Alex Zanardi did not cheat death. He stared it down, twice, and kept going.
He lost both legs in a blur of metal and blood, then came back faster.
He smashed his skull in a handbike crash, then inspired a Pope.
Alex Zanardi’s story was never about the brutality of his accidents, but the ferocity of his comebacks. From modest results in Formula One to conquering CART in America, he was already respected. But when the 2001 Lausitzring crash took both his legs, he rewrote what courage in sport could look like. Designing his own prosthetics, joking he’d made himself taller, he learned to walk, then to race, all over again.
He traded horsepower for human power and became a Paralympic giant, winning four gold medals and two silvers, conquering marathons and Ironman courses, and returning to Daytona as the most revered man in the paddock. Even after his devastating 2020 handbike crash, tributes—from world leaders to Pope Francis—framed him as something rarer than a champion: a beacon. Surrounded by his family, he has finally taken his last lap, but the standard he set for resilience will not fade.