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Mario Cipollini reveals that his mother sawed his bike in two to stop him riding away as a child

Italian sprint legend was interviewed this week to mark his fiftieth birthday

 

Mario Cipollini turned 50 this week, and to mark the occasion, the flamboyant former sprinter gave an interview to Italian newspaper, Il Giornale. As you may imagine, there were some gems in it.

The winner of a record 42 Giro d’Italia stages plus 12 in the Tour de France and three in the Vuelta, as well as both Milan-San Remo and the road world championship in 2002, the rider from Tuscany revealed that his love of cycling had got him into trouble with his mother from an early age.

“I caused her a lot of headaches,” he said. “At just six years of age, I escaped on a woman’s bike and headed towards Lucca. When a friend of hers spotted me she went and told her and then she called me.

“My mother even sawed the bike in two. Once she even drove over it with her car to break it. But it didn’t scare me; she was obstinate, but so am I.”

He revealed that the race he puts above all others is Milan-San Remo, one that he only won on one occasion, describing it as “my dream.”

Cipollini said: “It’s a bastard of a race, but fascinating as no other.”

Asked about the 2017 race, which took place last Saturday and where Michal Kwiatkowski pipped Peter Sagan in the sprint having followed an attack from the world champion on the Poggio, Cipollini said: “It happens. It’s a cruel race.

“Moser and Saronni rode it many times but each only won once. Me too.  Moreno Argentin, who was one of the greatest Classic-hunters of all time, never made it his.

“Peter was only beaten by himself, for being too careful. If only he’d gone [in the sprint] a moment later,” added Cipollini, who described Kwiatkowski as a “great rider, strong and intelligent.”

> Michal Kwiatkowski claims Strava KOM on Poggio on way to Milan-San Remo win

He was scathing in his opinion of the current state of Italian cycling, however.

“It’s gone,” he said. “We are fourth world. We’ve only have Vincenzo Nibali, the only real talent we’ve got. As for the rest, they are only extras.” Asked if that included Fabio Aru, he said: “Give us a sign. We’re here, waiting.”

Cipollini spoke about his family including his brother Cesare whose son, Edoardo, aged 11, is proving to be a promising cyclist.

“He [Cesare] was the first cyclist in the family,” he said. “He’s 10 years older then me, we never saw much of each other, because we were too busy. Today, thanks to Edardo, we’ve become much closer. Edo is a little talent.”

He added that the youngster worshipped him. “When he rides he absolutely wants to be uncle Mario and on a Cipollini – as in the bike.”

Asked which former team mates he remained close to, he singled out Mario Scirea, now sports director at UAE Team Emirates, and Giuseppe Saronni, with whom he said he had “a special rapport.”

But when he was quizzed about which rival he got on with best, he replied: “I don’t get on with anyone who was my rival.”

He was similarly uncompromising when asked which defeat had hurt him the most.

“All defeats hurt, no exceptions,” he replied.

He admitted that the biggest mistake of his career never completing the Tour de France, typically abandoning the race when it hit the mountains.

“I didn’t understand anything,” he confessed. “When I went as a spectator to Paris to cheer on the triumph of Vincenzo Nibali [in 2014], the most under-rated Italian champion in history, I understood the scale of the Tour and the scale of the mistake I’d made.”

Finally, Cipollini revealed that he has two challenges he wants to win, the first concerning the brand of bikes that bears his name.

“I’d like to supply a WorldTour team,” he said.

The other? “I need to sort something out with the La Gazzetta dello Sport,” he disclosed. “It’s a courtroom battle, and I want to win it.”

That, presumably, is a veiled reference to an article from 2013, in which the newspaper alleged that he had been a client of Eufemiano Fuentes, the banned Spanish doctor at the centre of the Operacion Puerto doping ring.

> Mario Cipollini denies Fuentes links after Gazzetta dello Sport publishes 'proof' of doping

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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12 comments

Avatar
ktache | 7 years ago
2 likes

I tried to grab that picture from bikesnob's site yesterday.  I failed.  I know there are others of an oiled up Mario.  I do enjoy BikesnobNY's obsession with SuperMario.

I must say, I always loved the way, in my early TdF watching days, that the Saeco train would emerge, with the rest of the peleton unable to counter, and then the outrageos Mario would pop out to win.

Avatar
Russell Orgazoid | 7 years ago
0 likes

White shorts

Avatar
davel replied to Russell Orgazoid | 7 years ago
2 likes
Plasterer's Radio wrote:

White shorts

Oh, would you prefer him to remove the shorts? SuperMario wears what we wants, when he wants....

Avatar
Boss Hogg | 7 years ago
2 likes

Legend!

Avatar
Jackson | 7 years ago
3 likes

Yep he's looking pretty good for 50, especially since he was on 20 a day even as a pro

Avatar
ktache | 7 years ago
1 like

I don't think it was strictly perscription.

Avatar
Leviathan | 7 years ago
4 likes

50? Whoever his 'doctor' is I'll have some of what he is prescribing. 

Avatar
steviemarco | 7 years ago
0 likes

Absolutley love his bikes. Have one and another on order. I was told by a Cannondale Evo rider not long ago, after he had a little ride on my RB 800, 'so thats what a bike is supposed to ride like'. Says it all really, for me anyway. Hand made in Italy too none of that mass produced, over priced Tiawanese rubbish (well they're not rubbish just some are very over priced for off the peg frames IMO).

Avatar
beezus fufoon replied to steviemarco | 7 years ago
2 likes

steviemarco wrote:

Absolutley love his bikes. Have one and another on order. I was told by a Cannondale Evo rider not long ago, after he had a little ride on my RB 800, 'so thats what a bike is supposed to ride like'. Says it all really, for me anyway. Hand made in Italy too none of that mass produced, over priced Tiawanese rubbish (well they're not rubbish just some are very over priced for off the peg frames IMO).

which one have you ordered?

I love the translations on the website

"who wants only a bike - he can sit elsewhere"

"for the pistard that wants only the best"

and one for Cippo's mum,

"handle with care - is ready to explode"

Avatar
steviemarco replied to beezus fufoon | 7 years ago
1 like

beezus fufoon wrote:

steviemarco wrote:

Absolutley love his bikes. Have one and another on order. I was told by a Cannondale Evo rider not long ago, after he had a little ride on my RB 800, 'so thats what a bike is supposed to ride like'. Says it all really, for me anyway. Hand made in Italy too none of that mass produced, over priced Tiawanese rubbish (well they're not rubbish just some are very over priced for off the peg frames IMO).

which one have you ordered?

I love the translations on the website

"who wants only a bike - he can sit elsewhere"

"for the pistard that wants only the best"

and one for Cippo's mum,

"handle with care - is ready to explode"

I have an RB 0.8K (RB 800) and ordered a Bond disc as they have a more relaxed geometry.

Avatar
beezus fufoon replied to steviemarco | 7 years ago
1 like

steviemarco wrote:

beezus fufoon wrote:

steviemarco wrote:

Absolutley love his bikes. Have one and another on order. I was told by a Cannondale Evo rider not long ago, after he had a little ride on my RB 800, 'so thats what a bike is supposed to ride like'. Says it all really, for me anyway. Hand made in Italy too none of that mass produced, over priced Tiawanese rubbish (well they're not rubbish just some are very over priced for off the peg frames IMO).

which one have you ordered?

I love the translations on the website

"who wants only a bike - he can sit elsewhere"

"for the pistard that wants only the best"

and one for Cippo's mum,

"handle with care - is ready to explode"

I have an RB 0.8K (RB 800) and ordered a Bond disc as they have a more relaxed geometry.

yeah - that's the one I was eyeing too!

Avatar
beezus fufoon | 7 years ago
0 likes

Che cazzo e? Freud would have a field day!

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