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Cyclist covered in thousands of spikes after crash into cactus bush

Argentinian cyclist Diego Moreno had to be taken to hospital after hitting a pothole in Buenos Aires which sent him flying into a cactus bush. Pictures: YouTube
Argentinian cyclist Diego Moreno had to be taken to hospital after hitting a pothole in Buenos Aires which sent him flying into a cactus bush. Pictures: YouTube

A cyclist in Buenos Aires has come off second best after tangling with a cactus on the side of the road while out for a ride with mates.

Thousands of painful cactus spikes had to be removed from Diego Moreno’s body after he tumbled into the spiky plant while riding through the City East district of the Argentinian capital.

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Passers-by stopped on the side of the road to help Moreno remove thousands of spines that were covering his body.

The poor cyclist said a pothole in the road that he hadn’t seen had sent him flying.

“We were going with three more cyclists, I was last in line,” Moreno said, according to The Sun.

“I didn’t see a small crater in the asphalt and I hit the pothole.

“Thank god I was wearing glasses and a helmet and I didn’t injure my face or head.

“Because the way the spines got embedded in me, it could have blinded me.”

Moreno was later taken to hospital to be treated for his injuries.

MotoGP rider's doping ban now four years

MotoGP rider Andrea Iannone had his ban for doping with an anabolic steroid extended to four years on Tuesday because he could not prove contaminated meat was to blame.

The Court of Arbitration for Sport said its three judges dismissed the Italian rider's appeal against an 18-month ban and upheld the World Anti-Doping Agency's counter appeal requesting a four-year sanction.

The 31-year-old Iannone's ban originally imposed by the International Motorcycling Federation was extended to December 2023.

Iannone cited eating contaminated meat for his positive test for Drostanolone at the Malaysian Grand Prix in November 2019.

The CAS judges found he was not able to prove "the precise type of meat he had consumed nor the origin of said meat."

MotoGP racer Andrea Iannone has had his doping ban extended to four years by the Court of Arbitration for Sport. (Photo by Mirco Lazzari gp/Getty Images)
MotoGP racer Andrea Iannone has had his doping ban extended to four years by the Court of Arbitration for Sport. (Photo by Mirco Lazzari gp/Getty Images)

"Moreover, the panel found that neither Andrea Iannone nor his experts were able to establish specifically that there was an issue of meat contamination by Drostanolone in Malaysia," CAS said in a statement.

Anti-doping rules place the burden of proof on the athlete to explain how a banned substance was present.

Athletes have had explanations of contaminated meat accepted after testing positive for clenbuterol in China and Mexico where it has been used in livestock farming.

A two-year ban could have resulted for a judgement of inadvertent doping.

However, the panel decided even if meat contamination was possible in Iannone's case, he "has not been able to provide any convincing evidence to establish that the (violation) he committed was unintentional. "

Iannone had a contract to ride for Aprilia Racing Team Gresini.

His only MotoGP victory came at the 2016 Austrian GP.

With AAP

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