VELIKO TARNOVO, Bulgaria (AP) — Uruguayan cyclist Guillermo Silva won a crash-marred second stage of the Giro d'Italia in a sprint finish and took the overall race lead on Saturday.
Silva made some history too as the first Uruguayan to win a Giro stage and to don the maglia rosa. The Maldonado-born rider put his hands on his head in disbelief before playfully sticking out his tongue as he celebrated the biggest win of his career.
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The pack rides during the second stage of the Giro d'Italia cycling race, from Burgas to Veliko Tarnovo, Bulgaria, Saturday, May 9, 2026. (Fabio Ferrari/LaPresse via AP)
Uruguay's Guillermo Thomas Silva Coussan wins the second stage of the Giro d'Italia cycling race, from Burgas to Veliko Tarnovo, Bulgaria, Saturday, May 9, 2026. (Gian Mattia d'Alberto/LaPresse via AP)
Uruguay's Guillermo Thomas Silva Coussan celebrates after winning the second stage of the Giro d'Italia cycling race, from Burgas to Veliko Tarnovo, Bulgaria, Saturday, May 9, 2026. (Fabio Ferrari/LaPresse via AP)
Uruguay's Guillermo Thomas Silva Coussan wins the second stage of the Giro d'Italia cycling race, from Burgas to Veliko Tarnovo, Bulgaria, Saturday, May 9, 2026. (Massimo Paolone/LaPresse via AP)
“I'm over the moon. It's only my second stage at the Giro d’Italia and I've already managed to win and even take the maglia rosa,” he said. "I was feeling good but I never imagined I could achieve something like this.”
Pre-race favorite Jonas Vingegaard was among four leading riders on the home stretch but they were caught by a big group of sprinters with 300 meters left.
Silva's XDS Astana teammate Christian Scaroni put him in an ideal position to attack and he just held off German rider Florian Stork and Italian climbing specialist Giulio Ciccone, who finished third.
“I have to thank Christian Scaroni, who helped me both in the chase to the leaders and in setting up the sprint,” Silva said. “I don't think I’ll ever forget this day.”
They finished the 221-kilometer (137-mile) hilly trek from Burgas to Veliko Tarnovo in north-central Bulgaria, which featured three moderate climbs, in 5 1/2 hours.
Silva took the pink jersey from Frenchman Paul Magnier, who won Friday’s opening stage, which was the first of three in Bulgaria and also featured a heavy crash at the end.
In the overall standings, Silva was four seconds ahead of Stork and Colombian Egan Bernal. Vingegaard was 10 seconds back in 15th overall.
In the rain on Saturday, Italian Mirco Maestri and Spaniard Diego Pablo Sevilla formed an early breakaway. They were caught with 27 kilometers left and patted each other on the back in a show of camaraderie.
With just over 20 kilometers remaining, about 15 riders went down after turning on a wet road.
British rider Adam Yates — the twin of retired defending champion Simon Yates — had blood and mud covering his face but carried on. The race was neutralized for several minutes while assistance was given to riders strewn along the road, some of whom lay on their backs after being flipped over a steel roadside barrier.
Yates was nearly 14 minutes behind and already likely to be out of contention for the title. Australian Jay Vine and his UAE Team Emirates teammate Marc Soler both abandoned after leaving in ambulances.
Vingegaard was not caught in the crash and placed himself at the front of the peloton toward the end, both to avoid danger and use his climbing skills on the uphill approach to the finish line.
He is debuting in the Giro and aiming to complete a trio of Grand Tours wins. The Dane won the Tour de France in 2022 and ’23 and clinched the Spanish Vuelta last year.
Sunday's mostly flat 175-kilometer third stage begins in Plovdiv — one of the oldest continuously inhabited cities in Europe — and ends in the Bulgarian capital of Sofia.
The 109th men's Giro ends on May 31 in Rome.
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The pack rides during the second stage of the Giro d'Italia cycling race, from Burgas to Veliko Tarnovo, Bulgaria, Saturday, May 9, 2026. (Fabio Ferrari/LaPresse via AP)
Uruguay's Guillermo Thomas Silva Coussan wins the second stage of the Giro d'Italia cycling race, from Burgas to Veliko Tarnovo, Bulgaria, Saturday, May 9, 2026. (Gian Mattia d'Alberto/LaPresse via AP)
Uruguay's Guillermo Thomas Silva Coussan celebrates after winning the second stage of the Giro d'Italia cycling race, from Burgas to Veliko Tarnovo, Bulgaria, Saturday, May 9, 2026. (Fabio Ferrari/LaPresse via AP)
Uruguay's Guillermo Thomas Silva Coussan wins the second stage of the Giro d'Italia cycling race, from Burgas to Veliko Tarnovo, Bulgaria, Saturday, May 9, 2026. (Massimo Paolone/LaPresse via AP)
MEMPHIS, Tenn. (AP) — For 21 years, Steve Fowler and Sam Wilson have performed together in a band on Memphis’ renowned Beale Street. And for the past decade, the men have been neighbors on a quiet, leafy avenue.
But as of Thursday, they will no longer cast the same ballot despite living across the street from each other.
That’s because Tennessee’s Republican-controlled legislature redrew the congressional district of Memphis, which has long enjoyed its own Democratic-leaning U.S. House seat. Now, the city is split into three Republican-leaning districts, its majority-Black population sliced up and bound to mostly white, rural and conservative communities along lines that branch away from Fowler and Wilson’s East Memphis neighborhood.
A line runs down the middle of the street, placing Fowler in the 8th Congressional District, which runs hundreds of miles to central Tennessee across a dozen counties. Wilson is zoned for the 9th District, which extends across most of the state’s southern border before curving up to encompass the largely white and affluent Nashville suburbs.
“I think it’s horrible,” said Fowler, who is white. “This isn’t just going to be bad for Black folks in Memphis, but poor whites in these new districts also aren’t going to get services. How are any of these congressmen going to serve all these different counties?”
The redraw was sparked by a ruling from the conservative majority of the U.S. Supreme Court that may be a death knell for congressional representation of majority-Black Southern communities such as Memphis.
For 60 years, a provision of the landmark Voting Rights Act required mapmakers to prove they were not discriminating against racial minorities in how they drew districts, often leading to political boundaries that allowed some minority communities to vote for their preferred representative rather than having their vote diluted by white majorities surrounding them.
The rule had the greatest effect in Southern states, where neighboring Black and white communities remain highly polarized in partisan politics.
On April 29, the justices severely weakened that requirement, ruling that the way courts had handled it improperly injected racial matters into redistricting in violation of the U.S. Constitution. Republicans across the South immediately leaped at the chance to redraw their maps before the November elections to eliminate as many Democratic-held, majority-minority congressional seats as possible.
Tennessee’s legislature was the first in a GOP-controlled state to finalize a new map. But it is one of several Southern states — Alabama, Florida, Louisiana, Mississippi and South Carolina among them — engaged in a broader partisan redistricting competition sweeping the country.
Republicans have long complained that the Voting Rights Act prevented them from doing to Democratic, majority-Black districts what Democrats in states they control do to conservative-leaning, white and rural areas — scatter their voters for partisan gain. That is what Tennessee Republicans did in their initial congressional map in 2021 to the state’s other large reservoir of Democrats in Nashville, where they did not have to step gingerly because that city is majority white.
“Tennessee is a conservative state and our congressional delegation should reflect that,” said Republican state Sen. John Stevens, who shepherded the bill for a new map that made all nine congressional districts solidly Republican.
Wilson, the Memphis musician who is Black, was less distraught by the carving up of his neighborhood for partisan purposes. He saw the move as just another trial facing the city after a surge of federal agents sent by President Donald Trump to combat crime and amid narratives about Memphis' safety from neighboring suburbs and Republican state lawmakers.
“It’s a hustling community. We’re going to make ends meet for our families,” Wilson said. “The legacy of Memphis is music and our civil rights history,” he said, adding the two were intertwined. “Hard times mean you’re going to try and find your gift. That’s what we do here; music in Memphis is a way of life.”
The Memphis district predates the Voting Rights Act. For at least a century, well before Congress acted to protect minority voting rights, Tennessee has believed it made sense for its metropolis on the Mississippi River to have its own U.S. House district. But since that law was passed in 1965, anyone who tried to split up the district for partisan gain could be sued and have the maps thrown out. Now, legal experts say that is not much of a risk.
Nonetheless, Democrats and civil rights groups are suing to block the map. The symbolism is especially sharp as the city is home to the National Civil Rights Museum, built around the motel where the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. was assassinated in 1968. When the legislature passed the new maps, Democrats and protesters shouted “hands off Memphis!” and waved signs accusing Republicans of bringing back Jim Crow.
“Memphis is not just any city; it holds a central place in the national story of our quest for racial justice in this country and how, over time, we have increasingly achieved civil, voting, and economic rights for all Americans,” said Eric Holder, a former U.S. attorney general who chairs the National Democratic Redistricting Committee. “Black citizens protested, marched and died there for the right to vote.”
Memphis has faced dual stories in recent years. Billions of dollars in private investment and federal dollars have flooded into the area in recent years, but many local businesses still express concerns about a lagging regional economy.
Residents who spoke with The Associated Press expressed concerns about safety and public services but bristled at stereotypes about rampant crime. The twin stories are often on display in the river city, where pothole-filled streets run from empty storefronts to ornate mansion-filled neighborhoods and leafy college campuses only blocks away.
The city has long had a contentious relationship with the rest of the state, which voted for Trump in 2024 by a roughly 2-1 margin.
The conservative legislature in Nashville has clashed repeatedly with Memphis and accused its leaders of broad mismanagement. The legislature passed a law blocking many police overhaul efforts in Memphis that were put in place after the death of Tyre Nichols, an unarmed Black man, at the hands of city officers in 2023. It passed another measure seizing control of Memphis’ airport board and those of other cities across the state, and gave the state attorney general, also a Republican, the power to remove Memphis' elected district attorney.
“The state legislature is trying to take it over,” said U.S. Rep. Steve Cohen, the white Democrat who still represents the city in Congress until the new lines kick in after the midterms. “And that’s absurd. It was all partially because it’s a majority Black city.”
Thomas Goodman, a politics and law professor at Rhodes College in Memphis, notes that the new congressional districts may lead to greater friction over who receives attention — and funding — from lawmakers. Memphis residents will soon share districts with Republican towns with starkly different economies, geographies and demographics. Whoever holds those congressional seats will have an incentive to pay attention to those voters and not to Memphis’ population.
“It would not only deprive Black Tennesseans of proper representation,” Goodman said. “These changes also break up the city of Memphis as an entity into multiple districts, thereby removing a dedicated agent in government who knows the people, who understands their concerns and can speak for them and deliver on behalf of their interests and desires.”
Chris Wiley’s house sits in what was, before this week, a quiet street in Midtown Memphis dotted with duplexes, tidy lawns and sports fields. Now his neighborhood is carved apart at the intersection of three congressional districts. That is not surprising, he said, because “Tennessee is all about the dollar” rather than residents.
“Memphis is majority Black, so if you mess with that, what’s the point of even voting in Tennessee?” said Wiley, a 29-year-old sports stadium worker who is Black. “Whatever the congressional numbers, whatever that is, we don’t count on the scale as high, anyway.”
Associated Press writer Nicholas Riccardi in Denver and AP videojournalist Sophie Bates contributed to this report.
Rep. Steve Cohen, D-Tenn., of Memphis stands outside a House hearing room during a special session of the state legislature to redraw U.S. Congressional voting maps Wednesday, May 6, 2026, in Nashville, Tenn. (AP Photo/George Walker IV)
A person leaves the state Capitol after a special session of the state legislature to redraw U.S. Congressional voting maps Thursday, May 7, 2026, in Nashville, Tenn. (AP Photo/George Walker IV)
Steve Fowler, a Beale Street musician whose street was bisected by Tennessee's new congressional districts, strums the guitar in his front yard on Thursday, May 7, 2026, in Memphis, Tenn. (AP Photo/Sophie Bates)
Steve Fowler, left, and Sam Wilson, right, rehearse with their band on Thursday, May 7, 2026, in Memphis, Tenn. (AP Photo/Sophie Bates)
A portion of Shotwell Street in Memphis, Tenn., that is now a dividing line between two newly-redrawn congressional districts, is seen Thursday, May 7, 2026, in Memphis, Tenn. (AP Photo/Sophie Bates)