Kasper Asgreen takes solo victory from the breakaway on stage 14 – Giro d’Italia

Giro d’Italia 2025

Stage 14

Kasper Asgreen (EF Education-EasyPost) hung on for a famous breakaway victory on stage 14 of the Giro d’Italia, the Dane’s triumph coming on a day of unexpected GC drama thanks to a crash on the closing circuit.

As the race visited the Italy-Slovenia cross-border city of Gorizia-Nova Gorica, what was expected to be a straightforward sprint stage was turned on its head by a multi-rider crash in the peloton 23km from the line.

GC contenders Primož Roglič (Red Bull-Bora-Hansgrohe), Juan Ayuso (UAE Team Emirates-XRG), Egan Bernal (Ineos Grenadiers), Antonio Tiberi (Bahrain Victorious), and Giulio Ciccone (Lidl-Trek) were all caught out in the fall, shedding major time at the end of the 195km stage.

Out front, Asgreen took advantage of the split in the peloton and resulting chaos to go solo 6.5km from the line.

He left behind breakaway survivors Mirco Maestri (Polti-VisitMalta) and Martin Marcellusi (VF Group-Bardiani CSF-Faizanè) to solo home and win the stage by 16 seconds as Kaden Groves (Alpecin-Deceuninck) and Olav Kooij (Visma-Lease A Bike) led a 16-rider peloton across the line.

Maglia rosa Isaac del Toro (UAE Team Emirates-XRG) was safe among the lead group, as were other major GC names Richard Carapaz (EF Education-EasyPost), Simon Yates (Visma-Lease A Bike), Tom Pidcock (Q36.5), Damiano Caruso (Bahrain Victorious), and Derek Gee (Israel-Premier Tech).

The next group on the road, at 1:04 down on Asgreen and those losing 48 seconds to Del Toro et al, were Juan Ayuso (UAE Team Emirates-XRG), Primož Roglič (Red Bull-Bora-Hansgrohe), the Ineos Grenadiers duo of Egan Bernal and Thymen Arensman, and Michael Storer (Tudor).

It was an even worse day for Italy’s top GC hopefuls. Antonio Tiberi (Bahrain Victorious) came home two minutes down to lose 1:44 to the lead group, while Giulio Ciccone (Lidl-Trek) lost minutes after resuming from the crash over six minutes down.

The new GC picture sees Del Toro holding pink by an extended 1:20 from Simon Yates, while Ayuso lies third at 1:26. Roglič remains fifth, now at 2:23 down rather than 1:35, while Tiberi drops five places to eighth at 3:02.

The peloton tackles an incline on stage 14.

With the mountainous final week of the Giro d’Italia looming, only a handful of chances remained for the sprinters of the peloton, with stage 14’s trip to the Slovenian border providing another opportunity.

The largely flat stage, featuring just under 1,000 metres of climbing, headed 195km east from Treviso to the cross-border city of Nova Gorica-Gorizia. Just three fourth-category climbs lay in wait for the peloton, with Goniace (3.5km at 4.9%) and two ascents of Saver (700m at 7.7%) coming in the final 40km of the stage.

The break of the day took some time to go clear as attacks flew from the start. The first 20km of the stage saw a strong group jump away, including Wout van Aert (Visma-Lease A Bike), Quinten Hermans (Alpecin-Deceuninck), Kasper Asgreen (EF Education-EasyPost), Taco van der Hoorn (Intermarché-Wanty), Josef Cerny (Soudal-QuickStep), and Dries De Bondt (Decathlon AG2R La Mondiale).

That breakaway attempt wouldn’t succeed, however, but Asgreen continued to push alone at the front. He drew a sole chaser in Mirco Maestri (Polti-VisitMalta), before Clément Davy (Groupama-FDJ), Louis Meintjes (Intermarché-Wanty), and Martin Marcellusi (VF Group-Bardiani CSF-Faizanè) also came across.

Attacks continued behind, but as Visma-Lease a Bike and Alpecin-Deceuninck set about taking control of the peloton with 160km to go, that quintet was set as the break of the day. They’d take 90 seconds on the main group, but Meintjes only lasted 10km with the leaders before dropping back.

On the pan-flat run to the border, rain showers came and went and then came back again, though little else of note occurred as the riders raced eastwards. Maestri led over the first intermediate sprint at
Morsano al Tagliamento before Marcellusi beat him to the line at Talmassons, 94km from the finish.

Both sprints saw De Bondt jump out of the peloton to sprint against maglia ciclamino Mads Pedersen (Lidl-Trek), an odd matchup given the Belgian lay seventh in the standings, 178 points down on the Dane. He took the singular point on offer on each occasion, in any case.

At the next sprint, the Red Bull Kilometre at 62km to go, the break race on with an 80-second lead while Maestri led the way once again as Visma-Lease a Bike and Alpecin-Deceuninck continued at the head of the peloton.

Asgreen rides on the front of the breakaway.

Throngs of Slovenian fans, out in force to support their hero Roglič, greeted the Giro at the border, where the riders finally hit the first climb of the day at Gonlace, 42km from the line.

The break soon became a trio on the way up as Davy dropped off the back. Asgreen led them over the top while back in the peloton, Ineos Grenadiers accelerated to the front, bringing the gap down to a minute.

On the city circuit, a tightening bend at 23km to go brought the first major drama of the day as the squeeze in the peloton brought on a multi-rider crash and a split in the group. Lidl-Trek GC leader Giulio Ciccone went down hard and took some time to get going again, resuming six minutes off the lead.

The split also saw a swathe of other GC riders – including Roglič, Ayuso, Bernal, and Tiberi – on the back foot, forced to chase a lead peloton which included race leader Del plus Carapaz, Simon Yates, and Gee.

Out front, the break was hanging on to a 25-second lead heading into the final 10km. Roglič, Ayuso, Bernal and his teammate Arensman lay 1:10 down, while Tiberi and several teammates chased from a two-minute deficit.

Despite the best efforts of Visma-Lease a Bike chasing the break for their sprinter Kooij, it would be the break which fought for the victory – or one of their number, at least. Asgreen, the sole WorldTour representative in the move, went for it on the day’s final climb with 6.5km to go.

He held onto an ever-tightening gap during the closing kilometres. However, it was an advantage which hovered around the 10 to 15-second mark rather than melting into single figures.

The Dane, a winner from the break at the Tour de France two years ago, held on to hold off the select chase group and record the 14th victory of his career, EF’s second in four days at the Giro.

16 seconds later, the fastmen Groves, Kooij, and Orluis Aular (Movistar) led home the chase, while, further back, a swathe of major Giro contenders were left counting their losses.

Lidl-Trek aid Giulio Ciccone to the line, he has since withdrawn from the race.

Stage 15 of the Giro takes the riders on a gruelling 219-kilometre journey from Fiume Veneto to Asiago, with the formidable Monte Grappa as a centrepiece. The elevation gain adds up to roughly 4,000 metres.

Following a flat run-up and a false flat section, the day’s first climb is the Muro di Ca’ del Poggio. Just 1.1 kilometres long, but averaging 12.2% and with a peak gradient of 16% – a real leg-breaker.

The day’s true monster comes around 80 mostly kilometres later: the Monte Grappa. A staggering 25.1 kilometres long with an average gradient of 5.7% and ramps up to 11%, this climb could reshape the GC standings.

But “could” is the key word. After cresting the Monte Grappa, the riders still face 90 kilometres. First comes a descent nearly as lengthy as the climb itself, followed by 20 kilometres of flat valley roads leading to the next challenge: the climb to Dori. At 16.4 kilometres with an average gradient of 5.4%, it’s another test that could catch out tired legs.

Once over the top at Dori, there’s still 18.5 kilometres to go. The route begins with a short descent, followed by a sharp 1.5-kilometre climb at 8.3%, before rolling terrain leads the way to the finish in Asiago.

Asiago was the scene of a dramatic finale in 2017, when Thibaut Pinot outfoxed his breakaway companions Ilnur Zakarin, Vincenzo Nibali, Domenico Pozzovivo, and Nairo Quintana to take the stage win. Tom Dumoulin, dropped on the final climb, limited his losses in the rolling finale with the help of Bauke Mollema and Bob Jungels, ultimately conceding just 15 seconds. The Dutchman slipped to fourth in the GC, but the following day, he turned the tables with a dominant ride in the final time trial to secure overall victory.

The final intermediate sprint comes halfway up the climb to Dori, 185.8 kilometres into the race, with 6, 4 and 2 bonus seconds up for grabs; at the finish line, 10, 6 and 4 seconds await the first three riders.

Stage 14 result:

General Classification:


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