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2011 Giro d'Italia to start with team time trial in Turin and end in Milan

94th edition of race to celebrate 150th anniversary of Italian unification

Next year’s Giro d’Italia will help celebrate the 150th anniversary of Italian unification with an itinerary that starts in Turin and ends three weeks later in Milan.

The 94th edition of the race starts on Saturday 7 May with a 22km team time trial from the former royal residence of Venaria Reale, one of Europe’s largest Baroque palaces, to the centre of the city.

Visited 84 times by the Giro, the city, capital of Piedmont and as former seat of the royal house of Savoy the first capital of the newly unified Italy, has only hosted the departure of the race once before, when Italy celebrated its centenary in 1961.

"I’m convinced that Turin will be able to do even better than Amsterdam,” said race director Angelo Zomegnan, referring to the Dutch city that hosted the Prologue of this year’s race, where Bradley Wiggins of Team Sky took the maglia rosa.

Zomegnan, talking to the Gazzetta dello Sport, added that it had taken two years to finalise the plans to host next year’s departure in Turin, adding that former president of Italy Carlo Azeglio Ciampi, chairman of the Italia 150 committee which is co-ordinating celebrations, had played a pivotal role in making it possible.

While there was no team time trial in this year’s Giro d’Italia, there had been one 12 months earlier in the opening stage of the centenary edition of the race at Lido, across the lagoon from Venice, won by HTC-Columbia, with Mark Cavendish crossing the line ahead of his team mates to become the first Briton to don the maglia rosa.

The format, which is also being adopted in the opening stage of the Vuelta later this month in Seville, is not without its critics, however, given the fact that it can skew the general classification towards a particularly strong time-trialling team, particularly when it comes at the beginning of the race.

Three weeks after that departure in Turin, the Giro will conclude with another time trial, this time an individual one, in Milan, which will start from Piazza Castello outside the imposing fortress built by the ruling Sforzesco family in the 15th Century and finishing in Piazza Duomo in front of the city’s cathedral.

The announcement marks a return to favour for the Lombard capital, home to the Gazzetta dello Sport, the newspaper behind the launch of the race 101 years ago – hence the pink leader’s jersey – which was left out of this year’s race in a move that some saw as a snub to the city following chaotic organisation of Stage 9’s circuit race there in 2009, which was effectively neutralised by the riders.

The city has hosted the final stage of the Giro in 74 of its 93 editions, the last time being in 2008 when Marco Pinotti of HTC-Columbia won the closing day’s individual time trial.

"The Giro was born here,” said Milan’s mayor, Letizia Moratti, who added: “This is a city that is passionate about cycling. It will be a race of great symbolic value in a year of public celebration of Italian unification.”

Andrea Monti, editor of the Gazzetta dello Sport, claimed that “It will be a true race, not a parade,” in line with Zomegnan’s aim that the Giro will be decided on the last day, in contrast to the celebrations seen on the way into Paris during last Sunday’s final stage of the Tour de France, with Alberto Contador sipping the traditional glass of Champagne as he headed towards the French capital in the yellow jersey.

“It’s a happy return to tradition for a Giro d’Italia that wants to preserve and celebrate all the warmth and colour of our glorious history,” added Monti.

The rest of the itinerary has yet to be revealed, and as yet it is unknown whether further stages will tie in with the 150th anniversary theme, but if they do that could mean that the race might visit Florence, which briefly succeeded Turin as capital, the present capital Rome, and Sicily, where Garibaldi landed with 1,000 troops to launch his campaign that would lead to unification of the country.

Another intriguing possibility might involve the race heading across the French border to Nice, Garibaldi’s birthplace, for centuries under influence of various Italian states but ceded to the French, much to the soldier-patriot’s dismay, in 1860.

Simon joined road.cc as news editor in 2009 and is now the site’s community editor, acting as a link between the team producing the content and our readers. A law and languages graduate, published translator and former retail analyst, he has reported on issues as diverse as cycling-related court cases, anti-doping investigations, the latest developments in the bike industry and the sport’s biggest races. Now back in London full-time after 15 years living in Oxford and Cambridge, he loves cycling along the Thames but misses having his former riding buddy, Elodie the miniature schnauzer, in the basket in front of him.

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3 comments

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Simon_MacMichael | 13 years ago
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May indeed, Colonels Bucket, well noticed - I guess July seemed never-ending what with Le Tour and everything  3

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Colonels Bucket | 13 years ago
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"The 94th edition of the race starts on Saturday 7 July"...Time to promote the tea boy! We all know it's May right?  16

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skippy | 13 years ago
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Happily i was offered accom with friends in torino when i visited them on the way to Cuneo for the Italian start of this year's Giro.
Torino was host to the 2006 Winter Olympic & Paralympic so enjoyed a really nice time there although without the bike. Cycling in Torino can be fun so will arrive WEdnesday for the start if i am in Europe next year.

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