Football has been hit by a second tragedy in three days, after
Bernardo Ribeiro, a 26-year-old midfielder, died after falling ill
during a friendly match in his native Brazil.
Friburguense, Ribeiro’s club, posted official confirmation
of the player’s death on its website on Sunday, affirming that he had
been playing a game of amateur football on Saturday night when he
collapsed at the end of the first half.
Ribeiro fell ill at the end of the first half of the game in Recreio,
a western suburb of Rio de Janeiro. He was taken by ambulance to a
hospital in Recreio, where attempts to resuscitate him were
unsuccessful. The cause of death has not been confirmed. O Globo, the Brazilian newspaper, reported that a “sudden illness” had taken Ribeiro’s life.
Ribeiro was something of a footballing nomad—the statement on
Friburguense’s website described him as an “idol” in Albania, where he
played for KF Skenderbeu between 2011 and 2012.
Before that, he played youth football at Catania in Serie A, and
after Albania his nomadism took him to Newcastle Jets in Australia and
IFK Mariehamn in Finland.
Ribeiro’s death will place even more scrutiny on the health of
apparently physically perfect young footballers, after Patrick Ekeng, a
26-year-old Cameroonian, died on Friday from a suspected heart attack
during a game between Dinamo Bucharest and Viitorul in the Romanian
capital.
A police investigation is underway in Bucharest into the
circumstances surrounding Ekeng’s death, after reports from Romanian
football journalists questioned whether the former Cordoba midfielder
was treated appropriately before he was transported to hospital.
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