Ireland is expected to be confirmed tomorrow as hosting the opening stages of next year’s Giro d’Italia, with the race beginning in Belfast and crossing the border for a stage finish in Dublin before heading back to its home country.
Further details of the Irish Grande Partenza should be confirmed at press conferences being held tomorrow at the Titanic Belfast visitors’ centre and Dublin’s civic offices, reports the Belfast Newsletter.
The Grande Partneza of the 2014 Giro will take place less than two months before the 101st edition of the Tour de France gets under way in Yorkshire.
Like the Tour de France, the Giro d’Italia nowadays stages foreign starts every two or three years, with last year’s race beginning in Denmark. This year’s edition starts on Italian soil, in Naples.
The cross-border bid to stage next year’s race has been backed by the governments of both Northern Ireland and the Republic of Ireland, and is supported by the Northern Ireland Tourist Board (NITB) and its counterpart in the Republic, Failte Ireland.
It has reportedly been co-ordinated by Dublin-based Shade Tree Sports, which was co-founded and is managed by Darach McQuaid, brother of UCI president Pat McQuaid.
The only previous visit of one of cycling’s Grand Tours to the Emerald Isle was the Tour de France in 1998, the year the race became embroiled in the Festina affair.
Now I don't do any of this InstaTok business, so I could well be wrong, but it looks to me like he's only outed himself as a follower of someone...
Not unless theVED is made eye wateringly expensive....
My mum always told me I'd inherited her 'hobbit feet', though as far as I'm aware we don't have any family in New Zealand.
He is not saying anything wrong. Modern cars with huge screens, super soundproofed and bluetooth phones, enhance you to get distracted.
Hyponatremia is a real risk even for an amateur cyclist or runner in hot weather. I've bonked from it before, and I was drinking Gatorade the whole...
Feather isn't primarily citing a lack of demand like many comments here are suggesting, lamenting a changing industry....
in the UK we have policing which to a greater or lesser extent relies on assistance from members of the public......
So...don't cycle on it. Lots of other routes around that area. Source: I used to work there.
My photochromic specs have just turned up in the post today
Downhill Alpe d'Huez TT would be _awesome_. And someone should organise one for real!...