No Tour de France for Fabio Jakobsen after a complicated surgery: "I feel like an old grandpa, but I walk and move"

Cycling
Friday, 11 April 2025 at 05:00
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Fabio Jakobsen's iliac artery surgery went well, albeit not exactly as planned. While with initial prognosis the Dutch sprinter could've hoped to recover in time for Tour de France, now it's clear that won't be possible. But the regained hope of returning to his best is perhaps even more important into future.
"Surgery went well. Now some weeks of complete rest to let everything on the inside and outside heal and recover again," Jakobsen posted a photo of himself post-operation giving a thumbs up on Instagram.
Although he was expected to take six weeks off the bike followed by a gradual rehabilitation, Jakobsen told De Telegraaf, that the surgery became more involved than initially expected and his recovery time has increased to up to 12 weeks.
"I came out of it in a very bad way. I feel like an old grandpa, but I walk and move," he explained of his post-operation experience. "Of course, you go into such an operation super fit. Then you spend a night in intensive care, and I came out of it very badly. They cut my abdominal muscles from top to bottom. So, it was vertically open to be able to reach both veins."
"When they are done with the operation, the abdomen has to be closed again. That is quite a thing if you have strong abdominal muscles. That is where I feel the most pain, my legs do not really bother me that much. Sometimes, they do the operation with small incisions, but the scan did not show what exactly they had to do. Then it is done the 'old school way'. Open it up, look at everything carefully and do what is necessary."
"The surgeon was very pleased with the operation, but it will be a very long rehabilitation, at least eight to twelve weeks. With that stomach and veins, I have to rest for at least four weeks. I am allowed to walk lightly and nothing else."

No Tour de France

Jakobsen said he will not be recovered in time to compete at the Tour de France, which starts on July 5 in Lille, but he is optimistic that he will make a full recovery.
He confirmed that he is scheduled for a post-opration check-up in four weeks, and from there, and in consultation with his medical team and Team Picnic PostNL, he can begin discussing a more concrete rehabilitation plan.
"You lose condition quite quickly, but the advantage is that at 28, I am still young and fit. Then you can get 'flying hours' again fairly quickly," he said. "I can be very sad, but unfortunately, injuries are also part of top-level sport, and I know what it is like to have to return. My growth curve had stopped because of this injury. This operation was necessary because otherwise I would have had to stop cycling."
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