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‘Destroyed our lives': Surgeon loses part of arm after car hits 2 runners during Florida Keys race

Family members said the men were taking part in the Keys 100, a 100-mile race from Key Largo to Key West, when they were struck

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Two men are in the hospital with serious injuries after their loved ones say they were hit by a car while running a race in the Florida Keys this past weekend.

Family members said the men were taking part in the Keys 100, a 100-mile race from Key Largo to Key West, when they were struck.

The wife of one of the men, Matt D., spoke with NBC6 from Jackson Memorial Hospital's Ryder Trauma Center, where he continues his recovery.

Family Photos
Matt D.

The wife, Sara, said she flew down to Miami after her husband was hospitalized. She said doctors had to amputate part of her husband's right arm.

She said her husband is a surgeon and a professional marathon runner, so it wasn't his first race.

"This was supposed to be a fun event, we were hoping to have a family vacation and it has destroyed our lives for as long as we will know it," she said.

Now the family is seeking answers about how this could have happened at an organized race.

"They were part of an official race, all I know is they weren't on their own, they were part of an organized event and I don't comprehend the details. Why? How?" she said.

NBC6 spoke with the wife of the other runner who said her husband, Gabriel, is a professor at the University of Miami and an avid runner.

She said he was hospitalized and it's expected he will lose some function in his right arm.

NBC6 spoke with the race director Bob Becker over the phone. He said what happened Saturday was an unfortunate car accident.

Becker said part of the race is on the road and the accident happened where participants were running on the shoulder. He added they have several safety protocols in place, from sheriff’s deputies to cones and signage.

However Gabriel's wife, who said she was at the race, said there weren't any safety measures in the area where her husband was hit.

In an email, Becker responded by saying, “Seven Mile Bridge is coned, not the entire course. It never has been and there has been no comment ever to that effect.”

The two wives believe the accident was preventable and what they want now is to prevent it from happening again.

“In our experience all of these ultra races if there's any kind of vehicles involved usually the roads are closed off to vehicles so I don't really understand what the car was doing there,” Sara said.

NBC6 has reached out to the Florida Highway Patrol for more information about the incident, and were waiting to hear back.

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