Romain Bardet suffered brain bleeding after Tour concussion

AG2r La Mondiale rider Romain Bardet of France. Photo: Anne-Christine Poujoulat/Reuters

AG2r La Mondiale rider Romain Bardet of France. Photo: Anne-Christine Poujoulat/Reuters

Published Sep 12, 2020

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AG2r La Mondiale rider Romain Bardet of France. Photo: Anne-Christine Poujoulat/Reuters

PARIS – Romain Bardet suffered a small haemorrhage following a concussion that forced him to pull out of the Tour de France on Friday, the Frenchman said on Saturday.

"An MRI in the morning revealed has confirmed a small haemorrhage following the concussion," Bardet wrote on Instagram.

The 29-year-old crashed with 87km in the 13th stage, getting back on his bike despite a bout of dizziness and lost 2:30 to overall leader Primoz Roglic, slipping down to 11th on the standings from fourth.

His AG2R-La Mondiale team announced on Friday night that he was pulling out after he was taken for an emergency scan that showed he had suffered a concussion.

Tour de France chief doctor Florence Pommerie said the nature of the sport made it almost impossible to detect a concussion on the spot.

"You're always a bit dizzy when you crash at 40 or 80kph," she told reporters.

"We didn't prevent him from racing because he was showing no clinical signs of a concussion."

Team manager Vincent Lavenu said that the 2016 Tour runner-up showed the first signs of a concussion after the stage.

"In the car that took us to Clermont (from the Puy Mary), he asked us to stop and he vomited. We already had a scan but we went straight to the hospital," he said.

Reuters

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