Billy go or stay just stop abuse everyone and if you cant take the drink, leave it alone, and I'm a Sunderland fan but enough is enough.
so this thread that began as a way to show support for a young lad who's been hospitalised has descended into farce... good one.
Got a text from a mate at the game say jesus it is foe again, same spot on pitch nearly, he was at that one too. Well done the medics and all involved. Thankfully he is making a fight of it all the best lad one day at a time
I've played rugby against a lad with a PCM, If you can get away with it in a high contact sport you should be able to get away with it in football.
It varies in its severity. Sometimes it's manageable, sometimes it isn't. However, if Muamba does have that, then it's clearly severe enough to cause cardiac arrest and extreme difficulty in restarting his heart, even with a proper defibrillator. For that reason I highly doubt he would play again, but it could be one of many issues.
I find this strange - When I had my Heart attack in 93 I was in a CCU and the only people who were allowed in to visit were CLOSE family members not colleagues or friends as I was on the "dangerously ill list" but I see other footballers visiting him and he is on the "critically ill" list unless of course things have changed since back then or they are the visitors just in the "waiting room" - incidentally I am not suggesting anything untoward has occured here before some f***wits suggest otherwise Also naturally i wish all the best for the lad
Fabrice Muamba has walked for the first time since suffering a cardiac arrest as his condition continues to improve. "He's taking steps, talking and has that big smile we love to see. He is progressing the right way," said Owen Coyle, the player's manager at Bolton. Former England Under-21 international Muamba was technically "dead" for 78 minutes after collapsing in Wanderers' FA Cup tie at Tottenham last month. Muamba collapse - events of 17 March Muamba, who turns 24 on Friday, remains in intensive care at a London hospital. "He has done some short periods of walking down the corridor he is in as part of the unit, staying in intensive care," added Coyle.