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Daily Mail
27 minutes ago
- Daily Mail
Footy star reveals the horror health risk that has forced him to break new ground in the NRL by wearing goggles for the rest of his career
Footy star Marion Seve is determined to continue playing despite suffering a horror injury during a match that has left him with a visual impairment in one eye. The defiant Melbourne Storm star, aged 30, was on the receiving end of an accidental boot to the eye while playing for the North Sydney Bears during a NSW Cup game in June. He had feared going blind and having to give up his playing career after the 'traumatic' injury, after a stud on the cleat made direct contact with his eyeball. In a remarkable turn of events, he is now back on the footy but will have to wear a pair of protective goggles for the remainder of his career. 'I could tell by the doctor's face that it was pretty serious and there were chances I could lose my sight. I was a bit worried. No one wants to lose their eyesight and there were worries my retina could have been detached,' Seve told The Daily Telegraph. After the incident took place, his vision out of his right eye went white. More concerningly, his sight later turned dark. 'That's when I started getting worried,' he explained. View this post on Instagram A post shared by North Sydney Bears (@northsydneybearsofficial) Marion Seve (left) will need to wear eye-goggles for the remainder of his footy career after he suffered a horrific eye injury Seve rushed to the Royal North Shore Hospital, where he underwent immediate surgery. He explained that he also had bleeding to the back of his eye, which doctors later stopped during surgery. 'It was a waiting game from then on. They told me the injury was pretty traumatic. I always try to brush things off and think I'll be okay but I could feel the vibe was serious,' he added. Doubts started to creep in over whether the Storm centre, who married his partner Chloe in November last year, should continue to play footy. The 30-year-old revealed that he can now see out of his right eye, but his vision remains blurry, with Seve adding that he needs prescription glasses to read and struggles with his long sight. Meanwhile, his surgeons had warned that if he takes another hit to the eye, he could permanently lose his eyesight. Seve first joined the Storm in 2019 and has made 48 appearances for the footy club, scoring 12 tries. The 30-year-old, who admits he is motivated to push on through adversity, wasn't going to bring a premature halt to his footy career just yet. Upon recommendations from his club, he has started wearing an eye mask that resembles a pair of ski goggles. And he got a chance to test them out properly last Sunday, with the footy star turning out for the Bears in the NSW Cup. Seve touched down for three tries to help his side claim a huge victory against Newcastle, in which he was named the player's player of the match. It is not uncommon to see athletes in other disciplines wear goggles. Dutch Football star Edgar Davids, basketball hero Kareem Abdul-Jabbar and Collingwood ruckman Mason Cox are some in a long line of athletes to have worn goggles. However, for rugby league, this is a fairly unique occurrence, according to Bears CEO Gareth Holmes, who added the entire club were worried about Seve's sight. 'I've not seen a player wear goggles before. They strap around the back of his head. During breaks in play, he took them off to wipe away the sweat, wipe them clear and give his face some air,' Holmes told the outlet. 'It would have been foreign to him.' Seve admitted that it took a bit of time to get used to while adding that he still had some stitches in his eye that he'll look to get removed during the off-season. 'I wasn't too keen on [wearing the goggles] because I'd cop some from the boys and I would look weird on the field,' he added. 'It turned out good for me. I had a good response and everyone is happy that I'm back playing. I got the goggles about a week after I hurt my eye so I had been wearing them when training and running to get used to them and to feel comfortable.'


The Independent
an hour ago
- The Independent
Steve Tandy: There's no magic wand or quick fix – but I believe in Welsh talent
New head coach Steve Tandy says Wales must show ambition to restore national pride after sliding down the world order. Tonmawr-born Tandy, a former Ospreys player and coach, has ended a six-year stay as Scotland defence coach to return home to Wales. Tandy becomes the first Welshman to coach the national side since 2007, at a time when Wales have slipped to 12th in the world rankings and had lost 17 successive matches before beating Japan last month in the final game of Matt Sherratt's interim reign. 'The privilege and the honour to be head coach of your national country is massive,' Tandy said. 'Being in the changing rooms is even better. I've got huge pride as a sense of family and what a great rugby nation it is. 'So, it's a feeling of absolute pride and an honour.' Wales were 2019 World Cup semi-finalists under Warren Gatland and Wayne Pivac's side won the 2021 Six Nations Championship. But Pivac's reign quickly unravelled and Gatland's return – the Kiwi had overseen a glorious chapter between 2007 and 2019 – produced no upturn in fortunes, with his departure coming during the 2025 Six Nations in February. The Welsh Rugby Union has stated it wants to see Wales in the top five in the world by 2029. But is that a realistic target given the problems facing the Welsh game at a time when four regions could be cut to two and the talent pool is shallow compared to rival nations? Tandy said: 'I believe in the talent we have in Wales, to get us to where we want to go. 'There's not going to be a magic wand or a quick fix and then it all changes, but I do believe in the pathway. 'Ultimately you want to have ambition. We want to have ambition to meet those targets, but ultimately there's a process to get to that as well. 'We have to build performances incrementally. From campaign to campaign we have to be better and looking at how we can build that performance through the exciting group we've got.' Tandy won the Pro12 competition in six years at Ospreys but left the Welsh region in 2018. He worked for NSW Waratahs in Australia before moving to Scotland, while Gatland made him defence coach on the British and Irish Lions' 2021 tour of South Africa. 'The one thing that has really driven me from the start is I want to be the best person and the best coach I can possibly be,' Tandy said. 'Did I ever think I'd be a Lions coach? No. Did I ever think I'd coach the Waratahs? No. 'But I think it's surprising what happens when you have the mindset to be better and to understand as well you have got blind spots and you have got things to work on.' Tandy takes up his role on September 1 and will prepare for autumn home games against Argentina, Japan, New Zealand and South Africa. He will shape his backroom team along with WRU performance director Dave Reddin, saying there is a 'blank canvas' after Gethin Jenkins (defence), Danny Wilson (forwards), Adam Jones (scrum), Rhys Thomas (assistant forwards coach) and Leigh Halfpenny (kicking) assisted Sherratt in Japan.


BBC News
an hour ago
- BBC News
How far Scotland can go at Women's World Cup?
Scotland head coach Bryan Easson has named his 32-player squad for the upcoming Women's World Cup in Rachel Malcolm leads a selection comprising 18 forwards and 14 backs for a Pool B campaign against Wales, Fiji and Lightning full-back Lucia Scott misses out, but Lana Skeldon has been selected despite the Bristol hooker - whose 81 appearances make her the most-capped member of the squad - leaving the field on a stretcher against Ireland on best showing at a Women's World Cup came in 1994 when they finished fifth on home soil in their tournament Scots failed to qualify for the 2014 and 2017 editions and didn't make it past the pool stage in do you make of Easson's squad? Do you think Scotland are well equipped this time round - and how far can they go?Let us know your thoughts