olympics

Kiteboarder 'lucky to be alive' but loses finger tip

Yahoo Sports

Lily Young has returned to kiteboarding less than four months after a training accident left her with serious hand injuries.

A professional kiteboarder said she is lucky to be alive after losing part of a finger in a training accident on the water. Lily Young, from Weymouth, was dragged face-first through the sea when a kite line became tangled around her helmet when boarding in France. The athlete tried to free herself by using her hands, suffering serious injuries – including the loss of the tip of her left index finger.

Now, less than four months on, Young has already returned to competing at the sport's highest level. Warning: Graphic images below Reflecting on the incident, she said: "It was a very bad situation. I knew I probably didn't have long to get myself out of it.

"I just knew I needed to get this line off me as quick as I possibly could, and unfortunately it ended up ripping through the back of my helmet and taking my finger off before I could even try. "I'm super grateful to still be here, let alone be continuing professional sport to a high level. " Young said kiteboarders would usually avoid putting their hands anywhere near the lines – but that she was running on instinct as she tried to free herself.

It was only after escaping that she fully realised the severity of her injuries. "I cut through an artery. I could see the bone and I knew the finger was gone," she said.