Miguel Oliveira: “We cannot rush coming back”
Miguel Oliveira unsure of Spanish MotoGP retꦗurn, says full fitness is the only priority.

168澳洲5最新开奖结果:Miguel Oliveira returned to the MotoGP paddock in Qatar on Friday with his left arm in a sling as he continues recovering from a complicated shoulder injury sustain꧃ed in Argentina.
The Pramac Yamaha rider was injured w🌼hen he was taken down by r🎶ookie Fermín Aldeguer during the Sprint on March 15th.
Initially suspected to be 𝓡a fractured collarbone, further examination revealed Oliveira had suffered a more severe ‘luxation of the sternum and clavicle’.
Describing the early stages of his recovery, Oliveira told MotoGP.com: “I had the shoulder completely immobilised for the f🐟irst th🎃ree weeks.
"Those were the more critical ones to get the claviཧcle back in place, try to create a little bit of a scar tissue around it and🦄 try to get a little bit of stability.
“Now I'm able to start to move a little bit more freely the arm and the shoulder, and I can start to see things going a 🍷litt꧃le bit better and better each day.
"And of course that's really motivating when you're trying to come back a🉐s soon as possible.”
“We cannot rush coming back”
Oliveira is🦩 being replaced for the second event in a row by Yamaha test rider Augusto Fernandez.
The next potential date for a return to MotoGP action is the Spanish Grand Prix at the end ♍of this month.
“We'll see, it's the doctor's decision,” Oliveira said. “After we get another MRI next week we'll assess the situation of the tend💮on.
"Then if we can start to g🐷o higher and higher with the movements, we can start to add maybe a little bit of weight that speeds up the recovery quite well.
“How much, we're not sure. And w꧅e need to have a stable collarbone to compete, to make sure it doesn't come out with the effort.
"So we cannot 𒁏rush coming back. I need to be 100% fit to ride the MotoGP.”
Oliveira, injured by the actions of others more than any other rider on the premier-class grid, said he trie꧙s not to dwell on what happened.
“You just try to forget,” he said. “Every injury I'm just loo༒king forward, to what I 🧸can do to heal myself as quickly as possible.
“🌊Also, to have an optimistic and a positive approach to the comeback. Because if you start thinking about the luck you have, you will lose control a little bit of what you can do.
“So whenever the time is to come 🔥🐓back. I'll make sure I'll be ready.”

Peter has been in the paddock for 20 years and has seen Valentino R🦹ossi come and go. He is at the forefront of the Suzuki exit story and Marc Marquez’s injury issues.