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Did Primož Roglič just win his last race for Jumbo-Visma?

Did Primož Roglič just win his last race for Jumbo-Visma?

On the day that both Primož Roglič and his Jumbo-Visma team acknowledged that the mighty Slovenian will be moving teams in 2024, the four-time Grand Tour titlist took Saturday’s 106th edition of the 1.Pro-rated Giro dell’Emilia, one of the warmup races of next Saturday’s Il Lombardia. It was his first one-day victory of the season after a Giro d’Italia triumph and three other stage race wins. Michael Woods, who has been on the Giro dell’Emilia podium twice, came fifth.

The Course

The first 75 km of the 204 km Giro dell’Emilia were flat. The Samone climb led to the higher ground. Monte Nonascoso just past the midway point was probably the hardest climb of the day. Once the riders ascended 2.1-km, 9.3 percent San Luca for the first time, they were in the Bologna circuits. They’d climb San Luca and Monte “Lou” Albano four times after that and finish atop San Luca.

It would be one of the last races that two-time winner Primož Roglič would ride for Jumbo-Visma. He is leaving the team for 2024, his destination yet to be announced.

Eight breakaway riders went clear in the early flat ground and had a 2:00 gap by the time it assailed Samone. After descending Monte Nonascoso, there were only two Italian fugitives left out front with 50-seconds over the UAE-Emirates-led peloton.

With 41 km remaining and San Luca 1 looming, the escapees were caught. The peloton galloped towards the circuits. A rider from Continental side GW Shimano-Sidermec skipped away when the grades kicked up. Other riders took up the cause, and Quentin Pacher and Chris Harper would be the ones who tipped over, crossing the finish line for the first time. By the time the duo started descended off Monte Albano, it had rolled up a 25-second lead.

On San Luca 2, UAE-Emirates continued to pull the pack. Harper shook loose of Pacher. Various Italians tried to bridge. Harper had 30 seconds with three…

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