Imperial Valley Press

Cianciarul­o ready for 450 debut after long ride

- By JOHN MARSHALL AP Sports Writer celebrates winning the

Doubt’s clutches first gripped Adam Cianciarul­o at 17.

He had been unbeatable and invincible to that point, knowing he could beat the other riders every time he pulled his dirt bike into the gate.

Cianciarul­o shrugged off a shoulder injury as part of being a motocross racer. Breaking his leg the second day back on the bike had him wondering why me.

A crash in his first race back from the leg injury had him thinking, while still in the air, he might die on the concrete below. A third shoulder injury, on the left this time, crushed nearly all the confidence he had left.

Doubt, it appeared would not let go.

“I used to line up in the gate, look to my left, look to my right and think, I’ve got these guys beat, I’ve got them covered,” Cianciarul­o said. “Coming back from all those injuries, I started looking left and right and thinking, I don’t have these guys. As an athlete, you become vulnerable, that feeling of maybe I was never really that good.”

Through his own determinat­ion and a little help along the way, Cianciarul­o rediscover­ed his confidence during a 250cc class championsh­ip run this summer. On Saturday night, he will make his 450cc debut at the Monster Energy Cup in Las Vegas.

A rut-filled path paved the way.

Cianciarul­o’s interest in motocross began on TV. He started watching races from his home in Claremont, Florida, at 3 and became enamored with Jeremy McGrath, toting a VHS tape of the seven-time champion’s 1999 Supercross season everywhere he went.

On a dirt bike, young

Adam was unrivaled, winning at every level. He signed with Kawasaki at 7 and his first pro contract with Pro Circuit Racing at 14. He finished his amateur career with a record 11 mini-bike national championsh­ips.

Cianciarul­o was pegged as the next two-wheel star, in line behind McGrath, Ricky Carmichael, Ryan Villopoto, Ryan Dungey — maybe even surpassing them.

He lived up to the billing early in his first Supercross season, winning his 250cc debut and two other races in 2014.

“He made it look so easy,” Pro Circuit Racing owner Mitch Payton said. “Every class he would elevate to, he would continue to win.”

Cianciarul­o’s first taste of defeat came inside Toronto’s Rogers Centre in 2014.

Holding a 17-point lead with three rounds left, he hit a section of whoops and injured his right shoulder while trying to hold onto the bike. He tried to race later that night, but the shoulder again popped out and the joint was too loose to continue.

Surgery for a torn rotator cuff and labrum followed, but through intense rehab, he was ready to ride again four months later.

Two days into his return, he suffered compound tibia and fibula fractures.

“That’s when I was like, man, what’s going on here?” he said.

The injury ride was just getting out of the gate.

For his first race back from the broken leg, Cianciarul­o went to Geneva for an exhibition race, shortly after turning 18. Riding through a rhythm section, he lost control, sailed off the course and landed headfirst on the concrete.

“In the air, I was thinking: This might be it, I may die,” he said. “That’s the only time I’ve ever thought that on a dirt bike.”

Cianciarul­o remained unconsciou­s for several minutes. He had to be strapped to a backboard and taken to a hospital.

Luckily, his head injury was not severe. His shoulder injury was.

Cianciarul­o shattered the socket of his surgically repaired right shoulder, and re-tore the labrum and rotator cuff.

Three successive injuries sent Cianciarul­o into a dark place. He remained the happy-go-lucky kid on the outside, but it was a facade to mask the anguish building inside.

A third shoulder injury — on the left — six races into his latest return caused Cianciarul­o to question himself and his place in the sport.

“I was basically a bust. That’s what I considered myself,” he said. “I was always hurt, I could never stay on the track and the more I sat on my couch, the better everyone else was getting.”

More injuries followed: a broken wrist in 2016, ACL reconstruc­tion in 2018.

 ??  ?? In this Aug. 24 photo, provided by Motocross Action Magazine. Adam Cianciarul­o
Ironman National motocross race in Crawfordsv­ille, Ind. rIch ShePherd/MOtOcrOSS ActIOn MAgAzIne VIA AP
In this Aug. 24 photo, provided by Motocross Action Magazine. Adam Cianciarul­o Ironman National motocross race in Crawfordsv­ille, Ind. rIch ShePherd/MOtOcrOSS ActIOn MAgAzIne VIA AP

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