Trisha Shetty (Editor)

Mercatone Uno–Scanavino

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UCI code
  
MER

Discipline
  
Road

Disbanded
  
2003

Founded
  
1997

Mercatone Uno–Scanavino uploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommons558Shirt

Registered
  
San Marino 1992-1995 Italy 1997-2003

General manager
  
Franco Gini (1992-1995) Luciano Pezzi (1997-1998) Franco Cornacchia (1995-2001) Manuela Ronchi (2000-2002)

1992-1993 1994 1995 1997 1998-1999 2000 2001 2002 2003
  
Mercatone Uno-Zucchini Mercatone Uno-Medeghini Mercatone Uno-Saeco Mercatone Uno Mercatone Uno-Bianchi Mercatone Uno-Albacom Mercatone Uno-Stream TV Mercatone Uno Mercatone Uno-Scanavino

Mercatone Uno–Scanavino is a former professional cycling team which was based in San Marino and then in Italy. Throughout the 1990s it was one of the strongest Italian cycling teams in the peloton. The team was sponsored by a chain of supermarkets in Italy.

Contents

San Marino Team

The team began as Mercatone Uno-Zucchini in 1992 and was based in San Marino. Riding with the team Adriano Baffi won the points classification in the 1993 Giro d'Italia. During the 1995 season the General Manager of the team was Franco Gini and the directeur sportifs were Antonio Salutini, Franco Chioccioli, Olivano Locatelli and Bruno Vicino. This team closed at the end of 1995 season with the withdrawal of the sponsor: the new team had the same sponsor but was a totally different team.

Team built around Pantani

When Carrera Jeans manufacturers stopped sponsoring the famous Italian cycling team Carrera Jeans–Tassoni at the end of 1996, it was reported that manager Davide Boifava would be building a team around Marco Pantani with Mercatone Uno as the main sponsor. However Luciano Pezzi became the President of that new team, taking with him as directeur sportifs Giuseppe Martinelli, Davide Cassani and Alessandro Giannelli and ten of the riders from Carrera including Pantani. In this way a new team based in Italy was formed with Marco Pantani as the team leader and which rode Bianchi bikes. According to former cycling champion Felice Gimondi the team was built exclusively around Pantani with directeur sportif Martinelli refusing to sign a sprinter as this could have created other objectives of the team. According to Gimondi, in this way the team was conceived similarly to the way the Bianchi cycling team was conceived in the mid-1940s as a team built around Fausto Coppi. In the 1997 season, Pantani finished third overall at the 1997 Tour de France and won several stages including the stage to the Alpe d'Huez. The following year Pantani won the 1998 Giro d'Italia and then won the 1998 Tour de France - becoming only the seventh rider in history to achieve the Giro-Tour double. Pantani dedicated his win to the recently deceased General manager of Mercatone Uno Luciano Pezzi. After achieving this great success, the head of the branch of the Mercatone Uno supermarkets, Romano Cenni, said that the sponsor would remain in cycling as long as Pantani was still cycling. In the 1999 Giro d'Italia, Pantani dominated the race until he was suspended from the race due to a high haematocrit level. As a result, the entire Mercatone Uno team withdrew from the race. The following year the team won the 2000 Giro d'Italia with Stefano Garzelli to which he thanked Pantani for help. Although Garzelli had a contract that run until the end of the 2001 season, he left the team at the end of 2000. When Pantani abandoned the 2002 Giro d'Italia, there was immediate talk of Mercatone Uno stopping its sponsorship after the 2002 season as the team had not been invited to the 2001 and 2002 Tour de France. However the team continued during the 2003 season where Pantani rode to 14th overall in the 2003 Giro d'Italia. The team was disbanded at the end of 2003 due to the probable retirement of Pantani with several riders going to the South African team Barloworld.

Famous Mercatone Uno cyclists

  • Marco Pantani
  • Michele Bartoli
  • Francesco Casagrande
  • Dmitri Konychev
  • Bruno Leali
  • Adriano Baffi
  • John Talen
  • Roberto Petito
  • Mario Cipollini
  • Dario Frigo
  • Eddy Mazzoleni
  • Stefano Garzelli
  • Daniel Clavero
  • Sylvester Szmyd
  • References

    Mercatone Uno–Scanavino Wikipedia