trib logo
ad-image
ad-image

Report has compiled 937 serious health issues, 620 deaths, for athletes after Covid shots

Professional mountain biker Kyle Warner developed pericarditis, postural orthostatic tachycardia syndrome or POTS and reactive arthritis following his second dose of Pfizer’s COVID-19 shot.
by WorldTribune Staff, April 21, 2022

A private team of "investigators, news editors, journalists and 'truth seekers,' has maintained and updated a detailed list of deaths, cardiac arrests and other serious issues among athletes following COVID-19 shots.

As of April 13, the group called Good Sciencing has recorded 620 athlete deaths and 937 athlete cardiac arrests and other serious health issues following the Covid shots.

The group maintains its anonymity for protection and is maintaining a “nonexhaustive and continuously growing list of mainly young athletes who had major medical issues in 2021/2022 after receiving one or more COVID vaccines” and note:

“It is definitely not normal for so many mainly young athletes to suffer from cardiac arrests or to die while playing their sport, but this year it is happening. Many of these heart issues and deaths come shortly after they got a COVID vaccine. While it is possible this can happen to people who did not get a COVID vaccine, the sheer numbers clearly point to the only obvious cause.

“… Initially, many of these were not reported. We know that many people were told not to tell anyone about their adverse reactions and the media was not reporting them. They started happening and ramping up after the first COVID vaccinations.

“The mainstream media still are not reporting most, but sports news cannot ignore the fact that soccer players and other stars collapse in the middle of a game due to a sudden cardiac arrest. Many of those die — more than 50%.

“We also note that many posts in Facebook, Instagram, Twitter, forums and news stories are being removed. So now we are receiving some messages saying there is no proof of the event or of vaccination status. That is partly because this information is being hidden.”

The unprecedented surge in cardiac arrest and other heart issues among elite athletes coincides with the rollout of Covid-19 vaccines, OAN's Pearson Sharp reported.

“How many 23-year-old athletes were collapsing and suffering heart attacks before this year? Do you know any 23-year-old people who had heart attacks before now? And these are just the ones we know about. How many have gone unreported? Nearly 800 athletes — young, fit people in the prime of life — falling down on the field. In fact, 500% more soccer players in the EU are dropping dead from heart attacks than just one year ago," Sharp noted.

“Coincidence? When the Pfizer vaccine is known to cause heart inflammation? No. In fact, many doctors treating these players list their injuries and deaths as being directly caused by the vaccine … This is not a coincidence,” Sharp added.

The Miami Open tennis tournament made headlines in early April after 15 players — all of whom had reportedly received Covid jabs — dropped out.

Among them were favorites Paula Badosa and Jannik Sinner. Badosa left the court in tears after becoming unwell, and Sinner’s opponent said he saw him “bend over” on the court, noting “it was very strange.” Even the fans were confused, with one stating, “What is going on?”

As of April 1, the Vaccine Adverse Event Reporting System (VAERS), which is where adverse events caused by COVID-19 jabs in the U.S. are supposed to be collected, lists 26,693 deaths along with 147,677 hospitalizations in association with the COVID-19 shot.

There were also 13,677 heart attacks reported and 38,024 cases of myocarditis (inflammation of the heart muscle) and pericarditis (inflammation of the tissue sac surrounding the heart). Past investigations have shown only between 1% and 10% of adverse reactions are ever reported to VAERS, which is a passive, voluntary reporting system, so the actual number could be much higher, critics point out.

Myocarditis and pericarditis cause symptoms such as chest pain, shortness of breath and a fluttering or pounding heart.

One athlete who filed a VAERS report about his own health injuries following the COVID-19 jab was mountain biker Kyle Warner. The 29-year-old was at the peak of his career as a professional mountain bike racer when, in June 2021, he got his second dose of the Pfizer vaccine. He said he had suffered a reaction so severe that, months later, he was still spending days in bed, easily overwhelmed by too much mental or physical exertion.

“I believe where there is risk, there needs to be choice,” he said. Instead, “people are being coerced into making a decision based on lack of information versus being convinced of a decision based on total information transparency.”

Warner developed pericarditis, postural orthostatic tachycardia syndrome or POTS and reactive arthritis following his second dose of Pfizer’s COVID-19 shot.

While YouTube, Instagram, Facebook and other social media platforms have become adept at censoring stories and videos of vaccine injuries and deaths, some have made it through to mainstream media, including:

• Florian Dagoury, a world record holder in static breath-hold freediving. After receiving his second dose of Pfizer’s COVID-19 injection, he experienced increased heart rate and a reduction in his breath-holding capacity. A cardiologist diagnosed him with myocarditis and pericarditis. As a result of the shots, Dagoury’s career may be over.

• Jeremy Chardy, a 34-year-old professional tennis player ranked 73rd in the world, suspended his season due to a severe adverse reaction to the COVID-19 shot, which left him unable to engage in intense activity.

• Veteran triathlete Antoine Méchin, 32, is facing the potential end to his career after receiving Moderna COVID-19 injections. After his second dose, he began to experience shortness of breath and low-back pain, which turned out to be a pulmonary embolism. The symptoms, which included breathing problems and arm pain, started after the first dose, but doctors brushed off his shortness of breath as related to stress and fatigue. About a month after his second dose, shortness of breath and body pain returned. Only after testing at a sports clinic was the pulmonary embolism revealed.

U.K. football legend and sports commentator Matt Le Tissier has been speaking out about the large number of athletes who have collapsed or died on the field. He lost his job as a commentator because of it.

In an interview with Red Voice Media, Le Tissier was asked about his thoughts on the surge of cardiac events in the sporting world, to which he responded: “I’ve never seen anything like it. I played for 17 years. I don’t think I saw one person in 17 years have to come off the football pitch with breathing difficulties, clutching their heart, heart problems … The last year, it’s just been unbelievable how many people, not just footballers but sports people in general, tennis players, cricketers, basketball players, just how many are just keeling over. And at some point, surely you have to say this isn’t right, this needs to be investigated.”

Gary Dempsey, a professional soccer player with a nearly two-decade career, noted just how unusual the recent wave of cardiac events among athletes is:

“Was a professional for nearly 20 years. From 1996. Played nearly 500 games. Club and international level. Never ever was there 1 cardiac arrest. Either in the crowd or a player. It’s actually quite scary,” Dempsey tweeted.

Good Sciencing has recorded 130 of these incidents involving athletes since March 1.

They include:

April 11, Italy: Maria Sofia Paparo (27), former professional swimmer and part of the Speedo Master Team died suddenly after a cardiac arrest.

April 7, Australia: Ollie Wines (27), Port Adelaide Football Club Australian Rules Footballer and reigning Brownlow Medalist felt nauseous and dizzy during the loss to Melbourne, went to hospital for an overnight stay. Diagnosed with irregular heartbeat. Was discharged after a heart irregularity “resolved itself.” Triple vaccinated. It was reported that the hospital ward where Wines stayed overnight was “full of patients with the same symptoms.”

April 6, Ivory Coast: Abraham Sié (23), Dakar University basketball player in Senegal, originally from Ivory Coast, died suddenly. No further details available.

April 3, Spain: Jorge Salmerón Mezcua (13), CF San José Obrero Footballer in Cadiz, Andalucia, Spain, who played football for his local club, died suddenly. No further details available.

April 3, Michigan: Jayden Hill (19), Wildcat Athletics Track & Field team member at Northern Michigan University died suddenly. No further details available.

April 1, Ireland: Red Og Murphy (21), Curry GAA Irish player of Gaelic football who had played for North Melbourne in Australia and then returned to his homeland to play for his local club Curry GAA and county Sligo, died suddenly.

April 1, Wales: Igor Jonczyk (18), Denbigh FC Football goalkeeper. His family moved to Wales from Poland when he was nine years of age. Goalkeeper for Denbigh Town’s development football team and then the reserves. He became unwell from a “heart condition” and died in hospital.

March 29, England: Cameron Milton (18), Rugby Union player and student at Bolton School in England, a keen rugby player who played for the school and Bolton Rugby Club, died unexpectedly in his sleep.

March 27, Romania: Ovidiu Hategan (41), international football referee. Shortly after the he finished his daily physical training, he had a cardiac arrest and was rushed to hospital, where he underwent immediate surgery.

March 26, Romania: Andrei Drăghici (23), Dinamo Bucharest Waterpolo player in Romania. He felt sudden chest pain during the second quarter. Other players helped him swim to the edge of the pool. Players and medical staff tried to resuscitate him for an hour but didn’t succeed.

March 24, France: Adrien Guillonnet-Lopez (28), Footballer had just played football with friends on a local pitch near the south coast of France. He then climbed onto his motorbike for the journey home. Adrien did not arrive home. The next morning, a passing cyclist found his body.

March 23, USA: Yennifer Ramírez (29), Volleyball player was part of the Dominican Republic national women’s volleyball team in the children’s and youth categories. She died of a cardiac arrest at home in the USA, where she had married. No more information available.

March 20, Uruguay: Michel Almanza (22), Footballer collapsed due to a cardiac arrest during a match between clubs Decano Carolino and Jamaica in Maldonado, Uruguay. He was convulsing on the pitch as other players tried to help him. An ambulance took him to the cardiac ICU, where he suffered another cardiac arrest and died.

March 19, New Jersey: Vincent Doffont (37), a standout football player, wrestler, track runner and professional firefighter who collapsed in the shower a few hours after a training exercise. He was pronounced dead at the scene. He was a former police officer and U.S. Marine.

March 19, India: Debajyoti Ghosh (25), Railway FC central midfield footballer collapsed due to a cardiac arrest while playing in the final match of a local football tournament in Belpukur, Nadia, West Bengal. He was taken to the local rural hospital and referred to the Nadia district hospital in Krishnagar, where he was declared dead.

March 18, Spain: Jaume Grau (24), Real Zaragoza footballer in Spain, underwent an “electrophysiological study and catheter ablation to solve the paroxysmal atrial fibrillation that was detected during the match against Fuenlabrada.”

March 16, Germany: Lean Bergmann (23), Ice Hockey player diagnosed with myocarditis. Will not play for Germany in the Ice Hockey World Cup.

March 15, Wales: Elgan Jones (16), Colwyn Bay FC Football under-16 academy goalkeeper. He is reported to have “suddenly passed away.”

March 14, California: DeJon Packer (24), celebrated former SJSU football player and San Jose Police Department officer. He “passed away suddenly.”

March 11, Ohio: Sha’Niya Clark (18), Volleyball player at Western Hills High School, a member of Mustang Athletics and the volleyball team, died suddenly.

March 11, Utah: Logan Gagnier (9), Basketball player was a normal, healthy 9-year-old boy from Eagle Mountain, Utah. He loved Oreo cookies, Doritos, Brigham Young University (BYU) football and Utah Jazz basketball. He played football and basketball. He died suddenly and unexpectedly in his sleep. His death was reported on KSL-TV. “KSL-TV is owned by the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints (“Mormon Church”). The church publicly and vehemently forbids religious exemptions from the mRNA and viral vector DNA injections. The Mormon Church also owns nearly $650 million in Johnson & Johnson stock, and $1 billion each of Google, Apple and Microsoft stock.”

March 4, Cuba: Ulfrido García (28), Santiago de Cuba baseball pitcher in Cuba although he had also played abroad. He died suddenly from a cardiac arrest.

March 3, Italy: Matteo Pietrosanti (15), Footballer was at football training with his mother looking on, when he suddenly collapsed due to a cardiac arrest. Received heart massage for at least twenty minutes, but he died.

March 1, California: Katie Myer (22), Stanford Footballer. Goalkeeper and captain for the Stanford women’s football team, was discovered dead in her dorm at Stanford University. No further explanation is given, other than she died “unexpectedly”. “All students coming to campus are required to be fully vaccinated against COVID-19. In addition, booster shots are required.”

We’re doing this anonymously because we’ve seen people viciously attacked and threatened for doing things like this, so we’re not going to open ourselves or any of our contacts to that. Also, please note, we’re not being paid and we’re not making any money from this – it is costing us time, effort, and money. We’re doing it because there is a concerted effort to block all of this information, but as some smart people used to say, “sunlight is the best disinfectant.”

About . . . . Intelligence . . . . Membership

kwarner by is licensed under Video Image

This website uses essential cookies for site operation. We would also like to set optional cookies to help us improve our site and to analyze web traffic, as described in the Privacy Compliance. You may accept or reject the use of optional cookies by clicking the Accept or Reject button.

ACCEPT
REJECT