Derek Gee keeps getting closer, and that only makes it harder to take. The Canadian has done more than anyone to enliven the Giro d’Italia over the past week, but for now, he continues to be rewarded with near misses and plaudits rather than stage victory and bouquets.
By now, it feels almost inevitable that “numero 135, Derek Gee” will feature in the roll call whenever race radio crackles into life to announce a breakaway, and that was the case once again on the road to Cassano Magnago on stage 14.
At the finish, however, the Israel Start-Up Nation rider again had to settle for a maddening second place – his third of the Giro – after he was pipped to the line by Nico Denz (Bora-Hansgrohe).
When Gee won the sprint for second behind Ben Healy in Fossombrone a week ago, it felt almost like a victory for the Grand Tour debutant, while a narrower second place behind Magnus Cort in Viareggio three days was a confirmation rather than a missed opportunity. The narrow margin of defeat to Denz here, however, made this latest runner’s-up spot a little harder to process.
“It’s a mix of emotions for sure,” Gee told Cyclingnews. “If you told me going in that I’d be in this position with these legs, I probably wouldn’t have believed you, but right now it hurts. It hurts a lot.
“I mean… Nico really deserved that stage, but I wanted it so bad. He was so strong, but it was so close in the end. To get closer every time, but still finish second is frustrating.”
In years past, Gianni Savio’s Androni team used to be the perennial aggressors of the Giro, proudly racking up kilometre after kilometre in the early break. In their absence, Israel Start-Up Nation have taken up that mantle, though the team – and Gee in particular – have made a habit of driving those breaks deep into the race.
Simon Clarke, for instance, was only caught in the finishing straight in Naples, while Sebastian Berwick took third in Rivoli. On Saturday, the team had three men in the sizeable break that formed ahead of the Simplonpass, with Gee and Clarke joined by Stevie Williams.
When that unwieldy move broke up in the final hour of racing, it was Williams and Clarke who worked to bring Gee back into contention, and he would make it across to the front group in the final kilometre in the company of Denz and Alberto Bettiol (EF Education-First). At the end of another grisly, rain-soaked afternoon, Gee came close to overhauling Denz in the sprint, but the finish line arrived just a beat too soon.
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