Rick Ross Nearly Broke His Leg… And Still Wants Another Party

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Rick Ross Nearly Broke His Leg

Rick Ross almost walked away from one of his wildest pool parties with a broken leg, and somehow he tells the story like it was just another normal day at the crib. No panic, no drama, just a laugh and a shrug like, yeah, that was close, but we good.

That’s Rick Ross for you.

A guy who turned luxury living into a whole lifestyle brand, where even a near injury sounds like part of the entertainment package. And the way he tells it, you can almost picture the whole scene playing out at one of his famous estate parties. Loud music, people everywhere, energy turned all the way up, and Ross in the middle of it like the host of the year.

He said it happened during one of those pool moments where things get a little too comfortable, a little too bold. He tried out a diving board move he calls the “Double Decker Slapper.” Just the name alone already sounds like trouble waiting to happen. And yeah, it almost went left fast.

“I almost broke my leg… but it was fun,” he said with a smile.

That line says everything about how he moves through life. Even when something could’ve turned serious, he frames it like a story instead of a setback. Most people would’ve been shaking it off for weeks. Ross just adds it to the collection of moments he’s built over time.

Because at this point, his life has become a mix of business, music, and these larger-than-life personal stories that feel almost unreal. Mansion parties, car shows, private events, and now diving board stunts that almost send him to the ER. It all blends into the same picture.

And the wild part is, he’s already talking about doing it again.

Ross recently teased another big celebration coming up after a car show scheduled for June 13. If you know anything about his events, it won’t just be a quiet hangout. It’s going to be music blasting, people moving around, cameras everywhere, and probably another moment where someone does something a little too bold near a pool.

And Ross? He’ll be right in the middle of it, probably smiling like nothing can go wrong.

But this interview wasn’t just about the pool incident. It came up while he was talking about something deeper, his new memoir, Renaissance of a Boss: Notes from a Creative Reawakening. This is his third book, and this one isn’t just about the flashy side of success. It’s about everything underneath it.

Ross opens up more in this one. Not just the wins, but the losses too. The setbacks, the mistakes, the moments where things didn’t go how he planned. And instead of trying to hide those parts, he leans into them.

That’s something a lot of people don’t expect from someone with his image. The big house, the cars, the jewelry, the boss talk. But in this book, he’s showing another layer. The part where things weren’t always smooth. The part where he had to learn the hard way, more than once.

“I appreciate the falls,” he explained.

That mindset is a big piece of who he is now. To him, every setback wasn’t just pain for no reason. It was part of building something bigger. Even when it felt like things were slipping, he sees it now as part of the process that shaped him.

And that’s what makes his story stick with people. It’s not just success. It’s survival mixed with growth. Learning how to take hits and still keep moving forward without losing your identity in the process.

He even talked about what advice he would give his younger self, and it was simple. Almost too simple, but that’s what made it hit harder.

Don’t quit.

He didn’t dress it up with fancy words. He didn’t try to make it sound poetic. Just straight to the point. Don’t quit, homie. Keep going even when it feels like everything is falling apart.

And that hits different coming from someone who’s lived through different phases of fame, pressure, and public attention. Because it’s easy to say “keep going” when everything is going right. It’s a whole different story when things are heavy, when the pressure is real, and when quitting almost feels easier.

Ross compared it to being right at the finish line and giving up too early. That moment when you’re closer than you think, but don’t realize it until later. That’s the kind of lesson you only learn after going through it yourself.

And in a way, that near pool injury fits right into that mindset too. Something could’ve gone wrong. It almost did. But instead of turning it into a moment of fear, he turns it into another story. Another reminder that life is unpredictable, but you keep moving anyway.

That’s the energy he carries. Even when things get risky, even when it looks like it could go left, he doesn’t let it change the way he shows up in the world. He laughs it off, adjusts, and keeps the momentum going.

And as his next big event approaches, that same energy is still there. Bigger plans, bigger crowds, more moments that blur the line between celebration and chaos. But if you know Rick Ross, you already know he’s not stepping back from any of it.

If anything, he’s leaning in even more.

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