Two Argentine crews complete the podium: second Erejomovich-Llanos, third Tonconogy-Ruffini BRESCIA, Italy, June 23 (Bernama-GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- After 
5 racing days, 
1900 kilometres and over 400 classic cars in movement, today the forty-third re-enactment of the 
1000 Miglia ended in 
Brescia. A special edition, bringing back to life the 
“figure-eight” route of the epic pre-war editions, symbolically uniting not only the North and South, but also the East and West from the Adriatic Sea to the Tyrrhenian coast.
The champions once again were 
Andrea Vesco and Fabio Salvinelli, who, driving their faithful 
Alfa Romeo 6C 1750 Ss, once more came out on top, despite the fact that 
Daniel Andres Erejomovich and Gustavo Llanos did not let them have it easy with their 
1929 6C 1500 Ss, even managing to snatch first place at the end of the fourth day of racing. Third were 
Tonconogy-Ruffini in a 
1931 6C 1750 Gs.
Roland Hotz and Giordano Mozzi won the 
Ferrari Tribute 1000 Miglia in an 
F8 Spider, while 
Mirco Magni and Federico Giavardi in a 
Polestar 4 won the seventh edition of the 
1000 Miglia Green.
A race, a journey, a collective ritual. The 
Red Arrow passed through villages, cities of art, Apennine passes and festive piazzas, turning each leg into a snapshot of Italy. The route followed the veins of the smaller Italy, the ones not always ending up in 
brochures, but which give back the country’s most authentic soul. After starting from Viale Venezia, the crews reached 
Ferrara, with the evening magic of the Estense Castle, and then, the following day, reached the capital through the Mugello bends and the lands of the 
Val d'Orcia. The third leg, at dawn, said goodbye to 
Rome among the still sleeping palaces, climbing up to 
Orvieto and 
Arezzo, before the evening embrace of 
Cervia. From there, the spectacular passage through the heart of Versilia, with the transit inside the 
Naval Academy of Livorno and the historic curves of the Cisa Pass. The return journey paid homage to Po Valley Italy: 
Cremona, Soncino, 
Franciacorta. And finally, 
Brescia, which welcomed the cars and their crews 
with a music festival and an ovation worthy of the 
most beautiful Race in the world. Today the race has come to an end. But what remains – the images, the faces, the emotions – goes on.
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A photo accompanying this announcement is available at 
https://www.globenewswire.com/NewsRoom/AttachmentNg/2f70729a-7dad-4b1b-8007-02b869b2edf7 SOURCE: 1000 Miglia S.r.l.
--BERNAMA