PARIS – Italian rider Sonny Colbrelli, who required emergency treatment after collapsing at the Volta a Catalunya race in March and was fitted with a subcutaneous defibrillator implant (ICD), said that he will retire from professional cycling.
Colbrelli was edged out by Australian Michael Matthews at the end of the opening stage of the race in Spain and fell to the ground. He needed defibrillation and was later diagnosed with an “unstable cardiac arrhythmia”.
The 32-year-old Bahrain Victorious rider was treated in Spain before being moved to Italy where he had an operation to fit the ICD following a cardiovascular evaluation.
“Following the medical advice from his examinations, Sonny Colbrelli will retire from professional cycling after having a defibrillator fitted as a result of his collapse,” Bahrain Victorious said in a statement.
Other elite sportsmen have returned to action after having an ICD implanted, most notably Danish midfielder Christian Eriksen, but Colbrelli said cycling was unlike soccer and the risks were much greater for him.
“It’s a different sport; you ride on the streets,” Colbrelli said in his statement according to Reuters. “You do not play it on a football pitch, where, in case of need, the interventions of the medical equipe can be timely.
“Their training activities take place in a limited area, while in the case of a cyclist, you often find yourself alone for hours on little-travelled roads.”
Colbrelli said he also considered removing his ICD to take another path and compete again.
“But… removing the defibrillator is against the medical practice and means removing a lifesaver that is necessary as secondary prevention. A risk too high. A risk that I cannot afford to take,” Colbrelli said.
In October last year, Colbrelli became the first Italian to win the Paris-Roubaix race, one of the “Monument” classics, for 22 years, a month after he claimed the European road race title.
“A year ago in this period, I spent my days celebrating the most important victory of my career, Paris-Roubaix. I never thought I would find myself a year later to face one of the most challenging moments that life has put me in front of,” Colbrelli said.
“But it’s my life that I want to be grateful for, a life I risked losing and which gave me a second chance. That of being here today, to remember that I came out of the Hell of the North as a winner, and I did it in a legendary way, which will remain in history and that I will be able to continue to tell my children. It is to them, my family and all the people closest to me that I owe this new life of mine.