The Dakar rally has now claimed all but three of the Australians after yet another tough day of racing.

Riders follow each other on stage 6 of the Dakar rally (AAP)
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Bruce
Garland was forced to withdraw overnight - the back pain he had
shrugged off to complete yesterday’s stage more serious then he’d let
on. The ever stoic Garland now lies in hospital with a broken vertebrae.
Today, it was Warren Strange who departed the bivouac. Riding
side-by-side with Jacob Smith, Strange lost control after hitting a
washout, and crashed heavily onto his already damaged shoulder.
He was taken from the stage by helicopter to hospital, where he’s in good spirits but in some pain.
Jacob
Smith rode side by side with Strange for much of the stage, after his
GPS failed and the duo shared navigation. Smith was right behind Strange
when he crashed.
“He came over a little rise and it just g’d
out. Went side to side and then shot him out, it was like slow motion
for me, there was nothing I could do,” a tired Smith said.
"I sort of thought he’d be ok because the bike only came down on the low side, but he landed badly and popped his shoulder out.
“He’s
alright, he didn’t hit his head or anything, and he tried to get me to
put his shoulder in before the chopper came but he was in too much
pain,” Smith explained.
After referring to yesterday as ‘the
toughest day I’ve had on a bike’, Smith was shattered after today’s
stage. “It’s just relentless this race,” he said simply. “Absolutely
crazy.”
Smith said no warning was ever going to be enough to
prepare for the Dakar, “You can’t prepare yourself for what you’re going
to go through till you come here and do it. I came here with the
attitude that nothing was going to surprise me and i knew it would be
tough, but you just can’t prepare for it.
“You hear all the
stories and you think ‘oh yeah’, but you just don’t know til you get
here. Maybe if I was out in clear air and could ride my own race it
would be ok, but you’re not.
"There’s one problem after another,
and you’re always catching guys and getting caught in their dust, and
it’s nothing to do with me, I only crashed once and it didn’t even hurt,
it’s just one of those things.
“When you’re in dust and back
there, you can’t race. You just can’t race the race, you just have to
ride it. You can’t ride like you do in Safari or you have what happened
to Warren. I’m so over this place.
"There is so much that can
catch you, so much. You have a hundred moments a day, where you go
‘urgh!’. Like you’re going over a flat and then it’s just a big drop
off, and then the next thing and there’ll be a huge rock you miss by a
millimetre,” Smith said, trailing off at the end.
Simon Pavey
had an off of his own today, but luckily survived. The Dakar veteran
used his experience to navigate through an area that confused many
others, in the process picking up time. He sits 71st after finishing
47th on today’s stage.
The Coconut race team are still out on
stage, and will be for some time, another massive night for Geoff and
Steve who only made it back to the bivouac at 5.30am this morning...and
started today’s marathon stage just four hours later!
Tomorrow brings a much needed rest day to the Dakar bivouac.
Comments (10)
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16 Dec 2011 12:03 AEST
From: Salt Lake City
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12 Nov 2011 18:59 AEST
From: Salt Lake City, UT
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11 Jan 2011 19:55 AEST
From: ADELAIDE SOUTH OZ
DAKAR ON A WHOLE
WELL DONE SBS COMMENTATOR IS A FLOP NOT AS GOOD AS THE PREVIOUS ONE ,GET RID OF HIM AND SECOND TOO MUCH ADVERTISING TOUR DE PUSH BIKE ,WE WANT DAKAR AND LOTS MORE WE DONT GET A FULL 30 MINUTES OF IT EVEN OUT THE 3 CATAGORIES OTHERWISE OK BY ME ,KEEP GOING ALL YOU OZZIES IN THE DAKAR
10 Jan 2011 18:43 AEST
From: Gold Coast
Jacob Black - One of the best Dakar Journo's anywhere - thanks
Jacob - I must thank you for your reports and do find your writing style and coverage to be the best in the Dakar Journo arena. Your stuff just seems like real reporting and not a factory spin campaign or re-hash - keep up the good work! Please tell us a little more about Simon and how he always finishes the Race? I love Garland/Suzuki but they go so fast and so close to the edge that they seem better suited to low-risk racing - It's as if they are not pacing. Jacob, what does it take to finish - what's the mental game/tactics of small privateers who finish every year???
10 Jan 2011 18:02 AEST
From: Perth Western Australia
Congratulations
Great Coverage and reporting Jacob good to see you made it back this year.
09 Jan 2011 22:25 AEST
From: Nelson Bay
Aussie performance
Again the Aussies have done us proud. You've gone to do battle with the toughest event and shown that resiliant aussie spirit. Finish or not you are there giving it ago.
09 Jan 2011 15:57 AEST
From: Queensland
aussie spirit
go you goo ausie boy dig deep and make it to the finish
09 Jan 2011 3:12 AEST
From: Busselton, WA
Thanks for the great coverage
Thanks Jacob for keeping us up to date with all of the Aussie competitors as it is sometimes very difficult to find out information on the Dakar website. Yours in ralling, Heidi.
08 Jan 2011 21:23 AEST
From: UK
Prep
Great quote you got there Jacob. "I came here with the attitude that nothing was going to surprise me and i knew it would be tough, but you just can’t prepare for it." Nothing prepares you for the Dakar... Hope all well mate. TM
08 Jan 2011 14:50 AEST
From: Mandurah
Warren Strange
Hi Warren, sorry to hear about your crash hope you get better soon.
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About this Blog
Deep in the Dust is the place to enjoy all the latest stories and interviews from Jacob Black, SBS's man on the ground in Argentina and Chile for the 2011 Dakar Rally.
Jacob Black Jacob Black is a motorsport writer and broadcaster. An accomplished feature article writer and a co-author to several books on Australia's V8 Supercars, (1K08, 1K09 and V808) Jacobs hold a Bachelor of Media, Communications and Culture in Broadcast Journalism from Murdoch University.
Inspired by his father's passion for touring car racing, Jacob developed a keen interest in all things motorsport from an early age. After traveling there in 2008, he also developed a deep affection for South America and in particular, Argentina.
Born in Perth, Western Australia, Jacob is now based in St Kilda, Victoria.
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