Koen Bouwman takes his first-ever grand tour stage victory in frenetic day of racing.
At the finish, he launched his sprint to the line very early but was able to hold off Mollema and Davide Formolo (UEA Team Emirates). With two riders in the move, Jumbo-Visma had the upper hand but it also had the pressure to perform. After the long and slow burn that was stage 7, Friday’s racing more than made up for it with action right from the start.
Diamante - Potenza km This is the penalty you get for a cozy beach stage yesterday. Should be a nasty fight to get in a...
This is the penalty you get for a cozy beach stage yesterday. How Trek decide to protect pink could also have a big impact on how hard the start gets. Should be a nasty fight to get in a breakaway with good chances to make it to the end.
2022 Giro d'Italia - STAGE 7 preview. 4728m climbing, near 200 kilometers, 4 categorized climbing, a real hard stage. Can an escape group survived?
Romain Bardet Romain Bardet Don’t be surprised either to see Mathieu Van der Poel having a day in the front with his new best friend Biniam Girmay.
'Tu si l'azzurro dò mare sì duci e si amar' dear Naples. 09:24:51 - May 13, 2022. This is the emotional Jumbo-Visma view ...
It's been a long day in the saddle but it was a great stage to follow blow by blow. One time on the climb I had troubles but I came back and I was confident for the sprint. "It wasn’t my plan to go in the break but I found myself in there by coincidence. At the back of the pack, the sprinters are struggling and hurting. Swift and Puccio are leading the chase. It's 5:10 now as the break comes close to the sprint in Viggiano. Though Bouwman and Dumoulin will move back into the top ten overall. The two groups combine to create a seven-rider break. The run-in to the finish in Potenza is far from simple, a short 2.3km climb with 7km remaining. The toughest test of the day is the category 1 Monte Sirino after 90km. The gradient is only 3/4 % but hurts at this speed. The riders are lined-up and ready.
After two days off for the GC favourites, the spotlight shifts onto the battle for the maglia rosa on Stage 7.
It's nice to see Dumoulin on the front of the race again - he was dropped on the first climb after picking up a puncture. 145km to go: Wout Poels was caught by Fomolo and Perez shortly after the summit and they're descending as a trio - although the Dutchman is taking some of these damp corners quite gingerly. - off the front of the pack. The 2017 Giro winner stops on the side of the road and swaps back to his favoured steed - it's a lighter bike with more aero wheels. Not for the first time today: he punctured on the first climb of the day and was momentarily distanced by the pack. The gap drops to four minutes accordingly for the break - so that takes the pink jersey out of the equation for Bouwman and Mollema. The gap back to the peloton is still 5:35 and so it's touch and go for the pink jersey. Bouwman has many options today: the stage win, the pink jersey and the blue jersey (where he finds himself just two points away from the summit). This is a great turnaround for Jumbo-Visma, who also have Tom Dumoulin in the break, after their troubled start to the Giro. The gap is growing again - 5:40 now - so Bouwman is back in the virtual pink jersey. Jumbo-Visma put in a series of attacks through Bouwman and Dumoulin before Mollema takes advantage of a lull to go on a steep part of the climb. After a fast descent there are some lumps and bumps in the run into Potenza - incouding the punchy ramp to the second sprint at Potenza Centro - before the final uphill rise to the line, which ramps up to 13%. This is followed by another attack by Mollema, who powers clear to take the intermediate sprint ahead of Bouwman and Formolo. And this time it looks like Dumoulin has been dropped for good.
Giro Stage 7 Race Report: A super strong break formed early and was whittled down to four riders: Koen Bouwman, Davide Formolo, Tom Dumoulin and Bauke ...
Bouwman was first at the summit of the Montagna Grande di Viggiano, putting him in the lead of the KOM. On the descent, Villella was also able to return to the front. The 2017 Giro winner then took the lead in the service of Bouwman. Just before the top Mollema tried again and Bouwman and Formolo jumped on his wheel. I was confident that I would win the sprint but I didn’t expect the finish to be that steep. The Italian was able to get back on the bike and take his place in the leading group. Since moving to Spain and finding out how to use a computer, he has gone from contributor of Daily Distractions at the 2002 Vuelta a España to editor at PezCyclingNews. Formolo and Mollema were able to get to him, but Bouwman had to leave a gap. On the Passo Colla, the first climb of the day, Wout Poels attacked and was the first over the top, collecting the first points for the mountains classification. The leading group had 5 minutes at the top of the Monte Sirino, where Bouwman was the first over the top for 40 mountain points. Four Dutchmen were in front with Wout Poels (Bahrain Victorious), Tom Dumoulin and Koen Bouwman (Jumbo-Visma) and Bauke Mollema (Trek-Segafredo). The others were Davide Villella (Cofidis), Diego Camargo (EF-EasyPost) and Davide Formolo (UAE). Koen Bouwman won the seventh stage of the Giro d’Italia. In Potenza, the Dutchman of Jumbo-Visma was the best of a leading group of four men. There was a fierce battle for the break of the day, with a particularly fast pace. The bunch came in at 3 minutes with Juan Pedro López keeping the pink jersey.
Tom Dumoulin helped Koen Bouwman claim his first career grand tour victory from a breakaway as Jumbo-Visma's switch to target stage wins delivered quick ...
It was a languorous day in the saddle for most of the peloton, with just Diego Rosa (Eolo-Kometa) braving his arm, the Italian riding out in front on his lonesome for 140km, before the sprinters' teams came to the fore. The former Liège-Bastogne-Liège winner gained up to around 30sec on the peloton, while further back attacks came and went as riders marked each other. Another bike change for Tom Dumoulin who switches back to his climbing bike. Koen Bouwman rolls through the intermediate sprint first to pick up 12 points, the Jumbo-Visma rider is looking supremely relaxed. Fortunately, though, the Italian managed to find a soft landing in the grass verge at the side of the road. If the stage were to end now, Juan Pedro López would keep hold of the pink jersey. One rider rises out of his saddle to put a bike length or two into the group, before he his countered. Tom Dumoulin rolls off the front, team-mate Koen Bouwman stoically refuses to chase forcing Bauke Mollema into doing some of the heavy lifting. The Trek-Segafredo rider gains a few bike lengths on Dumoulin and Davide Formolo, but Koen Bouwmanis unable to hold their wheels. And the road pitches up to a very steep gradient. He will not panic, but instead stick to riding at his own measured pace. After the disappointment we had at Mount Etna, we decided to chase stages and that's what we did today.”
Superb Jumb-Visma teamwork leads Dutchman to his first Grand Tour stage win.
From there, Dumoulin clearly sacrificed his chances to enable Bouwman to sit in approaching the line. With two steep climbs, including one to the line, within 9km to go, there were inevitably more attacks. That attack was short lived, as were those from Mollema and Formolo, save for briefly distancing Bouwman at one point. The first man to get away in earnest was Wout Poels (Bahrain-Victorious), who forged on alone approaching 155km to go. On the La Sellata climb the break really began to fall apart under the strain of the two Jumbo-Visma riders. Ten kilometres later and some riders in the break began to struggle.
Outsider Koen Bouwman won stage 7 of the Giro d'Italia on Friday when four riders escaped from the main peloton along the 196km route from Diamante to ...
"AS we came to the line I knew it was mine to win," he said. "Tom was a great help because there were two of us, I'm really happy how it all went," said Bouwman, who came 12th on the Giro in 2021. Bouwman rode the final kilometres with his team leader the 2017 Giro winner Tom Dumoulin, a third Dutchman in Bauke Mollema, and Italy's Davide Formolo of Team UAE.
Koen Bouwman (Jumbo–Visma) won Stage 7 of the Giro d'Italia as Juan Pedro López (Trek – Segafredo) retained the maglia rosa.
But such were the efforts to jettison the 2017 champion that Dumoulin was able to dig deep and return to the fold. Twice Dumoulin was dropped after the experienced duo of Mollema and Formolo looked to end Jumbo-Visma’s numerical advantage. Maximum points over both Monte Sirino and Monte Grande di Viggiano saw Bouwman move ahead of Kamna in the king of the mountains classification. “In the final we were four guys with the two of us – and Tom did a superb job in the last two kilometres. “But I came back and I was actually confident for the sprint. The 2017 Giro champion was a key cog in the day’s breakaway and then battled back into contention on numerous occasions during a thrilling finale before helping to tee up Bouwman for the win.
POTENZA, Italy — Dutch cyclist Koen Bouwman claimed a first grand tour stage victory after winning a tough Stage 7 of the Giro d'Italia, as Juan Pedro Lopez ...
Stage 8 sees the Giro return to Naples for the first time since 2013 when the city hosted the start of the Italian grand tour. “One time on the climb I had a bit of trouble. “Unbelievable, like my first victory in the Dauphine, I can’t believe it,” he said.
Potenza, Italy, (APP - UrduPoint / Pakistan Point News - 13th May, 2022 ) :Giro d'Italia results and standings after the 196km seventh stage between ...
Alejandro Valverde (ESP/MOV) 2:23. Jai Hindley (AUS/BOR) 2:16, 15. Mikel Landa (ESP/BAH) 2:15, 13. Richie Porte (AUS/INE) 2:04, 10. Wilco Kelderman (NED/BOR) 1:55, 7. Pello Bilbao (ESP/BAH) 2:00, 9. Jai Hindley (AUS/BOR) s.t., 36. Wilco Kelderman (NED/BOR) s.t., 31. Richie Porte (AUS/INE) s.t., 28. Romain Bardet (FRA/DSM) 2:59, 12. Simon Yates (GBR/BIK) 2:59, 13. Alejandro Valverde (ESP/MOV) 2:59, 10.
Image 1 of 41. POTENZA ITALY MAY 13 Koen Bouwman of Netherlands and Team Jumbo Visma celebrates winning during the. Giro d'Italia stage 7: Koen Bouwman ...
While focusing on and writing on tech topics, his varied skills and experience enable him to write on any topic related to tech which may interest him. Pioneer Jury is a qualified writer and a blogger, who loves to dabble with and write about technology. Koen Bouwman (Jumbo-Visma) claimed the first Grand Tour stage victory of his career on stage 7 of the Giro d’Italia, winning from the breakaway on a brutal and breathless stage to Potenza.
Koen Bouwman (Jumbo-Visma) might have been the winner on Friday, but Tom Dumoulin (also Jumbo-Visma) will be feeling almost as good as his countryman for ...
After the two sprint stages, it meant that there hasn't been much of a revolution in the standings since Etna on stage four. On Friday, however, it was common knowledge that a break would have a good chance of making it to Potenza alone. At one point, Carapaz and Van der Poel were up the road, while at another Kämna was attempting something, but it all came to nothing. My favourite event is Strade Bianche, but I haven't quite made it to the Piazza del Campo just yet. In the end, Poels paid for his repeated aggression, being dropped from the break and swallowed by the peloton. It did not work, but it is clear he has the legs, and the desire, for the pink jersey. Stage seven saw the riders tackle 4730 metres of climbing, an enormous test after Thursday's sleepy stage. It just looks out of place, especially when they're not even controlling the pink jersey yet. Yet it is clear that he has designs on a bigger objective, the maglia rosa. Ineos Grenadiers appear to like trains more than the train guy, returning to their favourite mountain tactic without achieving much yet again on stage seven. On Friday, he even attempted an early attack, with 154km to go, to try and put his rival under pressure. However, the Dutch team were able to quickly refocus and restructure their plan.