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Niki Terpstra says he’ll be back after being knocked unconscious in Tour of Flanders crash

Defending champion hospitalised with cranial trauma – and will miss next week’s Paris-Roubaix

Niki Terpstra, winner of last year’s Tour of Flanders, has said he’ll “be back” after his title defence ended today when he was knocked unconscious in a crash.

The crash happened on a straight, flat stretch of road with 100 kilometres ridden of the 267 kilometre race from Antwerp to Oudenarde, the most likely cause being a touch of wheels.

TV footage showed the Direct-Energie rider motionless on the ground while he was attended to by race medical staff, with team mates looking concerned.

The French UCI Professional Continental outfit subsequently gave an update via Twitter, with the team doctor confirming that the Dutch rider was okay.

However the team added that as a result of his suffering a cranial trauma and being knocked unconscious, he would be unable to ride next week at Paris-Roubaix – a race he won in 2014, and where he finished third 12 months ago.

The 34-year-old subsequently reassured fans via Instagram that he would “be back.”

Direct Energie, which Terpstra joined this season after eight years at Quick Step, was last month given a wild card entry to July’s Tour de France.

Today's race was won by the Italian rider Alberto Bettiol of EF Educatin First, in what was the first professional victory of his career.

Simon joined road.cc as news editor in 2009 and is now the site’s community editor, acting as a link between the team producing the content and our readers. A law and languages graduate, published translator and former retail analyst, he has reported on issues as diverse as cycling-related court cases, anti-doping investigations, the latest developments in the bike industry and the sport’s biggest races. Now back in London full-time after 15 years living in Oxford and Cambridge, he loves cycling along the Thames but misses having his former riding buddy, Elodie the miniature schnauzer, in the basket in front of him.

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13 comments

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maviczap | 5 years ago
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The helmet prevents damage to the skull and prevents external bruising, which could then put pressure on the brain, which would be bad.

But no helmet will prevent the brain rattling inside the skull as a result of a crash, which is the cause of the concussion, you don't necessarily have to have a big lump on your head to have concussion.

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Mungecrundle | 5 years ago
5 likes

Would absolutely agree with the compulsory aspect of removing a sportsperson from the field of play as a result of any suspected head injury.

1. It removes the element of peer or team management pressure to return to the fray when you really know that you should not.

2. People with head injuries and hyped on adrenaline are not best placed to self assess their medical needs.

3. In many sports an injured player or one not fully capable of making rational decisions can be a liability to other competitors, not just themselves.

As to - did the helmet mitigate further injury or not? That cannot be answered based on any single incident. There is a good argument that wearing protective equipment shifts the risk balance that the wearer is willing to accept, but this was racing and the incident doesn't look to have happened in an extreme moment. Actual reliable, peer reviewed evidence of the efficacy of wearing a helmet outside of the somewhat unrealistic, but repeatable world of the test lab is exceedingly hard to come by. However I'm not sure that given the choice, too many riders would wish to repeat the same incident without one.

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Kapelmuur | 5 years ago
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Is the proposition that the injury would have been less severe had a helmet not been worn?

My only experience of head injury is crashing when not wearing a helmet and not remembering anything between leaving home and waking up in A&E.

Neither my accident or Terpstra's is repeatable with/without helmet so the 'debate' grinds on ad infinitum.

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BehindTheBikesheds replied to Kapelmuur | 5 years ago
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Kapelmuur wrote:

Is the proposition that the injury would have been less severe had a helmet not been worn? My only experience of head injury is crashing when not wearing a helmet and not remembering anything between leaving home and waking up in A&E. Neither my accident or Terpstra's is repeatable with/without helmet so the 'debate' grinds on ad infinitum.

Who has said that?

looking at why crashes occur and occur far more frequently since helmet mandation, why riders still get knocked out, why they hit their heads at all more and have more traumatic injuries and indeed more deaths post helmet rules is important is it not? 

Or are they/you going to keep on ignoring the problems, going to keep on ignoring that more riders are still being pushed to keep on going post crash despite obvious injury, the one I highlighted was absolutely shocking but many riders have been forced (or not stopped) from carrying on post having a head strike/concussion.

Shall we wait until its too late and in a few decades we realise that cycle helmets have exactly the same effect as helmets in gridiron, like headguards have had in boxing?? The rules re helmets have been knee jerk reactions with no basis in fact, the facts support that wearing helmets in pro racing only make matters worse but then the UCI have a vested financial interest as does the cycling industry as a whole to sell helmets so they won't bother looking at the real root causes and continue to go down the more is better route just as gridiron have with disastrous effects!

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Merchant of Cool | 5 years ago
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"Why compulsory?  No one is responsible for another person in this situation. If the rider choses to get back on then its his choice.  The very idea that it is desirable to protect someone from their own actions is ridiculous. Compulsory helmets even is immoral.  A doctor can suggest, a team can have a team policy which the rider signs up to, a race can be rquired to have a doctor etc on site,  but to suggest that anyone can over-ride an individuals rights to kill themselves is fundamentally wrong."

 

Helmets are compulsory in UCI races......

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bigbiker101 | 5 years ago
7 likes

We cannot say the helmet didn't help him, he could easily be dead or seriously injured now without a helmet, likewise he could of been in the exact same sitution if he hadn't had a helmet on, to use this crash as an argument for or against helmet use is foolish at best as we cannot compare with or without.

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BehindTheBikesheds replied to bigbiker101 | 5 years ago
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bigbiker101 wrote:

We cannot say the helmet didn't help him, he could easily be dead or seriously injured now without a helmet, likewise he could of been in the exact same sitution if he hadn't had a helmet on, to use this crash as an argument for or against helmet use is foolish at best as we cannot compare with or without.

Bother to actually read what I said, tell me where I said not to use helmets? I clearly stated that the severe concussion occured despite wearing a helmet and that the incident was at low speed, speeds that a helmet is supposed to prevent this from occuring, it clearly failed to do its job, one that is pushed everywhere. 

I also said that the UCI needs to investigate further how they can prevent these common occurences from happening AND to tighten up their procedures when riders are concussed.

Nowhere did I say helmets should not be worn!

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longassballs | 5 years ago
7 likes

Bit silly.

There's no evidence either way that the helmet either didn't protect him properly or that the helmet prevented a worse injury.

Support mandatory concussion protocols.

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nebcb | 5 years ago
4 likes
mattsccm wrote:

3. Why compulsory?

So that teams are compelled to look after their riders and not put them into races when they they should be recovering from concussion.

That's why.

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mattsccm | 5 years ago
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Firstly this goes a small way to prove that helmets are not the universal answer to head injuries.

But more to the point the above poster is so wrong in several ways.

1. This happened in a nice safe situation. Likely a touch of wheels. What would the poster do? Have mandatory gaps around each rider. In this case "shit happens".

2. And just how would you improve helmets etc without adding to the weight, cost etc?

3. Why compulsory?  No one is responsible for another person in this situation. If the rider choses to get back on then its his choice.  The very idea that it is desirable to protect someone from their own actions is ridiculous. Compulsory helmets even is immoral.  A doctor can suggest, a team can have a team policy which the rider signs up to, a race can be rquired to have a doctor etc on site,  but to suggest that anyone can over-ride an individuals rights to kill themselves is fundamentally wrong.

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Htc replied to mattsccm | 5 years ago
0 likes
mattsccm wrote:

Firstly this goes a small way to prove that helmets are not the universal answer to head injuries.

But more to the point the above poster is so wrong in several ways.

1. This happened in a nice safe situation. Likely a touch of wheels. What would the poster do? Have mandatory gaps around each rider. In this case "shit happens".

2. And just how would you improve helmets etc without adding to the weight, cost etc?

3. Why compulsory?  No one is responsible for another person in this situation. If the rider choses to get back on then its his choice.  The very idea that it is desirable to protect someone from their own actions is ridiculous. Compulsory helmets even is immoral.  A doctor can suggest, a team can have a team policy which the rider signs up to, a race can be rquired to have a doctor etc on site,  but to suggest that anyone can over-ride an individuals rights to kill themselves is fundamentally wrong.

 

Philosophically I agree with you, ethically I don’t.

 

1) Unfortunately the world is far to litigious now that any precaution available must be taken to avoid leaving oneself/ones organisation open to a claim.

2) It’s right that an employer must put their employees lives above any business goals.

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daturaman replied to mattsccm | 5 years ago
1 like
mattsccm wrote:

Firstly this goes a small way to prove that helmets are not the universal answer to head injuries.

It does nothing of the sort. No head gear, no matter how protective, will offer a "universal answer to head injuries". No one is seriously making this claim.

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BehindTheBikesheds | 5 years ago
2 likes

look at how slow they were going, shocking how the helmet didn't stop this trauma from happening from a low speed fall!

 I hope he fully recovers with no lasting side effects but this yet again highlights how mickey poor helmets really are, the UCI should be looking further at how they can protect riders from such injuries BUT also importantly they should be looking at mandatory concussion protocols for ANY rider that has a concussion.

We have this in rugby league and rugby union, my team currently have a player who has had two concussions in the last 12 months, that means he's not allowed to play for two weeks minimum, the club have to put this (and any injury) onto his player passport and remove him from play immediately for assessment. This does not happen currently in cycling and is still way behind other sports.

You only need look at how there was no help for Toms Skujins in 2017 when he was clearly badly concussed, in fact the first person on the scene (neutral wheel person I think) was trying to aid him get back on the bike when they should have been getting him out of harms way and STOPPING him from remounting.

UCI needs to deal with these traumas better still despite the improvements in recent years but look yet again as to why crashes/injuries occur in the first instance, prevention is far better than a cure!!

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