Giro d'Italia Donne 2023
Latest News from the Race
-
5 conclusions from the 2023 Giro Donne
Van Vleuten dominant, Vos falls short, Realini is the real deal and bright future with RCS Sport -
Annemiek van Vleuten's path to four Giro d'Italia Donne victories
Taking a look over the Dutch rider’s 13-year history at the Italian stage race -
Marianne Vos narrowly misses out on 33rd Giro Donne stage victory in Olbia
'We would have liked to have taken another victory' says Jumbo-Visma leader
Date | June 30 - July 9, 2023 |
Start location | Chianciano |
Finish location | Olbia |
Distance | 928km |
Previous edition | Giro d'Italia Donne 2022 |
Stage 9: Annemiek van Vleuten (Movistar) secured the overall victory at the 2023 Giro d'Italia Donne, her fourth overall title at the Italian stage race during her 16-year career. Chiara Consonni (UAE Team ADQ) won the final sprint on stage 9 into Olbia, beating Marianne Vos (Team Jumbo-Visma), and denying the Dutchwoman a 33rd career Giro stage win.
Stage 8: Blanka Vas (Team SD Worx) won stage 8 of the Giro d'Italia Donne, beating Chloé Dygert (Canyon-SRAM) and Liane Lippert (Movistar Team) in an uphill sprint to take her first Giro stage, as Annemiek van Vleuten wears the maglia rosa into the finale stage 9 on Sunday.
Stage 7: The final stage ahead of the rest day transfer to Sardina was a challenging 109.1km from Albenga to Alassio where Annemiek van Vleuten (Movistar) took her third stage victory and extended her maglia rosa lead.
Veronica Ewers (EF Education-TIBCO-SVB) dropped out of the top three overall, down to fourth place, and Van Vleuten now leads the GC by 3:56 minutes ahead of Juliette Labous (Team DSM-Firmenich) and 4:25 minutes ahead of Gaia Realini (Lidl-Trek).
Stage 6: On a day that was initially meant for the sprinters, Annemiek van Vleuten thwarted those sprinters' plans and went on the attack and soloed to the stage 6 victory at the Giro Donne, extending her maglia rosa lead.
After a breakthrough stage 5 victory at Antonia Niedermaier's debut Giro Donne, she was involved in a crash with Jayco-AlUla’s Urška Žigart, and both riders were forced to abandon the Giro Donne.
Stage 5: Antonia Niedermaier (Canyon-SRAM) won stage 5 of the Giro d'Italia Donne with a 24-kilometre solo, narrowly holding off maglia rosa Annemiek van Vleuten (Movistar) to take the biggest victory of her career, while Elisa Longo Borghini's GC hopes were ruined by a crash on the final descent.
Stage 4: It was the longest stage at the Giro d'Italia Donne and was initially tipped for sprinters, but a potential bunch sprint was thwarted by a series of long-range attacks that ended with a three-rider breakaway succeeding as Elisa Longo Borghini (Lidl-Trek) won stage 4 ahead of Veronica Ewers (EF-Education-TIBCO-SVB) and overall leader Annemiek van Vleuten (Movistar).
Stage 3: A highly technical finish led organisers to neutralise the general classification at the 1km to go banner, and Lorena Wiebes (dsm-firmenich) claimed the reduced bunch sprint.
Stage 2: Annemiek van Vleuten (Movistar) took advantage of one of the few stages with a significant climb, attacking over the Passo della Colla and soloing to a 49-second overall lead in the Giro Donne.
Stage 1: The opening time trial was cancelled due to a heavy downpour, lightning, hail and blocked roads that forced the CPA Women and the race jury to apply the Extreme Weather Protocol at the Giro d'Italia Donne. The cancelled stage meant that there was no stage winner and no leader's maglia rosa awarded in Chianciano.
2023 Giro d'Italia Donne Information
- The biggest talking points ahead of the Giro d'Italia Donne - Preview
- Giro d'Italia Donne 2023 - Analysing the contenders
- Giro d'Italia Donne 2023 - The route
The Giro d’Italia Donne is a long-running women's stage race which has carved a niche as one of the most prestigious women's events in the world. It is the only women's event that has traditionally covered 10 days of racing and includes a number of iconic mountain passes. The race will celebrate its 34th anniversary in 2023.
The Giro d'Italia Donne and Tour de France Femmes are the two biggest races of the year and will both be held in July before the inaugural UCI Cycling World Championships held in Glasgow.
Read more in the Women's WorldTour – The definitive guide for 2023.
The Giro d'Italia Donne returned to the Women's WorldTour in 2022 after being downgraded in 2021 for not offering live broadcasting of the race in 2020.
The Giro d'Italia Donne is currently organised by PMG Sport/Starlight, an organization that took over the women's stage race in 2021 and 2022 from long-time organiser Giuseppe Rivolta.
Starting in 2024, RCS Sport will take over the organization of the Giro d'Italia Donne for a four-year term ending in 2027.
Join Cyclingnews' coverage of the 2023 Giro d'Italia Donne with race reports, results, photo galleries, news and race analysis.
Subscribe to Cyclingnews for unlimited access to our coverage of women's cycling.
2023 Giro d'Italia Donne Contenders
The 2022 Giro d'Italia overall winner, Annemiek van Vleuten, will return with her Movistar team to defend her general classification title in the 2023 edition. Van Vleuten is in her final year of racing before retirement and is aiming to win the Giro d'Italia Donne for the fourth time in her career. She won overall titles in 2018, 2019 and 2022.
Mavi Garcia has become one of the major contenders in professional cycling, a former duathlete, she had a late start to her cycling career but finished third at the Giro d'Italia Donne last year. This year she aims to take another step up with an eye on the maglia rosa. After winning a fifth national road race title at the Spanish Championships, Garcia spoke with Cyclingnews about why age and experience matter in overall title hunt at Giro d’Italia Donne.
Trek-Segafredo, renamed Lidl-Trek, lines up with several cards to play; Elisa Longo Borghini, Gaia Realini and Lizzie Deignan. While Longo Borghini is capable of winning on any stage, given her versatility as a rider, Realini's pure climbing strengths will surely be saved for the Passo (Pian) del Lupo, which is marked as the 'Cima Coppi' of the Giro d'Italia Donne, the highest peak of the race, on stage 5. Elisa Longo Borghini said she will aim for stage wins and race with "true grit and tenacity."
Other riders to watch include Juliette Labous (Team DSM Women), Cecilie Uttrup Ludwig (FDJ-Suez) and Niahm Fisher-Black (SD Worx), while Marta Bastianelli (UAE Team ADQ) has announced that she will retired after this Giro d'Italia Donne.
2023 Giro d'Italia Donne Route
The Giro d’Italia Donne route will cater to the most powerful riders who can cover both relentlessly steep pitches to long high-mountain terrain.
The 2023 Giro d'Italia Donne route will cover 928km across nine stages and will traverse the five Italian regions of Tuscany, Emilia-Romagna, Piedmont, Liguria and Sardinia.
The main feature of this year's race will be the Passo (Pian) del Lupo, which is marked as the 'Cima Coppi' of the Giro d'Italia Donne, the highest peak of the race, on stage 5.
- June 30 - Stage 1: Chianciano, 4,4km (ITT)
- July 1 - Stage 2: Bagno a Ripoli to Marradi, 102,1km
- July 2 - Stage 3: Formigine to Modena, 118,2km
- July 3 - Stage 4: Fidenza to Borgo Val di Taro, 134km
- July 4 - Stage 5: Salassa to Ceres, 103,3km
- July 5 - Stage 6: Canelli to Canelli, 104,4km
- July 6 - Stage 7: Albenga to Alassio, 109,1km
- July 7 - Rest Day
- July 8 - Stage 8: Nuoro to Sassari, 125,7km
- July 9 - Stage 9: Sassari to Olbia, 126,8km
Giro d'Italia Donne History
In the Giro d'Italia's more than three-decade-long history, some of the past winners include inaugural champion Maria Canins (Italy) in 1988, Catherine Marsal (France) in 1990, five-time winner Fabiana Luperini (Italy) from 1995-98 and 2008, two-time winner Joane Somarriba (Spain) in 1999 and 2000, three-time winner Nicole Brändli (Switzerland) in 2001, 2003 and 2005, Nicole Cooke (Great Britain) in 2004, and two-time winner Edita Pučinskaitė (Lithuania) in 2006 and 2007.
Americans Mara Abbott won in 2010 and 2013, and Megan Guarnier won in 2016. Now retired Anna van der Breggen (Netherlands) won the race four times, in 2015, 2017, 2020 and 2021.
Two three-time winners, both from the Netherlands, are expected to be on the start this year: Marianne Vos (2011, 2012, 2014) and defending champion Annemiek van Vleuten (2018, 2019, 2022).
Last year, Vleuten dominated the race on her winning to winning her third Maglia Rosa. She claimed the leader’s jersey after winning stage 4, and then stamped her authority with a solo victory on stage 8, overcoming a late crash on the final descent to extend her overall lead. Marta Cavalli (FDJ-SUEZ-Futuroscope) finished second overall at 1:52 back, and Mavi Garcia (UAE Team ADQ) was third, 5:56 down.
2023 Giro d'Italia Donne Schedule - Start Times and Finish Times
Date | Stage | Start time | Finish time |
---|---|---|---|
June 30, 2023 | Stage 1 | 12:50 CET | 14:00 CET |
July 1, 2023 | Stage 2 | 12:00 CET | 14:41 CET |
July 2, 2023 | Stage 3 | 11:40 CET | 14:43 CET |
July 3, 2023 | Stage 4 | 11:00 CET | 14:50 CET |
July 4, 2023 | Stage 5 | 11:20 CET | 14:04 CET |
July 5, 2023 | Stage 6 | 12:00 CET | 14:46 CET |
July 6, 2023 | Stage 7 | 11:40 CET | 14:34 CET |
July 7, 2023 | Rest Day | Row 7 - Cell 2 | Row 7 - Cell 3 |
July 8, 2023 | Stage 8 | 11:35 CET | 14:50 |
July 9, 2023 | Stage 9 | 11:25 CET | 14:40 CET |
2023 Giro d'Italia Donne Start list
Data powered by FirstCycling
Giro d'Italia Donne teams
- Canyon-SRAM Racing
- EF Education-TIBCO-SVB
- FDJ-SUEZ
- Fenix-Deceuninck
- Human Powered Health
- Israel Premier Tech Roland
- Liv Racing Teqfind
- Movistar Team Women
- Team Jayco Alula
- Team DSM, Team
- Jumbo-Visma
- Team SD Worx
- Trek-Segafredo
- UAE Team ADQ
- Uno-X Pro Cycling Team
- Bizkaia– Durango,
- Isolmant-Premac-Vittoria
- Team Mendelspeck
- Top Girls Fassa Bortolo
- Aromitalia Basso Vaiano
- Bepink
- Born To Win-Zhiraf-G20
- GB Junior Team Piemonte
- AG Insurance-Soudal-QuickStep Team
Races
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Giro d'Italia Donne 202330 June 2023 - 9 July 2023 | Italy | Women's WorldTour
- Giro d'Italia Donne 2023 route
- Giro d'Italia Donne - Past winners 2023
- The biggest talking points ahead of the Giro d'Italia Donne - Preview
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Rest Day2023-07-07
Latest Content on the Race
Annemiek van Vleuten is back, takes 100th career win in Giro d'Italia Donne
By Amy Jones published
News Movistar rider solos to victory in Marradi, gaining 45 seconds on her rivals
How to watch the 2023 Giro d'Italia Donne – live streaming
By Kirsten Frattini published
News Don't miss a minute of the 34th edition, which runs from June 30 to July 9 as major contenders aim to win the maglia rosa
Cancelled Giro d'Italia Donne ITT 'a lottery' says Annemiek van Vleuten
By Lukas Knöfler published
News Saturday's stage 2 first test for GC contenders
Chloé Dygert sets top time despite crash on cancelled stage 1 of Giro d'Italia Donne
By Amy Jones published
News Rain and slippery conditions cause US Champion to crash in 4.4km route in Chianciano
Lightning, rain, hail - weather protocol enforced in cancelled Giro Donne opener
By Kirsten Frattini published
News 'It's the best possible choice to suspend this stage. Safety first!' says Marianne Vos as maglia rosa on hold until stage 2
Giro d'Italia Donne, Tour de France Femmes dates shuffled forward in 2024
By Simone Giuliani published
News UCI releases 2024 Women's WorldTour calendar with no new races added to top-tier, Olympic-based date movements
The Giro d'Italia Donne: Confusion, chaos, and complacency
By Amy Jones published
Opinion 'We can only hope that there is truth in the adage that things must get worse before they get better'
'It's not good enough' - Lizzie Deignan critical of Giro d'Italia Donne organisation
By Kirsten Frattini published
News 'I'm pleased that the race is still on and the future of it is in different hands next season' says Lidl-Trek rider
Top News on the Race
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Solo attack on Colle Paravenna falls short for Mavi García at Giro Donne
'I felt super good, but it wasn’t to have been' Spanish champion loses almost two minutes, drops to seventh overall -
Ewers, Garcia, Santesteban lose time in Giro Donne GC standings
Annemiek van Vleuten continues to gain time ahead of the rest day with two stages to go in Sardinia -
Lorena Wiebes leaves Giro Donne to focus on Tour de France Femmes sprints
Dutch sprinter looks ahead to Tour, Worlds and European Championships
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Labous challenges for Giro Donne podium with aggressive team tactics
Ewers out of position on Calosso climb but returns to limit time losses -
Antonia Niedermaier, Urska Zigart abandon Giro Donne after stage 6 crash
Crashes create further GC gaps as Annemiek van Vleuten extends maglia rosa lead -
Elisa Longo Borghini abandons Giro d'Italia Donne after heavy stage 5 crash
Lidl-Trek says rider shows no sign of concussion but is still in considerable pain so will not start stage 6
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'I just needed to go for it' - Niedermaier takes biggest career win at Giro Donne
'I can't really believe it' 20-year-old wins queen stage, moves up to second overall and leads young rider category -
Longo Borghini taken to hospital for medical checks after Giro Donne crash
Italian champion finishes stage 5 into Ceres but taken to hospital to rule out concussion, confirm Lidl-Trek -
Van Vleuten consolidates Giro Donne GC lead on queen stage
Maglia rosa takes two-minute buffer into last four stages
Related Features
-
5 conclusions from the 2023 Giro Donne
Van Vleuten dominant, Vos falls short, Realini is the real deal and bright future with RCS Sport -
Annemiek van Vleuten's path to four Giro d'Italia Donne victories
Taking a look over the Dutch rider’s 13-year history at the Italian stage race -
The Giro d'Italia Donne: Confusion, chaos, and complacency
'We can only hope that there is truth in the adage that things must get worse before they get better' -
Giro d'Italia Donne 2023 - Analysing the contenders
Cyclingnews showcases the riders to watch in the hunt for stage wins and the maglia rosa -
Giro d'Italia Donne 2023 start list
The riders competing in the 34th edition held from June 30 to July 9 across Tuscany, Emilia-Romagna, Piedmont, Liguria and Sardinia