Former cycling film actor accused of motor doping at French stage race dramatically flees as teammate knocks down race director with van
In a barely believable chain of events, it's emerged that Giovambattista
Iera - a former elite cyclist and respected restaurant co-founder who
counts Mark Cavendish among his Instagram followers - has been banned from
his team for "intolerable behaviour"...
by JACK SEXTY
UPDATED SUN, MAY 26, 2024 17:11
You may have heard the terms 'mechanical doping' or 'motor doping' in the context of cycling, where a cheating rider tricks out their bike with some
form of assistance to reduce their effort needed to pedal, thus gaining an illegal advantage... but how about (alleged) motor doping committed by a
former elite cyclist and actor in the classic cycling film 'Le Vélo de Ghislain Lambert', who is seemingly pally with Astana team staff and
riders, and whose hasty and dramatic attempt to flee interrogation saw his teammate run over a race director with his van? It's a new one on us.
It's hard to know where to start, but we'll try to unravel this in some
kind of order. The drama began some time before the final stage of Les
Routes de l'Oise, a four-stage amateur road race held annually in northern France, when riders reported hearing unusual noises in the peloton. The
noises were said to be coming from the bike of bib number 88, 53-year-old Giovambattista Iera of the AC Bellaingeoise team, and pictures circulating
on social media appear to show a bonus wire popping out of his Lapierre
bike.
The race director, Frédéric Lenormand, told local press: “As early as Saturday, there were suspicions of mechanical doping concerning this rider, which were brought to our attention by riders in the peloton.
“Suspicions were confirmed on Sunday. This Monday morning [the final day of racing], we wanted to check his bike. He was at the back of the pack. He
got back on his bike and fled, we chased after him. By the time we got to
him he had loaded the bike into his van.”
What happened next was far from comical unlike the rest of this debacle, as
one of Iera’s teammates is accused of driving with Lenormand on the bonnet
of his van for up to 300 metres, leaving the shocked race director "scared
for [his] life" and with an injured knee and ankle, before the teammate
(who is also believed to be Iera’s coach) eventually shook him off the van and drove away.
"I didn’t want him to get away", said Lenormand.
It's reported that Iera was sought by local police, and members of his team were questioned this week over what happened. Eventually Iera handed
himself in on Tuesday, facing charges of attempted fraud and aggravated assault.
According to local police, and reported by Le Bonhomme Picard (link is external), Iera has since been exonerated in relation to the incident
involving Lenormand.
His teammate, however, has been charged with aggravated wilful violence
against the race director, and will appear in court in January 2025.
The public prosecutor in Beauvais also confirmed that a separate
investigation is ongoing into Iera’s alleged mechanical fraud, which could lead to a potential five-year prison sentence and maximum fine of €375,000.
“The procedure relating to the attempted fraud linked to the use of a disputed bicycle has been separated and will continue in the preliminary
form in particular in order to recover this material, to carry out the expertise, and to characterise the involvement of each person in the
commission of the offence,” the prosecutor said this week.
AC Bellaingeoise were also banned from the race, with all results from
other team members chalked off.
A statement from the race organisers said: "Following suspicion of
mechanical doping of bib number 88 Giovambattista Iera, the organisation
asked to have his bike checked.
"This person immediately left the starting line to return to his truck to
leave the scene. The vehicle endangered people in the organisation.
"This rider's team, AC Bellaingeoise, was excluded from the Routes de
l'Oise."
In response, the team's management were quick to deny theirs and other
riders' knowledge of any cheating within the team, manager Daphnée Bos
telling actu.fr (link is external): "It’s a real betrayal. He fled his responsibilities and we bear the shame.
"Even if the Routes de l'Oise is an important cycling event, we did not
think that he would adopt this intolerable behaviour for an amateur race.
“The rest of the team is in a terrible state.”
Bos said Iera and his Venezuelan coach were "immediately excluded" from the team following the bizarre incident which, on top of the charges brought against him by the French authorities, could prove damaging considering
Iera's connections within the sport of cycling and outside of it.
Now a restaurant owner, who co-founded the Italian Trattoria restaurant
chain with a number of premises in the US, Iera lives in Miami according to
his Strava account (link is external), which is now littered with sarcastic comments underneath his latest upload, Saturday's stage of Les Routes de l'Oise.
Iera's Instagram account, which is now set to private, reveals he has connections to a number of pro cyclists, particularly staff and team
members at Astana Qazaqstan, who he has been pictured riding with.
Ironically, Iera was also a supporting cast member in the classic 2001
cycling film Le Vélo de Ghislain Lambert, in which he played Fabrice
Bouillon under the name Jean-Baptiste Iera. The film tells the tale of a Belgian cyclist born on the same day as Eddy Merckx, who goes to
extraordinary lengths to be a top pro and emulate his hero. If Iera did do
what he was accused of doing, it would have made for an interesting
sub-plot...
It's not the first time we've heard rumours or reported on actual evidence
of mechanical doping in the amateur or professional ranks of course
(although this one surely tops the lot): memorable cases include former
Belgian cyclocross racer Femke Van den Driessche, the only top-tier pro to
be caught when a concealed motor was found in her bike for the 2016 World Championships, and a 73-year-old who was caught with a hidden motor in his bike's hub at a French hill climb event, propelling him to a lofty 16th
place. You can fill your boots in our feature titled a brief history of
motor doping in cycling, which is surely now due an update.
Regarding the peculiar case of Mr Iera... surely a film needs to be made
about it?
<
https://road.cc/content/news/former-actor-accused-motor-doping-flees-race-308487>
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