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Freddie Flintoff’s return to the spotlight comes as his new Disney+ documentary, Flintoff, prepares to air, promising an unfiltered look at the aftermath of the 2022 Top Gear crash that changed his life.
Flintoff, who is also set to appear on ITV’s Jonathan Ross Show, will discuss the physical and mental toll of the accident, which left him with significant facial injuries and forced him out of the public eye for seven months.
“I remember everything about it.
It’s so vivid,” Flintoff says in the documentary trailer, as he reveals his scars and reflects, “This is what I’m left with”45.
The crash occurred at Dunsfold Park Aerodrome while Flintoff was driving a Morgan Super 3, which flipped and slid across the track, leaving him with broken ribs and facial injuries so severe that the BBC suspended Top Gear and paid him £9 million in compensation.
Initial reports suggested high speeds, but later accounts indicated the car was traveling at just 22mph, highlighting the unpredictable danger of such stunts.
Former co-presenter Chris Harris had previously warned BBC executives about the escalating risks, stating, “Unless you change something, someone’s going to die on this show,” and described Flintoff as a “physical specimen” whose strength likely saved his life.
Flintoff’s recovery has been arduous, involving multiple surgeries and a prolonged period of isolation, as he grappled with both the visible scars and the psychological impact.
“Afterwards, obviously there’s the physical scars that I’ve got.
But then the mental side of it.
I didn’t leave the house for probably six or eight months.
The only times I was leaving the house was for medical appointments and surgeries,” Flintoff shared, adding that a close friend, Rob Key, helped coax him back into the world by inviting him to cricket matches, where he would sit in a back room, masked and hidden from the crowd.
“It’s always better when that starts happening.
Back to normal.
I’m more accepting of it now, it is what it is and move on.”
The documentary will feature never-before-seen footage of the crash and Flintoff’s candid reflections on his journey, including the impact on his family and his struggle to rediscover his identity after the accident.
“It’s almost like a reset.
I’m trying to find out what I am now.
I’ve always seemed to be able to flick a switch, I’ve got to find that switch again,” he says, underscoring the resilience and vulnerability at the heart of his story.
The BBC’s decision to rest Top Gear indefinitely after the incident has prompted wider industry discussions about safety standards in reality and motoring television, with Flintoff’s experience serving as a powerful reminder of the risks involved.
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