"I think they completely misjudged the circuit": Bart Wellens breaks down how the breakaway pulled off a miracle in Milan

Cycling
Monday, 25 May 2026 at 09:00
Captura de ecrã 2026-05-24 155022
A flat Grand Tour stage finishing in Milan is usually an absolute lock for a bunch sprint, but stage 15 of the Giro d'Italia completely flipped the script. To the shock of the peloton, a four-man breakaway defied the odds, holding off the chasing pack to contest the victory, with Fredrik Dversnes taking a stunning win. While some frustrated riders pointed fingers at motorbike drafts, Lotto-Intermarché sports director Bart Wellens argues that a brutal mix of extreme heat, cumulative fatigue from a hard mountain stage the day before, and a tricky city circuit created the perfect storm for an upset.

Motorbike drama or a misjudged chase?

In the immediate aftermath of the stage, tension was running high in the peloton. Riders like Tim Torn Teutenberg and Elmar Reinders openly grumbled that the four attackers had received an unfair aerodynamic boost from the media and race motorbikes humming ahead of them on the road.
However, Wellens, who has been tracking every kilometer of this Giro from the team car, believes the sprinters' teams just underestimated the technical layout of the closing city circuit.
“I think they completely misjudged the circuit,” Wellens told Sporza. “The gap was down to two minutes, and we were already saying in the team car that it was going to be a tough ask to bring them back. You could see the riders chasing in tenth to fifteenth position were absolutely turning themselves inside out just to hold the wheel.”

Accumulated fatigue and brutal heat

The physical toll of a the second week of the Giro also played a massive role. The day prior, the peloton endured one of the hardest stages of this edition, and combined with the stifling weather, many of the leadout trains were running on empty before the chase even truly began.
“The warm weather is really hacking into everyone," Wellens explained. "I think a lot of guys suffered immensely yesterday. There were three sprinters' teams who had something to prove today because of crashes in Bulgaria and Naples earlier in the race. They wanted to show their strength, but the legs just weren't there.”
Wellens also pointed out that the logistics of the race act as a hidden drain on the peloton's energy. “It has already been a deeply exhausting Giro with all the long transfers between the stages. It’s a combination of everything. Those four guys at the front put their heads down and rode full gas right from the start. In the end, Dversnes is a completely well-deserved winner.”
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