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1925 Giro d'Italia
| Field | Value |
|---|---|
| name | 1925 Giro d'Italia |
| image | Giro Italia 1925-map.png |
| image_caption | Route of the 13th Giro d'Italia. |
| date | 16 May – 7 June 1925 |
| stages | 12 |
| distance | 3520.5 |
| unit | km |
| time | 137h 31' 13" |
| first | Alfredo Binda |
| first_nat | ITA |
| first_natvar | 1861 |
| second | Costante Girardengo |
| second_nat | ITA |
| second_natvar | 1861 |
| third | Giovanni Brunero |
| third_nat | ITA |
| third_natvar | 1861 |
| previous | [1924](1924-giro-d-italia) |
| next | [1926](1926-giro-d-italia) |
The 1925 Giro d'Italia was the 13th edition of the Giro d'Italia, a Grand Tour organized and sponsored by the newspaper La Gazzetta dello Sport. The race began on 16 May in Milan with a stage that stretched 278.1 km to Turin, finishing back in Milan on 7 June after a 307.9 km stage and a total distance covered of 3520.5 km. The race was won by the Alfredo Binda of the Legnano team. Second and third respectively were the Italian riders Costante Girardengo and Giovanni Brunero.
Participants
Of the 126 riders that began the Giro d'Italia on 16 May, 39 of them made it to the finish in Milan on 7 June. As in the previous Giro, riders entered the race individually, not as part of a team. Most of the disagreements between the professional teams and the Giro organisation were resolved, so most teams agreed to send riders. There were six professional teams that had one ore more riders competing in the race: Aliprandi-Pirelli, Jenis, Legnano-Pirelli, Olympia-Pirelli, Peugeot-Pirelli, and Wolsit-Pirelli.
The peloton was completely composed of Italians, a trend which continued until the 1950s because of Italy's fascist policies and political climate. The field featured two former Giro d'Italia champions in the 1919 Giro d'Italia winner Costante Girardengo and returning champion Giovanni Brunero. Other notable Italian riders that started the race included Gaetano Belloni, Giovanni Rossignoli, and Pietro Bestetti. This was the first Giro d'Italia that Alfredo Binda competed in. The winner of 1924, Giuseppe Enrici, did not start this race, as he had moved to the French Armor-Dunlop team, and targeted the 1925 Tour de France.
Race summary
In the first stage, eighteen riders rode away, taking almost five minutes on the others. Linari won the stage and became the leader, the main favourites were behind him in this group.
In the second stage, a group of four riders was away. The sprint was won by Girardengo, who then became the new leader based on his stage positions, Binda and Brunero were second and third in the general classification with the same time. Girardengo and Binda finished in the first groups in the third and fourth stage, such that Girardengo was still leading with Binda in second place in the same time. Girardengo helped his team mate Bestetti to win the third stage, and won the fourth stage himself.
Another team mate of Girardengo was Gaetano Belloni, the winner of the 1920 Giro d'Italia. Belloni was not satisfied with Girardengo's support for Bestetti in a stage where Belloni struggled. In the fifth stage, Girardengo had a flat tire; Belloni decided to not help his team mate, but to help Binda escape. Belloni won the stage, but Girardengo lost more than five minutes, making Binda the new leader.
Girardengo tried to win back the lead in the next stages. He only won back seconds in the seventh stage. Despite winning six stages, he ended in second place in the general classification, with Binda as winner.
Final standings
Stage results
| Stage | Date | Course | Distance | TypeIn 1925, there was no distinction in the rules between plain stages and mountain stages; the icons shown here indicate that the first, second, third, fourth, sixth, seventh, eighth, ninth, tenth, and twelfth stages included major mountains. | Winner | Race Leader | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 | 8 | 9 | 10 | 11 | 12 | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 16 May | Milan to Turin | 278.1 km | [[Image:Mountainstage.svg | 22px | link= | alt=]] | Stage with mountain(s) | Pietro Linari | Pietro Linari | ||||||||||||
| 18 May | Turin to Arenzano | 279.2 km | [[Image:Mountainstage.svg | 22px | link= | alt=]] | Stage with mountain(s) | Costante Girardengo | Costante Girardengo | ||||||||||||
| Alfredo Binda | |||||||||||||||||||||
| Giovanni Brunero | |||||||||||||||||||||
| 20 May | Arenzano to Pisa | 315 km | [[Image:Mountainstage.svg | 22px | link= | alt=]] | Stage with mountain(s) | Pierino Bestetti | Costante Girardengo | ||||||||||||
| Alfredo Binda | |||||||||||||||||||||
| 22 May | Pisa to Rome | 337.1 km | [[Image:Mountainstage.svg | 22px | link= | alt=]] | Stage with mountain(s) | Costante Girardengo | Costante Girardengo | ||||||||||||
| 24 May | Rome to Naples | 260 km | [[Image:Plainstage.svg | 22px | link= | alt=]] | Plain stage | Gaetano Belloni | Alfredo Binda | ||||||||||||
| 26 May | Naples to Bari | 314.2 km | [[Image:Mountainstage.svg | 22px | link= | alt=]] | Stage with mountain(s) | Alfredo Binda | Alfredo Binda | ||||||||||||
| 28 May | Bari to Benevento | 234.9 km | [[Image:Mountainstage.svg | 22px | link= | alt=]] | Stage with mountain(s) | Costante Girardengo | Alfredo Binda | ||||||||||||
| 30 May | Benevento to Sulmona | 275 km | [[Image:Mountainstage.svg | 22px | link= | alt=]] | Stage with mountain(s) | Giovanni Brunero | Alfredo Binda | ||||||||||||
| 1 June | Sulmona to Arezzo | 376.8 km | [[Image:Mountainstage.svg | 22px | link= | alt=]] | Stage with mountain(s) | Costante Girardengo | Alfredo Binda | ||||||||||||
| 3 June | Arezzo to Forlì | 224.3 km | [[Image:Mountainstage.svg | 22px | link= | alt=]] | Stage with mountain(s) | Costante Girardengo | Alfredo Binda | ||||||||||||
| 5 June | Forlì to Verona | 318 km | [[Image:Plainstage.svg | 22px | link= | alt=]] | Plain stage | Costante Girardengo | Alfredo Binda | ||||||||||||
| 7 June | Verona to Milan | 307.9 km | [[Image:Mountainstage.svg | 22px | link= | alt=]] | Stage with mountain(s) | Gaetano Belloni | Alfredo Binda | ||||||||||||
| Total | 3520 km |
General classification
There were 39 cyclists who had completed all twelve stages. For these cyclists, the times they had needed in each stage was added up for the general classification. The cyclist with the least accumulated time was the winner; there were no time bonuses for stage winners. Riccardo Gagliardi won the prize for best ranked "indipendente" rider in the general classification, this was a category in between professional and amateur.
| Rank | Name | TeamRiders rode individually in the 1925 Giro d'Italia; the team indicated here is the team that the riders rode for in the rest of the season. | Time | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 | 8 | 9 | 10 |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Alfredo Binda | Legnano | 137h 31' 13" | |||||||||||
| Costante Girardengo | Wolsit | + 4' 58" | |||||||||||
| Giovanni Brunero | Legnano | + 7' 22" | |||||||||||
| Gaetano Belloni | Wolsit | + 26' 29" | |||||||||||
| Nello Ciaccheri | Legnano | + 37' 57" | |||||||||||
| Ermanno Vallazza | Legnano | + 1h 00' 27" | |||||||||||
| Pierino Bestetti | Wolsit | + 1h 15' 10" | |||||||||||
| Gianbattista Gilli | — | + 1h 25' 18" | |||||||||||
| Giovanni Trentarossi | — | + 1h 40' 45" | |||||||||||
| Pasquale Di Pietro | — | + 2h 31' 23" |
| Final general classification (11–39) | Rank | Name | Team | Time |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 11 | Giuseppe Pancera | Aliprandi-Pirelli | + 2h 32' 24" | |
| 12 | Michele Gordini | — | + 3h 08' 22" | |
| 13 | Antonio Tecchio | — | + 3h 30' 39" | |
| 14 | Ottavio Pratesi | — | + 4h 28' 47" | |
| 15 | Riccardo Gagliardi | — | + 4h 45' 44" | |
| 16 | Antonio Pancera | — | + 5h 17' 03" | |
| 17 | Angelo Verona | — | + 5h 29' 24" | |
| 18 | Azzelio Terreni | — | + 5h 50' 35" | |
| 19 | Giovanni Rossignoli | — | + 6h 27' 46" | |
| 20 | Giovanni Del Taglio | — | + 7h 41' 02" | |
| 21 | Giuseppe Casadio | — | + 7h 54' 52" | |
| 22 | Luigi Cecilli | — | + 8h 18' 18" | |
| 23 | Guido Oddone | — | + 8h 50' 44" | |
| 24 | Gino Petri | — | + 9h 04' 55" | |
| 25 | Antonio De Franceschi | — | + 9h 26' 09" | |
| 26 | Arnaldo Bergami | — | + 9h 39' 52" | |
| 27 | Guido Messina | — | + 10h 09' 21" | |
| 28 | Tito Brambilla | — | + 11h 09' 21" | |
| 29 | Pierino Cazzaniga | — | + 11h 09' 39" | |
| 30 | Antonio Buelli | — | + 11h 46' 24" | |
| 31 | Augusto Rho | — | + 12h 26' 22" | |
| 32 | Umberto Ripamonti | — | + 13h 11' 15" | |
| 33 | Andrea Cazzaniga | — | + 15h 12' 24" | |
| 34 | Paolo Baldieri | — | + 15h 23' 03" | |
| 35 | Angelo Brumana | — | + 16h 07' 40" | |
| 36 | Francesco Barbalonga | — | + 16h 48' 26" | |
| 37 | Giuseppe Brenna | — | + 18h 41' 45" | |
| 38 | Angelo Guidi | — | + 18h 45' 38" | |
| 39 | Luigi Brivio | — | + 20h 29' 10" |
Aftermath
Girardengo lost the Giro despite winning a plurality of stages. In the next year, the Giro organization introduced a time bonus of 1:30 for the stage winner; had this been in place in 1925, Girardengo would have won the Giro.
Notes
References
Bibliography
References
- "Archived copy".
- Bill and Carol McGann. "1925 Giro d'Italia". Dog Ear Publishing.
- (2017). "1925". La Gazzetta dello Sport.
- (14 June 1950). "I vincitori delle categorie speciali". Corriere dello Sport.
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