Tony Dodds recovering well after serious collision with car
Tony Dodds recovering well after serious collision with
car
New Zealand elite triathlete Tony Dodds is back on the
saddle one week after a serious accident while training in
Germany. Dodds,
24, was launched through the rear windscreen of a car while
out training on his bike last week when the vehicle in front
of him slammed its brakes on. He escaped with a badly
bruised hip and shoulder but lost a lot of blood from deep
cuts to his right arm which narrowly missed severing an
artery. Dodds is recovering in Darmstadt and has made solid
improvements over the past week with London's first Olympic
selection race now just two weeks away. "It's coming right,
just taking some time. The German stitches aren't that great
and my elbow is still a bit pussy and puffy but life goes
on. It's a bit of a bummer but it happens," Dodds said. "A
lot of people have said 'you're so lucky you didn't hurt
anything else' but to be honest I haven't really thought
about it that much yet. I'm lucky to come out with just a
sore arm since my whole body went through the
windscreen. "There was nothing wrong with my bike, nothing
wrong with my helmet, my whole body was sweet. It was just
an instinct that I put my arm first and it just took the
whole crash really." With 12 stitches limiting movement in
his arm and elbow, Dodds was a late withdrawal for last
weekend's ITU World Championship Series race in
Hamburg.
While the risk of infection is still too high to
think about swimming, he has been able to continue run
training and is now back on the road with his bike after a
week on the wind trainer. Dodds admits his mental space
wasn't great in the days following the accident, and he even
thought about returning home to Wanaka. But support from
fellow athletes and his coach Tim Brazier pulled him through
and he's now more determined than ever to get his season
back on track. "The first thing I wanted to do was go home.
I was just in one of those moods, my arm was so sore and I
was pretty fed up. "There's still a lot of puffiness and I
can't bend it that far. All I'm doing is running and biking
at the moment but in each training session I'm doing the
little things I can to improve and not think about it too
much. "Looking at London right now the water's pretty dirty
so I'll have to be careful and make sure I put something
over it and hope like hell I can manage for 1500m - it
shouldn't be a problem. "One thing I've got to do is not
let it worry me too much, I'm just taking it a day at a time
at the moment." The London leg of the ITU World
Championship Series is split over two days on August
6th/7th. ends