Skip to content
Surf Wiki
Save to docs
sports

From Surf Wiki (app.surf) — the open knowledge base

1955 Giro d'Italia


FieldValue
name1955 Giro d'Italia
date14 May - 5 June 1955
stages21
distance3871
unitkm
time108h 56' 12"
firstFiorenzo Magni
first_natITA
first_team
first_colorpink
secondFausto Coppi
second_natITA
second_teamBianchi
thirdGastone Nencini
third_natITA
third_team
mountainsGastone Nencini
mountains_natITA
mountains_team
sprintsNino Defilippis
sprints_natITA
sprints_teamTorpado
teamAtala
previous[1954](1954-giro-d-italia)
next[1956](1956-giro-d-italia)

The 1955 Giro d'Italia was the 38th edition of the Giro d'Italia, one of cycling's Grand Tours. The Giro started off in Milan on 14 May with a 163 km flat stage and concluded back in Milan with a 141 km relatively flat mass-start stage on 5 June. Fourteen teams entered the race, which was won by Italian Fiorenzo Magni of the Nivea-Fuchs team. Second and third respectively were Italian riders Fausto Coppi and Gastone Nencini.

In the 20th stage, arriving in San Pellegrino Terme, Magni and Coppi attacked Gastone Nencini (who was leading the general classification) taking advantage of a puncture he suffered in an unpaved road section. Coppi won the stage (his last victory in the Giro) and Magni took the lead in the general classification.

Teams

In December 1954 when the initial plans for the 1955 edition were announced, the organization announced they would invite ten Italian based teams and six foreign teams: France, Switzerland, Belgium, the Netherlands, Spain and England whom by December had confirmed participation. Belgium, Spain, Switzerland, the Netherlands, and France, after missing the previous edition, sent teams to compete in the race. Fourteen teams were invited by the race organizers to participate in the 1955 edition of the Giro d'Italia. The Spanish team missed the pre-race ceremony because they missed their flight into Milan and had to take a train into the city. Each team sent a squad of seven riders, which meant that the race started with a peloton of 98 cyclists. From the riders that began the race, 72 made it to the finish in Milan.

The 1955 Giro was run with national teams and trade teams. Most national teams were sponsored by Italian companies for the duration of the Giro.

The national teams entering the race were:

  • The Netherlands (sponsored by Doniselli)
  • Switzerland (sponsored by Faema)
  • France
  • Spain (sponsored by )
  • Belgium (sponsored by )

Italian teams entering the race were:

  • Bianchi
  • Legnano

Pre-race favorites

Five-time champion Fausto Coppi (Bianchi) and Hugo Koblet (Faema) were named by most as the primary favorites to win the race overall. Coppi who was now 35 years old notably had won the Giro dell'Appennino and finished second at Paris–Roubaix. Serge Lang wrote that Coppi was the public's favorite to win, but most other riders did not him as much of an overall threat due his age. Novelliste Valaisan also named Pasquale Fornara () their favorites to win the race. Fornara's best finish came in 1953 when he placed third overall, while Koblet won in 1950 and had three other top ten finishes. 1948 winner Fiorenzo Magni () finished the Vuelta a España on 8 May and was viewed as contender for the general classification.

It was believed reigning champion Carlo Clerici (Faema) would be marked heavily this race after the nature of his victory the previous year when he gained significant time through a breakaway. Clerici was thought to be in good form. Faema did not include Fritz Schär who had injured his knee. Despite being a favorite to some, Koblet was not seen as a favorite by Swiss writer Serge Lang who believed he does not like climb he did when he won the race in 1950.

Young Italians including the likes of Mauro Gianneschi (Arbos), Nino Defilippis (Torpado), Giuseppe Minardi (Legnano), Agostino Coletto () were thought to be outside contenders for the general classification and were the team's leaders. Coletto was perceived by some to be the next great Italian general classification rider. Atala's best chances were seent with Giancarlo Astrua and Bruno Monti, the latter of which impressed at the Tour de Romandie. Astrua was perceived as a good climber and a rouleur. Gastone Nencini () was a younger rider whom many felt showed a lot of promise and was known for his descending prowess.

A Nouvelliste Valaisan writer felt the Spanish team had riders that can climb very well, but lacked maturity and team comradery to obtain a high general classification ranking. The French team was believed to be very strong and in good shape prior to start. They were thought to have its best chances with Raphaël Géminiani and recent Vuelta a Espana winner Jean Dotto who both were in great form, but it was thought Géminiani could lose several minutes in the time trial stages.

Doniselli, the Dutch team, was thought to have great riders who could animate the race like Wout Wagtmans, Hein Van Breenen, and Gerrit Voorting. Notably Thijs Roks, van Breenen, and Wagtmans composed the podium for the Dutch national road race championship. Doniselli sports director Kees Pellenaars stated that Wagtmans gave the best chance for the overall victory, but instead of surrounding the whole team with him throughout the race as other Italian teams do, he would allow two to three riders to attempt attacks. Expectations of the Belgian team by a Nouvelliste Valaisan writer were unknown as the writer cited a previous difficulty by Belgian riders in the Giro d'Italia. A notable omission from the team was Rik van Steenbergen. The teams' young riders Joseph Schils and Carl Borgmans were expected to have a good performance. In addition, the team brought a new flahute Rik Van Looy.

Other notable riders that did not participate were Frenchman Louison Bobet and Swiss rider Ferdinand Kübler. In addition, this was the first Giro d'Italia without two-time winner Gino Bartali participating. Bartali retired following the previous season, but returned to the Giro d'Italia to provide commentary for several newspapers.

Route and stages

The route's general structure was announced on December 29, 1954 at the Palazzo Marino in Milan in front of local dignitaries. The finalized route was revealed on 9 March 1955. The route was designed in a counter-clockwise direction across twenty-one days of racing and two rest days,It contained two time trial events, one individual and one team event. The team time trial rode over the cobbled roads of Genoa. This race featured the first stage finish and start in France. The tenth stage utilized the route used in the 1955 UCI World Championships men's road race that were to be held in Frascati, Italy August that year in a 20.4 km loop that was traversed ten times. The highest climb was the Passo Pordoi. In total the route had roughly 25000 m of elevation change of which five stages contained eight categorized climbs that awarded points for the mountains classification. The nineteenth stage was deemed the queen stage as it featured the climbs of the Falzarego Pass, the Col de Rolle, the Pordoi, and the Col de Brocon. Five stages ended in a velodrome.

Due to complaints from the riders about the previous year's race, the organizers reduced the amount of kilometers in the race by approximately 500 km. Further, race organizers decided to reduce the length of the stages within the Giro d'Italia closer to 200 km, similar to the Tour de France at the time. The stages had become known as "Italian stages" for their extreme length in hundreds of kilometers, only to have the racing start in the final 10 km. Through the reduction in stage length, the organizers hoped to have more attacking done by riders. The intermediate sprints or "flying checks" as they were known were well received and thought to have helped animate the race, with several stage winners coming from those that won the sprints of the day. The amount of intermediate sprints has been reduced by 30 this race, leaving 30 to be taken. If you win the prize you must be within the first five positions of the general classification.

A writer for Nouvelliste Valaisan felt a rouleur could win the general classification if they could take advantage of the course before the race hits the Dolomites. The Gazette de Lausanne writer Serge Lang wrote that the route was the hardest since World War II and felt the general public and most newspapers felt the route was well designed.

StageDateCourseDistanceTypeWinner123456789101112131415161718192021
14 MayMilan to Turin163 km[[Image:Plainstage.svg22pxlink=alt=]]Plain stageGuido Messina
15 MayTurin to Cannes (France)243 km[[Image:Mountainstage.svg22pxlink=alt=]]Stage with mountain(s)Fiorenzo Magni
16 MayCannes (France) to Sanremo123 km[[Image:Mountainstage.svg22pxlink=alt=]]Stage with mountain(s)Nino Defilippis
17 MaySanremo to Acqui Terme192 km[[Image:Mountainstage.svg22pxlink=alt=]]Stage with mountain(s)Alessandro Fantini
18 MayAcqui Terme to Genoa170 km[[Image:Mountainstage.svg22pxlink=alt=]]Stage with mountain(s)Giancarlo Astrua
19 MayGenoa to Lido d'Albaro18 km[[Image:Time Trial.svg22pxlink=alt=]]Team time trialTorpado
20 MayGenoa to Viareggio164 km[[Image:Mountainstage.svg22pxlink=alt=]]Stage with mountain(s)Giovanni Corrieri
21 MayRest day
22 MayViareggio to Perugia260 km[[Image:Mountainstage.svg22pxlink=alt=]]Stage with mountain(s)Rino Benedetti
23 MayPerugia to Rome174 km[[Image:Mountainstage.svg22pxlink=alt=]]Stage with mountain(s)Gastone Nencini
24 MayFrascati to Frascati207 km[[Image:Mountainstage.svg22pxlink=alt=]]Stage with mountain(s)Bernardo Ruiz
25 MayRome to Naples242 km[[Image:Plainstage.svg22pxlink=alt=]]Plain stageVincenzo Zucconelli
26 MayNaples to Scanno216 km[[Image:Mountainstage.svg22pxlink=alt=]]Stage with mountain(s)Gastone Nencini
27 MayScanno to Ancona251 km[[Image:Mountainstage.svg22pxlink=alt=]]Stage with mountain(s)Giorgio Albani
28 MayAncona to Pineta di Cervia173 km[[Image:Mountainstage.svg22pxlink=alt=]]Stage with mountain(s)Giuseppe Minardi
29 MayPineta di Cervia to Ravenna50 km[[Image:Time Trial.svg22pxlink=alt=]]Individual time trialPasquale Fornara
30 MayRavenna to Lido di Jesolo245 km[[Image:Plainstage.svg22pxlink=alt=]]Plain stageRino Benedetti
31 MayLido di Jesolo to Trieste150 km[[Image:Mountainstage.svg22pxlink=alt=]]Stage with mountain(s)Alessandro Fantini
1 JuneRest day
2 JuneTrieste to Cortina d'Ampezzo236 km[[Image:Mountainstage.svg22pxlink=alt=]]Stage with mountain(s)Angelo Conterno
3 JuneCortina d'Ampezzo to Trento227 km[[Image:Mountainstage.svg22pxlink=alt=]]Stage with mountain(s)Jean Dotto
4 JuneTrento to San Pellegrino Terme216 km[[Image:Mountainstage.svg22pxlink=alt=]]Stage with mountain(s)Fausto Coppi
5 JuneSan Pellegrino Terme to Milan141 km[[Image:Plainstage.svg22pxlink=alt=]]Plain stageHugo Koblet
Total3871 km

Classification leadership

One jersey was worn during the 1955 Giro d'Italia. The leader of the general classification – calculated by adding the stage finish times of each rider – wore a pink jersey. This classification is the most important of the race, and its winner is considered as the winner of the Giro. There were no time bonuses in the 1955 Giro.

The mountains classification leader. The climbs all awarded three points to the first rider and one point to the second rider to cross the summit. There was no jersey for this classification.

The intermediate sprints classification was again based on sprints midway through a stage, and positions at the finish line, but unlike the year before, now riders only received points at the finish line if they also scored points on previous sprints in that stage. For sprints midway through a stage, the first 3 riders scored points, while at the finish line the first 5 riders could score points.

The teams classification got a new system in 1955. It was now based on stage positions: the stage positions of the three best riders per team were added, and the team with the lowest total rank was the best team. There were two separate team classifications, one for the foreign teams and one for the Italian teams (also called the G.P. dell'Industria). There were no jerseys for these classifications.

Minor classifications were the classifications for best young rider (esordienti) and best foreign rider (stranieri).

StageWinnerGeneral classification
[[Image:Jersey pink.svg25pxlink=alt=A pink jersey]]Mountains classificationIntermediate sprints classificationItalian Team classificationForeign Team classification123456789101112131415161718192021**Final****Fiorenzo Magni****Gastone Nencini****Atala****France**
Guido MessinaGuido Messina*not awarded*Henri Van KerckhoveLegnanoGirardengo
Fiorenzo MagniFiorenzo MagniBruno MontiFiorenzo MagniLeo-ChlorodontDoniselli
Nino DefilippisNino Defilippis
Alessandro FantiniRino Benedetti
Giancarlo AstruaNino Defilippis
TorpadoNivea-FuchsFaema
Giovanni Corrieri
Rino BenedettiRino BenedettiAtala
Gastone Nencini
Bernardo RuizBruno Monti
Vincenzo ZucconelliFrance
Gastone NenciniRaphaël GéminianiBruno Monti & Gastone NenciniNino Defilippis
Giorgio Albani
Giuseppe MinardiGiuseppe Minardi, Bruno Monti & Gastone Nencini
Pasquale FornaraGastone Nencini
Rino Benedetti
Alessandro Fantini
Angelo ConternoBruno Monti
Jean DottoGastone Nencini
Fausto CoppiFiorenzo Magni
Hugo Koblet
**Nino Defilippis**

Final standings

Legend
[[Image:Jersey pink.svg20pxalt=Pink jersey]]

General classification

RankNameTeamTime12345678910
Fiorenzo Magni [[File:Jersey pink.svg20pxlink=General classification in the Giro d'Italiaalt=Pink jersey]]Nivea108h 56' 12"
Fausto CoppiBianchi+ 13"
Gastone NenciniChlorodont+ 4' 08"
Raphaël GéminianiFrance+ 4' 51"
Agostino ColettoFréjus+ 7' 19"
Aldo MoserTorpado+ 8' 01"
Pasquale FornaraChlorodont+ 9' 16"
Salvador BotellaIgnis+ 14' 10"
Wout WagtmansDoniselli+ 16' 03"
Hugo KobletFaema+ 20' 16"

Foreign rider classification

RankNameTeamTime12345678910
Raphaël GéminianiFrance109h 01' 03"
Salvador BotellaIgnis+ 9' 19"
Wout WagtmansDoniselli+ 11' 12"
Hugo KobletFaema+ 15' 25"
Hein Van BreenenDoniselli+ 19' 49"
Nello LaurediOlympia+ 32' 10"
Jean DottoFrance+ 35' 03"
Carlo ClericiFaema+ 50' 44"
Bernardo RuizIgnis+ 56' 28"
Gerrit VoortingDoniselli+ 58' 49"

Mountains classification

RankNameTeamPoints123457
Gastone NenciniChlorodont7
José SerraIgnis6
Bruno MontiAtala4
Antonio GelabertIgnis
Giuseppe MinardiLegnano3
Jean DottoFrance
Wout WagtmansDoniselli1
Raphaël GéminianiFrance
Pierino BaffiNivea-Fuchs
Giancarlo AstruaAtala
Salvador BotellaIgnis

Intermediate sprints classification

RankNameTeamPoints123456789
Nino DefilippisTorpado42
Giorgio AlbaniLegnano39
Rino BenedettiLeo-Chlorodont38
Fiorenzo Magni [[File:Jersey pink.svg20pxlink=General classification in the Giro d'Italiaalt=Pink jersey]]Nivea16
Fausto CoppiBianchi13
Giuseppe FaveroBianchi13
Louis CaputFrance12
Donato PiazzaNivea-Fuchs11
Gastone NenciniChlorodont10
Giovanni CorrieriArbos
Angelo ConternoTorpado

Italian team classification

RankTeamPoints123456789
Atala840
Chlorodont918
Nivea1117
Bianchi1203
Torpado1222
Legnano1237
Fréjus1437
Arbos1461
Welter1667

Foreign team classification

RankTeamPoints12345
France1050
Faema1190
Doniselli1334
Ignis1347
Girardengo2086

References

Citations

Bibliography

References

  1. (6 June 1955). "Termino La Vuelta A Italia Con La Victoria De Magni". El Mundo Deportivo.
  2. L.C.. (30 December 1954). "I capisaldi del Giro d'Italia che partita il 14 maggio da Milano". Editrice La Stampa.
  3. E.U.. (13 May 1955). "Le 38e Tour d'italie cycliste". Nouvelliste Valaisan.
  4. (14 May 1955). "I corridori in gara". Corriere dello Sport.
  5. Bill and Carol McGann. "1955 Giro d'Italia". Dog Ear Publishing.
  6. Mickey. (13 May 1955). "Voici le Giro!". Journal et Feuille d'Avis du Valais et de Sion.
  7. (14 May 1955). "Les questions de contrôle au Tour d'Italie". La Sentinelle.
  8. Serge Lang. (14 May 1955). "Aujourd'hui départ du Tour d'Italie". Gazette de Lausanne.
  9. (11 May 1955). "Les Suisses au Giro". Nouvelliste Valaisan.
  10. (14 May 1955). "Vandaag Start Giro". Limburgsch Dagblad.
  11. (13 May 1955). "De Pel deed een beloftte: geen sigaren meer!". Het vrije volk.
  12. (14 May 1955). "Ronde van Italie". de Volkskrant.
  13. (14 May 1955). "Gino Bartali volgt de Ronde als speciale verslaggever". Limburgsch Dagblad.
  14. (10 March 1955). "Varato il Giro d'Italia chilometri 3857 in 21 tappe". Corriere dello Sport.
  15. (10 March 1955). "Queste le 21 tappe del "Giro d'Italia"". PCI.
  16. Attilio Camoriano. (11 March 1955). "Il percorso del "XXXVIII Giro d'Italia" si addice alle corse a tappe moderne". PCI.
  17. (14 May 1955). "Le Tour d'Italie". La Liberte.
  18. (12 May 1955). "Des samedi, l'attention des sportifs se dirige vers le Sud, ou ... Koblet, Clerici et Coppi batailleront pour remporter le Tour d'Italie". La Sentinelle.
  19. (13 May 1955). "Giro 1955 Klaar Voor de Start". Eindhovens Dagblad.
  20. (14 May 1955). "Le caratteristiche delle tappe". Corriere dello Sport.
  21. Laura Weislo. (13 May 2008). "Giro d'Italia classifications demystified". Future Publishing Limited.
  22. (4 June 1955). "Il ruolino di Marcia del Gr. Pr. Della Montagna". Corriere dello Sport.
  23. "Informatie over de Giro d'Italia van 1955". tourdefrancestatistieken.nl.
  24. (7 June 1955). "Sintesi delle ventuno tappe". Corriere dello Sport.
  25. (6 June 1955). "Terminó la Vuelta a Italia". El Mundo Deportivo.
  26. (6 June 1955). "Classifica generale". Corriere dello Sport.
  27. (6 June 1955). "Le classifiche". Corriere dello Sport.
Info: Wikipedia Source

This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.

Want to explore this topic further?

Ask Mako anything about 1955 Giro d'Italia — get instant answers, deeper analysis, and related topics.

Research with Mako

Free with your Surf account

Content sourced from Wikipedia, available under CC BY-SA 4.0.

This content may have been generated or modified by AI. CloudSurf Software LLC is not responsible for the accuracy, completeness, or reliability of AI-generated content. Always verify important information from primary sources.

Report