Tom Pidcock leads Q36.5 at the Giro d'Italia (AFP via Getty Images)
With cycling’s most famous Slovenian absent, another steps up. Primoz Roglic (Red Bull-Bora-Hansgrohe) arrives at the Giro d’Italia start line in Durres, Albania the hot favourite to succeed compatriot Tadej Pogacar and lift the crown at the first Grand Tour of this season.
But even without Pogacar UAE Team Emirates-XRG have a strong contender to foil Roglic: young Spaniard Juan Ayuso, who is searching for his first Grand Tour title.
Both teams have selected a strong line-up to deliver their leading men to glory: Roglic will be supported by faithful lieutenant Dani Martinez – second at the Giro last year in his own right – and one of the 2024 race’s breakout stars in climber Giulio Pellizzari.
Ayuso can rely on the services of rock-solid mountain domestique Rafal Majka and another with Grand Tour podium pedigree in Adam Yates, as well as having the joker card of another serious young talent, Isaac del Toro.
Wildcard team Q36.5 will be in Grand Tour action for the first time, supporting Tom Pidcock as the Brit either hunts stages or targets the general classification, while there’s more British representation in his teammate Mark Donovan; Ineos Grenadiers with time-triallist Josh Tarling - a likely candidate for stage 2’s contre-la-montre in the Albanian capital Tirana - and Ben Turner; EF Education-EasyPost’s duo of Owain Doull and James Shaw; and Visma-Lease a Bike’s GC contender and former Vuelta champion Simon Yates.
Young British climber Max Poole will support French veteran Romain Bardet’s bid for one last moment in the sun before he hangs up his cleats (on the road at least), and Ethan Hayter is a prospect for the sprint stages at Soudal Quick-Step alongside another talented French starlet, Paul Magnier.
Other major names include the phenomenally talented all-rounder Wout van Aert and his rival from the recent Spring Classics, Mads Pedersen, as well as Ineos Grenadiers’ Egan Bernal, a former Giro winner back at the scene of one of his past glories, and the ageless Grand Tour stalwart and 2014 champion Nairo Quintana.
Primoz Roglic is the favourite to lift the Giro d'Italia title this year (AFP via Getty Images)
Giro d’Italia 2025 start list
Alpecin-Deceuninck
Kaden Groves
Quinten Hermans
Juri Hollmann (DNF stage six)
Jimmy Janssens
Timo Kielich
Edward Planckaert
Jensen Plowright
Fabio Van den Bossche
Arkea-B&B Hotels
Alessandro Verre
Giosue Epis
Simon Guglielmi
Laurens Huys
Michel Ries (DNS stage seven)
Embret Svestad-Bardseng
Luca Mozzato
Martin Tjotta
Bahrain-Victorious
Antonio Tiberi
Pello Bilbao
Damiano Caruso
Afonso Eulalio
Matevz Govekar
Fran Miholjevic
Andrea Pasqualon (DNF stage nine)
Edoardo Zambanini
Cofidis
Nicolas Debeaumarche
Milan Fretin (DNS stage 16)
Jonathan Lastra
Jan Maas
Sylvain Moniquet
Stefano Oldani
Anthony Perez
Sergio Samitier
Decathlon AG2R La Mondiale
Sam Bennett
Geoffrey Bouchard (DNF stage one)
Dries de Bondt
Stan Dewulf
Dorian Godon
Tord Gudmestad
Nicolas Prodhomme
Andrea Vendrame
EF Education-EasyPost
Richard Carapaz
Kasper Asgreen
Georg Steinhauser
Alexander Cepeda
Owain Doull
Mikkel Honore
Darren Rafferty
James Shaw
Groupama-FDJ
Sven Erik Bystrom
David Gaudu
Remy Rochas
Lorenzo Germani
Enzo Paleni
Clement Davy
Kevin Geniets
Quentin Pacher
Ineos Grenadiers
Egan Bernal
Thymen Arensman
Jonathan Castroviejo
Lucas Hamilton
Brandon Rivera (DNS stage 14)
Kim Heiduk
Joshua Tarling (DNF stage 16)
Ben Turner
Intermarche-Wanty
Francesco Busatto
Kevin Colleoni
Louis Meintjes
Simone Petilli
Dion Smith (DNF stage six)
Gerben Thijssen
Taco van der Hoorn
Gijs Van Hoecke
Israel-Premier Tech
Derek Gee
Corbin Strong
Hugo Houle
Jakob Fuglsang
Jan Hirt (DNS stage seven)
Marco Frigo
Nick Schultz
Simon Clarke
Lidl-Trek
Giulio Ciccone (DNS stage 15)
Daan Hoole
Patrick Konrad
Soren Kragh Andersen (DNS stage five)
Jacopo Mosca
Mads Pedersen
Mathias Vacek
Carlos Verona
Movistar
Einer Rubio
Nairo Quintana
Jefferson Cepeda
Jon Barrenetxea
Davide Formolo
Orluis Aular
Albert Torres
Lorenzo Milesi
Q36.5 Pro Cycling
Xabier Mikel Azparren
Mark Donovan
Damien Howson
Emils Liepins
Matteo Moschetti
Tom Pidcock
Milan Vader
Nick Zukowsky (DNF stage four)
Red Bull-Bora-Hansgrohe
Primoz Roglic (DNF stage 16)
Giovanni Aleotti
Nico Denz
Jai Hindley (DNF stage six)
Dani Martinez
Gianni Moscon
Giulio Pellizzari
Soudal Quick-Step
Mikel Landa (DNF stage one)
Mattia Cattaneo
Josef Cerny
Gianmarco Garofoli
Ethan Hayter
James Knox
Luke Lamperti
Paul Magnier (DNS stage 16)
Jayco AlUla
Koen Bouwman (DNS stage nine)
Davide De Pretto
Paul Double
Felix Engelhardt
Chris Harper
Michael Hepburn
Lucas Plapp (DNF stage 17)
Filippo Zana
Picnic PostNL
Romain Bardet
Alex Edmondson
Chris Hamilton
Gjis Leemreize
Niklas Markl
Max Poole
Casper van Uden
Bram Welten (DNF stage seven)
Polti VisitMalta
Alessandro Tonelli
Davide Piganzoli
Giovanni Lonardi
Mirco Maestri
Andrea Pietrobon
Fran Munoz
Mattia Bais
Davide Bais
Visma-Lease a Bike
Wout van Aert
Edoardo Affini
Dylan van Baarle
Wilco Kelderman
Olav Kooij
Steven Kruijswijk
Bart Lemmen
Simon Yates
Tudor Pro Cycling
Marco Brenner
Michael Storer
Alexander Krieger
Florian Stork
Larry Warbasse
Rick Pluimers
Maikel Zijlaard
Yannis Voisard
UAE Team Emirates-XRG
Juan Ayuso
Igor Arrieta
Filippo Aroncini
Isaac del Toro
Rafal Majka
Brandon McNulty
Jay Vine (DNF stage 17)
Adam Yates
VF Group-Bardiani CSF-Faizane
Filippo Fiorelli
Luca Covili
Filippo Magli
Martin Marcellusi
Alessandro Pinarello (DNS stage six)
Alessio Martinelli (DNF stage 16)
Manuele Tarozzi
Enrico Zanoncello
XDS Astana
Nicola Conci
Lorenzo Fortunato
Max Kanter
Fausto Masnada
Anton Kuzmin
Wout Poels
Christian Scaroni
Diego Ulissi
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