Giro d'Italia 2026 stage two preview: Puncheurs' paradise

Giro d'Italia 2026 stage two preview: Puncheurs' paradise

With three classified climbs and an uphill finish, day two is a typically explosive Giro stage which promises a smorgasbord of options at the line: will we see a breakaway, a late attacker, or a small group sprint?


Date: Saturday, May 9
Distance: 221km
Start location: Burgas / Бургас
Finish location: Veliko Tarnovo / Велико Търново
Start time: 09:50 BST / 10:50 CEST / 04:50 EDT
Finish time: 14:59 BST / 15:59 CEST / 09:59 EDT (approx.)

Distance, a steep late climb and a lick of cobbles to finish make stage two of the 2026 Giro d'Italia the first truly selective day. The rolling Balkan valleys make for an immediate shift in tone as the race travels westward toward the hilltop city of Veliko Tarnovo: in comparison to the flat roads of stage one, riders will come up against 2,600 metres of elevation gain. The weight of that climbing arrives in the second half, with the Byla and Vratnik passes culminating in the decisive Lyaskovets Monastery ascent just 11 kilometres from the finish – an obstacle for heavy sprinters, and a launch pad for puncheurs. Expect a dynamic race in the final hour, with GC teams looking to test rivals before the race reaches the high mountains, scheming stage-hunters on the attack, and the maglia rosa likely to change hands for the first time.

Giro d'Italia 2026 stage two profile

Giro d'Italia 2026 stage two profile
Giro d'Italia 2026 stage two profile (RCS)

Contenders

Tobias Lund Andresen (Decathlon CMA CGM), might have already proved he is one of the race’s leading pure sprinters with a second-place finish on stage one, but his form this spring over the Classics shows outstanding versatility well-suited to day two. A spree of top 10 results with 6th at Omloop Het Niewsblad, 7th at Kuurne-Brussels-Kuurne, 6th at E3 Saxo Classic, and second at In Flanders Field means the Dane will be one to watch over this very mixed stage, especially if it ends in a reduced sprint.

Lund Andresen took second in the sprint of stage one behind Soudal-Quickstep's Paul Magnier (Image credit: Getty) 

Read more: Giro d'Italia 2026 stage one results: Paul Magnier wins in Burgas

Brit Ben Turner will be hunting for a stage win for Netcompany-Ineos. He is a fastman with an engine proven capable of performing in late, punchy small group sprints, especially after such an attritional stage – just like when he he prevailed over Jasper Philipsen to take his first Grand Tour stage win at the Vuelta a España last year. 

 Ben Turner took his first Grand Tour win in a sprint at the Vuelta a España last year (Image credit: Getty)

NSN puncheur Corbin Strong, who finished fifth at Milan-Sanremo this year, will also get his chance at pink on the rolling hills, as will Jasper Stuyven (Soudal Quick-Step), who comes into the Giro after an impressive spring campaign, including third at Paris-Roubaix. 

If we’re looking at versatile sprinters, Kaden Groves (Alpecin-Premier Tech) isn’t one to count out either. The Australian showed his prowess on the hills at the back end of last year’s Tour de France, and could target this stage as part of a bid for the maglia ciclamino. However, he was caught up in the crash on stage one and could be feeling its effects on Saturday’s stage.

Jhonatan Narváez (UAE Team Emirates XRG) is back racing after a heavy crash at the Tour Down Under and represents the aggregate strength of UAE. A stage win and time in the maglia rosa to his name makes the Ecuadorian a threat on this stage, which looks similar to the route profile on which he overtook Tadej Pogačar in stage one of the 2024 edition. His teammate António Morgado pocketed bonus seconds on day one’s Red Bull KM, and will also be an all-rounder to watch.

 António Morgado lines up with a stacked UAE squad headed by GC contender Adam Yates (Image credit: Getty)

GC riders wanting to stay safe in the early phases of the race may well end up in a small group over the top of the final ascent, in which case we can look to red-hot favourite Jonas Vingegaard (Visma-Lease a Bike), or  young Italian Giulio Pellizzari (Red Bull-Bora-Hansgrohe). It’s possible that some of the best climbers could go full throttle at the foot of the climb, in which case we can look to Guilio Ciccone (Lidl-Trek), who took the mountains classification at Volta a Catalunya in March and has the kick demanded by this stage’s punchy uphill finish. 

Prediction

We think Lund Andresen's flying form will earn him the stage win and the maglia rosa on stage two. 

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