Cyprien Sarrazin repatriated to after his accident, his ski season ends

Cyprien Sarrazin repatriated to after his accident, his ski season ends
Cyprien Sarrazin repatriated to France after his accident, his ski season ends

A week after his violent fall in Bormio (Italy) and a serious head injury, Cyprien Sarrazin was repatriated this Friday to , to . The descender, who suffers from dilopia, will begin a convalescence which promises to be long… and with no guarantee that he will be able to put on skis again in competition.

A bright future sliding into unknown limbo. As confirmed by the French Ski Federation (FFS) this Saturday during a press briefing, Cyprien Sarrazin’s 2024-2025 season is over. The Haut-Alpin, world No.2 in downhill last winter, will begin another race in Lyon, one to regain all his faculties.

“We are talking in months, we are not at all talking about recovery in weeks,” anticipated Stéphane Bulle, the doctor of the French alpine ski team during this video conference. “He is doing well, but is still very tired and has difficulty communicating. He is relieved to be back in France and he is fully aware of what happened to him,” the doctor explained.

CYPRIEN SARAZIN SUFFERS FROM DILOPIA

On December 27, during the second official training before the downhill and super of Bormio, counting for the World Cup, Sarrazin lost control of his skis on one of the last difficulties of the Stelvio, one of the most feared on the circuit where the men’s alpine skiing events of the 2026 Olympics will take place.

Helicoptered to Sondalo hospital, not far from Bormio, he initially received “very good quality care,” said Doctor Bulle. Aged 30, the skier then suffered from an “acute intracranial hematoma”. “The hematoma quickly worsened and caused what we call compression,” the doctor said. “We, in agreement with the neurosurgeons, made a burr hole. That is to say, we do a suction in the skull to empty the blood inside the hematoma.

Transferred Friday to the Médipole in Lyon, Sarrazin will then continue his convalescence at the Henry-Gabrielle center, still in Lyon, “which really has a specificity in neurological rehabilitation for people who have had car accidents, people who have had enormous trauma », Specified the doctor.

His rehabilitation began with simple actions. “We’re going to start by allowing him to do things that everyone does, namely sit, eat, stand. Today, he still has a little difficulty opening his eyes, because he suffers from diplopia, that is to say that the reflexes which coordinate your two eyes are a little disturbed following the hyperpressure in the skull,” further underlined the French team doctor.

“I have absolutely no idea where this is going to take us.”

If he said he was “relatively calm” before the final assessment of potential injuries which will be carried out in the days to come, the French team doctor does not yet have an answer to the question of whether the leader leader of French downhillers will be able to resume his career at the high level. “I have absolutely no idea where this is going to take us. I can’t tell you. But anyway, that’s our goal,” he conceded.

It also remains to be seen whether Sarrazin, already the victim of heavy falls in the past, including serious head trauma in 2018, will still want to hurtle down icy slopes at more than 100 km/h.

-

-

PREV A possible limitation of tariff increases by Trump delights the stock markets
NEXT “If Nicolas Sarkozy were condemned, the Fifth Republic would be damaged,” believes historian Gilles Richard