MechanicalCheese
MechanicalCheese t1_it67sgz wrote
Reply to comment by adfthgchjg in TIL in 2003, 12yo Auri Allen was featured on Ripley's Believe It or Not due to his massive size, nicknamed Baby Shaq. By 2006, he was regarded as one of the top 5 basketball players in the country, until a car crash paralyzed him. He later became a Head Coach and founded his own basketball academy. by SlipperyThong
The last bit is a little surprising to me. I would think the taller you were, the less distance you had to fall. Assuming the roof doesn't crush in too far, the top of my head is generally a couple inches from it. That seems like a far easier impact to absorb than dropping a foot. I'd expect weight to have a much greater impact than height in terms of injury risk.
MechanicalCheese t1_it89wj7 wrote
Reply to comment by juicythiccdrumstick in TIL in 2003, 12yo Auri Allen was featured on Ripley's Believe It or Not due to his massive size, nicknamed Baby Shaq. By 2006, he was regarded as one of the top 5 basketball players in the country, until a car crash paralyzed him. He later became a Head Coach and founded his own basketball academy. by SlipperyThong
That why I mentioned weight being the bigger factor - I expect a 5'8" 380lb man would have a comparable if not worse risk.
As for size - here's an example (as I'm packing for a camping trip today) - if I drive down a bumpy road with a glass bottle in a tall cooler, it's much more likely to break than in a short cooler, as it can't so easily develop and speed before impact with space constraints.
Supporting your body weight with your neck is never good, but being dropped on your head is a lot worse.
I'm having trouble finding data on rollovers in particular. For most vehicles accident injuries, shorter folks are far worse off.
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3217531/