Gilbert barking mad as dog causes Tour spill
The stray dog is one of the peloton's biggest fears and Belgium's Philippe Gilbert became its latest victim on the 18th stage of the Tour de France.
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What can you do against people who insist on standing to watch the race with a dog that size that isn't on a lead? It's not right. The proof is it caused an accident.
Gilbert (BMC), who wore the yellow jersey last year, was among several riders brought down in a spill at the 120km mark of the 226km race from Blagnac to Brive-la-Gaillarde on Friday.
A family watching the race go past saw its dog, which some riders later compared to "a pony", run out into the road.
It brought several riders down and left BMC's Gilbert with a sore shoulder. He hopes his Olympic road race hopes for July 28 will not suffer.
"I hurt my elbow and my hip but it's my shoulder that is quite sore. Plus we have a 400km transfer by bus tonight, not ideal for recovering," said Gilbert.
"The most important thing is that nothing's broken for the Olympic Games next week. That's my biggest worry."
Gilbert eventually got back on his bike to resume racing while being given treatment by in-race medical staff, but not before giving the dog owner a piece of his mind.
Gilbert yells at family twitter.com/nyvelocity/sta…
— nyvelocity (@nyvelocity) July 20, 2012
He added: "I wanted to hit them, but (team manager) John Lelangue managed to calm me. Afterwards I was really annoyed.
"What can you do against people who insist on standing to watch the race with a dog that size that isn't on a lead?
"It's not right. The proof is it caused an accident."
Lelangue said shortly after the accident: "His hand has been injured a little as well as his elbow and knee.
"The dog was stronger than him and it won that bout but the important thing is that he could return to his place in the peloton."
Although still with its full roster of nine riders, BMC is licking its wounds three days from Paris after its defending yellow jersey champion Cadel Evans dropped nearly 10 minutes behind race leader Bradley Wiggins during Stage 17.
Wiggins, of Team Sky, is set to become Britain's first yellow jersey champion when the Tour hits Paris on Sunday (Sunday night AEDT).
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