Team
Alstare Suzuki rider Michel Fabrizio left the
10th round of the World Superbike Championship
at Nurburgring in Germany with no points after
being 'struck on the arm' on the opening lap
of race one.
He made a good
start to race one from the third-row of the
grid, but was hit on the opening lap: At first,
the impact didn't bother him and he was able
to charge through the field and take fifth place
by half-race distance. But then his arm began
to swell and he was unable to control the throttle
properly. As the pain increased, the Italian
dropped down the order and finished just outside
the points in 16th place.
Carlos Checa (Ducati)
won the race comfortably with Marco Melandri
(Yamaha) second and Noriyuki Haga (Aprilia)
in third.
After the race,
Fabrizio went to the Clinica Mobile where he
had his right arm X-Rayed. Fortunately, nothing
was broken, but the swelling indicated some
damage to a tendon or muscle. He had some painkillers
before going out on the grid for race two -
which was delayed as the organisers waited to
see if the rain would come down. When it did,
all riders changed to wet tyres and went out
for their inspection laps. The rain got harder
and soon there were rivulets of water running
across the track and deep puddles throughout
the 5.137 kilometre circuit.
Fabrizio and the
rest of the field started the race cautiously,
but it soon became clear that the conditions
were worsening, he struggled for five laps before
he and the Alstare Suzuki Team decided that
it would be better to pull in than risk a crash
and a possible injury.
The race was won
by Tom Sykes (Kawasaki) after it was red-flagged
with seven laps to go. Second was Sylvain Guintoli
(Ducati) with his team mate Jakub Smrz third.
Michel
Fabrizio - Race 1: 16th, Race 2: Retired.
"I am really
not sure what happened in the first lap of race
one. I was going though a left turn whilst keeping
an eye on Sykes on my left when I suddenly felt
an impact on my right arm, just above the wrist.
I don't know if it was another rider or something
that had flown up from the track. All I know
is that it was a fairly-hard blow. I carried
on racing and managed to pass quite a few riders
and get up to fifth place. I was pretty happy
at this stage because I had started from 12h
on the grid, but soon I could feel the pain
in my arm getting worse. I could feel it swelling
up and, as the race wore on, that affected my
throttle control. I just couldn't force the
throttle wide open when I needed to and it wasn't
long before riders began to pass me. I kept
going as best I could, but it was frustrating
seeing all the riders I had passed overtake
me. The pain got worse and worse, but I kept
going in case I could get any points. Unfortunately,
I finished 16th, so not a good start to the
day. I had some painkillers - pills, not injections
- before the start of race two, but I knew that
it was not going to be a good day for me, when
the rain began to pour.
"Soon there
were big puddles everywhere and there were rivulets
in many parts of the track. Even on the straights
we were aquaplaning and it was pretty dangerous
just trying to get round without crashing. My
arm was feeling very painful and I wasn't in
the points, so the team and I decided that there
was no point continuing. I pulled into the pits,
which was definitely the right decision. Watching
the rest of the race from my pit box, I am a
bit surprised that 13 laps were completed before
the red flag came out, but I was happy to have
survived without crashing.
"The weekend
had started pretty well and Friday and Saturday
had been good, apart from Superpole. My race-pace
was good and I was happy with fifth after nine
laps of race one. If it hadn't have been for
the blow to my arm, I'm sure that I would've
finished the first race in the top five. But
racing is unpredictable and today was just not
my lucky day."
Results:
Race 1:
1 Carlos Checa (ESP-Ducati), 2 Marco
Melandri (ITA-Yamaha), 3 Noriyuki Haga (JPN-Aprilia),
4 Eugene Laverty (GBR-Yamaha), 6 Leon Haslam
(GBR-BMW), 16 Michel Fabrizio (ITA-Alstare Suzuki),
Race 2:
1 Tom Sykes (GBR-Kawasaki), 2 Sylvain
Guintoli (FRA-Ducati), 3 Jakub Smrz (CZE-Ducati),
4 Jonathan Rea (GBR-Honda), 5 Laverty, 6 Melandri.
Michel Fabrizio (ITA-Alstare Suzuki) RETIRED
Championship
Points: 1 Carlos Checa 376, 2 Marco
Melandri 302, 3 Max Biaggi 281, 4 Laverty 232,
5 Haslam 176, 6 Camier 154. 7 Michel Fabrizio
(Alstare Suzuki) 141.
|