German champion Pascal Ackermann made a dream Giro d'Italia debut when he timed his sprint to perfection to win the second stage, a 205-km ride from Bologna, on Sunday. The Bora-Hansgrohe rider just avoided French rider Olivier Le Gac crashing in front of him during the finale before outsprinting Italian champion Elia Viviani and Australian Caled Ewan. Slovenian Primoz Roglic retained the overall leader's pink jersey after remaining in the peloton throughout a rainy day after the race left Emilia-Romagna for Tuscany. Eight men broke away early on but the bunch always had them under control, reining them in shortly before the line to trigger a massive sprint. "It was our first chance to win a stage and we did it straight," Ackermann, who is making his grand tour debut, told reporters. "We were super-motivated. It bodes well for the rest of the Giro." Roglic, who impressed in Saturday's opening time trial, said: "It wasn't an easy day because it was cold from the beginning and also quite fast all the time. "It will be another day in the 'Maglia Rosa' tomorrow. The team worked hard for that. It's a pleasure to retain the jersey." Monday's third stage will take the peloton over 220km from Vinci to Orbetello. Switzerland coach Hondo sacked after doping confession Switzerland coach Danilo Hondo has been sacked with immediate effect after the German said he was involved in blood doping, the Swiss cycling federation said in a statement on Sunday. Hondo told German TV channel ARD he went through with blood manipulation in 2011 and "made the biggest mistake of my life". "As I am a national coach in Switzerland and am active with a lot of young riders, and I made a point in recent years of active anti-doping (campaigning), it was clear to me that if I was involved in this case I had to come clean in order to continue what I have been doing since the end of my active career as a pro in recent years," he added. The 45-year-old, who was a professional cyclist until 2014, had already served a two-year doping ban after failing a drugs test at the 2005 Tour of Murcia. Hondo, who won two Giro d'Italia stages in 2001, was named head coach of the Switzerland team in 2017. — Reuters