However the quality of the winners over the past 15 years is outerwordly, with many of the world's very best climbers winning the overall classification at the prime of their career. Cadel Evans, Vincenzo Nibali, Alberto Contador, Nairo Quintana, Primoz Roglic, Simon Yates, Tadej Pogacar, Jonas Vingegaard... It's hard to image a better list.
In 2025 Juan Ayuso inserted his name amongst the greats, winning the overall classification after winning the queen stage, dethrnoing a Filippo Ganna who showed the very best climbing legs of his career.
Profile stage 7: Civitanova Marche - San Benedetto del Tronto
Stage 7: Civitanova Marche - San Benedetto del Tronto, 142 kilometers
The race finishes off with the traditional circuit in San Benedetto del Tronto, after a stage that can see the breakaway become quite dangerous. That is because, unlike all other stages, this one is quite short - only 142 kilometers in length - and has an explosive start.
Two small climbs provide the classics specialists and those looking to make one more bid for success to attack; and the pan-flat final hours of racing will be extremely fast, which allows any escapee group to ride quite fast and try to prevent the peloton from coming back.
The finale is not overly technical, and the chances are that a bunch sprint will end up deciding the outcome of the stage.
The Favourites
We should see another bunch sprint decide the race but this one much more pure and at the end of an easier stage than the other bunch sprint we've seen. There it was
Tobias Lund Andresen who won after a strong leadout and with some uphill gradients that burned out a few riders. The Danish sprinter certainly has the talent to replicate that win in San Benedetto del Tronto however it will be much more a game of chance than the previous one.
And the arguments for the main men remain the same, as
Jasper Philipsen will have Mathieu van der Poel to back him up and in peak form;
Jonathan Milan has his mega leadout which should work on paper; whilst the likes of
Paul Magnier,
Arnaud de Lie and
Sam Welsford have all given good signs recently and can take the win if they find themselves in the right position at the right time.
Added to the equation are riders such as Pavel Bittner, Giovanni Lonardi, Danny van Poppel, Oded Kogut, Madis Mihkels, Luca Mozzato and Andrea Vendrame who should be able to do well on a bunch sprint finish.
I don't think it's reasonable to expect someone like Mathieu van der Poel or Filippo Ganna to head into the breakaway or give it a go, despite using this week to prepare for Milano-Sanremo. That is because they will be on leadout duties, but the same can't be said of Wout van Aert who is unlikely to battle in the bunch sprint and may together with Tim Rex and Timo Kielich try to form a strong group early on in the day.
This is a stage that can see a front group succeed despite the interests in the peloton, because the hilly section of the day provides that space and the finale is simply very fast where it is not easy to close down gaps. It depends a lot on the group that finds itself in front; it can be made more dangerous with the addition of riders such as Jonas Abrahamsen, Dries de Bondt, Alberto Bettiol, Julian Alaphilippe or Vincenzo Albanese - if Ben Healy himself doesn't try.
Prediction Tirreno-Adriatico 2026 stage 7:
*** Jonathan Milan, Jasper Philipsen, Tobias Lund Andresen
** Sam Welsford, Arnaud de Lie, Paul Magnier
* Pavel Bittner, Danny van Poppel, Giovanni Lonardi, Madis Mihkels, Luca Mozzato, Andrea Vendrame
Pick: Jasper Philipsen
How: Regular bunch sprint.
Original: Rúben Silva