Heartbreaking moment soccer players in Brazil scream for an ambulance after Uruguay's Juan Izquierdo collapses on the field only to be pronounced dead days later

  • 2 days ago
Heartbreaking footage from the night Uruguayan soccer player Juan Izquierdo collapsed during a game in Brazil has surfaced, showing the tense moments teammates and opponents frantically waved emergency medics onto the field.

According to his Uruguayan club and South American football's governing body, Izquierdo died 27 days later.

Game footage from Nacional's match in Sao Paulo shows alarmed players urging an ambulance to drive directly onto the field in the hectic scene. The original broadcast also included the moment Izquierdo stumbled backward before collapsing.


The club, Nacional, posted a statement on social media saying Izquierdo's death is felt 'in deep pain and impact in our hearts' and 'all Nacional is in grief for his irreplaceable loss.'

South American soccer's governing body also posted a tribute, just days after he collapsed on the field and was rushed to hospital before the team announced he was in a 'stable condition.'

Izquierdo was taken to Hospital Albert Einstein after he collapsed during a Copa Libertadores soccer match at Sao Paulo's Morumbi Stadium last Thursday.

The hospital said in a statement late Tuesday that Izquierdo had 'cardiorespiratory arrest associated with his cardiac arrhythmia.'

In a statement on Monday, doctors at the hospital said Izquierdo was experiencing increased intracranial pressure. He had been on a ventilator since Sunday and under neurological critical care since Monday.

Izquierdo's professional career began in 2018 at local club Cerro. He joined Peñarol the following year but didn't get much playing time. The defender then moved to Montevideo Wanderers.

Izquierdo returned to Nacional this year and was vying for a position in the starting lineup with veteran Sebastián Coates, who played for Uruguay's national team. He played 23 matches this year and scored one goal.

Izquierdo was married and had two children - the youngest, a boy born earlier in August.

Uruguayan media said Izquierdo's parents and Nacional executives were at the hospital in Sao Paulo.

Uruguay's first- and second-division leagues were postponed at the weekend due to concerns over Izquierdo's health. Sao Paulo players wore a shirt in support of the Uruguayan footballer before the team's 2-1 Brazilian league win against Vitoria on Sunday.
Transcript
00:00Juan Esquirdo has died at the age of 87, in a car crash that killed his wife and two children.
00:06Juan Esquirdo has died at the age of 87, in a car crash that killed his wife and two children.
00:11Juan Esquirdo has died at the age of 87, in a car crash that killed his wife and two children.
00:16Juan Esquirdo has died at the age of 87, in a car crash that killed his wife and two children.
00:20Images shocking in the Bolivia now.
00:23Few times you see an ambulance in the central circle, right?
00:26The way we are seeing it now.
00:28Juan Esquirdo has died at the age of 87, days after collapsing during a game in Brazil,
00:34according to his Uruguayan club and South American football's governing body.
00:38The club, Nacional, posted a statement on social media,
00:42saying Esquirdo's death is felt in deep pain and impact in our hearts,
00:46and all Nacional is in grief for his irreplaceable loss.
00:50South American soccer's governing body also posted a tribute,
00:54just days after he collapsed on the field and was rushed to hospital,
00:58before the team announced he was in a stable condition.
01:01Esquirdo was taken to hospital Albert Einstein,
01:05after he collapsed during a Copa Libertadora soccer match at Sao Paulo's Marumbi Stadium last Thursday.
01:11The hospital said in a statement late Tuesday,
01:14that Esquirdo had cardiorespiratory arrest associated with his cardiac arrhythmia.
01:20In a statement Monday, doctors at the hospital had said Esquirdo was experiencing increased intracranial pressure.
01:27He had been on a ventilator since Sunday and under neurological critical care since Monday.
01:41For more UN videos visit www.un.org

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