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1914 Giro d'Italia
Cycling race From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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The 1914 Giro d'Italia was the sixth Giro; it was organised and sponsored by the newspaper La Gazzetta dello Sport. The race began on 24 May in Milan with a stage that stretched 420 km (261 mi) to Cuneo, finishing back in Milan on 6 June after a 420.3 km (261 mi) stage and a total distance covered of 3,162 km (1,965 mi). The race was won by the Italian rider Alfonso Calzolari of the Stucchi team.[1] Second and third respectively were the Italian riders Pierino Albini and Luigi Lucotti.
It was the last Giro before the Great War and the first one with a final classification based on time rather than points.
It is remembered as the hardest Giro of the heroic period of bicycle racing. Besides five stages of over 400 km (and the longest ever average stage length), it included the longest stage ever in the history of the Giro: the Lucca-Rome stage won by Costante Girardengo. This edition of the Giro was run at the lowest average speed (23.374 km/h); marked the highest gap between the first and the second (1 hour, 55 minutes and 26 seconds); saw the longest ever stage by time taken (the Bari-L'Aquila). Only 8 riders (out of 81 participants) finished the race.
The sixth stage (Bari-L'Aquila) is remembered as the hardest stage in the history of the Giro, with many riders forced to retire, including the first of the general classification Giuseppe Azzini, who was found the next day resting in a country house.
The Giro organisation declared Calzolari winner after the race, but a legal battle started between the Giro organisation and the Italian Cycling Union, who thought Calzolari should have been removed from the race for taking help from a car, making Albini the winner. After 14 months in court, the final decision was in favor of the Giro organisation, thus making Calzolari the definitive winner.
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Participants
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Before the race started, 98 cyclists had entered themselves in the race, of which 35 were professional cyclists in a team, 41 were professional cyclists without a team, and 22 were amateurs (Italian: aspiranti). Favorites for the race were Lucien Petit-Breton from France, and Ganna, Galetti, Girardengo, Giuseppe Santhià and Azzini from Italy.[2] There was no fixed number for cyclists per team; teams could decide for themselves how many riders to enter. Bianchi sent 8 riders, while Stucchi and Globo only sent 4 riders.[3]
Race director Cougnet decided to allow amateurs due to the low number of cyclists and teams that had registered in the weeks prior to the start.[4] Many of these riders were unemployed and borrowed bikes in order to participate.[4] Umberto Ripamonti was the youngest to enter the race at age nineteen.[5]
At 24 May, when the Giro began, 81 of them started the race; only eight of them made it to the finish in Milan on 7 June.[6] Riders were allowed to ride on their own or as a member of a team. There were eight teams that competed in the race: Alcyon, Atala, Bianchi, Ganna, Gerbi, Globo, Maino, and Stucchi.[6] The field featured three former Giro d'Italia champions in the 1909 winner Luigi Ganna, three-time winner Carlo Galetti, Eberardo Pavesi who was a member of the 1912 Atala winning team, and returning champion Carlo Oriani.[6] Other notable Italian riders that started the race included Costante Girardengo, Angelo Gremo, Alfonso Calzolari, and Giovanni Gerbi.[6]
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Race summary
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The race itself began at midnight.[5] Angelo Gremo won the first stage ahead of Carlo Durando and Alfonso Calzolari who finished over thirteen minutes in arrears. After those three finishers, 34 more crossed the line with the last rider finishing 7 hours after Calzolari.[7] Only three aspiranti riders remained.[7] Three riders were disqualified for being pulled by cars, which meant that half of the cyclists were already out of the race after the first stage.[8]
Calzolari won the second stage, leaving all other riders so far behind that he took the lead. Calzolari stayed safe in the third stage. In that third stage, Lauro Bordin escaped after 15 km, and rode alone for 350 km, which made it the longest (unsuccessful) breakaway in the history of the Giro.[9]
Calzolari seemed to be the strongest rider, and was at that point expected to win.[8] From then on, Calzolari's tires started to puncture more than normal. Sometimes at a checkpoint where riders had to place their signatures, or when they had to carry their bicycles. In this way, Calzolari's competition won back some time in the fourth stage, which was won by Giuseppe Azzini, with a margin of over 36 minutes. The fifth stage was also won by Giuseppe Azzini, this time more than an hour ahead of the next cyclist. This is the biggest stage winning margin in Giro history,[10] a record that is practically impossible to ever be broken. Azzini had won back enough time to lead the general classification, and was announced as new leader. Later that evening, he was given a penalty of one minute for taking a shortcut, which would have put him back in second place. Due to unclarity about when this penalty should take effect, he is often still regarded as leader after the fifth stage.[11]
The next stage is regarded as the toughest stage in the Giro ever. It was very long, and the weather was terrible. Giuseppe Azzini did not finish this stage; he had last been seen 30 km from the finish. The organisation started a search for Azzini, who was found the next morning.[8] Because Azzini had not finished the stage, this was the first time in Giro history that the winner of a stage did not finish the next stage.[12] Carlo Oriani also abandoned in that stage, which meant that there was no previous Giro winner anymore in the race.[13] Calzolari stayed in the race, and he led the race again. However, he was accused of having been pulled by a car. Previously riders had been expelled from the race for this infraction, but the jury decided to give Calzolari a time penalty of three hours.[8]
Calzolari did not get into problems anymore in the last two stages, and thereby won the 1914 Giro d'Italia.
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Final standings
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The race compared to the previous year's edition featured fewer stages and a longer total distance.[14] The route covered the whole stretch of the country from northwest to southeast in Bari.[14] Race director Armando Cougnet decided to abandon the points system for calculating the general classification in favor of a purely time based approached where the leader was the rider with the lowest total time raced for all stages – a decision the Tour de France director Henri Desgrange did in 1913.[4] The prize for winning the race in 1914 was 3,000 lire.[4]
Stage results
The stages in the 1914 Giro were unusually long; stages 1, 3, 6, 7 and 8 are the longest 5 stages in the history of the Giro d'Italia, all over 420 km.[15]
General classification
There were eight cyclists who had completed all eight stages. For these cyclists, the times they had needed in each stage was added up for the general classification. The cyclist with the least accumulated time was the winner. Enrico Sala won the prize for best ranked isolati rider in the general classification.[16]
Of the two cyclists without a team, Sala rode as a professional Italian: isolato and Ripamonti as an amateur Italian: aspirante.[1][2]
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Aftermath
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During the race, Calzolari, Canepari and Durando had been given a penalty of 3 hours, for taking help from a car. After the race, the Italian Cycling Union said that the Giro jury had made a wrong decision, and that the three cyclists should have been removed from the race, declaring Albini the winner. The Giro organisation did not agree, and declared that Calzolari stayed the winner. The two parties went to court, and in February 1915 the Giro organisation won, and again after an appeal in July 1915, making Calzolari the definitive winner.[19]
Several weeks after the 1914 Giro ended, World War I started. Italy initially stayed neutral, but Italy entered World War I in early 1915, which made it impossible to organize a Giro in the next years, and the planned 1915 edition was cancelled.[6]
The 1914 Giro has since been regarded as the hardest Grand Tour of all time.[6][20] The route featured the longest average stage length at 395.25 km (246 mi) , the longest individual stage which was stage five covering 430 km (267 mi) from Lucca to Rome, the smallest number of finishers at 8 riders, the highest percentage of retirements at 90%, and the longest individual stage time at 19h 34’ 47" which was the sixth stage from Bari-L’Aquila.[20] Due to the race's reputation, British author Tim Moore rode the route in autumn of 2012.[21] Moore elected to ride the course in period attire and on a period bicycle.[21] He then published a book where he detailed his exploits entitled Gironimo!: Riding the Very Terrible 1914 Tour of Italy.
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References
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