Giro d’Italia

Road ยท Stage Race
When Early May
Course Stage Race
Since 1909
Format Stage Race
Why watch?

The Giro d'Italia is the most unpredictable Grand Tour, where weather, ambition, and mountain roads conspire to reward risk and punish caution.

Race guide

Giro d’Italia

The Giro d'Italia is a three-week men's stage race held each May across Italy. First run in 1909, it is one of cycling's three Grand Tours and typically features the season's hardest mountain stages, often decided by a rider's willingness to attack early and survive long.

Fausto Coppi, Eddy Merckx, and Marco Pantani each shaped the race's identity as a climber's proving ground and a theater for audacity.

Why this race matters

The Giro rewards gamblers. Its route builders favor high mountains, steep gradients, and stages that isolate riders before the final week. Weather in May can turn alpine passes into survival tests. The race often belongs to climbers willing to take time in the second week rather than wait for the third, and its history is thick with lone breakaways, surprise winners, and spectacular collapses.

How this race is usually won

The Giro is usually decided in the mountains, particularly in the second and third weeks when the route reaches the Dolomites or the high Alps. Time trials matter, but they rarely define the winner outright. Stages often finish on steep, narrow climbs where team support thins and individual resilience counts more than controlled pacing. Weather is a recurring factor: snow, rain, and cold can turn planned summit finishes into rerouted chaos or wars of attrition. The race also uses gravel sectors, steep early-week climbs, and technical descents to create separation before the final mountain bloc. Expect the overall to shift on long, hard stages where early attacks are rewarded and conservative racing is punished. The third week typically includes at least one high-altitude stage that serves as the final reckoning.