-
Coventry 'let the Games do their magic': former IOC executives
-
Cayenne Turbo Electric 2026
-
Sri Lanka have to qualify 'the hard way' after England drubbing
-
Doris says Six Nations rout of England is sparking Irish 'belief'
-
Thousands of pilgrims visit remains of St Francis
-
Emotional Gu makes history with Olympic freeski halfpipe gold
-
Impressive Del Toro takes statement victory in UAE
-
Gu wins triumphant gold of Milan-Cortina Olympics before ice hockey finale
-
England rout Sri Lanka for 95 to win Super Eights opener
-
Underhill tells struggling England to maintain Six Nations 'trust' as Italy await
-
Alfa Tonale 2026: With a new look
-
BMW 7 Series and i7: facelift in 2026
-
Eileen Gu makes history with Olympic freeski halfpipe gold
-
Eileen Gu makes history with Olympic halfpipe gold
-
Morocco flood evacuees mark muted Ramadan away from home
-
Lucid Gravity 2026: Test report
-
Sri Lanka restrict England to 146-9 in T20 World Cup Super Eights
-
West Indies wary of Zimbabwe's 'X-factor' quick Muzarabani
-
Bentley: Visions for 2026
-
Eileen Gu wins Olympic gold in women's freeski halfpipe
-
First 'dispersed' Winter Olympics a success -- and snow helped
-
Six stand-out moments from the 2026 Winter Olympics
-
Andrew's arrest hands King Charles fresh royal crisis
-
Afghans mourn villagers killed in Pakistani strikes
-
Jeeno Thitikul brings home LPGA win in Thailand
-
Snowboard champion Karl '99 percent' sure parallel giant slalom will stay in Olympics
-
Greenland does not need US hospital ship: Danish minister
-
Russian missile barrage hits energy, railways across Ukraine
-
Ka Ying Rising makes Hong Kong racing history with 18th win
-
St Francis relics go on public show for first time in Italy
-
Deflated Australia face tough questions after T20 World Cup flop
-
Brazil's Lula urges Trump to treat all countries equally
-
Knicks rally to down Rockets as Pistons, Spurs roll on
-
Brumbies end 26-year jinx with thrashing of Crusaders
-
Pakistan launches deadly strikes in Afghanistan
-
Son's LAFC defeats Messi and Miami in MLS season opener
-
Korda to face Paul in all-American Delray Beach final
-
Vikings receiver Rondale Moore dies at 25
-
Copper, a coveted metal boosting miners
-
Indigenous protesters occupy Cargill port terminal in Brazil
-
Four lives changed by four years of Russia-Ukraine war
-
AI agent invasion has people trying to pick winners
-
'Hamnet' eyes BAFTAs glory over 'One Battle', 'Sinners'
-
Cron laments errors after Force crash to Blues in Super Rugby
-
The Japanese snowball fight game vying to be an Olympic sport
-
'Solar sheep' help rural Australia go green, one panel at a time
-
Cuban Americans keep sending help to the island, but some cry foul
-
As US pressures Nigeria over Christians, what does Washington want?
-
Dark times under Syria's Assad hit Arab screens for Ramadan
-
Bridgeman powers to six-shot lead over McIlroy at Riviera
Pedersen sprints back into Giro pink after mountain goat incident
Denmark's Mads Pedersen won a mass bunch sprint on stage three of the Giro d'Italia at the coastal town of Vlore on Sunday on the final day of racing in Albania, which also featured a mountain goat running through the peloton.
This was a second stage win on the 2025 Giro following the Lidl-Trek rider's opening day win and left him 9sec clear of Slovenian veteran Primoz Roglic in the overall standings.
Despite a 10.7km climb with seven percent gradients 35km from the finish, an arrow-straight 1km home run on the Adriatic coast set up a very high speed finish where Pedersen went early and held off a late burst from Corbin Strong of IPT.
"That's exactly what we wanted today. We have two victories already," said a clearly ecstatic Pedersen, who finished in 3hr 49min 47sec.
Halfway through the race, a mountain goat hit straggling rider Dion Smith of Intermarche-Wanty in the hills outside Vlore.
Fortunately neither rider nor goat were hurt as a herd of goats and a large unaccompanied dog watched on, with Smith showing great reactions in staying upright as the goat ran across the road right into him.
Many of the pure sprinters were dropped 60km from the finish while Saturday's time trial winner Josh Tarling led a 120km break on Sunday, but was caught and dropped by the peloton on the last climb.
After three days in Albania, the Giro heads back across the Adriatic to Italy, with Monday a rest day for the riders.
Tuesday's fourth stage is a flat run to Lecce in the heel of Italy, where the pure sprinters such as Olav Kooij, Sam Bennett, Kaden Groves or Paul Magnier should be in the final mix.
The rest of next week is hills galore as the riders criss-cross Italy via Matera and Napoli and climbing as far as Siena by stage nine.
The final week of the Giro will be decisive with stage 16 featuring five Alpine mountains, and stage 20 ending with a gruelling climb up the Colle delle Finestre to the Sestriere ski resort -- the moment when the winner is likely to emerge.
G.Teles--PC