What should have been a day in which the Tour de France mountain battle occupied everyone’s thoughts was overshadowed by the shock news on Monday Ivan Basso has testicular cancer.
The 37-year-old Italian stunned the gathered media when he arrived at a press conference in Pau meant to be about his Tinkoff-Saxo team leader, Alberto Contador, and dropped a bombshell about his health.
“Unfortunately, I have a bad announcement to give to you guys,” said Basso, a former Giro d’Italia winner. “In stage No. 5, I had a really small crash and on the crash I touched my testicle on the saddle. For a few days, I felt a small pain. Yesterday [Sunday] our doctor spoke with the doctor of the Tour and we decided to go to make a special analysis to the hospital. The examination gave me bad news: I have a small cancer in the left testicle.”
Photo: AFP
“So it’s easy to understand that I have to stop and go back to Italy,” he said. “Our doctor is already in contact with the specialist in Italy to fix the operation as soon as possible.”
Contador himself led fellow riders past and present in offering their support to Basso.
“It has been a very tough day for the whole team; we never imagined something like that,” the Spaniard said. “For me it has been very hard because over the last 180 days we spent 120 days together and we have been very close to each other.”
“On behalf of the whole team we want to give him the best wishes in the world,” Movistar’s Alejandro Valverde chipped in. “It’s a shame that these things happen, but that’s life and he has our sympathy and support.”
Even disgraced former champion cyclist Lance Armstrong offered his sympathies.
“Thinking about @ivanbasso and wishing him the very best as he embarks on his cancer journey. #ivanSTRONG!!” he wrote on Twitter.
Armstrong was diagnosed with testicular cancer in 1996, but recovered to go on and dominate the Tour de France — before being stripped of his seven straight titles from 1999 to 2005 for doping — while he also set up a charitable foundation called Livestrong, which raised money to battle the disease.
Basso was once one of Armstrong’s great rivals, finishing third behind the American in 2004 and second during Armstrong’s last Tour win in 2005.
However, he also served a doping ban over his links to drug-doctor Eufemiano Fuentes when he was found to have “attempted” to cheat.
Speaking before the Basso news dropped, other riders were looking forward to the battle ahead.
Race leader Chris Froome said on the eve of the first mountain stage yesterday that it is now up to his rivals to attack him.
“It’s up to other teams to put pressure on us, this is the heart of the race now,” Froome said. “All the action’s going to be happening now, we’re going to see who’s done their homework and who’s going to do what in the mountains. This is where the real race for the yellow jersey starts.”
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