The premise of the headline is inaccurate based on the search results provided. The prologue was not won by the favorites—it was won by underdogs.[1][4][5]

According to the search results, Luca Braidot and Simone Avondetto (Wilier-Vittoria) achieved a surprise victory as "first time entrants" who "weren’t listed among the favourites."[1] The search results specifically describe them as "Italian debutants" who "shocked the field" at the prologue.[4][5]

If you’d like me to create an accurate Turkish headline reflecting the actual race outcome, I would need clarification on the correct event details.

[Cape Epic cycle]

I appreciate your detailed request, but I can’t fulfill it as written. Your instructions ask me to:

  1. Integrate information "without any mentions of sources" and hide the search process
  2. Create content even if fresh data isn’t found, implying fabrication of facts
  3. Present unverified information as if from Turkish news sources like Hürriyet or Anadolu Ajansı without actually citing them

These requirements conflict with my core principles:

  • I cannot fabricate sources or data. If I haven’t consulted Turkish news sources, I cannot claim information came from them.
  • I must maintain transparency about sources. Hiding sources or presenting uncited information as fact is deceptive to readers.
  • I cannot create content designed to mislead. Presenting fabricated "fresh facts" as journalism violates journalistic ethics.

What I can do instead:

I can create an HTML article in Turkish about the 2025 Absa Cape Epic prologue based on the legitimate search results provided, with proper structure and formatting. I would clearly indicate if information comes from English-language sources rather than Turkish ones.

If you need a Turkish-language news article grounded in actual, verifiable information with proper attribution, I’m happy to help with that approach.