Once Upon a Time in the Vest

Monday, October 2, 2023

V 13 N. 97 Track and Field Can Be Dangerous to Your Health on a Given Day

 The following article appeared in the Oct. 1, 2023  The Guardian telling about a Chinese track official being seriously injured while working at the hammer throw at the Asian Games.  You want to believe those nets and cages are bullet proof, but they are not, especially in this case.  So next time you are walking by officials working the throwing events, try not to distract them and afterward thank them for doing what they do to make the sport possible.


Asian Games official in stable condition after being hit by stray hammer throw

  • Huang Qinhua suffers broken leg and serious bleeding
  • Ali Zankawi’s throw flies out of cage sideways at Games in China

An athletics official suffered a broken leg and serious bleeding after being hit by a misthrown hammer in the Asian Games in Hangzhou, but his vital signs are now stable.

On Saturday, Kuwait’s Ali Zankawi lined up for one of his throws in the men’s hammer final at the eastern Chinese city’s packed Olympic stadium. But instead of soaring straight onto the outfield, the hammer flew out sideways and low to the right, smashing into the leg of the sitting technical official.

Looking horrified, Zankawi sprinted over as blood began spurting from the official’s right leg. The official, Huang Qinhua, 62, grimaced and swayed dizzily as Zankawi rushed to check on him, blood shooting out of the wound.

Within seconds Zankawi was using his huge hands and strength to improvise a tourniquet on Huang’s thigh and halt the bleeding. Medical personnel soon took Huang away on a stretcher after applying a tourniquet, then sent him to a nearby hospital.

“He arrived at the hospital at 20:15, where was diagnosed with a right open tibiofibular fracture,” Games spokesman Xu Deqing told a news conference on Sunday. “Currently his vital signs are stable.”

Kuwait’s Zankawi Ali in action at the 2023 Asian Games.
Kuwait’s Zankawi Ali in action at the 2023 Asian Games. Photograph: Lee Jin-man/AP

Afterwards Zankawi looked shaken and was seen asking after the official, according to a Reuters witness.

The final was won by China’s Wang Qi. Zankawi finished eighth but still managed a season’s best of 67.57 m, which he threw in the second round before his misthrow.

As is common in athletics competitions, the official had sat several metres from the cage-like netting that surrounds the throwing circle where the athletes spin and take their throws.

But the power and velocity of the 7.26kg flying metal ball meant the netting could only slightly cushion the hammer’s flight, not stop it.

The netting in athletics is designed to hang relatively loosely to prevent hammer balls and discuses from bouncing back at the athletes after misthrows.

Many users of Chinese social media platform Weibo, where the incident was trending on Sunday, said safety protocols should be improved to offer better protection for officials.

Some comments:


Mike Waters:  Yikes!,  George I enjoy working the hammer event.  Are you trying to scare me  

A friend told me about an official in New Zealand who had a big crease in his forehead from a discus.  I suggested he might consider trying Bondo to fill it.  We used it on dents in our cars.   Somewhere I've got photos (1920s early 30s)  of people standing around the hammer throw with no protection.    One of the L.A. Track Club's good runners had a career ending injury to his foot or leg from a discus.    At Oklahoma we had an very good thrower about 180 feet and the discus would skid across the track.  We always had to keep an eye out for him when we were running intervals.   George


Steve Smith:    I worked all the events but I enjoyed the hammer the most.


Years ago we had a guy warned many times about turning his back to the ring. 
He was hit with the wire and maybe the handle, it fractured his arm and then he tried to sue the school. 

 I think the discus is the most hazardous sometimes the discus just seems to take off on a strange path and then bounce or slide weird. I have been on the field at an NCAA meet when a official was hit in the head with a discus. A left handed thrower tends to make the discus act weird. Another PAC 12 meet and a discus took a strange bounce, changed direction and hit an official in the shoulder

 I also remember at a meet in Carson Ca. about 10 years a shot hit and killed an official.


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