Heartbreaking newsđ Survivor legend secretly needed surgery after suffering brutal injury while filming Season 50
A SURVIVOR legend built his name on winning â but one painful moment while filming Season 50 nearly changed the entire game.
The once-untouchable challenge beast revealed he suffered a shocking mid-competition accident that left him needing surgery â and it was all cut from the show.
Pictured L to R during Survivorâs Blood Moon episode: Tiffany Ervin, Benjamin âCoachâ Wade, Joe Hunter, Emily Flippen, Dee Valladares, Ozzy Lusth, Christian Hubicki, Kamilla Karthigesu, Genevieve Mushaluk, and Chrissy Hofbeck.
Survivor legend Ozzy Lusth, 44, exclusively told The U.S. Sun that he suffered from an injury that left him needing surgery after a brutal Season 50 challenge.
Challenge beast Ozzy admitted to âf**king upâ his knee mid-competition while filming on the islands of Fiji last Summer.
While the accident would have ruined his âentire gameâ in the past, this time around, Ozzy says âeverything was different.â
âI f**ked my knee up badly, but itâs not like a huge thing on the show. I donât even think theyâll show it,â Ozzy told The U.S. Sun as he hosted a Survivor event with fellow show alumâs Brice And Wen Present.
âIt was during the middle of a challenge. It wouldâve f**ked everything up for me in the past, but it didnât impact my game this time.
âMostly because I didnât play that type of physical game this time around. I led with more strategy.
âIâve been going to the doctors [since we got back from filming].
âItâs the first time Iâve injured myself on Survivor,â he confessed â while adding that he played through the injury and was not medevaced out over it.
Ozzy confirmed that in late 2025, after months of limping around, he ended up undergoing surgery on his knee.
In the months that followed, Ozzy appeared at several fan events and Survivor viewing parties on crutches, with the star struggling to walk.
He is now off crutches and recovering well â and said he is âdoing a lot betterâ after the procedure.
The reality star, once feared for his elite swimming, climbing, and endurance abilities, built his reputation as one of the most dominant physical competitors in Survivor history.
The reality star, while still on crutches in late 2025, leaves a TV event with Brice and Went Presents
His skills were so formidable, he often single-handedly carried tribes through grueling immunity challenges for the win.
In past seasons, that strength was his biggest weapon â and at times, his biggest target.
But after returning for season 50, Ozzy said he deliberately shifted away from that high-risk, high-reward style â a decision that ultimately helped soften the blow of his injury.
The injury, however, marked a turning point in how Ozzy views the game he once tried to overpower.
âAt a certain point, you gotta play a different game. When you realize thatâs not winning for you.
âAnd I think the people winning, they can pull out a physical win when they really need it â and rely on their physicality to get them far.â
He acknowledged that kind of perfectly timed dominance is rare, pointing to winner Chris Underwood as a near-impossible exception during Edge of Extinction in 2018.
âUnless youâre a one-in-a-million, like Chris who came back from Redemption to win it. Heâs a special case.
âVery few people can actually do that â I couldnât do it. I donât think Iâm that good at the game in that way.â
Instead, Ozzy says his approach this season has been about longevity â surviving each phase rather than conquering every challenge.
âI play a good enough game to get myself to the next phase,â he explained.
âI think more than the social part, I appreciate being out there. I love playing.
âAnd that, more than anything, is what gets other people excited too. Weâre doing something thatâs so much fun and so rare.â
Ozzy is one of the 24 castaways to secure the high-coveted spot on Season 50âs cast.
One of the most famous names to ever come from the show, Ozzy played a staggering 128 days of Survivor before even joining the cast of 50.
The Los Angeles native first appeared on TV screens during Cook Islands in 2006, where he made it all 39 days and was the runner-up.
Two years later, he competed in Survivor: Micronesia â Fans vs. Favorites for 27 days.
He came back to the show in 2011 for Survivor: South Pacific, lasting all 39 days after dominating the challenge duels.












