Flintoff reveals ânightmaresâ of Top Gear crash
-
Published
Andrew Flintoff has revealed his struggle with anxiety, nightmares and flashbacks following the high-speed car accident which he says âchanged my life foreverâ.
The former England all-rounder suffered serious facial injuries in a crash while filming Top Gear in December 2022.
Now the 46-year-old has spoken publicly for the first time about the incident and its aftermath as part of the second series of Freddie Flintoffâs Field of Dreams, which begins on BBC One on 13 August (21:00 BST).
âI donât know what completely better is,â said Flintoff in scenes filmed at the beginning of this year.
âI am what I am now. Iâm different to what I was. Itâs something I will have to deal with for the rest of my life. Better? No, different.â
One of the most famous cricketers England has ever produced, Flintoff played 79 Tests between 1998 and 2009.
He played a pivotal role in the epic Ashes triumph of 2005, after which he was named BBC Sports Personality of the Year.
âI should not be hereâ
Known as âFreddieâ, Flintoff transitioned into TV presenting at the end of his cricket career and fronted Top Gear from 2019 until the crash three years later.
In the first series of Field of Dreams, aired in 2022, Flintoff returned to his hometown of Preston to assemble a cricket team of teens that had never played the game before. The second series centres on taking the team on a tour of India and began filming before Flintoffâs accident.
The crash occurred 12 weeks before the tour was scheduled to take place. In the documentary, Flintoff is shown a week and a half after the accident in footage he shot himself on his phone. It reveals the initial extent of his facial injuries.
âI genuinely should not be here with what happened,â he said. âItâs going to be a long road back and Iâve only just started. Iâm going to need help. I really am. Iâm not the best at asking for it.
âIâm looking forward to seeing the lads. I really am. This India trip is going to be for me as much as them now. Iâm determined. I really want to go.â In the end, the tour would have to be delayed until 2024.
Seven months after the accident, in the summer of 2023, Flintoff was visited by close friend and fellow coach Kyle Hogg. The exchange between the two, captured in the documentary, is Flintoffâs first explanation of the impact the accident had on him.
By that stage, Flintoff had undergone a number of operations on his face and rarely left his home. When he did it was with a âfull face mask and glassesâ.
âItâs been so hard to cope withâ
âI thought I could just shake it off,â said Flintoff. âI wanted to shake it off and say âeverythingâs all rightâ, but itâs not been the case.
âItâs been a lot harder than I thought. As much as I wanted to go out and do things, Iâve just not been able to.
âI struggle with anxiety. I have nightmares, I have flashbacks. Itâs been so hard to cope with.â
Flintoff eventually met the cricket team six months later, 13 months after the accident, to resume planning for the tour of India, which finally took place earlier this year.
Filming of Top Gear was halted following Flintoffâs accident. In March 2023 the BBC apologised to Flintoff, who agreed in October of the same year a package of compensation, reported by The Sun to be ÂŁ9m.
In November 2023 the BBC confirmed Top Gear would not return âfor the foreseeable futureâ.
In September 2023, Flintoff returned to cricket in the coaching staff of the England white-ball team. He remained part of the set-up through to the T20 World Cup in June, where England were beaten in the semi-finals.
He is currently in his first full-time head coach position, with Northern Superchargers in The Hundred.
âYouâre coaching people â not playersâ
Speaking at the launch of the new series of the documentary, Flintoff said the show aided his coaching education.
âI learned a bit about coaching,â he said. âUltimately youâre coaching people, youâre not coaching players.
âThatâs something Iâll take away in my career, whatever that leads to next. I suppose I found a confidence in India that had been lacking in recent times.
âIâd love to do more coaching. I donât know in what entity. Iâm quite open-minded about it all, then a little bit of TV as well. This has been the perfect introduction back into coaching.â
Flintoffâs sons, 18-year-old Corey and Rocky, 16, made their debuts for Lancashireâs second XI earlier this year.
Rocky has since signed professional terms with the county, made his debut for England Under-19s and became Lancashireâs youngest ever first-team player when he lined up against Kent in the One-Day Cup in July.