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Italian cycling star Vincenzo Nibali admitted his guilt on Sunday nearly six weeks after being thrown off Spain's Vuelta for cheating by holding on to his Astana team's car. Speaking after his maiden victory in the Tour of Lombardy, the final classic 'monument' of the season, the Astana team leader and 2014 Tour de France winner admitted: "It was a serious mistake."
Professional cyclists regularly bend the rules of the sport and race officials often turn a blind eye when they momentarily hold on to a team car, or cycle ferociously in the slipstream of a car in a bid to rejoin the peloton.
But Nibali's gesture in one of the sport's three major Tours was far too blatant to ignore.
Judges reviewed the evidence and decided to throw him off the race on August 23, causing the Italian champion to sit at home and contemplate a mistake that blackened an otherwise respectable career.
"For every cyclist there are happy times and there are other moments that are not so happy," he added. "The whole episode got me really angry. I wanted to get back on my bike to show what I was really made of. It gave me a whole new motivation."
Nibali, known as 'Il Squalo (The Shark)' for his incisive attacks, knuckled down and the results started pouring in.

Copyright Agence France-Presse, 2015

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