Refresh
Signs of movement in the peloton. First attacks are starting from Intermarché with the one categorised climb of the day approaching. Lilian Calmejane is the most active.
120KM TO GO
A look at the peloton on today’s third stage.
130KM TO GO
With the first chance of a sprint incoming, make sure you catch up with what 12-time Giro stage winner Robbie McEwen had to say to Cyclingnews about the sprint field.
‘Giro d’Italia sprints are going to be incredible’- Robbie McEwen rates the sprint contenders
Thumbs up and a wave from Fabio Jakobsen to the camera. He said to media this morning that the stage will be his to go for as plan A but if he isn’t feeling good then Tobias Lund Andresen will have the same freedom he had at the Tour of Turkey where he scored three stage wins.
140KM TO GO
Here’s what one of the favourites for the day, Tim Merlier, had to say about today’s potential sprint:
“It will be a hard final, it will make it really hectic. Some riders will be on the limit. It is a strange finish in the end but we will see what happens,” he told CyclingProNet.
“The seasons started really well so I want another one today.”
He’ll have a strong side dedicated to helping him reach the finish today with Bert Van Lerberghe and Luke Lamperti as two of his last men in the train. Julian Alaphilippe could also be involved to ride the punchy climb near the finish on the front for Merlier.
150KM TO GO
Pogačar and Geraint Thomas are taking the chance to have a chat after the GC action exploded yesterday. It won’t be a day for either of them today with a calm sprint stage on the menu. They’ll be eyeing the final 3km and a safe run into Fossano
Big smile on the face of Cian Uijtdebroeks to the camera as the young Visma man started his first day in white at the Giro. He moved into the lead of the young rider’s classification with a top ride yesterday up to Oropa.
Cian Uijtdebroeks hits ground running in Giro d’Italia debut with youth classification lead
Here’s that chat between Fiorelli and Pogačar with the Italian wondering whether the Slovenian had his colours mixed up when he put on his shorts this morning. The ciclamino bottom half has been causing quite a stir on social media.
160KM TO GO
Full status quo on the peloton for now with everyone happy for a calm start after two full gas days of racing in the hills and mountains. All eyes will be on the finale.
A look at the jersey wearers on stage 3 of the Giro d’Italia: Cian Uijtdebroeks in white, Pogačar in pink, Fiorelli in ciclamino and Dani Martínez who is looking after the blue KOM jersey for the Slovenian race leader. Andrea Piccolo (EF Education EasyPost) was also on the front row after his efforts in the break yesterday.
166KM TO GO
Davide Ballerini is enjoying a chilled start to the day and tucking into some haribos out of the lead race car. He’ll either be on duty for his own ambitions or Max Kanter at the finish today.
Bubbling underneath the pure sprinters is a whole host of fast men who are more than punchy enough to survive those late steep pinches in the road:
– Laurence Pithie (Groupama-FDJ)
– Biniam Girmay (Intermarché Wanty)
– Matteo Trentin (Tudor)
– Filippo Ganna (Ineos Grenadiers)
– Christophe Laporte (Visma-Lease a Bike)
– Timo Kielich (Alpecin-Deceuninck)
Unofficial Start
Pogačar’s shorts are looking rather ciclamino, however, and he’s shared a friendly chat with the maglia ciclamino wearer Filippo Fiorelli on the start line. If he is to hold his lead, expect to see him fully in pink as the days go on.
Here he is then. Race leader Tadej Pogačar gears up for the start of stage 3 in the maglia rosa.
Its a big day for Olav Kooij and Visma-Lease a Bike as the Dutchman eyes his first opportunity to take a Grand Tour stage win on debut. Visma set stage wins as their main objective for this year’s Giro and sprinter Kooij will be the focus with a strong leadout train of Edoardo Affini, Tim van Dijke and Christophe Laporte.
Pogačar looks resplendent in the pink jersey, taking time to sign autographs ahead of signing on. It should be a day of staying safe in the peloton with the race leader not getting carried away despite taking a big lead yesterday.
Here’s what Caleb Ewan had to say ahead of the stage:
“Now I’ve had a really good preparation for the Giro and I feel really good so hopefully I can go for some stages here,” said Ewan in Novara to CyclingProNet.
In his pomp, Ewan would have been perfectly suited to a punchy run into a sprint so if he’s anywhere near back to his best it could be a chance to score his sixth Giro stage win.
“I think a finish like this suits me, with some of the sprinters legs I guess being a bit tired at the top of the climb. I think it is going to be really tough but it should come down to a sprint.”
Here’s a look at Jonathan Milan arriving at the start of today’s stage. He’ll fancy his chances even with the steep pinches near the finale. Milan won the first sprint opportunity at last year’s race and held the maglia ciclamino right the way through to Rome.
However, looking closer at today’s finish in Fossano reveals a much punchier final few kilometres than a simple flat run-in. The road up to Fossano takes the riders off a main road and onto a steeper duo of switchbacks. This steep pinch could prove a real problem for the purer sprinters mentioned earlier.
Aside from Merlier, there are a whole host of other sprinters at this year’s Giro in one of the most stacked fields for a while:
– Olav Kooij (Visma-Lease a Bike)
– Jonathan Milan (Lidl-Trek)
– Caleb Ewan (Jayco AlUla)
– Fabio Jakobsen and Tobias Lund Andresen (DSM-Firmenich PostNL)
– Alberto Dainese (Tudor)
– Kaden Groves (Alpecin-Deceuninck)
– Phil Bauhaus (Bahrain-Victorious)
– Danny van Poppel (Bora-Hansgrohe)
– Juan Sebastián Molano (UAE Team Emirates)
Riders are completing sign-ons and the team presentation ahead of the third stage. Piemonte native Filippo Ganna (Ineos Grenadiers) gets the biggest cheer of the day so far.
One man who will certainly be happy to be back in Novara is Tim Merlier. This is where the Belgian sprinter won his first Grand Tour stage in 2021 when he took victory in the second stage ahead of Giacomo Nizzolo. He’s riding for a different team in 2024 with Soudal-QuickStep but he’ll be hoping for similar success today.
We’ve unfortunately had the second abandon of the 2024 Giro d’Italia, with Eddie Dunbar leaving the race due to injuries he sustained yesterday.
Eddie Dunbar pulls out of the Giro d’Italia after crashing on stage 2
We’re around 45 minutes away from the neutralised start in Novara.
With the move into the maglia rosa, here’s a look at Pogačar customised bike for the third day. Nothing crazy for now but the pink accents do make that Colnago look even sweeter.
Yesterday’s dominant display from Tadej Pogačar on the first summit finish of the race saw him move into the pink jersey with a 45-second lead on Geraint Thomas heading into today’s stage. If you missed out on the Slovenian’s stunning solo victory, catch up with how he did it below.
Giro d’Italia: Tadej Pogačar crashes but then cracks rivals with solo attack to win stage 2 to Oropa
The race stays in the Piedmont region in northwest Italy with a 166km route starting in Novara and heading south to Fossano. There isn’t much in the way of climbing along the route with just a singular category 4 climb to content with, so those with fast men should look to control.
After an exhilarating opening weekend of racing with the GC action exploding in Turin and up Oropa, today’s third stage should be the first opportunity for the sprinters’ teams to show themselves and fight it out in a big bunch finish.
Buongiorno and welcome to our live coverage of stage 3 of the 2024 Giro d’Italia!