2020 Giro d'Italia

Jhonatan Narvaez Wins Giro d'Italia 12th Stage, Almeida Stays In Pink

Jhonatan Narvaez Wins Giro d'Italia 12th Stage, Almeida Stays In Pink

Ecuador's Jhonatan Narvaez, riding for Ineos, won the 12th stage of the Giro d'Italia at Cesenatico on Thursday.

Oct 15, 2020 by FloBikes Staff
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Ecuador's Jhonatan Narvaez gave the Ineos team their third stage win in this year's Giro d'Italia, crossing the line alone on a wet stage 12 at Cesenatico on Thursday.

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Narvaez soloed to victory 1min 8sec ahead of Ukrainian Mark Padun, who had suffered a puncture 24km from the line, with Australian Simon Clarke third at 6min 50sec following the difficult 204km run mostly in the rain.

"Today I woke up with the right spirit and wanted to be the main player in this stage," said Narvaez. "It is not a problem for me to race in the rain, in fact, I prefer it to the hot weather."

The 23-year-old dedicated his first WorldTour win to ex-Ineos sports director Nico Portal who died aged 40 this year after a heart attack.

"I learned a lot from him," said Narvaez. 

Portugal's Joao Almeida retained the overall race leader's pink jersey in the stage around the home region of Italian cycling great Marco Pantani, who died in 2004.

"Today was a very tough stage," said the Deceuninck rider. "I am happy to have managed to keep the Maglia Rosa. Once again my team was extraordinary, I'm really grateful to my teammates."

Almeida's group, which included the race favourites, crossed the line over eight minutes behind the winner. Narvaez joined Ineos last year and was competing in his second Giro, which compatriot Richard Carapaz won last year. The Ecuadorian had already tasted success in the Emilia-Romagna region just a month ago having won the Coppi-Bartali International around Cesenatico. Narvaez and Padun had pulled clear with 60km to go from the 14-rider break away which formed an hour into the hilly race, which featured five climbs in the Romagna hinterland. 

Friday's 13th stage covers 192km from Cervia to Monselice, overly mostly flat terrain before two short, steep climbs near the finish line.