logo
Video shows man have apparent seizure at 'Run It' competition

Video shows man have apparent seizure at 'Run It' competition

1News25-05-2025
Two men were knocked out during last night's 'Run It Straight' event held in Auckland, in which two competitors collide at full speed.
Warning: This article includes footage of an apparent injury event.
While one of the men was able to be helped away on his feet after contact, another slumped to the ground and appeared to have a seizure.
The Run It Straight competition at Auckland's Trust Arena on Wednesday night drew more than 1000 people.
Eight men put their bodies and brains on the line for $20,000 prize money last night, two of them required medical attention after being knocked out.
The winners from this week's trials will progress to a final competition held next month, where the champion is set to receive a prize of $250,000.
The sport has a number of high profile endorsements, including Kiwi league legend Manu Vatuvei.
"This is one of the contact sports that I love, you know, it's a one-on-one … it just reminds me of training, we used to run at each other and try smash each other, just to get the feel of the contact," he told RNZ.
Others RNZ spoke to at the event said they liked the energy of the collision — "the big oomph", one said.
Another spectator said they enjoyed the vibes of the sport and the event.
"Just the big hits eh, all the hype it brings, the crowd, everything, the atmosphere, they said.
One fan told RNZ she was glad the sport was expanding.
"I'm glad that this one went through, and now the world can see what type of sport this is, and you know the people who are attracted to it.
"It's a good thing for our brothers, but they need to do a woman's one, I'm gonna run it straight," she said.
Meanwhile, the sport has been under fire for its risk of head injuries.
Wednesday night's event saw knock outs — including one athlete appearing to have a seizure as he hit the ground.
The Run It championship league attempted to mirror the physical collisions seen during rugby league or union games, but has some concerned. (Source: 1News)
When RNZ approached some fans about the criticisms of the sport, some still backed it.
"Mind your own business eh, like you know, just let the people be, let them be," one person said.
Another commented "the people wanna do it, like, why stop them?".
Vatuvei said he backed the sport despite the controversy.
"I'm just happy that it's here in New Zealand, I know a lot of people hate it and a lot of people love it, I'm one of those people that love it," he said.
When asked whether he would be tempted to try the sport himself, he said "I do, I do, honestly I do, but it's one of those things that my mind is telling me one thing but my body is telling me another".
An event planned for Williams Park in Māngere on Wednesday did not go ahead and another planned for Marist Saints on Thursday was also scrapped.
The council said the organisers did not seek a permit or try to book council sites, but if they had followed the correct process, it was highly unlikely the event would have met its guidelines for approval.
Earlier, RNZ spoke to a brain injury support group who said they were "appalled" that the Run It Straight events were being staged across Auckland.
Chief executive of the Headway charity Stacey Mowbray said the activity was undoubtedly causing brain injury.
She said the format and promotion of the events appeared to exploit financially vulnerable people by offering large cash prizes.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

‘Son of Queenstown' remembered
‘Son of Queenstown' remembered

Otago Daily Times

timea day ago

  • Otago Daily Times

‘Son of Queenstown' remembered

The late Bruce Grant. PHOTO: SUPPLIED If Queenstown's the world's adventure capital, no-one epitomised that better than Bruce Grant. That even applied to the tragic end of his life — succumbing to "the mother of storms" after becoming the first Kiwi to summit the world's second highest mountain, K2, without oxygen. Only 31, this 'son of Queenstown' — as he's described on a plaque in the Gardens — had already packed in a lifetime of adventures. Born in the Sydney St maternity home his family once lived opposite, Bruce's mum Ros, who's 93, was a teacher and his dad, the late John, a builder. The youngest of four siblings, he started skiing earlier than the others — "he sort of got dragged along", sister Christine, one year his elder, says. He attended primary and secondary school on Ballarat St, finishing at the latter's new Fryer St campus. Christine says then-skifield owner Mount Cook provided schools with ex-rental gear which Bruce started with. The pair would later miss a lot of school as they ascended the ranks to national ski team selection. New Zealand downhill champ for five years, he and Christine skied that discipline, under the influence of a Canadian coach, at the 1984 Sarajevo Winter Olympics. Bruce finished 31st and was also chosen for the '88 Calgary Olympics, but an injured leg didn't recover in time for him to compete. He got into parapenting soon after it was introduced to Queenstown, first flying solo before becoming a commercial tandem pilot for eight years. After summiting many mountains, including Mt Cook seven times, he'd often ski or parapente off them, sometimes for films he starred in. One was The Leading Edge, for which Queenstowner Mathurin Molgat hired him after watching him ski The Remarkables. "He was an exceptional athlete, and he never said 'no'. "If you said, 'you want to do this, Bruce?' it didn't matter what the adventure was, he was in it." They even tried, before crashing, to mountain bike down The Remarkables' 'Elevator' chute. Mathurin found him the strong, silent type. "We drove up to Mt Cook and I think there were about four words exchanged. "He was a very content, self-contained character." Christine says he also meditated — "he was contemplative". A sculpture in his memory in the Queenstown Gardens. PHOTO: PHILIP CHANDLER In terms of extreme adventure, skiing down Austria's long and difficult Hahnenkamm run put him in elite company. His main mountaineering buddy was then-Queenstowner Kim Logan, who marvelled at some of his amazing Fiordland climbs. Although about 10 years his senior and more experienced, he says Bruce was mentally and physically the better mountaineer. "His safety margin was higher than mine." The pair were among rescuers who saved the life of a German backpacker on the Routeburn Track in extreme conditions, winning them all Royal Humane Society bravery medals. Kim recalls the police afterwards shouted them breakfast at Queenstown's then Gourmet Express and they got "absolutely smashed" on Irish coffees — "forget about the coffee, just bring us the Irish [whiskey]". The pair's '95 assault on K2, considered the world's most dangerous mountain, was preceded by a major community fundraising effort. Kim says he turned around just after Camp 4 —"it was my own condition and the weather" — and a few hours later expedition leader Peter Hillary did, too. Bruce and five others subsequently reached the summit, but all perished soon after when "the mother of storms" blew through, Kim says. Christine's sure if they'd had an inkling they wouldn't have summitted. "There was a very strong wind which was unforeseen really, in my understanding it came from the bottom up." Ironically, at the same time his brother Andrew, nicknamed 'Buzz', was experiencing a huge storm after summiting Mt Cook. When Kim returned to Queenstown, a memorial service was held in the Anglican church, after which hardy souls ventured in very wild weather to the Gardens where Christine's husband Dan Kelly's sculpture of a hand grasping an ice axe, in Bruce's memory, had been installed that day. At the time, Christine told Mountain Scene: "Bruce achieved a majority of his goals, there's not many people who could ski off Mt Cook, let alone fly. "He was aware of the fragility of human life in nature, he understood the reputation of K2 fully. "He achieved this goal, who knows what he would have achieved next?" Bruce Grant won every Dash for Cash he entered. Thirty years after his death, Sunday's Dash for Cash on Queenstown's Coronet Peak — a fundraiser for the Bruce Grant Youth Trust — is being held in his honour, from 2pm.

Formula 1: Liam Lawson qualifies inside top 10 again, to start ninth at Hungarian Grand Prix
Formula 1: Liam Lawson qualifies inside top 10 again, to start ninth at Hungarian Grand Prix

NZ Herald

timea day ago

  • NZ Herald

Formula 1: Liam Lawson qualifies inside top 10 again, to start ninth at Hungarian Grand Prix

Hungary marks just the second time Lawson has bettered Hadjar in qualifying, with the only previous time resulting in his career-best finish of sixth in Austria. And, as was the case with Monaco earlier this year when Lawson finished eighth, Hungary's tight nature and low speed corners makes overtaking increasingly difficult. In the build-up to this weekend's grand prix, Lawson himself highlighted qualifying as the area he needs to improve the most. As the clock began ticking in Q1, none of the 20 drivers immediately left their garage to set an early lap time, even with the threat of rain, as clouds came in to help cool the track down from over 50 degrees. With just over 12 minutes left in the session, Lawson emerged from pit lane, and set a first timed lap of 1m 16.350s, good enough for ninth place at the time, with drivers still yet to cross the finish line on their starting efforts. By the time all 20 drivers had set a timed lap, Lawson was 14th, and 0.225s clear of the drop zone. When he returned for his last laps of Q1, Lawson's gap to elimination had been cut to 0.119s, with the cooling track seeing more and more drivers improve on their times. Williams' Carlos Sainz and Alpine's Pierre Gasly both improved their times, which pushed Lawson down to 17th by the time he started his final lap, as the Kiwi improved his lap time to 1m 15.849s to advance in 14th, at the expense of Red Bull's Yuki Tsunoda, by just 0.50s. Liam Lawson arrives at the Hungarian Grand Prix. Photo / Red Bull Into Q2, and there was no delay in seeing cars immediately leave the pits, as rain started to fall over parts of the track. With that in mind, Lawson's first lap in Q2, 1m 16.156s, was enough for ninth by the time the 15 remaining drivers had set their first lap, 0.045s clear of elimination, ahead of both Ferrari cars. As the session wound down, though, the rain over turn six dissipated, Lawson was one of the first cars to return for his last laps of Q2. That, though, left him vulnerable to the track improving for the drivers who had started later than he had. Those fears didn't eventuate, though, as Lawson's final Q2 time of 1m 15.630s saw him advance to Q3 for the second week in succession, safe by 0.057s, and 0.072s clear of Ferrari's Lewis Hamilton in 12th. With 12 minutes to push for as high a place on the starting grid as possible, Lawson managed 1m 16.649s on his first timed lap, which while slower than his best effort in Q2, was enough for seventh, before improving for one last time gave him ninth. The Hungarian Grand Prix begins at 1am on Monday (NZ time), as the final race before Formula One's month-long summer break. Hungarian Grand Prix starting grid Charles Leclerc - Ferrari Oscar Piastri - McLaren Lando Norris - McLaren George Russell - Mercedes Fernando Alonso - Aston Martin Lance Stroll - Aston Martin Gabriel Bortoleto - Sauber Max Verstappen - Red Bull Liam Lawson - Racing Bulls Isack Hadjar - Racing Bulls Ollie Bearman - Haas Lewis Hamilton - Ferrari Carlos Sainz - Williams Franco Colapinto - Alpine Kimi Antonelli - Mercedes Yuki Tsunoda - Red Bull Pierre Gasly - Alpine Esteban Ocon - Haas Nico Hulkenberg - Sauber Alex Albon - Williams Alex Powell is a sports journalist for the NZ Herald. He has been a sports journalist since 2016.

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