The Camorra organised crime syndicate had a blood sample from the late Marco Pantani switched to have him ejected from the 1999 Giro d’Italia and head off potentially huge gambling losses.
That’s the finding of an investigation into the case by a public prosecutor reported in the Italian media today, although no criminal charges can be brought against any persons involved due to a statute of limitations.
The probe was launched by magistrates in Forli in Pantani’s home region of Emilia-Romagna in 2014, partly based on testimony provided by high-profile criminal Renato Vallanzasca.
He wrote in his autobiography that he had been told by a fellow prisoner in a jail in Milan in May 1999 to bet his life savings on Pantani’s rivals and that the rider – the defending champion and leading the race after winning the previous two mountain stages – would not finish it.
The Camorra reportedly stood to lose billions of Lire in illegal gambling on the race if the hugely popular Pantani won.
They apparently decided to take matters into their own hands by ensuring he would be disqualified by having his blood samples switched.
That would also bring them a windfall, in the shape of money from losing bets gambled on a Pantani victory.
Vallanzasca was interviewed by a magistrate at the time, but for fear of reprisals from the Camorra, would not reveal the identity of the man in question, leaving the trail cold but the Forli magistrates.
However, the Forli public prosecutor’s office reopened the case after believing they had found out who the man in question was.
> Magistrates investigate whether Camorra fixed 1999 Giro d’Italia
Today, the Italia 1 TV programme Studio Sport has published a transcript of a telephone conversation between the man who had been Vallanzasca’s cellmate in 1999, in which he confirmed to a family member that he had been interviewed by investigators from Forli.
Asked if Vallasnzasca’s allegations were true, the man repeated the word “Sì” – “Yes” – five times.
According to reports on outlets including La Gazzetta dello Sport, Sergio Sottani, the state prosecutor heading the investigation, has concluded that “A Camorra family threatened a doctor to compel him to alter the test results to cause Pantani to be outside the rules.”
The Forli investigation addressed allegations of criminal association for the purpose of fraud and sporting fraud surrounding the race 17 years ago from which the Mercatone Uno rider was expelled at Madonna di Campiglio ahead of the penultimate stage.
No test existed at the time for EPO with the UCI instead stipulating under a rule introduced two years earlier that if a rider’s haematocritic level exceeded 50 per cent, he had to take a two-week break from racing.
Tested on the eve of the last but one stage and with victory in his grasp, Pantani returned a reading of 52 per cent. The following morning, the shock news broke that he had been thrown off the race.
He would never be sanctioned, but his mother Tonina later said that “Without Campiglio, there would have been no Rimini,” referring to his death five years later in a hotel room in the Adriatic resort.
Officially, the cause of death was given as cocaine poising, with one hypothesis being that he was forced by persons unknown to take a lethal quantity of the drug, although the more generally accepted verion of events is that he was the victim of a self-administered overdose.
Pantani’s mother, who has always maintained that he did not take performance enhancing drugs and that he was murdered – a 2013 French Senate investigation into the 1998 Tour de France, which he won, concluded that he had used EPO in that race – said that today’s news vindicated her son.
"Finally someone has managed to some good work,” she said. “It won’t give me Marco back, but it will give him back his dignity.
“These words hurt me,” she added. “They confirm what Marco always said – ‘they cheated me’. He never accepted it.”
While the criminal aspect of the case is time-barred, the Pantani family and their lawyers are now reportedly considering what, if any, redress they may have under civil and sports law.
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10 comments
There doesn't appear to be any evidence other than a convicted criminal saying "si" 5 times to a fellow prison inmate. Not I think something a half-decent lawyer would have a problem dismantling in court.
And the motivation - the Camorra losing money on gambling debts. Does the Camorra normally honour its obligations to punters?
Of course it is very possibly true despite the absence of proof. Pantani being on EPO is almost certain, but his sample might have been switched. I bet that Armstrong is kicking himself that this hadn't emerged before he got nabbed, so he could claim the same thing.
I would agree with Unpopular, there. Both things are probably true. Given the era it's probable that Pantani did take EPO, I think most top riders of the period have been shown to be doing so. However, it's also probable that a top rider like Pantani would have been keeping his haematocrit levels just on 49%, which was within the rules at the time, and therefore wouldn't have been considered cheating by the riders. I realise this is a grey area to say the least, but you need to consider it from the psyche of a pro cyclist of the time. So when Pantani tested positive, with a haematocrit level of 52% he would have felt that he was cheated. It would be a huge blow for an Italian rider to be thrown off the Giro whilst in the lead, with all the press and publicity involved. Ultimately, I think it was this that lead to his depression and finally suicide. Very sad.
Do you think it's just possible that both things might be true: that Pantani used EPO and that the test result was rigged in connection to illegal gambling? Tragic story, whichever way you look at it.
Yes, I wasn't ever going to believe that Pantani wasn't doping - but the fact that he was taken out of race by a criminal ring? Wow.
Look, he said yes 5 times. I think that settles it.
If you look back at the tapes it was clear that Pantani was doping. He was able to destroy everyone on the climbs and make it look easy. Cycling never gets easier.
I don't think his mum, bless her, is the best judge.
And the proof is some bloke saying 'Si' a lot?
No charges? Well I'm sure that's euros well spent.
Even if this is true it doesn't prove Pantani wasn't trying to get his haematocrit level up to the magic 49% you could get away with on EPO before the test came along. It just proves someone switched him for a bad 50% plus sample.
Sadly I think in the pre-EPO test days, its very hard to believe a top tier rider - especially one with Pantini's 'ability' - wasn't doing it, given how easy it was to get away with.
I am shocked -- shocked! -- to find that gambling is going on here!
This is just a conspiracy theory that someone is stirring the pot on. If you read Rendell's book there's more than enough evidence to suggest he was on EPO. It's not like the distance of time has suddenly made it easier to prove the Maffia link, just that it's easier to concoct a story and get a random to corroborate it for money.
Wow.