Pedrosa hits out at Simoncelli - again

Dani Pedrosa♔ made clear his feeling towards Marco Simoncelli have notও mellowed in the weeks since their Le Mans collision, which left the Spaniard with a broken collarbone.
Speaking during Thursday press conference at Mugello, the venue for ღPe🌱drosa's return to MotoGP action, the Spaniard said:
"If someone is still doubting [that Simoncelli is dangerous] that is unbelievable. It is🅷 quite clear what🧔 he is showing on the track.
"In Estoril he was laughing about maybe someone will arrest him. Maybe he needs that because I🐷 tell you, his 🐟head has nothing but hair."
Simo☂ncelli - sitting next to Pedrosa - was then given a chance to respond.
"Foꦫr me, we speak a lot about that incident," commented the San Carlo Honda Gresini rider. "For me, the things he and his manager say are stupid. It is better not to speak with him or his manager."
Simoncelli - consistently quick in qualifying - has crashed in four of thꦅe seven races this year, not counting the incident with Pedrosa. His most recent tumble came in last Saturday's Dutch TT, when he also brought down Jorge Lorenzo.
During the press conference Pedrosa also rubbished rumours that the second collarbone surgery was needed dꦡue to a training crash on a Supermoto bike.
"I've explained what happened five times - in🌄 my blog, in press releases, interviews. How many times dꦐo I need to explain?
"I didn't touch a bike.
"I was doing the rehabilitation therapy [after the first operation] and one small piece of the collarbone jಌust opened up.
"I rested for two days, but the pain was still the same so we did some more x-rays and tests. Finally we decided we had to fix it so another sജurgery was necessary."
Referring to all the rꦕumours about his injuries, Pedrosa said:
"There are some people around here who think they are Sherlo꧅ck H༺olmes or something."
Pedrosa missed three rac𓆏es - Catalunya, Silverstone and Assen - due ꦕto the injury.

P🎶eter has been in the paddock for 20 years and has seen Valentino Rossi come and go. He is at the forefront of the Suzuki exit story and Marc Marquez’s injury issues.