NAPLES, Italy — Denmark’s Mads Pedersen won the sixth stage of the Giro d´Italia after a two-man breakaway was caught with the line in sight.
Andreas Leknessund kept hold of the pink jersey.
Pedersen beat Jonathan Milan and Pascal Ackermann in a bunch sprint at the end of the picturesque 162-kilometres (101-mile) route that started and finished in Naples.
The Giro ends in Rome on May 28.
It looked as though Alessandro De Marchi and Simon Clarke were going to contest the victory after they were in a breakaway that went early in the day, but they were swallowed up less than 300 meters from the end. De Marchi shook his head and they embraced each other as they crossed the line.
“I´m very happy. That´s what we came here for,” Pedersen said. “It was difficult to catch the breakaway riders. We had to use all our teammates early.”
There were two categorized climbs along the stage that went around Mount Vesuvius before going through Sorrento and along the Amalfi coast on a relatively calm day.
“It was not easy to catch them for a long time. All the sprinters had to use all the guys we had available.
“We caught them with 300m to go. I feel sorry for those guys because they did really, really well – but I am happy I took the win,” Pedersen added.
Pedersen has now won a stage in all three Grand Tour races.
The 27-year-old picked up victories on stage 13 of last year’s Tour de France before taking stages 13, 16, and 19 at last year’s Vuelta a España on his way to first place in the overall points classification.
There was no change to the general classification at the Giro after stage six as Norway’s Andreas Leknessund maintained his 28-second lead over Belgian Remco Evenepoel.
Frenchman Aurélien Paret-Peintre makes up the top three, 30 seconds off the pace.
That would have come as a relief to the riders after miserable weather the previous day caused several crashes.
Pre-race favorite Remco Evenepoel was in a lot of pain after being involved in two of those incidents but he appeared not to be too affected by that as he finished safely in the peloton to remain 28 seconds behind Leknessund.
Aurélien Paret-Peintre was third overall, 30 seconds behind Leknessund.
The colour of the Giro is pink but the streets in and around Naples were festooned with blue in honor of the city´s soccer team after Napoli ended its 33-year wait for the Serie A title last week.
Despite the crashes the previous day, the only rider not to start was Clément Russo after testing positive for coronavirus.
The Giro hits the high mountains on seventh stage with the edition´s first finish above 2,000 meters.
The 218-kilometre (135-mile) route from Capua ends in a daunting top-category climb on the Gran Sasso d´Italia to Campo Imperatore.
“Today was a really nice day for being in the Maglia Rosa,” Leknessund said. “We also wanted to go for the stage win with Marius Mayrhofer but it didn´t work. I feel ready for the mountain stage tomorrow. I´ll do my best to keep the Maglia Rosa.”