Giro Next Gen
Giro Next Gen, also known as Baby Giro, Girobio, Giro d'Italia Giovani Under 23 or Giro Ciclistico d'Italia, is an Italian road bicycle racing amateur stage race created in 1970.
![]() | |
Race details | |
---|---|
Date | June |
Region | Italy |
Nickname(s) | Baby Giro |
Discipline | Road |
Type | Stage race |
Organiser | RCS Sport |
Web site | www |
History | |
First edition | 1970 |
Editions | 46 (as of 2023) |
First winner | ![]() |
Most recent | ![]() |
The race is considered to be the most important race on Italy's U23 calendar, the analogue of the Giro d'Italia. The list of winners includes renowned riders like Francesco Moser, Marco Pantani, Gilberto Simoni, Leonardo Piepoli and Danilo Di Luca.[1]
After the 2012 edition, the race was not held for a few years, but it was announced that in 2017 it would return as a U23 race.[2]
Winners
Year | Country | Rider | Team | |
---|---|---|---|---|
1970 | ![]() |
Giancarlo Bellini | ||
1971 | ![]() |
Francesco Moser | ||
1972 | ![]() |
Giovanni Battaglin | ||
1973 | ![]() |
Gianbattista Baronchelli | ||
1974 | ![]() |
Leone Pizzini | ||
1975 | ![]() |
Ruggero Gialdini | ||
1976 | ![]() |
Francesco Conti | ||
1977 | ![]() |
Claudio Corti | ||
1978 | ![]() |
Fausto Stiz | ||
1979 | ![]() |
Alf Segersäll | ||
1980 | ![]() |
Giovanni Fedrigo | ||
1981 | ![]() |
Sergey Voronin | ||
1982 | ![]() |
Francesco Cesarini | ||
1983 | ![]() |
Vladimir Volochin | ||
1984 | ![]() |
Piotr Ugrumov | ||
1985 | ![]() |
Sergei Uslamin | ||
1986 | ![]() |
Alexandre Krasnov | ||
1987 | No race | |||
1988 | ![]() |
Dmitri Konychev | ||
1989 | ![]() |
Andrei Teteriouk | ||
1990 | ![]() |
Wladimir Belli | ||
1991 | ![]() |
Francesco Casagrande | ||
1992 | ![]() |
Marco Pantani | ||
1993 | ![]() |
Gilberto Simoni | ||
1994 | ![]() |
Leonardo Piepoli | ||
1995 | ![]() |
Giuseppe Di Grande | ||
1996 | ![]() |
Roberto Sgambelluri | ||
1997 | ![]() |
Oscar Mason | ||
1998 | ![]() |
Danilo Di Luca | ||
1999 | ![]() |
Tadej Valjavec | ||
2000 | ![]() |
Raffaele Ferrara | ||
2001 | ![]() |
Davide Frattini | ||
2002 | ![]() |
Giuseppe Muraglia | ||
2003 | ![]() |
Dainius Kairelis | Modal Faresin | |
2004 | ![]() |
Marco Marzano | VC Ceramiche Pagnoncelli | |
2005 | No race | |||
2006 | ![]() |
Dario Cataldo | Bedogni Natalini Praga | |
2007– 2008 |
No race | |||
2009 | ![]() |
Cayetano Sarmiento | Colombia | |
2010[3] | ![]() |
Carlos Betancur | Colombia | |
2011 | ![]() |
Mattia Cattaneo | U.C. Trevigiani–Dynamon–Bottoli | |
2012 | ![]() |
Joe Dombrowski | United States | |
2013– 2016 |
No race | |||
2017[4] | ![]() |
Pavel Sivakov | BMC Development Team | |
2018 | ![]() |
Aleksandr Vlasov | Gazprom–RusVelo | |
2019 | ![]() |
Andrés Ardila | EPM | |
2020 | ![]() |
Tom Pidcock | Trinity Racing | |
2021[5] | ![]() |
Juan Ayuso | Team Colpack–Ballan | |
2022[6] | ![]() |
Leo Hayter | Hagens Berman Axeon | |
2023 | ![]() |
Johannes Staune-Mittet | Jumbo–Visma Development Team |
References
- Baby Giro: Where future stars are recruited
- "Under-23 Giro d'Italia to return in 2017". Cyclingngews. 10 November 2016. Retrieved 28 May 2017.
- "Standings Baby Giro - Cycling". Eurosport. 2010. Retrieved 18 June 2022.
- "Pavel Sivakov seals overall Baby Giro victory". cyclingnews.com. 16 June 2017. Retrieved 18 June 2022.
- "VN news ticker: Juan Ayuso wins 'Baby Giro' ahead of joining UAE Emirates - Swiss Cycles". swisscycles.com. 13 June 2021. Retrieved 18 June 2022.
- "RISULTATI" (PDF). Dropbox (in Italian). 18 June 2022. Retrieved 18 June 2022.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.