Driver rams dashing cyclists in Arizona, 6 fundamentally harmed SHOW LOW, Ariz. (AP) — Authorities were attempting to decide why a 35-year-elderly person driving a pickup truck blasted through bicyclists during a local area street race in Arizona, fundamentally harming six riders. The suspect, whose name hasn't been delivered, was hospitalized in basic however stable condition subsequent to running away from the accident area Saturday and being shot by police outside a close by home improvement shop in the mountain town of Show Low, around a three-hour drive upper east of Phoenix. "We don't have the foggiest idea about the inspiration," city representative Grace Payne revealed to The Associated Press. Four of the harmed riders were hospitalized in basic condition with two others in basic however stable condition as of Saturday. One was traveled to a medical clinic close to Phoenix. Specialists didn't promptly give any updates Sunday. "This has been a repulsive occasion," police representative Kristine Sleighter said in an explanation. "Our people group is stunned at this occurrence and our hearts and petitions are with the harmed and their families right now." Witnesses said protective caps, shoes and folded and broken bikes were thronw across the road after the accident, and a tire was wedged into the barbecue of the truck, which had harm to its top and sides and a slug opening in a window. Police said a Ford pickup truck struck the bicyclists about 7:25 a.m. Saturday in midtown Show Low during the yearly 58-mile (93-kilometer) Bike the Bluff race that had 270 members. Tony Quinones, of Santa Fe, New Mexico, told the New York Times that he had been riding for around six minutes with different cyclists over the age of 55 when a dark pickup that had been driving the other way got more than three paths and made a beeline for the cyclists. Quinones said he expected the driver was moving toward a parking area. All things being equal, the driver blasted through the cyclists in front of the 55-year-old Quinones. "He drove his truck straightforwardly and purposefully into our gathering, and you could hear him speed up," Quinones said, adding that he saw bicycles and bodies flying. After the driver hit a utility pole, cyclists approached the truck and began beating on the windows, shouting at the driver to get out, Quinones told the Times.1 Yet rather than stop, he said the driver hit the gas pedal and retreated, drove as it were, made a U-turn and afterward made a beeline for the cyclists. Payne said the driver didn't consent when officials attempted to capture him, yet the conditions of the shooting were not promptly delivered. The Navajo County sheriff's office and Arizona Department of Public Safety were assisting with the examination.