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1910 Milan–San Remo

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Cycling race
1910 Milan–San Remo
Eugène Christophe won the fourth running of Milan–San Remo
Eugène Christophe won the fourth running of Milan–San Remo
Race details
Dates3 April 1910
Stages1
Distance289.3 km (179.8 mi)
Winning time12h 24' 00"
Results
 Winner Eugène Christophe (France)(Alcyon-Dunlop)
 Second Giovanni Cocchi (Italy)
 Third Giovanni Marchese (Italy)
← 1909
1911 →

The fourth running of theMilan–San Remocycling race took place on 3 April 1910. FrenchmanEugène Christophe won the event, more than one hour ahead of his first pursuers. The race gained a place in cycling legend because it was run in dreadful weather. Riders needed to take refuge in the houses along the roads from a severesnowstorm.[1] Only four of 63 riders finished the race.[2]

Summary

[edit]

63 riders started the race inMilan at 6 a.m., when news broke that heavy snow fell on theTurchino, prompting some riders to return home immediately.[3]Cyrille Van Hauwaert, winner of the1908 race, broke away and had a 3-minute lead overOctave Lapize,Luigi Ganna andErnest Paul when they reachedOvada.Eugène Christophe was in fifth place at 10 minutes.

As the weather deteriorated, only thirty riders were still in the race byMasone and were forced to walk and shoulder their bikes up the climb. At the top of the Turchino, after five hours of racing, Van Hauwaert was still in the lead, followed by Christophe at 10 minutes, Paul at 19 minutes and Ganna at 22. Van Hauwaert crashed in the snowy descent, sought refuge in a cottage and, when warmed up, refused to continue his way.

Meanwhile, Eugène Christophe, after being refreshed as well, continued his way in a pair of long pants, and set off in pursuit of the new leadersPierino Albini and Luigi Ganna. BySavona Christophe had taken the lead, followed by Ganna at 15 minutes and Albini at 26. Christophe again stopped to eat and cut his pants that had become entangled in his chain.[3]

Christophe won, even though he thought he had taken a wrong road and did not realize he was the first to reachSanremo.[1] Christophe finished the race in 12 hours and 24 minutes, the slowest in history.Luigi Ganna, the previous year's winner, finished second at 39' 30", but was disqualified for having taken a car.[3]

After the race, Christophe needed to be hospitalized for frostbite to his hands and further body damage from the cold. He spent a month in a Sanremo hospital and it took another two years before he recovered to his original health.

Results

[edit]
RiderTeamTime
1FranceEugène ChristopheAlcyon-Dunlop12h 24' 00"
2ItalyGiovanni Cocchi-+ 1h 01' 00"
3ItalyGiovanni Marchese-+ 1h 17' 00"
4ItalyEnrico SalaSenior-Polack+ 2h 06' 00"

Just four riders were officially listed. Two more riders reportedly finished after the classified four, but the officials had already gone home.[2]

Further reading

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ab"Storia della Milano-Sanremo".La Gazzetta dello Sport (in Italian).RCS MediaGroup. Retrieved26 February 2016.
  2. ^ab"1910 Milano - San Remo".bikeraceinfo.com. Retrieved27 February 2016.
  3. ^abc"3 aprile 1910 - Milano-Sanremo".museociclismo.it (in Italian). Retrieved27 February 2016.
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