How to watch Milan-Torino - live stream, TV, results

Road
How to watch Milan-Torino - live stream, TV, results

Milan-Torino gets a new look today, Wednesday. While in previous years it has been a battle of punchers for the trophy, this year it will be a sprint for the riders aiming for Milano-Sanremo.

From Peter Sagan (Bora-Hansgrohe) and Caleb Yuan (Lotto Soudal) to Mathieu van der Pol (open in new tab) (Phoenix Alpecin) and Wout van Aert (Jumbo Visma), the field is top notch and the grand finale is well worth seeing.

Cycling News will bring you live race coverage, reports, results, photos, and news; read about how to use ExpressVPN (opens in new tab) to watch Milan-Torino via live stream regardless of location.

Milan-Torino usually takes place at the end of the season, when the athletes have a full year of racing behind them.

Not only is the course flattened, but the sprinters are itching to win - just in case a viral outbreak prevents them from racing again.

1. 14 WorldTour teams are participating in this pro-ranked race this season, with eight pro teams on the 22-team start list. Due to course changes, EF Pro Cycling will pass on last year's winner, Michael Woods, to race in the Tour de France.

The 198-km race will be a good test of endurance without draining the legs of the riders ahead of Milan-San Remo: Peter Sagan (Bora-Hansgrohe), looking for his first win of the season, will be looking for revenge after suffering a flat tire in Strade Bianche. The big names include Mathieu Van der Pol (Alpecin Phoenix), Strade Bianche winner Wout Van Aert (Jumbo Visma), and Vuelta a Burgos stage winner Fernando Gaviria (UAE Team Emirates).

Sam Bennett (Deceuninck-Quickstep) won an impressive uphill stage win in Burgos, and Arnaud Demaret (Groupama-FDJ) has twice finished second in Spanish stage races.

Trek-Segafredo's young prospect Matteo Moschetti won twice in Mallorca in January after completing rehabilitation for pelvis, scapula, and spine fractures suffered in February.

With few overpasses to slow down the peloton, the journey from Mechero to Stupinigi will be furiously fast and should be a major test for the sprinters leading the pack.

Read on for all the details on how to watch their action in Milan-Torino on Wednesday.

Follow cycling news on Twitter (opens in new tab), Facebook (opens in new tab), and Instagram (opens in new tab) to receive alerts on important stories and action during the race.

Milan-Torino will be broadcast comprehensively on many networks and live in Europe, Asia and Australia on Eurosport (opens in new tab) and Eurosport Player.

A subscription to Eurosport Player (opens in new tab) can be signed up for £6.99/$9.16 per month, £4.99/$6.54 for a one-year monthly pass, or £39.99/$52.42 for a 12-month pass.

The GCN Race Pass (opens in new tab), available on the GCN app, also broadcasts races in the UK. Access is £39.99 for a year, but you can subscribe for £19.99 with a special offer now.

In North America, FloBikes (opens in new tab) televises races; a subscription to FloBikes costs $150 per year and allows you to watch most of the big races this season. [e.g., Rai Sport in Italy (opens in new tab), Sporza in Belgium (opens in new tab), and EITB in the Basque Country (opens in new tab).

If you live outside the broadcast area or are out of the country on vacation and find that the live stream is geographically restricted, simulate being in your home country via a "virtual private network" for your laptop, tablet, or mobile, or via VPN This can be circumvented by accessing it through.

TechRadar has tested hundreds of VPNs and recommends the number one VPN available today as Express VPN. with ExpressVPN (opens in new tab), you can use your Smart TV, Fire TV Stick, PC, Mac, iPhone, Android phones, iPads, tablets, and many other devices at once.

Start 13:55 CET

End: 18:15-18:30 CET

.

Categories