
Three weeks after suffering the first fracture of his
career, Dan Martin has clocked up several outdoor spins and is working towards
a racing return that could potentially see him ride the Tour de France.
The Irishman is tight-lipped about his chances of doing the
race, saying that the Garmin-Sharp team will make its own announcement of the
line-up, but being able to train pain-free gives him the opportunity to build
form for the French event if he does indeed ride.
Martin identified the Giro d’Italia as his main season goal,
deciding to focus on that event as the first three days started in Ireland.
However he completed only fifteen minutes of the event before his wheel slipped
on a wet manhole cover, sending him and his bike clattering to the ground. While
the other Garmin-Sharp riders who fell were able to remount and ride to the
finish, he was unable to go any further due to a badly fractured collarbone.
That injury was operated on two days later in Dublin and
now, three weeks later, he’s clocking up training miles again. He’s now ready
to talk about his fall, the outcome, the operation and his recovery, having
chosen before this point not to comment to the press about what was a big
disappointment for him.
“I am doing okay,” Martin told CyclingTips. “Obviously it
was a bit rough for the week or so after the operation. There was the initial
buzz of having the operation done and then having quite decent mobility back,
then the progress slows down. It was a gradual rehabilitation, getting the
muscles moving. All that stuff. It is something I have never experienced
before, it is the first time I have broken a bone.”
While he suffered a concussion in last year’s Vuelta a
España and also had to withdraw from that race, he considers the fracture to be
something else again. “It is the first time I have really been injured from a
crash,” he said. “I mean, I had an injury before but I have been very, very
fortunate my whole career as far as injuries go.
“This is a new experience. We had the physio and doctors
looking after me. It has been fantastic, I think I have made really good
progress and I have been back on the bike this week, just riding a bit. I feel
pretty good.”
Martin was initially told that he could resume working on
the home trainer the day after his operation. However he said that he decided
not to do so, admitting he was not geared up to knuckle down again so soon. “It
is hard enough to motivate yourself to use the trainer normally, and I wasn’t
going to just jump back on it,” he said. “I think a lot of guys rush back from
these injuries and pay for it later.
“For the sake of a few hours’ training, I definitely took my
time and made sure that the bone was healed 100 percent. It was a pretty bad
break in the end…it was a clean break, but I still have a lot of metalwork
going on inside me. I wanted to be sure that I get the arm moving properly
again.
“It was more important for me to spend more time doing the
rehab exercises rather than riding the home trainer.”
That patience appears to have paid off; he said that he can
train on the road without any pain in that shoulder, although he notes that the
muscles are still a little stiff. He feels that is down to a lack of use in
recent weeks and that it will settle down as he continues to ride. “We will get
there, we will get back on track,” he said.
That will be reassuring for his fans, who would have been
worried about his programme this year after his fall in Belfast. From the sound
of things, Martin’s recovery is going well, and he’s also in a good place
mentally.
Switching off for a while was key to that.

“I JUST DIDN’T WANT TO TALK ABOUT IT TEN TIMES A DAY”
In the days following his accident, Martin said that he shut
himself away. He said it wasn’t due to despondency about what happened, but
rather a desire not to dwell on things. To move on from the moment of the crash
rather than being repeatedly dragged back.
“To be honest, I didn’t really move out of the apartment for
the first week. I was pretty useless,” he said. “I also hadn’t spent any time
at home in Girona, so it was good to finally do that. I had literally spent a
week at home in three months as I was preparing for the Giro. My girlfriend
came over a last week. I had a few days here. It was nice to just clear my head
that way and relax. To be almost normal for a week, although walking around
with your hand in a sling is not exactly normal.
“It has been really nice just to chill out and to really
escape from cycling for ten days. I didn’t look at my phone much, I just really
turned my brain off.
“Doing so wasn’t down to disappointment with the result,
with what happened. It was more a case that I just didn’t want to talk about
it, to be honest. There are so many people around here, people I ride with and
friends and stuff, and if I met them I’d end up answering the same question a
million times.
“I was on painkillers and after the operation, I didn’t want
to talk about it ten times a day. I just didn’t want to think about it.”
Martin’s new relationship has been a good distraction for
him. While altitude training at Sierra Nevada prior to the Giro, he met a
British athlete called Jess. They clicked and she has been spending time with
him in Girona. He’s been able to get to know her more and also to show her
around what is his hometown.
He sounds happy, is enjoying life and doesn’t appear at all
despondent now about how his Giro turned out. He said he would have loved to
have been there, to have helped Ryder Hesjedal in the third week, but that
there is no point in mulling over things.
“It is what it is. It happened and you can’t change it,” he
reasoned. “There is no point in being disappointed, it happened. There is no
changing it. The worst thing for me was the fact that the pain that I caused my
team-mates. Obviously I was the first one to crash. They crashed over me and
they were pretty knocked around.
“I don’t think it was my fault, but I still have that guilt
at the end. Especially with the overall Giro…it was the worst start possible a
team could have. And not only the time lost, but losing two riders and beating
up another two riders. That was more the thing that disappointed me most. I
don’t think I could have changed it or made it different, but it still hurts.”
Given that the crash was so dramatic and so unexpected,
there was always the risk that it would have affected his confidence. That’s
also compounded by the fact that it was his first time to break a bone and
because the fall came so soon after he crashed in the finale of
Liège-Bastogne-Liège.
Much of an athlete’s motivation and focus is founded on
self-belief, and anything that rocks this can compound the after-effects of a
bad injury.
Fortunately he said he’s been able to put the fall behind
him. “It was just such a freak accident,” he said, insisting that it won’t make
him more cautious and hesitant in the future. “That was the problem – the last
two times I raced I have crashed. If you kind of land in a big pile of guys and
hurt yourself or if you made a mistake… You’d hold your hand up and say, ‘okay,
fair enough.’
“But literally both times I crashed I have had pretty much
no idea what has happened. I just hit the floor like I have fallen out of a
tree. It has been a lot of shock more than anything.
“Obviously I know what happened in both cases, but I
couldn’t have done anything about it. I don’t feel that I could have avoided
either crash. It is just pure bad luck. Hopefully that bad karma is over and
we’ll get payback eventually in the end.”
CONNECTING WITH THE FANS AT CYCLE4LIFE:
Martin’s first event back will take place next Saturday, but
isn’t actually a race. Instead, he will ride with hundreds of fans in County
Dublin, lining out alongside them as part of the Cycle4life charity ride.
The annual event offers participants the chance to cycle
with Martin across a range of distances; there is a 105 kilometre event for the
more advanced riders, a medium 55 kilometre distance and then short 3km ride
for children, beginners and anyone else who wishes to do that one. Through
staggered starts Martin will spend time with each group, and the proceeds will
be used to raise funds for the Temple Street Children’s hospital.
Thus far over €350,000 has been raised since the first
edition was held in 2012 and Martin plus the organisers are hoping to increase
what is generated this year. The funds will be used to buy new medical
equipment for the hospital, and thus improve the care it can offer.
Martin said he is looking forward to the trip back, and to
having a happier experience than the last time he was on Irish roads. “Funnily
enough, I think I am staying about 500 metres from where I had the surgery. So
it is definitely coming straight back in to where it all happened,” he said.
“But it is going to be great…the welcome in Belfast was incredible. Obviously
we are always keen to come back and ride and it is something that is very close
to my heart.
“It is part of cycling that I love doing. It was a fantastic
event last year and I am sure it is going to be the same this time,” he said.
“Hopefully the weather will be a bit better and I will be a bit more
confortable standing around, hanging around in the start and finish area.
“I think it will definitely be a fun day, there is no doubt
about that. And I hope we can make a lot of money for the hospital.”
Martin said that he has been moved by the amount of support
people have shown him since his fall and sees the time he will spend with the
fans as a way of thanking them.
“I think a lot of people were quite upset by what I did to
myself, and that really touches me,” he said. “So it is nice to be able to come
back. Especially to spend time with the kids…the kids and the toddlers’ rides
were one of my highlights of the year last year. It was incredible to just see
all those little people on bikes.
“It really is a special day, and we get to support a special
cause at the same time. I’m really looking forward to it.”
Beyond that, he isn’t saying much about his plans. “I am
just coming back. I feel good but I’d need to be 100 percent for the Tour. So
we’ll see. The team is weighing everything up, and it is always very secretive
about the programme. They will say more when they are ready.”
So too will Martin. He went through a rough time last month
but sounds like he has come out the other side. As he’s shown repeatedly in the
past, such as when he crashed just before what could have been a second
consecutive Liège-Bastogne-Liège title, he’s kept things in perspective.
As he often says, it’s only a sport. It’s high tech, high
costs and high stakes, but only a sport.
That said, he’s itching to get back to it soon and to start
racing again.
No comments:
Post a Comment