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Riccardo Riccò

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Full name
  
Riccardo Ricco

2010
  
Ceramica Flaminia

Height
  
1.73 m

Nickname
  
The Cobra

2010–2011
  
Vacansoleil

Weight
  
59 kg


Rider type
  
Climbing Specialist

Name
  
Riccardo Ricco

Current team
  
Meridiana-Kamen

2006–2008
  
Saunier Duval-Prodir

Role
  
Bicycler

Disciplines
  
Road bicycle racing

Riccardo Ricco Ricc describes the Cycling Reform Commission as a joke

Born
  
1 September 1983 (age 40) Formigine, Italy (
1983-09-01
)

Competitors
  
Chris Froome, Vincenzo Nibali, Mark Cavendish, Alejandro Valverde, Fabian Cancellara

Tour de France 2008 - stage 9 - Riccardo Ricco takes a flying solo win


Riccardo Riccò (born 1 September 1983 in Formigine) is a former professional road bicycle racer from Italy. He remains under contract to UCI Continental team Meridiana-Kamen, but is suspended from all competition until 2024. He was previously ejected from the 2008 Tour de France for doping violations and suspended. Riccò returned to competition in late 2010, but in February 2011 he was fired by his team, Vacansoleil–DCM, after he became seriously ill allegedly through a self-administered autologous blood transfusion.

Contents

Riccardo Riccò Riccardo Ricco in quotes Irish Peloton

On 19 April 2012 it was announced that he had been suspended for 12 years effectively ending his career.

Riccardo Riccò Tour de France 2008 Stage 6 Results Riccardo Ricc wins Road

Riccardo ricco expelled from the 08 tour de france


Career

Riccardo Riccò httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu

He joined UCI ProTeam Saunier Duval–Prodir in 2006 after two successful seasons as an amateur rider, during which he won the Settimana Bergamasca. Prior to joining the team he tried to become a professional with Ceramica Panaria–Navigare in 2005 but wasn't allowed because several blood tests revealed his hematocrit levels exceeded those acceptable. Saunier Duval's sportif director, Mauro Gianetti, suggested he spend a week in the UCI laboratory in Lausanne to prove that his blood values were natural. Further exhaustive tests by the UCI confirmed that Riccò´s hematocrit level was naturally over 50%. This has since been questioned however when, on 17 July 2008, it was revealed that Riccò had a non negative test for EPO, the hematocrit boosting drug, following the Tour de France stage 4 time trial at Cholet. It has since been suggested by fellow pro-rider Jérôme Pineau that Riccò openly doped even as a junior rider.

Saunier Duval (2006-2008)

Riccardo Riccò riccardo ricc riccardoricco Twitter

Riccò's breakthrough came during the 2007 Tirreno–Adriatico, when he won two consecutive stages and the Points Classification. He also won a stage and finished second in Settimana internazionale di Coppi e Bartali. He then finished ninth in Amstel Gold Race and sixth in La Flèche Wallonne in his first ever appearance in the Ardennes Classics. He rode the Giro d'Italia as a domestique of team leader Gilberto Simoni and in the process he took the 15th stage at Tre Cime di Lavaredo ahead of his teammate Leonardo Piepoli. He would finish sixth overall, seven minutes behind eventual winner Danilo Di Luca. In the season finale Giro di Lombardia, he finished second after losing a two-man sprint with Damiano Cunego.

Riccardo Riccò Riccardo Ricc caught up in new drug investigation in Italy

In 2008, Riccò rode the Giro d'Italia as team leader, and impressed in the mountains, taking two stage victories, the young rider's classification, and was 2nd overall in the general classification, 1:57 behind winner Alberto Contador. It is suspected that Riccò's performance was not clean. Doping expert Michel Audran has stated that CERA was in use by some riders in the 2008 Giro CERA is the supposedly untraceable third generation EPO used by Riccò in the Tour de France weeks later.

Riccardo Riccò Riccardo Ricc ampquotThe Cobra is deadampquot Cyclingnewscom

On 10 July 2008, Riccò won stage 6 of the Tour de France with a hilltop finish at Super-Besse giving him his first Tour de France stage win. There were, however, some rumors saying that test results revealed abnormalities in his blood level. The team and the athlete claimed there were no doping issues, however, since Riccò claims to have a naturally high haematocrit level. He reportedly has a UCI certificate attesting to an hematocrit of 51%, 50% being considered the accepted upper limit since 1997. Three days later he achieved his second win at stage 9 of the Tour de France with a break away climb of the Col d'Aspin.

Positive test

Riccardo Riccò Riccardo Ricc39s home raided suspicious pills seized

On 17 July 2008, Riccò tested positive for the banned blood booster Continuous Erythropoiesis Receptor Activator (or CERA, a variant of Erythropoietin), from a sample taken following the fourth stage, making him the third rider to test positive for this substance in the 2008 Tour de France after Moisés Dueñas of Barloworld and Manuel Beltrán of Liquigas. He was immediately ejected from the Tour and his team Saunier Duval withdrew of their own volition. Saunier Duval announced the next day that team manager Mauro Gianetti had "lost faith in" Riccò and that he had been fired from the team; Riccò spent the night at the police station and was indicted on charges of "use of poisonous substances". He denied the charges and told RAI television;

Riccardo Riccò Riccardo Ricc Wikipedia

I'm very bitter. I spent a night in the police station and it was like being in prison. The magistrate listened to what I had to say. They searched my bags but only found some vitamins that we all use and so they decided to let me go home.

Verdict

Riccardo Riccò Riccardo Ricc quotTour doping e suicidio vivo in fugaquot Repubblicait

The prosecutor, Antoine Leroy, testified that medical supplies including syringes and equipment for intravenous drips were found in his hotel room, but were unused. According to AFP, the prosecutor said in the first searches, "there were no doping substances as such" found.

Riccardo Riccò Riccardo Ricc Returns Cyclingnewscom

It was later revealed that Riccò had attempted to escape doping control officials after stage 4 of the Tour, but had been caught in traffic. As a result of this, officials decided that he was to be tested after every stage. It was also revealed that CERA's manufacturer Roche Pharmaceuticals had secretly worked closely with the World Anti-Doping Agency to develop a test for the drug, and this was how Riccò had been caught.

Riccardo Riccò Riccardo Ricc39s career ends with a twelve year ban for doping

In the week following the race, Riccò admitted to the Italian National Olympic Committee (CONI) that, independent of the team, he had been taking EPO in preparation for the 2008 Tour de France, and he accepted responsibility for his actions and apologized to his teammates and fans. Riccò told the Italian newspaper La Repubblica that it was the banned doping doctor Carlo Santuccione who supplied the new form of EPO.

Riccardo Riccò Italian cycling transfer market kicks off as Ricc quits Flaminia

Following Riccò's admission of guilt in the affair, his advisors had hoped for a 20-month ban to be handed to the rider, but on 2 October 2008, he was handed a 2-year ban by the Italian National Olympic Committee (CONI), which Riccò found disappointing; "I'm very disappointed and bitter. I expected better understanding. But I made a mistake and it's fair that I pay." However, on 17 March 2009, the Court of Arbitration for Sport reduced the ban to 20 months because of his cooperation; he resumed racing in March 2010 on the Ceramica Flaminia team.

Riccò also faced criminal prosecution in both Italy and France for the doping affair. He was convicted by a criminal court in Padua and given a fine of €3,040. In June 2010, Riccò was handed a two-year suspended sentence by a Toulouse court, which was upheld on appeal in November 2011.

In August 2010, Riccò terminated his contract for Ceramica Flaminia, and signed a two-year contract with Dutch Vacansoleil Pro Cycling Team.

2011 blood transfusion incident

On 6 February 2011 Riccò was admitted to a hospital in critical condition, with sepsis and kidney failure, allegedly due to a blood transfusion he performed on himself with 25-day-old blood. Riccò admitted he had performed the transfusion to the doctor treating him in the presence of his girlfriend Vania Rossi. The doctor treating him reported this information to authorities leading to an investigation being opened against the professional cyclist by police and the Italian Olympic committee (CONI). He was well enough to be released from hospital within two weeks, and was sacked by his team Vacansoleil–DCM. Riccò later denied blood doping, but also stated that he was finished with the sport and that he wanted to train to become a barista. He later changed his mind and said he would indeed like to race again.

In October 2011, it was reported that Riccò confessed to the blood transfusion to CONI although his lawyer later denied these reports.

On 19 April 2012, Italy's National Anti-doping Court (TNA - Tribunale Nazionale Antidoping) banned Riccò from any professional cycling activity for 12 years, effectively ending his career. Riccò appealed to the Court of Arbitration for Sport. The CAS upheld the ban.

2014 accused of buying EPO in a McDonald's car park

On 1 May 2014 Riccò was accused of purchasing EPO and testosterone, after being caught by Italian police in the car park of a McDonald's restaurant in Livorno. Riccò later claimed to be "in the wrong place at the wrong time" and his lawyer stated that he was not in the car park to purchase EPO.

References

Riccardo Riccò Wikipedia