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Alessandro Petacchi announces retirement with immediate effect

AleJet draws curtains on career in which he became member of select group to win points jerseys in all three Grand Tours

Italian sprint legend Alessandro Petacchi has announced his retirement with immediate effect at the age of 39, following nearly two decades as a pro in which he won alm 48 Grand Tour stages – nine of those in the 2004 Giro d’Italia alone – as well as Milan-San Remo and Paris-Tours.

Petacchi, nicknamed Ale-Jet, is one of just four cyclists to have won the points jerseys in all three Grand Tours, the others being Eddy Merckx, Laurent Jalabert and Djamolidine Abdoujaparov – Mark Cavendish missed out on becoming the fifth member of that elite club by just one point last year.

In a statement released through his Lampre-Merida team, Petacchi said:

“Paris-Roubaix closed an early part of the season in which I raced a lot, trying to be protagonist in traditional appointments, such Milano-Sanremo, and in competition for me less usual as Paris-Roubaix.

“I approached all these races in the whole professional way, driven by the enthusiasm that Galbusera family and the new sponsors gave to the team. I’m aware I gave my best, as I always did in the 18 seasons as professional cyclist.

“My career has been full of satisfactions and enriched by all the most important victories that a rider like me could ever aimed to. At the threshold of the 200 victories in career, I feel my life reaches a peculiar moment, a turning point in which I perceive the need to find a new dimension and to have more time to dedicate to my family. These considerations induce me to the decision to pause my career.

“I always put first the professional side of my job, honouring the efforts made by sponsors, such Lampre, Merida and all the other partner of the team: I really thank them for the trust they gave me in these marvellous years.

“I feel it’s time to dedicate time for myself and to go in search for new spurs.

“By now, I want to say goodbye to all the cycling fans, considering that maybe there will be the chance to come back some day to be part on the world that gave me so much, offering my experience to the new cycling generations.

“I’d like to thank the team, the sponsors, the management, the staff and athletes and everyone that supported me during my career, confirming by now my availability to support, when necessary, my mates and the team with advices and my experience.

Your sincerely,

Alessandro Petacchi”

The sprinter, who comes from La Spezia, Liguria, leaves the sport just a week before a preliminary hearing is held relating to the Mantua investigation linked to the Lampre team, although much of its focus relates to the period before he joined it in 2010.

His name does not figure among those potentially facing charges, although in that year he was interviewed as part of a separate investigation based in Padua.

Petacchi himself received a retroactive ban in 2008 and was stripped of results including five Giro stage wins after testing positive for an excessive amount of the asthma drug, Salbutamol.

He was permitted to use it under a therapeutic use exemption, but the Court of Arbitration for Sport, while acknowledging he had not intended to cheat, said he had failed to use appropriate caution to ensure he kept within the appropriate dosage.

Announcement of his retirement also comes less than a fortnight before the Giro d’Italia gets under way in Naples, with Lampre-Merida’s challenge in sprint stages likely to be focused on Roberto Ferrari, signed this year from Androni Giocattoli-Venezuela.

Simon joined road.cc as news editor in 2009 and is now the site’s community editor, acting as a link between the team producing the content and our readers. A law and languages graduate, published translator and former retail analyst, he has reported on issues as diverse as cycling-related court cases, anti-doping investigations, the latest developments in the bike industry and the sport’s biggest races. Now back in London full-time after 15 years living in Oxford and Cambridge, he loves cycling along the Thames but misses having his former riding buddy, Elodie the miniature schnauzer, in the basket in front of him.

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7 comments

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NeilG83 | 10 years ago
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I thought the investigations into Lampre were into events from 2009 and before; which is before Petacchi joined the team.
He is most probably retiring because he hasn't been chosen for Lampre's team for the Giro or the Tour.

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Nick T | 10 years ago
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Farewell Ale, you gave us some beautiful racing. It's a shame when a man in the twilight of his career decides to retire from cycling that the drugs accusations come out. The timing isn't all that strange, it's a GT in a fortnight and can you blame him if he doesn't feel up to it? The way I see it, he's 39 and nowhere near as fast as he once was, let the investigators decide wether he was involved in anything but until then, let the man retire in peace - he's a legend of the sport.

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Gkam84 replied to Nick T | 10 years ago
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Nick T wrote:

Farewell Ale, you gave us some beautiful racing. It's a shame when a man in the twilight of his career decides to retire from cycling that the drugs accusations come out. The timing isn't all that strange, it's a GT in a fortnight and can you blame him if he doesn't feel up to it? The way I see it, he's 39 and nowhere near as fast as he once was, let the investigators decide wether he was involved in anything but until then, let the man retire in peace - he's a legend of the sport.

Exactly. I could not be bothered getting into an argument with others, so shall just agree with the above  4

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joebee9870 | 10 years ago
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Its Merida I feel for as they have joined up with a team with a poor reputation. Hope they don't suffer with that association.

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Decster | 10 years ago
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Must be a doping case (Padova) coming soon and the team told him to retire before he gets the sack.

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theclaw | 10 years ago
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good riddance. perhaps the rest of Lampre could kindly retire with immediate effect as well.

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arrieredupeleton | 10 years ago
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Strange timing and surely related to one of the two investigations that are on-going.

I remember he was unstoppable in the Tour in 2003 - think he won 4 stages. However, I can't help but think it's another one of the old guard of chemically enhanced riders leaving the sport and that is no bad thing.

Yours sincerely

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