Skip to content

Giro d'Italia 2016 awards: We celebrate the race's star riders

Esteban Chaves, Vincenzo Nibali, Alejandro Valverde, Giro d'Italia 2016
Image: From left, Esteban Chaves, Vincenzo Nibali and Alejandro Valverde on the final Giro d'Italia podium

The Giro d’Italia is over and Vincenzo Nibali has won for the second time.

But the 'Shark of Messina' is not the only rider worth celebrating, because there were plenty of other good - and bad - performances to recognise.

Here, we present our Giro 2016 awards…

Nibali seals Giro victory
Nibali seals Giro victory

Vincenzo Nibali completed overall victory of the Giro d'Italia on Sunday

Best all-rounder: Bob Jungels

Jungels was already a highly regarded up-and-coming young rider prior to the Giro, but he has shown over the past three weeks just how good and multi-talented he really is.

Bob Jungels, Giro d'Italia, stage 11
Image: Bob Jungels was outstanding on all terrains

The fact he finished sixth overall, only 8min 31sec down on Nibali, and led the race for three days is impressive enough, but it was the range of terrains on which he flourished that really stood out.

He finished in the top 10 in all three time trials (one flat, one rolling, one uphill), climbed with the leaders in the mountains and even finished fourth in a sprint. It was a near-flawless all-round display.

Also See:

Best climber: Steven Kruijswijk

This winner of this award is a tough one to pick given that everyone had good and bad days. There is a temptation to give it to Jungels for far exceeding expectations in the mountains, and likewise to Nibali for his race-winning performances in the final two Alpine stages.

Steven Kruijswijk on stage eight of the 2016 Giro d'Italia
Image: Steven Kruijswijk climbed brilliantly before his crash

But it goes to Kruijswijk due to the fact his two bad days in the mountains came after he had cracked a rib and suffered several other bumps and bruises in a heavy crash on stage 19.

Prior to that he had looked invincible on the hills and you cannot help but wonder if that would have continued had he not ploughed into that wall of snow on the descent off the Colle dell'Agnello.

Best young rider: Bob Jungels

Jungels was one of the best riders in the race full stop, so it is inevitable to declare him the best young rider.

Bob Jungels, Giro d'Italia 2016, stage 13
Image: Jungels topped the best young rider classification

The next best under-23 was Sebastian Henao, but he finished almost 30 minutes behind Jungels in 17th place overall.

Best sprinter: Marcel Kittel

This was a tight one between Kittel, who won two stages, and Andre Greipel, who won three stages, but Kittel nicks by virtue of the emphatic nature of his victories.

Marcel Kittel wins stage two of the 2016 Giro d'Italia
Image: Marcel Kittel was untouchable on stages two and three

On both stage two and three, he won by such huge margins that there was no one else in shot on the overhead camera when he crossed the line. It was as impressive as sprinting gets.

Best supporting rider: Michele Scarponi

Nibali won the race thanks to his own climbing prowess, but he owes a huge debt of gratitude to the outstanding Scarponi.

Michele Scarponi, Giro d'Italia 2016
Image: Michele Scarponi provided admirable support to Nibali

The 36-year-old rode superbly and loyally in Nibali's service, repeatedly blowing the peloton to pieces on his team leader's behalf and even sacrificing his own chances of a victory on stage 19 to offer assistance.

Best team: Etixx - Quick-Step

Astana were strong contenders for this award thanks to their strength in depth in the mountains and superb tactics, but not even they were a match for Etixx - Quick-Step.

Il ciclista della Etixx-Quickstep batte in volata Moser e Brambilla (foto Getty)
Image: Matteo Trentin was one of three Etixx - Quick-Step riders who won stages

The Belgian squad won four stages with three riders, had three riders lead the race for a total of six days, and have a walked away with an unexpected sixth place in the general classification. The race could not really have gone any better.

Best breakthrough performance: Primoz Roglic

Jungels would have been a shoe-in for this award given the way he has announced himself as a potential grand tour winner of the future, but not even that was as big a surprise as the performances of the previously unheralded Roglic.

Primoz Roglic, Giro d'Italia, stage nine
Image: Primoz Roglic excelled in the race's first two time trials

The 26-year-old Slovenian, who is a former ski jumper, only joined the UCI WorldTour this year but missed out on a maiden grand tour victory by just 0.02 seconds on the Giro's opening-stage time trial.

However, he made amends with by winning the 40.5km time trial on stage nine and now has to be regarded as one of the best time-triallists in the world.

Best sportsmanship: Esteban Chaves

After Kruijswijk had hit the wall of snow, lost more than four minutes to his rivals and surrendered the pink jersey, new race leader Chaves was the first person to commiserate with the Dutchman in his post-stage interviews.

Esteban Chaves, Giro d'Italia 2016, stage 14
Image: Chaves was philosophical in defeat

When Chaves then lost the pink jersey to Nibali 24 hours later, he didn't sulk or avoid speaking to the media, but instead accepted that he had run out of legs and insisted there were worse things in the world than losing a bike race.

And in one final show of class, when both he and Rigoberto Uran were caught up in a crash on the last stage, Chaves checked to see if his fellow Colombian was OK before chasing back to the peloton.

Biggest disappointment: Domenico Pozzovivo

Pozzovivo has good pedigree at the Giro and while he was never considered a genuine contender for overall victory, a place in the top five should not have been beyond him.

Domenico Pozzovivo on stage 19 of the 2016 Giro d'Italia
Image: Domenico Pozzovivo did not live up to expectation

However, he instead finished almost 52 minutes down in 20th place and was only the third-best rider in his own team.

Around Sky