All weekend soccer in Italy was called off on Saturday following the death of AS Livorno Calcio midfielder Piermario Morosini, a player whose own private life had been plagued by a series of tragedies.
The 25-year-old, on loan from Serie A side Udinese, collapsed on the pitch during a Serie B game at Delfino Pescara 1936 and was later pronounced dead in hospital.
It continued a tragic family history that saw Morosini’s parents die while he was a teenager, after which his disabled brother also committed suicide.
Photo: Reuters
He is survived by an older sister, who is handicapped.
Morosini’s death comes just under a month after Bolton Wanderers midfielder Fabrice Muamba suffered a cardiac arrest during his side’s FA Cup quarter-final match with Tottenham Hotspur, prompting calls for more stringent medical checks on players.
Italian Football Federation general manager Antonello Valentini responded to Saturday’s tragedy by suspending all remaining weekend matches, starting with the Serie A match between AC Milan and Genoa.
The match had been due to kickoff at 6pm. Fans already at the San Siro responded to the announcement largely with applause, although some jeered.
Italian Olympic Committee president Giovanni Petrucci later invited all Italian sports federations to observe a minute’s silence in memory of Morosini.
Morosini suffered a heart attack during the first half of the match. He collapsed suddenly and was treated on the pitch, before being taken away by ambulance to the Civile Santo Spirito hospital in Pescara, but the former Italy under-21 international was later pronounced dead.
Pescara’s masseur Claudio D’Arcangelo said he knew immediately something was wrong.
“I darted onto the pitch because I understood straight away that it was a serious situation,” he said. “I didn’t even wait for the referee’s permission. I gave him heart-massage straight away and for a moment I felt he was coming back, but there was nothing we could do.”
There was a delay as the ambulance was initially prevented from entering the stadium due to a police car blocking an exit.
“There were moments of great confusion and I tried to understand what was happening, also with regard to the delay of the emergency services. They said the ambulance couldn’t come onto the pitch because the entrance was blocked by another car. Some of my teammates carried the stretcher to the ambulance,” Pescara goalkeeper Luca Anania said.
Authorities opened an investigation, but a heart specialist said the delay made no difference.
“A minute more or less in the ambulance would not have done anything,” cardiologist Paloscia said. “His heart had stopped and never started beating again. We tried to reanimate him for an hour and a half, but it was all to no avail.”
Italian media were alerted to Morosini’s death initially by an “explosion of shouts and tears” from his teammates, who had arrived at the hospital.
Police started to usher the press away, but the official confirmation followed shortly afterwards.
FIFA president Sepp Blatter was among those to pay tribute to Morosini.
“The tragedy that has affected everyone that loved him has brought great pain to everyone who loves football,” he said on Twitter.
Muamba’s collapse on March 17 raised fears that he would become another entry in the grim list of professional players who have died playing the game, the most high-profile being Marc-Vivien Foe.
The 28-year-old Cameroon midfielder, who played for West Ham United, Manchester City and Olympique Lyonnais, died after collapsing during a Confederations Cup semi-final against Colombia in Lyon, France, in June 2003.
Muamba — whose heart stopped for 78 minutes as medics battled to keep him alive both at the stadium and then in hospital — defied the odds and has since made incredible progress, boosting hopes that he will make a full recovery.
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