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1927 Giro d'Italia


FieldValue
name1927 Giro d'Italia
imageGiro Italia 1927-map.png
image_captionRace Route
date15 May – 6 June 1927
stages15
distance3758.3
unitkm
time144h 15' 35"
firstAlfredo Binda
first_natITA
first_natvar1861
first_teamLegnano
secondGiovanni Brunero
second_natITA
second_natvar1861
second_teamLegnano
thirdAntonio Negrini
third_natITA
third_natvar1861
third_teamWolsit-Pirelli
previous[1926](1926-giro-d-italia)
next[1928](1928-giro-d-italia)

The 1927 Giro d'Italia was the 15th edition of the Giro d'Italia, a Grand Tour organized and sponsored by the newspaper La Gazzetta dello Sport. The race began on 15 May in Milan with a stage that stretched 288 km to Turin, finishing back in Milan on 6 June after a 291.5 km stage and a total distance covered of 3758.3 km. The race was won by Alfredo Binda of the Legnano team. Second and third respectively were the Italian riders Giovanni Brunero and Antonio Negrini.

266 riders started the race, and 80 crossed the finish line of the final stage.

It was the first Giro with a modern design: in the same period of time of the previous Giro, three more stages were included, which replaced three days of rest. At the same time the stages became shorter (only one passed 300 km).

In 1927 Binda was at the apex of its career, and it triumphed winning 12 stages out of 15: a record still to be surpassed. Binda led the general classification from the first to the last stage (only Girardengo had already done it, in the 1919 Giro). In Binda's team there was also his brother Albino, as a support rider.

Giovanni Rossignoli, "virtual" winner of the first edition in 1909, participated for the last time. He was 45 years old and concluded the race in 44th place, about 7 hours behind Binda.

Participants

Of the 266 riders that began the Giro d'Italia on 15 May, 80 of them made it to the finish in Milan on 6 June. Riders were allowed to ride on their own or as a member of a team. There were six teams that competed in the race: Aliprandi-Pirelli, Bianchi-Pirelli, Berettini-Hutchinson, Ganna-Dunlop, Legnano-Pirelli, and Wolsit-Pirelli.

The peloton was primarily composed of Italians. The field featured three former Giro d'Italia champions in three-time winner and reigning champion Giovanni Brunero, along with one-time winners Alfredo Binda and Giuseppe Enrici. Other notable Italian riders that started the race included Arturo Bresciani, Giovanni Rossignoli, and Domenico Piemontesi. Notable absentee was Costante Girardengo.

Among the starters was Luigi Ferri, almost fifty years old. Ferri is the oldest known rider to participate in the Giro, but did not finish the first stage.

Race summary

From the start of the Giro, Binda was dominant. He won the first three stages; only Pancera, Giuntelli and Brunero finished in the same group as him in these three stages, and because of the time bonus for the stage wins, Binda was leading them by three minutes in the general classification.

Binda was beaten in the sprint for the fourth stage by Piemontesi, but showed his dominance by winning the next six stages. His winning streak was interrupted by Bresciani in the eleventh stage and Brunero in the thirteenth stage, but Binda won all other stages. In the end, Binda had won 12 out of 15 stages, a record that is unlikely to be ever beaten.

Final standings

Stage results

An innovation in this Giro was the reduction of rest days. Previous editions always had a rest day in between stages, but in 1927 some stages were run on consecutive days.

StageDateCourseDistanceTypeIn 1927, there was no distinction in the rules between plain stages and mountain stages; the icons shown here indicate that the first, second, third, fifth, seventh, eighth, tenth, and fifteenth stages included major mountains.WinnerRace Leader123456789101112131415
15 MayMilan to Turin288 km[[Image:Mountainstage.svg22pxlink=alt=]]Stage with mountain(s)Alfredo BindaAlfredo Binda
17 MayTurin to Reggio Emilia321 km[[Image:Mountainstage.svg22pxlink=alt=]]Stage with mountain(s)Alfredo BindaAlfredo Binda
19 MayReggio Emilia to Lucca207 km[[Image:Mountainstage.svg22pxlink=alt=]]Stage with mountain(s)Alfredo BindaAlfredo Binda
20 MayLucca to Grosseto240 km[[Image:Plainstage.svg22pxlink=alt=]]Plain stageDomenico PiemontesiAlfredo Binda
22 MayGrosseto to Rome257.6 km[[Image:Mountainstage.svg22pxlink=alt=]]Stage with mountain(s)Alfredo BindaAlfredo Binda
23 MayRome to Naples256.8 km[[Image:Plainstage.svg22pxlink=alt=]]Plain stageAlfredo BindaAlfredo Binda
24 MayNaples to Avellino153.4 km[[Image:Mountainstage.svg22pxlink=alt=]]Stage with mountain(s)Alfredo BindaAlfredo Binda
26 MayAvellino to Bari271.8 km[[Image:Mountainstage.svg22pxlink=alt=]]Stage with mountain(s)Alfredo BindaAlfredo Binda
27 MayBari to Campobasso243.6 km[[Image:Plainstage.svg22pxlink=alt=]]Plain stageAlfredo BindaAlfredo Binda
29 MayCampobasso to Pescara220.2 km[[Image:Mountainstage.svg22pxlink=alt=]]Stage with mountain(s)Alfredo BindaAlfredo Binda
30 MayPescara to Pesaro218 km[[Image:Plainstage.svg22pxlink=alt=]]Plain stageArturo BrescianiAlfredo Binda
1 JunePesaro to Treviso305.6 km[[Image:Plainstage.svg22pxlink=alt=]]Plain stageAlfredo BindaAlfredo Binda
2 JuneTreviso to Trieste208.2 km[[Image:Plainstage.svg22pxlink=alt=]]Plain stageGiovanni BruneroAlfredo Binda
4 JuneTrieste to Verona275.6 km[[Image:Plainstage.svg22pxlink=alt=]]Plain stageAlfredo BindaAlfredo Binda
6 JuneVerona to Milan291.5 km[[Image:Mountainstage.svg22pxlink=alt=]]Stage with mountain(s)Alfredo BindaAlfredo Binda
Total3758.3 km

General classification

There were 80 cyclists who had completed all fifteen stages. For these cyclists, the times they had needed in each stage was added up for the general classification. There was a time bonus for stage winners: the winner of a stage had one minute subtracted from their time. The cyclist with the least accumulated time was the winner. Aristide Cavallini won the prize for best ranked independent rider in the general classification.

RankNameTeamTime12345678910
Alfredo BindaLegnano-Pirelli144h 15' 35"
Giovanni BruneroLegnano-Pirelli+ 27' 24"
Antonio NegriniWolsit+ 36' 06"
Ermanno VallazzaLegnano-Pirelli+ 51' 20"
Giuseppe PanceraBerrettini+ 54' 29"
Arturo BrescianiBianchi+ 1h 10' 03"
Egidio PicchiottinoBianchi+ 1h 11' 54"
Aleardo SimoniGanna+ 1h 32' 14"
Luigi GiacobbeWolsit+ 1h 57' 49"
Aristide Cavallini+ 2h 05' 44"

Notes

References

Bibliography

References

  1. (12 May 2009). "Alfredo Binda: The Giro's first superstar". Cyclingnews.
  2. Bill and Carol McGann. "1927 Giro d'Italia". Dog Ear Publishing.
  3. (14 June 1950). "I vincitori delle categorie speciali". Corriere dello Sport.
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