2015 Giro d'Italia Stage 8 Live Coverage

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Welcome to our live coverage of Stage 8 of the 2015 Giro d'Italia! Our live profile and commentary are below, followed by a preview of the technical aspects of the route.

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Fiuggi, the start of yesterday's finish, will see the riders off for Stage 8. The riders will encounter some hills on the route as they work their way to Campitello Matese, making this route a challenging one. Forca d'Acero Cat. 2 climb is the first KOM of the day at 80.7 km, and points will also be available on the finishing climb at Campitello Matese. Intermediate sprints will take place in Sora at 51 km and Isernia at 148 km.

Manzoni said weather will be a factor in determining the outcome of this stage.

“There are a number of issues to factor in here, but this is going to be a really hard stage regardless,” he said. “It’s inland and you could just as easily have torrid heat as real, biting cold. They’re going to be up and down all day, with no respite. So there will be attack after attack, and that’s going to hurt. Then I know from experience that the final climb is really hard. It may not look it on paper, but I can assure you that the gradients are really irregular, so you’re going to see a natural selection.”

Even though Manzoni said this stage is extremely difficult to call, his feeling is a select group of GC contenders could come in first.

“In addition certain riders are going to be feeling the Giro by now, particularly guys who haven’t been used to riding a grand tour,” Manzoni said.

Moment in time

The ski station at Campitello Matese has played host to six stage finishes and they’ve generally been belters. Take the first of them, for example, won by Varzi’s Carlo Chiappano. Chiappano was one of Italy’s very best gregari. Prior to 1969 he’d ridden seven seasons as a pro and had won just once.

Instead he’d been in the employ of guys such as Imerio Massignan, Italo Zilioli and Felice Gimondi, the cream of Italian cycling. This season he was supposed to ride for Gianni Motta, but Motta was out injured. Chiappano therefore had carte blanche – or rather carta bianca – at Tirreno-Adriatico and decided to go with the breaks. Somehow they kept staying away and he wound up on the podium in Marche wearing the winner’s jersey. It obviously lifted his spirits. At the Giro time trial in Tuscany, he amused the tifosi by riding round with an umbrella. The tifosi, but not the jury. They promptly fined him 50,000 lire. Miserable so-and-sos.

Stage 10 would include the first summit finish, at Campitello Matese. It was slated as the first GC sort-out, but debutant Pietro Tamiazzo wasn’t hanging around for that. He took off and rode 170 lonely kilometres, before being snared by Chiappano. He jumped out of an eight-man counter offensive with Ugo Colombo, Italy’s other gregario di lusso. Colombo fell away half way up and, as luck would have it, the favourites came over all timorous. As they dithered, Carlo Chiappano took his one and only Giro stage win and simultaneously settled his account with the jury. He who laughs last…

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