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AFL: waterskiing accident 1990 Doug Magor: 21 Footscray: VFL: car accident 1969 Michael Mascoulis: 20 Port Melbourne (former West Coast rookie) VFL (formerly AFL) car accident 2013 [14] John McCarthy: 22 Port Adelaide: AFL: accidental fall in Las Vegas 2012 Dinny McKay: 29 South Melbourne: VFL: peritonitis (from burst appendix) 1897 Darren ...
This category covers Australian rules football players who have either died while playing, died directly from injuries sustained while playing, or died after taking ill on the pitch. Pages in category "Australian rules footballers who died while playing"
Jesse Alan Baird (4 September 1997 – 19 February 2024) was an Australian television presenter and Australian rules football goal umpire. [4] Baird worked as a presenter and reporter on various Network 10 programs, including Totally Wild, Gamify and Studio 10.
Abner Haynes, a member of the Kansas City Chiefs Hall of Fame, has died at age 86. Haynes, who was a running back who helped popularize the American Football League, died Thursday in Dallas.
Northeastern Oklahoma A&M: 5 football players were killed in a head-on highway crash (1966). Marshall: 37 members died in an airplane crash (1970). Wichita State: most of the starting players and coaches, 31 in total, died in an airplane crash (1970). Cal Poly Mustangs football team: 16 players and 6 others died in an airplane crash (1960).
After leaving football, Mainwaring took a job with Seven News. By 2007, he was reading the sport at the weekend, as well as reporting during the week. He also read the sport headlines during the news on Perth radio station Mix 94.5 from 5:30 to 9:00 am. In 2005 he was a reporter for the Seven News desk.
Niclas Kaus, an 18-year-old playing with Löwen Frankfurt in the German third division, died on Thursday after succumbing to head injuries sustained in a game last weekend.
This is a list of association footballers who died due to football-related incidents. The primary causes of on-field deaths have evolved over time. Improvements in infection control and emergency surgery since the early days of organised soccer have mostly eliminated the fatal complications that were once common after routine sporting injuries.