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Giro d’Italia Women stage 4 LIVE: Valentina Venerucci sets the fastest time with half the field still to start, but the favourites are yet to come
The first significant GC shake-up with a challenging 12.7km uphill time trial on a cat.1 climb to Nevegal

(Image credit: © Getty Images)
We’re getting towards the big names now, Urška Žigart (AG Insurance-Soudal) has just started, and Marlen Reusser (Movistar) is off in a couple of minutes.
And Solène Muller (St Michel – Preference Home – Auber93) sets a anew fastest time of 34:37, putting a stunning 52 seconds into Venerucci.
Marion Bunel is the leader for Visma-Lease a Bike and she just moved into second place at the intermediate check, one second behind Muller.
Amanda Spratt (Lidl-Trek) won a mountain stage of the Giro back in 2018, on her way to finishing third overall.
The Australian is retiring at the end of the seasoon, so this is her final Giro.
40 riders to go
Chiara Consonni heads down the ramp and we have 40 women yet to start.
Venerucci continues to lead the time trial, with Solène Muller setting the best intermediate time, though Lucinda Brand (Lidl-Trek) ran her very close.
It was Van Vleuten again at the 2018 Giro. Like today’s race, it was a true Alpine mountain time trial, it started in Lanzada and climbed to the reservoir at Diga di Campo Moro, about 300km west of today’s stage.
Meanwhile, Justine Ghekiere (AG Insurance-Soudal) has moved into second place. She seemed to be struggling in the first two stages, but this result will give her huge confidence ahead of the mountain stages to come.
Pan-American TT champion, Kritsen Faulkner (EF Education-Oatly) has switched from her TT bike to a road bike, but it was a slow change. We’l find out whether the swap was worth it.
She was not in the top 10 at the intermediate point.
While Venerucci continues to lead the race, there’s a new best intermediate time for 22-year-old Frenchwoman, Solène Muller (St Michel – Preference Home – Auber93), clocking 9.50.
Vittoria Guazzini (FDJ United-Suez) in the Italian time trial champion’s skin suit.
60 riders to go
Sofia Arici (Vini Fantini-BePink) is off down the ramp. She began the day 3.31 behind Elisa Balsamo’s GC time.
Valentina Venerucci continues to lead the stage.
In the 2017 Giro, Annemiek van Vleuten won in the broiling heat and brutal, 20% slopes to Sant’elpidio a Mare on the Adriatic coast. Anna van der Breggen was second and won the GC that year. She’s here this year riding for SD Worx-Protime.
Venerucci has only been in the sport a few years, but started her sporting life as a distance runner, specialising in the 5,000m and off-track disciplines.
Venerucci is from the micro state of San Marino and the 32 year-old is well know as a more than useful climber.
After a torrid opening few stages, Justine Ghekiere (AG Insurance-Soudal) has just clocked 9.56 at the intermediate time check.
But the big news is a leader at the finish, Valentina Venerucci (Aromitalia Vaiano) has set a time of 35.29, taking 28 seconds out of Storrie.
Over the years the Giro organisers have often put an uphill TT in the race.
In 2016 it was a tough uphill followed by a descent to the coast at Varazze, which is on the road to San Remo. Evie Stevens won that day, with Boels-Dolmans team mate, Megan Guarnier, second and winning the overall GC a few days later in Verbania.
80 riders to go
With Matilde Vitillo (Liv-Alula-Jayco) off the ramp we’re inside the final 80 riders.
Despite Marit Raaijmakers beating her intemediate time, Storrie continues to lead, her lead 20 seconds on Raaijmakers.
Plenty of riders are choosing to use road bikes for the uphill section of the race. Here Nienke Veeenhoven (Visma-Lease a Bike) climbs towards a time of 38.54, currently in third place.
Storrie’s time remains well over two minutes faster than anyone who has so far finished. She’s blown it away, but where will she be at the end of the day?
Though we’re likely to see a new race leader, so a new maglia rosa, Elisa Balsamo has a 55 point lead in the points classification, so she’ll keep the red jersey as there is a maximum of 15 points on offer today.
And Becky Storrie is the first to finish, the Picnic-PostNL rider clocking 35.57. She was sixth to start, so has put in a magnificent ride.
100 riders to go
Matra Pavesi (Top Girls Fassa Bortolo) heads down the ramp and we’re inside the final 100 riders.
But we have a new fastest intermediate time, Marit Raaijmakers (Human Powered Health) setting a time of 10:02.
Soraya Paladin (Canyon-Sram) has just started. She’s a strong all-rounder, with a big engine for a time trial, but she may take it relatively easy to preserve herself for tomorrow.
No one is yet at the finish, which is an indication of just how hard today is, it’s 31 minutes since the first rider started the 12.7km course!
Storrie is standing the test of time, no one is yet inside 20 seconds of her 10:10 at the intermediate time check.
She’s done well in mountain TTs before, finishing 16th on stage 2 of the 2024 Tour de Suisse.
We saw Mikayla Harvey in a nasty crash during yesterday’s stage, sadly the SD Worx-Protime rider has been forced to with draw from the Giro this morning.
The loss will limit the support for their GC rider, Anna van der Breggen in the coming mountain stages.
120 riders to go
Valentina Zanzi (Isolmant-Premac-Vittoria) is the 24th to start, leaving 120 left to start.
Storrie is still the fastest at the intermediate, which came at 5.3km.
No sooner do we say that than she is eclipsed by Beckie Storrie, the British Picnic-PostNL rider clocking 10:10.
Katelyn Nicholson has the current best time at the intermediate time check, the Australian stopping the clock in 10:38.
Eleonora La Bella (Aromitalia Vaiano) just started. She wore the blue mountains jersey in yesterday’s stage after taking maximum point on Sunday’s only climb at Ca’ del Poggio.
Robyn Clay (Picnic-PostNL) has just started. the British rider is among the first of the WorldTour team riders off the ramp. Clay is in her first year at this level, after coming to the sport late in life.
Though the early riders head off the ramp at one minute intervals, the final 15, will start with three minute intervals.
The remaining 7.4km is horrendous, with an average gradient of 8%, there are early ramps of 12% before the slope eases off to something more manageable.
The route is a tough one. Just 12.7km, it comes in two halves.
The first 5.3km to the intermediate time check is up and down and averages only 1.5% gradient.
Riders start at one minute intervals in the reverse order of the general classification, so Elisa Balsamo will be the final rider.
Two of Marinetto’s team mates, Sara Segala and Katelyn Nicholson are the next two off the ramp.
The first rider off
The first rider for this year’s race is Ilaria Marinetto, the Mendelspeck E-Work rider was in the breakaway on stage one, but started today as the last rider on the general classification.
Elena Cecchini is still on home roads for today’s TT, though we’re further west than yesterday’s stage. And further into the mountains, north of Vittorio Veneto, a city Sunday’s stage passed through.
We start at 13:20CET in Belluno for the 12.7km race to Nevegal, with the first rider off at 13:20 and the last at 16:02.
Giro d’Italia women stage 4 time trial start times.
Such is the route for today’s TT we’re likely to get a new race leader, but yesterday Elisa Balsamo took a third stage and maglia rosa.
Balsamo powered to her hat-trick victory on stage 3 with searing uphill sprint.
Today is a tough mountain time trial set to paint the first GC picture of the race.
The Giro has a long tradition of time trials which goes way back. Whether it be a short prologue, a team time trial or an individual mountain effort like today.
Welcome to stage of the 2026 Giro d’Italia Women and it’s individual time trial day.
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