logo
Women's runner hospitalized after falling unconscious during distance race at European Championships

Women's runner hospitalized after falling unconscious during distance race at European Championships

Fox News10-03-2025

Dutch women's athlete Maureen Koster was knocked unconscious when she fell down during the women's 3000m at the European Indoor Championships in Apeldoorn, the Netherlands, on Sunday.
The 32-year-old athlete was treated by medical staff and later transported to a local hospital.
Koster was in front of Great Britain's Innes FitzGerald and behind Hannah Nuttall when the fall occurred. Nuttall was temporarily pushed off the track and FitzGerald had to run around Koster.
"I just saw her on the floor in front of me. I thought I had to get around her and hopefully not be fazed by that," FitzGerald said after the race. "I didn't want it to affect my race plan. It was gutting to have her fall, especially in front of a home crowd. I hope she is okay. Very sad that she fell over."
The Netherlands team later posted on X that Koster was conscious and responsive.
Koster's friend and fellow competitor, Great British runner Melissa Courtney-Bryant, who finished the event with silver, said the incident was "carnage."
"I heard Maureen scream," Courtney-Bryant said. "I know her really well because we used to train together and room on the Diamond League. Then I saw a leg as I was running around, and I knew it was her shoe. It put everyone on edge, and everyone was pushing more. I was just trying to keep up, because you don't want to end up down as well. It was carnage."
Ireland's Sarah Healy won gold after Koster's fall.
Follow Fox News Digital's sports coverage on X, and subscribe to the Fox News Sports Huddle newsletter.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

The Return Of Trayvon Bromell At Diamond League Rome
The Return Of Trayvon Bromell At Diamond League Rome

Forbes

time5 hours ago

  • Forbes

The Return Of Trayvon Bromell At Diamond League Rome

ROME, ITALY - JUNE 06: Trayvon Bromell of USA celebrates after winning in Men's 100m during the ... More Golden Gala Pietro Mennea, part of the 2025 Diamond League at Stadio Olimpico on June 06, 2025 in Rome, Italy. (Photo by) Nearly three years ago. That was the last time Trayvon Bromell won a Wanda Diamond League race at 100 meters. Three years can sometimes feel like a lifetime in track and field. But on Friday in Italy, at Diamond League Rome outing, the St. Petersburg, Florida native turned back time, rushing out of the blocks with a blistering 0.112 reaction time en route to a dominant win in 9.84 seconds, leaving the field behind as he logged a new world best time over the 2025 season. It was his first World No. 1 performance since 2021. 'It's a blessing to come out here and put God first,' Bromell said afterward of the meet otherwise known as the Golden Gala Pietro Mennea, 'and go out there and execute the race. It was a great field.' ROME, ITALY - JUNE 06: Trayvon Bromell of Team United States celebrates following victory in the ... More Men's 100m Final during the Golden Gala Pietro Mennea, part of the 2025 Diamond League at Stadio Olimpico on June 06, 2025 in Rome, Italy. (Photo by) Much has changed in those three years. An Olympic cycle has passed. New global stars like Noah Lyles and Kishane Thompson have emerged. Bromell is nearing 30, and he's been a professional for nearly a decade. He last reached the Olympics in 2021, failing to reach the final during the pandemic-altered Games in Tokyo. Five years earlier, he was eighth in Rio. It's been nearly a decade since his last world medal – an indoor title that same year in Portland, Oregon. Time often slips for aging sprinters. But Friday's performance was a reminder that he has not lost a step. 'I've been away for a while now—and being able to compete at a high level probably since 2022,' the 29-year-old said, 'so it was definitely a lot of jitters. I'm not going to sit here and act like nerves weren't there. I was definitely nervous, because I didn't know what to expect.' While an oblique strain limited his indoor season, with Bromell shutting things down after the Millrose Games in February, he began to ramp things back up in April, starting first with efforts at 200 meters in April at his former home Baylor University, before following just a few weeks later down the road at the University of Texas. A month later, he found the right touch down the straightaway, clocking a time of 9.91 at the National Training Center in Clermont, Florida, submitting his first sub-10 performance since September of 2022—where he ran 9.94 at the Wanda Diamond League in Zurich, Switzerland. Of course, Bromell knew one time didn't cut it. 'Everyone will have their speculation about it being in the United States,' he said. 'Can you do it overseas? Can you do it when the pressure is on? That was one thing running through my mind.' ROME, ITALY - JUNE 06: Trayvon Bromell of USA competes in Men's 100m during the Golden Gala Pietro ... More Mennea, part of the 2025 Diamond League at Stadio Olimpico on June 06, 2025 in Rome, Italy. (Photo by) Bromell had every right to wonder on Friday, with a field in Rome that included in-form sprinters and men arriving less than a year off the Paris Olympics. His U.S. colleagues Fred Kerley and Courtney Lindsey and Brandon Hicklin all found themselves in the field. So did Kenya's Ferdinand Omanyala and Cameroonian Emmanuel Eseme. Bromell, however, never gave the field a chance, slipping out of the bocks with a reaction time that was nearly perfect, just one-hundredth of a second away from an illegal start. He took his drive phase with beautiful ease before running into the final meters with precision. Like his old self. 'Never lose my faith,' Bromell told FloTrack, the Diamond League streaming partner, afterward. 'And man, that's what, that's what really got me through this. Because even coming to the race I was having, like, doubt thoughts, like, 'Man, am I gonna run fast? Like, was the 9.91 real?'' Bromell alluded to some personal growth over his recent lean years, owing to the fact that he spoke with former U.S. sprinter and Olympic champion Justin Gatlin, who advised him to see a therapist. What Bromell learned, he said, was that he was not invincible, even at his best. '2021, that was me second-guessing that nobody will be able to beat me,' Bromell said of his career-best year. 'I'm the fastest guy. And I'm never going to have that mindset going into a race again, because you never know how someone is feeling that day.' The result from Rome was an eye-opener. Just eight-hundredths off his personal best of 9.76 from 2021, Bromell gave a strong sense that he's right back in the mix when it comes to qualifying for the World Championships. Which only adds to the fire for an American contingent that exited the Paris Olympics, between Noah Lyles and Kerley, with gold and bronze, while a third, Kenneth Bednarek, was seventh and now has proceeded to run into the best form of his life with Grand Slam Track. But in track and field, if years are like lifetimes, then races are quickly-fleeting moments, worth only as much as the memories they serve. Will Bromell continue to capture his old form again and again? Time will give him his answer, but at least in Rome, there was no one better. 'I will study the film,' Bromell said of his race, adding, 'We will sit down and talk and take it from there.'

Naperville North's Lucy Fitzgerald wears No. 11, like her sisters did. She nearly wins it all, which Nora did.
Naperville North's Lucy Fitzgerald wears No. 11, like her sisters did. She nearly wins it all, which Nora did.

Chicago Tribune

time14 hours ago

  • Chicago Tribune

Naperville North's Lucy Fitzgerald wears No. 11, like her sisters did. She nearly wins it all, which Nora did.

Naperville North's Lucy Fitzgerald had to wait a long time to get regular playing time. Fitzgerald didn't make the varsity team until her junior year and only earned a starting spot about two months ago. But the senior defender never came off the field during her final game — the Class 3A state championship game, which went to double overtime Saturday night. 'It really meant so much to me because at the beginning of the year I didn't start,' she said. 'Throughout the year, I've just been working my hardest, and to be able to play all 100 minutes on the field feels really good.' There were tears in Fitzgerald's eyes, of course, because O'Fallon halted Naperville North's stirring playoff run. The Huskies' 1-0 loss at North Central College in Naperville also ended an era. Fitzgerald is the last of three sisters to play for the Huskies (17-6-3), whose underdog run to the final was reminiscent of the 2019 state championship team that included her oldest sister, Nora. Both wore No. 11. Their sister Maggie Fitzgerald, who graduated from Naperville North in 2023 and flew into town to attend the game, wore No. 11 and No. 19 during her time. 'To have Maggie come back and surprise her sister at the state championship game, that's just what makes this program special,' Naperville North coach Steve Goletz said. 'Families like the Fitzgeralds, the DeCooks, the Polaviejas, the Bueschers, there's a reason these girls were where they were. 'Nobody thought that this team would be in the state championship tonight outside of our group.' The Huskies had no Division I recruits except Tennessee-bound junior forward Claire DeCook, who played her last game because she will graduate early, and Minnesota-bound senior defender Emily Buescher. But Lucy Fitzgerald was respected for her grit and perseverance. 'Something that's incredibly special about Lucy is just her willingness to work all the time, and she never lets that negative feeling overcome her,' Buescher said. 'Every time she's given a chance, she proves that she deserves it. 'We do an awards banquet before the year ends, and her thing was most improved player because there were days when she would stay 40 to 50 minutes after practice. She would ask for me to stay or for other people to stay to help her with certain things.' Buescher, whose sister Katelynn captained the Huskies to third place in 2018 before playing at Illinois and Illinois State, added that Fitzgerald's work rate pushes teammates too. 'It makes it so easy to work hard when you're next to Lucy because you know how hard she's working,' Buescher said. 'Our last game, she absolutely saved us, so it's so easy to cheer her on because she's such a special person and a special player.' Goletz said Fitzgerald showed that Saturday, helping the Huskies hold the Panthers (23-1-1) scoreless for almost 90 minutes until Allie Tredway scored on a 22-yard rocket with 5.7 seconds left in the first overtime. 'Lucy's an incredible kid, a kid that ran the process of being in this program,' Goletz said. 'The reason you play state championship games is because you have kids who care more about the program than they do themselves. 'Lucy was such a rock back there. She was a great target on restarts, and tonight she's put on an island at times 1v1, moves her feet well.' Like most of her teammates, Fitzgerald will not play in college. But she cemented her family's legacy and set a great example. 'It's a tough thing for a high school kid to check your own ego at the door and continue to fight for your teammates,' Goletz said. 'Lucy did that day in and day out for four years, and for her to step in at the moment she had the opportunity this year and seize that spot in the back made us better.' Although her sisters' varsity careers were longer than hers, the 6-foot Fitzgerald is the tallest and strongest. But like them, she walked off the field in a Naperville North uniform for the final time having given her all and leaving behind no regrets before she heads to Tennessee, where she can cheer on DeCook. 'I feel like it was a good ending, a happy ending,' Fitzgerald said. 'Even though it's sad that it's over, I'm really happy I got to do it with this team with every single one of the girls.'

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store