Dutchman Dumoulin wins 100th Giro d'Italia

Dutchman Tom Dumoulin has claimed his maiden grand tour title when he won the Giro d'Italia after crushing his main rivals in Sunday's final time trial.

Dutch cyclist Tom Dumoulin

Dutch cyclist Tom Dumoulin has claimed his maiden grand tour title by winning the Giro d'Italia. (AAP)

Tom Dumoulin has won the 100th Giro d'Italia in dramatic fashion on Sunday, reclaiming the overall lead after finishing second in the final-stage individual time trial.

It's the first Grand Tour victory for Dumoulin, a Dutchman with Team Sunweb, and it sets him up as a potential rival for three-time Tour de France champion Chris Froome.

Dumoulin entered the final stage in fourth position but finished far enough ahead of his rivals over the flat 29-kilometre route from Monza's Formula One race track to Milan's cathedral to claim victory.

"This is crazy. I could not have imagined this," Dumoulin said.

"I cannot describe it with words. It was such a nerve-racking day but I did it.

"I was strong. I was lucky. Just everything fell into place the whole Giro."

In the overall standings, Dumoulin finished 31 seconds ahead of 2014 champion Nairo Quintana (Movistar) of Colombia and 40 seconds ahead of last year's winner, Italian Vincenzo Nibali (Bahrain-Merida).

Dumoulin's fellow Dutchman Jos van Emden won the 21st stage in 33min 8sec.

"It couldn't be better," Van Emden said.

"I'm really happy for Tom. He deserves it."

Dumoulin was 15 seconds off the pace set by Van Emden. Nibali was 13th, 1:09 behind Emden and Quintana was 27th, 1:39 back.

Dumoulin entered the final stage 53 seconds behind Quintana, in fourth place.

Dumoulin also won the race's other time trial in Stage 10 and claimed Stage 14, which had an uphill finish.

He wore the leader's pink jersey for eight days but then struggled in the serious mountain stages and lost the lead to Quintana two days ago.

Dumoulin came close to winning the 2015 Spanish Vuelta, which he led heading into the penultimate stage.

But he faded fast on the final mountain ride, and finished sixth behind winner Fabio Aru. The final stage was the traditional leisurely arrival to Madrid, which offered no chance to come back.

This time, the concluding time trial was just what Dumoulin needed, enabling him to become the first Dutch rider to win the Giro.

Relief came via the team radio.

"I was feeling good. Halfway they said 'Don't take risks anymore,' so I thought, 'Maybe I'm winning now?"' Dumoulin said.

"They better never do that again, because it was close in the end."

Frenchman Thibaut Pinot (FDJ) took fourth place overall ahead of Russian Ilnur Zakarin (Katusha).


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Source: AAP



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