Ball that hit cricketer Phil Hughes at SCG would have felt like bullet, says expert
PHILLIP Hughes would have felt as if he had been hit by a bullet, an expert says.Harder than a rock, the cricket ball weighing roughly 160 grams was
travelling at 85km/h or more when it struck him behind his left ear.
“The
ball is small so the actual pressure is like a bullet effect,” said Dr
Edouard Ferdinands of Sydney University, a world expert in cricket
biomechanics.“People think it’s only a ball — that’s an illusion. Where he was hit is the spot where there is some crucial brain matter.”
He said batsmen were vulnerable to short-pitched deliveries because even state-of-the-art modern helmets only partly covered the head. “There are weak spots even in the helmet itself,” said Dr Ferdinands.
“There is a chance for the ball to get through the grille — there have certainly been incidents there.
“Also, where the ball hit Phil Hughes, the helmets don’t extend that far down.
“Maybe there needs to be extra padding that extends down towards the neck. That might be something that needs to be addressed.”
Other experts said that the injuries caused by a cricket ball can be the same as those suffered in a high-speed car crash, skydiving, or in horror ski accidents such as that suffered by former F1 champ Michael Schumacher.
Sports doctor Dr Peter Larkins said a direct blow anywhere to the skull had the potential to cause the most serious injuries.
“It doesn’t matter if it is a skiing accident like Schumacher’s, or football, motorcycling, parachuting or falling off a horse — it is why we wear helmets,” he said.
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