After devastating BMX injury, Kai Sakakibara makes winning return as para cyclist | Kieran Pender

A picture


Five years after a crash that left him with a life-changing brain injury the former Olympic hopeful has a national title to his name – and his sights set on the ParalympicsFive years ago, Kai Sakakibara’s life nearly came to an end doing what he loved – bike racing,At a BMX world cup event in Bathurst, the Olympic hopeful was heading downhill into a turn when his front wheel seemed to buckle,The momentum saw Sakakibara slam headfirst into the dirt, causing carnage as a rider behind him tried to avoid the inevitable collision,In a split second, Sakakibara suffered a devastating brain injury,It was unclear whether Sakakibara, who was 23 at the time, would survive.

He eventually emerged from a coma, and it was uncertain if the cyclist would walk again.But last week Sakakibara was finally back doing what he loves.At the Anna Meares Velodrome in Brisbane, the Queenslander was crowned Australia’s national champion in the Para C1 1000m time trial.And, Sakakibara tells Guardian Australia, this is just the beginning.“I feel great,” he says in an interview over Zoom.

“But I still have a long way to go before I get to where I need to go.I’m looking forward to what’s to come.”It has been a busy time for Sakakibara, now 28.After initially taking up rowing following the injury, the former BMX star only returned to cycling earlier this year.He was classified – the process to determine which para-sport category an athlete competes in – just days before the AusCycling national championships.

Suddenly, he was flying around the velodrome, winning the national stripes.“I hadn’t raced anyone for five years,” Sakakibara says.“I know that’s not that long, but it felt like ages to me.The fact I was able to do it, in front of all those fans, and come away with the win – it was absolutely amazing.”Sakakibara has no memory of the crash that changed his life.

A super slow-motion video on YouTube relays it over 19 agonising seconds (the clip has been watched nearly 150,000 times),To this day, he is still navigating the impact of the traumatic brain injury that left him in intensive care for months,“To be honest, I wish I could tell you [about the aftermath of the crash],” he says,The incident occurred in February 2020; Sakakibara has no memory of the period from November 2019 until midway through his recovery,“I couldn’t walk or talk.

That was really hard.”Sakakibara’s father, Martin Ward, is by his son’s side for the interview; the brain injury’s ongoing impact means Sakakibara sometimes needs a moment to formulate an answer, or land on the right word.Ward encourages him when he gets stuck.“There’s no lead in to this stuff,” Ward says of Sakakibara’s time in hospital.“Everyone else in the brain injury ward – the nurses, the doctors – they’ve been there for many years.

We’re thrown in the deep end.“And the challenge with a brain injury is it’s not like breaking an arm – you know you’ll be in plaster for eight weeks and then it will be fixed.There’s no prognosis, it’s so complex.Despite what people know, they don’t know very much.So when we would say: ‘What’s going to happen?’ They would say: ‘Don’t know, wait and see’.

‘What’s the prognosis?’ ‘Don’t know.’ ‘Will he be a vegetable?’ ‘Don’t know.’ Kai likes to say one day at a time – that’s what it was for us.Every day was: ‘what can we do to make things better, let’s hope for tomorrow.’”Sign up to Australia SportGet a daily roundup of the latest sports news, features and comment from our Australian sports deskafter newsletter promotionIn time Sakakibara was transferred to Liverpool Hospital, in Sydney’s south-west.

That is his first memory after the crash.“But I still thought it was just a dream,” he says.“I thought I would just wake up one day and go, ‘OK, time to go and train’.Obviously that wasn’t the case.That was really hard – at the time I don’t know how was I able to deal with it.

’In the first month after Sakakibara emerged from his coma, he was wheelchair-bound and unable to stand up.It came with a great unknown: would he ever be able to return to his passion of sporting competition? (Sakakibara had been in the process of qualifying for the Tokyo Olympics).“It was a big part of our life – BMX was all I ever thought about, really,” he says.“I didn’t know what else I was going to do.Luckily I found rowing, and track cycling – that was a saviour, I guess.

If it wasn’t for those sports, I don’t know what I would be doing right now,”Sakakibara’s return to sport helped him find community – others who had endured similar life-changing injuries – and new pursuits,In 2022, he attended a para-sport try-out day and soon found himself in a boat, learning to row,“That was awesome, a brand new sport – I thought, ‘what can I do here?’ That really drove me,” Sakakibara spent two years committed to para-rowing; he also became an ambassador for Connectivity, an advocacy group for sufferers of concussion and traumatic brain injury.

Sakakibara – who is half-Japanese, half-British and grew up in Australia – had made an aborted attempt to return to cycling early on in his recovery,“It was scary,” he says,“I didn’t want to crash and hurt my head again,” But a few months ago, he went back to the velodrome with his sister, the Olympic gold medallist Saya, , to watch her train,Sakakibara found that he had overcome his fear of the bike.

“Those things that had troubled me, they weren’t there anymore.”Sakakibara may have only been back on the bike for a few months, but it looks like a career-shift to track para-cycling will endure.“Rowing was a great transition,” he says.“But I think going with cycling, like I always have, is the way to go from here.” His eye is already on a Paralympic medal in three years’ time.

“The Paralympics in Los Angeles would be an absolute dream come true for me.”Sakakibara is based on the Gold Coast, meaning a home Paralympics might then await in 2032.But he doesn’t want to get ahead of himself.“I’ve only just started, so I don’t want to make any promises.Those are the goals.

”Saya won BMX gold at the Paris Olympics; in a poignant moment, Kai and Saya embraced after the medal ceremony.Initially Kai struggled to understand the commotion; it was only when he and his sister came together that Sakakibara appreciated the significance of the moment.“It was odd,” he says.“She finished and everyone was cheering, but I couldn’t really comprehend what had just happened.I was allowed on the track where they had the presentations, and Saya came over to hug me, saying ‘We did it.

’ That’s when it sunk in; I thought, ‘We did do it,’ That was very special,”It has been a long five years for the Sakakibara family,But at last, Kai Sakakibara is back on the bike,“It’s huge,” says his father.

“It’s huge seeing him doing something he loves again.”
recentSee all
A picture

Global markets in turmoil as Trump tariffs wipe $2tn off Wall Street

Global financial markets have been plunged into turmoil as Donald Trump’s escalating trade war knocked trillions of dollars off the value of the world’s biggest companies and heightened fears of a US recession.As world leaders reacted to the US president’s “liberation day” tariff policies demolishing the international trading order, about $2tn (£1.5tn) was wiped off Wall Street and share prices in other financial centres across the globe.Experts said Trump’s sweeping border taxes of between 10% and 50% on the US’s traditional allies and enemies alike had dramatically added to the risk of a steep global downturn and a recession in the world’s biggest economy.World leaders from Brussels to Beijing rounded on Trump, with China condemning “unilateral bullying” practices and the EU saying it was drawing up countermeasures

A picture

Tata redundancy scheme targeted older, non-Indian nationals in UK, tribunal hears

A UK division of the Indian conglomerate Tata “deliberately orchestrated” a redundancy programme in a way that unfairly targeted older, non-Indian nationals, an employment tribunal has heard.Three claimants allege the Mumbai-based Tata Consultancy Services (TCS), which is valued at almost £110bn on the BSE stock exchange in Mumbai, discriminated against them on grounds of age and nationality during a restructuring that began in mid-2023.The case mirrors a similar claim brought in the US, where at least 22 workers have alleged that TCS sacked them at short notice and replaced many of them with workers from India on H1-B visas, used for hiring staff with specialist skills.TCS denies both claims. It is part of the Tata group of companies, which includes Tetley Tea and Jaguar Land Rover

A picture

Meta faces £1.8bn lawsuit over claims it inflamed violence in Ethiopia

Meta faces a $2.4bn (£1.8bn) lawsuit accusing the Facebook owner of inflaming violence in Ethiopia after the Kenyan high court said a legal case against the US tech group could go ahead.The case brought by two Ethiopian nationals calls on Facebook to alter its algorithm to stop promoting hateful material and incitement to violence, as well as hiring more content moderators in Africa. It is also seeking a $2

A picture

Don’t weaken online safety laws for UK-US trade deal, campaigners urge

Child safety campaigners have warned the government against watering down landmark online laws as part of a UK-US trade deal, describing the prospect of a compromise as an “appalling sellout” that would be rejected by voters.A draft transatlantic trade agreement contains commitments to review enforcement of the Online Safety Act, according to a report on Thursday, amid White House concerns the legislation poses a threat to free speech.The Molly Rose Foundation, a charity established by the family of Molly Russell, a British teenager who took her own life after viewing harmful online content, said it was “dismayed and appalled” at the prospect of the act being a bargaining chip in a deal.The MRF said it had written to the business secretary, Jonathan Reynolds, outlining its concerns and urging him “not to continue with an appalling sellout of children’s safety”.The commitment to review enforcement of the OSA and another tech-focused piece of legislation – the Digital Markets, Competition and Consumers Act – was reported by the online newsletter Playbook, which said the legislation would undergo a review of how it is implemented and not a “do-over”

A picture

Henman Hill to get shelter under fresh Wimbledon expansion plans

Different generations of tennis fans may disagree on its name – to traditionalists it will always be Henman Hill, millennials probably plump for Murray Mound and gen Z may know it as Raducanu Rise or even, regrettably, Jack’s Stack – but all ages can agree that bringing a little shelter to Wimbledon’s most famous viewing area can only be a good thing.Wimbledon’s Hill – which since 1997 has allowed tennis fans with a grounds pass to watch the action on No 1 Court live atop its grassy knoll – is getting a makeover, the All England Lawn and Tennis Club (AELTC) has announced.A multimillion-pound development, due to be finished in time for the 2027 championships, will boost the Hill’s capacity by 20% and improve accessibility for wheelchair users. Plans include a new pergola – and there is little Wimbledon likes more than a pergola – which will provide a space for more hanging plants to provide shade and protection from British summer rain.The pergola, which will replace the structure at the top of the Hill, will wrap around the area’s 150-year-old oak tree while the AELTC hopes to make the area more environmentally sustainable by replacing tarmac paths with permeable resin

A picture

ECB insists sale of Hundred teams will go through despite TV rights wrangle

The England and Wales Cricket Board insists that the sale of the eight Hundred franchises will be completed by the end of April, despite the delays to negotiations.The governing body’s chief executive, Richard Gould, said that the high valuations were not one of the issues behind the delays, but admitted that future broadcasting rights were. “All the discussions are on a very, very sound footing,” Gould said, “we’re just trying to work out how to maximise value from sponsorships, tickets sales and broadcast revenues. They’re investing a lot of money into our game and we want to make sure that pays dividends.”One sticking point is the issue of overseas TV rights