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Giro d'Italia: Crostis dropped from tomorrow's Zoncolan stage - here are new route details

Lack of ambulance and team car access prompts UCI race jury to remove climb and descent

Organisers of the Giro d’Italia have announced that tomorrow’s Stage 14 from Linz to Monte Zoncolan will not now feature the climb and descent of Monte Crostis, which had been due to make its debut in the race. The decision was made by Thierry Diederen, chairman of the UCI race jury, but is against the wishes of the organisers themselves, who had added safety features including plastic netting and crash mattresses. The revised stage profile is shown in the picture above, and the revised timetable can be found here.

Rider safety in this year’s Giro is under greater scrutiny than ever before as a result of Wouter Weylandt’s death on Stage 3, and the main reasons given for the jury’s decision were the difficulty of access for ambulances as well as the poor road surface.

Another issue was the fact that team cars would have been unable to follow the race while the riders were on the Crostis, which the race jury felt detracted from the sporting element of the stage. The cars will now be able to follow the riders to the foot of the Zoncolan.

Giro race director Angelo Zomegnan, quoted in the Gazzetta dello Sport, insisted this evening that the perceived hazards of the stage had already been addressed: “For us, security and compliance with sporting regulations had been assured before this decision and still are now.”

He added: “We invite all the fans who would have waited for the riders passing on the Crostis to move onto the Zoncolan for a great day of cycling.”

The alternative route to the Zoncolan avoiding Monte Crostis has been revealed this evening and as a consequence of the route changes, the distance of the stage from Linz to Zoncolan has been cut by 20km to 190km.

While the Zoncolan was always going to be decisive tomorrow, it will probably to play more of a key role than it would have done had the Crostis still been included, with the GC group now likely arriving at the foot of the climb together – something that would have been unlikely had they ridden over the Crostis first.
 

Simon joined road.cc as news editor in 2009 and is now the site’s community editor, acting as a link between the team producing the content and our readers. A law and languages graduate, published translator and former retail analyst, he has reported on issues as diverse as cycling-related court cases, anti-doping investigations, the latest developments in the bike industry and the sport’s biggest races. Now back in London full-time after 15 years living in Oxford and Cambridge, he loves cycling along the Thames but misses having his former riding buddy, Elodie the miniature schnauzer, in the basket in front of him.

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James Warrener | 13 years ago
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Seeing some of the photos doing the rounds and baring in mind what has happened in the Giro, this is a common sense; albeit late in the day, decision.

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martincashman | 13 years ago
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 2 Oh Poo! Working nights but was gonna get up early to watch this, should still be a good finish but the unpredictability of Monte Crostis would have turned the excitement up to 11.

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