stage 20.

For potential long-range winners, look to the names that have now become familiar in that conversation, names like Beñat Intxausti, Giovanni Visconti, Franco Pellizotti, Carlos Betancur, Esteban Chaves, Darwin Atapuma, Edoardo Zardini, Francesco Bongiorno, and Stefano Pirazzi.

VeloHuman Stage 20 Favorites

1. Alberto Contador | 2. Mikel Landa | 3. Ryder Hesjedal

Be sure to follow @VeloHuman on Twitter for more race analysis, and check back after the conclusion of Stage 20 for the preview of the final stage. Also, don’t miss the most recent episode of the Recon Ride podcast!

-Dane Cash

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