'I even thought I might never make it home' - Damien Touzé out of danger but season over and career on hold after 60 kph Tour of Oman horror crash

Damien Touzé during the 2026 Tour of Oman
Damien Touzé during the 2026 Tour of Oman (Image credit: Getty Images)

Damien Touzé returned to Belgium following a horrendous 60 kph crash during stage 4 of the Tour of Oman, but the Cofidis racer said his career was now on hold and his season over as the battle to recover from his injuries continues.

Touzé, 29, suffered a perforated intestine, ripped spleen and broken knee in the crash and remained in hospital in Oman for 10 days before doctors decided the French pro had recovered enough to be put on a flight back to Europe. During that time, he's had two operations and lost 10 kilos in weight.

"I even thought I might never make it home," Touzé told Ouest-France on Wednesday from his hospital bed in Menen, Belgium.

A pro since 2017 in French teams throughout his career, first with the low-level HP BTP-Auber '93 squad, and then as part of Cofidis, AG2R La Mondiale and then Cofidis again, Touzé said he had no idea what the future holds for him.

Once in hospital in Oman, "Initially they didn't realize that I had a hole in my intestine, so that's what made my condition worse," Touzé added.

With his issues in his abdomen only partly resolved, the doctors in Belgium had to operate on the injury, with Touzé explaining that after everything had been put back in place, he had a new wound that needed to heal.

Then there was his knee injury to handle as well. Touzé is still waiting to see how multiple torn ligaments will be treated, but it's estimated that it'll take anything up to eight months for him to recover fully.

Touzé already had bad accidents in the 2020 Tour de Pologne and the 2022 Vuelta a Burgos. In Poland he was caught in the same mass crash where Fabio Jakobsen had a life-threatening fall, in the Frenchman's case fracturing a finger in three places. Then in Spain two years later, like several others, he lost control of his bike on a speed bump organisers had failed to remove from the course and hurt his head badly.

Out of contract at the end of the year, but receiving lots of support from friends and family, Touzé said his future remained very unclear. But despite the uncertainty he was trying to stay philosophical.

"After all this, frankly I didn't think about the bike at all," Touzé told Ouest-France .

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Alasdair Fotheringham

Alasdair Fotheringham has been reporting on cycling since 1991. He has covered every Tour de France since 1992 bar one, as well as numerous other bike races of all shapes and sizes, ranging from the Olympic Games in 2008 to the now sadly defunct Subida a Urkiola hill climb in Spain. As well as working for Cyclingnews, he has also written for The IndependentThe GuardianProCycling, The Express and Reuters.

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