Guardian staff and Australian Associated Press 

Melbourne teacher receiving end-of-life care after horror head clash during suburban football game

Epping footballer Nathan Fitzgerald, 27, remains in hospital after hitting his head during a game in Lalor on Saturday
  
  

Image of Nathan Fitzgerald supplied by Epping Football Netball Club via facebook.
High school teacher Nathan Fitzgerald was playing football for Epping at a match in Lalor on Saturday when he suffered multiple hits to his head. Photograph: Epping Football Netball Club/Vic AFL

A suburban Melbourne footballer is receiving “end-of-life” care in hospital after a horror head clash saw him fall to the ground and hit his head on a covered cricket pitch, his club says.

High school teacher Nathan Fitzgerald, 27, was taken to Royal Melbourne hospital on Saturday after the incident during an Australian rules football game in Lalor, in Melbourne’s north. His club has since raised concerns about the covered cricket pitch on the oval, where Fitzgerald was injured.

According to his club’s president, Fitzgerald had been playing for Epping when, during a tackle, he clashed heads with another player before receiving a second blow to the head “which could have been from a flailing boot or a knee”.

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“Then he’s hit his head on the ground,” the Epping football netball club president, Luke De Vincentis, told ABC Radio Melbourne on Monday.

“And [it] has been reported on the part of the ground that’s much harder than everywhere else where the cricket pitch runs through the middle of the ground.”

De Vincentis described Fitzgerald as a “gentle soul of a man”, who was loving and humble.

“He had this smile on his face – his teeth would light up a room from a mile away because he always had a smile on his face. And [he] just gave time to everyone,” he said.

He said the club was still coming to terms with the accident, with a statement released a statement on Sunday saying Fitzgerald’s “condition deteriorated overnight and [he] is now receiving end-of-life care”.

“We’ve lost a teammate and a much-loved person from the club – but more importantly the Fitzgerald family have lost a son and a brother,” De Vincentis said on Monday.

De Vincentis called for an investigation into the playing of football on fields that have cricket pitches, noting that the one at the ground in which Saturday’s incident occurred had been covered.

“There’s always been some risks and concerns involved around the cricket pitches on footy ovals I guess,” he said. “Unfortunately, because we are just local amateur sports, we have to be able to use these facilities for multiple purposes.

“But the risk does come that there is quite a hard strip of surface in the middle of a ground where there’s a high velocity, high contact sport played on.”

The City of Whittlesea, which manages the reserve, said the pitch covering met the relevant safety standards and was commonly used nationwide.

“The synthetic cricket wicket at Lalor recreation reserve was covered with a purpose-designed, multi-layered synthetic surface in accordance with applicable AFL/Cricket Australia performance standards for shared-use sporting grounds,” a spokesperson said.

“Covered cricket wicket systems of this type are commonly used on shared-use sporting grounds across Australia.”

According to The Age, a spokesperson for the Northern Football Netball League has said that umpires inspected the ground before the game.

In a statement on Saturday, the league said “there is no suggestion that what took place was anything other than a football accident”.

There has been increased focus on head knocks in football in recent years amid a better understanding of chronic traumatic encephalopathy.

Fitzgerald worked at the Mernda Central College, where he has been a maths and science teacher since 2023.

Support will available for the school community, a Victorian education department spokesperson said.

“Our thoughts are with the family, friends and colleagues of Nathan Fitzgerald at this very difficult time,” they said.

 

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