TOUR Online
· 30.05.2026
On the final weekend of the men's Giro d'Italia, the Giro d'Italia Women started at the same time with a flat stage along the Adriatic Sea over 139 kilometres from Cesenatico to Ravenna. The finale took place over several laps on a 13-kilometre course around the finish town - with the expected bunch sprint as the outcome.
Victory went to Lorena Wiebes (Team SD Worx - Protime), the big favourite in the run-up to the race. Her rivals had no chance against her early start and acceleration. With her commanding sprint victory, she swapped her Dutch champion's jersey for the second stage for the pink leader's jersey. Elisa Balsamo (Lidl - Trek) took second place ahead of Lara Gillespie (UAE Team ADQ).
The Giro d'Italia Women started a month earlier than usual, as the organiser RCS Sport has implemented a new team planning. This is to avoid the overlap with the men's Tour de France and to give the women's Giro more attention.
On the first stage, only 240 metres in altitude had to be conquered - there was no mountain classification. A mass arrival was the expected outcome of this stage. Accordingly, any escape attempts were hopeless right from the start.
Nevertheless, after a few kilometres, four Italians - Sharon Spimi (Top Girls Fassa Bortolo), Valeria Curnis (Isolmat - Premac - Vittoria), Ilaria Marinetto (Team Mendelspeck E-Work) and Sofia Arici (Vini Fantini - BePink) - tried their luck as breakaways. While Marinetto dropped back early on, the other three riders built up an interim lead of around four minutes. In the peloton, Team SD Worx - Protime and UAE Team ADQ coordinated the chase.
A mass crash on the road led to Car Ferguson (Movistar Team) retiring early. Overall, there were several crashes during the stage.
With 50 kilometres to go, the peloton caught up with the three breakaway riders. In the meantime, Team Lidl-Trek also took part in the pace work. With the prospect of a bunch sprint and the first pink jersey of the tour, the race became extremely hectic in the finale, especially in the final kilometres. However, there were no further crashes. Lorena Wiebes then proved to be unbeatable in the bunch sprint.