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Giro 2019 route revealed, Froome uncertain about defending title

Milan: Giro d'Italia champion Chris Froome said he is still undecided about riding in next year's edition but added that the start of the 102nd route, announced on Wednesday, looked explosive.

The Team Sky rider became the first Briton to win the century-old race in May, and was briefly the first cyclist in 35 years to hold all three grand tours at the same time.

Chris Froome with the Giro d'Italia trophy.

Chris Froome with the Giro d'Italia trophy.Credit:AP

He relinquished that when he finished behind teammate Geraint Thomas in the 2018 Tour de France and then did not race in the Vuelta a Espana which was won by compatriot Simon Yates, who had led most of the Giro before Froome's win.

Froome was one of the main guests at the 2019 Giro route presentation in Milan on Wednesday.

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However, he was unsure about whether he would be on the start line in Bologna on May 11 where a short and sharp 8.2-kilometre time trial kicks off the race.

"I still don't know. It's a decision that we'll have to take with the team," Froome said.

"With a hard start like that it's going to be very explosive, very interesting."

After the time trial, stage two takes the riders from Bologna to Fucecchio. The riders will then head to the west coast from Vinci to Orbetello, before twisting through the shallow inclines of central Italy.

Italy's Elia Viviani, who won the points classification in this year's race, predicted a fast opening week in 2019.

"A sprinter who arrives in good shape could get a good haul of stage wins from that first week," he said.

There will also be another individual time trial on stage nine over an ever-rising 34.7km from Riccione to San Marino.

Riders get a respite on stage 10's flat 147km route from Ravenna to Modena, with the next day starting from Carpi.

After stage 12, riders will move towards the Alps and will tackle gradients of 14 and 15 per cent, circling around the foot of Mont Blanc. At 237km stage 15 will be the longest from Ivrea to Como and the following day the peloton climb up to 2618m above sea level.

The race winner will probably be decided on one of the three Dolomite climbs on stage 20, before the final stage in Verona, a 15.6km time trial. The winner will be crowned inside the city's Roman amphitheatre.

Team Sky will have a decision to make on who they send to the 3518km event in Italy with Welshman Thomas considering returning to the race which he crashed out of in 2017.

"The Giro really excites me. It feels like unfinished business," Thomas said recently.

The presentation follows last week's unveiling of the 2019 Tour de France route in Paris.

Reuters

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