World Cup overall leader Camille Balanche has just shared the news that she broke her collarbone in the first day of practice at Mont-Sainte-Anne. With a 230 point lead over Myriam Nicole and 369 point lead ahead of Vali Höll, Camille was in a strong position to take the 2022 overall series with just Mont-Sainte-Anne this weekend and Val di Sole September 2-4 remaining.
 | Not what I wanted to share after this first day of practice but I crashed on my shoulder and broke my collarbone! I’m proud of my season so far and I was so close to achieve my dream but shit happens! I was kinda waiting this day to arrive as I was super lucky since 2017! Good luck for everyone racing this weekend! I will be cheering from the side! It’s hard to tell if I will be back before the last round but I will take one day after the other and keep you updated.—Camille Balanche |
We're gutted to see the Swiss rider injured and wish her all the best with her recovery.
We've heard Elite Women's series leader, Camille Balanche, is out for the season broken collarbone after a crash in practice, Loic separated his shoulder and Loris had a big off as well. We wish them all the best.
Flat tires were a common occurrence today as riders pushed the pace during timed runs. Just heard that Amaury had a flat during his 4th place timed run.
MSA is a fast course, and if the plate came loose during a run, the consequences could be catastrophic.
Camille has the rest of her life to live.
As a surgeon who fixes clavicles, you're right, no doctor would recommend this... but I get your point, it just isn't reasonable when the risks so clearly outweigh the benefits.
Also, there is no concussion dilemma any more, its a god damn brain injury, stay the f home. don't be stupid
Do you not think that one head butt to a tree could just end it? Every one of these extreme sports has a risk of death, it is just how is it managed and who is willing to risk more.
In this case I doubt she is racing for millions in sponsorship/prize money so I agree that to me the the risk is not worth the reward, I merely pointed out the option. See @ Duplex above.
If that’s the case, she misses one race.
Surgical reduction saw me back on the bike in 28 days.
By the way, thanks for all you do.
While the pressure to compete may be less from a sponsor point of view nowadays after an injury. You are only talking the top few racers who have contracts where they get paid if they dont ride. The rest of the racers dont have the teams to fall back on and recover. They race injured or not.
For something as high impact as downhill mountain biking, a very aggressive return to the sport would be 8-10 weeks.
To clarify some points... plates aren't designed to substitute the strength of the native bone. These plates are low profile and meant to accommodate some small 2.7-3.5mm screws. During the surgery we try to align the bones as anatomically as possible and then compress the ends with the plates holding the bones together. The whole point is to minimize motion of the fracture site so the bones can heal in a way much different than if you were to allow it to heal without surgery.
If you return too early and there is too much strain across the fracture, it won't heal appropriately. The plate will see too much stress and start to loosen or break and now were potentially dealing with a nonhealing fracture site. Best to just allow it to fully heal, then rehabilitate, and then return so you can avoid complicated revision surgery.
I'm not sure if that's the same track they run for UCI DH. The video is sick.
Still time remaining to change fantasy teams!? She was my safe bet this season...
Heal up fast and see you on the race scene soon!
There's a snap/crack noise just as she goes past the Orange Pads and she utters "Whaa", then she nose dives into the right edge of that rock in the landing zone. I wonder if something on her bike broke??? It may be totally unrelated but the timing is a bit suspect.
Camille has amazing core stability. So she doesn’t need to ride like a rodeo to ride fast./fastest
@Meganstuart1:
Heal fast.