Matt Rendell
Author of The Death of Marco Pantani: A Biography
About the Author
Matt Rendell survived Hodgkin's Disease and lecturing at British and Latvian universities before entering TV and print journalism
Image credit: Dailypeloton.com
Works by Matt Rendell
A Significant Other: Riding the Centenary Tour de France with Lance Armstrong (2004) 45 copies, 1 review
Kings of the Mountains: How Colombia's Cycling Heroes Changed Their Nation's History (2002) 18 copies
Olympic Gangster: The Legend of José Beyaert-Cycling Champion, Fortune Hunter and Outlaw (2009) 6 copies
Tagged
Common Knowledge
- Canonical name
- Rendell, Matt
- Gender
- male
- Short biography
- Matt Rendell was born 44 years ago in the English county of Kent. Born to Lancastrian parents, Rendell took three postgraduate degrees and “then being overqualified to do any work and used to living on a student scholarship” decided to become a writer.
He is the author of a number of books including “Kings of the Mountains - How Columbia's Cycling Heroes changed Their Nation's History”; “A Significant Other - Riding the Centenary Tour de France with Lance Armstrong”, a look at the 2003 Tour through the eyes of US Postal domestique Victor Hugo Peña; and the award winning “The Death of Marco Pantani”, and is a member of the UK Television broadcaster ITV's Tour presentation team. Matt Rendell lives in Calne, Wiltshire, England. [from dailypeloton.com] - Nationality
- UK
- Map Location
- UK
Members
Reviews
Although I love professional cycling, despite its flaws, I have delayed reading Matt Rendell’s biography of the Italian climber Marco Pantani, who won the Tour de France and the Giro in 1998, and died of a massive cocaine overdose in a hotel room six years later, dogged by (well-founded) drugs scandals. The book got fine reviews, and Rendell knows the sport well.The reason I put off reading it was that I knew it would depress me.
The best way to summarise this is through a couple of lines show more in the final chapter:
"Looking back, Marco’s successes, like any number of world records, gold medals, and winning sequences in recent sporting history have a phantom quality. … They weren’t events at all, but phantasmagorical experiences with no clearly definable reality that existed chiefly in the emotions they caused in millions of indivdual minds. The emotion most associated with Marco is euphoria, yet we know now that it was triggered by the poisons that flowed through his veins and made his flamboyant style possible."
It’s worth exploring this further. One of the most exciting sights in cycling is a climber attacking the field and gaining the minutes he needs to win - and Pantani’s stage win at Les Deux Alpes in 1998, when he attacked on a climb in atrocious conditions, descended recklessly, then climbed again, to make enough time on Ullrich to seal his Tour victory - was one of the most exciting days of racing in my lifetime.
But in a (literally) forensic analysis, Rendell demonstrates that Pantani had been blood doping through the use of EPO almost from the start of his professional career. At the same time, he kicks away one of the cycling fans’ supports. Almost all of the successful cyclists in the 1990s used EPO. So the fan’s defence is that EPO use must have levelled the playing field. Rendell suggests that athletes respond differently to EPO, and that Pantani’s success might just suggest that his body was better attuned to the drug.
More at:
http://aroundtheedges.wordpress.com/2009/02/27/reaching-the-heights-touching-the... show less
The best way to summarise this is through a couple of lines show more in the final chapter:
"Looking back, Marco’s successes, like any number of world records, gold medals, and winning sequences in recent sporting history have a phantom quality. … They weren’t events at all, but phantasmagorical experiences with no clearly definable reality that existed chiefly in the emotions they caused in millions of indivdual minds. The emotion most associated with Marco is euphoria, yet we know now that it was triggered by the poisons that flowed through his veins and made his flamboyant style possible."
It’s worth exploring this further. One of the most exciting sights in cycling is a climber attacking the field and gaining the minutes he needs to win - and Pantani’s stage win at Les Deux Alpes in 1998, when he attacked on a climb in atrocious conditions, descended recklessly, then climbed again, to make enough time on Ullrich to seal his Tour victory - was one of the most exciting days of racing in my lifetime.
But in a (literally) forensic analysis, Rendell demonstrates that Pantani had been blood doping through the use of EPO almost from the start of his professional career. At the same time, he kicks away one of the cycling fans’ supports. Almost all of the successful cyclists in the 1990s used EPO. So the fan’s defence is that EPO use must have levelled the playing field. Rendell suggests that athletes respond differently to EPO, and that Pantani’s success might just suggest that his body was better attuned to the drug.
More at:
http://aroundtheedges.wordpress.com/2009/02/27/reaching-the-heights-touching-the... show less
Overall an enjoyable read, but not without some flaws. Matt Rendell's style is likeabke and his deliberately anecdotal account of the TdF, it has some excellent insights, facts and character stories. However, it does read rather as a knowing reminder to someone who already knows all the details, rather than being genuinely informative.
Also, there are far too many digressions into lists of stage start and finishes that for most practical purposes add nothing to the information conveyed and show more waste space that could have described the events in a more rounded way.
That said, I enjoyed the book as far as it goes (2006), and kudos to Matt Rendell for naming a chapter after a Les Zeppelin album. show less
Also, there are far too many digressions into lists of stage start and finishes that for most practical purposes add nothing to the information conveyed and show more waste space that could have described the events in a more rounded way.
That said, I enjoyed the book as far as it goes (2006), and kudos to Matt Rendell for naming a chapter after a Les Zeppelin album. show less
More a book about self-destruction than a book about cycling, although if you aren't familiar with Pantani, you may not find yourself drawn into the story.
Marco Pantani was the best cyclist in the world in 1998, winning the Tour de France and the Tour of Italy. He was also one of the most exciting cyclists of recent generations, winning with spectacular, risky accelerations during the hardest mountain stages. His fame in Italy transcended cycling and sports.
He was busted for doping the show more following year while leading the Tour of Italy, and, if Rendell's investigations are valid, all of Pantani's professional achievements are tainted by consistent use of EPO to enhance the oxygen-carrying capacity of his blood.
Pantani did persist in his cycling career after the bust, famously winning a stage of the Tour de France on Mt. Ventoux against Lance Armstrong when the two reached the finish stretch alone, and Armstrong chose not to contest the finish. But Pantani was on the way down, professionally and personally, while Armstrong continued to ascend. He became a heavy coke user, binging repeatedly until finally barricading himself in a hotel room and coking himself to death.
It's a well-researched and well-told, unfortunately true, dark story of self-destruction. And you'll learn more than you ever wanted to know about blood testing. show less
Marco Pantani was the best cyclist in the world in 1998, winning the Tour de France and the Tour of Italy. He was also one of the most exciting cyclists of recent generations, winning with spectacular, risky accelerations during the hardest mountain stages. His fame in Italy transcended cycling and sports.
He was busted for doping the show more following year while leading the Tour of Italy, and, if Rendell's investigations are valid, all of Pantani's professional achievements are tainted by consistent use of EPO to enhance the oxygen-carrying capacity of his blood.
Pantani did persist in his cycling career after the bust, famously winning a stage of the Tour de France on Mt. Ventoux against Lance Armstrong when the two reached the finish stretch alone, and Armstrong chose not to contest the finish. But Pantani was on the way down, professionally and personally, while Armstrong continued to ascend. He became a heavy coke user, binging repeatedly until finally barricading himself in a hotel room and coking himself to death.
It's a well-researched and well-told, unfortunately true, dark story of self-destruction. And you'll learn more than you ever wanted to know about blood testing. show less
A genuine tragedy of modern times. Rendell superbly accounts for the rapid rise and fall of one of the most exciting cyclists of the recent era.
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- Works
- 8
- Members
- 299
- Popularity
- #78,482
- Rating
- 3.6
- Reviews
- 6
- ISBNs
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