logo
'Alex died chasing his dream, it can't be in vain'

'Alex died chasing his dream, it can't be in vain'

Yahoo5 days ago
The family of a 15-year-old champion kickboxer who died after a bout have said while his death has left them "broken", they hoped it wouldn't be "in vain".
Alex Eastwood, from Fazakerley, Liverpool, collapsed after the third and final two-minute round of a "light contact" kickboxing match against a 17-year-old opponent in Wigan in June 2024. He was taken to hospital but had suffered a serious head injury and died three days later.
Alex's father Stephen Eastwood and step-mother Nikita vowed to make the sport safer after it came to light he had been competing in an unsanctioned fight.
His father Stephen Eastwood said: "As a family, we're still broken. I don't think that will ever go away.
"We're just trying to do thing right and make change for the people involved in that sport."
Mr Eastwood said they were hopeful that a recent meeting with Culture, Media and Sport Secretary Lisa Nandy, who is also the MP for Wigan, would result in changes being made.
He said: "She was quite positive that something will happen to prevent this from happening again.
"So as a parent, his death isn't in vain - there's a lasting legacy for Alex and to protect other people in the sport."
'Massive regret'
A recent inquest into Alex's death found there was no minimum standard of medical aid or proper risk assessments done at events like the one that resulted in his death.
Coroner Michael Pemberton said neither Alex, nor his parents, appreciated the dangers of the "chaotic and somewhat disjointed" approach to children involved in combat sports.
Mrs Eastwood said Alex was "massively failed" by the lack of safety protocols in the organisations he competed and trained with.
"He was just doing his dream, doing what he wanted and pursuing his career," she said.
"There was nothing to keep that dream fulfilled and sustained within the safety that should have been there for him."
She said assuming that there were safety protocols in place was "a massive regret" she had.
Mrs Eastwood said: "I encourage other parents to ask the questions - what is my child going into here?"
Listen to the best of BBC Radio Merseyside on Sounds and follow BBC Merseyside on Facebook, X, and Instagram. You can also send story ideas via Whatsapp to 0808 100 2230.
More on this story
Parents of kickboxer who died meet sport secretary
'Our son's kickboxing death must lead to change'
No safeguards when kickboxer, 15, died - coroner
'Our son's kickboxing death must lead to change'
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

ATP says Safe Sport program has flagged more than 162,000 abusive online comments to players
ATP says Safe Sport program has flagged more than 162,000 abusive online comments to players

Yahoo

time14 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

ATP says Safe Sport program has flagged more than 162,000 abusive online comments to players

LONDON (AP) — The ATP Tour said Thursday its Safe Sport initiative has flagged more than 162,000 abusive social media comments directed at players in its first year. The tour said more than 3.1 million comments were scanned, with the ones classified as most severe hidden from the 245 players who were targeted. Safe Sport uses real-time AI to detect and hide social media comments from players' accounts. It launched in July 2024 and is available to the top 250 players in singles and the top 50 in doubles. Andrew Azzopardi, the ATP's director of safeguarding, said the initiative has 'fundamentally changed how we protect our athletes online.' 'More than 1 in 10 comments on players' posts were abusive — rising to 50% in extreme cases,' Azzopardi said in a statement. "While it won't eliminate abuse overnight, it's our first line of defense. Safeguarding player well being is a long-term commitment.' Safe Sport also supports players facing email threats, impersonation, deepfakes and scams. ___ More AP tennis:

ATP says Safe Sport program has flagged more than 162,000 abusive online comments to players
ATP says Safe Sport program has flagged more than 162,000 abusive online comments to players

Associated Press

time18 minutes ago

  • Associated Press

ATP says Safe Sport program has flagged more than 162,000 abusive online comments to players

LONDON (AP) — The ATP Tour said Thursday its Safe Sport initiative has flagged more than 162,000 abusive social media comments directed at players in its first year. The tour said more than 3.1 million comments were scanned, with the ones classified as most severe hidden from the 245 players who were targeted. Safe Sport uses real-time AI to detect and hide social media comments from players' accounts. It launched in July 2024 and is available to the top 250 players in singles and the top 50 in doubles. Andrew Azzopardi, the ATP's director of safeguarding, said the initiative has 'fundamentally changed how we protect our athletes online.' 'More than 1 in 10 comments on players' posts were abusive — rising to 50% in extreme cases,' Azzopardi said in a statement. 'While it won't eliminate abuse overnight, it's our first line of defense. Safeguarding player well being is a long-term commitment.' Safe Sport also supports players facing email threats, impersonation, deepfakes and scams. ___ More AP tennis:

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store