Chris Froome retires after near-fatal crash: ‘I’m lucky to be alive’
Chris Froome has retired from professional cycling after a near-fatal training crash last summer left him with a collapsed rib cage and a punctured pericardium. The four-time Tour de France winner, 41, confirmed his retirement last week during the grand départ in Barcelona. He was airlifted to a military hospital in Toulon after hitting a road sign at 50kph on a training ride.
On a routine training ride last summer, Froome struck a road sign at 50kph. The impact flipped him off the bike and shattered his rib cage. The broken ribs collapsed inward, destroying his right lung and piercing the pericardium-the fluid-filled sac surrounding his heart. Blood filled his chest cavity, leaving him unable to breathe. A passing motorist stopped and called an ambulance, which arrived within seven or eight minutes. Paramedics inserted a tube between his ribs to relieve the pressure.
Froome knew his injuries were grave. He felt broken bones and couldn’t move his back after fracturing a vertebra. A military helicopter landed on the road minutes later and airlifted him to Toulon’s military hospital. Surgeons sewed up his pericardium and stabilized his heart. When he woke, the surgeon told him most patients with his injuries don’t survive. Froome spent four months in and out of hospital after the crash, including follow-up surgery when his lung collapsed again.
The crash forced Froome to question his priorities. With two young children, he wondered what he was still chasing. “I’ve had such an amazing career,” he said. “What am I still chasing?” His 2019 Dauphiné recon crash-when he fractured his femur, hip and lumbar vertebrae-had already made him question his future. He tried to return but never regained his old form. His five-year contract with Israel-Premier Tech expired at the end of last year. He never formally announced his retirement until now.
Froome’s focus shifts to family and recovery. He spent months on antibiotics to prevent reinfection. Doctors warned him about the risks of another collapse. Now 41, he leaves the sport on his own terms. “I am very lucky to be here today,” he said. His final chapter closes with gratitude-and a warning about the fragility of life.