Most Popular Sports
All Sports
Show All

Rio 2016 Olympics: Crash cyclist Van Vleuten shrugs off fractured vertebrae, saying 'I'll be fine'

Eurosport
ByEurosport

Updated 08/08/2016 at 08:44 GMT

Annemiek van Vleuten suffered three fractured vertebrae and a concussion after a horrifying high-speed crash in the Olympic women's road race on Sunday but the Dutch rider said she will be fine and was more disappointed at missing out on a medal.

Rio 2016 - Annemiek van Vleuten (NED) of Netherlands

Image credit: Samsung Galaxy

Television pictures showed Van Vleuten after losing control of her bike when leading on the final descent towards Copacabana beach with around 15km of the race remaining.
Van Vleuten was leading the race when she skidded on a steep descent and smashed head-first into a stone kerb.
She was taken to hospital and put in intensive care, with some who saw the accident fearing the 33-year-old may have suffered more severe injuries.
"I am now in the hospital with some injuries and fractures, but will be fine," Van Vleuten said on Twitter.
"Most of all super disappointed after best race of my career."
The Dutch team's chief medical officer Cees Rein van den Hoogenband said: "Annemiek went through a total CT scan and is stable now. She suffers from a heavy concussion but there were no further abnormalities seen on the scan.
"She will stay in intensive care for the next 24 hours. She is fully conscious and her reactions are adequate."
picture

Annemiek van Vleuten in the women's road race

Image credit: Reuters

'She's super tough': Support from across the sport

Other riders were quick to offer their support.
Australian Gracie Elvin, who also rides for the Orica team along with Van Vleuten, said she could have been killed.
"I'm still concerned right now but from what we've heard she's ok," Elvin said on Twitter.
"She's super tough."
Van Vleuten's compatriot Anna van der Breggen won the women's race, and speculated on what might have happened.
"Of course if you are riding out front, then maybe you take too much risk, I don't know," she said.
"It's still a bike race and anything can happen, so maybe it's just bad luck that happened to her."

Van Vleuten's history of bad luck

It is not the first time Van Vleuten has suffered serious injuries after a crash.
Last year she was left with three broken ribs, a broken collarbone and a collapsed lung following a training accident with a car in Italy.
The Rio course, particularly the Vista Chinesa descent where Vincenzo Nibali crashed and broke both collarbones on Saturday, has come under fire.
Nibali was also leading the men's race when he crashed on the same section of road.

Chris Boardman's anger at organisers

TV commentator Chris Boardman said afterwards that he was "angry" about the perilous course following several injuries in the equivalent men's event.
"I'm really just waiting for news on Van Vleuten; it's very hard to concentrate when you see a crash like that," he said.
"I'm actually quite angry because I looked at the road furniture and thought nobody can crash here and get up. This was way past technical, this was dangerous."
Additional reporting by Reuters / Carrie Dunn
Join 3M+ users on app
Stay up to date with the latest news, results and live sports
Download
Related Topics
Share this article
Advertisement
Advertisement