Hubbry Logo
Ivan BassoIvan BassoMain
Open search
Ivan Basso
Community hub
Ivan Basso
logo
8 pages, 0 posts
0 subscribers
Be the first to start a discussion here.
Be the first to start a discussion here.
Ivan Basso
Ivan Basso
from Wikipedia

Ivan Basso (born 26 November 1977) is an Italian former professional road bicycle racer, who rode professionally between 1999 and 2015 for seven different teams. Basso, nicknamed Ivan the Terrible,[3] was considered among the best mountain riders in the professional field in the early 21st century, and was considered one of the strongest stage race riders. He is a double winner of the Giro d'Italia, having won the race in 2006 for Team CSC and 2010 for Liquigas–Doimo.

Key Information

In 2007, Basso admitted to planning the use of blood doping and was suspended for two years. His suspension ended on 24 October 2008, and he returned to racing two days later in the Japan Cup, where he placed a close third behind Damiano Cunego and Giovanni Visconti.[4] He later returned to racing in his home tour, and in 2010, he won his second Giro d'Italia, winning two stages along the way.[5][6]

Biography

[edit]

He was born in Gallarate, located in the province of Varese in Lombardy. He grew up next door to Claudio Chiappucci, a former three-time stage winner in the Tour de France who was suspended for two years after being proven guilty of doping several times.

As an amateur, he finished second in the road race at the 1995 UCI Juniors Road World Championships and his first big result was winning the under-23 road race at the 1998 UCI Road World Championships.[citation needed] In his youth he fiercely competed with fellow Italian riders Giuliano Figueras and especially Danilo Di Luca who proclaimed he would have won the under-23 World Championship himself had it not been for the team tactics.[7] Before Basso could turn professional, his parents wanted to see him finish his Technical Geometry studies. He turned professional with Davide Boifava's Riso Scotti–Vinavil team in 1999, where he rode his first Giro d'Italia. He did not finish the three-week race, but he made it a priority to win it someday.[3] In 2000, with the team now called Amica Chips–Tacconi Sport, he won his first professional victories in the Regio-Tour.

Promising results

[edit]

In 2001, he moved to Fassa Bortolo under the guidance of sporting director Giancarlo Ferretti. He scored several notable victories in 2001, and he made his Tour de France debut in the 2001 edition. His attack on the Bastille Day stage prompted a five-man breakaway which rode for the victory, but Basso crashed on a mountain descent and was forced to abandon the race.

His next two years were devoid of significant wins, even though he had promising rides in the Tour de France. In the 2002 Tour de France, Basso finished 11th overall and won the young rider classification, the award presented to the best-placed rider in the general classification under the age of 25.

Basso during the 2003 Tour de France

He impressed again in the 2003 Tour de France, finishing seventh overall in spite of receiving little help from his Fassa Bortolo teammates who, after dedicating their efforts in the first part of the race to help Alessandro Petacchi win four stages, had to pull out due to food poisoning, leaving only two riders to help Basso. Despite his good results as the best placed Italian rider in the Tour de France, he was behind fellow Italian teammate Dario Frigo in the Fassa Bortolo pecking order for the biggest race in Italy, the Giro.[3] After the promising start to his Fassa Bortolo career, Basso's relationship with Ferretti turned sour. Basso failed to respond well to the management methods of the "iron sergeant", who thought Basso did not win enough races.

Apart from the individual time trial stages, Basso had only lost around a single minute to winner Lance Armstrong in the 2003 Tour, and he was not short of new team offers. Despite strong rumours sending him to the U.S. Postal Service team,[7] Basso moved to Team CSC for the 2004 season, under the guidance of team manager Bjarne Riis. At Team CSC, Basso was to fill the role as team captain, which Tyler Hamilton had left vacant at the Danish outfit, with the main aim to be a challenger in the Tour de France. Basso's weakness was the time trial, and before the 2004 season he and teammate Carlos Sastre trained in a wind tunnel at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology to improve their aerodynamics and positioning on the bike. The time trial skill of Basso was one of the main points of improvement over the next years.

Heir apparent

[edit]
Basso (left) alongside Lance Armstrong at the 2004 Tour de France. Basso achieved his first Grand Tour stage victory at the race, on the twelfth stage.

Basso looked impressive in the 2004 Tour de France, winning stage 12 ahead of eventual winner Lance Armstrong, his first victory since 2001. His overall time was hurt by relatively poor time trial results: he only finished 8th on the stage 16 time trial up the mountain Alpe d'Huez, where he was caught and passed by Armstrong, and 6th in the stage 19 time trial. In all, he lost a combined 5 minutes and 13 seconds in the two stages. His time loss on the last time trial effectively sent Basso down to third place behind Andreas Klöden, and Basso finished 6:40 behind overall winner Armstrong. He ended the season, participating with the Italian national team in the 2004 UCI Road World Championships in Verona, helping fellow Italian Luca Paolini get a bronze medal. In the off-season, Team CSC was in a financial struggle. Even as Bjarne Riis let riders who received superior offers from other teams leave, Basso did not move to the Discovery Channel team even though an economically more lucrative contract was proposed.[3]

January 2005 saw the death of Basso's mother, who died after battling cancer. Basso went on to focus on the 2005 Giro d'Italia, in her memory, as his main aim for that season. By both focusing on winning the Giro and the Tour, he was going against the trend of only aiming for one big race a season, a tactic most notably employed successfully by Lance Armstrong.[8] Basso wore the pink jersey as leader of the General classification in the Giro d'Italia until severe stomach problems caused him to lose the lead on stage 13 on the Passo delle Erbe. He lost another 40 minutes during the 14th stage, a mountain stage which included the Stelvio Pass, and thus effectively ended his bid for overall honours. No longer dangerous to the other main riders, Basso decided to continue in the race with the objective of winning individual stages. He did manage to achieve this goal at stage 17, a mountain stage. He also won the 18th stage, a time trial, ahead of teammate David Zabriskie, demonstrating the improvement he had made in this area.

Basso at the 2005 Tour de France, where he finished the race second overall.

At the 2005 Tour de France, he started out comparatively weakly on stage 10, the first mountain stage of the race, where he trailed the front group by a minute. But for the rest of the race, Basso was once again the only rider to keep up with the race leader, Lance Armstrong, in the mountains, and on occasion, he tried to pressure the eventual winner by going on the attack. Basso was still weaker in the time trials, although he had improved significantly when compared to 2004. He lost a collective 3:47 over two time trial stages, as Basso placed second overall in the Tour, 4:40 behind Lance Armstrong. During the 2005 Tour de France, Basso signed a new three-year contract with Team CSC.

2006 Giro d'Italia

[edit]
Basso at the 2006 Giro d'Italia

Following his overall rank of 28th in the 2005 Giro d'Italia, Basso returned to the Giro in 2006, intending to win. Following a good performance in the stage 1 time trial, Basso and his CSC teammates won the 5th stage, a team time trial. Basso's first solo stage victory came on the 8th stage, the first mountaintop finish of the Giro, where he countered an attack by Damiano Cunego and rode to the finish by himself. That victory also allowed him to gain enough time on his rivals to put him in the leader's pink jersey for the first time in the race, a jersey which he would hold on to for the remaining 13 stages.

Stage 11 was a long and flat[9] individual time trial where Basso finished in second place, losing only to former two-time world time trial champion Jan Ullrich, beating riders like the Italian national time trial champion Marco Pinotti. During the last week of the 2006 Giro, Basso beat his main rivals for the general classification, and won stages 16 and 20 along the way. His victory in Stage 20, where he rode to a solo victory on the final ascent into Aprica after riding away from rival Gilberto Simoni, was notable when he, already sure of his victory, pulled out a picture of his newly born son Santiago, and held it aloft as he crossed the finish line. Santiago Basso had been born the previous day, and Basso had not yet seen his son in the flesh, having been given the picture only hours before the stage started. When rival Simoni rolled across the line over a minute behind Basso, he was clearly upset at being beaten and made a remark that Basso's dominance at that year's Giro was "extra-terrestrial."[10] Basso eventually finished 9 minutes 18 seconds up on the second placed rider, José Enrique Gutiérrez, the largest margin of victory in the Giro d'Italia since 1965. After the last stage of the race, Basso declared that he would continue along his pre-season plan to also ride the Tour de France.

Operación Puerto and the 2006 Tour de France

[edit]

On 30 June 2006, the management of the Tour de France announced at a press conference that a number of riders, including Ivan Basso, would not be riding in the race due to rumours of blood doping stemming from the Operación Puerto doping case in Spain. According to the investigation, Basso was allegedly given blood doping by doctor Eufemiano Fuentes in a Spanish clinic. No formal charges had been raised, but following an agreement between the managers of all the ProTour teams, any rider under suspicion of doping would not be allowed to start in ProTour races. This forced CSC to remove Basso from their squad for the 2006 Tour.

Speculation in the Italian press suggested that, should Basso not be banned, he would be joining the Discovery Channel team. Team CSC described these suggestions as just rumours.[11] Later, CSC manager Bjarne Riis was reported stating that it was unlikely that Basso could return to CSC without proving he had no contact with Fuentes, as Basso's contract specified that he could receive no outside medical assistance. Riis conceded that it might be impossible for Basso to prove beyond doubt. Rumours also talked about Basso moving to Team Milram or Barloworld (a non-ProTour team).[12] The Italian National Olympic Committee (CONI) proceedings commenced in late August 2006.

From CSC to Team Discovery Channel

[edit]
Basso at the 2007 Tour of California

On 18 October 2006, Team CSC announced that his contract had been terminated by mutual consent.[13] On 27 October 2006, Basso was acquitted of any involvement in the Operation Puerto events by the committee, due to insufficient evidence.[14]

On 9 November 2006, Basso announced he was joining Lance Armstrong's former team, Discovery Channel. The announcement was made in Austin, Texas, and Basso joined the team on 3 December 2006 for the first unofficial training camp. Basso rode for Levi Leipheimer during the 2007 Tour of California,[15] and also raced Tirreno–Adriatico, where he crashed.[16]

Puerto case reopened

[edit]

On 24 April 2007, Basso was suspended by Discovery Channel when the Italian National Olympic Committee (CONI) reopened his case. On 30 April 2007, Team Discovery Channel announced that Basso would be released from his contract. Basso requested to leave the team, citing "personal reasons related to the re-opened investigation by the Italian National Olympic Committee (CONI)." Basso met with the General Manager of Team Discovery Channel, Bill Stapleton, and Johan Bruyneel, the Team Director, and the two agreed to allow Basso to leave the team.[17] While still claiming to never have actually engaged in blood doping, Basso admitted contacting Fuentes' clinic with the intention to engage in blood doping.[18]

Basso appeared before the Italian National Olympic Committee (CONI) on 2 May 2007.[19] On 7 May 2007, Basso admitted his involvement with the drug scandal to the Italian National Olympic Committee (CONI).[20] In a later press conference, he stated it was "attempted doping", and that while he had not actually undergone doping, he was "fully aware that an attempt at doping is tantamount to doping" and that "[he would] serve [his] suspension and then return to race."[21]

On 15 June 2007, Basso received a two-year ban. The time he had already spent under team suspension whilst riding for CSC and temporary suspension since leaving Discovery was taken into consideration, which meant he was banned until 25 October 2008.[22]

Return after suspension

[edit]
Basso at the 2009 Vuelta a Espana

After his return, Basso signed a two-year contract with Liquigas, his first race being in the Japan Cup on 26 October 2008. He proceeded to finish third, behind Damiano Cunego and Giovanni Visconti. In April 2009, he claimed overall victory in the Italian stage race Giro del Trentino. He then competed in his main objective for the year, the Giro d'Italia, where he finished fifth behind eventual winner Denis Menchov, Danilo Di Luca, fellow Liquigas rider Franco Pellizotti and 2008 Tour de France winner Carlos Sastre. He also placed 4th in the Vuelta a España behind Alejandro Valverde, Samuel Sánchez, and Cadel Evans respectively.

2010

[edit]
Basso wearing the maglia rosa at the 2010 Giro d'Italia

In 2010, Basso aimed to win his second Giro d'Italia, leading Liquigas–Doimo with his teammate Vincenzo Nibali. Despite having a quiet start to the race, he won the 15th stage of the race atop Monte Zoncolan, after his Liquigas team had set the pace for some 150 kilometres (93 miles) in order to chase down a breakaway. After Stage 19, he led the general classification as a result of out-climbing previous race leader David Arroyo, and held it to the end of the race.[23] This resulted in his second Giro win, after 2006. Basso then focused on the Tour de France where he attempted to win the Giro and the Tour during the same year, but he ended up struggling through the last week, finishing 32nd.

2011

[edit]

In 2011, Basso skipped the Giro d'Italia to focus on the Tour de France. After having a good start over the first 2 weeks, sitting 5th overall, Basso struggled on stages 16 and 17 after being dropped on the final descents, and later finished 7th overall.

2012

[edit]

In 2012, Basso started the season with quiet form, focusing on the Giro d'Italia, but only finishing 5th overall.

Tinkoff-Saxo

[edit]

In August 2014, it was announced that Basso would be joining Tinkoff–Saxo from 2015 on a two-year deal.[24] In July 2015, Basso was diagnosed with testicular cancer and immediately withdrew from the Tour de France to seek treatment in Italy.[25] Basso received support from a number of people including Lance Armstrong. Basso made the announcement to the media in those terms: "I have a bad announcement to give to you guys", Basso said. "On stage 5, I had a really small crash but in the crash I touched my testicle on the saddle and for a few days, I felt a small pain. Yesterday we spoke with the doctor of the Tour de France and we decided to go to make a special analysis in the hospital and the examination gave me bad news. I have a small cancer in the left testicle."[26]

In September 2015 Tinkoff–Saxo confirmed that Basso had recovered fully after undergoing surgery in Milan and that he would be able to race again.[27] However, after Basso had talks with the team it was announced that he would retire from competition the following month, whilst remaining with Tinkoff–Saxo in a management role.[28] Basso later followed Alberto Contador to Trek–Segafredo, taking up a support staff position.[29]

Post racing

[edit]

Following his exit from racing, Basso and Alberto Contador opened up Aurum bikes in 2020.[30]

Personal life

[edit]

Basso resides in Cassano Magnago, Italy, with his wife and four children.

He has now purchased land in his home town to start a blueberry farm where he hopes to employ locals as well as make an investment for his retirement from cycling as the future of the European economy is uncertain.[31] Basso has already begun planting; his farm is called "Il Borgo" or "the village".[32]

He is not related to Italian cyclist Marino Basso, nor the bicycle brand Basso.

Major results

[edit]
1995
2nd Road race, UCI Junior Road World Championships
3rd Overall Giro della Lunigiana
1997
1st Trofeo Città di San Vendemiano
1st Piccola Sanremo
9th Trofeo Banca Popolare di Vicenza
9th Gran Premio Palio del Recioto
1998
1st Road race, UCI Road World Under-23 Championships
2nd Trofeo Gianfranco Bianchin
6th Trofeo Città di San Vendemiano
8th Firenze–Pistoia
9th Coppa Fiera di Mercatale
1999
2nd Trofeo Matteotti
2nd Giro del Friuli
3rd Gran Premio Palio del Recioto
6th HEW Cyclassics
6th Tre Valli Varesine
6th Gran Premio della Liberazione
7th Gran Premio Industria e Commercio di Prato
2000
2nd Overall Regio-Tour
1st Stages 1 & 3b (ITT)
5th Giro dell'Emilia
6th Tre Valli Varesine
7th Trofeo Andratx-Mirador d'Es Colomer
8th Giro del Lazio
2001
1st Stage 1 Tour Méditerranéen
1st Stage 5 Euskal Bizikleta
1st Stage 5 Tour of Austria
2nd La Flèche Wallonne
4th Road race, National Road Championships
4th Trofeo dell'Etna
6th Giro dell'Emilia
7th Coppa Placci
8th Trofeo Melinda
9th Gran Premio della Costa Etruschi
2002
1st Young rider classification, Tour de France
2nd Overall Volta a la Comunitat Valenciana
2nd Giro dell'Emilia
3rd Liège–Bastogne–Liège
5th Gran Premio Città di Camaiore
6th Giro del Lazio
8th Tre Valli Varesine
9th Züri-Metzgete
2003
2nd Clásica de San Sebastián
5th Overall Volta a Catalunya
6th Giro del Veneto
6th Coppa Placci
7th Overall Tour de France
7th GP Industria & Artigianato di Larciano
7th Coppa Bernocchi
8th Giro di Toscana
10th Liège–Bastogne–Liège
10th Firenze–Pistoia
2004
1st Giro dell'Emilia
2nd Overall Tour Méditerranéen
3rd Overall Tour de France
1st Stage 12
3rd Giro di Lombardia
6th Clásica de San Sebastián
7th Overall Tour de Romandie
8th Liège–Bastogne–Liège
2005
1st Overall Danmark Rundt
1st Stages 1, 2, 3 & 5 (ITT)
Giro d'Italia
1st Stages 17 & 18 (ITT)
Held after Stages 11–12
2nd Overall Tour de France
4th Overall Critérium International
2006
1st Overall Giro d'Italia
1st Stages 5 (TTT), 8, 16 & 20
1st Overall Critérium International
1st Stage 2
4th Overall Circuit de la Sarthe
1st Stage 2b (ITT)
6th Overall Tirreno–Adriatico
10th Liège–Bastogne–Liège
2008
3rd Japan Cup
2009
1st Overall Giro del Trentino
3rd Overall Giro d'Italia
4th Overall Vuelta a España
4th Trofeo Melinda
5th Overall Tirreno–Adriatico
5th Overall Tour de San Luis
2010
1st Overall Giro d'Italia
1st Stages 4 (TTT) & 15
1st Gran Premio Industria e Commercio Artigianato Carnaghese
5th Overall Giro del Trentino
2011
1st Overall Giro di Padania
1st Stage 4
1st Gran Premio di Lugano
4th Overall Tirreno–Adriatico
4th Giro di Lombardia
7th Overall Tour de France
7th Overall Volta a Catalunya
10th Trofeo Laigueglia
10th Japan Cup
2012
1st Japan Cup
5th Overall Giro d'Italia
2013
4th Overall Settimana Internazionale di Coppi e Bartali
8th Overall Tour de Pologne
9th Overall Tour of Beijing
10th Overall Vuelta a Burgos

Grand Tour general classification results timeline

[edit]
Grand Tour 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015
A pink jersey Giro d'Italia DNF 52 28 1 3 1 5 15 51
A yellow jersey Tour de France DNF 11 7 3 2 31 7 25 DNF
/A red jersey Vuelta a España 4 DNF
Legend
Did not compete
DNF Did not finish

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]
[edit]
Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
Ivan Basso (born 26 November 1977) is a retired Italian professional racer renowned for his climbing prowess and two overall victories in the , achieved in 2006 and 2010. His career spanned from 1999 to 2015, during which he secured 30 professional wins, including six stages in the and one-day races such as the . Basso's 2006 Giro performance stands out for its dominance, as he finished over 9 minutes ahead of the second-place rider, showcasing exceptional power output on key mountain stages like Passo Lanciano. Basso's trajectory was interrupted by a major doping controversy tied to , a Spanish blood-doping ring uncovered in 2006. He admitted to planning the use of blood transfusions under the pseudonym "Birillo," paying €15,000 to the operation's doctor, , though he denied actual doping during races and provided evidence of negative tests. This led to a two-year suspension from October 2007 to 2008, after which he returned to competition, culminating in his 2010 Giro triumph as a form of redemption. In 2015, Basso withdrew from the upon diagnosing , underwent treatment, and announced his retirement later that year, transitioning to a team management role. His reflects both extraordinary athletic peaks and the era's pervasive doping challenges in professional , where empirical evidence from admissions and investigations underscores systemic issues in performance enhancement.

Early Life and Amateur Career

Childhood and Entry into Cycling

Ivan Basso was born on November 26, 1977, in , in the , , and spent his childhood in nearby Cassano Magnago. As the only child of Nives and Franco Basso, who operated a local butcher shop, he grew up in a household marked by frequent parental arguments that created a tense environment. Basso received his first bicycle, a small blue Asperge model, from his father at the age of four, which he used for initial training rides and playful exploration around Cassano Magnago, describing himself as "the happiest kid in the world" upon receiving it. Cycling initially served as an escape from family discord, progressing from a tricycle to road biking as he sought solace outdoors. Inspired by Italian cycling legend , he began competing formally at age seven with the Oratorio di Cassano Magnago youth team, winning his debut race and a subsequent event in his hometown. By age eight, Basso had transitioned to and was tackling significant climbs, including the Aprica pass at eleven and the Stelvio at twelve, demonstrating early prodigious talent and dedication that brought temporary harmony to his family through his successes. These formative experiences fueled his rapid rise in amateur ranks, where he dominated junior competitions before turning in 1999.

Key Amateur Achievements

Ivan Basso demonstrated early promise in junior cycling by finishing second in the road race at the 1995 UCI Junior Road World Championships in San Sebastian, , competing at age 17 against riders from 28 nations. This performance highlighted his climbing ability and positioned him among Italy's top young talents. Basso's most significant amateur achievement came in the under-23 category, where he won the road race at the 1998 in Valkenburg, , on October 11, covering 166.8 km in 3 hours, 48 minutes, and 20 seconds ahead of Belarusian rider Aleksandr Koboniya. This victory, his first major international title, showcased his endurance in hilly terrain and directly facilitated his transition to ranks with Riso Scotti–Vinavil the following year.

Professional Career

Professional Debut and Initial Years (1999-2003)

Ivan Basso turned professional in 1999 at age 21 with the Italian Riso Scotti–Vinavil team, managed by Davide Boifava. He made his Grand Tour debut that May in the , competing over 21 stages totaling 3,440 km, but abandoned the race before completion. Remaining with Riso Scotti in 2000, Basso secured his initial professional victories by winning stage 1 (Strasbourg to Kehl, 165 km) and stage 3b (a ) of the Rothaus Regio-Tour, a five-stage race in and covering 700 km. These results marked his emergence as a climber capable of aggressive attacks in multi-day events. Basso transferred to Fassa Bortolo for the 2001 season, a squad known for nurturing Italian talent under Giancarlo Ferretti. He claimed stage 1 of the Tour Méditerranéen, stage 5 of the Euskal Bizikleta (a 148 km mountainous leg from Iurreta to Arrate), and stage 5 of the Österreich Rundfahrt (), demonstrating consistency in hilly terrain across early-season races. He also finished 2nd in La Flèche Wallonne, one of the Ardennes classics. In 2002, still with Fassa Bortolo, Basso debuted at the , finishing 11th overall in the general classification after the 3,428 km race and capturing the white jersey as the best young rider under 26. Additionally, he placed 3rd in Liège–Bastogne–Liège. Basso continued with Fassa Bortolo into 2003, improving to 7th in the general classification, 10 minutes 12 seconds behind winner , with strong performances in high-mountain stages like despite limited team support. He also placed 10th at Liège–Bastogne–Liège and 2nd at Clásica de San Sebastián, demonstrating his capability in one-day hilly races including Basque events and Ardennes classics (where he had achieved podium finishes in prior years).

Rise to Prominence (2004-2005)

In 2004, Ivan Basso joined Team CSC, where he began to emerge as a serious general classification contender in Grand Tours under the guidance of team manager Bjarne Riis. His breakthrough came at the Tour de France, where he secured his first stage victory since 2001 on stage 12 to La Mongie, outsprinting Lance Armstrong at the summit finish. Basso demonstrated strong climbing ability throughout the race, finishing third overall in the general classification, 6 minutes and 40 seconds behind winner Armstrong. Basso's performance marked him as a potential successor to Armstrong's dominance, with his consistent positioning in the mountains and ability to match attacks from top rivals. Basso also achieved notable results in other races in 2004, finishing second in the Tour of the Mediterranean in February, winning the in September, and placing third in the in October, further solidifying his climbing prowess. Entering 2005, Basso targeted the , where he won two consecutive mountain stages—stage 16 and stage 17—en route to briefly holding the maglia rosa before finishing outside the top ten overall. He then excelled at the , placing second overall behind Armstrong, 4 minutes and 40 seconds in arrears, while contending strongly in the high mountains. These results positioned Basso as one of the preeminent Grand Tour riders entering 2006.

2006 Giro d'Italia Win

Ivan Basso won the 2006 overall classification, securing his first Grand Tour victory while riding for Team CSC. The race, held from May 6 to May 28, spanned 3,440 kilometers across 21 stages, including two individual time trials, a , and multiple mountain stages. Basso completed the event in 91 hours, 33 minutes, and 36 seconds, averaging 38.54 km/h, finishing 9 minutes and 18 seconds ahead of second-place José Enrique Gutiérrez of Phonak Hearing Systems, with Gilberto Simoni of Saunier Duval-Prodir third at 11:59 back. Basso first donned the maglia rosa after winning stage 8 on May 14, a 171 km mountainous route from to Maielletta/Passo , where he attacked decisively on the final climb to finish solo, taking the lead from Paolo Savoldelli by 1:10 overall. His Team CSC squad had earlier contributed to his position by winning the stage 5 team time trial on May 11, which helped consolidate early gaps among contenders. In the stage 11 individual time trial on May 18, Basso posted a solid performance in the 50 km individual time trial, finishing second 28 seconds behind stage winner Jan Ullrich (time of 59 minutes 16 seconds), maintaining his lead despite not winning the stage. Basso extended his advantage on key Dolomite stages, including victory on stage 16 to Monte Bondone on May 23, where he soloed to the line after escaping on the final ascent, gaining over a minute on rivals like Simoni and adding to his buffer. He defended through subsequent climbs such as the Mortirolo Pass and Aprica, where no serious challenges materialized, with his strongest performances coming on long, steep gradients that suited his climbing prowess. His dominance was marked by consistent top placings in mountain stages and minimal time losses, underscoring Team CSC's tactical control.

Team Transitions and 2006 Tour de France Exclusion

Following his victory in the 2006 Giro d'Italia, where he secured the general classification by 9 minutes and 18 seconds ahead of José Enrique Gutiérrez, Ivan Basso prepared to contest the as a leading favorite for Team CSC. On June 30, 2006, two days before the Tour's start, race organizers (ASO) excluded Basso, along with and other riders linked to the Operación Puerto investigation, to uphold the event's credibility amid the unfolding doping scandal. The Spanish authorities' raid on Dr. ' clinic in May 2006 uncovered documents referencing preparations, with Basso identified under the alias "Birillo" and notations suggesting 24 blood bags intended for use during the Tour. Basso denied any involvement in doping, asserting that he had never used banned substances or methods, though Team CSC manager confirmed the team's suspension of the rider pending further inquiry. The exclusion disrupted Basso's season, as he was under contract with CSC through 2008, but the persistent doping cloud strained the relationship. On October 18, 2006, after Italian Olympic Committee (CONI) prosecutors initially declined to pursue charges due to lack of corroborating evidence beyond the documents, CSC and Basso mutually terminated the agreement. Riis cited the summer's events as necessitating the parting, emphasizing the team's commitment to clean . Seeking to revive his career, Basso signed a two-year contract with Pro Cycling Team on November 8, 2006, the squad formerly directed by and associated with Lance Armstrong's seven Tour wins. The deal, reportedly worth several million euros, was conditioned on Basso providing a DNA sample to definitively rule out links to Puerto-seized blood products, reflecting the team's effort to verify his claims of innocence amid ongoing scrutiny. This transition positioned Basso for a potential 2007 return, though it drew criticism from anti-doping advocates questioning the haste of recruitment post-allegations.

Suspension Period (2007-2009)

In May 2007, Ivan Basso acknowledged his involvement in the Operación Puerto blood-doping scandal to Italian anti-doping authorities, confessing to "attempted doping" through planning blood transfusions with but denying any actual use, as he never received or transfused blood. He submitted a dossier of over 60 prior UCI doping tests, all negative, to support his claim of non-implementation. On June 15, 2007, the Italian Cycling Federation (FCI) imposed the maximum two-year suspension on Basso for attempting to use banned methods and possession of prohibited substances, aligning with UCI requests despite a CONI recommendation for 21 months. Accounting for approximately eight months of prior provisional suspensions by teams and CSC since late 2006, the effective ban expired on October 24, 2008. During the suspension, Basso expressed remorse in a December 2007 interview, stating he had lost races, contracts, and reputation, and committed to accepting the penalty while focusing on personal reflection and private training to rebuild fitness. He signed a contract with in mid-2008, enabling his return. Basso resumed professional racing on October 26, 2008, at the , marking the end of his enforced absence. In 2009, he competed in major events including the and the , finishing 3rd in the Giro d'Italia and 4th in the Vuelta a España, using the season for form-building ahead of major targets.

Comeback Seasons (2010-2014)

Following a two-year suspension ending in October 2009, Basso returned to professional racing with -Doimo in 2010, targeting the . He secured the general classification victory on May 30, 2010, finishing 1 minute and 13 seconds ahead of , marking his second Giro title and first major win post-ban. Basso won one stage during the race, Stage 15 atop Monte Zoncolan on May 23, where he distanced rivals by over a minute on the steep climb. His performance demonstrated sustained climbing prowess, with team support enabling attacks in key mountain stages like the Passo di Gavia. In 2011, Basso skipped the Giro to prioritize the , aiming for overall contention but fading after a strong mid-race position around fifth. He finished 7th overall, 7 minutes and 23 seconds behind winner . The decision to focus solely on the Tour yielded disappointing results, as Basso later reflected on the challenges of peaking for without spring Grand Tour preparation. For 2012, riding for Liquigas-Cannondale, Basso raced both the Giro d'Italia and Tour de France, but contended for neither GC seriously. At the Giro, he finished 5th overall, 3 minutes 44 seconds behind winner Ryder Hesjedal, while at the Tour he finished 25th, 59 minutes 44 seconds behind winner Bradley Wiggins. His efforts highlighted endurance across dual Grand Tours but lacked the punch for podium threats amid rising competition from teams like Sky. In 2013, still with Cannondale, Basso targeted the , reaching seventh overall before withdrawing on stage 14 due to during rainy conditions in the . In 2014, continuing with Cannondale, Basso rode the Giro d'Italia, finishing 15th overall in the general classification. These seasons underscored Basso's persistence in Grand Tour pursuits, though without replicating 2010's dominance amid physical setbacks and evolving dynamics.

Final Racing Years and Retirement (2015-2016)

In 2015, Basso joined Tinkoff-Saxo on a two-year contract, shifting to a domestique role supporting team leader Alberto Contador in Grand Tours. He participated in the Giro d'Italia, finishing 51st overall, 2 hours 52 minutes and 16 seconds behind winner Contador. Basso also raced in events like Tirreno-Adriatico and the Italian National Road Race Championships, where he placed 17th. His season yielded no podium finishes or stage victories, reflecting a veteran supporting capacity rather than personal contention. During the on July 13, 2015—the first rest day—Basso withdrew after a medical examination revealed a small in his left , prompted by pain experienced earlier in the race. He immediately returned to for surgery in , which was successful, and by September 2015, Tinkoff-Saxo confirmed his full recovery, allowing a planned return to racing in October. On October 5, 2015, during the presentation of the route, Basso announced his retirement from professional cycling at age 37, clarifying that the decision had been made prior to his cancer diagnosis and was not influenced by it. He did not compete in , effectively ending his racing career after the 2015 season, and transitioned to a technical coordinator role within Tinkoff-Saxo.

Doping Controversies

Involvement in Operación Puerto

In May 2006, Spanish authorities raided the operations of Dr. , uncovering a network of involving professional cyclists, including evidence linked to Ivan Basso through blood bags labeled "Birillo," the name of his dog used as a pseudonym. Basso, riding for the CSC team at the time, was provisionally suspended by the UCI and excluded from the by his team despite no positive doping test, as the scandal implicated over 50 riders in prepared blood extractions for autologous transfusions. Italian investigators obtained the relevant blood bags from Spanish custody in April 2007 for DNA comparison, confirming a match to Basso and prompting further scrutiny by the Italian Cycling Federation and Olympic Committee (CONI). Initially denying active doping, Basso admitted on May 7, 2007, to CONI that he had engaged in "attempted doping" by traveling to Madrid in late 2005 for two blood extractions by Fuentes, paying approximately €15,000 in cash, with the intent to re-infuse the blood for performance enhancement at the 2006 Tour de France. He maintained that the police raid disrupted the plan, preventing any actual transfusion or use of the blood, and cooperated without implicating others. During a 2013 Spanish court testimony related to the ongoing Puerto case, Basso reiterated paying Fuentes for the procedure but emphasized no banned substances were administered or transfused, attributing the halt to the scandal's exposure. This admission distinguished his case from riders with direct evidence of use, leading CONI to classify it as attempted doping rather than proven violation, though it resulted in a two-year suspension effective from October 2006.

Admissions, Denials, and Ban

In the wake of the Operación Puerto investigation's public revelation in May 2006, Basso initially denied any involvement with the blood-doping network led by Dr. , asserting that he had not engaged in prohibited practices despite his blood bags—labeled with the "Birillo" after his dog—being seized by Spanish authorities. His team, CSC, suspended him provisionally in June 2006, leading to his exclusion from the , though he maintained his innocence and competed in and won the 2006 , which he later insisted was achieved cleanly. On May 7, 2007, Basso reversed course during questioning by Italy's National Anti-Doping Organization (NADO Italia) and the Italian Olympic Committee (CONI), admitting to planning for the by extracting and intending to reinject his blood but claiming he never actually executed the transfusions due to the unfolding . He cooperated fully with investigators, providing details on his contacts with Fuentes but refusing to implicate other riders, while emphatically denying any actual use of banned substances or blood products throughout his career up to that point. In response to his of "attempted doping," NADO Italia imposed a two-year suspension on Basso on June 15, 2007, for possession of banned substances and intended use of prohibited methods, a penalty backdated to account for his prior team-imposed suspensions totaling 236 days (approximately eight months from CSC in 2006 and in 2007). The ban's effective end date was October 24, 2008, allowing his return to professional racing with Liquigas-Doimo in 2009. During the 2013 Spanish of Fuentes and associates, Basso testified via video link that he had paid the doctor €70,000 (about $94,000) in for a year-long program aimed at boosting his performance, including an initial €15,000 cash payment, though he reiterated that the plan was abandoned amid police scrutiny and described the decision as a moment of personal weakness driven by competitive ambition. This disclosure aligned with his prior admission of intent but provided financial and logistical specifics previously undisclosed, without altering his consistent denial of consummated doping.

Long-Term Reflections and Criticisms

In the years following his 2007-2009 suspension, Basso expressed that the ban served as a pivotal personal turning point, stating in January 2008 that it was "the best thing that could have happened to me," likening himself to a "better man" in a paraphrase of 's phrasing. This sentiment aligned with his December 2007 reflections on rebuilding his life and career amid the fallout from Operación Puerto, where he emphasized learning from the scandal's "grim reality." Post-retirement in 2016, Basso maintained a diplomatic stance on doping controversies, declining to criticize Armstrong in 2020 despite the American's public accusations of hypocrisy against other implicated riders, noting instead his focus on moving forward without engaging in retaliation. In managerial roles, such as with Trek-Segafredo, he has advocated for cleaner practices, though without detailed public endorsements of specific anti-doping reforms beyond general cooperation with authorities during his 2007 admission of attempted . Critics have questioned the completeness of Basso's admissions, particularly after 2013 revelations during the Operación Puerto trial that he paid Dr. €15,000 in cash for blood extraction services aimed at enhancing performance in the , despite his claims of not completing the transfusions or using the blood. Italian outlet Gazzetta dello Sport amplified these doubts by publishing corroborating evidence from witness testimonies, including those of retired rider Jörg Jaksche, which portrayed Basso's involvement as more extensive than his initial "attempted doping" confession to Italian authorities in May 2007. Long-term assessments of Basso's legacy highlight how his Operación Puerto ties—evidenced by police documentation of 26 bags of his blood stored for transfusion—irrevocably tainted victories like the 2006 , contributing to broader skepticism about the era's clean comebacks despite his post-ban results, such as the 2010 Giro win. Prosecutors in 2007 sought a 21-month ban citing violations of rules on prohibited substance use or attempts, a penalty extended to two years, underscoring judicial views of his actions as undermining cycling's integrity amid systemic blood-doping prevalence.

Post-Retirement Activities

Managerial Roles in Cycling

Following his retirement from professional racing in October 2015, Basso transitioned immediately into a managerial capacity with Tinkoff-Saxo, assuming the newly created role of Technical Coordinator. This position integrated technical oversight with broader team strategy, involving close collaboration with the managing director to leverage Basso's racing expertise for rider development and operational planning. He retained this role through the season until Tinkoff's withdrawal from the sport at year's end. In September 2016, Basso joined Trek–Segafredo as part of the support staff, mirroring a similar advisory function he had performed earlier that year with Tinkoff alongside . His responsibilities centered on consulting for the team's coaching and athlete development programs, partnering with Sport's initiatives to enhance training methodologies and performance optimization. This involvement extended to Trek–Segafredo's affiliated development squad in 2017, where Basso contributed to the Polartec–Kometa team's structure under the Foundation. Basso deepened his commitment to emerging talent through the Kometa project, co-founded with Contador in as a UCI Continental squad focused on nurturing young riders. By 2020, as Eolo–Kometa elevated to ProTeam status, Basso assumed a leading managerial position, emphasizing ethical development and pathway progression to WorldTour levels. In this capacity, he oversees team operations, rider recruitment, and strategic growth, collaborating with Contador and Fran Contador on long-term objectives. The team's to Polti–Kometa in 2024 under Polti sponsorship marked continued expansion, with Basso affirming the project's dedication to sustainable pathways amid Italian sport's challenges.

Other Ventures and Contributions

In 2020, Basso co-founded Aurum Bikes with fellow former Grand Tour winner , establishing a Spanish-based brand focused on high-end bicycles informed by their professional racing expertise. The venture emphasizes performance-oriented designs, such as the model, a lightweight carbon bike engineered for climbing and speed, drawing directly from Basso's and Contador's experiences in events like the . Aurum's philosophy prioritizes innovation in frame geometry, aerodynamics, and rider ergonomics to replicate the feel of top-tier race machines, with production emphasizing custom carbon layups and advanced materials testing. The brand's launch targeted professional and amateur cyclists seeking equipment refined by riders who secured multiple pink jerseys, positioning Aurum as a alternative to mass-market manufacturers. Basso has contributed to product development by providing input on handling characteristics suited to Grand Tour demands, including responsiveness in mountainous stages where he excelled. By 2023, Aurum expanded its lineup to include gravel models like the Manto, adapting principles for off-road versatility while maintaining a focus on lightweight construction and durability. This project represents Basso's shift toward influencing technology post-retirement, leveraging his insights to shape equipment for future generations of racers.

Personal Life

Family and Relationships

Ivan Basso has been married to Micaela since approximately 2000. The couple has four children: daughter Domitilla (born 2003), son Santiago (born May 25, 2006), son Levante, and son Tai (born November 26, 2014). Basso and his family reside in Cassano Magnago, , where they have maintained a private life amid his cycling career and subsequent ventures. Micaela has been described by Basso as a key source of personal redemption and stability, particularly following his doping-related suspensions.

Health Issues and Recovery

In July 2015, during the , Ivan Basso sustained an injury to his left in a crash on stage 5 to . On the race's first rest day, July 13, medical examinations confirmed the presence of , prompting his immediate withdrawal from the event. Basso underwent orchiectomy surgery on July 15, 2015, at San Raffaele Hospital in Milan, where the affected testicle was removed. Post-operative assessments indicated no evidence of metastasis or need for additional chemotherapy or radiation, with medical optimism for complete recovery following a one-month rest period. By August 17, 2015—32 days after —Basso resumed light training. In September 2015, follow-up evaluations cleared him of further , allowing a return to competitive racing. He competed in the Tour of in October 2015, marking his professional comeback, though his concluded with retirement in October 2016. No long-term health complications from the cancer have been publicly reported in subsequent years.

Career Achievements and Legacy

Major Race Wins and Records

Ivan Basso's most significant victories came in the , where he secured the general classification twice. In the 2006 edition, riding for Team CSC, Basso dominated from stage 7 onward, claiming three stage wins—including stages 7 and 8—and finishing 9 minutes and 18 seconds ahead of José Enrique Gutiérrez in second place, the largest margin of victory in the since Eddy Merckx's 12-minute gap in 1974. His performance featured exceptional climbing displays, such as on and La Morra, underscoring his specialization as a grand tour rider. Basso won the again in 2010 with Liquigas-Doimo, edging out David Arroyo by 44 seconds after a consistent race highlighted by a solo victory on the grueling Monte Zoncolan ascent in stage 15. Across his career, he amassed six stage victories in the Giro, contributing to his reputation as one of Italy's premier stage racers. Beyond grand tours, Basso's notable one-day win was the 2012 , where he outpaced a strong field in a late-season effort. He also captured the junior world road race championship in 1998 as an amateur. Basso never won a , with his best result a third place in the in 2005.

Grand Tour Results Overview

Ivan Basso competed in 20 Grand Tours across his career, with nine starts each in the and , and two in the . He secured overall victories in the in 2006, where he won three stages and finished nearly nine minutes ahead of second place, and in 2010, adding one stage win after returning from a doping suspension. His strongest performances came in 2004 (third overall with one stage win) and 2005 (second overall), while his best Vuelta result was fourth in 2009. Later career efforts yielded consistent top-15 finishes in the Giro but diminished contention in the Tour amid physical decline and team roles. The following table summarizes Basso's general classification (GC) positions in Grand Tours:
Year GC GC GCNotes
1999DNF---
200052nd---
2001-DNF--
2002-11th-White jersey winner
2003-7th--
2004-3rd-1 stage win
200528th2nd-2 Giro stage wins
20061st--3 stage wins; overall victory
20093rd-4th-
20101st30th-1 Giro stage win; overall victory
2011-7th--
20125th25th--
2013--DNFWithdrew due to
201415th---
201551stDNF--
Data compiled from official race results.

Evaluation Amid Doping Era

Ivan Basso's career intersected prominently with cycling's doping scandals, particularly Operation Puerto, a 2006 investigation by Spanish authorities that uncovered a network led by Dr. supplying services to athletes, including cyclists preparing for the . Basso, identified by the codename "Birillo" in seized documents, admitted in May 2007 to contracting Fuentes for blood transfusions valued at €70,000 to enhance performance in the , paying an initial €15,000 in cash before the scandal halted the process. He maintained that he never received or used the prohibited substances, classifying his actions as "attempted doping" under World Anti-Doping Agency rules, supported by over 60 prior negative tests from the (UCI). This admission led to a two-year suspension from October 2007 to October 2008, during which he cooperated with investigators without implicating others. The Operation Puerto affair exemplified the era's pervasive practices, where autologous transfusions allowed riders to boost oxygen-carrying capacity without easy detection, a method rampant among top contenders from the late through the mid-2000s. Basso's exclusion from the —where he was a pre-race favorite—alongside figures like , contributed to the race's purge of nine riders and underscored systemic incentives: clean racing often yielded inferior results against doped competitors, as evidenced by retrospective admissions from and others dominating the period. Basso's second-place finish in the 2005 Tour behind Armstrong, later stripped for doping, and his strong climbing displays in prior years, fueled retrospective skepticism about the authenticity of his pre-ban results, though no of use during those events emerged. Upon return with Liquigas in 2009, Basso achieved a second victory in 2010 without recorded violations, placing third overall in the 2011 Giro and contributing to team successes amid stricter UCI protocols like the biological passport introduced in 2008. Critics, however, questioned the completeness of his post-ban redemption, noting the difficulty of verifying cleanliness in an era where micro-dosing evaded tests, and his 2006 Giro win—retained despite Puerto links—remains debated given the scandal's timing overlap with that race's preparation. In a 2025 reflection, Basso expressed profound , stating he lacked , prioritized over family, and viewed his actions as a failure, aligning with broader industry reckonings but not erasing the taint on his legacy. Basso's case illustrates causal dynamics of the doping era: high-stakes Grand Tours rewarded marginal physiological edges, pressuring riders toward forbidden methods, yet his documented intent and payment distinguish him from those denying involvement entirely. While serving his ban demonstrated accountability absent in some peers, empirical scrutiny tempers claims of untainted talent; his peak performances coincided with unchecked blood manipulation technologies, rendering absolute verification elusive and subordinating individual merits to the sport's collective ethical breach.

References

Add your contribution
Related Hubs
User Avatar
No comments yet.