1996 Giro d'Italia

1996 Giro d'Italia
Race details
Dates18 May — 9 June 1996
Stages22
Distance3,990 km (2,479 mi)
Winning time105h 20' 23"
Results
Winner  Pavel Tonkov (RUS) (Panaria–Vinavil)
  Second  Enrico Zaina (ITA) (Carrera Jeans–Tassoni)
  Third  Abraham Olano (ESP) (Mapei–GB)

Points  Fabrizio Guidi (ITA) (Scrigno–Blue Storm)
Mountains  Mariano Piccoli (ITA) (Brescialat)
Intergiro  Fabrizio Guidi (ITA) (Scrigno–Blue Storm)
  Team Carrera Jeans–Tassoni
  Team points Panaria–Vinavil
← 1995
1997 →

The 1996 Giro d'Italia was the 79th edition of the Giro. It began on May 18 with a mass-start stage that began and ended in the Greek capital Athens. The race came to a close on June 9 with a mass-start stage that ended in the Italian city of Milan. Eighteen teams entered the race that was won by the Russian Pavel Tonkov of the Panaria–Vinavil team. Second and third were the Italian rider Enrico Zaina and Spanish rider Abraham Olano.

Silvio Martinello led the race for four of the first five stages because of his victory in the first stage and high-placing on the fourth stage. Stefano Zanini briefly took the lead away from Martinello following the third stage that featured a more mountainous stage profile. After winning the event's sixth stage, Pascal Hervé overtook Zanini for the lead for a single day, after which Davide Rebellin captured the lead with his winning efforts on the seventh day. Eventual winner Tonkov obtained the race leader's maglia rosa (English: pink jersey) when he finished the thirteenth stage. Tonkov kept the jersey for the rest of the race, except where he lost it to Olano by 46 hundredths of a second at the end of stage 20, but regained it the following day.

In the race's other classifications, Brescialat rider Mariano Piccoli won the mountains classification and Fabrizio Guidi of the Scrigno–Gaerne team won the points classification and the intergiro classification. Carrera Jeans–Tassoni finished as the winners of the team classification, ranking each of the eighteen teams contesting the race by lowest cumulative time of each team's top three riders per stage. The other team classification, the team points classification, where the teams' riders are awarded points for placing within the top twenty in each stage and the points are then totaled for each team was won by Panaria–Vinavil.


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