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1952 Giro d'Italia

1952 Giro d'Italia
Race details
Dates 17 May - 8 June
Stages 20
Distance 3,964 km (2,463 mi)
Winning time 114h 36' 43"
Results
Jersey awarded to the overall winner Winner  Fausto Coppi (ITA) (Bianchi)
  Second  Fiorenzo Magni (ITA) (Ganna)
  Third  Ferdinand Kübler (SUI) (Fiorelli)

  Mountains  Raphaël Géminiani (FRA) (Bianchi)
  Team Bianchi
← 1951
1953 →
Jersey awarded to the overall winner Winner  Fausto Coppi (ITA) (Bianchi)
  Second  Fiorenzo Magni (ITA) (Ganna)
  Third  Ferdinand Kübler (SUI) (Fiorelli)

  Mountains  Raphaël Géminiani (FRA) (Bianchi)
  Team Bianchi

The 1952 Giro d'Italia was the 35th edition of the Giro d'Italia, one of cycling's Grand Tours. The Giro started off in Milan on 17 May with a 217 km (134.8 mi) flat stage and concluded back in Milan with a 147 km (91.3 mi) relatively flat mass-start stage on 8 June. Sixteen teams entered the race, which was won by Italian Fausto Coppi of the Bianchi team. Second and third respectively were Italian Fiorenzo Magni and Swiss rider Ferdinand Kübler.

Sixteen teams were invited by the race organizers to participate in the 1952 edition of the Giro d'Italia. Each team sent a squad of seven riders, which meant that the race started with a peloton of 112 cyclists. From the riders that began the race, 98 made it to the finish in Milan.

The teams entering the race were:

One jersey was worn during the 1953 Giro d'Italia. The leader of the general classification – calculated by adding the stage finish times of each rider – wore a pink jersey. This classification is the most important of the race, and its winner is considered as the winner of the Giro.

Additionally, the highest ranked cyclist riding with a licence for independents was identified by the white jersey; at the end of the Giro this was Donato Zampini. The mountains classification leader wore no leader's jersey. There was one category for mountains which awarded 6, 4, 3, 2, and 1 point to the first riders to cross. Although no jersey was awarded, there was also one classification for the teams, in which the stage finish times of the best three cyclists per team were added; the leading team was the one with the lowest total time.


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