Marco "Il Pirata" Pantani would have celebrated his 44th birthday recently had he not passed away on Valentine's Day of 2004. We found this graffito scrawled on a building in Romagna (his home region) in 2005.
This memorial on the Mortirolo climb was sponsored by Bianchi in memory of his exploits, many of them astride a Bianchi bicycle. The inscription here reads:
To you cyclists. To you who pass by I ask a small gesture, a
little greeting, a little thought for this great man who liked to make us
dream. Let’s give homage to the Pirate! Let us remember that this is his climb,
his peak, his way to make us experience emotions we experienced only as
children. He will never be forgotten!
This monument stands atop Colle Fauniera, another scene of exploits by The Pirate.
When she learned of Pantani's death, Heather Reid composed this about the man who thrilled so many of us:
In Memoriam: Marco Pantani
It was just one of many slogans scrawled onto the homemade
banners that floated above a sea of cheering tifosi gathered atop the
Passo Mortirolo. But its truth rang
though the chaos and sticks in my head today.
It said, “Pirata—farci sognare” make us dream.
This is the precious gift of sports heroes. Marco did make us dream—he made us dream
about what humanity could be. He was a
shy, elfin, bald guy who showed that ordinary men could fly... When Marco was
in the race and the road tilted upwards, even the cynical eyes of wrinkled
Italian men sparkled with joyous anticipation.
He made anything, everything seem possible for all of us. It’s as if he was a god from Olympus, holding
up some magic mirror that reflected the potential in us all.
And so it seemed appropriate, a year or two ago, when I read
that he was training alone in those Olympian mountains of Greece. It was right that he escape to those lofty,
dreamy, peaks—because the world below had done nothing but drag him down.
A jeep strayed into his high-speed path on a supposedly
closed race-course, mangled his leg and nearly took his life. But he rose from those ashes, first to sing
poetry on the broadcast of a Giro he should have won but couldn’t take part in,
later to pedal perilously close to the heavens, winning the Giro and the Tour,
resurrecting our dreams again.
Then a legal scandal pulled him down. Guilty or innocent, he was chosen to bear the
brunt of a massive backlash against the drugs that had infested his sport. For every would-be eagle inspired by his
soaring, there seemed to be two vultures waiting to feed upon his wounds. And as the wounds multiplied so did the
vultures—you could see them pecking at his soul in that last, valiant, return
to the Giro.
Well, they, we, finally killed him off. Today Marco was found dead in a hotel. He didn’t die at the peak of his beauty; the
modern sports machine had been sucking the life from him for years. Maybe he decided to take the last part
himself.
I’d like to imagine that he’s really still in those hills,
escaped from the world of big-time sport, soaring among the peaks of Olympian
gods. You may say that’s just a dream,
but dreams are one of the best things we have.
And Marco made us dream.
--Heather Reid
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