At the
1924 Summer Olympics, Kovács, a Hungarian judge, made a controversial call in a fencing match, siding with
France over Italy. An Italian fencer, Aldo Boni, verbally attacked the judge for the ruling and refused to apologize when asked. Santelli was called in as a witness to Boni's outbreak, and the Italian team was forced to resign from the competition. Once in Italy, Adolfo Cotronei, a writer and journalist from Naples, who worked for
Italian papers such as Paese, Pungolo, Don Marzio, Mattino,
Corriere della Sera and
Gazzetta dello Sport accused Italo Santelli of speaking out against Boni to remove him from the competition, supposedly fearing they would eliminate his adopted nation of
Hungary, who would go on to take the bronze at the
1924 Games. In one of his writings, the journalist made remarks wholly detrimental to Santelli. So, he was challenged to a
duel by Italo Santelli's son, Giorgio. Under the rules of the "code duello",
Giorgio Santelli defended his father's honor and won the duel by delivering a blow to Cotronei's cheek, severing a nerve under his left eye (Cotronei's eye was irreparably damaged during that Summer). The challenge took place on 28 August 1924, when Giorgio Santelli was a skilled 27-year-old fencer, while his opponent was just a circa 46-year-old man of letters. Santelli and Cotronei met again and made their peace eight years later, at the
1932 Games in
Los Angeles. Italo Santelli went on to coach numerous
notable fencing students over the course of his career. Italo Santelli died on 8 February 1945, at the age of 78, in
Livorno, Italy. ==References==