Samwise Cycle Racing Newsletter
Sunday, May 31, 2026
Vingegaard Clinches Giro d'Italia with Dominant Stage 20 Win at Piancavallo
Jonas Vingegaard (Visma-Lease a Bike) sealed his first Giro d'Italia title on May 30, attacking with 11km remaining on the Piancavallo climb on Stage 20 to take his fifth stage win of the race. The Dane's Visma team set the tempo on the penultimate double ascent before Vingegaard struck clear solo. Felix Gall (Decathlon CMA CGM), Jai Hindley (Red Bull–Bora–Hansgrohe) and Derek Gee-West (Lidl-Trek) sprinted to the finish together, 1:15 behind. Gall was second on the stage, Hindley third — matching their GC positions. Thymen Arensman (Netcompany-Ineos) shed further seconds to slip to fourth. Vingegaard leads Gall by 5:22 overall entering Sunday's flat 131km finale in Rome.
Sources: Cyclingnews · Cycling Weekly
Wiebes Expelled from Giro d'Italia Women After Bike Fails Weight Check
Lorena Wiebes (SD Worx-Protime) crossed the line first on Stage 1 of the 2026 Giro d'Italia Women on May 30, sprinting from Cesenatico to Ravenna, but was disqualified from the entire race after her bicycle weighed just 6.78 kilograms — below the UCI's 6.8-kilogram minimum. It is only the third such disqualification in professional cycling history, following Fabiana Luperini at the 2013 Giro and Neve Bradbury at the 2019 New Zealand national championships. Elisa Balsamo (Lidl-Trek), who crossed the line second, was elevated to race winner and took the first maglia rosa of the 2026 edition. “It is not the way I want to win,” Balsamo said.
Sources: Cyclingnews
SD Worx-Protime Raises “Serious Questions” About Giro Donne Weighing Procedures
SD Worx-Protime called Lorena Wiebes' expulsion from the 2026 Giro d'Italia Women “an exceptionally severe sanction” on May 30, raising serious questions about bicycle-weighing procedures at the race. The team reported a weight difference of more than 50 grams between the first and second weighings of Wiebes' bicycle after Stage 1. Wiebes rode a Specialized S-Works Tarmac SL8 with lightweight components. The UCI's 6.8-kilogram minimum rule, established in 2000, has been criticised for penalising smaller riders on modern carbon-fibre equipment. Cycling Weekly described the penalty as “an exceptionally severe sanction,” and the race commissaires had not publicly responded as of late Saturday.
Sources: Cyclingnews · Cycling Weekly
Würtz Schmidt Claims Epic Solo Win at Muddy 20th Unbound Gravel 200
Mads Würtz Schmidt (Specialized Off-Road) soloed to victory at the 2026 Unbound Gravel 200 on May 30 after a teammate act of sacrifice turned a potential disaster into triumph. The European Gravel Champion had been clear with Keegan Swenson on the rain-soaked Kansas dirt roads when a rear-tyre flat struck near mile 125. Swenson stopped and handed his own wheel to Schmidt, who rode alone to the finish in Emporia after 9 hours, 14 minutes and 51 seconds. Matt Beers (Specialized Off-Road) crossed 5:03 behind in second, with Tobias Kongstad (PAS Racing) third at 9:52. Swenson, despite surrendering his wheel, recovered to finish fifth at 24:28.
Sources: Cyclingnews
Gomez Villafañe Wins Women's Unbound 200 in Five-Way Sprint
Sofia Gomez Villafañe (Specialized Off-Road) claimed her second Unbound Gravel 200 title on May 30, outsprinting four rivals after more than ten hours of mud, rain and wind on the 20th anniversary edition in Emporia, Kansas. The 2022 champion completed the 322km course in 10:31:37, edging teammate Geerike Schreurs by one second in the five-woman sprint. Cecily Decker (PAS Racing) took third, Paige Onweller fourth, and 2024 winner Rosa Klöser (Canyon-SRAM-MAAP) fifth. The leading group had stayed together through the final 55 miles despite repeated attacks from Schreurs. Villafañe's win extended her dominant 2026 gravel winning streak, which also included The Traka 200 earlier this month.
Sources: Cyclingnews
Continental Rider Liechti Seizes Bretagne Ladies Tour Lead with Stunning Time Trial
Jasmin Liechti (Nexetis) put on a stunning time trial display on May 30 to seize the overall lead at the Bretagne Ladies Tour, beating higher-ranked WorldTour rivals on a 24.7km course in Plomodiern. The Swiss Continental-team rider averaged 48.4kph, going out as one of the early starters and holding the hot seat for more than an hour before confirmation. Letizia Borghesi (AG Insurance-Soudal) finished 25 seconds back in second, with teammate Luca Vierstraete 27 seconds behind. Stage 1 winner Sandrine Tas (Lotto Intermarché) came through 36 seconds slower, dropping to third overall. Liechti now leads the four-day French race by 21 seconds over Borghesi in the general classification.
Sources: Cyclingnews
Cosnefroy Wins Boucles de la Mayenne Stage 2 Sprint to Claim Race Lead
Benoît Cosnefroy (UAE Team Emirates XRG) sprinted to stage 2 victory at the Boucles de la Mayenne on May 30, taking the overall race lead in the four-day French stage race. The 215.1km stage to Pré-en-Pail-Saint-Samson shattered the peloton over 11 climbs in the final 100km, leaving 13 riders to contest the sprint. Cosnefroy outpaced Noa Isidore (Decathlon CMA CGM) and Vincenzo Albanese (EF Education-EasyPost), and the 10-second bonus for the stage win moved him seven seconds ahead of Thibaud Gruel (Groupama-FDJ United) in the overall standings. Isidore sits third at 12 seconds, with two stages remaining.
Sources: Cyclingnews
Giro d'Italia 2026 — GC
Top 5 After Stage 20
1. Vingegaard (VLaB) — Leader
2. Gall (Decathlon CMA CGM) — +5:22
3. Hindley (Red Bull–Bora) — +6:25
4. Arensman (Netcompany-Ineos) — +7:02
5. Gee-West (Lidl-Trek) — +7:56
Jersey Leaders
All Classifications
Pink (GC): Jonas Vingegaard
Ciclamino (Points): Paul Magnier
Azzurra (Mountains): Giulio Ciccone
Bianca (Young Rider): Afonso Euálio
Stage 21: Rome finale today
Curated by JD · samwise.agency

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