Vingegaard Shows Resistance Is Futile | Giro d'Italia 2026 | THEMOVE+
5/30/202632 min
Johan Bruyneel and Spencer Martin break down Jonas Vingegaard's dominant win atop Piancavallo Giro d'Italia to win his fifth stage win of this race and pad his overall. They dive into how the GC battle, which was raging behind, shook out, and what to make of Vingegaard's improving performances. They also preview tomorrow's Stage 21, a likely sprint in Rome, and wonder if Lidl-Trek and Jonathan Milan can finally get their stage win.
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First 90 secondsSpencer Martin· Host0:01
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Johan Bruyneel· Host0:20
Uh, Visma made it clear that today they wanted to go for the stage win. Exactly what happened. Uh, takeaway of today, uh, the same way as we've seen in the last few mountain stages, is that Jonas is in a league on of, of his own here in this Giro, and then it's the rest.
Spencer Martin· Host0:36
[upbeat music] Hey, everybody. Welcome back to The Move+. I'm Spencer Martin. I'm here with Johan Bruyneel. We are breaking down stage 20 of the Giro d'Italia, the final mountain stage, the final GC set piece before tomorrow's procession/sprint in Rome. Jonas Vingegaard won the stage. One, one minute and 15 seconds, potentially his biggest gap, winning gap yet, Johan, over Felix Gall, with Jai Hindley coming in third. Stop us if you've heard that finishing order before on a mountain stage. Derek Gee coming in fourth. W- incredibly strong ride from Derek Gee. And Simon Arensbman with, uh, the ride of the day from Egan Bernal, pulling him back into that group after they were dropped, um, saving his fourth place, stopping Derek Gee from going into fourth himself. And then another ride of the day, Alfonso Haulio coming in seventh, two minutes, three seconds down on Vingegaard to save

