Mountains classification in the Giro d'Italia

Mountain classification of bicycle cycling in Italy
Mountains classification in the Giro d'Italia
Giulio Ciccone in the blue jersey of classification leader during the 2019 Giro d'Italia
SportRoad Cycling
CompetitionGiro d'Italia
Awarded forBest climber in mountain stages
Local nameGran Premio della Montagna (Italian)
History
First award1933
Editions87 (as of 2024)
First winner Alfredo Binda (ITA)
Most wins Gino Bartali (ITA)
(7 wins)
Most recent Tadej Pogacar (SLO)

The Mountains classification in the Giro d'Italia is a secondary classification that is a part of the Giro d'Italia, one of cycling's Grand Tour races. In this classification, points are awarded to the leading riders over designated climbs. The climbs are put into different classifications based on difficulty and their position on that day's stage. Bonus points are given to mountain top finishes and to the first riders over the Cima Coppi, traditionally adjudged as the highest point of the entire Giro.

The classification was first calculated in 1933; from 1974 to 2011, the leader of the mountains classification in the Giro d'Italia wore the maglia verde (from Italian: "green jersey"): in 2012, as part of a sponsorship deal, the jersey color was changed to blue (maglia azzurra).

History

Until 2011 (pictured, second from the left), the jersey for the mountains classification was green.

The mountains classification was added to the Giro d'Italia in 1933.[1] In the inaugural year of the classification, the organizers chose select climbs and awarded points to the first three riders who crossed the climbs.[1] Alfredo Binda was first over each climb and won the first mountains classification.[1] In 1974, the organizers added a green jersey to designate the leader of the classification.[2] The green jersey was used until 2012, when the classification's sponsor, Banca Mediolanum, renewed its sponsorship for another four years and desired the jersey to be blue rather than green.[3]

Winners

Chepe González winning a stage while leading the mountains classification during the 1997 Giro d'Italia
Koldo Gil receives the leader's green jersey at the 2005 Giro d'Italia
Key
*Winner won general classification in the same year
Winner won general and points classification in the same year
  • The "Year" column refers to the year the competition was held, and wikilinks to the article about that edition of the race.
  • The "Points" column refers to the number of points that the rider had in the mountains classification.
  • The "Margin" column refers to the margin of time or points by which the winner defeated the runner-up.
  • The "Stage wins" column refers to the number of stages wins the winner had during the race.
Giro d'Italia mountains classification winners[4][5]
YearCountryCyclistSponsor/teamPointsMarginStage wins
1933 ItalyAlfredo Binda*Legnano??6
1934 ItalyRemo BertoniLegnano31100
1935 ItalyGino BartaliFréjus44161
1936 ItalyGino Bartali*Legnano38.513.53
1937 ItalyGino Bartali*Legnano37124
1938 ItalyGiovanni Valetti*Fréjus2933
1939 ItalyGino BartaliLegnano2234
1940 ItalyGino BartaliLegnano2542
1941~Not contested
1942~Not contested
1943~Not contested
1944~Not contested
1945~Not contested
1946 ItalyGino Bartali*Legnano2770
1947 ItalyGino BartaliLegnano2431
1948 ItalyFausto CoppiBianchi2590
1949 ItalyFausto Coppi*Bianchi4653
1950  SwitzerlandHugo Koblet*Guerra–Svizzera43142
1951 FranceLouison BobetBottecchia2921
1952 FranceRaphaël GéminianiBianchi3130
1953 ItalyPasquale FornaraCilo33131
1954 ItalyFausto CoppiBianchi611
1955 ItalyGastone NenciniLeo–Chlorodont712
1956 LuxembourgCharly Gaul*[N 1]Faema20153
 SpainFederico Bahamontes[N 1]Girardengo30170
1957 FranceRaphaël GéminianiSaint Raphaël56180
1958 BelgiumJean BrankartSaint Raphaël56174
1959 LuxembourgCharly Gaul*Emi5602403
1960 BelgiumRik Van LooyFaema250403
1961 ItalyVito TacconeAtala2701401
1962 SpainAngelino SolerGhigi2601603
1963 ItalyVito TacconeLygie5204005
1964 ItalyFranco BitossiSpring Oil200604
1965 ItalyFranco BitossiFilotex250901
1966 ItalyFranco BitossiFilotex4901702
1967 SpainAurelio GonzálezKAS–Kaskol4603701
1968 BelgiumEddy MerckxFaema3401601
1969 ItalyClaudio MichelottoMax Meyer330801
1970 BelgiumMartin Van Den BosscheMolteni460400
1971 SpainJosé Manuel FuenteKAS360901
1972 SpainJosé Manuel FuenteKAS4900400
1973 SpainJosé Manuel FuenteKAS550401
1974 SpainJosé Manuel FuenteKAS5101805
1975 SpainAndrés Oliva[6]KAS300600
1976 SpainAndrés OlivaKAS5351450
1977 SpainFaustino Fernández OviesKAS6751850
1978  SwitzerlandUeli SutterZonca8303100
1979 ItalyClaudio BortolottoSanson4951651
1980 ItalyClaudio BortolottoSan Giacomo6702700
1981 ItalyClaudio BortolottoSantini510100
1982 BelgiumLucien Van ImpeMetauromobili8604800
1983 BelgiumLucien Van ImpeMetauromobili70271
1984 FranceLaurent FignonRenault–Elf53131
1985 SpainJosé Luis NavarroZor5470
1986 SpainPedro MuñozFagor54191
1987 United KingdomRobert MillarPanasonic–Isostar97441
1988 United StatesAndrew Hampsten*7–Eleven–Hoonved5942
1989 ColombiaLuis HerreraCafé de Colombia70322
1990 ItalyClaudio ChiappucciCarrera Jeans–Vagabond74180
1991 SpainIñaki GastónCLAS–Cajastur7560
1992 ItalyClaudio ChiappucciCarrera Jeans–Vagabond76310
1993 ItalyClaudio ChiappucciCarrera Jeans–Tassoni4221
1994  SwitzerlandPascal RichardGB–MG Maglificio78201
1995 ItalyMariano PiccoliBrescialat75301
1996 ItalyMariano PiccoliBrescialat69320
1997 ColombiaChepe GonzálezKelme–Costa Blanca99641
1998 ItalyMarco Pantani*Mercatone Uno–Bianchi89272
1999 ColombiaChepe GonzálezKelme–Costa Blanca61161
2000 ItalyFrancesco CasagrandeVini Caldirola–Sidermec71241
2001 ColombiaFredy GonzálezSelle Italia–Pacific73311
2002 MexicoJulio Alberto PérezColombia–Selle Italia69362
2003 ColombiaFredy GonzálezColombia–Selle Italia100220
2004 GermanyFabian WegmannGerolsteiner5620
2005 VenezuelaJosé RujanoColombia–Selle Italia143861
2006 SpainJuan Manuel GárateQuick-Step–Innergetic6481
2007 ItalyLeonardo PiepoliSaunier Duval–Prodir79331
2008 ItalyEmanuele SellaCSF Group–Navigare136733
2009 ItalyStefano GarzelliAcqua & Sapone–Caffè Mokambo61161
2010 AustraliaMatthew LloydOmega Pharma–Lotto56151
2011 ItalyStefano GarzelliAcqua & Sapone67240
2012 ItalyMatteo RabottiniFarnese Vini–Selle Italia84401
2013 ItalyStefano PirazziBardiani Valvole–CSF Inox82370
2014 ColombiaJulián ArredondoTrek Factory Racing173411
2015 ItalyGiovanni ViscontiMovistar Team12530
2016 SpainMikel NieveTeam Sky152181
2017 SpainMikel LandaTeam Sky2241061
2018 United KingdomChris Froome*Team Sky125172
2019 ItalyGiulio CicconeTrek–Segafredo2671521
2020 PortugalRuben GuerreiroEF Pro Cycling234771
2021 FranceGeoffrey BouchardAG2R Citroën Team184440
2022 NetherlandsKoen BouwmanTeam Jumbo–Visma2941312
2023 FranceThibaut PinotGroupama–FDJ237370
2024 SloveniaTadej Pogačar*UAE Team Emirates270646

Multiple winners

As of 2023, 15 cyclists have won the mountains classification more than once.[7]

Multiple winners of the Giro d'Italia mountains classification
CyclistTotalYears
 Gino Bartali (ITA)71935, 1936, 1937, 1939, 1940, 1946, 1947
 José Manuel Fuente (ESP)41971, 1972, 1973, 1974
 Fausto Coppi (ITA)31948, 1949, 1954
 Franco Bitossi (ITA)31964, 1965, 1966
 Claudio Bortolotto (ITA)31979, 1980, 1981
 Claudio Chiappucci (ITA)31990, 1992, 1993
 Raphaël Géminiani (FRA)21952, 1957
 Charly Gaul (LUX)21956, 1959
 Vito Taccone (ITA)21961, 1963
 Andrés Oliva (ESP)21975, 1976
 Lucien Van Impe (BEL)21982, 1983
 Mariano Piccoli (ITA)21995, 1996
 Chepe González (COL)21997, 1999
 Fredy González (COL)22001, 2003
 Stefano Garzelli (ITA)22009, 2011

By nationality

Riders from fifteen different countries have won the Mountains classification in the Giro d'Italia.[7]

Giro d'Italia mountains classification winners by nationality
CountryNo. of winning cyclistsNo. of wins
 Italy2239
 Spain1216
 Belgium56
 France56
 Colombia46
  Switzerland33
 United Kingdom22
 Luxembourg12
 United States11
 Mexico11
 Germany11
 Venezuela11
 Australia11
 Portugal11
 Netherlands11

Distribution of points

The points that are gained by consecutive riders reaching a mountain top are distributed according to 5 categories:

Tipologia1st2nd3rd4th5th6th7th8th9th
Cima Coppi50302014106421
First Category40181296421-
Second Category1886421---
Third Category9421-----
Fourth Category321------

The organization of the race determines which mountains are included for the mountains classification and in which category they are. The points for the Cima Coppi are awarded once every Giro, for the summit at the highest altitude in that Giro.

References

Footnotes
  1. ^ a b The 1956 Giro d'Italia had two mountain competitions: the Trofeo Dolomiti and the Trofeo Appennini. Charly Gaul won the former and Federico Bahamontes, the latter.
Citations
  1. ^ a b c Bill and Carol McGann. "1933 Giro d'Italia". Bike Race Info. Dog Ear Publishing. Archived from the original on 2014-02-27. Retrieved 2012-07-10.
  2. ^ Bill and Carol McGann. "1974 Giro d'Italia". Bike Race Info. Dog Ear Publishing. Archived from the original on 2017-07-25. Retrieved 2012-07-10.
  3. ^ "Blue Mountains Jersey For 2012 Giro D'Italia". Cycling News. 17 December 2011. Retrieved 20 June 2013.
  4. ^ "Past winners". Cyclingnews.com. 9 May 2009. Retrieved April 24, 2014.
  5. ^ "Giro d'Italia – Fight for Pink: Il Garibaldi" (PDF). Giro d'Italia. RCS MediaGroup. p. 38. Archived from the original (PDF) on April 19, 2014. Retrieved 18 April 2014.
  6. ^ Oliva, king of the mountain. "Galdós ganó la última etapa, pero no pudo ganar el Giro de Italia". hemeroteca.abc.es (in Spanish). 8 June 1975. Retrieved 4 June 2017.
  7. ^ a b "Giro d'Italia 2009" (PDF). Infostrada sports. 2009. p. 187. Archived from the original (PDF) on 17 December 2010. Retrieved 29 June 2011.
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