Armstrong breaks collarbone, will have surgery

MADRID, (Reuters) – Seven-times Tour de France  winner Lance Armstrong fractured his right collarbone in a race  in Spain on Monday, casting doubt on his participation in May’s  Giro d’Italia.

The American announced via his twitter feed (http://twitter.com/lancearmstrong) that he would have surgery “in a couple of days” after sustaining the injury during  the first stage of Spain’s Vuelta Castilla y Leon.

Asked whether his participation in the Italian stage race  was in jeopardy, Armstrong said: “I am very disappointed. Very.
Especially for the Giro.”

In comments released in a team statement, Armstrong added:  “Now I feel miserable … I hope I can tell you more about the  Giro in a week.”
Armstrong, 37, came out of retirement this year and is due  to make his first appearance in the Giro, starting on May 9 in  Venice, before riding the Tour de France in July.

“The crash has put my upcoming calendar in jeopardy but the  most important thing for me right now is to get back home and  rest up and begin my rehab,” Armstrong said in a team statement.

Armstrong was in obvious pain as he was helped into an  ambulance and taken to hospital after the incident involving a  group of riders with around 20 km left of the 168.3-km leg  between Paredes de Nava and Baltanas.

He was taken to the University Clinic in nearby Valladolid  for treatment and was later discharged. Astana team boss Johan Bruyneel said the fracture had been  clean and the rider’s recovery should be fast, although he gave  no timeframe.

The rider said he had been lucky to have avoided one of the  sport’s most common injuries for so long and that the only thing  he could do now was rest.
“This never happened in 17 years of pro cycling. That’s  cycling. It’s nobody’s fault,” he said.

On his twitter feed, he added: “I’m alive! Broken clavicle  (right). Hurts like hell for now. Surgery in a couple of days.”

FRUSTRATED PLANS

The Vuelta was being closely scrutinised as it was the first  and only time Armstrong had been due to race alongside Spanish  team mate Alberto Contador before the Tour de France.

Contador, the world’s best stage-race rider, won the Tour in  2007 and there has been speculation about which of the pair  would establish himself as Astana’s number one.

The Spaniard finished in 27th place in Monday’s stage, which  was won by Joaquin Sobrino of the Burgos Monumental team, and he  said the accident had frustrated Astana’s plans.

“It was a good opportunity to work together at a race,” he  said in a statement. “Now only I can support him and wish him to  recover as soon as possible.”
David Vitoria of Rock Racing took second place on Monday and  Jose Joaquin Rojas of Caisse d’Epargne third.

“I don’t know how the crash happened because it was in the  middle of the peloton,” stage winner Sobrino said.
“That it was Armstrong is a shame for us given all the media  attention he has attracted but it was nice anyway that he was in  the race today.”