Cycle News

Cycle News 2022 Issue 01 January 4

Cycle News is a weekly magazine that covers all aspects of motorcycling including Supercross, Motocross and MotoGP as well as new motorcycles

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together and they weren't right." The pain was a constant but espe- cially flared up when he rode: "Definitely 2018 was a tough season for racing and 2019, things still hurt quite a bit. It was a struggle every day to go ride because it always hurt. Working out hurt. You don't realize how much your wrist is involved in everything you do. There were a lot of times when I probably could've given up due to pain and suffer- ing, but I wasn't going to stop chasing my dreams for a little bit of pain. "It definitely has made me mentally tougher." Modern medicine, as well as exploring alterna- tive healing processes, combined with his mental outlook to help turn things around: "The whole time, I kept optimistic, hoping I could keep the mobility in my wrist. I ended up doing stem-cell injections and VOLUME 59 ISSUE 1 JANUARY 4, 2022 P51 behind Shirey, and I was like, 'Shoot, I've got it going on this year!' Everything felt good and this whole year, basically, everything just lined up. I was really con- fident in my bike; the suspension setup was really nice and my training program was spot-on. I knew I could do it, no mat- ter what. "Basically, this year, everything went perfectly, and I was able to wrap it up." From not knowing if he would even be able to keep his hand in 2017 to winning the championship in 2021 was quite a journey. "It broke my scaphoid in half, and basically took the ulna and radius bones and stuck them out through my skin," Wasson said. After initial treat- ment in Alamogordo, New Mexico, he was transferred to a hospital in El Paso, Texas, where he underwent surgery to rebuild the wrist and save his hand, remaining for three weeks during which time he underwent two more surgeries— operations complicated since Wasson refused to have the wrist fused. A wound was left open for two months to allow for cleaning and drainage, with an exter- nal fixator holding bones in place while things healed. "They were concerned because it was an open wound, and there was sand and stuff in it, so they kept me in the ICU there. When the doctor came in, he laid out all my options of things that were possibilities—there was a possibility of my hand not staying on my body because of infection or the surgery not working right. "It was nerve-wracking, to say the least." He admits that opting against fusion may have prolonged the healing process: "That was probably the reason for a lot of my pain that I had in 2018 when I had to stop because the bones were rubbing "I had a ton of confidence going in, my bike was working really good, and I just was going so fast. I kind of jumped off this little sand dune and basically went from 60 miles an hour to stopped."

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