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Antonio Puerta was buried yesterday, in Seville,
the city where he lived, loved and died while playing football. As he
was interred, the family of Clive Clarke was at Nottingham's Queens Medical
Centre, giving thanks for escaping a similar tragedy.
Clarke, a Sunderland defender on loan to Leicester
City, collapsed during City's Carling Cup match at Nottingham Forest on
Tuesday night. He is understood to have suffered two heart failures
and was treated with a defibrillator in the dressing room.
Puerta collapsed 35 minutes into Saturday's match
with Getaffe. He died of multiple organ failure brought on by a
series of prolonged cardiac arrests. More than 10,000 fans, of local
rivals Real Betis as well as Seville, paid their respects last night, filing
past his coffin at the club's Sanchez Piz Juan Stadium. Puerta,
Seville born-and-bred, leaves a wife who is seven months pregnant.
Puerta was 22, five years younger than Clarke and
Chaswe Nsofwa, a Zambian playing for Hapoel Beersheba in the second tier of
Israeli football who collapsed while training yesterday and later died in
hospital. He was the latest in a tragic line of young footballers to
die of heart failure in what ought to be their peak years of fitness.
Much younger players have been affected, notably Anton Reid, the 16-year-old
Walsall apprentice who died while training last week, and Daniel Yorath, son
of Terry and brother of Gabby Logan who died in 1992 at 15 while having a
back-garden kick-around. He was on Leeds United's books.
To the average supporter, who never warms up for
his weekly five-a-side game but only suffers a bit of stiffness afterwards,
the incidents do not make sense. These, after all, are fit guys,
professional athletes. "It's nothing to do with fitness," said Dr
Craig Panther, of Pure Sports Medicine who has worked with Fulham.
"There will be some underlying heart problem, something they were born with,
have developed, or are suffering as a consequence of a viral illness.
It can happen at all levels, we just hear about the professionals."
Indeed, the charity CRY (Cardiac Risk in the
Young) estimates eight under-35-year-olds a week die of Sudden Cardiac
Death, or Sudden Death Syndrome. Earlier this year it launched, in
conjunction with Phillips, Save Our Athletes, a five-year screening
programme for British athletes seeking involvement in the 2012 Olympics.
"Everyone is potentially at risk and the only
accurate means of diagnosis is through expert cardiovascular assessment,"
said Professor Greg Whyte, chairman of CRY and Professor of Applied Sport &
Exercise Science at Liverpool John Moores University.
The hearts of young footballers are screened when
they come into the game under a joint initiative by the Football Association
and the Professional Footballers' Association, which dates back a decade.
Premier League regulations, and common sense, dictate that clubs continue to
monitor players' health. But an ECG screening will not pick up every
abnormality. It did not save Reid and would probably have not, for
example, have picked up the enlarged right ventricle of Marc Vivien-Foe, the
former West Ham and Manchester City player, who collapsed while
playing for Cameroon in Lyons in 2003. Nor would it necessarily have
spotted that Puerta had arrhythymogenic right ventricular cardiomyopathny.
This leads to arrhythmias (abnormal heart rhythms) and occurs in about one
in 5,000 people, around two thirds of whom will have no family history of
the condition.
The tragedy of most conditions associated with
Sudden Cardiac Death is that were the victims not exercising hard, and so
pushing their bodies, they would probably not have had an attack. Then
again, even people with sedentary lifestyles have occasional bursts of
energy.
The risk needs to be kept in perspective. Dr
Brian Aarons, formerly Wimbledon's club doctor, who now works with the FA's
disability teams, said:
"We are not talking about conventional heart
attacks - smoking, high blood pressure, high cholesterol. These are
very rare conditions, a number of different ones, but all of them very rare.
Four hundred deaths sound a lot, but think of how many people are involved
in sport every day. More than 100,000 Britons a year die of
conventional heart disease."
One footballer who survived is Andy Scott.
In March 2005 the former Sheffield United, Brentford and Oxford forward was
playing for Leyton Orient against Cheltenham when he felt abnormally
drained. Scott has recalled: "Twenty minutes into the game I was
struggling to breathe and my legs felt really heavy. I came off and
got seen by the doctor."
He was sent to a specialist who told him: "You're
going to have to hang your boots up or else you could die."
Scott added: "I'd been playing for so long and
everything had been fine, I'd just assumed I'd be back, but it wasn't to
be."
Scott, then 32, had made 348 League appearances,
including all 39 that season. He recognises how fortunate he was and
campaigns for better cardiac screening of players with CRY.
Given his age, it is not clear whether Clarke had
been screened, but as noted, an ECG test will not spot everything. Yesterday
Clarke's agent, Gary Mellor, said the player was 'sitting up and talking'
and awaiting the results of further tests. Mellor added: "It appears
Clive's heart stopped twice, so the paramedics had to use a defibrillator.
His family are very upset. We just hope he's going to be OK."
Leicester are due to play again on Saturday, at
Plymouth. Seville, who postponed Tuesday's Champions League qualifier
at AEK Athens, will resume playing tomorrow night in the European Super Cup
against Milan in Monaco. Players will wear black armbands, stadium
flags will be flown at half mast and there will be a minute's silence in
addition to a short film recapping the player's career before the match.
Given the rarity of such deaths, Puerta was,
extraordinarily, the second Seville player to die after collapsing on the
pitch due to a heart condition. Pedro Berruezon, who died in 1973, was
also 27, and his wife was also pregnant. Their son, Pedro, is now a
professional footballer with the Sugunda B side Ceuta.
Sudden Death Syndrome - Footballers who have suffered
heart failure
David Longhurst, 25. A striker who
began his career in the Nottingham Forrest youth team, Longhurst suffered a
heart attack while playing for York City in 1990. York later named one
of the stands at Bootham Crescent after him.
Robbie James, 40. the former Swansea
City, Stock City and QPR star died on the pitchy playing for Llanelli AFC,
where he was player-manager, in 1989. James won 47 caps for Wales.
Marc-Vivien Foe, 28. On 26 June 2003, Foe
collapsed near the centre circle playing the Confederations Cup semi-final
for Cameroon against Colombia. The death was said to be caused by an
enlarged right Ventricle. He played for Lens and Lyons and had Premier
League spells with West Ham United and Manchester City. Foe scored the
last City goal at Marine Road. City retired the No 23 shirt he wore in
2002-03.
Miklos Feher, 24. Feher died playing form
Benfica against Victoria Guinmaraes in January 2004. The player
collapsed after receiving a yellow card and died later that night from a
confirmed cardiac arrest.
Anton Reid, 16. On 20 August this year,
Anton Reid passed away during training with his club Walsall on their Aston
training pitch. He was in his first year with the youth team.
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