portslade seagull
Well-known member
A Fulham fan died today after a cardiac arrest during the game. RIP fellow fan
Very sad RIP.
But there seems to be a lot of emergencies in the crowd lately, it used to be a very rare occurance, I think that there was another one yesterday in the lower leagues.
I'm sure it wasn't a rare occurrence. Given that on a full weekend fixture list there are about 750,000 people attend league football in England, and given that about 1 person in 2,5m has a heart attack in any two week period, we would expect a match to be stopped about once every three or four weeks.Very sad RIP.
But there seems to be a lot of emergencies in the crowd lately, it used to be a very rare occurance, I think that there was another one yesterday in the lower leagues.
I'm sure it wasn't a rare occurrence. Given that on a full weekend fixture list there are about 750,000 people attend league football in England, and given that about 1 person in 2,5m has a heart attack in any two week period, we would expect a match to be stopped about once every three or four weeks.
The only difference is that they never used to stop the match for an unrelated emergency. I don't know why they have started doing it now. It's not as if the team treating the sick person would be any use if another person had a heart attack, or that the risk to the crowd of sitting/standing around for 40 minutes in the cold watching nothing is materially different from the risk of watching the match continue.
It's all about priorities l think. The coaching staff will always have easy access to a defribilator and getting prompt treatment to the stricken fan is the be all and end all.
If the game needs to be stopped whilst treatment is being carried out, then who cares?
Yes, of course. But I am querying how it improves the poorly spectator's chances if the game is stopped while the club doctor is away from his seat in the stand.
Very moving thread from his daughter.
[tweet]1487703288028012546[/tweet]
Very sad RIP.
But there seems to be a lot of emergencies in the crowd lately, it used to be a very rare occurance, I think that there was another one yesterday in the lower leagues.
From personal direct experience in the early 70’s, heart attacks at games weren’t a rare occurrence at all.
What evidence do you have to justify your assertion that “it used to be a very rare occurrence”?
Very sad RIP.
But there seems to be a lot of emergencies in the crowd lately, it used to be a very rare occurance, I think that there was another one yesterday in the lower leagues.
I'm not so sure that there are more, or if it's a case of them being dealt with differently and more efficiently.
I suspect it's the latter.
It doesn't. Perhaps there's been some relatively new requirement that the doctor must be instantly available whie the ball is in play in case a player gets shot by a sniper (aka 'feels a touch')?Yes, of course. But I am querying how it improves the poorly spectator's chances if the game is stopped while the club doctor is away from his seat in the stand.