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Live Coverage - Stage 9 Giro d'Italia

Published: May. 18, 2008
  • 01:02 PM: Good day and welcome

    to VeloNews.com's Live Coverage of the 9th stage of the 91st edition of the Giro d'Italia., a nearly dead flat 218-kilometer race from Civitavecchia to San Vincenzo, a beautiful little town on the Leghorn coast in the southern portion of Livorno province.

  • 01:10 PM: Early attack

    Almost from the gun, we saw Yuriy Krivtsov (Ag2r) tear out of the field, intent on trying one of those headbangers' suicide breaks. Fortunately for him, he got company within a few kilometers and now he and Mickael Buffaz (Cofidis) have built up a quick lead of 7:15 after 28km of racing. Neither man poses a real threat to the overall standings, with Buffaz starting the day in 110th place, 48:19 out of first. Krivtsov is even further down, in 129th, at 56:34.

    Assuming that there are some in the peloton aching for a stage win - especially the sprinters in the bunch - we can expect a chase to kick in with plenty of time to reel these two back in before the race reaches San Vincenzo.

  • 01:14 PM: For those Astana fans

    in the crowd, the good news is that Alberto Contador did manage to make the start today and was among the 181 riders to roll off the starting line. He's a little worse for wear, but he's up and riding and has tomorrow's rest day to recover from the crash-related scrapes and bruises he suffered yesterday. He still has to be considered as one of the favorites for Tuesday's time trial, a stage that is sure to shake out the GC.

  • 01:16 PM: The escapees

    are bumping up their advantage as they pass the 40km mark. They have a lead of 8:13, but that may be due in part to the mellow approach the peloton is taking this afternoon. The average speed for the first hour today was just 38.23kph. Not exactly zippy.

  • 01:20 PM: Today's weather

    we might see a bit of rain today. There's a 35% chance of showers under cloudy skies, with temperatures in the mid-60s (20c). Winds may not be much of an issue today, as some had feared, with winds only around 8mph (13kph).

    Near the finish, the chance of showers increases to 58% and temperatures will be close to 70 degrees (21c).

  • 01:27 PM: Drop us a line

    If you have a question, suggestion or complaint, drop down and click on the "Contact our editors" link and we'll try to answer at least a few of those during today's update.

  • 01:36 PM: It's not really fair

    to say that today's stage is pan-flat. There is one rated climb at 175km, the Category 3 Campiglia Marittima and a few small unrated climbs, but none of the bumps in the road really poses much of a barrier to sprinters' chances for making it to the finish today.

  • 01:45 PM: Any bets?

    Assuming that out two escapees are going to be caught, you'd have to expect this to be a sprinters' day, but which one of the fast-twitch crowd are you going to put your money on. Of course the natural abilities of sprinters play a big part in determining the outcome, but so do motivation and psychology. After Mark Cavendish (High Road) made the statement that he is ranked among the world's best, we think Silence-Lotto's Robbie McEwen may need to show the young upstart who's boss. We're putting our bets on Robbie the Rocket today.

  • 01:49 PM: At 65km

    the two escapees have upped their advantage to 9:25. Now that sounds large, but do remember that there are still many kilometers to cover and it wouldn't take too much effort for the peloton to negate that within 70 or 80km. If the sprinters' teams really ramp it up, it could disappear much faster than that.

  • 01:54 PM: Winds

    coming off the Mediterranean are not as much of a factor as some might have feared today. The route today is largely on the coast, so strong winds could break things up as much as a day in the mountains, but it's not likely to happen today.

  • 01:58 PM: The gap

    is holding at around 9:15. It looks like the field has settled in for a long day in the saddle, having let out the amount of rope these two will be allowed to have. Let's keep an eye on the gap and track how these two fellers off the front fare for the next 150 (or so) kilometers.

  • 02:04 PM: The pace

    is not exactly frantic out there. After two hours of racing, the average speed is still just 37.5kph, meaning we've covered 75km thus far and the two leaders have an advantage of 9:30. As a reminder, we have Yuriy Krivtsov (Ag2r) and Mickael Buffaz (Cofidis) off the front, neither of whom poses much of a GC threat, so we doubt we'll see much of a big chase effort from the teams of the overall contenders, but the sprinters' teams will undoubtedly ramp up the effort once we get near the finish.

  • 02:15 PM: Poetry in the news

    So here's an interesting - albeit unrelated - news item. It seems someone in Scotland willingly paid nearly $13,000 for a collection of poetry by William Topaz McGonagall, the guy readers love to hate, noting he's the worst poet ever to launch an assault on the English language.

    His most (in)famous gem is, of course, his "The Tay Bridge Disaster":

    Beautiful Railway Bridge of the Silv'ry Tay!
    Alas! I am very sorry to say
    That ninety lives have been taken away
    On the last Sabbath day of 1879,
    Which will be remember'd for a very long time.

    Now, why mention it here? Long-time Live Update readers will, of course, remember our frequent Limerick and Haiku contests here. We may have to resurrect that idea... or perhaps a variation. In honor of the McGonagall sale, maybe we can ask you to top (sink below?) his effort by crafting a cycling-related poem of your own.

    Hit the "contact our editors" link below the update window and we'll try to publish the best... errrrr... worst.

  • 02:19 PM: The gap

    is inching (centimetering?) up. At 82.5km, the two escapees have upped their advantage to a peak of 9:45. There's still a long way to go though, and in this era of race radios, GPS and TVs in the team cars, they can't simply take advantage of the old "out-of-sight-out-of-mind" rule that applied in the golden days of bike racing.

  • 02:26 PM: 9:45 and holding

    Buffaz and Krivtsov are at 86.5km and are holding on to a lead of 9:45.

  • 02:34 PM: Reader question

    Robert N. from Redwood City, California, writes in:

    Dear Live Update Guy,
    I am struggling with my bad poem; you did set the bar high (low?) with McGonagal as the standard.
    But while I work on that, I wonder how old Dave Zabriskie is doing today. Any word from the Slipstream hero, who crashed so badly a week ago today?

    Robert, the latest we've heard is that his injuries, while painful, are not serious enough to have a long-term impact on his career.

    He's back home and says he has a doctor's appointment on Tuesday. He does say he's taking medication for the pain that inevitably accompanies a break in his L1 vertebra.

  • 02:43 PM: The first nip

    at 100km, the two leaders have had their lead trimmed to 9:15. It's the Quick Step team of race leader Giovanni Visconti is at the front of the field.

    Meanwhile reader Scotty G. sends in this gem; apparently not a vote of confidence in the escapees' chances today:

    Pedals turn in futility
    Among the men in the escape.
    They tilt the windmills over.

  • 02:52 PM: At 110km

    Our two leaders' advantage continues to slip slightly. Yuriy Krivtsov (Ag2r) and Mickael Buffalz (Cofidis) are now 9:10 ahead of the field.

    Meanwhile, reader John C, sends us this Giro-related gem:

    Alberto drank beer on a beach
    Thought the Giro was out of his reach
    But the race needed names
    So to Italy he came
    A hill climbing lesson to teach

  • 02:59 PM: At 115km

    the lead is holding, at around 9:15. Quick Step appears content to keep the gap steady, for now, although Paolo Bettini has to be aching for a win today, since the finish line is really quite close to his home town of Cecina.

  • 03:05 PM: Despite the forecast

    the threat of rain has never really developed. The sun is out and everyone seems relaxed out there. The gap is still 9:12.

  • 03:11 PM: Quick Step continues

    to do its share of the work at the front of the field. The gap is holding around 9:00.

    Reader Jeff E. (a Slipstream fan?) sends us this McGonagall-inspired poetry:

    Contador will climb no more,
    for it will not help his chances,
    The prize to be held,
    will go to Vande Velde,
    As through the TT he dances....

    Of the nine minutes back,
    3 or more he will hack,
    while his GC position enhances...

    p.s.
    (oddly both are former teammates of Lance's...)
    (and 2 of three won Tour de Frances...)
    (methinks that's enough of this rantses)

  • 03:19 PM: The winds

    are still reasonably light and, at this point, no factor at all, since the coast here is quite heavily forested and the road through which the peloton is travelling is about half-a-kilometer inland and the trees are offering plenty of protection from any breeze coming off the coast.

    Our two leaders' advantage has been cut to 8:35. The slow pull-back is underway, with 90km remaining in today's stage. We're putting our money on a catch.

  • 03:24 PM: Our two leaders

    continue to lose time. As they near the coastal community of Castiglione, their advantage has been trimmed to 8:26.

    Meanwhile, reader Andrew V. sends us this pair of Slipstream-inspired Limericks:

    Moustaches are not what you think
    They get in the way when you're trying to drink
    Zabriskie knew this
    Made him hard to miss
    Even with Christian in pink.

    Millar tossed his bike over the barrier
    Didn't think to pick it up and carry'er
    Now that Scot was pissed
    But one lucky fan wished
    And a brand new bike made him merrier!

  • 03:32 PM: Ode to the podium girl

    Reader Graham R.J. write an McGonagall-inspired ode to the podium girl:

    So fair is she!
    So fair her face
    So fair her pulsing figure

    Not so fair
    The maniacal stare
    Of her boyfriend who's much bigger.

    Man, Graham, it looks like you captured the soul of McGonagall with that one. You may have to contact Sotheby's to see if a signed broadsheet of that gem will draw a big equal to that of Friday's sale.

  • 03:39 PM: Olive trees

    vineyards and the Mediterranean coast and bike racing ... all under sunny skies and moderate temperatures in Italy. It just doesn't get any better than this.

    With 74km to go, our leaders' advantage has dropped to 8:05.

  • 03:41 PM: Sella

    the mountain leader is doing domestique duty today, hauling bottles up for the rest of the team.

  • 03:43 PM: Speaking of support

    work, the man in the maglia rosa, Quick Step's Giovanni Visconti is part of the chase effort, while teammate Paolo Bettini is tucked in behind, about two spots back. It's a sure sign that Quick Step's priority is getting the world champion a stage win on home turf today.

  • 03:47 PM: The gap

    has come down to 7:48. The peloton is visibly faster than the two men in the break and the gap will most certainly continue to drop.

  • 03:54 PM: In the town of

    Follonica, the two leaders pass under the day's intermediate sprint mark, meaning there are 62.5km remaining. The gap is down to 6:50... but we'll get a new time check when the peloton reaches Follonica.

  • 04:03 PM: After four hours

    in the saddle, we see the Milram and Liquigas teams moving riders up to lend a hand to the chase. The gap now is down to 7:20

  • 04:07 PM: Cross-cultural infection

    for the fifth day running, we see Bart Simpson hanging around the finish area.

  • 04:10 PM: With 52km to go

    there is still no sense of panic in the field. The gap is coming down slowly, around the 7:00 mark.

  • 04:19 PM: Okay, okay...

    we just mentioned cross-cultural infection. While Bart Simpsons' presence at the finish is bad enough, we just heard an Italian journalist use the phrase "the two men at the front will have to give 110-percent if they want to stay away."

    Ick.

    Meanwhile out on the road, the time gap is down to 6:45. These guys are going to have to give 110-percent if they want to stay away.

  • 04:21 PM: Sunny

    and nice out there. The wind is not a factor and the threat of rain in the weather report has not developed.

  • 04:23 PM: Tick, tick, tick tick

    the gap continues to fall. Our two leaders are just 6:18 ahead of the peloton, with 47km remaining.

  • 04:25 PM: sub-6

    Krivtsov (Ag2r) and Buffalz (Cofidis) are now 5:53 ahead of the field.

    Meanwhile Garrick S. writes a poem that may be a reminder of a need for humility

    Let's hear it for the Yanks and Vande Velde
    Perhaps state-side cycling has really gelled
    But with an election akimbo
    and the economy in limbo
    Let's hope their heads are not over-swelled

    "Akimbo?" Nice.

  • 04:30 PM: With 44km to go

    Yuriy Krivtsov (Ag2r) and Mickael Buffalz (Cofidis) are losing time and the gap is down to 5:30.

  • 04:34 PM: Climbing

    our two leaders are on the Category 3 Campiglia Marittima. It's ranked, but it does not appear to be much of an obstacle. Indeed, they're already over the top.

  • 04:36 PM: Remember

    that we won't be here with Live Updates tomorrow. It's the first of the Giro's two scheduled rest days. The next is on Monday, May 26th, Memorial Day, back in the U.S.

  • 04:37 PM: 40km to go

    the peloton is on the climb, while the leaders have just passed under the 40km mark.

  • 04:38 PM: Sella

    has moved out of the field, in an effort to snag the last point on the KOM. No one challenges. He hits the top 4:44 behind the two leaders. He'll wait for the peloton.

  • 04:40 PM: Coke break

    Mickael Buffaz (Cofidis) is downing a Coke, hoping the sugar/caffeine combo will hold him for another 39km.

  • 04:41 PM: The peloton

    hits the 40km to go mark.

  • 04:41 PM: And the leaders

    are now 4:28 ahead of the main field.

  • 04:47 PM: With the gap coming down

    and the finish line coming up, we see Robbie McEwen moving up in the field. Our European correspondent Andrew Hood has picked Daniele Bennati (Liquigas) for the win today. The Live Update Guy has already picked McEwen.

    A lot of you are going for the home-town fav' Paolo Bettini.

  • 04:48 PM: At the 35km to go mark

    the peloton crossed under the banner 4:23 behind the leaders. We see High Road, Milram and Liquigas at the front, lending a hand to Quick Step.

  • 04:48 PM: 4:00

    the gap is dropping rather quickly.

  • 04:52 PM: One guy we're not betting on

    is Danilo Hondo (Serramenti PVC Diquigiovanni). The returning doper isn't on form and we're still annoyed at the whole suspension thing.

    Meanwhile, reader Thomas Hartmann writes:

    Their once was a racer named Andy
    Whose talents on a bike were quite dandy
    The Hampster as he was known
    Into a Cinghiale he has grown
    Remains a Giro one and only

  • 04:53 PM: OUCH!!

    Filippo Savini (CSF Group Navigare) over-cooked a turn, hit a small concrete lip and crashed into a ditch. He doesn't look like he's going to be getting back on his bike. He is finally standing up.

    Up the road, the gap is down to less than 3:00.

  • 04:55 PM: A big day in cycling history

    It was on May 18, 1978, that Eddy Merckx officially retired ... although his last race was in March of that year. Merckx won 525 of the 1800 races he started, a stunning win ratio. One of the few major races that he never won was Paris-Tours.

    When Andrew Hood asked him about it during an interview in January, he shot back, "Well, you cannot win them all!"

    Problem was, he did!

  • 04:57 PM: Savini

    seems to have suffered a leg injury of sorts. He's able to drape his arms over two medical personnel, so we assume that there is no collarbone break. He is limping and it still doesn't look like he'll be able to finish today.

  • 04:58 PM: Well that shows how much we know

    Savini is being lowered onto his bike! He's going to try and finish.

    The two leaders have crossed through the finish area, beginning a 22.8km loop around the outskirts of town.

  • 04:59 PM: In other news

    around the peloton, Michael Rogers (High Road) makes his comeback at the Volta a Catalunya starting Monday. Rogers was hit by Epstein-Barr disease this spring

  • 05:00 PM: He gives up

    Savini has given up and climbed into an ambulance. We have to tip our hats to that guy. We would have stayed in the ditch, crying for our mothers.

  • 05:01 PM: The gap

    is now less than 2:00 as the peloton is on the final circuit.

    Meanwhile in other parts of Europe, Alejandro Valverde and Oscar Pereiro are checking out the Tour de France climbs in the Pyrenees this week while Stijn Devolder (Quick Step) is checking out the climbs in the Alps.

  • 05:04 PM: With 20km to go

    for the peloton, the gap has dropped to 1:30.

  • 05:06 PM: That little climb

    on the final lap is tougher than the profile would suggest. It has ramps that hit 12 percent and lasts a little more than 2km. We see a lot of the climbers coming to the front, but Quick Step is now keeping the pace high.

  • 05:08 PM: Bettini is taking a dig

    on the hill. He has Ricco and Sella on his wheel. They have a gap on the field. Meanwhile, Jim M in Brooklyn offers up:

    No 'stache
    Road rash
    Did Slipstream really think
    All this, after one glorious day in pink?

  • 05:10 PM: Sella moves off

    He's chasing after the two escapees, but Bettini and Ricco are waiting for the peloton.

  • 05:11 PM: Liquigas

    is driving at the front, while Sella is about to connect with two escapees. The peloton, however, is only about 10 seconds back.

  • 05:15 PM: Crash

    Christian Pfannberger (Barloworld) has crashed in the main field. He hit another rider and that is Bingen Fernandez (Cofidis). He's going to the hospital.

    Up front Sella is only a short bit ahead of the peloton. It looks like the days original break is over.

  • 05:16 PM: It's over

    Sella is just a few meters up the road.... no wait... he's caught.

  • 05:16 PM: The group is now all together

    Liquigas is up front, setting tempo, with 10km to go.

  • 05:18 PM: Sprinters

    are all moving up to the front. The pace is still being set by Liquigas and the Milram team of Erik Zabel is moving up, with 7.5km to go.

  • 05:20 PM: High Road

    is coming up fast, too. Cavendish wants a win, too. Let's see how the day shakes out. We're coming up to the finish soon.

  • 05:21 PM: Two trains

    We see both Liquigas and High Road both setting up finishing trains. You gotta figure McEwen is picking his wheels to grab on to. He rarely uses a leadout train of his own, rather opting to jump on the competition's.

  • 05:23 PM: Narrow roads

    and the peloton is fully under the command of the High Road squad. Are they going a little too early?

  • 05:24 PM: 2.5km to go

    We see Slipstream moving up... and High Road is still driving hard.

  • 05:25 PM: With 2km to go

    we still see High Road riders at the front and Liquigas tucked in behind.

  • 05:26 PM: Forster

    is being pulled up to the front. Cavendish is up there and there are Zabel and McEwen.

  • 05:27 PM: The SWARM

    Lampre moves up front as we enter the final kilometer.

  • 05:29 PM: Gatto goes

    from a long way out. Zabel is blocked by Bennati...

    Bennati and.... BETTINI. Paolo Bettini gets the stage! No, no... it's a photo finish. Bennati edges Bettini and McEwen is third.

  • 05:32 PM: Top five

    1. Daniele Bennati (I), Liquigas
    2. Paolo Bettini (I), Quick Step
    3. Robbie McEwen (Aus), Silence-Lotto
    4. Erik Zabel (G), Milram
    5. Koldo Fernandez (Sp), Euskaltel-Euskadi, all s.t.

    It looks like there will be no change in GC.

  • 05:38 PM: Okay, that's a wrap

    stay tuned for results, photos and a full stage report.

    Remember that tomorrow is a rest day, so we won't be here with a Live Update, but we'll be back on Tuesday with coverage beginning at 8:00 a.m. Eastern time in the U.S. Until then, enjoy your weekend. We hope you get a rest day, too.