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| One lap is enough for Stuart O'Grady |
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Stuart O'Grady plans on sticking to his push bike (c)RoadCycling.co.nz
"When the ride finished of course I could feel my heart rate soaring, my blood pressure rising, but I didn't give it much more thought," he said. "But then I started having blotchy vision and 20 minutes later I had a seizure and collapsed.
"It was possibly the extreme 'hyper tension' or maybe an old scar on my brain from one of my previous crashes but there's no use speculating or guessing, it's happened and that's that."
Prior to the ride O'Grady, who rides with Team Saxo Bank, underwent medical checks and was cleared to participate.
"The ride around the Valencia circuit was unbelievable," said O'Grady who rode pillion behind MotoGP legend Randy Mamola for the hot lap. "I've jumped out of planes, been in a Russian fighter jet, a V8 Supercar, the works - but the twin seater Ducati blows them all out of the water!
"I have never come close to the experience of hanging on for your life.
"The braking on those bikes had my feet coming off the rear pegs, and my butt way off the seat, the acceleration meant I needed my FULL strength to hang onto the machine and not get flicked out onto the track in front of 90 thousand fans," he explained. "It was something I will never forget and would do again tomorrow if my body could handle it."
O'Grady has thanked Ducati for the opportunity and the medical team for looking after him and he's made it clear he's not looking for a career in MotoGP.
"I think I'll stick to my 'little pushie' where we only hit 80 -100k an hour," O'Grady said. "I'll leave those MotoGP bikes to the legends that are riding them!
But whilst his MotoGP career has been short he has been given a nickname courtesy of friend and fellow cyclist David Millar who was with him at Valencia.
"I'm now the 'One Lap Wonder'," laughed O'Grady. "I can live with that."
O'Grady is one of Australia's most decorated sporting heroes. He won the 2007 Paris-Roubaix, has won two stages of the Tour de France and has gold medals from Olympic Games, Commonwealth Games and World Championships in his trophy cabinet. He was awarded an Order of Australia Medal (OAM) after his gold medal performance at the Athens Olympic Games.
But during his almost two decade career at the top level of professional cycling O'Grady has had more than his fair share of injuries.
In the past he has broken numerous bones, been treated for an abnormally high heartbeat and had surgery to repair a blocked artery. In 2007 a high speed crash during the Tour de France left him with five broken ribs, a broken shoulder and a punctured lung and earlier this year he was sidelined due to injuries sustained in a crash during the Milan - San Remo event.
So from O'Grady's perspective this latest incident is nothing to be concerned about.
"It takes more than one lap to get rid of me," said O'Grady.
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