Now on the road to recovery, Antonio took the time to visit the airbase where he met Dr Moloney and Moon face-to-face for the first time since the incident. Emotionally charged, the Premier League star didn’t hold back in expressing his gratitude.
"I want to say thank you because I wouldn't be here if it wasn't for you guys," he said on theBBC's Morning Live show. "So you guys are basically my heroes."
Antonio admitted the physical recovery has been steady, but the mental and emotional impact of the crash has been far more challenging.
"For me, personally, I could never do your job," he told them.
"If I go there and see blood or people in trouble, I would just panic or faint. It's definitely something I wouldn't be able to do. Being involved in a major accident can have life-changing physical and mental effects. I've processed it to a certain degree, but I think the emotions are going to take a long time. Mentally, trauma lasts a long time."
Antonio, a father of six, noted that while he physically experienced the crash, the emotional toll on his family may have been greater.
"My family probably experienced the incident more than I did," he added. "They had to see how I was in the hospital. I don't remember my face being cut or going down for surgery the next day. They lived it. They have those memories."