Stunned spectators watched as a rugby player collapsed and was given CPR, including by his wife, during a match at the Silverdale Rugby Club on Saturday.
Hato Hone St John told the Herald it was notified of a medical event in Silverdale at 3.30pm yesterday and responded with two rapid response units and one ambulance.
鈥淥ur crews assessed and treated one patient who was transported to Auckland hospital in a critical condition,鈥 the St John spokesman said.
The incident happened during a match between Silverdale Rugby (SURSC) Under 85s and the Massey Panthers at the Silverdale grounds.
The St John spokesman said it was unable to confirm if the incident resulted from an injury due to patient privacy.
A rugby player was taken to hospital in a critical condition. File photo / 123rf
An eyewitness said spectators and fans were 鈥渓eft stunned鈥 as the Massey player lay motionless on the ground and was being treated with a defibrillator and CPR.
鈥淚t was an uneasy feeling, especially after what happened at Beachlands just a couple of weeks ago,鈥 said the witness, a Silverdale supporter who was at the game.
On April 27, rugby player Cory Heather, 33, died after suffering a head knock during a match between Beachlands Maraetai and Patum膩hoe in Beachlands.
鈥淎bout 10 minutes before the first half was finished, a Massey player had fallen over on the field and he was having seizure,鈥 The witness said.
鈥淚 think it was his son, who was also one of the players on Massey鈥檚 team, that ran over and asked people to stop playing because his dad was seizuring.鈥
The witness said believed the player had taken a knock on the head during a tackle and 鈥済ot up and appeared all good鈥 just before he went down.
鈥淭he ref called half-time early because of the event, and they ended moving the game into a different field so that the play could continue,鈥 they said.
鈥淭here was then talk that he had a heart attack, so someone ran to the rugby club to get a defibrillator while another person was giving him CPR.鈥
The witness said St John arrived and then attended to the player 鈥渇or a good 20 to 30 minutes鈥 before taking the man in an ambulance to hospital.
鈥淥bviously what happened was hard to see and it left spectators stunned, especially with the Beachlands incident from two weeks ago still fresh on minds,鈥 they said.
But Hugh Goddard, chairman of Silverdale Rugby and Sports Club, said the player had a cardiac arrest and his collapse was not due to a head knock.
鈥淔ortunately, due to some quick thinking of spectators who were off-duty paramedics and the presence of an AED at the club, the individual was given first aid and was able to be tended by the ambulance service,鈥 Goddard said.
Courtney Wenzlick, the Massey U85 rugby manager, said there was 鈥渁 speculation around the fields and the sidelines鈥 that it was a head knock.
鈥淏ut it wasn鈥檛 a head knock, it was a very massive heart attack,鈥 Wenzlick said.
鈥淭he player is doing fine, he鈥檚 had two stents in, and a scan to check there鈥檚 no brain damage due to him not breathing at one stage.
鈥淭hat鈥檚 come out all clear.鈥
Wenzlick said he was first on the scene with the player鈥檚 wife and the two off-duty paramedics.
His wife was an ICU nurse who gave him CPR, and the defibrillator was used to shock and stabilize him.
Wenzlick said in a WhatsApp group message at 9.40am today that the brain scans 鈥渉ave all come back clear鈥, which was 鈥済reat news鈥.
His subsequent update at 12.40pm said the victim was now awake.
鈥淭hey woke him this morning, he seems okay but it鈥檚 early days.鈥
This article was originally published on the NZ Herald
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