It's not impossible if he actually got hit in the chest. It's very rare, but it does happen. It's called Commotio Cordis. I don't even know if we've hit 1000 confirmed cases in the US since we started counting sometime in the 90s, so make your own judgement, but it's not made up. It has all the same risk factors: Mostly men, worse for younger and more athletic men, and more likely when they're physically active. You don't actually have to be hit hard, it's just when your heart is working hard enough and you get hit in the right spot at a specific moment in the heartbeat.
It happened to a classmate in middle school. It only took a tennis ball flung from a lacrosse stick by a scrawny teen boy to do it. Luckily for him, one of the PE teachers knew CPR, and our school was practically next door to both a fire department and an urgent care with an ambulance service, so he was one of the few to survive it. Scared the shit out of the parents though and the whole district put down its lacrosse fad that year.
I remember reading about something like this - a good while back - happening to a boy playing baseball with his friends, Basically, the ball struck him in the perfect place in the chest, at the perfect time, and his heart stopped. It was so weird, that I've never forgotten about it.
So, anyhow, I believe there is a lot of weirdness with regards to the vaccine, and injuries being caused by it (I'm not all in on the, "It's a conspiracy to depopulate the world!" stuff, though...), and it could even be a contributing factor here, but the evidence just seems to line up with what this guy said - it just seems like this was one of those perfectly timed impacts to the heart.
It's not impossible if he actually got hit in the chest. It's very rare, but it does happen. It's called Commotio Cordis. I don't even know if we've hit 1000 confirmed cases in the US since we started counting sometime in the 90s, so make your own judgement, but it's not made up. It has all the same risk factors: Mostly men, worse for younger and more athletic men, and more likely when they're physically active. You don't actually have to be hit hard, it's just when your heart is working hard enough and you get hit in the right spot at a specific moment in the heartbeat.
It happened to a classmate in middle school. It only took a tennis ball flung from a lacrosse stick by a scrawny teen boy to do it. Luckily for him, one of the PE teachers knew CPR, and our school was practically next door to both a fire department and an urgent care with an ambulance service, so he was one of the few to survive it. Scared the shit out of the parents though and the whole district put down its lacrosse fad that year.
It’s so rare that the only case before today for the NFL was in 1971 with someone who had carotid artery blockage before the incident.
This.
I remember reading about something like this - a good while back - happening to a boy playing baseball with his friends, Basically, the ball struck him in the perfect place in the chest, at the perfect time, and his heart stopped. It was so weird, that I've never forgotten about it.
Here - I went and found an article that is probably what I remember.
So, anyhow, I believe there is a lot of weirdness with regards to the vaccine, and injuries being caused by it (I'm not all in on the, "It's a conspiracy to depopulate the world!" stuff, though...), and it could even be a contributing factor here, but the evidence just seems to line up with what this guy said - it just seems like this was one of those perfectly timed impacts to the heart.