Cycling Weekly

IN PANTANI’S SHADOW

On one side of the door the light is golden and vibrant, the glow provided by Fausto Coppi, Gino Bartali, Felice Gimondi and so many other legends of Italian cycle sport, their exploits captured in grainy black and white images. On the other side, it’s much darker, the gloom heightened by the Nosferatu-shaped shadow cast by the figure in the doorway, elfin, a bandanna covering his bald pate, a large earring hanging from each ear, very much living up to his alter ego, ‘the Pirate’.

This is the picture that is generally painted when analysing the fortunes of Italian cycling following the death on Valentine’s Day in 2004 of Marco Pantani. When he was in his pomp in the mid-1990s, Italian cycling was still surfing a wave of popularity that had carried it from the first years of the 20th century. In 1998, when Pantani claimed the first leg while half a dozen Italians representing six different squads finished in the top 10.

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from Cycling Weekly

Cycling Weekly1 min read
Cycling Weekly
Editor: Simon Richardson Web editor: Michelle Arthurs-Brennan News editor: Adam Becket Features editor: David Bradford Senior writer: James Shrubsall Tech features editor: Stefan Abram Tech writer: Hannah Bussey Staff writers: Anne-Marije Rook, Tom T
Cycling Weekly1 min read
Great Inventions of Cycling Cycle-path barriers
Local authorities and others frequently install barriers of various inventive designs on cycle paths. These are there supposedly to prevent unauthorised users from accessing the path. They rarely achieve this. They do have a number of other effects t
Cycling Weekly2 min read
Claud Butler Criterium
The glory years for Claud Butler Bicycles were from the early 1930s until 1956, when bankruptcy was declared. The business was sold initially to Alan Hill, then to Holdsworth in 1957 and finally Falcon in 1987. This Claud Butler Criterium from 1995,

Related Books & Audiobooks