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Tao Geoghegan Hart makes an impression at the Giro d'Italia ahead of final weekend

Tao Geoghegan Hart makes an impression at the Giro d'Italia ahead of final weekend
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He is 15 seconds off the lead.

Tao Geoghegan Hart vaulted himself to within 15 seconds of the pink jersey as the Giro d’Italia exploded on the slopes of the famed Stelvio.

Jai Hindley nicked the stage 18 victory from the Londoner at the line while the Australian’s Team Sunweb team-mate Wilco Kelderman took pink off the shoulders of Joao Almeida, but a dramatic day left the race delicately poised going into the final weekend.

Kelderman may have inherited the lead but he too struggled, finishing two minutes 18 seconds behind his team-mate, and the fight for pink could yet be a battle between two riders who came to the race as domestiques.

“Winning here is such an incredible feeling,” Hindley said. “It’s a big step forward in my career.”

Hindley sits 12 seconds off pink, with the Ineos Grenadiers’ Geoghegan Hart sitting menacingly in third after a day in which he came of age as a Grand Tour rider.

“We set out at the start of the day to take time and we did that so I can only really thank my team-mates – I didn’t do much in the end, it was 90 per cent them, I would say,” Geoghegan Hart said.

“I was pretty far behind after a few stages. It’s pretty unexpected and we can almost smell Milan now so we’ll stay focused and see what happens.”

Inevitably it was the snow-covered Stelvio, the highest paved mountain pass in the eastern Alps at 2,757m, that provided the stage for a dramatic change of the script.

Almeida, resplendent in pink since stage three on Mount Etna more than two weeks ago, faded early on this 25km slog to the summit and others – Vincenzo Nibali and Jakob Fuglsang amongst them – soon followed.

As Rohan Dennis put the power down for Geoghegan Hart, the bigger surprise came when Kelderman was dropped with nearly 10km of the climb still to come.

Hindley did not wait for his team-mate, determinedly sticking to the Ineos pair to the top.

Italy Giro Cycling
The snow-covered Stelvio led to a shake-up of the Giro d’Italia (Fabio Ferrari/AP/PA)

The young Australian had more drama as he struggled to put on his jacket, almost crashing his bike at one point, before wrestling his arm in.

But neither he, nor Kelderman behind, could zip up their jackets before the top – setting off on to the high-paced descent exposed to the biting cold with wind chill putting the temperatures below zero.

Kelderman crossed the summit some 46 seconds after the leading group, Almeida almost three minutes further back, though he would claw some of that back on the way down.

But as they hit the valley approaching the next climb, Kelderman quickly went backwards, overtaken by a recovering Pello Bilbao and Fuglsang as Geoghegan Hart and Hindley – two supposed domestiques – thought about battling for pink.

A scrapping performance from Kelderman would deny them that, but with such narrow deficits covering the top three, the race is wide open now.

“The hardest stage of my life,” Kelderman reflected afterwards. “We had a goal and we achieved it. Wearing the Maglia Rosa is a dream after so many difficult years, I’m really happy to be leading the GC.”

Bilbao sits fourth, one minute 19 seconds down, while Almeida dropped to fifth, two minutes 16 seconds down.

A bunch sprint is expected on Friday’s relatively flat stage 19 to Asti before another mountain test to Sestiere on Saturday, though stage 20 has been watered down due to enforced chages to the route.

The winner, however, will not be known until after Sunday’s closing time trial in Milan.

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