Watch the Last KM of Stage 13 of the Giro d’Italia 2025! 🥇

Immerse yourself in race with our Playlist:
✅ Strade Bianche Crédit Agricole
✅ Strade Bianche Women Elite Crédit Agricole
✅ Tirreno-Adriatico Crédit Agricole
✅ Milano-Torino presented by Crédit Agricole
✅ Milano-Sanremo presented by Crédit Agricole
✅ Sanremo Women presented by Crédit Agricole
✅ Il Giro d’Abruzzo
✅ Giro d’Italia
✅ Giro Next Gen
✅ Giro d’Italia Women
✅ GranPiemonte presented by Crédit Agricole
✅ Il Lombardia presented by Crédit Agricole

Follow our channels to stay updated on 🟣 Giro d’Italia 🟣 and interact with other cycling enthusiasts:

🟢 Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/giroditalia
🟢 TikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/@giroditalia
🟢 Twitter: https://twitter.com/giroditalia
🟢 Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/giroditalia/

Enjoy the magic of the major cycling 👉 www.giroditalia.it

#GirodItalia #Giro #GirodItalia2025 #UKM

16 Comments

  1. Loyalty and Destiny on Wheels
    In the inexact liturgy of modern cycling, where every second trades like a rough diamond, Isaac del Toro's gesture of turning his head over his left shoulder—once, twice, perhaps three times—in the final meters of the intermediate sprint seemed more an act of devotion than doubt. He wasn't looking for rivals, but for his own teammate.
    The order, never spoken aloud, seemed written in the air of the race radio: "Launch Ayuso." And so, the young Mexican who could have been second became a launcher of noble cause and contained soul, yielding his place to Juan Ayuso like one who surrenders the last bread in a Russian novel.
    But cycling, like history, doesn't always reward the obedient.
    Because upon reaching Vicenza—city of marbles and treacherous slopes—it was destiny that dictated justice: Ayuso, favored in the prior strategy, couldn't find the rhythm or fury to follow Pedersen and Van Aert in the final sprint. Isaac, meanwhile, no longer needing to look back, rode with the freedom of one who has paid his quota of loyalty.
    He latched onto the noblest wheels, endured like a Pavese verse recited uphill, and crossed the finish line in third place, earning not only the time bonus but something more sacred: the sensation that, even within an iron structure, his talent remains untameable, like a colt that only gallops when no one calls.

  2. Remember when the Giro was…difficult? Stage 13 and there still hasn't been a real mountain stage. As far as I can see there are only three in the whole race.

Leave A Reply