Ellie Roebuck's story: 'I should have lost my vision after stroke'
England goalkeeper Ellie Roebuck reveals she came close to losing her eyesight following a...
England goalkeeper Ellie Roebuck reveals she came close to losing her eyesight following a stroke at just 24 years old.
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Roebuck, now 25, felt something was "not right" towards the end of 2023 but it was first put down to concussion after she was hit in the head by a ball during a match for Manchester City.
She had a scan and the club doctor told her to come in, telling her she had a stroke.
Ellie Roebuck: "I probably should have been blind"Roebuck told the BBC: "I'm lucky because I should have lost my vision. I should have lost my peripheral vision for sure.
"The majority of people that suffer a stroke [like mine] do that. So, I probably should have been blind, which is quite a miracle that that didn't happen."
After investigations she found out it was caused by a tiny hole in her heart.
She added: ""[It] sounds crazy, but I was grateful that I had a hole in my heart because I'd found my reason and I knew that it could be closed and I could move on. I was almost excited that I was going in for heart surgery."
Get FourFourTwo Newsletter Contact me with news and offers from other Future brandsReceive email from us on behalf of our trusted partners or sponsorsBy submitting your information you agree to the Terms & Conditions and Privacy Policy and are aged 16 or over.Roebuck didn't play for City again after her stroke and moved to Barcelona in the 2024/25 summer transfer window.
The goalkeeper added her final season with City was "badly managed".
"I just felt like maybe my relationship with the manager [Gareth Taylor] got fractured," Roebuck said.
"I don't know whether that was me, maybe not hearing the clear communication or the fact that there just wasn't clear communication.
"I got my head down and I just tried to work every day, but I think it was a badly managed situation. I've always been professional. I just felt like the respect wasn't reciprocated in that same sense."