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Alberto Contador wins Giro d'Italia as Iljo Keisse takes final stage from the break

Tinkoff-Saxo rider completes comprehensive victory, while sprinters are thwarted in Milan

Alberto Contador has made it safely through today’s 21st and concluding stage of the Giro d’Italia to win the race for the second time. In doing so, the Tinkoff-Saxo rider has completed the first half of what he hopes will be the first Giro and Tour de France double since the late Marco Pantani achieved it in 1998 - although he admitted afterwards he is tired.

Today’s final 185km stage from Turin was won by Etixx-Quickstep rider Iljo Kiesse, who had got away with Orica-GreenEdge’s Luke Durbridge on the second of seven laps of the closing circuit in Milan, the pair finishing 9 seconds ahead of the chasing peloton.

Keisse said afterwards that his team's initial plan had been for him and Fabio Sabatini to attack on the last bend, "because I'm a track rider so I corner pretty well.

"But then I saw that there was some hesitation at the start of the circuit, so I attacked. I had a pretty good partner in crime in Luke Durbridge.

"I did my last pull at 2.5km," he continued. "I heard we had 30 seconds so I knew we'd make it.

"I put pressure on him by saying I wasn't going to work, and I've seen how Cavendish does it so I used that experience today. It's been a very different Giro this year for the team.

"We haven't won a stage, after being very successful in the previous couple of years, so this win is very important.

"It's my best ever victory, and I'm so, so happy."

Behind Keisse and Durbridge, Trek Factory Racing’s Giacomo Nizzolo finished fifth on the tage to seal victory in the points competition, while Astana’s Fabio Aru won the best young rider’s jersey for the second year running.

Following back-to-back stage wins on Friday and Saturday, Aru was also on the overall podium as runner-up to Contador, 1 minute 53 seconds behind the Spaniard, with Astana team mate Mikel Landa third, 1 minute 12 seconds further back.

It’s the third time Contador has occupied the top step of the podium in Milan at the end of the three-week Grand Tour.

His first victory in the race came in 2008, when he was with Astana. He also won the Giro in 2011 following his move to Saxo Bank, but was stripped of that title the following year as a result of his positive test for clenbuterol in

Contador's race was not incident free, with the Spaniard dislocating his shoulder in a late crash during the firt week then temporarily surrendering the lead - the first time he has lost a Grand Tour leader's jersey - to Aru at the end of the second week after crashing again.

He said: "I thank the people of Italy for their affection. Everyone has been very special with me and I am very happy.

"During the three hard weeks of the Giro, everything imaginable has happened: I came here thinking about victory having prepared very carefully, but then I had my fall and a shoulder injury.

"There was the mythical climb of the Mortirolo, but then yesterday on the Colle delle Finestre I had bad legs.

"It has been a beautiful Giro, and a very special experience for me.

"I don't know how long it will take to recover. I'm tired, and I know it will take time.

"It has been an emotional Giro for me. I've said it will be my last, but you never know," he added. "As we say in Spanish, never say never."

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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10 comments

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nortonpdj | 9 years ago
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Apart from Contador it was not a top quality field, but I really enjoyed the racing.
Rather than raising three fingers, Contador should act with a bit more class and just let his legs do the talking.

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ianrobo | 9 years ago
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Maybe his recovery feed is better than most ?

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Ogi | 9 years ago
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To all you guys trolling Contador...do you really believe Sky team and Froome and Wiggins were all clean in the last couple of years? Ah yes...Pinarello bikes, "gritty attitude", Rapha clothes, Jaguar know-how, great energy bars...give me a break! Too much money went in!

I'm not saying Contador is an angel either, but I don't see how his position is different to other top guys. Similar to many other athletes and sports...which amazingly don't get nowhere nearly scrutinised!

Sad!

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HalfWheeler | 9 years ago
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The only team that had the personnel to challenge Contador (a convicted cheat) was Astana (a team of cheats right up to 6 months ago).

As far as PR for the sport is concerned this years Giro has been an utter clusterfuck.

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ianrobo | 9 years ago
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and this is why I can not watch this giro without thinking about the past. When you can not admit what you did was wrong in the past then I think you are hiding something. Add to this I think his 'weakness' yesterday was a trick to fool people and he was fitter than ever before, including when he was doping.

On Saturday at the Sestriere ski resort, celebrating his pink jersey ahead of a final flat sprint stage into Milan, he held up three fingers on the podium above cheering fans.

“For me, I won that Giro d’Italia, all the people who have watched it on TV, including people who followed me, agree,” Contador explained.

“That’s why I held up three fingers. All the riders know I won; no-one has ever said the opposite.”

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apjs87 | 9 years ago
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All seemed a little too easy didnt it Mr Contador. Maybe i'm being a little sceptical

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vonhelmet replied to apjs87 | 9 years ago
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apjs87 wrote:

All seemed a little too easy didnt it Mr Contador. Maybe i'm being a little sceptical

He won, so obviously he was doping.

That's how it works, right? The winner is doping. Every time.

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apjs87 replied to vonhelmet | 9 years ago
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 103

vonhelmet wrote:
apjs87 wrote:

All seemed a little too easy didnt it Mr Contador. Maybe i'm being a little sceptical

He won, so obviously he was doping.

That's how it works, right? The winner is doping. Every time.

He won, great. Hats off to the guy. He's as tainted as the so called meat he ate.

To win without even so much of a grimace and to make it look so easy and put so much time into his rivals is not normal.

I am not alone in thinking this.

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apjs87 replied to apjs87 | 9 years ago
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apjs87 wrote:

 103

vonhelmet wrote:
apjs87 wrote:

All seemed a little too easy didnt it Mr Contador. Maybe i'm being a little sceptical

He won, so obviously he was doping.

That's how it works, right? The winner is doping. Every time.

He won, great. Hats off to the guy. He's as tainted as the so called meat he ate.

To win without even so much of a grimace and to make it look so easy and put so much time into his rivals is not normal.

I am not alone in thinking this.

And as for Aru's miraculous ability to climb so much better in the final couple of stages. That's just a miracle!

Perhaps I'm struggling to let go of the past?? I don't know

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belgravedave | 9 years ago
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One down two to go.

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