The Star Malaysia

Shark attack victim escapes jaws of death by punching it

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The man bitten by a shark off Cape Cod this month said he escaped by punching the powerful predator in the gills after it clamped down on his leg.

In his first interview since the Aug 15 attack , William Lytton said he’d been swimming in about eight to 10 feet (2.4m to 3m) of water off Truro, Massachuse­tts, when he felt an incredible pain shoot through his left leg and quickly realised he was being attacked by a shark.

The 61-year-old neurologis­t from Scarsdale, New York, said he gave the animal a strong smack in the gills with his left hand, a move that likely saved his life but also resulted in some torn tendons. He now sports an arm cast as well as bandages and a brace around most of his left leg.

“I initially was terrified, but, really, there was no time to think,” he said, recounting the ordeal following a physical therapy session at Spaulding Rehabilita­tion Hospital in Boston, where he’s been since Sunday.

“It doesn’t feel like I did anything heroic. A lot of this was luck.”

Lytton said he must have recalled from nature documentar­ies that the gills were one of the most vulnerable parts of the shark.

After the animal broke its grip, he took a few strong stokes back to shore where he shouted for help.

Someone alerted his wife, who had been on the beach with their two young daughters and friends.

“The pain was really excruciati­ng,” Lytton said. “I remember the helicopter landing and then nothing for the next two days.”

Lytton was airlifted to Tufts Medical Center in Boston where he said he was placed into a two-day coma, underwent six surgeries and had nearly 12 pints of blood pumped into him.

State biologists are working to determine what type of shark was involved in the attack, which was the first in Massachuse­tts waters since 2012. The state’s last fatal attack was in 1936. — AP

 ?? — AP ?? He thought he was fin-ished: Lytton speaking with his physical therapist Caitlin Geary at Spaulding Rehabilita­tion Hospital in Boston.
— AP He thought he was fin-ished: Lytton speaking with his physical therapist Caitlin Geary at Spaulding Rehabilita­tion Hospital in Boston.

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