The Morning Journal (Lorain, OH)

World-class Ironman triathlete on mend

- By Pat Graham

Ironman triathlete Tim Don carries a constant reminder of the accident with him — besides, of course, a neck that can only turn to the left and the fading marks from where screws painfully dug into his forehead.

It’s tucked away in his wallet: A driver’s license that features a photo of Don wearing a halo device to stabilize his broken neck.

“Insane, right?” the Britishbor­n Don said, laughing, as he flashed his license. “I didn’t think they’d take the picture with me like that. Now I’m always asked about it whenever I show my license.”

A few days before the 2017 Ironman world championsh­ips in Kailua-Kona, Hawaii, last October, the world-class endurance athlete nicknamed “The Don” was on a training ride when he smashed into a truck that pulled in front of him.

Three months in a halo, two months in a hard collar and lots of physical therapy later, the 40-year-old’s mission remains straight-forward: Get back to Hawaii and finish what he started.

“I’m still living the story of my broken neck,” said Don, who figures he needs a top-four finish at Ironman Hamburg in Germany on July 29 to secure a spot for Hawaii, a race that’s regarded as the Super Bowl of his sport. “But no one is going to feel sorry for you, because when the gun goes, we all have our stories.”

His, though, is a painful tale.

He was in elite shape heading into the world championsh­ips last season in Kailua-Kona for a race that combines a 2.4-mile swim, a 112-mile bicycle ride and a marathon. That May, he set a world record at an Ironman event in Brazil, finishing the course in a blistering time of 7 hours, 40 minutes, 23 seconds.

Don was on a nice leisurely bike ride — for him anyway — in Hawaii to wake up the legs. He was in the cycling lane when a white pickup truck turned in front of him. Don’s first reaction wasn’t so much about personal safety before slamming into side of the vehicle.

No, it was about the new racing wheels on his Specialize­d bike.

“I was like, ‘I’m going to need a new tires now,”’ said Don, who trains in Boulder.

That’s the last thought he had before waking up on a stretcher about 20 minutes later.

“I was in a neck brace and my shoulder hurt, but I was still thinking, ‘I can get through the swim, I’ve just got whiplash, and once I’m on the bike I’ll be OK,”’ recounted Don , whose recovery was chronicled in a documentar­y titled “The Man with the Halo “that was directed by Emmy awardwinne­r Andrew Hinton and commission­ed by Don’s sponsor, the Swiss-based sportswear company “On.”

Then, the MRI returned. A fractured vertebra high up in his neck.

There went the race. Possibly, his career.

He was flown back to Colorado and presented with two options: Fuse his vertebrae, which might restrict his swimming and biking, or wear a halo device that consisted of a vest, stabilizat­ion bars and a carbon ring encircling his head with multiple screws tightened into his skull. The halo won out. “I wasn’t fearful, because I knew I could race again,” said Don, who competed for Britain in the triathlon at three Summer Olympics, with his best finish 10th at the 2000 Games. “But at what level? I was trying to be optimistic about it. But there was that thought I might not get the full range of motion back in my neck.”

Early on, he was in discomfort and the pain medication was making him sick. On one occasion, he even went out to the garage to get an Allen wrench and take the screws out himself. His wife stopped him. Don couldn’t recline to sleep. He couldn’t shower on his own. He couldn’t even pick anything up.

When he ventured out, he was asked all about the halo. That was sometimes followed by if he had seen the film, “Bleed for This .” It’s based on the story of world champion boxer Vinny Paz, who broke his neck in a car crash, wore a halo and rose to prominence again. His comeback story was dramatized in the 2016 film starring Miles Teller.

“I’m basically trying to do the same thing — without Hollywood and all the glamour of boxing,” said Don, who had a fifth screw added to his halo midway through because it was getting too loose.

 ?? ANDREW HINTON — ON VIA AP ?? Tim Don works during his rehabilita­tion in December 2017 in Boulder Colo.
ANDREW HINTON — ON VIA AP Tim Don works during his rehabilita­tion in December 2017 in Boulder Colo.

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