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1986 Giro d'Italia

1986 Giro d'Italia
Race details
Dates 12 May – 2 June
Stages 22 + Prologue
Distance 3,858.6 km (2,398 mi)
Winning time 102h 33' 55"
Results
Jersey awarded to the overall winner Winner  Roberto Visentini (ITA) (Carrera–Inoxpran)
  Second  Giuseppe Saronni (ITA) (Del Tongo-Colnago)
  Third  Francesco Moser (ITA) (Supermercati Brianzoli-Essebi)

Points  Guido Bontempi (ITA) (Carrera Jeans)
Mountains  Pedro Muñoz (ESP) (Fagor)
Youth  Marco Giovannetti (ITA) (Gis Gelati-Oece)
  Team Supermercati Brianzoli-Essebi
← 1985
1987 →
Jersey awarded to the overall winner Winner  Roberto Visentini (ITA) (Carrera–Inoxpran)
  Second  Giuseppe Saronni (ITA) (Del Tongo-Colnago)
  Third  Francesco Moser (ITA) (Supermercati Brianzoli-Essebi)

Points  Guido Bontempi (ITA) (Carrera Jeans)
Mountains  Pedro Muñoz (ESP) (Fagor)
Youth  Marco Giovannetti (ITA) (Gis Gelati-Oece)
  Team Supermercati Brianzoli-Essebi

The 1986 Giro d'Italia was the 69th running of the Giro d'Italia, one of cycling's Grand Tours races. The Giro started in Palermo, on 12 May, with a 1 km (0.6 mi) prologue and concluded in Merano, on 2 June, with a 108.6 km (67.5 mi) mass-start stage. A total of 171 riders from nineteen teams entered the 22-stage race, that was won by Italian Roberto Visentini of the Carrera–Inoxpran team. The second and third places were taken by Italian riders Giuseppe Saronni and Francesco Moser, respectively.

Swiss rider Urs Freuler was the first rider to wear the race leader's maglia rosa (English: pink jersey). The race lead was passed between five riders across the first five days of racing. Saronni gained the overall lead after the conclusion of the sixth stage and maintained an advantage through the fifteenth day of racing. As the race crossed several Alpine passes in the sixteenth stage, Visentini gained the race lead due to his strong performance on the stage. Visentini then defended the race lead until the race's conclusion on 2 June.

Amongst the other classifications that the race awarded, Guido Bontempi of Carrera–Inoxpran won the points classification, Pedro Muñoz of Fagor won the mountains classification, and Gis Gelati-Oece's Marco Giovannetti completed the Giro as the best neo-professional in the general classification, finishing eighth overall. Supermercati Brianzoli finishing as the winners of the team classification, ranking each of the twenty teams contesting the race by lowest cumulative time.


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