Giro d’Italia to start on former railway line in Abruzzo

September 28, 2022 GMT
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FILE - Australia's Jai Hindley competes during the 20th stage of the Giro D'Italia cycling race, from Belluno to Passo Fedaia, Italy, on May 28, 2022. Next year's Giro d'Italia will start in the region of Abruzzo. Race organizers announced Wednesday, Sept. 28, 2022 that the 2023 edition will run May 6-28 and begin with an 18.4-kilometer (11.4-mile) time trial on the Adriatic coast. (Fabio Ferrari/LaPresse via AP, File)
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FILE - Australia's Jai Hindley competes during the 20th stage of the Giro D'Italia cycling race, from Belluno to Passo Fedaia, Italy, on May 28, 2022. Next year's Giro d'Italia will start in the region of Abruzzo. Race organizers announced Wednesday, Sept. 28, 2022 that the 2023 edition will run May 6-28 and begin with an 18.4-kilometer (11.4-mile) time trial on the Adriatic coast. (Fabio Ferrari/LaPresse via AP, File)

L’AQUILA, Italy (AP) — The 2023 edition of the Giro d’Italia will start with an individual time trial on a coastal cycle path that has been recreated from a former railway line in the region of Abruzzo.

At a ceremony in the Abruzzo capital of L’Aquila, race organizers announced Wednesday that the Grand Tour will run from May 6-28 and begin with an 18.4-kilometer (11.4-mile) time trial on the Adriatic coast.

Almost the entire time trial will be on the spectacular Costa dei Trabocchi cycle path that hugs the coast line before a short climb to the finish in Ortona.

“I am excited at the idea of the Grande Partenza (Big Start) of the Giro in Abruzzo … It is a dream come true, especially with regard to the prologue on the Costa dei Trabocchi,” said Trek-Segafredo cyclist Dario Cataldo, who is from the region.

“I well remember that when the cycle path project was born and I saw the first tracks, I imagined the beauty of a Giro d’Italia passing along the route. It looked perfect.”

The second stage is a 204-kilometer (127-mile) leg from Teramo to San Salvo that is hilly in the first part but expected to end in a bunch sprint.

Stage three will also start in the Abruzzo region, in Vasto, but it will then head south and will be detailed when the full route is revealed on Oct. 17 in Milan.

The Giro will also return to the region for the seventh stage, a daunting climb on the Gran Sasso d’Italia to Campo Imperatore. The high mountain stage, on May 12, will be the edition’s first finish above 2,000 meters.

Australian Jai Hindley won this year’s Giro.

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