Earlier in the day a large twelve-rider breakaway had animated the 207-kilometre stage from Tagliacozzo.
Riders including Tibor Del Grosso, Ivan Garcia Cortina, Liam Slock, Laurenz Rex, Dries De Bondt and Jonas Abrahamsen built a lead of more than three minutes while UAE Team Emirates - XRG controlled the peloton behind in defence of Isaac del Toro’s blue leader’s jersey.
The escape gradually fractured during the rolling second half of the stage before the peloton caught the final survivor, Jakub Otruba, at the foot of the decisive Tortoreto climb.
Visma detonates the race
Team Visma | Lease a Bike then lit the fuse of the finale. Matteo Jorgenson took control of the peloton after teammate Timo Kielich swung off the front, setting a relentless pace that rapidly reduced the field.
Under the American’s pressure, the peloton shrank to around twenty riders, with Van der Poel, Wout van Aert, Filippo Ganna, Primoz Roglic and Ben Healy all remaining near the front.
The brutal tempo immediately distanced several prominent names, including Julian Alaphilippe, Richard Carapaz and Magnus Sheffield.
Del Toro attacks on final climb
Race leader Del Toro then launched a fierce acceleration on the steepest section of the Tortoreto climb. Van der Poel responded instantly, while Van Aert also followed as the front group was reduced to the strongest contenders.
Attacks continued after the summit as riders attempted to break the stalemate.
Giulio Pellizzari tried to surprise the group on the descent before Jorgenson launched a move of his own, but Del Toro repeatedly shut down the attempts.
Andrea Vendrame and Jan Christen later managed to fight their way back to the front group, ensuring the stage would be decided by a select group of favourites.
Van der Poel finishes the job
The tactical battle continued into the final kilometre. Jan Christen launched the first attack before Filippo Ganna accelerated shortly afterwards, but neither move was able to break the group apart.
Van Aert briefly increased the pace as the riders prepared for the sprint before Van der Poel launched his decisive effort inside the final few hundred metres. The Dutchman surged clear to take the stage victory ahead of the elite group of contenders after one of the most aggressive finales of the race so far.
The result confirms Van der Poel’s strong early-season form while Isaac del Toro remains well-positioned to defend the race lead heading into the next stages of
Tirreno-Adriatico.