Lorenzo still sore ahead of German GP

An understandably emotional Jorge Lorenzo is greeted by his team after his heroic ride to fifth in the Dutch TT at Assen, 38 hours after breaking his collarbone in practice. Can he pull one out of the bag again this weekend at the Sachsenring?

An understandably emotional Jorge Lorenzo is greeted by his team after his heroic ride to fifth in the Dutch TT at Assen, 38 hours after breaking his collarbone in practice. Can he pull one out of the bag again this weekend at the Sachsenring?

Published Jul 11, 2013

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MotoGP World champion Jorge Lorenzo hopes to be in better shape for Sunday's German Grand Prix than he was two weeks ago in the Netherlands where he raced a day after having surgery for a broken collarbone.

Lorenzo had eight screws and a plate inserted in his left collarbone after the fall at Assen, flying to Barcelona for surgery and returning 38 hours later to finish an astonishing fifth.

He said at a Yamaha team preview for the eighth round of the championship: “The situation is still that I need more time to fix the injury. I won't be at 100 percent in Germany but I'm pretty confident I can have a good weekend.

“At least I have had almost 10 days to stay calm and improve my physical condition a bit. It will be difficult to compete another time but for sure I will push even harder than in Holland.”

SLOW CORNERS

The Sachsenring, near Chemnitz, is not one of Lorenzo's favourite circuits but the anti-clockwise layout with its slower corners could make him slightly more comfortable on the bike.

Currently second in the standings and nine points behind Honda's championship leader Dani Pedrosa, Lorenzo has never won a Grand Prix at the Sachsenring in any class but has finished second for the past four years.

Team mate Valentino Rossi, the winner at Assen in his first victory since 2010, has won four times in MotoGP at the Sachsenring.

Rossi, who now has 80 wins in the premier category, said: “I'm going to the Sachsenring with a new spirit - I am very happy for the Holland race. Now I want to keep it going like that.” - Reuters

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