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Ducati Marlboro Team riders
Carlos Checa and Loris Capirossi made an injury-blighted
start to the 2005 MotoGP season at Jerez today, riding
courageously to tenth and 13th positions. Checa, suffering
from a recent shoulder injury, was even uncertain that he
would be strong enough to finish the race. Capirossi
meanwhile needed pain-killing injections to race with the
ankle injury he sustained yesterday. Carlos Checa ran strong during the early stages of today's race, riding in the thick of a frantic skirmish for sixth spot until he began to slip back, troubled by his still-weak left shoulder, the legacy of a fall during tests at Catalunya last month. Although the injury is not painful, it drastically reduces upper-body strength, making bike control difficult, to say the very least. "To be honest, I didn't even expect to finish the race," said Checa. "At first things weren't too bad, but then Tamada made contact with me while trying to pass on the brakes. That hurt the shoulder again, then Barros and Bayliss came past and I couldn't stay with Biaggi and Edwards when they attacked. Physically and technically it's been a tough weekend, so all things considered, this isn't such a bad result." Loris Capirossi won three points for his pains this afternoon, battling to control his Ducati Marlboro Team Desmosedici GP5 with a cracked bone in his left ankle, sustained during a nasty highside crash yesterday morning. "My thanks to the Clinica
Mobile who made it possible for me to race," said the gritty
Italian who had started from the second row of the grid. "I
did my best but unfortunately I wasn't able to ride the bike
the way I like to ride it. I had problems shifting gears and
so I made a few mistakes. I tried as hard as I could and I
managed to finish. The result isn't great but two or three
points are always better than none." |
MotoGP Championship
2005
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