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BackJai Hindley Secures Third Podium Finish in Giro d'Italia, Second Australian to Achieve This Feat
Jai Hindley Secures Third Podium Finish in Giro d'Italia, Second Australian to Achieve This Feat
Sports
Guardian Sport6/1/2026Sports3 min read

Jai Hindley Secures Third Podium Finish in Giro d'Italia, Second Australian to Achieve This Feat

Quick Look

  • Jai Hindley achieved a historic third podium finish at the Giro d'Italia, securing third place.
  • The Australian cyclist, who battled illness during the race, joins an elite group of riders with multiple Grand Tour podiums.

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Why It Matters

Jai Hindley achieved a historic third podium finish in the Giro d'Italia, securing third place. He battled illness during the race, requiring antibiotics in the second week. This achievement places him among Australia's greatest cyclists.

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Jai Hindley has roared again in the “pinnacle of cycling”, making history as just the second Australian to enjoy three overall podium finishes in Grand Tours as he rode home for a valiant third place in the Giro d’Italia.

As new champion Jonas Vingegaard confirmed his place among the sport’s all-time elite in Rome by completing his set of the three Grand Tour triumphs and dominating the 109th Giro with five magnificent stage wins, Hindley underlined why he is one of Australia’s greatest.

The 30-year-old had been ill during the race, needing to take antibiotics in the second of the three weeks, yet recovered spectacularly to complete his own set of Giro podium finishes, having won in 2022, been runner-up in 2021 and now third.

Only the great former Tour de France winner Cadel Evans has had more Grand Tour podium finishes among Australians, with five.

The often unsung Perth rider Hindley said on the eve of the race from Bulgaria that he and his Red Bull BORA-hansgrohe team “aren’t here to lick stamps”. That was his 2026 version of his famous but bewildering affirmation “we’re not here to put socks on centipedes” in the year he won.

The translation was that he and his team weren’t once again there to mess around, and after he proved stronger over the race than his talented young co-team leader Giulio Pellizzari to assume the role of main man, Hindley lived up to his promise.

“The second week was very hard for me, I was really quite sick. I even had to take antibiotics, but I seem to be back in time,” Hindley had smiled after a remarkable third-week resurgence saw him move into third place overall on the 19th of 21 stages.

On Sunday, the largely processional ride into the capital ended with Italian Jonathan Milan winning the final-stage sprint and Vingegaard clinching his fourth Grand ‌Tour, having twice won the Tour de France and last year’s Vuelta, where Hindley had signalled he was recovering his best form with a fourth-place finish.

Hindley did suffer a mechanical mid-race on Sunday but swiftly got back to the peloton. He ended 6 minutes 25 seconds behind Vingegaard, and 1:03 behind runner-up, Austrian Felix Gall.

“I haven’t had a good result in a Grand Tour for a long time, and to be fighting for the podium again was really nice,” said Hindley. “For me, the Grand Tours are the pinnacle of cycling, and being competitive in them is what I train for.”

It was only the second Giro in a decade in which there wasn’t a stage won by an Australian, following the early abandonments of the luckless Kaden Groves and Jay Vine with crashes, but, impressively, there were four Australian finishers in the top 17.

Michael Storer (Tudor Pro) finished a career-best seventh at 10:13 down, Ben O’Connor (Jayco AlUla) was 16th at 24:12 and Chris Harper (Pinarello Q36.5 Pro) 17th at 30:43.

Open Questions

  • What specific antibiotics did Jai Hindley take?
  • What is the long-term impact of his illness on his future performance?
  • What are the specific details of his "famous but bewildering affirmation" from his previous win?

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This article was originally published by Guardian Sport.

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