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Enrico Gasparotto and Thomas Löfkvist both hit by vehicles in training crashes

Gasparotto will defend Amstel Gold title despite being hit by truck, but Löfkvist out for six weeks

Two top pro riders were hit by vehicles while training yesterday as they prepared for Ardennes Week which starts with The Amstel Gold Race on Sunday – the defending champion in that event, Enrico Gasparotto of Astana, and IAM Cycling’s Thomas Löfkvist. The former hopes to be able to defend his title, but Löfkvist is out or six weeks.

In a statement published on its website, Astana revealed that Gasparotto, aged 31, had been struck by a delivery truck which pulled out of a driveway near Lake Como.

Gasparotto, who was training behind a motor scooter being ridden by the team’s directeur sportif, Stefano Zanini, who managed to avoid a collision, but the rider hit the truck and came off his bike.

"It was impossible to brake,” he said. “We were going 45 maybe 50k on a little bit of a descent, and it was impossible not to crash.

“I was very, very lucky that there was no real damage. My body is a little bit hurt, and my bike was not so good.

“I have a little bit of pain right now, but today is Thursday, and I can go to the osteopath tonight and everything should be good by Sunday."

Zanini, by his own account, gave the driver a piece of his mind and then some.

"The crash happened in the first hour of training, and we stopped to yell at the driver for about 20 minutes. But Gaspa got back on his bike and rode at the same level for the rest of the training session," he stated.

Indeed, Gasparotto revealed that he became a bit worried how far Zanini might take matters.

"For me this is the most important week of the year, and I want to have good races in the Ardennes, so I continued my training session and that was all I could do.

“I yelled at the driver that this is my job, I don't go out on the bike just for fun, and he has no idea the sacrifices we make to be professionals.

“But Zaza is a big man and he was really angry, and I really thought he was going to hit him."

Meanwhile, Swiss Professional Continental outfit IAM Cycling, already without Aleksejs Saramotins who suffered a broken scaphoid during Paris-Roubaix, has now lost Thomas Löfkvist for six weeks, after the 29-year-old Swede was hit by a car while training.

“Löfkvist was knocked down by a car at the end of his training session and suffered a compound fracture to his index finger on his left hand,” said his team in a statement yesterday.

It added that he had undergone an examination at Geneva University Hospital, where he was due to be operated on yesterday evening.

The two incidents are the latest in a series involving pro cyclists being hit by vehicles when out training, including Bradley Wiggins who was hit by a van near his home in Lancashire last November, and Olympic mountain biker Burry Stander, killed when he was struck by a taxi in his native South Africa in January.

Simon joined road.cc as news editor in 2009 and is now the site’s community editor, acting as a link between the team producing the content and our readers. A law and languages graduate, published translator and former retail analyst, he has reported on issues as diverse as cycling-related court cases, anti-doping investigations, the latest developments in the bike industry and the sport’s biggest races. Now back in London full-time after 15 years living in Oxford and Cambridge, he loves cycling along the Thames but misses having his former riding buddy, Elodie the miniature schnauzer, in the basket in front of him.

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6 comments

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skippy | 11 years ago
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Every vehicle driver thinks that a Cyclist is an UNEMPLOYABLE LOUT , thus deserves no consideration ! As i know Stephano , i am aware of his ability to let you know his feelings on a subject . The driver was lucky to walk away without ear damage !

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Leviathan | 11 years ago
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How is he balancing in that photo?  13

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Simon_MacMichael replied to Leviathan | 11 years ago
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bikeboy76 wrote:

How is he balancing in that photo?  13

With the help of a *very* fast shutter speed, I imagine  3

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Tongietr8 | 11 years ago
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Anybody else noticed that car drivers were strangley polite and behaved well after Brad was knocked off?

Well now we are back on the roads after the snow, they have all forgotten and they are back to being complete and utter T0ss3rs!

I don't want Brad to be knocked off again, but WTF gives?

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WolfieSmith replied to Tongietr8 | 11 years ago
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Well known riders getting hurt and pretty girls getting killed are the most newsworthy for newspapers. Hopefully the deaths of pretty girls are starting to push the balance but I fear it'll take a few more yet.  2

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jollygoodvelo | 11 years ago
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And Jo Rowsell.

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