Neilson Powless (EF Education-EasyPost) pulled off a 43-kilometer solo attack to win this year’s Gran Piemonte.
After cresting the Passo della Colma with an elite group, the American rider rode away on the slopes of the Cremosina and time trialed to the end of the 118-year-old classic.
At the finish in Borgomanero, Powless raised his arms and saluted the Italian fans, who cheered on the first American winner of their race ever.
“There aren’t many feelings in the world that can compare to this one,” Neilson said before the podium ceremony. “Every cyclist works so hard all year to hopefully put it together on a day that it matters, and I’m just so happy that I could put it together today. The spring didn’t go so smoothly for me, but my family just stuck with me and supported me all the while through all the rehabilitation I needed to do and with all the long hours training and camps and time away at races. It’s just incredible what my family does for me to chase my dream. Today, it feels like it’s paying off.”
Powless made his decision to attack when he sensed a moment of hesitation in the peloton. For the next 43 kilometers, his advantage hovered around 30 seconds. The group behind chased hard and had him in sight. With six kilometers to go, they had brought him back to just over ten seconds. But today Neilson had super legs. He tucked in his elbows, crouched his back flat and made his attack stick.
“I was just racing on instinct all the way from the long climb with 60 k to go,” Neilson said. “It was getting really tactical, because there were 20 riders at the bottom of the descent, so riders started attacking and no one was working. We had two in there, so we had to try something. I asked Georg to follow a move, and then I countered, and it was the move that stuck. I wasn’t sure what the time gaps were so I just kept looking back to gauge who was chasing and where I was, but in the end I just gave my best effort and I rode as hard as I could. Right now, I just feel so incredibly happy and thankful.”
Earlier, the day’s early escape effort was launched by Nickolas Zukowsky (Q36.5 Pro Cycling Team) and Francisco Muñoz (Team Polti Kometa), with Luca Colnaghi (VF Group-Bardiani CSF-Faizanè) and the Andrii Ponomar (Team Corratec – Vini Fantini) quickly joining the duo.
From there, the escapees built up a gap of more than five minutes, but their time out front came to an end on the Paso della Colma with 45km left.
Powless blasted clear soon afterwards and swiftly opened a gap, while Julien Bernard (Lidl-Trek) and Georg Zimmermann (Intermarché-Wanty) tried to mark his move, but to no avail.
Corbin Strong (Israel-Premier Tech) and Alex Aranburu (Movistar) later led home the chase, grabbing the final two spots on the podium.
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