From 10% survival chance to facing world's best at G4D Open
Richie Willis was given only a 10% chance of surviving after he was involved in a lorry accident on the old Severn Bridge. Twenty-seven years since looking down to see his leg torn off and his arm seriously damaged, Welshman Willis will strike the first tee shot in golf's G4D Open on Friday. The G4D Open is one of the premier events for golfers with disabilities and will feature many of the world's finest players.
For Willis, 68, simply being in the field is remarkable given the trauma he has faced. Willis was on the road home to Wales when, on 22 December, 1999, what was later deemed a freak gust of wind sent the articulated lorry he was driving on to its side and into the central reservation. "I remember it all like it was yesterday," Willis tells BBC Sport Wales.
"After the impact I was on my back looking up thinking 'I've got away with this'. Then I lifted my head up and [saw that] my leg was completely gone. "I remember [in the ambulance] they were saying I was losing blood pressure.
They realised there was more wrong with me than just my leg and my arm. " Willis' "worst injury", it turned out, was a lacerated liver. "I didn't realise they had me on the table and they had 40 pints of blood to keep me going," he says.
"They came to me afterwards and said they had given me a 10% chance [of living]. They said 'obviously you wanted to live and that's why you are still here'. " Willis, who was 42 at the time of his accident, spent five months in hospital.