

He began physical therapy sessions Tuesday, although it's only for consultation and getting comfortable in the early stages.Īs far as thoughts of a comeback, Weidman said he is hopeful but realistic.

Weidman eventually reached a point where he could sit on the couch and play video games as long as his leg remained elevated. I had to amp myself up and mentally prepare myself just to get to the bathroom." And it was just so excruciating, to just get up for me to crutch my way to the bathroom. It started becoming more painful, as opposed to getting better. I went through a tough time about the four- or five-day mark postsurgery, because it started going the other way. "Recovery's going to be way longer and harder than I've ever experienced. When compared to every other surgery, this was a serious, traumatic thing that happened in my leg. But I didn't realize how different this was. "I've had 23 surgeries, so it's not like it's my first rodeo going through a surgery. "Initially, I was super optimistic, because after surgery I just figured it was going to be three, maybe four days' worth of pain and then I'd be kind of back into it," Weidman said. Having been through the injury, surgery and recovery process numerous times, Weidman thought he knew what he was in for but said this was unlike anything before. Like, how the hell does this happen? Three leg breaks in the history of the UFC, and I'm a part of two of them?" "I was a part of it when it happened to Anderson Silva, and this happens to me?. "When I was facedown, I think that immediately popped in my head - like, is this a bad dream? How is that possible?" Weidman said. But I remember seeing my leg, you know, rubbery."Īs the medical team entered the Octagon, one thought that popped into Weidman's head was of Anderson Silva suffering a nearly identical injury at UFC 168, against Weidman himself. And that must have been when I looked down and I got the visual of my leg flopping around. "Then, secondly, I looked up at his eyes, and I saw him have almost like a poker face on. He's not taking more than one or two of those,' like, that had to have hurt him," Weidman said. "I remember hitting him with the shot, and the first thing that went through my mind was, 'That was a super hard leg kick.

Weidman's leg wrapped unnaturally around Hall's calf, and when he took a step backward, Weidman collapsed under the weight and part of his bone went through his calf. Weidman suffered the injury while kicking Uriah Hall's leg shortly after the start of their fight at UFC 261 in Jacksonville, Florida, on April 24. And those moments were just terrible, literally like crying and pain." I was literally sleeping all day long - the only time I was moving really was to go to the bathroom. The pooling of blood in my shin and my foot was just so terrible. "The amount of pain when I got up from having my leg up above my heart, when I was putting that leg down - not actually putting weight on it, but just getting on crutches and going to the bathroom - was so bad. I've had pretty much everything you could possibly have," Weidman told ESPN's Ariel Helwani in an interview released Wednesday. "I've had 10 knee surgeries, three elbow surgeries, two neck surgeries, three hand surgeries. Ten days after suffering a compound fracture of his right leg, Chris Weidman was at home in New York and preparing for a long road to recovery, saying the pain felt during and after his fight at UFC 261 was unlike anything he had felt in his career.

Chris weidman leg break uriah hall upgrade#
You have reached a degraded version of because you're using an unsupported version of Internet Explorer.įor a complete experience, please upgrade or use a supported browserĬhris Weidman acknowledges 'terrible' pain from horrific compound fracture of leg at UFC 261
