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1995 Giro d'Italia


FieldValue
name1995 Giro d'Italia
date13 May — 4 June 1995
stages22
distance3736
unitkm
time97h 39' 50"
firstTony Rominger
first_natSUI
first_colorpink
first_team
secondEvgeni Berzin
second_natRUS
second_team
thirdPēteris Ugrjumovs
third_natLAT
third_team
pointsTony Rominger
points_natSUI
points_colorviolet
points_team
mountainsMariano Piccoli
mountains_natITA
mountains_colorgreen
mountains_team
intergiroTony Rominger
intergiro_natSUI
intergiro_team
intergiro_colorblue
team
teampoints
previous[1994](1994-giro-d-italia)
next[1996](1996-giro-d-italia)

The 1995 Giro d'Italia took place in May and June 1995. It was the 78th edition of the event. The Giro began on 13 May with a stage that began in Perugia and ended Terni. The race came to a close on 4 June with a stage that ended in the Italian city of Milan. The race was won by the Swiss Tony Rominger of the team. Second and third were the Russian rider Evgeni Berzin and Latvian rider Piotr Ugrumov.

Mario Cipollini won the event's first leg in a bunch sprint, allowing him to be the first rider to don the race leader's maglia rosa (). The following stage was an individual time trial that was won by Rominger, who also gained enough time on Cipollini to take the race lead. Rominger built upon his lead by winning the remaining two time trial stages, along with the hilly stage 4, and retained the lead for the duration of the race. By winning the Giro he became the third Swiss rider to win the event.

In addition to the general classification, Tony Rominger also won the points and intergiro classifications. rider Mariano Piccoli won the mountains classification. finished as the winners of the team classification. The team points classification, a system in which the teams' riders are awarded points for placing within the top twenty in each stage and the points are then totaled for each team, was also won by Gewiss–Ballan.

Teams

Main article: List of teams and cyclists in the 1995 Giro d'Italia

A total of 22 teams were invited to participate in the 1995 Giro d'Italia. Each team sent a squad of nine riders, so the Giro began with a peloton of 198 cyclists. Italy had the most riders participating with 85, while only Spain (28) and France (15) were represented by more than 10 riders. Of these, 81 were riding the Giro d'Italia for the first time. The average age of riders was 27.76 years, ranging from 19–year–old Sandro Giacomelli () to 35–year–old Giancarlo Perini (). The team with the youngest average rider age was (25), while the oldest was (29). Of the riders that started this edition of the Giro d'Italia, a total of 122 riders made it to the finish in Milan.

The teams entering the race were:

  • Ceramiche Refin–Cantina Tollo
  • Sicasal–Acral
  • ZG Mobili–Selle Italia

Pre-race favorites

The starting peloton included Evgeni Berzin, the 1994 winner. Berzin's team, , also brought Latvian Piotr Ugrumov, a two-time Grand Tour runner-up. The two riders had developed a mutual distaste for each other. El País writers Paolo Viberti and Carlos Arribas believed that Swiss rider Tony Rominger and Latvian Piotr Ugrumov were the favorites to win the race, while several named Rominger as the sole favorite. Author Bill McGann believed that Rominger and Berzin were in great form coming into the race. Specifically, Rominger returned to the Giro after a six-year absence and, more recently, coming off of a victory at the Tour de Romandie. Urgumov was seen as the primary challenger for Rominger for his performances at previous Giros and his knack for showing great form in the final week after remaining quiet in the first two weeks. Aside from Rominger and Berzin, ''El Punt'''s Luis Simon named 1988 winner Andrew Hampsten, Russian Pavel Tonkov, and Claudio Chiappucci amongst several other riders that could challenge for the overall title.

Italian Marco Pantani was seen by some to be a contender for to win the race. However, Pantani crashed during a training ride on 1 May and did not recover in time to participate. Two-time winner Miguel Induráin chose not to enter the race in favor of preparing for the Tour de France. Instead, Indurain rode the Critérium du Dauphiné Libéré. Twelve of the UCI Road World Cup top 20 ranked cyclists did not compete in the Giro d'Italia.

Route and stages

The route for the 1995 Giro d'Italia was unveiled by race director Carmine Castellano on 12 November 1994 in Milan. It contained three time trial events, all of which were individual. There were thirteen stages containing high mountains, of which five had summit finishes: stage 8, to Massiccio del Sirino; stage 11, to Il Ciocco; stage 14, to Schnals; stage 15, to Lenzerheide; and stage 20, to Gressoney-Saint-Jean. The organizers chose to include one rest day. When compared to the previous year's race, the race was 6 km longer, contained one more rest day, and the same number of stages. The nineteenth stage was regarded as the queen stage as it featured the climbs of the Col Agnel, Col d'Izoard, and Colle di Sampeyre.

The race route began in Perugia and traveled throughout the southern half of Italy for the first ten stages. After the stage 10 individual time trial, the riders were transferred to Tuscany by airplane, where the race remained in the northern half of the country and proceeded to cross into the higher and tougher mountains. There were a total of three stages that started outside Italy. Stage 15 ended in the Swiss city Lenzerheide and served as the start for the race's sixteenth stage. The mountainous twentieth stage began in the French city of Briançon.

The nineteenth stage was originally planned to stretch from Mondovì to Briançon over 202 km. The stage finish was moved to part way up the ascent of the Col Agnel, due to avalanches. The stage finished in Pontechianale where the day's intermediate sprint had been planned after 129.9 km of racing. The avalanche trapped several fans that had gotten their earlier, along with their cars. Ten spectators were injured and two were taken to the hospital.

Chiappucci believed that the descents of the mountains included in the race were very difficult. An El País writer found the route to be more mountainous than in years past. In addition, the writer mentioned that the increase in mountains within the route coupled with the reduced number of time trial kilometers, including the lack of a prologue, favored Marco Pantani. Three-time winner Gino Bartali believed that the route for the Giro was harder than the same year's Tour de France course.

StageDateCourseDistanceTypeWinner12345678910111213141516171819202122
13 MayPerugia to Terni205 km[[Image:Mountainstage.svg22pxlink=alt=]]Stage with mountain(s)Mario Cipollini
14 MayFoligno to Assisi19 km[[Image:Mountain Time Trial Stage.svg22pxlink=alt=]]Individual time trialTony Rominger
15 MaySpoleto to Marotta161 km[[Image:Plainstage.svg22pxlink=alt=]]Plain stageMario Cipollini
16 MayMondolfo to Loreto192 km[[Image:Mountainstage.svg22pxlink=alt=]]Stage with mountain(s)Tony Rominger
17 MayPorto Recanati to Tortoreto182 km[[Image:Mountainstage.svg22pxlink=alt=]]Stage with mountain(s)Filippo Casagrande
18 MayTrani to Taranto165 km[[Image:Plainstage.svg22pxlink=alt=]]Plain stageNicola Minali
19 MayTaranto to Terme Luigiane216 km[[Image:Mountainstage.svg22pxlink=alt=]]Stage with mountain(s)Maurizio Fondriest
20 MayAcquappesa to Massiccio del Sirino209 km[[Image:Mountainstage.svg22pxlink=alt=]]Stage with mountain(s)Laudelino Cubino
21 MayTerme La Calda to Salerno165 km[[Image:Plainstage.svg22pxlink=alt=]]Plain stageRolf Sørensen
22 MayTelese Terme to Maddaloni42 km[[Image:Time Trial.svg22pxlink=alt=]]Individual time trialTony Rominger
23 MayRest day
24 MayPietrasanta to Il Ciocco175 km[[Image:Mountainstage.svg22pxlink=alt=]]Stage with mountain(s)Enrico Zaina
25 MayBorgo a Mozzano to Cento195 km[[Image:Plainstage.svg22pxlink=alt=]]Plain stageJán Svorada
26 MayPieve di Cento to Rovereto218 km[[Image:Mountainstage.svg22pxlink=alt=]]Stage with mountain(s)Pascal Richard
27 MayTrento to Schnals240 km[[Image:Mountainstage.svg22pxlink=alt=]]Stage with mountain(s)Oliverio Rincón
28 MaySchnals to Lenzerheide (Switzerland)185 km[[Image:Mountainstage.svg22pxlink=alt=]]Stage with mountain(s)Mariano Piccoli
29 MayLenzerheide (Switzerland) to Treviglio224 km[[Image:Mountainstage.svg22pxlink=alt=]]Stage with mountain(s)Giuseppe Citterio
30 MayCenate Sotto to Selvino43 km[[Image:Time Trial.svg22pxlink=alt=]]Individual time trialTony Rominger
31 MayStradella to Sanctuary of Vicoforte221 km[[Image:Plainstage.svg22pxlink=alt=]]Plain stageDenis Zanette
1 JuneMondovì to Pontechianale130 km[[Image:Mountainstage.svg22pxlink=alt=]]Stage with mountain(s)Pascal Richard
2 JuneBriançon (France) to Gressoney-Saint-Jean208 km[[Image:Mountainstage.svg22pxlink=alt=]]Stage with mountain(s)Serhiy Ushakov
3 JunePont-Saint-Martin to Luino190 km[[Image:Mountainstage.svg22pxlink=alt=]]Stage with mountain(s)Evgeni Berzin
4 JuneLuino to Milan148 km[[Image:Plainstage.svg22pxlink=alt=]]Plain stageGiovanni Lombardi
Total3736 km

Race overview

Mario Cipollini won the race's opening stage by several bike lengths to don the race's first maglia rosa (). Cipollini lost the lead to Tony Rominger following the stage 2 individual time trial that was contested in rainy conditions. Rominger was able to gain almost a minute on each of the main general classification contenders including Piotr Ugrumov and Evgeni Berzin. The third stage was Cipollini's second stage victory as he won the bunch sprint. The fourth stage was contested on a set circuit that was covered four times. The day's breakaway managed to get a maximum of 14' 25" before gradually being pulled in. Claudio Chiappucci attacked on the final lap but was pulled back in by the chasing peloton. Ugrumov, Berzin, and Berzin's teammate Vladislav Bobrik then attacked and managed to form a gap. Rominger chased after and caught the riders, then passed them and went on to win the stage.

The event's fifth leg saw a breakaway succeed; the group began with five riders and was reduced to three riders – Erik Breukink, Filippo Casagrande, and Rolf Sørensen – before the finish. Casagrande won the three-man sprint to the line to take the day. The sixth stage resulted in a field sprint that was won by Nicola Minali. The seventh stage featured an undulating stage profile, with a slight uphill finish. On the race's final incline, Rominger attacked but his move was marked by several general classification contenders. Maurizio Fondriest managed to edge out Rominger in a dash for the line which saw him gain four seconds on Rominger due to time bonuses. The eighth stage featured the first summit finish of the race, to Massiccio del Sirino. The day's breakaway was established early on in the day and managed to reach the final climb before the pursuing peloton. Stage winner Laudelino Cubino attacked with eight kilometers to go and rode solo until the finish; the time he gained during the stage allowed him to move into third overall.

The ninth day of racing resulted in a bunch sprint that was won by Sørensen. The next stage of the race was a forty-two kilometer individual time trial. Race leader Rominger won the leg by one minute and twenty-four seconds and increased his overall lead to three minutes over Casagrande, who was in second place overall. Enrico Zaina and Nelson Rodríguez Serna were the first two riders to reach the stage's final climb of Il Cioccio and the two stayed out in front until the finish which saw Zaina win the race to the line. With four kilometers left in the stage, Ugrumov and Berzin attempted to crack Rominger by attacking him repeatedly. After several attacks where the riders moves were marked, the riders agreed to ride to the finish together. The twelfth stage of the race saw the peloton arrive at the finish together ready for a bunch sprint. Cipollini originally won the stage but was relegated to last place on the stage after having been found to have leaned on Mario Manzoni during the dash to the line. Ján Svorada, who had come in second, was then made the stage winner.

The thirteenth stage saw the race begin to enter the smaller mountains within the Dolomites.{{cite news|url=http://elpais.com/diario/1995/05/27/deportes/801525601_850215.html|title=Richard gana en el aperitivo dolomítico

The sixteenth leg was a downhill stage from the Swiss Alps. A breakaway did form but was caught before the run into the finish as the peloton prepared for a sprint finish. The stage was initially won by Giovanni Lombardi, but he was deemed by race judges to have had an irregular sprint and the victory was awarded to the second placed rider Giuseppe Citterio. The next day consisted of a climbing time trial to Selvino. Rominger extended his advantage over all his competitors by winning the stage by a margin of one minute and thirty-nine seconds over Berzin. The eighteenth stage was plagued by rainy conditions throughout the undulating course. The day's breakaway consisted of sixteen riders, which Tony Rominger's Mapei team chose not to chase down. Denis Zanette and Giuseppe Guerini formed an attack group from the breakaway and rode into the finish where Zanette managed to edge out Guerini for the win. The main contenders did not have any time gaps during the stage, leaving the general classification unchanged.

The nineteenth leg saw a breakaway of nine riders form off the front of the peloton. While racing, the finish line of the stage was moved to Pontechinale, a location that was part way up the climb of the Col Agnel because several avalanches occurred near the summit and prevented the riders from passing. Richard was the first rider to reach the new finish line and thus won his second stage. Serguei Outschakov won the following stage after being a part of the day's breakaway that dwindled as the stage wore on; he out-raced the only other remaining member Richard to win the stage. Behind, Urgrumov attacked and was only marked by both Berzin and Rincon, while Rominger trailed behind. Berzin and Ugrumov refused to work with one another and did not extend their advantage over Rominger. Rominger wound up losing minimal time. The race's penultimate stage was marred by rain. On the second ascension of the Cuvignone, Berzin attacked and was able to distance himself; however, he gave up the attack near the summit. He attacked again on the race's final climb of Salita di Montegrino Valtravaglia. Berzin rode solo to win the stage and managed to gain twenty-five seconds on Ugrumov and Rominger. The final leg of the race was decided through a bunch sprint that was won by Giovanni Lombardi. Rominger became the third Swiss rider to win the Giro.

Three riders achieved multiple stage victories: Cipollini (stages 1 and 3), Rominger (stages 2, 4, 10, and 17), and Richard (stages 13 and 19). Stage wins were achieved by eleven of the twenty-one competing squads, eight of which won multiple stages. Mapei–GB–Latexco had four stage wins through Rominger. MG Maglificio–Technogym won a total of three stage wins with Richard and Rolf Sörensen (stage 9). Six teams won two stages. These were Mercatone Uno–Saeco (through Cipollini), Lampre–Panaria (Fondriest on stage 7 and Svorada on stage 12), Brescialat (Casagrande on stage 5 and Piccoli on stage 15), Aki–Gipiemme (Citterio on stage 16 and Zanette on stage 18), Gewiss–Ballan (Minali on stage 6 and Berzin on stage 21), and Polti–Granarolo–Santini (Outschakov on stage 20 and Lombardi on stage 22). Kelme-Sureña, Carrera Jeans–Tassoni, and ONCE each won a single stage at the Giro, through Cubino (stage 8), Zaina (stage 11), and Rincón (stage 14), respectively.

Classification leadership

Four different jerseys were worn during the 1995 Giro d'Italia. The leader of the general classification – calculated by adding the stage finish times of each rider, and allowing time bonuses for the first three finishers on mass-start stages – wore a pink jersey. This classification is the most important of the race, and its winner is considered as the winner of the Giro.

For the points classification, which awarded a purple (or cyclamen) jersey to its leader, cyclists were given points for finishing a stage in the top 15; additional points could also be won in intermediate sprints. The green jersey was awarded to the mountains classification leader. In this ranking, points were won by reaching the summit of a climb ahead of other cyclists. Each climb was ranked as either first, second or third category, with more points available for higher category climbs. The Cima Coppi, the race's highest point of elevation, awarded more points than the other first category climbs. The Cima Coppi for this Giro was the Col Agnel, but it was not climbed due to avalanches that prevented the riders from being able to pass on the roads. The intergiro classification was marked by a blue jersey. The calculation for the intergiro is similar to that of the general classification, in each stage there is a midway point that the riders pass through a point and where their time is stopped. As the race goes on, their times compiled and the person with the lowest time is the leader of the intergiro classification and wears the blue jersey.

Although no jersey was awarded, there was also a classification for the teams, in which the stage finish times of the best three cyclists per team were added; the leading team was the one with the lowest total time. There was another team classification that awarded points to each team based on their riding's finishing position in every stage. The team with the highest total of points was the leader of the classification.

The rows in the following table correspond to the jerseys awarded after that stage was run.

StageWinnerGeneral classification
[[Image:Jersey pink.svg25pxlink=alt=]]Points classification
[[Image:Jersey violet.svg25pxlink=alt=]]Mountains classification
[[Image:Jersey green.svg25pxlink=alt=]]Team classification12345678910111213141516171819202122**Final****Tony Rominger****Tony Rominger****Mariano Piccoli******
Mario CipolliniMario CipolliniMario CipolliniGiuseppe Guerini
Tony RomingerTony RomingerRolf Sørensen
Mario CipolliniMario CipolliniMariano Piccoli
Tony Rominger
Filippo CasagrandeBrescialat
Nicola Minali
Maurizio Fondriest
Laudelino CubinoMG Maglificio–Technogym
Rolf Sørensen
Tony RomingerTony Rominger
Enrico Zaina
Ján Svorada
Pascal Richard
Oliverio Rincón
Mariano Piccoli
Giuseppe Citterio
Tony Rominger
Denis Zanette
Pascal Richard
Serguei Outschakov
Evgeni Berzin
Giovanni Lombardi

Final standings

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

General classification

RiderTeamTime
1Tony Rominger [[Image:Jersey pink.svg20pxalt=Pink jersey]][[Image:Jersey violet.svg20pxalt=Purple jersey]][[Image:Jersey blue.svg20pxalt=Blue jersey]]
2Evgeni Berzin
3Piotr Ugrumov
4Claudio Chiappucci
5Oliverio Rincón
6Pavel Tonkov
7Enrico Zaina
8Heinz ImbodenCeramiche Refin–Cantina Tollo
9Georg Totschnig
10Francesco Casagrande

Points classification

RiderTeamPoints
1Tony Rominger [[Image:Jersey violet.svg20pxalt=Purple jersey]][[Image:Jersey pink.svg20pxalt=Pink jersey]][[Image:Jersey blue.svg20pxalt=Blue jersey]]
2Rolf Sørensen
3Evgeni Berzin
4Piotr Ugrumov
5Giovanni Fidanza

Mountains classification

RiderTeamPoints
1Mariano Piccoli [[Image:Jersey green.svg20pxalt=Green jersey]]Brescialat
2Nelson Rodríguez SernaZG Mobili–Selle Italia
3Giuseppe Guerini
4Evgeni Berzin
5Oliverio Rincón

Intergiro classification

RiderTeamTime
1Tony Rominger [[Image:Jersey blue.svg20pxalt=Blue jersey]][[Image:Jersey pink.svg20pxalt=Pink jersey]][[Image:Jersey violet.svg20pxalt=Purple jersey]]
2Giovanni Fidanza
3Evgeni Berzin

Team classification

TeamTime
1
2
3
4
5Brescialat

Team points classification

TeamPoints
1
2
3
4
5

References

Footnotes

Citations

References

  1. (13 May 1995). "Todos pendientes del 137". El Mundo Deportivo.
  2. (13 May 1995). "Los números de la prueba". El Mundo Deportivo.
  3. Carlos Arribas. (13 May 1995). "La imagen del ciclismo español sin Induráin". El País.
  4. (8 May 1995). "189 iscritti e 2,5 miliardi di premi". PCI.
  5. "Giro d'Italia – 1995 Riders per nation".
  6. "Giro d'Italia – 1995 Debutants".
  7. "Giro d'Italia – 1995 Peloton averages".
  8. "Giro d'Italia – 1995 Oldest competitors".
  9. "Giro d'Italia – 1995 Average team age".
  10. Bill and Carol McGann. "1995 Giro d'Italia". Dog Ear Publishing.
  11. Paolo Viberti. (13 May 1995). "Marco Pantani renuncia a correr el Giro". El País.
  12. Adrian R. Huber. (13 May 1995). "Rominger es el maxim favorit del Giro, que comenca avui a Perusa". Hermes Comunicacions S.A..
  13. (13 May 1995). "Avec Tony comme favori". L'Express.
  14. (12 May 1995). "Tony Rominger favori No 1". L'Express.
  15. LLuis Simon. (13 May 1995). "Rominger i Berzin inicien el Giro com a principals favorits a la victoria". Hermes Comunicacions S.A..
  16. Gianni Ranieri. (13 November 1994). "Pantani preso in Giro". Editrice La Stampa.
  17. (13 November 1994). "Il ritorno in Valle del Giro d'Italia". Editrice La Stampa.
  18. (13 November 1994). "Giro in saliscendi Ma Pantani dice: <<Mi aspettavo di più>>". PCI.
  19. (20 May 1995). "Rominger, sorprendido". El Mundo Deportivo.
  20. (24 May 1995). "Tony critica la carrera: "El desorden es absoluto"". El Mundo Deportivo.
  21. (27 May 1995). "La llegada de hoy en Val Senale es el final del primer 'Tapone' alpino". El Mundo Deportivo.
  22. (28 May 1995). "Clasificaciones". El Mundo Deportivo.
  23. (2 June 1995). "Clasificaciones". El Mundo Deportivo.
  24. Paolo Viberti. (1 June 1995). "La nieve amenaza la disputa de la etapa reina". El País.
  25. (13 May 1995). "Rominger sale en busca de su reválida italiana". El Mundo Deportivo.
  26. Carlos Arribas. (13 November 1994). "Un Giro para Pantani". El País.
  27. Paolo Viberti. (2 June 1995). "Richard se apunta una etapa recortada por la nieve". El País.
  28. Paolo Viberti. (26 May 1995). "Svorada gana en Cento por descalificación de Cipollini". El País.
  29. Gianni Ranieri. (26 May 1995). "Il Giro cerca un Pantani". Editrice La Stampa.
  30. (30 May 1995). "Otro sprint marrullero acaba con descalificados". El Mundo Deportivo.
  31. Gianni Ranieri. (30 May 1995). "Lombardi retrocesso, vince Citterio; rubata la super-bici della Maglia rosa". Editrice La Stampa.
  32. Paolo Viberti. (30 May 1995). "Nueva bronca entre 'sprinters' la víspera de la cronoescalada". El País.
  33. Paolo Viberti. (14 May 1995). "Mario Cipollini, el primer líder del Giro de {{sic". El País.
  34. Paolo Viberti. (15 May 1995). "Rominger comienza a hacer suyo el Giro". El País.
  35. (16 May 1995). "Cipollini, el rey de la 'volata'". El Mundo Deportivo.
  36. Paolo Viberti. (17 May 1995). "Rominger reina hasta en las etapas". El País.
  37. Paolo Viberti. (18 May 1995). "Casagrande 'el joven' gana en un santiamén". El País.
  38. (19 May 1995). "Sprint a muerte". El Mundo Deportivo.
  39. Paolo Viberti. (20 May 1995). "Fondriest gana una pequeña batalla". El País.
  40. Paolo Viberti. (21 May 1995). "Cubino e Induráin reinan en las cumbres". El País.
  41. Paolo Viberti. (22 May 1995). "Sorensen gana en Salerno la víspera de la contrarreloj larga de Giro". El País.
  42. Paolo Viberti. (23 May 1995). "Tony Rominger gana a lo grande la contrarreloj larga del Giro". El País.
  43. Paolo Viberti. (25 May 1995). "Rominger impone "la ley del miedo" en el Giro". El País.
  44. Paolo Viberti. (28 May 1995). "Rominger se exhibe en los Alpes". El País.
  45. Paolo Viberti. (31 May 1995). "Rominger remacha su Giro en Selvino". El País.
  46. (3 June 1995). "Encerrona a Rominger en el avituallamiento". El Mundo Deportivo.
  47. (14 May 1995). "Estrena el Rosa". El Mundo Deportivo.
  48. (15 May 1995). "Rominger, un Fórmula 1". El Mundo Deportivo.
  49. (17 May 1995). "Un gigante". El Mundo Deportivo.
  50. (23 May 1995). "Tony vuela". El Mundo Deportivo.
  51. (31 May 1995). "Tony Rominger demuestra quien es el más fuerte". El Mundo Deportivo.
  52. (27 May 1995). "Trabajo estéril de Rincón que ni disputa el sprint". El Mundo Deportivo.
  53. (2 June 1995). "Tres avalanchas de nieve frustran la etapa reina". El Mundo Deportivo.
  54. (22 May 1995). "Rominger, ante 'su' crono". El Mundo Deportivo.
  55. (20 May 1995). "Rominger, sorprendido". El Mundo Deportivo.
  56. (26 May 1995). "Descalificado". El Mundo Deportivo.
  57. (18 May 1995). "Sorprendente triunfo de un 'anonimo' de 21 años". El Mundo Deportivo.
  58. (29 May 1995). "Líder sólido". El Mundo Deportivo.
  59. (1 June 1995). "La lluvia, el frío y la nieve amenazan el etapon de hoy". El Mundo Deportivo.
  60. (4 June 1995). "Tony Rominger aguanta en una etapa vibrante". El Mundo Deportivo.
  61. (5 June 1995). "Tony Rominger se pasea por Milán vestido de rosa". El Mundo Deportivo.
  62. (21 May 1995). "Gran Cubino". El Mundo Deportivo.
  63. (25 May 1995). "Lale se hunde". El Mundo Deportivo.
  64. (28 May 1995). "Un buen Rincón". El Mundo Deportivo.
  65. Laura Weislo. (13 May 2008). "Giro d'Italia classifications demystified".
  66. (5 June 1995). "Clasificaciones". El Mundo Deportivo.
  67. (16 June 1992). "Rominger s'adjudica un Giro que ha dominat de principi a fi". Diari de Girona Media, S.L..
  68. (14 May 1996). "Classifica generale". PCI.
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