
In 2013, German race car legend Michael Schumacher was skiing in the French alps when disaster struck.
The racing driver, who raced in Formula One for Jordan Grand Prix, had built a career breaking Formula One racing records.
But when he was skiing off piste with his 14-year-old son Mick, descending the Combe de Saulire at Meribel ski resort, he fell and hit his head on a rock.
Despite wearing a ski helmet and being an experienced skier, he spent the next six months in a medically induced coma, with the head injuries rendering him wheelchair-bound and unable to speak.
But five years after the 49-year-old’s accident, his rescuer Stephane Bozon, a mountain cop, has spoken.
Bozon said that given the location of the injury, the retrieval was difficult.
“The first responders said that because the accident site was next to the slope, it was difficult for them to transport him carefully and cautiously,” he told German news outlet FOCUS.
“It was clear that it was very serious, otherwise we would not have used the helicopter. Mr Schumacher was lucky (to survive),” he added.
He explained the nature of the stone Schumacher had struck.