Twenty years ago, in the winter of 2006, a doctor related to cycling who hid his name in anonymity made a mental account with ABC about the benefits that Eufemiano Fuentes could obtain with his business of blood bags and the different
doping treatments organized in refrigerator chests. He had a turnover of around one million euros a year, which brought him enough dividends to appear on the famous 'Falciani list', the list of names published by the computer engineer Hervé Falciani on alleged tax evaders who had undeclared bank accounts in Switzerland.
"How are you going to retire with a turnover of one million a year? Operation Puerto is not going to end Eufemiano. He will continue in one way or another in the sport. Sure," said the anonymous voice. Twenty years have passed since the largest police raid in our country, perhaps in the world, related to doping in sport and the prognosis was simple and accurate. Anti-doping authorities leading investigations, proposing sanctions and fighting fraud in sport still think the same thing: Eufemiano Fuentes, now 70, has not retired. He is still excited by two pleasures: money and risk. ...
From the past another legend returned,
Michele Ferrari, 71 years old, millionaire, the doctor of Lance Armstrong and so many others. A celebrity in the underworld of doping, of which it is difficult to find a drinkable (? useable) photograph because he has not allowed himself to be seen or portrayed in forty years of practice outside the law. Except for the trials he has had to face, there are no images of the one who always won, Ferrari.
Spanish anti-doping sources suspect that the Italian doctor has returned to cycling and by extension to sport to, in the shadows, as always, instruct his clients in doping plans. Everything in words, nothing in writing.