So many calls to react to this. A fan collapsed and suffered a cardiac arrest this weekend in the Premier League Match between Newcastle vs. Tottenham. Calamity ensued. The match was stopped, and Newcastle Doctor, Paul Catterson and a fan in the stands, Dr. Tom Pritchard had to work together to resuscitate him. This has OBVIOUSLY generated a whole load of question about what happened, what was supposed to happen and why the game was stopped. Timestamps : 00:00 - Fan collapses in Newcastle vs Tottenham match 01:18 - The normal medical care at stadiums. 02:20 - What happens when a fan collapses at a match? 03:23 - Why did the Newcastle Doctor go into the stands? 04:43 - Why did the referee stop the match? 05:30 - The time I went into the stands... Join our Discord Server! - https://discord.gg/u6hRYbYGbk Instagram - www.instagram.com/docinthearena All views portrayed here are just opinions and are mine alone. Any footage or images used here are solely for educational purposes, transformed in line with fair usage policy, and not for commercial gain.
Aston Villa ended up bottling a 2-0 Lead to Wolves in 15 minutes with a calamity at the back and pointless substitutions by Dean Smith as Ruben Neves score a 95th minute freekick to win the game. Ruben Neves Freekick against Villa wins it, after Danny Ings goal and John Mcginn goal. Subscribe - https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCipJVsxxNVlu-gvO05hNooA?view_as=subscriber Pro Kie - https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCjMYNupcEL53u5VjswGMLiA Twitter - https://twitter.com/OfficialProKie #AVFC #Wolves #AVLWOL
Reaction from Mikel Arteta at the Karaiskakis Stadium in Piraeus on Thursday after his Arsenal side struck twice late in the game to earn a 3-1 win at Olympiacos and take control of their Europa League round of 16 tie. However, the 'Gunners' almost proved architects of their own downfall once again. Martin Odegaard's first Arsenal goal put the visitors in front, but another defensive calamity gifted Youssef El-Arabi an equaliser just before the hour. Arsenal were rocked but recovered well and two goals in six minutes from Gabriel Magalhaes and substitute Mohamed Elneny earned a deserved victory. Arteta saw his side dumped out by Olympiacos in the round of 32 last season despite winning the opening leg in Greece - he will be hoping lightning does not strike twice. Please subscribe, like the video and share wherever you can! **DO NOT copy and re-upload any part of this video anywhere otherwise copyright strikes will be made! You do not have my permission** I have all the necessary rights to use this footage, my footage is licensed through agencies, please contact me if you're unsure, you can find my email address on my 'about' page. To make sure you don't miss any of my videos on this and my other channels please : Subscribe here!: http://bit.ly/MrBeanSub Twitter: http://www.twitter.com/BeanymanSports Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/beanymansports Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/BeanymanSports Website: http://www.BeanymanSports.com If you want to help with the costs involved with running the channel you can support me on my Patreon here = https://www.patreon.com/BeanymanSports
Armed with a 22-point lead entering the final three minutes of the third quarter on Friday night, the Los Angeles Clippers seemed poised to push their season record to 7-3. Instead, calamity struck. The Golden State Warriors used a massive run in those final few minutes to close the gap down to six points entering the fourth quarter. And that’s what we’re going to look at in this video breakdown. The Clippers made mistake after mistake. It didn’t matter if it was on the offensive end or the defensive end, the mistakes just wouldn’t stop. Eventually, the Warriors ended up toppling the Clippers, 115-105, and Los Angeles had to sit in the locker room post-game and figure out just what happened. So, sit back, relax and enjoy. And stay safe! If you'd like to donate: https://www.venmo.com/flybyknite85 If you'd like to subscribe on Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/flybyknite Article with the video: https://www.patreon.com/posts/regular-season-46045933 Music by: https://incompetech.com/music/
SUBSCRIBE ► http://bit.ly/SSFootballSub PREMIER LEAGUE HIGHLIGHTS ► http://bit.ly/SkySportsPLHighlights2021 Highlights from the Nations League as Manchester City defender Ruben Dias scored an impressive brace including a calamitous injury-time winner. Watch Premier League LIVE on Sky Sports here ► http://bit.ly/WatchSkyPL ►TWITTER: https://twitter.com/skysportsfootball ►FACEBOOK: http://www.facebook.com/skysports ►WEBSITE: http://www.skysports.com/football MORE FROM SKY SPORTS ON YOUTUBE: ►SKY SPORTS CRICKET: https://bit.ly/SubscribeSkyCricket ►SKY SPORTS BOXING: http://bit.ly/SSBoxingSub ►SOCCER AM: http://bit.ly/SoccerAMSub ►SKY SPORTS F1: http://bit.ly/SubscribeSkyF1 ►SKY SPORTS: http://bit.ly/SkySportsSub
Subscribe to our channel: https://goo.gl/pqS0mLEngland can't tempt Alastair Cook back but the top order can at least try to bat like him. Do you know what England should do? Get down on their hands and knees and beg Alastair Cook to put down his microphone, come out of retirement and open the batting in St Lucia to try to salvage some pride from this wretched series. Cook has not picked up a bat since his perfect, emotional farewell at the Oval last summer and, in truth, he would never agree to return. But right now, nobody in this England Test team seems to have the application to bat properly in Test cricket like Cook did. No one looks capable of displaying the guts and character coach Trevor Bayliss admits have been woefully lacking during England’s Caribbean horror show. It was almost surreal to see England’s most prolific Test runscorer — looking as fit and ready to play as ever — sitting in the media centre at the Sir Viv Richards Stadium in his new role with the BBC as he watched one of his country’s most spectacular calamities unfold. The very old-fashioned but still valid attributes Cook always epitomised are precisely what have been missing in Barbados and Antigua, where the Wisden Trophy has been lost in fewer than seven days of cricket. There has been no stomach for the fight, no realisation England cannot always succeed in red-ball cricket playing the white-ball way. Instead there has been stubbornness, complacency and almost an arrogance about them. Yes, there are reasons why a domestic structure that has marginalised the first-class game does not produce Test batsman any more, just as the Twenty20 revolution has pushed the ultimate format into the margins and threatens the existence of the greatest game. And that is before the accursed Hundred comes into existence next year and sends an already crammed fixture list past bursting point. We will be playing Championship matches in February and October next to leave ‘summer’ free for the ECB’s huge gamble with our game’s future. That is not England’s fault but the point is these players are better than this. Much, much better than a side who lost all 10 wickets for 54 in their first innings in Barbados; all 10 for 161 in their second there; all 10 for 183 in the first innings here in Antigua and then, again, all 10 for 97 on Saturday when they must have known that even a lead of 130 would have given them a good chance of victory. Instead they could manage an advantage of just 14. Goodness, they have lost wickets in this series every 32 balls, which is an even worse rate than the 1985-86 tour that is commonly regarded as their worst ever in the Caribbean. Truly, they have been more desperate here than even England sides playing against the greatest of all West Indians. It is a real low. But for an example of how it should be done, England do not even have to look up to the press box to try to persuade their former captain, who deserves to be left in peace to enjoy his new life, to come and rescue them. Step forward Darren Bravo who, since calling West Indies board president Dave Cameron a ‘big idiot’ on Twitter nearly three years ago, has been spending much of his time in international exile playing Twenty20. Yet Bravo, who hit five sixes in one over during a Caribbean Premier League match last year, was discipline personified in surviving all Stuart Broad, Jimmy Anderson and Ben Stokes could hurl at him on an unsatisfactory pitch to reach the slowest Test 50 this century and set up West Indies’ triumph. Now that is adapting. England have to prove they can do what Bravo did and have a Plan B, to find the right blend of defence and attack and sell their wickets much more expensively. It is something they have failed to do ever since Bayliss said on taking up his post that he prefers two ‘positive’ players in his top three. Those words have come back to haunt the Australian, whose methods have still not resonated with England as