Behind the maglia rosa, the fight for the podium briefly opened before settling again inside the final kilometres. Gall, Jai Hindley, Derek Gee-West, Egan Bernal and Thymen Arensman regrouped behind Vingegaard, leaving the top five on course to remain unchanged, while Afonso Eulalio resisted one final move from Davide Piganzoli in the white jersey battle.
Early break gives Visma a target
The final mountain stage of the 2026 Giro d’Italia opened with a tribute in Gemona del Friuli, where the peloton paused near the cemetery to commemorate the victims of the 1976 Friuli earthquake. Vingegaard also wore a modified pink jersey carrying the message “Friuli thanks and does not forget” as the race marked 50 years since the disaster.
Once racing began, Team Visma | Lease a Bike worked to prevent a large move from going clear before a smaller break was allowed up the road. Jonas Geens, Jack Haig and Guillermo Thomas Silva opened the gap, Axel Huens and Andreas Leknessund bridged across, and Larry Warbasse and Manuele Tarozzi later made contact after a long two-man chase.
That left a seven-man break of Geens, Tarozzi, Huens, Haig, Warbasse, Leknessund and Silva, with Haig the best placed overall but almost two hours down on Vingegaard. Silva beat Leknessund at the first intermediate sprint, before Leknessund took the KOM points on the category-three climb of Clauzetto.
Visma kept the gap below five minutes before the first ascent of Piancavallo, where Tim Rex and Victor Campenaerts began to reduce both the break’s advantage and the peloton behind. Tarozzi and Silva were the first to lose contact at the front, followed by Huens and Geens, leaving Haig, Warbasse and Leknessund as the three survivors from the original escape.
Haig led Warbasse and Leknessund over the top of the first Piancavallo passage, with Giulio Ciccone then sprinting from the peloton to take sixth over the summit. Those points made the mountains classification mathematically safe, leaving the Italian secure in the maglia azzurra as long as he reaches Rome.
Vingegaard attacks as final climb breaks Giro open
Ciccone briefly led the reduced peloton on the descent before Ludovico Crescioli and Igor Arrieta attacked. They linked up with Huens, then closed the gap to Haig, Warbasse and Leknessund in the valley, creating a new six-man lead group before the final ascent of Piancavallo.
Their advantage grew to just over two minutes before the road kicked up for the last climb of the Giro, but Visma never allowed the stage to drift away. Campenaerts continued to drive onto the lower slopes before finally swinging off, leaving Vingegaard with Bart Lemmen, Sepp Kuss and Piganzoli.
The break began to fracture almost immediately. Huens lost contact, Haig was dropped after Warbasse lifted the pace, and Arrieta and Crescioli then moved clear with Leknessund still close enough to respond.
Behind them, the GC group also started to shrink. Ben O’Connor and Giulio Pellizzari were among those distanced, while the main podium contenders stayed together until Vingegaard made his move.
The Dane attacked with around 11 kilometres remaining. Gall was the only rider able to follow at first, but the Austrian lasted barely a kilometre before Vingegaard rode clear alone.
Vingegaard quickly caught and passed Crescioli and Leknessund to take the lead of the stage, opening around 30 seconds over Gall as the final climb continued. Gee-West then attacked from the favourites’ group, with Hindley following to protect his podium place.
For a moment, the podium and top-five battle looked ready to reopen. Gall, Hindley and Gee-West came together around a minute behind Vingegaard, while Arensman briefly had to chase after a chain issue. The Dutchman quickly recovered, however, and with Bernal’s support he returned to the group behind the maglia rosa.
That regrouping took much of the tension out of the GC battle behind Vingegaard. With Gall, Hindley, Gee-West, Bernal and Arensman back together, the top five looked set to remain unchanged, while the Dane continued to increase his advantage alone at the front.
Piganzoli made one final acceleration from the group containing Eulalio, but the Portuguese rider stayed with him and protected his advantage in the young rider classification. That effectively ended Visma’s hopes of adding the white jersey to their Giro dominance.
Vingegaard had time to enjoy the final kilometre, raising his fist as he moved towards the line with the stage and the Giro all but secured. The final climb left the same image that has defined this race: the maglia rosa alone at the front, and everyone else fighting over what remained.