Features, News, Riccardo Riccò -

Riccardo Riccò receives a lifetime ban

Supported by

Riccardo Riccò has been handed a lifetime doping ban by the Italian national anti-doping organization.

The ban is the latest in a series of penalties levied by anti-doping authorities against the 37-year-old Italian, who has not raced professionally since 2011.

After turning heads with a promising start to his career that saw him take a total of three stage wins and second overall at the Giro d’Italia before he turned 25, Riccò tested positive for CERA at the 2008 Tour de France and received a two-year ban. He returned to racing following the ban but in 2011, he was hospitalized after allegedly undergoing a blood transfusion with infected blood. He was subsequently suspended for 12 years. In 2014, however, he was caught by police while trying to purchase EPO and testosterone in a parking lot.

On Monday, the Italian anti-doping organization announced a lifetime ban for Riccò, who it noted is “currently not registered” with a racing license. Riccò was also ordered to pay a fine of €4,000 and “costs of the proceedings” amounting to €378.

Riccò confessed to doping in an interview with the Corriere della Sera in August. He is no longer involved in the sport, and now runs an ice cream shop.

The post Riccardo Riccò receives a lifetime ban appeared first on CyclingTips.


Tags