When Travis Pastrana executed the
first Double Flip I really wondered who would be brave enough to follow in his
footsteps. Scott Murray gave it a shot and failed more than he succeeded. On a
very good day he nailed it, but was very hit and miss with perfecting the
double rotation.
Then came along Australian Cam “Sincs”
Sinclair, who proved the Double Flip can be consistently executed after he
successfully rode away from 20-plus during the 2009 Crusty Tour and several competitions
world wide. Then Cam raised the bar and included the Double Flip in his
90-second run at the X-Fighters rounds he attended. All seemed to be going well
until the pressure of linking a smooth run together at the Madrid stop in Spain
saw him under rotate the Double ending in a near fatal accident that he was
lucky to survive.
Two months later Cam made his
first public appearance at Robbie Maddison’s Red Bull XRAY freeride event with
his brother Mick and manager Adam Bailey, so I sat down with the Sincs brothers
to talk about what happened at Madrid, the recovery process, and will we be
seeing him back on a bike any time soon.
Mick left and Cam at Rebull XRAY, Cam's first outing since his accident at X-Fighters in Spain
Cam you’re lucky to be here
mate, do you have any memory of your crash in Madrid, Spain?
Cam: To be honest there’s not much
memory at all. I’ve seen video clips and photos and nothing triggers. The only
thing I really remember is the last week of being in hospital in Madrid and
that was three weeks after my accident and after I came out of my coma.
Cam, you’ve had some pretty
amazing support from your friends, and especially your brother Mick. Mick how
was it for you watching it all go down?
Mick: I wasn’t there when it happened.
I was watching it live on the webcast with our folks, and when he crashed it
was pretty gnarly as we didn’t know what happened ‘cause obviously they took
the cameras off him straight away. We jumped straight on the phone and I called
Cam’s mobile, trying to get hold of his mechanic and no one answered and for
half an hour we didn’t know what was going on. About half an hour later I got a
call from Maddo saying that he was alive, which is what we needed to hear.
So Mick what was it like when you
were on the other side of the world watching and you’re thinking your bro’s
going to win this event but then he just comes down like that, how did you
feel?
Mick: Well it’s a bit of a blur now,
but it was just so hard to take in. You don’t know what to do, you feel so
helpless on the other side of the world, especially when you can’t get in touch
with anyone. I didn’t know if he was dead or alive. Every five minutes or so
Dad, Mum, or myself were talking on the phone trying to get a clearer picture
as we didn’t know what was happening, and that’s the worst feeling
Does it just completely change
your reality, like what’s important in life?
Mick: Yeah for sure. Motorbikes are our
life. We’ve been on them since we were four years old and we’ve never not been
around them you know. But at that time you just think I don’t give a shit if I
don’t look at a motorbike again. Now I know he’s OK I can’t wait for him to get
back on, but at that time I didn’t give a shit about anything but him.
Cam you were saying earlier the
fear is coming to you now you’re learning more about what happened. Can you
look back at the footage, and at what people have told you, and tell what went
wrong?
Cam: I wasn’t going to watch any of
the footage until I got home, but the day before I left Spain I looked at it
and just seen what happened. I guess I’d done two the night before in Spain and
they were fine, but I think just the fact of trying to put the Double into a
ninety second run is just too hard, it’s too difficult. In demonstrations
you’ve got as much time in the world to do it, and if you’re not feeling it you
just keep taking run-ins until you feel right.
Mick: I wish he’d put the Double at the
start of his run because you can ride out and take as long as you want as your
time doesn’t start til you hit the first ramp, and we told him but he didn’t
listen to us!
So Cam you’ve been the most
successful at consistently executing a Double Flip by a long shot and I guess
you were pushing it to the limit and trying to do it in a run and it just comes
down to the fact that you do need more time to pull it off?
Cam: Yes. The way I’m looking at it
now I’m not sure if I want to do it again in a ninety-second run. I just think
it’s too hard. To do a Double Flip you want as much time as you need to get it
right.
It’s a best trick isn’t it?
Cam: Yeah it’s the best trick
basically so I might just save it for demonstrations and best trick
competitions now.
And before the accident you were
seriously pumped for X Games right?
Cam: Oh yeah, I was really looking
forward to X Games. I’ve had some tricks up my sleeve that I’ve kept quiet that
only a few people knew about, like a few Combo Double Flips. You know I was
feeling comfortable with them and I was going to bring them out. And sure if I
had of pulled it off at X Games I would’ve won a gold medal for sure. And it
could’ve happened again in freestyle, but there’s always next year, and I’ll
try to do the same thing.
So Cam since you’ve been back home
what’s been the program, what have you had to go through?
Cam: I had to fly back from Spain
first class with the doctor. And the day I got back I was rushed into hospital
and spent three nights there. They wanted me to be in there for two weeks but I
sort of couldn’t handle it, I just wanted to get home. But apart from that,
I’ve just been at home, going to rehab three times a week, been going to physio
and just seeing doctors and things like that. You know there’s so many
different things I injured, so many different parts – I hurt my ankles, my
shoulder, my head, and suffered internal injuries so I’m seeing so many
different doctors it annoys me sometimes, but I’ve just gotta do it for the
best result.
What was the worst damage you
suffered from the accident?
Cam: At the time I’m not really sure.
I don’t really know much about my injuries. Mick knows more about it than me.
Mick: The main injury, the life
threatening injury was his liver because it was squashed so it was ruptured and
he had some severe internal bleeding. So that was the main concern. They were
also concerned about his brain, but their main priority was to get the liver
clotted to stop bleeding so they went through the main artery in his leg,
because they couldn’t open him up from the front. That procedure went for about
four hours, so once they clotted the liver and stopped the internal bleeding he
was stable so the next thing to do was to have a look at his brain and see what
was wrong with it. When they checked out his head they found some bleeding but
it wasn’t major, but there was bleeding deep inside his brain, and that’s the
part that controls the right side of your body. Hence why he’s got the limp,
and why he can’t use his right side very well. It’s getting a lot better but
that’s what they were worried about. There’s also bruising which has affected
the right side of his body, his memory and speech. He crushed his wind pipe as
well, which has affected his speech a little, plus cracked his shoulder blade,
a fracture in the hip, fractured his cheek bone, his scapula and also chipped
his shoulder cup.
Cam: All I could do was lay in bed and
do nothing. I couldn’t walk for the first three weeks. My body was real numb
still.
So who takes you to see all
these doctors?
Cam: My fiancé Brooke. She’s been
through so much in Spain, she was really scared. She’s been so helpful and
awesome through this whole thing and she’s driving me to rehab three times a
week, talks to all the doctors and sorts out my insurance and stuff like that.
How has the accident changed your
life Cam? How do you view your future now that you’re on the way to recovery,
like are you going to recover 100%?
Cam: It’s still too early to tell. I
plan on getting better 100%, but at the moment I’m going day by day. In five
months I’ve got to do another assessment, and in 6 months time if I’m good to
ride then I’ll ride. I’ll just get my life back on track first. But in saying
that my main goal is to have a gold medal around my neck this time next year.
That’s the plan.
So it all comes down to when you
feel 100% and then you can make the decision when you’re feeling it?
Mick: What the doctors are saying is
that the recovery period is going to be 6-12 months, but knowing Cam and how
hard he’s working it’s going to be more like 6 than 12, but it’s just going to
take time. I took him to physio last Monday, and they told him to do 3 sets of
10 and Cam would do 4 sets of 11, so knowing how hard he’s working and how
determined he is, and just knowing his persona he should be right in 8 months.
I’ve got no doubt he’ll be back 100%.
Cam you said it feels so good to
be up here at Red Bull XRAY as it’s the first bike event you’ve been to since
the accident.
Cam: Yeah it’s just good to be out of
home. I haven’t been able to do anything, just going home, getting back in the
car going to the city, going to rehab, going to the doctors, getting back home,
going to sleep, and it’s just the sane thing over and over again. It’s just
good to be out of home.
Mick: It’s also good to give
Brooke a bit of a break for a couple of days for her to catch up with her
friends.
So you’re only out for the day?
Cam: The doctors said I should go home
after one day. They don’t want me to stay the whole weekend.
Mick: You know a week ago there’s no
way he would’ve been able to sit on the back of a bike and get dinked around
the track. So seeing him do that, he has come a long way.
Before we end this Cam, how did it
feel watching your buddy Bilko win the Gold at X?
Cam: I was very happy for him even
though he got an arse raping in Best Trick – beaten by a trick that won last
year and off a smaller gap. Next year I want to go Aussie one two, and hopefully
with Maddo we can be all three on the box. Bilko’s got the 360, I’ve got the
Double Flip, so we’ve got tricks no one else has got.