| 2nd | Top doping cases in cycling |
| 1st | Top doping cases in cycling |
| 1st | Top doping cases in cycling: 2003 |
| 12nd | Top cyclists |
![]() |
||||||||||||||||
| Personal information | ||||||||||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Full name | Marco Pantani | |||||||||||||||
| Nickname | 'Il Pirata' (The pirate) | |||||||||||||||
| Date of birth | January 13, 1970 | |||||||||||||||
| Date of death | February 14, 2004 (aged 34) | |||||||||||||||
| Country | Italy | |||||||||||||||
| Height | 1.72 m (5 ft 71⁄2 in) | |||||||||||||||
| Weight | 57 kg (130 lb; 9.0 st) | |||||||||||||||
| Team information | ||||||||||||||||
| Discipline | Road | |||||||||||||||
| Role | Rider | |||||||||||||||
| Rider type | Climbing specialist | |||||||||||||||
| Professional team(s)1 | ||||||||||||||||
| 1992–1996 1997–2003 |
Carrera Mercatone Uno |
|||||||||||||||
| Major wins | ||||||||||||||||
Tour de France
|
||||||||||||||||
|
||||||||||||||||
| Infobox last updated on: | ||||||||||||||||
| July 24, 2008
1 Team names given are those prevailing |
||||||||||||||||
Marco Pantani (January 13, 1970–February 14, 2004) was an Italian road racing cyclist, one of the best climbers in professional road bicycle racing. He won the Tour de France and the Giro d'Italia in 1998. He was known as 'Il Pirata' (the pirate) because of the bandana he wore. His career was beset by drug abuse allegations after a failed blood test in the 1999 Giro d'Italia. He died after a cocaine overdose in 2004.
Contents |
Pantani was born in Cesena, Romagna. At 1.72m and 57 kg (5 ft 8 in, 126 lb/9 st),[1] Marco Pantani had the classic build for a mountain climber. As an amateur, he won the 1992 Baby Giro by his climbing.[2] In 1994, during his second Giro d'Italia, he won two mountain stages and came second behind Eugeni Berzin but ahead of Miguel Indurain, who won the two previous Giros. Pantani first rode the Tour de France in 1994, coming third In 1995 he was hit by a car while training but rode the Tour and won stages at Alpe d'Huez and Guzet Neige. He came third in the 1995 world championship in Colombia. Shortly after returning to Italy he collided head-on with a car during the Italian Milano-Torino race. He broke his leg in two places.[3]
Pantani's climbing style was to stay on the lower section of his handlebars, often pedaling out of the saddle. Bianchi built for him a bike with a longer steerer tube for higher handlebars.[4]
Pantani returned to the Giro in 1997 but fell after a black cat ran in front of him during one of the first stages.[5] He returned to action at the Tour and won two stages in the Alps and Pyrénées, establishing a record time for the climb of Alpe d'Huez. Jan Ullrich won, with Pantani third behind Richard Virenque.
The following year, 1998, Pantani won the Giro d'Italia for the first time, beating Pavel Tonkov and Alex Zülle. In the Tour de France, Pantani pulled back early time losses to Ullrich and then defeated Ullrich by almost nine minutes in the mountain stage, from Grenoble to Les Deux Alpes, via the Col de la Croix de Fer and Col du Galibier. Pantani became the first Italian since Felice Gimondi (1965) to win the Tour.
Things turned bad for Pantani towards the end of the 1999 Giro. He won four stages, with his challengers far away, and only one mountain stage left: however, he was disqualified for a high red blood-cell count which suggested EPO. Later, it was revealed he had a hematocrit level of 60 per cent after his crash in 1995, above the later limit of 50.[6] Pantani stayed away from the rest of the year's races.
In 2000 he was back in the Giro after deciding to ride only the day before the race started. He lost time and could not attack until the last mountain stage to Briançon, in which he helped his teammate Stefano Garzelli to win. Pantani rode the 2000 Tour de France. He was off the pace but matched Lance Armstrong on Mont Ventoux, leaving the field behind. Armstrong eased and appeared to allow Pantani the stage victory; Pantani resented the gesture, causing bad feelings between the two exacerbated when Armstrong referred to him as Elefantino (Italian for 'little elephant'), a reference to his prominent ears.[7] In that same Tour, he won another stage, to Courchevel, leaving everyone behind. On the next stage, over the hors categorie Col de Joux-Plane, Pantani broke away to crush Armstrong. Instead, he suffered stomach problems and dropped out. He never raced the Tour again.[8]
After that he raced sporadically in 2001 and 2002, morally defeated from doping suspicions. He seemed to be back during the Giro of 2003, where he did not win any stage but finishing well-placed in the mountains.[9]
Pantani entered a clinic in northern Italy in June 2003, suffering clinical depression.[10]
|
|
During the early evening of 14 February 2004 Pantani was found dead at a hotel in Rimini, Italy. An autopsy revealed he a cerebral edema and heart failure, and a coroner's inquest revealed acute cocaine poisoning. Mario Cipollini said "I am devastated. It's a tragedy of enormous proportions for everyone involved in cycling. I'm lost for words."[11]
Pantani was buried in his hometown, Cesenatico. Twenty thousand mourners were at his funeral, during which his manager Manuela Ronchi read from his diary:
| “ | For four years I've been in every court, I just lost my desire to be like all the other sportsmen, but cycling has paid and many youngsters have lost their faith in justice. All my colleagues have been humiliated, with TV cameras hidden in their hotel rooms to try and ruin families. How could you not hurt yourself after that? | ” |
Miguel Indurain, five-times Tour de France winner, paid tribute by saying: "He got people hooked on the sport. There may be riders who have achieved more than him, but they never succeeded in drawing in the fans like he did."[13]
Giro d'Italia's organizers decided to dedicate a mountain pass to Pantani's memory every year. In the 2004 edition, the first Cima Pantani was Mortirolo Pass, a pass that played a key role in Pantani's history. When it was included in the Giro for the third time in 1994 Pantani attacked, leaving everyone behind, to earn win at Aprica.
The 16th stage of 2004 Tour de France was dedicated to Pantani's memory. This stage was an individual time trial up to Alpe d'Huez, where Marco Pantani won in 1995 and 1997.[14]
Matt Rendell's biography of Pantani suggests Pantani used recombinant erythropoietin (rEPO) throughout his professional career. It alleges that seasonal levels of hematocrit from several sources showed variations which exceeded those possible naturally, and that Pantani's great victories were probably with levels up to 60 per cent.[15]
Source:[16]
| Awards and achievements | ||
|---|---|---|
| Preceded by |
Vélo d'Or 1998 |
Succeeded by |
|
|||||
|
|||||
Marco Pantani (January 13, 1970 – February 14, 2004) was an Italian professional cyclist. He was very good at climbing mountains in races. In 1998 he won both the Tour de France and the Giro d'Italia. He was a popular cyclist, and his Italian fans gave him the nickname 'Il Pirata' (the pirate) because of his appearance (he often wore a bandana) and because of his aggressive riding style. He failed a test in the 1999 Giro d'Italia, which showed he had doped, that is taken drugs to help him win. He returned to cycling, but never won a major race again. In June of 2003 he went into hospital with depression. He died of a cocaine overdose in 2004. His last entry in his diary read:
| “ | For four years I've been in every court, I just lost my desire to be like all the other sportsmen, but cycling has paid and many youngsters have lost their faith in justice. All my colleagues have been humiliated, with TV cameras hidden in their hotel rooms to try and ruin families. How could you not hurt yourself after that? | ” |
Contents |
|
|