Australian cricketer Hughes dies after freak accident

spaminator

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Australian cricketer Hughes dies after freak accident
REUTERS
First posted: Thursday, November 27, 2014 12:20 AM EST | Updated: Thursday, November 27, 2014 12:35 AM EST
SYDNEY - Australian cricketer Phillip Hughes died in hospital on Thursday, two days after the batsman was struck on the head by a bouncer during a domestic match.
Governing body Cricket Australia (CA) confirmed the 25-year-old had lost his fight for life.
"We are extremely sad to announce that Phillip Hughes has passed away at the age of 25," CA said on its Twitter feed.
"Our thoughts go out to Phillip's family, friends, and the entire cricket community on this incredibly sad day."
There were no further details.
Hughes had spent a second night in a Sydney hospital in an induced coma after having emergency surgery to relieve pressure on his brain.
The batsman was struck on the head by a ball at the Sydney Cricket Ground, a devastating blow experts compared to the trauma suffered by victims of a car crash.
News of Hughes death followed calls by former players for the Australian team to abandon the first test match against India next week.
Questions about the response time of ambulances dispatched to the stadium were also raised.
The head of New South Wales Ambulance was to be hauled before the state health minister Jillian Skinner on Thursday after the ambulance authority issued conflicting statements about their response times.
The arrival of the first ambulance took 15 minutes, NSW Ambulance clarified in a statement on Wednesday.
The state's median response time for the highest priority "life-threatening cases" was just under eight minutes in 2013-14, according the authority's statistics.
"Due to the conflicting information distributed today by NSW Ambulance regarding (Tuesday's) response to the Sydney Cricket Ground, I will be meeting with NSW Ambulance Commissioner Ray Creen tomorrow to discuss the circumstances surrounding the incident," Skinner said.
Dr Peter Larkins, a leading sports physician, told Reuters: "Time is of the essence when your brain has suffered trauma."
Family and players had maintained their vigil at Hughes' bedside.
Australia's Phillip Hughes watches his shot during the fourth day of their third and final test cricket match against Sri Lanka in Colombo in this September 19, 2011 file photo. (REUTERS/Dinuka Liyanawatte/Files)

Australian cricketer Hughes dies after freak accident | Other Sports | Sports |
 

Blackleaf

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This is a sad day for the great sport of cricket and for the big cricketing nations with the death of Australian cricketer Phil Hughes just three days before his 26th birthday after being struck by a ball whilst playing for South Australia against New South Wales during a Sheffield Shield match.

This event shows just how dangerous cricket can be, even in the modern age of cricketers wearing helmets, which was not the case until quite recently despite batsmen having to face rock solid balls coming at them at almost 100mph. Phil isn't the first cricketer to be killed after being struck by a ball.

As well as Australia, Hughes was particularly well known in both England and India, as he played county cricket for Middlesex, Hampshire and Worcestershire and for the Mumbai Indians in the IPL.

Hughes, who played 26 Tests for Australia, made his Test debut at the age of 20 against South Africa in 2009.

In only his second match, he became the youngest batsman to post two centuries in a Test match. He shared in a then world record 10th-wicket partnership of 163 with Ashton Agar against England in the 2013 Ashes series.

At the beginning of last year he was included in Australia's ODI squad and he made his debut for Australia in ODI cricket against Sri Lanka. He made his mark with a solid 112 (from 129 balls), becoming the first Australian to reach a century on debut.

Just last month he made his debut for Australia in T20 cricket against Pakistan in United Arab Emirates.

This morning, the flag at Lord's Cricket Ground in London, the home of cricket, is flying at half mast.

The players who were involved in the match have been offered counselling, and particular thoughts must who go to New South Wales bowler Sean Abbott, whose bouncer accidentally struck Phil on the head.


Australian cricketer Phillip Hughes, 25, dies two days after he was hit in the head by a bouncer - as devastated bowler Sean Abbott who delivered fatal ball leaves hospital in tears


Phillip Hughes has died in hospital surrounded by family and friends, three days before his 26th birthday. He never recovered from a devastating bouncer to the back of his head at the Sydney Cricket Ground on Tuesday afternoon. The tragic development sparked a huge outpouring of emotion from the Australian and international community. Team doctor Peter Brukner said: 'It is my sad duty to inform you that a short time ago Phillip Hughes passed away. 'He never regained consciousness following his injury on Tuesday. Pictured centre bowler Sean Abbott - whose bouncer hit Hughes in a freak accident - is comforted as he left St Vincent's Hospital after the tragic news. Pictured top right are Hughes' distraught father Greg and mother Virginia leaving the hospital.

'Phil would in no way hold Sean responsible': Hughes' friend, broadcaster Alan Jones, took to the airwaves as the cricket community rallied behind bowler Sean Abbott



Parents Greg and Virginia Hughes and sister Megan leave Cricket NSW in Sydney



Members of two local cricket teams observe a moment of silence for Phillip Hughes before their match in Kolkata. Australia's scheduled matches against India may be called off






Legend: Hughes was a keen cricketer, even as a youngster in Macksville. As a professional cricketer, he would go on to beat one of the great Don Bradman's records. Hughes holds the highest percentage of runs scored by one man in a first class match


The statement from Australian team doctor Peter Brukner



In Australian colours: Phillip Hughes played 26 Test matches for his country


Close mate David Warner and Candice Falzon (top) console each other as they leave St Vincent's Hospital as a tearful George Bailey (bottom) makes his exit

Bouncer: This is the shot that caused Phil Hughes' fatal injury on Tuesday afternoon

Hughes, pictured after absorbing the shot, collapsed face first to the ground shortly after the bouncer smacked him toward the back of his head

Hughes collapsed onto the pitch seconds after this picture was taken

Hughes dramatically collapsed shortly after being struck by the bouncer










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Australian cricketer Phillip Hughes has died after being hit on the head by a cricket ball. Can helmets ever offer total protection?


Phil Hughes: Could head injuries be eliminated?

By Justin Parkinson
BBC News Magazine
27 November 2014




Cricket is often caricatured as a slow game, with action limited to a few seconds at a time. But top-level batsmen have to stand in front of a hard ball, which weighs between 5.5 and 5.75 ounces (155.9g and 163g), delivered at speeds sometimes in excess of 90 miles (145km) per hour.

Hughes died only two days after being placed in an induced coma in a Sydney hospital. This follows surgery he underwent after being struck on the neck or the back of his head. This area was apparently unprotected at it was beneath the bottom of his helmet.

Safety design has improved in cricket - where helmets only became standard relatively recently - and other sports. But could this go further without making equipment too cumbersome to use?

"We believe there's more that can be done," says Rene Ferdinands, head of cricket biomechanics research at the University of Sydney. "It is possible to offer protection that extends beyond the area covered by the helmet."



One idea suggested by Ferdinands is to wear a skull cap, made of composite foam or other substance, reaching beyond the area at the base of the helmet. A study suggests such materials can absorb between 50% and 70% of the impact of a baseball, he adds, saying it would not impede mobility.

Masuri, the UK company which manufactured Hughes's helmet, says he was not wearing the latest model, which offers "extra protection" in the area where he was hit, while still allowing "comfortable movement". It is seeking more video evidence to determine the exact point of impact.

"This is a vulnerable area of the head and neck that helmets cannot fully protect," the company says, "while enabling batsmen to have full and proper movement."

Cricket is one of many sports where helmets are used. In ice hockey, they became compulsory in Sweden in 1963 following a succession of injuries, with other countries doing the same later, including the US from 1979. Face protectors were added in the 1970s and throat protectors in the 1980s.

Helmets are standard in American football, equine events, competitive skiing and many other pastimes involving high speeds or violent bodily contact.

But the International Amateur Boxing Association banned headgear for men's international bouts last year, putting it in line with the professional version of the sport. It said there was evidence to show this could actually cut the number of concussions because it reduced risky behaviour by competitors.


A cricket ball is hard and solid and weighs between 5.5 and 5.75 ounces (155.9g and 163g). It is made of cork covered in leather. Manufacture is regulated by cricket law at first class level.


Former England captain Mike Gatting

Cricket has gone the opposite way. "When I first started we didn't have helmets on," said former England captain Mike Gatting, who had his nose broken by a short-pitched delivery from West Indies fast bowler Malcolm Marshall in 1986. "Sadly for Phil, it must have hit one of the very few spots that has done some damage, some severe damage, and it really is just so tragic."

In a study published last year, researchers at Loughborough and Cardiff Metropolitan universities analysed 35 videos of first-class cricketers being injured despite wearing helmets.

Most involved being hit on the faceguard or peak, or when the ball got through the gap between them. These mostly caused cuts, fractures and contusions.

But six (17%) of the injuries resulted from the ball hitting the back of the helmet's shell and two (6%) the unprotected neck or occiput (lower left- or right-side region of the back of the skull). The study said impacts in these areas were more likely to result in concussions. This seemed to corroborate findings from US studies into baseball impacts on batters' heads.

Prevention might be improved by "extending the shell of the helmet to cover the entire occipital region", the study recommended.


Dennis Amiss (with Garfield Sobers in background) modelling an early cricket helmet, 1978

"We should design helmets as strong as technology allows," says Antonio Belli, professor of trauma neurosurgery at Birmingham University. "But we need to accept that in cricket and other sports that involve hard objects or bodily contact there will always be freak accidents. I would put what happened to Philip Hughes into that category.

"For the number of hours played in cricket, it's actually considered a safe sport in terms of concussion."

But head injury has long been a concern. In the so-called "Bodyline" England v Australia series of 1932, Australia's Bert Oldfield's skull was fractured by a bouncer. This and other incidents prompted an outcry against the use of short-pitched bowling aimed at the body.

The following summer Middlesex and England batsman Patsy Hendren, playing against the West Indies at Lord's, wore a protective cap created by his wife. Resembling a deerstalker hat, it had three peaks, two of which covered the ears and temples on either side of the head and were lined with sponge rubber.

But the use of real cricket helmets has largely evolved over the last 40 years or so.

India's Sunil Gavaskar created his own skull protector. However, he decided not to wear a helmet. "I had a habit of reading before I slept and on most occasions slept while reading," said Gavaskar in 2009. "My neck muscles got weakened due to this and I feared that my reflexes would slow down while facing a bouncer (if I wore a helmet)."

Helmets "spread like mushrooms after rain" in the late 1970s, according to cricket historian Gideon Haigh, after Australia's David Hookes had his jaw broken by West Indian fast bowler Andy Roberts.

Australian left-hander Graham Yallop was booed when he became the first player to wear a full helmet - an improvised motorcycle helmet, including a plastic visor - in a Test match, in Barbados in 1978. England's Dennis Amiss wore similarly shaped equipment, complete with grille, in World Series Cricket in the same era.

These days top-level players usually wear a helmet when facing fast or medium-pace bowlers. In the UK it is compulsory for cricketers under 18 to use one when batting, whatever the speed of bowling.

Modern helmets are designed to absorb the ball's energy by becoming deformed, or dented, on impact. They contain foam injected in to the cavity between the inner and outer shells to help this.

England all-rounder Stuart Broad edged a ball through the gap between the grille and peak of his helmet in a Test match against India earlier this year, injuring his nose.

Ferdinands says this is another area that is being investigated, although there is still a need for batsmen to maintain as much visibility as possibility. "Helmet design is certainly a lot better than it was," he says. "The designers have done a really good job. But this is all a process of evolution. We have to take the next step."

BBC News - Phil Hughes: Could head injuries be eliminated?
 
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gopher

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A sad day for the wonderful sport of cricket. You would have thought that head gear would be enough to protect against a bouncer but it wasn't. Hopefully, more protective gear will be created.
 

Sal

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I'm shocked to read he had his helmet on...he was just a kid. RIP
 

Blackleaf

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A sad day for the wonderful sport of cricket. You would have thought that head gear would be enough to protect against a bouncer but it wasn't. Hopefully, more protective gear will be created.


In fact, deaths in cricket are mercifully very rare. I discovered on TV early this morning that, including Phil Hughes, there have been eight cricket deaths..... since 1624. Seven of those were as a result of being hit by a bat or ball and one of those - that of an English cricketer in 1998 - was the result of complications arising from the anaesthetic he received in hospital after being injured whilst playing. The odds on being killed whilst playing cricket are 10 million to 1. You are three times more likely to be killed playing "soccer."

But just because deaths are rare in cricket doesn't mean that serious injuries are.


India’s Raman Lamba died in 1998 at the age of 38 after being struck in the temple by a cricket ball hit by a Bangladesh batsman.

In the infamous Bodyline Series in 1932-33, the Australian wicketkeeper Bert Oldfield had his skull fractured when he was hit by a ball from English fast bowler Harold Larwood.

In the 1960s, Indian captain Nari Contractor was hit in the head by a ball from West Indian paceman Charlie Griffith.

Contractor was unconscious for six days and needed a blood transfusion to survive but never played international cricket again.

In the Ashes between England and Australia, Bob Willis’s delivery fractured Rick McCosker’s jaw in the 1977 Centenary Test, and in a match between England and West Indies in 1986 Mike Gatting’s nose was smashed by a Malcolm Marshall special.

In 1975, New Zealander Ewen Chatfield swallowed his tongue and stopped breathing after being hit on the temple by English fast bowler Peter Lever during a Test match.

His life was saved by English physio Bernard Thomas, who sprinted onto the field and administered CPR.

Staying true to the cricketers’ gentlemanly code, Chatfield later said of Lever: "It wasn’t really his fault. I should have been able to get out of the way.

"He’s a very nice fellow."

Just two years ago, South African wicketkeeper Mark Boucher lost the lens, iris and pupil in his left eye after a being hit by a bail that flew back off the top of the wicket.

"Having looked at it on YouTube, I don’t like to look at it too much because it freaks me out a bit," he told cricket website Cricinfo (Live cricket scores, commentary, match coverage | Cricket news, statistics | ESPN Cricinfo). "The bail hit me in the eye and went two centimetres back."

Other players, however, have not been so lucky.

India’s Raman Lamba died in 1998 after being struck in the temple by a cricket ball hit by a Bangladesh batsman. He was 38.

Pakistan’s Abdul Aziz was struck on the chest by a ball, collapsed and never regained consciousness. He died on the way to the hospital, aged 17.

Hughes’s injury a reminder of ‘Gentlemen’s Game’ dangers - The Hindu
 

Blackleaf

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Cricketing legends, cricket fans and cricket clubs around the world, as well as celebrities and players and teams from other sports, have been taking part in the #putoutyourbats tribute for Phil Hughes on Twitter, in which they have placed a bat and cricket cap by their front door as a mark of respect after the 25-year-old Australian batsman died on Thursday.

They include members of the England team Stuart Broad, Matt Prior and Jonathan Bairstow, former England captain Michael Vaughan, former England spinner Graeme Swann and a host of Australian cricket stars past and present, including Adam Gilchrist, David Warner and Shane Warne. The England team is currently on tour in Sri Lanka.

Hampshire County Cricket Club, which Hughes used to play for, tweeted a picture of the player's former club shirt.

In North London, even Premier League football giants Arsenal paid tribute to Hughes, who was an Arsenal fan, by taking a photo of a cricket bat in front of the honours board at their training ground. Other football teams taking part were Australian A-League sides Melbourne Victory and Adelaide United, who took a photo of a cricket bat and a football before their match against each other.

Marylebone Cricket Club, the Pakistan cricket side and even Google also took part in the #putoutyourbats tribute, as well as India's "Little Master", Sachin Tendulkar, probably the greatest cricketer of all time who is, literally, worshipped as a god in India.

In today's rugby union match between England and Australia at Twickenham, both sides will pay tribute to Hughes by giving a minute's applause before the match.

Arsenal, Stuart Broad, Matt Prior and Michael Vaughan join fans in touching #putoutyourbats tribute to Phillip Hughes

Cricket world mourns the loss of Phillip Hughes, who died aged 25
Past and present cricketers join in #putoutyourbats tribute to Hughes
Cricket Australia will conduct an investigation into player safety
Australia's first Test against India in Brisbane on December 4 in doubt


By Dave Wood
28 November 2014
Daily Mail

Sports stars, celebrities and cricket fans all around the world have united in a touching tribute to Phillip Hughes.

Hundreds of people across the world have placed a bat and cricket cap by their front door as a mark of respect after the 25-year-old Australian batsman died on Thursday.

They include members of the England team Stuart Broad, Matt Prior and Jonathan Bairstow, former captain Michael Vaughan, former England spinner Graeme Swann and a host of Australian cricket stars past and present.


The England (and Wales) cricket team put their bats and navy blue caps out for Phillip Hughes in Colombo during their tour of Sri Lanka



The ECB (England and Wales Cricket Board) put a bat out for Hughes at their offices at Lord's Cricket Ground with an Australia Ashes cap


Pakistan captain Misbah-ul-Haq walks past his teams bats, put out in tribute to Phillip Hughes



England fast bowler Stuart Broad joined the tribute, leaving out his bat and cap



The Little Master Sachin Tendulkar posted a picture of the bat he used when he was 25



England's Matt Prior wrote #408 and #63 on his bat in honour of Hughes


England put their bats outside their dressing room in memory of Hughes on Friday in Colombo


Marylebone Cricket Club tweeted a picture of a bad out for Hughes at Lord's


Hughes' great mate David Warner posted his bat with a heartfelt message on Instagram


Arsenal, the football club supported by Hughes, paid tribute at their training ground


Australian legend Shane Warne added his own tribute on Instagram


Former England captain Michael Vaughan included England cap in his tribute


England batsman Jonathan Trott left a bat and an England cap by his front door


Steve Smith paid tribute to his former Australian team-mate on Twitter on Friday


Nick Compton's bat tribute to his friend, with the heartfelt message 'love ya cuz'



Google Australia displayed a bat on their homepage in tribute to Hughes


New Zealand's players joined in the tribute to Hughes ahead of day two of their Test against Pakistan


A poignant tweet by Hampshire County Cricket Club, with Hughes' shirt in its old spot


TV personality Piers Morgan tweeted picture of two bats and replica of Ashes urn

Sydney resident Paul Taylor has sparked a trend on social media, saluting the batsman by perching a cricket bat outside his front door and uploading an image to Twitter with the accompanying hashtag #putoutyourbats

Hughes died in a Sydney hospital on Thursday surrounded by family, friends and teammates just three days before his 26th birthday.

Hughes, from Macksville, New South Wales, never recovered from a devastating head injury he sustained after a ball delivered by bowler Sean Abbott struck him in the back of the head while he was playing first-class cricket at the Sydney Cricket Ground on Tuesday afternoon.

Legends of the cricketing world, including Ian Chappell, Sachin Tendulkar, Ian Botham, Shane Warne and Adam Gilchrist have paid tribute to the opener whose guts and determination defined his all-too-brief, yet spectacular, career.


Australian bowler Nathan Lyon joined the tributes with a Kookaburra bat and an Australian Baggy Green cap


Hughes was 63 not out when he was hit so Graeme Swann picked out this bat from his Test career as well as one of his England caps


Former Australia captain Adam Gilchrist (right) and his children joined in touching tribute


Glenn Maxwell shared a picture on Instagram of the three caps he wore when playing with Hughes


Former Australian batsman Dean Jones put out his 1989 Ashes bat, with his dog keeping watch


A bat is laid on the pitch before Melbourne Victory's A-League game against Adelaide United

'Just an absolute tragedy that Hughesy is no longer with us. He was such an awesome young man, RIP buddy, shattered...' came the tweet from spin-king Shane Warne.

It was Gilchrist, who perhaps best captured the heartache of the nation and the sport’s worldwide community when he simply tweeted 'No no no no no. RIP Phillip Hughes'.

India's little master Sachin Tendulkar said: 'Shocked to hear about Phil. Sad day for cricket. Deepest condolences to family, friends and well wishers. RIP" From the Prime Minister Tony Abbott came this statement.


Read more: Arsenal, Stuart Broad, and Michael Vaughan join fans in #putoutyourbats Phillip Hughes tribute | Daily Mail Online
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