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F Bradley Wilson-Dean didn’t know any better, the déjà vu he felt from helping fellow New Zealander and Diamonds team-mate George Congreve prepare for last Monday’s World Championship qualifier in Abensberg, Germany, could have been to meet his own ambitions. IBAD FOR BRAD Unfinished business? More like unfinished seasons as Bradley Wilson-Dean looks back at a catalogue of seasons completed on the Bra Alas, once more, injury has struck this likeable Kiwi and he’s on the outside looking in. His third match for Newcastle was unlucky for him when he was forced to withdraw and has been sidelined ever since. “I rode at Leicester and it was pretty rough, well, I was finding it pretty rough, but some of the guys made it look really smooth, I definitely didn’t!” says Wilson-Dean. “Every time I came into the corner and hit a bump, the bike would sort of straighten up. I did it in my second race and the bike just took off with me and wrenched my arm – and that was it, I knew I couldn’t carry on. The pain was just stupid. “The rest of that race, I just couldn’t hang on. I just kept going out towards the fence because it would get a bit of drive and shoot me out to the fence, and I couldn’t even hang on to it properly. I went out for my third race, dropped the clutch, and then as soon as I started turning into the corner, I just knew I couldn’t, and that was it, I pulled off the track. “I’ve torn the tendon in my rotating cuff, supraspinatus tendon, it’s very sore. When the bike starts pulling, it’s driving, which is the one thing you want it to do, I just can’t hang on to it.” The tendon is located at the back of the shoulder of the supraspinatus muscle, and it enables your arm to move through its full range of motions. He’s currently undergoing physiotherapy and carrying out exercises, as advised, in order to build up and to strengthen the tendon., “It’s pretty slow to be honest,” he says of its progress. “I’ve just been seeing a physio, doing exercises and stuff. I see her every two weeks, and she’s purely sports physio, treated a few All Blacks – she’s pretty good. She said she’d let me know when it is strong enough. At the moment she said there is no strength in it. wrong side of the safety fence pandemic, and a heavy crash in last year’s Grand Prix qualifier in Glasgow, means that Brad has missed two years of league competition. Obviously, it’s a major setback, but he remains philosophical and also realistic about his side’s situation. “I told Newcastle the week after, ‘I don’t want you guys waiting on me, you’ve got to do what is best for the team. If you’ve got to sign someone else, no hard feelings, you have the club to look after, don’t worry about me’. It’s up to them. “I don’t expect them to wait on someone who is injured, and doesn’t have a clear answer of when he’ll be able to ride. I couldn’t expect them to. I’m not worried if they sign someone else; for them, I think it’s more about surviving than it is about winning, so they need to survive. I want whatever is best for Newcastle Speedway. At the end of the day, I don’t want to see any more clubs close down. “It is frustrating. I’d signed for Rawicz (in Poland), but since I’ve been injured I’ve not had a chance to do anything with them. I’ve seen they’re having a tough season. But I don’t sit here thinking about it, I just get on with my day. “How many times have I not finished the season? Two-thousand and sixteen, seventeen, I sort of did, on and off; 18, I had to finish early because I had surgery booked and needed to take it; 19, I didn’t finish. The last season I finished properly was 2015. You can’t control an injury, all I can do is try and get it better. I don’t stress too much on anything these days – it’s injuries and speedway,” he shrugs. Congreve has benefitted somewhat from Wilson-Dean’s redundant equipment and Brad accompanied him to Germany where he assisted him as much as he could. Furthermore, BWD can look forward to becoming a father in November when he and his partner Jodie are expecting a baby boy. “The Ben Fund have been brilliant, they’ve really looked after me, with a baby on the way, no income, trying to keep up with rent and all that, I’d like to thank them for supporting me,” he says gratefully. “I let Speedway New Zealand know I wasn’t doing the qualifier, so George could . I’ve been helping him out getting over here. “The bikes he’s riding are mine, I’ve sponsored him with them for the season, a couple of bikes and engines; his toolbox, oils, sprays, helped him out as much as I can to make it a little bit easier for him. “It’s nice to have another Kiwi here for a change. He’s been struggling a bit, but before here he’s only ridden on three tracks in his life really, so it’s a bit of a learning curve for sure. It was good experience for him to be out there with the big boys.” Words: BRIAN BURFORD “I’ve spent so much money (NZ$8,000 on a visa alone), put so much into it, to come to the other side of the world, and I’ve got a pretty sweet life back home, so to come all the way over here to do this job and not be able to do it 100 per cent...it’s not worth it. “It’s not worth me going out there and not being able to do it properly, I’d rather wait until I’m right – that’s how I look at it. I’m not doing the team, or myself, any favours by going out there and not scoring because I can’t ride properly. I’m better waiting until I’m fit.” The pandemonium caused by the 2 speedway star June 11, 2022
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radley Wilson-Dean & Josh Auty HE 2022 British speedway season was meant to be one where everything got back on course for Josh Auty. TInstead, it’s turned out to be another which could leave him questioning his future in the sport. It’s fair to say it’s been a testing couple of years for the experienced British racer. He’s openly spoken about some tough personal issues throughout the pandemic and was looking forward to focusing on his speedway once again last term. But a crash at Leicester less than a month after racing resumed post-Covid saw his season ending early after being replaced by Scunthorpe, bringing an end to his long association with the Scorpions. The North Lincolnshire club honoured his Testimonial this March though, and the 31-yearold was optimistic about the months ahead after linking back up with Birmingham, the side with whom he reached the Elite League Grand Final in 2013. But less than a month into his latest stint with the Brummies, Auty was again sidelined after crashing out of his first ride of the abandoned home fixture against Berwick, ploughing through the home straight kickboards and breaking his leg in the process. “I just lay there thinking, ‘this is just my luck’,” Auty said. “After a tough start to the year, I’d just got a little bit of form back together with a decent score of eight points at Redcar the week before. “I’d got my engine serviced before that meeting; it felt good, and by the end of the night I felt as if that was going to help me to settle down and focus purely on racing my bike again. “In speedway, you do have to constantly reinvest in your equipment to stay competitive. People may not always realise how much, but it is a super-expensive game to just remain competitive nowadays, but I felt good again and I wanted to follow that up in that meeting at Birmingham. “I’d gone into that night wanting to build a bit of momentum, and you only get that by winning and the confidence flows from that. “It was just one of those incidents where I got a little bit out of shape and stuff like that happens so fast. When you get out of shape, sometimes you get away with it, other times it can have catastrophic consequences and unfortunately that was one of those times. “When I went through the fence, my initial thought was that I’d compound fractured my leg, which was strange really. “I wanted to get my boot off straight away because of the sensations I’d got, but it wasn’t particularly that painful to begin with. “It did kick in after a short while though, and I was soon on the morphine and on my way to hospital.” He viewed 2022 as the year to get back on an even keel but, instead, Josh Auty finds himself frustratingly sidelined and wondering about his future, as he tells RYAN GUEST said. “On June 1, I had my cast removed and a boot fitted. The surgeon told me I can’t fully bear weight on it for another three or four weeks or so yet, so July 20, I think that’s realistic. “That will be three months exactly since I had the accident, and that’s a good amount of time in terms of recovery. “At first, I’d thought around June 20, but that would’ve been way too early when you consider the severity of the fracture and stuff. “I want to, and have to, make sure it’s right before I come back because if I was to take another prang on it, you’re going to add another three months or so onto your recovery at least. “I’ve done my ankle before and things, but they were only very minimal fractures and I came back in very good time on both occasions. “But in this one, the shinbone was pretty much snapped. The surgeon wasn’t too concerned about that though, because it has a pretty good blood flow and it only bears about 25 per cent of your body weight. “The tibia had a big chunk cracked off and has got screws and plates holding it together, so that’s the more severe one. commitments to Birmingham this year as much as I can. “It’s frustrating because right now there’s nothing at all I can do apart from do as I’ve been told, be patient and wait for the time to come around. “I haven’t won a race since pulling their race-jacket on again this year, and that’s something that is bugging me, that is frustrating me, and that does make me even more determined to get back out there this year and try and finish that last part of the season as strong as I can. “Once the season’s over then I’ll reassess everything and see what direction I want to go in.” • A fund-raiser for Josh Auty has been set up to assist the rider while he’s on the injury list. Donations can be made to: www.just giving.com/crowd funding/joshauty fundraiser Whilst refusing to acknowledge whether or not retirement at the end of 2022 has crossed his mind during the past seven weeks or so whilst hopping around on crutches back at home, Auty was quick to state his intentions on the immediate future. “That’s the bone that takes the majority of your body weight as well so that’s the one that needs to be strong. “Hopefully by mid-July that will be the case and I’ll be ready to get back racing again. “I do want to get back into it this season,” he “More than anything, I want to fulfil my TESTING TIMES Pictures: IAN RISPIN and STEVE BROCK June 11, 2022 speedway star 3

F Bradley Wilson-Dean didn’t know any better, the déjà vu he felt from helping fellow New Zealander and Diamonds team-mate George Congreve prepare for last Monday’s World Championship qualifier in Abensberg, Germany, could have been to meet his own ambitions.

IBAD FOR BRAD Unfinished business? More like unfinished seasons as Bradley Wilson-Dean looks back at a catalogue of seasons completed on the

Bra

Alas, once more, injury has struck this likeable Kiwi and he’s on the outside looking in.

His third match for Newcastle was unlucky for him when he was forced to withdraw and has been sidelined ever since.

“I rode at Leicester and it was pretty rough, well, I was finding it pretty rough, but some of the guys made it look really smooth, I definitely didn’t!” says Wilson-Dean. “Every time I came into the corner and hit a bump, the bike would sort of straighten up. I did it in my second race and the bike just took off with me and wrenched my arm – and that was it, I knew I couldn’t carry on. The pain was just stupid.

“The rest of that race, I just couldn’t hang on. I just kept going out towards the fence because it would get a bit of drive and shoot me out to the fence, and I couldn’t even hang on to it properly. I went out for my third race, dropped the clutch, and then as soon as I started turning into the corner, I just knew I couldn’t, and that was it, I pulled off the track.

“I’ve torn the tendon in my rotating cuff, supraspinatus tendon, it’s very sore. When the bike starts pulling, it’s driving, which is the one thing you want it to do, I just can’t hang on to it.”

The tendon is located at the back of the shoulder of the supraspinatus muscle, and it enables your arm to move through its full range of motions. He’s currently undergoing physiotherapy and carrying out exercises, as advised, in order to build up and to strengthen the tendon.,

“It’s pretty slow to be honest,” he says of its progress. “I’ve just been seeing a physio, doing exercises and stuff. I see her every two weeks, and she’s purely sports physio, treated a few All Blacks – she’s pretty good. She said she’d let me know when it is strong enough. At the moment she said there is no strength in it.

wrong side of the safety fence pandemic, and a heavy crash in last year’s Grand Prix qualifier in Glasgow, means that Brad has missed two years of league competition. Obviously, it’s a major setback, but he remains philosophical and also realistic about his side’s situation.

“I told Newcastle the week after, ‘I don’t want you guys waiting on me, you’ve got to do what is best for the team. If you’ve got to sign someone else, no hard feelings, you have the club to look after, don’t worry about me’. It’s up to them.

“I don’t expect them to wait on someone who is injured, and doesn’t have a clear answer of when he’ll be able to ride. I couldn’t expect them to. I’m not worried if they sign someone else; for them, I think it’s more about surviving than it is about winning, so they need to survive. I want whatever is best for Newcastle Speedway. At the end of the day, I don’t want to see any more clubs close down.

“It is frustrating. I’d signed for Rawicz (in Poland), but since I’ve been injured I’ve not had a chance to do anything with them. I’ve seen they’re having a tough season. But I don’t sit here thinking about it, I just get on with my day.

“How many times have I not finished the season? Two-thousand and sixteen, seventeen, I sort of did, on and off; 18, I had to finish early because I had surgery booked and needed to take it; 19, I didn’t finish. The last season I finished properly was 2015. You can’t control an injury, all I can do is try and get it better. I don’t stress too much on anything these days – it’s injuries and speedway,” he shrugs.

Congreve has benefitted somewhat from Wilson-Dean’s redundant equipment and Brad accompanied him to Germany where he assisted him as much as he could. Furthermore, BWD can look forward to becoming a father in November when he and his partner Jodie are expecting a baby boy.

“The Ben Fund have been brilliant, they’ve really looked after me, with a baby on the way, no income, trying to keep up with rent and all that, I’d like to thank them for supporting me,” he says gratefully.

“I let Speedway New Zealand know I wasn’t doing the qualifier, so George could . I’ve been helping him out getting over here.

“The bikes he’s riding are mine, I’ve sponsored him with them for the season, a couple of bikes and engines; his toolbox, oils, sprays, helped him out as much as I can to make it a little bit easier for him.

“It’s nice to have another Kiwi here for a change. He’s been struggling a bit, but before here he’s only ridden on three tracks in his life really, so it’s a bit of a learning curve for sure. It was good experience for him to be out there with the big boys.”

Words: BRIAN BURFORD

“I’ve spent so much money (NZ$8,000 on a visa alone), put so much into it, to come to the other side of the world, and I’ve got a pretty sweet life back home, so to come all the way over here to do this job and not be able to do it 100 per cent...it’s not worth it.

“It’s not worth me going out there and not being able to do it properly, I’d rather wait until I’m right – that’s how I look at it. I’m not doing the team, or myself, any favours by going out there and not scoring because I can’t ride properly. I’m better waiting until I’m fit.”

The pandemonium caused by the

2 speedway star June 11, 2022

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