Double MotoGP champion Casey Stoner has revealed a fresh battle with chronic fatigue that has left him unable to stay fit enough to do any meaningful riding.
Stoner appeared on the latest episode of the Rusty’s Garage podcast, and said that he’s currently on medication to deal with a serious bout of chronic fatigue syndrome.
It is not his first battle with fatigue, the Aussie missing three races in 2009 for chronic fatigue that was later linked to an intolerance to lactose.
According to Stoner, this new fight against fatigue is serious enough that even taking part in his hobbies such as karting and archery is out of the question.
“I haven’t been out [karting] in over a year now,” he told podcast host Greg Rust.
“I don’t have the energy to go out there and do that for the day, it’ll put me on the couch for another week.
“I haven’t done the things that I enjoy a lot these days. It’s been a little frustrating. I haven’t pulled a bow back in probably 10 months or more.
“Basically, what happens, with the chronic fatigue I’m not able to keep myself fit and healthy.
“I’ve got a problem where my ribs go out often, and they’re connected to your vertebrae. They’ll go out of place and that puts my back out.
“I’ve already got leaking discs, so that puts pressure on my disc and that will spray a little bit of liquid out, and that puts pressure on your nerve and then you have a spasm, and that’s a good week before you can properly start to put some weight on it again.”
The chronic fatigue has also kept him out of the saddle in terms of riding bikes on asphalt.
In fact, he says his last serious ride on two wheels was the group test with Ducati’s MotoGP squad at Sepang in January 2018.
“The first time I’ve been on a road-based bike since January last year, which was testing, was only a couple of weeks ago when I was in the US on my birthday for an Alpinestars event,” he said.
“We did a little bit of riding around with a few guys. We didn’t push or anything, but it took it out of me enough.”
Stoner added: “These last few months I’ve been improving with some new medication that I’m on, but I’m still nowhere near training and getting out and doing things.
“Otherwise it just puts me on the couch for a good week or so, or at least four or five days, and that makes it hard on the wife.”
Stoner made his MotoGP debut in 2006 with LCR Honda, but a switch to Ducati one year later yielded his first title.
He switched to the Honda works’ team for 2011 he took his second MotoGP title, and the next season was his last at that level.
After a season in the Super2 Series, the Supercars support championship, in 2013. He returned to the MotoGP in a testing role for Ducati before he was dropped at the end of the 2018 season.