The Day

‘We’re losing pieces’: Giro cycling race weakened by virus

- By ANDREW DAMPF AP Sports Writer

Rome — The Giro d'Italia was thrown into chaos Tuesday when two full teams, another overall contender and one more elite rider withdrew from the cycling race following a series of positive tests for the coronaviru­s.

The Mitchelton- Scott and Jumbo-Visma teams left the race before Stage 10.

“Clearly we're losing key pieces of the Giro. The important thing now is to reach Milan,” race director Mauro Vegni said, referring to the scheduled finish of the event on Oct. 25.

Four Mitchelton-Scott staff members tested positive. That came after Mitchelton-Scott team leader Simon Yates withdrew before Saturday's eighth stage after also contractin­g COVID-19.

Dutch contender Steven Kruijswijk of Jumbo-Visma and Australian rider Michael Matthews of Team Sunweb also tested positive amid 571 exams for all riders and staff members coinciding with Monday's rest day.

Kruijswijk and Matthews were withdrawn from the event.

Then Jumbo-Visma announced minutes before the stage started that it was withdrawin­g the rest of its team, too. Still, the stage started with the 20 remaining teams and 145 remaining riders.

“We all have been in contact with (Kruijswijk) for the past days,” Jumbo-Visma sports director Addy Engels told RAI state TV. “So the risk of passing it through to someone else has been there for several days. We are not going to keep taking the risk.”

In addition, one staff member for the Ineos Grenadiers team and one staff member for AG2R-La Mondiale came back positive and were put into isolation.

Still, Vegni rejected speculatio­n that the race might be stopped prematurel­y.

“It's like in normal life, the more tests you do the easier it is to find positives. The number (of positives) is still relatively low. We're optimistic,” Vegni said. “At this point there's zero risk, because I don't see elements that would require the Giro to be stopped."

Italy has been hovering around 5,000 new coronaviru­s cases per day, prompting the government to consider more restrictio­ns after making masks mandatory outdoors last week.

The Giro was already reschedule­d from its usual May slot because of the coronaviru­s pandemic.

No winner?

Vegni has suggested that the race won't have a winner if all 21 stages are not completed.

“This morning, all of the teams with positive cases were given new, rapid tests and we'll do that again tomorrow,” Vegni said. “We've performed nearly 1,500 tests and frankly it's impossible to do more than that."

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