Edoardo Bove’s collapse gives a new lesson on what really matters in life | Serie A![]() Before Edoardo Bove fell, it had seemed as though a disallowed goal was the most important thing in the world. Fiorentina and Inter were waiting for a VAR check to confirm whether the ball really had gone out as Denzel Dumfries set up Lautaro Martínez to score in the 17th minute of their top-four clash. Players and coaches voiced their disagreement in the usual theatrical terms. And then, it did not matter at all. Bove had not involved himself in the discussion, waiting in the far half of the pitch. He dropped to a knee for a moment, presumed to be tying a shoelace, but in fact using his hands to steady himself on the turf. After standing back up, he took a handful of steps then collapsed beside Hakan Calhanoglu. A football match became an afterthought. Dumfries, the first to see what had happened, turned to the dugouts and cried for assistance. Perhaps it was his tone, or some other cue, but recognition of the urgency of the situation spread immediately. Players and staff ran in all directions: towards Bove, towards the ambulance, towards officials, towards each other. Simone Inzaghi, the Inter manager, lost his feet sprinting to help. Opponents who had quarrelled moments earlier now stood with arms around each other’s shoulders, shielding Bove from view. The only yelling inside the Stadio Artemio Franchi was from a group of players who could not understand why the ambulance had not entered the pitch. The medical team was following protocol, leaving the vehicle in place while its crew rushed to tend to the player. Bove was swiftly placed on a stretcher and taken to the ambulance. He had suffered a cardiac arrest, and it has been widely reported that a defibrillator was used to restart his heart. Better news has followed. Bove was taken to the Careggi University Hospital, and a statement released by Fiorentina on Sunday evening said he “was treated on the pitch following a loss of consciousness during the Fiorentina v Inter match [and] is currently under sedation and is hospitalised in intensive care. “The Viola player arrived at the emergency department in stable hemodynamic conditions and initial cardiological and neurological tests have ruled out acute damage to the central nervous system and the cardio-respiratory system. Bove will be re-evaluated in the next 24 hrs.” On Monday morning, Matteo Dovellini, journalist for the newspaper la Repubblica, reported that Bove had been extubated. “He is lucid and responding to questions,” wrote Dovellini. “There is no cerebral or cardiac damage.” Fiorentina posted later that Bove was “awake, alert and oriented” and that diagnostic tests were ongoing. The match was suspended by referee Daniele Doveri as the ambulance departed. A decision was taken soon afterward that it would not resume on Sunday evening. It was hard to imagine any other outcome. Players from both teams were visibly distraught. Supporters stayed in the stands awaiting an announcement, but the only concern was for Bove’s wellbeing. The cardiac arrest suffered by Christian Eriksen while playing for Denmark at the European Championship in 2021 has heightened awareness of such incidents, though Italian football has witnessed others. In 2012, Piermario Morosini died of the same cause while playing for Livorno against Pescara in Serie B. Six years later, Fiorentina’s captain, Davide Astori, died after a cardiac arrest in his hotel room before a game at Udinese. The club honoured his memory, as they always do, by reading his name out after the starting XI on Sunday. Fans continued their tradition of applauding for him in the 13th minute, the number he wore on his shirt. Quick Guide |
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