Skip to content
Chimera readability score 58 out of 100, Graduate reading level.

Three of the eight riders who have abandoned the Tour de France in the opening week have suffered concussions.
As happens every year, crashes have punctuated the opening week of the Tour de France, with several incidents highlighting how difficult it remains to manage concussion in a sport where the clock is always ticking.
Of the eight riders who have abandoned the race since it began in Barcelona, Spain, on July 4, three withdrew because of concussion: Frenchman Clement Berthet of Groupama-FDJ United, Dutch rider Alex Molenaar of Caja Rural-Seguros RGA and Norway’s Torstein Traeen of Uno-X Mobility, who briefly wore the yellow jersey.
Recommended Stories
list of 4 items- list 1 of 4Best birthday present for Yamal? World Cup semifinal win over France
- list 2 of 4‘Kylian is fine’: France ready, full-strength for Spain World Cup semifinal
- list 3 of 4Norway ‘rows’ at the royal palace to welcome back World Cup heroes
- list 4 of 4Haaland’s Norway receive heroes’ welcome in Oslo after World Cup exit
All three had one thing in common: they crashed, completed the stage and then withdrew later that evening once the diagnosis had been made.
Berthet went down heavily during the opening team time trial, Molenaar crashed 5km (3 miles) from the finish of stage five, while Traeen hit the ground the following day on the descent of the Col du Tourmalet while wearing the race leader’s yellow jersey.
“It is never very satisfactory for us to see riders diagnosed with concussion after they have resumed racing,” Xavier Bigard, medical director of the International Cycling Union (UCI), told the Reuters news agency.
The UCI introduced a concussion protocol at the start of the 2021 season. A year earlier, French rider Romain Bardet had covered almost 90km (56 miles) despite suffering concussion in a crash at more than 60km/h (37mph).
“We have come a long way,” said Bigard, who began working on a protocol after joining the UCI in 2018.
Under the current procedure, a rider who crashes must be assessed by the first person to reach them, often a mechanic from their team.
If that person detects at least two observable signs of concussion – such as nausea, head or neck pain, weakness in the limbs, disorientation or impaired balance – the rider must be taken out of the race.
If not, the rider may continue before undergoing a further assessment during the race from the medical car or a team vehicle. That examination involves answering a number of relatively simple questions about the context of the race, and the rider may still be withdrawn.
Where concussion is suspected, a more complete examination lasting about 10 minutes must then be carried out after the stage.
“The roadside protocol is much shorter,” said Mathieu Le Strat, medical director of Groupama-FDJ United. “It is carried out in the heat of the moment, so it is much harder to make an assessment.
“You have a rider who is caught up in the race and immediately wants to get back on the bike, so it is not easy.
“A proper concussion protocol takes 10 to 15 minutes and involves several tests. You cannot do that on the side of the road.”
Florence Pommerie, the Tour de France’s chief doctor since 2010, also stressed how difficult concussion can be to diagnose.
“You cannot see it,” she said. “There is no single defining sign, only a combination of indicators.”
Pommerie added that she had not seen any of the three riders in question come back to the medical car after their respective crashes.
“Some signs appear immediately but disappear after a few hours, while others only emerge later,” Bigard said, explaining why a roadside assessment may differ from the diagnosis made after the stage.
All those interviewed agreed that cycling had taken the issue far more seriously in recent years.
“There is now a full awareness of it,” said Pascal Chanteur, vice president of the CPA international riders’ union.
The central problem, however, remains the understandable urgency to get back on the bike in a sport where every second matters, particularly for a rider fighting for the overall classification in a three-week race.
“We are in a situation that is far from perfect, and we are trying to make it the least imperfect as possible,” Bigard said.
He added that education remained “a real challenge” in elite cycling, a sport inevitably driven by performance.
“It is a long-term process that will take time, but it is essential.”

Facts Only

* Three of eight riders who abandoned the Tour de France in the opening week suffered concussions.
* The three riders were Clement Berthet, Alex Molenaar, and Torstein Traeen.
* Berthet crashed during the opening team time trial.
* Molenaar crashed 5km from the finish of stage five.
* Traeen hit the ground on the descent of the Col du Tourmalet.
* The UCI introduced a concussion protocol at the start of the 2021 season.
* Roadside assessment requires a mechanic to detect at least two observable signs of concussion, such as nausea, head or neck pain, weakness in the limbs, disorientation, or impaired balance.
* A more complete examination lasting about 10 minutes occurs after the stage if concussion is suspected roadside.
* Florence Pommerie stated that no signs of concussion were seen in the three riders after their crashes.

Executive Summary

Three of the eight riders who abandoned the Tour de France in the opening week suffered concussions: Clement Berthet, Alex Molenaar, and Torstein Traeen. These riders all experienced crashes during the race, completed a stage, and subsequently withdrew after diagnosis. Berthet crashed during the team time trial; Molenaar crashed 5km from the finish of stage five; and Traeen hit the ground on the descent of the Col du Tourmalet while wearing the yellow jersey. The International Cycling Union (UCI) introduced a concussion protocol in the 2021 season. Under the current roadside procedure, if a mechanic observing a crash detects at least two signs of concussion (like nausea, pain, weakness, disorientation, or impaired balance), the rider must be removed from the race. A more comprehensive assessment, lasting 10 to 15 minutes, is conducted after the stage when roadside assessment is insufficient. Experts noted the difficulty in diagnosing concussions roadside, as visual signs are not always present immediately, and assessments in the field are time-constrained compared to full medical evaluations.

Full Take

The narrative highlights a systemic tension between the immediate demands of elite sport and the delayed, complex nature of neurocognitive injury management. The roadside protocol is presented as an unavoidable constraint, forcing rapid assessment in a high-pressure environment where athletes prioritize resuming performance over comprehensive medical review. This situation suggests that existing safety frameworks are structurally incompatible with the urgency of competitive cycling. The fact that observable signs of concussion can be transient and delayed underscores Pommerie's point regarding the difficulty of roadside diagnosis; what is missed in the immediate, time-constrained assessment may be entirely missed in a full clinical review later. The system relies on an imperfect, reactive safety measure rather than proactive prevention embedded within the competitive structure itself. This points to a deeper implication: when performance dictates every second, education and protocol implementation become secondary considerations, creating an environment where athletes must manage risk based on limited, immediate indicators, rather than thorough diagnostic certainty. The ongoing challenge noted by Bigard regarding long-term education in a performance-driven sport suggests that true resilience requires decoupling the necessity of racing from the accepted risk parameters.
Tour de France crash and concussion cases expose limits of roadside checks — Arc Codex