Jonas Vingegaard completed his Giro d’Italia triumph, securing the first part of a coveted Grand Tour double in a procession finale around Rome won by the home hero Jonathan Milan. Vingegaard rolled into the Italian capital needing just to complete the flat final stage to claim overall victory and the triple crown of road cycling’s three-week showpieces.The Visma-Lease a Bike rider is now the eighth man to win the Giro, Tour de France and Vuelta a España, joining Bernard Hinault, Eddy Merckx and Vincenzo Nibali in reaching one of the sport’s hardest goals. His attentions now turn to the Tour in July and a showdown with Tadej Pogacar, road cycling’s biggest star and his key rival for the Grande Boucle.Vingegaard, already a two-time Tour winner, did not have Pogacar to contend with on the Giro, which he won without ever really looking like being challenged. The 29-year-old had little to do on Sunday beyond look at the ancient monuments of Rome’s historic centre after finishing the hard work with a classic mountain stage win the day before.He finished the Giro with five stage wins and a gap of 5min 22sec over Felix Gall, who completed his best placing in a Grand Tour.“Winning all three is very special for me, it’s difficult to find the words to describe it,” Vingegaard told the Italian broadcaster RAI. Vingegaard added he would stay in Rome for a few days with his family before returning to Denmark to begin preparations for the Tour de France.“It all depends on how you come out of the Giro,” said Vingegaard. “If you’re completely exhausted and need two weeks of rest afterwards, it’s not ideal. But I’m not completely exhausted.”For Milan, crossing the line first in Rome after a typically powerful late burst salvaged his Giro, the Italian winning his first stage of this year’s edition of his home Grand Tour. Milan has had a difficult race and could not stop Paul Magnier winning the points jersey for the sprinters.Elisa Balsamo won stage two of the women’s Giro to extend her overall lead as Lorena Wiebes was thrown out for a bike that was too light. Balsamo inherited the pink jersey after Wiebes was expelled from the race late on Saturday for a noncompliant bike weight. On Sunday, Balsamo edged Irish sprinter Lara Gillespie and another Italian, Chiara Consonni.