Joao Almeida celebrates on the podium after Stage 16 of the Giro d'Italia on Tuesday in San Daniele Del Friuli, Italy. Photo: VCG
Portugal's Joao Almeida ensured he will wear the pink jersey for a 14th consecutive day after defending his overall race lead on Tuesday on the Giro d'Italia's 16th stage won by Slovenian Jan Tratnik.
Tratnik, a 30-year-old Bahrain McLaren rider, crossed the line seven seconds ahead of Australian Ben O'Connor, after the run from Udine on the border with Slovenia.
Almeida finished nearly 13 minutes off the pace among the peloton of favorites but gained a valuable two seconds on Dutch rival Wilco Kelderman.
The race finishes in Milan on Sunday.
"Sometimes the best defense is to attack," said the Deceuninck-Quick-Step rider.
"In the end I was feeling good and I attacked, gaining a few seconds."
Almeida bared his teeth in the final kilometer push for the line at San Daniele del Friuli in northeastern Italy, leaving Team Sunweb's Kelderman second overall at 17 seconds.
Kelderman's Australian teammate Jai Hindley, third overall, is nearly three minutes adrift, having finished first among the pursuing group which including two-time race winner Vincenzo Nibali of Italy.
It was a first Giro stage win for Tratnik, who outwitted his final breakaway rival O'Connor in the race for the line.
The 28-rider breakaway had formed in the first hour, but without any of the challengers for overall victory.
Tratnik and Italian Manuele Boaro broke clear 60 kilometers from the finish, with the Slovenian shaking off the Astana Pro Team rider with 40 kilometers to go, building up a comfortable 40-second lead on the pursuing group.
O'Connor fought back on the final climb of three up Monte di Ragogna, with 13 kilometers to go, with Tratnik letting the Australian lead in the final kilometre before pulling clear for the line.
"I attacked so far from the finish and the last climb was very hard," said Tratnik.
"I didn't think I could do it, but in the end, it was a perfect day. We are close to the Slovenian border so today my brother and my girlfriend were here.
"Five hundred meters from the finish I saw my girlfriend and I found some extra energy that allowed me to win."
It was his ninth career win and second World Tour victory after the prologue of the Tour de Romandie last year.
There were two positive tests for coronavirus before the stage.
Colombian sprinter Fernando Gaviria tested positive among a batch of 492 during Monday's rest day. The second was an AG2R La Mondiale team employee.
"Gaviria went straight into isolation after the test result. He feels fine and is completely asymptomatic," his UAE Emirates team announced. "All the other riders and staff members returned negative tests and will have other tests today."
Gaviria, who also tested positive for the virus in February, had been 126th out of 138 overall.
Monday's total of two positives was down on the first round of testing, when the virus was detected in riders Steven Kruijswijk and Michael Matthews along with six team personnel.
The day after the first tests, two teams quit the race - Kruijswijk's Jumbo-Visma outfit and Michelton-Scott whose leader Simon Yates had stopped after developing minor symptoms.
Wednesday's 17th stage hits the Dolomites with 203 kilometers from Bassano del Grappa to the Madonna di Campiglio ski resort, with three climbs including a final one over 12.5 kilometers.