2009 UCI World Ranking, race 13 of 24 | |||
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Overview of the stages: route from Venice to Rome covered by the riders on the bicycle (red) and distances between stages (green). |
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Race details | |||
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Dates | 9–31 May 2009 | ||
Stages | 21 | ||
Distance | 3,456.5 km (2,148 mi) | ||
Winning time | 86h 03' 11" | ||
Results | |||
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Winner |
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(Rabobank) |
Second | Empty | ||
Third |
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(Cervélo TestTeam) | |
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Points |
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(Rabobank) |
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Mountains |
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(Acqua & Sapone–Caffè Mokambo) |
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Youth |
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(Quick-Step) |
Team | Astana | ||
Team Points | Team Columbia–High Road | ||
The 2009 Giro d'Italia was the 92nd running of the Giro d'Italia, one of cycling's Grand Tours. It was held from 9 to 31 May 2009, and marked the 100th year since the first edition of the race. Starting in Venice and finishing in Rome, 22 teams competed over 21 stages.
The Giro was raced on a unique path through Italy, taking the peloton to some historic cities and towns in Italian cycling. Though the route lacked any well-known, storied climbs, the many intermediate and mountain stages in the second and third weeks of the race proved deceptively difficult. The 10th and the 16th stages were both called the race's queen stage, as both contained multiple difficult mountain climbs.
Riders protested during the ninth stage, a criterium in Milan. This protest was nominally about the overall safety conditions of the stage, and was sparked by life-threatening injuries sustained by Pedro Horrillo the day before. In the protest, riders declined to contest the stage except for a final sprint finish, a decision that proved controversial with race organizers and fans.
Denis Menchov won the race, having taken the lead in a long time trial in stage 12, and defended vigorously against attacks by his closest challenger, Danilo Di Luca, during the mountain stages of the final week. Di Luca came in second, 41 seconds behind the winner, and won the mauve jersey as points classification winner. Subsequent to the Giro, both he and third-place finisher Franco Pellizotti became embroiled in doping scandals, were given bans, and had their results stripped.
Twenty-two teams were announced for the Giro. These included fifteen ProTour teams, and seven Professional Continental teams. Three ProTour teams did not wish to participate, and were thus not invited: Cofidis, Euskaltel–Euskadi, and Française des Jeux. Conversely, the organizers of the race originally declined to invite Fuji–Servetto, but changed this decision on 23 April, inviting them as the Giro's 22nd and final team. Each team sent a squad of nine riders, so the Giro began with a peloton of 198 cyclists.