The Daily Courier

Play halted for Eriksen tribute during Euro game

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COPENHAGEN — Christian Eriksen will be fitted with an implantabl­e device to monitor his heart rhythm, the Danish soccer federation said Thursday.

The 29-year-old Eriksen is recovering in a Copenhagen hospital after suffering cardiac arrest during Denmark’s game against Finland at the European Championsh­ip.

The Danish federation said doctors have determined that Eriksen needs to have an ICD — implantabl­e cardiovert­er-defibrilla­tor.

“This device is necessary after a cardiac attack due to rhythm disturbanc­es,” the federation said in a statement. “Christian has accepted the solution and the plan has moreover been confirmed by specialist­s nationally and internatio­nally who all recommend the same treatment. We encourage everybody to give Christian and his family peace and privacy the following time.”

An ICD can function as a combinatio­n between a pacemaker and a defibrilla­tor. It monitors a person’s heartbeat and can send electrical pulses to restore a normal rhythm.

Netherland­s defender Daley Blind still plays profession­ally with an ICD. He had one fitted after being diagnosed with an inflamed heart

muscle in 2019.

Denmark played Belgium in its second Euro 2020 game on Thursday and lost 2-1. The game featured a minute’s applause for Eriksen just after the clock hit 10 minutes in honor of his No. 10 national team shirt.

“Today, we will enter the pitch against Belgium with Christian in our hearts and thoughts,” Denmark captain Simon Kjaer said before the match in his first public statement since the incident. “It gives us peace in our minds, which allows us to focus on the game of football. We will play for Christian, and as always for all of Denmark. That is the greatest motivation for us all.”

Kjaer, who is close friends with Eriksen and his family, was one of the first players to come to the midfielder’s aid after his collapse. He called it “a shock that will be part of me — part of all of us — forever.”

One of the doctors who helped treat Eriksen on the field told German media the midfielder could speak and think clearly immediatel­y after he was resuscitat­ed with a defibrilla­tor.

“That was a very moving moment, because with such medical emergencie­s in everyday life the chances of success are much lower. Eriksen looked at me and I asked him: ‘Well, are you back with us?’ And he replied: ‘Yes, I am with you,”’ Dr. Jens Kleinefeld said.

 ?? The Associated Press ?? Denmark’s Simon Kjaer, left, and Belgium’s Romelu Lukaku pause to pay tribute to Denmark’s Christian Eriksen in Copenhagen, Denmark, Thursday.
The Associated Press Denmark’s Simon Kjaer, left, and Belgium’s Romelu Lukaku pause to pay tribute to Denmark’s Christian Eriksen in Copenhagen, Denmark, Thursday.

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