Daily Mail

NO EMERGENCY EQUIPMENT AT CHINESE TRAINING BASE WHERE TIOTE COLLAPSED

- by IAN HERBERT

THE CHINESE club where former Newcastle player Cheick Tiote died in training had no emergency cardiac equipment to treat him, despite the billions of pounds washing around the country, Sportsmail can reveal. The 30-year-old will be buried in his native Ivory Coast today but a week on from his death, Beijing Enterprise­s, a second-tier team in the Chinese League, is yet to confirm the cause of his death or respond to claims from three sources that the extremely basic medical facilities at the club’s training ground did not include a defibrilla­tor.

Sportsmail has been told that days before Tiote died, one official from his club expressed concern through the Chinese social media applicatio­n WeChat that the player had been affected by not eating or taking water between dawn and dusk, in order to keep Ramadan. The post was later deleted. ‘The medical conditions of the Chinese clubs are much worse than you imagine,’ said one source, who asked not to be named. ‘Did Beijing Enterprise­s have defibrilla­tors? A cast-iron no. They have two people in their medical staff. One is qualified but the other is known as a spraying physio, for spraying painkiller­s.’ Another source, who recently visited second-tier team Shenzhen, managed by former England coach Sven Goran Eriksson, said: ‘Basically they didn’t have medical facilities and relied a lot on traditiona­l Chinese medicine. ’ Christophe­r Atkins, a player agent for RWMG Sports, who works on the Chinese end of transfers, said he had never seen a defibrilla­tor at a training ground in the country’s second tier. ‘I’ve never seen much by way of medical equipment,’ he said. ‘There are ECG and MRI scans, but how seriously they take them varies.’ Beijing Enterprise­s said in a statement that Tiote had been ‘rushed to hospital immediatel­y’ when he collapsed but ‘all revival measures proved ineffectiv­e’.

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