Saturday’s stage of the 2026 Giro d’Italia packs 4,350m of climbing into just 133km and could decide who wins the pink jersey in Rome.
An old-school ‘tappone’ squeezed into a modern distance. (Photo: Gruber Images/RCS Sport)
Updated May 22, 2026 02:05AM
No flat roads, no recovery, and endless vertical — Saturday’s Stage 14 is built to break the Giro d’Italia wide open.
The peloton is already bracing for a brutal mountain stage as the Giro turns into the Italian Alps and the final week of suffering.
The first true five-star mountain stage of the 2026 Giro packs 4,350 meters of climbing into just 133 kilometers in a compressed alpine showdown expected to rip apart the general classification.
And all signs point toward Jonas Vingegaard.
Coming into Friday, the Dane has survived crashes, illnesses, chaotic sprint stages, and the massive stage 10 time trial while sitting comfortably within striking distance of the maglia rosa.
The Dane is expected to power into pink and perhaps hold it for good. Saturday is ideal for Visma-Lease a Bike to put their rivals to the sword.
The short, brutal climbing stage on Saturday will have an oversized impact on who wins the pink jersey May 31 in Rome.
Stage 14 route, profile and start times

This one might be worth skipping the group ride Saturday to tune in.
Stage 14 starts in Aosta at approximately 12:55 CET, which translates to around 6:55 a.m. ET and 3:55 a.m. PT. The stage is expected to finish around 5:15 p.m. local time in Italy, or roughly 11:15 a.m. ET.
U.S. viewers can stream the Giro d’Italia on Peacock. Canadian coverage is available through FloBikes.
The route features five categorized climbs, including three category 1 ascents and a brutal summit finish at Pila.
The climbing begins almost from the gun with the ascent of Saint-Barthélémy, a 15.7km grind averaging 6.2 percent with ramps reaching up to 13 percent. After a fast descent back toward the valley, riders hit the shorter climb to Doues, ideal ground for an early breakaway.
Back-to-back climbs of Lin Noir and Verrogne loop the route back down to the valley ahead of the final climb to Pila, and many GC leaders could already be isolated.
The final ascent rises for 16.5km at more than seven percent average gradient. The final three kilometers steepen sharply toward nine percent, with ramps touching 11 percent near the summit.
Stage 14 is an old-school alpine tappone squeezed into a modern-era distance.
What Vingegaard needs to do

Vingegaard and Visma-Lease a Bike will want to control the chaos and let the Dane turn the screws when it counts.
The Dane does not need to attack from distance to splinter the peloton because the brutal terrain will do the job for him. These long alpine climbs suit his steady climbing tempo better than any stage up to this point of the race.
And after two weeks of racing in the legs, the cumulative fatigue should play directly into Visma’s hands.
If Vingegaard reaches the lower slopes of Pila with Sepp Kuss in tow, the race could quickly turn defensive behind him.
The riders who must attack

Stage 14 is likely the best opportunity yet for pure climbers to claw back time after the time trial reshuffled the GC standings earlier this week.
Assuming everyone survives Friday’s transition stage, the Giro hits crunch time for the podium contenders.
Thymen Arensman will be under pressure to defend gains he made Tuesday against the clock. The Dutchman didn’t quite have the sparks in the early climbs, but the Alps will put everyone in their place.
Felix Gall enters terrain perfectly suited to recapture his momentum from the early summit finales and reverse his TT losses. A strong ride would catapult him back into podium contention heading into the third week.
The Red Bull-Bora-Hansgrohe duo of Jai Hindley and Giulio Pellizzari will be looking to revive their podium hopes after losing time against the clock. Pellizzari will be hoping a stomach bug that bogged him down earlier in the race is in the rearview.
Ben O’Connor and Derek Gee-West are cagey veterans who typically find another gear as grand tours go deeper, and both will be looking for big rides in this decisive stage.
And then there is Afonso Eulálio, the surprise package of this Giro and one of its biggest remaining wild cards.
We’ll see if he’s still in the maglia rosa, but pink gives you wings, and so far the Portuguese rider has been flying.
When the Giro dips into the Alps, things always get serious.

