Luton's Tom Lockyer says heart stopped for 2 minutes, 40 seconds after cardiac arrest during game

Updated Feb. 18, 2024 5:12 p.m. ET
Associated Press

LUTON, England (AP) — Luton captain Tom Lockyer says his heart stopped for more than 2 1/2 minutes when he suffered cardiac arrest in a Premier League game at Bournemouth in December, but he is still hoping that doctors give him the all clear to keep playing professionally.

The 29-year-old defender collapsed in the 59th minute at Vitality Stadium on Dec. 16, resulting in the game being abandoned. Lockyer was discharged from the hospital five days later following a successful procedure to fit an implantable cardioverter defibrillator.

“Two minutes, 40 seconds I was out for," Lockyer told Sky Sports in an interview aired Sunday before Luton's game against Manchester United in the Premier League. "I needed the defibrillator to shock me back. A massive thank you to the paramedics and club doctors involved, because without them I wouldn’t be here.”

Lockyer also collapsed during May’s Championship playoff final victory over Coventry at Wembley, leading him to undergo surgery to correct an atrial fibrillation.

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He said he knew straight away that his collapse at Bournemouth was more serious.

“I was running up to the halfway line and went really light-headed. I remember thinking ‘I will be OK in a second’ and eventually I wasn’t," he said. “I woke up and the paramedics and everyone were everywhere. It happened in May as well, but I knew instantly this was different. Last time I woke up from almost a dream, this time I woke up from a nothingness. Straight away there was a little bit more panic from the paramedics, physios and club doctors. I was a little bit disorientated, couldn’t speak or move, I was just trying to work out what was happening.

“While that was going on I remember thinking ‘I could be dying here’ and it’s quite a surreal thought thinking that and not being able to move and respond.”

Lockyer said he still needs to undergo more tests before doctors have a firm grasp about whether it's safe for him to resume his playing career.

“We will be dictated to by the medical staff and specialists, but if there was a chance I could play again, and I’m not going to do anything against the specialists’ recommendations, then I would love to," he said. “It’s far too early to say, there are a lot more tests and things that need to happen in the background, but I wouldn’t write it off.”

Manchester United midfielder Christian Eriksen successfully resumed playing after being fitted with an ICD following his collapse at the European Championship in 2021 while playing for Denmark.

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