A day after incident, vigil continues

Published on: Wednesday, 26 November 2014 //

By: DENNIS PASSA


More than 24 hours after being hit behind the left ear by a short-pitched ball, Australian cricketer Phillip Hughes remained in critical condition on Wednesday after undergoing emergency surgery. Australian team doctor Peter Brukner issued a statement saying Hughes had further scans at St. Vincent’s Hospital during the morning and that his condition was unchanged from overnight.


The 25-year-old Hughes was batting for South Australia in a Sheffield Shield match against New South Wales at the Sydney Cricket Ground on Tuesday when he was knocked out by a delivery by Sean Abott. Hughes was treated on the field by medical experts, including doctors who were flown by helicopter onto the ground, before being taken to the hospital.


“Phillip’s condition is unchanged and he remains critical…he is receiving the best possible medical care,” Brukner said.


The match was canceled almost immediately and other Sheffield Shield matches in Brisbane and Melbourne were called off Wednesday after consultation between Cricket Australia and the Australian Cricketers’ Association. Hughes was wearing a batting helmet, but the area behind his ear was unprotected.


Images of the hard-to-watch blow were broadcast almost instantly across Australia, and messages of support flowed in from around the world all night and into the morning. News channels were live at the hospital in downtown Sydney, where satellite TV trucks and dozens of news crews reported regular updates on Hughes’ condition.


A no-fuss player


Hughes has played 26 Test matches for Australia since his debut in 2009 but hasn’t been able to earn a regular spot in the starting lineup. He was highly regarded by teammates and rivals, and regular fans who appreciated his no-fuss approach to the game.


The injury sparked debate about short-pitch bowling in the game, and the level of protection offered by contemporary helmets. Cricketers didn’t start wearing protective helmets until the late 1970s, when batsmen decided it was time to protect themselves against a 156-gram (5 1/2-ounce) hard leather ball traveling at up to 160 kilometres per hour (100 miles per hour).


Bouncers, where a fast bowler aims to push the batsman back toward the stumps with a ball that lands halfway down the pitch and rears up above chest or head height, are still a regular and acceptable part of the game. The International Cricket Council revised its laws on short-pitch bowling in the early 1990s, putting restrictions on the number of short-pitch balls allowed per over to stamp out bowlers merely using the delivery to intimidate batsmen.


Speaking on Australian radio, cricket great Shane Warne called it a freak accident. “It’s a tough situation for everyone,” Warne said. “You just think about how many lives the helmet has saved over the years. This is just one of those things.”


Adding some optimism to Hughes’ recovery hopes was Phil Simmons, a former West Indies batsman who recovered fully from a similar head injury and returned to Test cricket. Simmons was hit by a fast delivery by David Lawrence in a tour match for the West Indies against Gloucestershire in Bristol, England, in 1988. His heart stopped after the accident, but he made a full recovery after extensive brain surgery.


Simmons, who was also 25 at the time, was not wearing a helmet. “I think there’s an omen somewhere that he will pull through and I hope so,” Simmons told the BBC. “My injury was as serious as you can get. I had to have emergency surgery to have a clot removed from my brain. I was written off as never to play again and put in a long-term unit for head injuries, but I was out in eight days.” (AP)


Older, Lighter helmet


Sydney: With questions being raised over the degree of safety provided by protective gear in cricket in the wake of the Phil Hughes incident, the manufacturer of the injured cricketer’s helmet, Masuri, has said that the Australian batsman was wearing an older and lighter headgear. A spokesman for the UK-based company said that Hughes was wearing an old helmet instead of their their latest model, in the Sheffield Shield match between New South Wales and South Australia at the SCG yesterday.


The company said they were studying video footage of the freak incident and wished Hughes a speedy recovery. “From the footage and pictures currently available to Masuri, it appears that Phil Hughes was struck by the ball to the rear of the grille and below the back of the shell, missing his Masuri Original Test model helmet,” the spokesman was quoted as saying by Australian press.


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


Masuri had launched a new model of helmet that covers the back of the batsmen’s head in August last year, but it seems Hughes was not wearing the latest model while batting in the Sheffield Shield match. Hughes continued to fight for life as he remained in a critical condition after being struck on the head in a freak accident yesterday. (PTI)


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