Cycling-Thomas Silva sprints to victory in Giro stage 2 after nearly 20 riders crash


Cycling - Giro d'Italia - Stage 9 - Cervia to Corno alle Scale - Italy - May 17, 2026 XDS Astana Team's Guillermo Thomas Silva celebrates crossing the line to win stage 9 REUTERS/Stoyan Nenov

May 9 (Reuters) - Guillermo Thomas Silva won ⁠stage two of the Giro d'Italia on Saturday to become the first Uruguayan to ⁠win a Grand Tour stage after a dramatic sprint, following a crash involving ‌nearly 20 riders in the hilly, rain-soaked 221 km ride from Burgas to Veliko Tarnovo in Bulgaria.

The race was temporarily neutralised after the crash around the 198km mark which left several riders injured, and forced Australian Jay Vine and ​Norwegian Adne Holter to abandon.

Spaniard Florian Stork finished second and ⁠Giulio Ciccone was third, as XDS ⁠Astana rider Thomas Silva took the pink jersey from stage one winner Paul Magnier.

"This is only ⁠the ‌second stage of my first Giro d'Italia and I'm the winner. It was a bit unexpected. I'm speechless," said Thomas Silva.

The stage started without Matteo Moschetti, who was caught ⁠up in a crash on Friday and became the first ​competitor to abandon the race.

Mirco ‌Maestri and Diego Pablo Sevilla attacked early and moved five minutes ahead of the ⁠peloton. They remained ​unchallenged through the climbs to Byala Pass and Vratnik Pass, where Sevilla led the way to the top.

But the peloton slowly chipped away at the breakaway riders in rainy conditions, and once the weather cleared ⁠up, Maestri and Sevilla were caught with 27km left in ​the stage.

But the mass crash followed soon after.

Commentators said Marc Soler was the first to hit the ground that was still slippery from the rain, before several others got caught in the crash, ⁠with some hitting or going over a guard rail.

VINGEGAARD'S ATTACK FALLS SHORT

The race resumed with 18.2km left and Jonas Vingegaard attacked during the Lyaskovets Monastery Pass, opening a gap with the peloton near the top as Giulio Pellizzari and Lenny Van Eetvelt chased him down the descent.

But with ​half a kilometer left, the peloton caught up with the leading ⁠group, leading to a frantic sprint in which the Uruguayan 24-year-old prevailed in a photo finish.

"I just ​had to keep calm and launch the sprint at the ‌right time... this is the maximum I could ​hope for," Thomas Silva said.

The race will continue on Sunday with a 175km flat stage from Plovdiv to Sofia.

(Reporting by Chiranjit Ojha in Bengaluru, editing by Ed Osmond)

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