Nibali calls for swift Contador verdict
Sicilian remembers first visit to Etna



Vincenzo Nibali (Liquigas-Doimo) has called for a speedy resol♉ution to the Alberto Contador affair. The Spanish rider returned an adverse analytical finding for Clenbuterol at the Tour de France but a verdict has yet to be returned on his case.
“I only hope that the sporting justice system can operate more quickly,” Nibali told Gazzetta dello Sport. “You can’t be stopped from riding for a year and then exonerated, thus paying a price for🦩 nothing✤, as happened to [Franco] Pellizotti.”
Nibali’s Liquigas teammate Pelizotti was sidelined in May after his UCI biological passport showed suspicious values, but he was recently cleared by the Italian Olyℱmpic Committee 🐭(CONI).
Regardless of whether Contador is cleared to ride next year’s Tour de France, Nibali is adamant that the ce𓂃ntrepiece of his season will be an assault on the Giro d’Italia. The 2011 edition of the corsa rosa is parti✤cularly enticing to Nibali given that it will give him the chance to showcase his talent in front of his home support in Sicily.
“I’m aiming for t♒he Giro,” he said. “There’ll be the Sicilian stage with the finish at Etna.”
Stage 9 of the Giro brings the gruppo from Messina to a finish on the s꧃lopes of Mount Etna and Nibali will be hoping to reach the top in significantly better shape than he did the first time he tackled the volcano over 15 years ago.
“When I was small I rode up Etna from the Linguaglossa side with my father and a big group of cyclo-tourists,” Nibali explained. “Tꦫhat time, since I didn&💫rsquo;t have anything left, I arrived at the summit attached by a rope to the car that my mother was driving. But I was 10 years old…”
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The Vuelta a España winner has been off the bike since the Tour of Lomba൩rdy two weeks ago and will spend the first part of November in Sicily. Nibali will begin his 2011 preparation in earnest at Liguigas’ first training camp ꦜfrom December 9-22 in Sardinia.
“For me, 2011 will be a new year. The odometer goes back to zero, as does the emotions-meter and the dre๊ams-meter,” Nibali said. “As for cycling, I don’t know. I hope it will be a calm year.”

Barry Ryan was Head of Features at Cyclingnews. He has covered professional cycling since 2010, reporting from the Tour de France, Giro d&rsꩵquo;Italia and events from Argentina to Japan. His writing has appeared in The Independent, Procycling and Cycling Plus. He is the author of , pub𒁏lished by Gill Books.