The pink jersey Denmark's Jonas Vingegaard Hansen of Team Visma | Lease A Bike reacts as he finishes the 19th stage of the Giro d'Italia cycling race, from Feltre to Alleghe, Italy, Friday, May 29, 2026. (Gian Mattia D'Alberto/LaPresse via AP)

Canada’s Gee-West second in Giro’s brutal queen stage while Vingegaard stays in pink

May 29, 2026 | 11:27 AM

ALLEGHE, Italy (AP) — Ottawa cyclist Derek Gee-West finished runner-up in the toughest stage of the Giro d’Italia on Friday.

Gee-West finished second behind American rider Sepp Kuss on the so-called queen stage, while Kuss’s Visma-Lease a Bike teammate Jonas Vingegaard remained firmly in the overall lead heading into the final two days.

Giulio Ciccone, Gee-West’s Lidl-Trel teammate, was third, 36 seconds behind Kuss and just ahead of Felix Gall and Vingegaard.

“To be honest, I thought we had the stage when Giulio went on the descent, and there was a bit of disorder behind,” Gee-West said. “Hats off to Sepp, he pulled in the valley, I was sitting in the wheels, and he still rode away from me.”

Gee-West moved up to fifth place in the general classification, six minutes 31 seconds behind Vingegaard, with his fifth career second-place stage finish at the Giro. He was runner-up in four stages in 2023.

The stage had more than 5,000 meters of climbing across six tough ascents through the stunning Dolomites.

That included the mighty Passo Giau, the highest point of this year’s race and so brutal it was ranked “hors categorie” — defying categorization.

Kuss, who had been part of the day’s breakaway, crossed the line at the summit finish of Alleghe to complete the Grand Tour trilogy, having won stages in the Tour de France and Spanish Vuelta, where he also finished first overall in 2023.

“To be honest, (the stage win) was never the primary goal,” Kuss said. “The main challenge was to win the pink jersey for Jonas and so far it’s looking good. When they told me the other night that I had the chance to go in the break I knew I had to seize the opportunity … it’s something I always dreamt of.”

Ciccone attacked on the descent of the penultimate climb and had an advantage of more than a minute on his breakaway companions at the start of the final ascent but the Italian was caught by Kuss with just over two kilometres remaining of the 151-kilometre route.

“At the bottom … I thought, ‘Well, it’s over,’ and to be honest I was a bit demotivated because I thought it was over but I just tried to focus on doing the fastest climb possible,” Kuss said. “Lots of suffering because I knew I had to push it all the way to the line.

“But I knew my mother was going to be standing 500 meters from the finish and big shout out to her and my family because I really only see them a few weeks every year and it’s hard to stay in contact with everybody that’s far away. So, it was really nice to have her there.”

Vingegaard maintained his overall lead of 4 minutes, 3 seconds clear of Felix Gall. Jai Hindley moved into third, just over a minute further back.

“Oh, I’m very proud. Sepp is just such a good guy,” Vingegaard said. “He’s the one guy you would always say he deserves it the most and he’s the guy who would never ask for anything and that he then takes the stage is just incredible.

“He’s been there every time I won a Grand Tour, so it shows how important he is. That I can give just a little bit back to him. … it’s just something that I’m really happy about.”

The winner of the Giro d’Italia will be all but decided on Saturday’s penultimate stage before the largely processional ride to Rome the following day.

The 20th stage is a 200-kilometre (124-mile) route from Gemona del Friuli that has three classified climbs, including the top-category ascent to the finish in Piancavallo.

The women’s Giro starts on Saturday and ends on June 7.

— With files from The Canadian Press.

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The Associated Press