Matthews wins stage three of Giro d’Italia, Evenepoel extends lead

Australian Michael Matthews claims a first stage win at Giro d’Italia since 2015

Photos by Jennifer Lorenzini/Reuters

(Reuters) – Australian Michael Matthews timed his final effort to perfection to win a rain-affected stage three at the Giro d’Italia on Monday, following a 216-kilometer ride from Vasto to Melfi.

Matthews and Mads Pedersen were neck-and-neck until the final corner, but the Australian, who was set up perfectly by his Jayco-AlUla team, moved in front on the home straight to emerge victorious and claim a first stage win at Giro d’Italia since 2015.

“We rode all day today. They were fully committed for me to win the stage,” Matthews said.

“I don’t have words at the moment. It’s been such a roller coaster this year. Now already on stage three with a stage win? That’s more than I could ever dream of.”

Team Jayco AlUla's Michael Matthews in action during stage 1 of Giro d'Italia
Team Jayco AlUla’s Michael Matthews in action during stage 1 of Giro d’Italia

Trek–Segafredo’s Pedersen finished second, ahead of Kaden Groves (Alpecin–Deceuninck) and Vincenzo Albanese (EOLO-Kometa).

Corratec-Selle Italia riders Alexander Konychev and Veljko Stojnic were the early pace-setters, leading the stage for the first half of the race, before being reeled in by the main group with 36 kilometers to go.

Belgian Remco Evenepoel extended his lead after taking three bonus seconds to tighten his grip on the leader’s maglia rosa jersey, while Joao Almeida recovered from a fall in slippery conditions to move up to second.

Team Jayco AlUla’s Michael Matthews sprays sparkling wine as he celebrates on the podium after winning stage 3

Primoz Roglic, who was eclipsed by rival Evenepoel in the intermediate sprint, climbed to third.

“I went for the time bonus in the intermediate sprint because we were just there as we wanted to stay at front because the rain had made the road a bit dangerous,” Evenepoel said.

“I saw Roglic and his teammates right behind us so I sprinted. It didn’t cost much energy. There were a few seconds up for grabs. One second more on Primoz and three on the others, it’s good, especially after such an easy day of racing.”

Tuesday’s stage four is a 175-kilometer ride from Venosa to Lago Laceno, which features two long and manageable ascents before culminating in a steep climb and a flat finish.

(Reporting by Aadi Nair in Bengaluru, editing by Pritha Sarkar)

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