Skip to content
Search

Latest Stories

Cricketer Rishabh Pant's condition improves, shifted from ICU to private ward

Pant was admitted to the intensive care unit (ICU) of the hospital hours after the wicketkeeper-batsman suffered multiple injuries in a car accident.

Cricketer Rishabh Pant's condition improves, shifted from ICU to private ward

Cricketer Rishabh Pant has been shifted from the ICU to the private ward of the Max Hospital in Dehradun, the capital of India's northern state of Uttarakhand, following an improvement in his condition. He was shifted to the private ward on Sunday evening as his condition improved but the pain in his leg persists, sources said.

No MRI is planned yet, they added. Pant was admitted to the intensive care unit (ICU) of the hospital hours after the wicketkeeper-batsman suffered multiple injuries in a car accident on the Delhi-Dehradun highway, near Roorkee, in the early hours of Friday.


Uttarakhand Chief Minister Pushkar Singh Dhami, who met Pant at the hospital on Sunday, had said quoting the cricketer that he had lost control over his car while trying to avoid a pothole and something black on the road.

Delhi and District Cricket Association (DDCA) director Shyam Sharma, who met the cricketer on Saturday, had also told reporters that the accident took place when Pant was trying to negotiate a pothole.

The accident took place at around 5.30 am on Friday, when Pant's luxury car hit a road divider, rolled over to the other side of the road and caught fire.

Pant had a miraculous escape but he sustained injuries on his forehead, leg and bruises on his back.

(PTI)

More For You

Vishwash-Kumar-ANI

The British citizen, who lives in Leicester, central England, walked away from the wreckage in what he has called “a miracle”, but lost his brother in the crash. (Photo: ANI)

Getty Images

Air India crash sole survivor says he lives with pain and trauma

THE ONLY only survivor of June’s Air India crash has spoken to UK media about the mental and physical pain he continues to suffer months after the disaster in Ahmedabad.

Vishwash Kumar Ramesh told in interviews aired and published on Monday that the period since the crash, which killed 241 passengers on the London-bound flight and 19 people on the ground, has been “very difficult.”

Keep ReadingShow less