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2011 Giro d'Italia

2011 Giro d'Italia
2011 UCI World Tour, race 14 of 27
A physical map of Italy, with the host cities for the Giro marked with red and green dots and the route among them drawn with purple lines.
Overview of the stages; purple lines represent distances covered in the individual stages,
while black dotted lines are the distances covered in transfers between the stages
Race details
Dates 7–29 May
Stages 21
Winning time 84h 11' 24"
Results
Jersey awarded to the overall winner Winner  Michele Scarponi (ITA) (Lampre–ISD)
  Second  Vincenzo Nibali (ITA) (Liquigas–Cannondale)
  Third  John Gadret (FRA) (Ag2r–La Mondiale)

Points  Michele Scarponi (ITA) (Lampre–ISD)
Mountains  Stefano Garzelli (ITA) (Acqua & Sapone)
Youth  Roman Kreuziger (CZE) (Astana)
  Team Astana
  Team Points Lampre–ISD
← 2010
2012 →
Jersey awarded to the overall winner Winner  Michele Scarponi (ITA) (Lampre–ISD)
  Second  Vincenzo Nibali (ITA) (Liquigas–Cannondale)
  Third  John Gadret (FRA) (Ag2r–La Mondiale)

Points  Michele Scarponi (ITA) (Lampre–ISD)
Mountains  Stefano Garzelli (ITA) (Acqua & Sapone)
Youth  Roman Kreuziger (CZE) (Astana)
  Team Astana
  Team Points Lampre–ISD

The 2011 Giro d'Italia was the 94th Giro d'Italia, one of cycling's Grand Tours. The race started on 7 May with a team time trial in Turin to celebrate the 150th anniversary of Italian unification, when the city served as the first capital of the single state.

The route was one of the most difficult in the modern history of the race, with substantial criticism that it was simply too hard for a three-week-long race. Of the seven stages categorized as 'high mountain', six had summit arrivals, highlighted by the three stages before the second rest day ending at Grossglockner in Austria, the exceptionally steep Monte Zoncolan, and a tall and steep peak near the Fascia Valley in Gardeccia. There was also, for the fifth consecutive Giro, a climbing time trial, this one to the Nevegal. Of the race's 18 mass-start stages, only three ended with the majority of the field together at the front of the race.

In the third stage, Leopard Trek rider Wouter Weylandt crashed coming down the Passo del Bocco, near the town of Mezzanego, suffering catastrophic injury. Despite substantial resuscitation efforts, he was established to have died on the spot. The fourth stage was not competitively raced; instead, it was run as a cycling procession. On the second rest day, Xavier Tondó, a member of Movistar Team, was killed in an accident at his home. Although he was not a participant, his death caused his teammates and other members of the peloton to pay tribute to him in the subsequent stages.

Strong overall favorite Alberto Contador was the race's original winner, in what constituted his second Giro championship. His winning margin ahead of second-placed Michele Scarponi was over six minutes. He also won the points competition as the most consistent high finisher, also with a substantial lead over Scarponi in second place, and Vincenzo Nibali completed the podium. In the other sub-classifications, Stefano Garzelli won the mountains competition and Roman Kreuziger finished as the best rider aged 25 or under in the general classification; he finished the race fifth overall.


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