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1931 Giro d'Italia


FieldValue
name1931 Giro d'Italia
imageGiro Italia 1931-map.png
image_captionRace Route
date10–30 May 1931
stages12
distance3012
unitkm
time102h 40' 46"
firstFrancesco Camusso
first_natITA
first_natvar1861
first_teamGloria-Hutchinson
first_colorpink
secondLuigi Giacobbe
second_natITA
second_natvar1861
second_teamMaino
thirdLuigi Marchisio
third_natITA
third_natvar1861
third_teamLegnano
teamLegnano
previous[1930](1930-giro-d-italia)
next[1932](1932-giro-d-italia)

The 1931 Giro d'Italia was the 19th edition of the Giro d'Italia, organized and sponsored by the newspaper La Gazzetta dello Sport. The race began on 10 May in Milan with a stage that stretched 206 km to Mantua, finishing back in Milan on 31 May after a 263 km stage and a total distance covered of 3,012 km. The race was won by the Francesco Camusso of the Gloria team. Second and third respectively were the Italian riders Luigi Giacobbe and Luigi Marchisio.

It was the first edition in which the leader used the pink jersey (maglia rosa) for the leader of the general classification. The first cyclist to wear it was Learco Guerra.

Participants

Of the 109 riders that began the Giro d'Italia on 10 May, 65 of them made it to the finish in Milan on 31 May. Riders were allowed to ride on their own or as a member of a team. There were seven teams that competed in the race: Bianchi-Pirelli, Ganna-Dunlop, Gloria-Hutchinson, Legnano-Hutchinson, Maino-Clément, Touring-Pirelli, and Olympia-Spiga.

The peloton was primarily composed of Italians. The field featured three former Giro d'Italia champions in four-time winner Alfredo Binda, single-time winner Gaetano Belloni, and reigning champion Luigi Marchisio. Other notable Italian riders that started the race included Learco Guerra, Michele Mara, Felice Gremo, and Domenico Piemontesi. Frenchman Antonin Magne — who would go on to win the Tour de France twice — competed in the race, as well as future world champion, Belgian rider Jean Aerts. This race also saw the first Spanish riders compete with Mariano Cañardo and Ricardo Montero.

Race overview

The first stage was won in a sprint by Guerra, who became the leader of the general classification, and thus the first rider ever to don the pink jersey. Guerra also won the sprint in the second stage, but lost several minutes in the third stage. Binda won that third stage, and became the new leader.{{cite news|url=http://dlib.coninet.it/bookreader.php?&c=1&f=612&p=1#page/1/mode/2up

The sixth stage was won by Ettore Meini, who was an isolated rider without team support. This was the last time that an isolated rider won a stage in the Giro d'Italia. Binda crashed during that stage and lost the lead, and would abandon before the next stage.{{cite news|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20230527230308/http://www.archiviolastampa.it/component/option,com_lastampa/task,search/mod,libera/action,viewer/Itemid,3/page,7/articleid,1149_01_1931_0119_0007_24893823/

In the next few stages, the lead changed a few times. Guerra became leader after the eighth stage. In the ninth stage, Guerra collided with another rider, and had to leave the race in the leader's jersey.

Marchisio inherited the pink jersey, with Giacobbe and Mara close behind him. In the tenth stage, a group of three riders (Luigi Giacobbe, Francesco Camusso and Aristide Cavallini) beat the rest with a margin of a few minutes, and Giacobbe became the new race leader, with Camusso in second place.

In the eleventh stage, Camusso attacked. Giacobbe was not able to follow him, and Camusso won solo, taking the lead in the general classification. In the last stage, the standings did not change, so Camusso became the winner of the 1931 Giro d'Italia.

Final standings

Stage results

StageDateCourseDistanceTypeIn 1931, there was no distinction in the rules between plain stages and mountain stages; the icons shown here indicate that the third, fourth, fifth, sixth, seventh, ninth, tenth, eleventh, and twelfth stages included major mountains.WinnerRace Leader123456789101112
10 MayMilan to Mantua206 km[[Image:Plainstage.svg22pxlink=alt=]]Plain stageLearco GuerraLearco Guerra
11 MayMantua to Ravenna216 km[[Image:Plainstage.svg22pxlink=alt=]]Plain stageLearco GuerraLearco Guerra
13 MayRavenna to Macerata288 km[[Image:Mountainstage.svg22pxlink=alt=]]Stage with mountain(s)Alfredo BindaAlfredo Binda
15 MayMacerata to Pescara234 km[[Image:Mountainstage.svg22pxlink=alt=]]Stage with mountain(s)Alfredo BindaAlfredo Binda
17 MayPescara to Naples282 km[[Image:Mountainstage.svg22pxlink=alt=]]Stage with mountain(s)Michele MaraAlfredo Binda
19 MayNaples to Rome256 km[[Image:Plainstage.svg22pxlink=alt=]]Plain stageEttore MeiniMichele Mara
21 MayRome to Perugia247 km[[Image:Mountainstage.svg22pxlink=alt=]]Stage with mountain(s)Learco GuerraLuigi Marchisio
23 MayPerugia to Montecatini Terme246 km[[Image:Plainstage.svg22pxlink=alt=]]Plain stageLearco GuerraLearco Guerra
25 MayMontecatini Terme to Genoa248 km[[Image:Mountainstage.svg22pxlink=alt=]]Stage with mountain(s)Michele MaraLuigi Marchisio
27 MayGenoa to Cuneo263 km[[Image:Mountainstage.svg22pxlink=alt=]]Stage with mountain(s)Luigi GiacobbeLuigi Giacobbe
29 MayCuneo to Turin252 km[[Image:Mountainstage.svg22pxlink=alt=]]Stage with mountain(s)Francesco CamussoFrancesco Camusso
31 MayTurin to Milan263 km[[Image:Mountainstage.svg22pxlink=alt=]]Stage with mountain(s)Ambrogio MorelliFrancesco Camusso
Total3012 km

General classification

There were 65 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. The cyclist with the least accumulated time was the winner. Aristide Cavallini won the prize for best ranked isolati rider in the general classification.

RankNameTeamTime12345678910
Francesco Camusso [[File:Jersey pink.svg20pxlink=General classification in the Giro d'Italiaalt=Pink jersey]]Gloria-Hutchinson102h 40' 46"
Luigi GiacobbeMaino+ 2' 47"
Luigi MarchisioLegnano+ 6' 15"
Aristide Cavallini+ 10' 15"
Ettore Balmamion+ 12' 15"
Augusto ZanziGanna+ 12' 16"
Antonio Pesenti+ 13' 50"
Ambrogio MorelliBianchi+ 16' 59"
Felice GremoLegnano+ 27' 05"
Eugenio GestriLegnano+ 32' 25"

Isolati

RankNameTime
1Aristide Cavallini102h 51' 01"
2Ettore Balmamion+ 2' 30"
3Antonio Pesenti+ 3' 35"
4Renato Scorticati+ 40' 55"
5Casimiro Bianchin+ 52' 20"

Team classification

RankTeam1234
Legnano
Gloria
Ganna
Maino-Clement

There was no team that finished with all riders, while Olympia-Spina was the only team that did not have any rider finish.

References

;Footnotes

;Citations

;Bibliography

References

  1. (1 June 1931). "Camusso brillante vincitore dell'appassionante Giro ciclistico d'Italia". La Stampa - Consultazione Archivio.
  2. Bill and Carol McGann. "1931 Giro d'Italia". Dog Ear Publishing.
  3. Boyce, Barry. "19th Giro d'Italia 1931 (Italy), Camusso's late charge to victory". Cycling Revealed.
  4. (14 June 1950). "I vincitori delle categorie speciali". Corriere dello Sport.
  5. (1 June 1931). "El "comingman" Camusso definitive vencedor de la Vuelta a Italia". El Mundo Deportivo S.A..
  6. "Algemeen klassement ploegen". Tourdefrancestatistieken.nl.
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