
“Safety is provided and prevented. They foresee it and prevent it, because it heals” (Hippocrates). “It is safe to provide and prevent. Anticipating and preventing is better than cure.”
Serious dangers lurk in the coexistence of football players and athletes or ordinary athletes in stadiums. The problem, however, is maximized in Municipal Sports Centers (MCCs). Realizing that it will be very difficult for the administration of the municipality to make a decision to eliminate football, especially in an election year, even during track and field training hours, I think that the way out is the immediate installation of high protective nets around the entire perimeter of the football fields. Especially at those stadiums where football and athletics trainings take place in parallel.
When (and not if, I suppose it happens) a serious accident occurs, it will be too late. We are very close to this. A few days ago, while playing sports, I received a ball on the head with such force that I received a concussion.
Let DAK administrations and city authorities think about it: if there had been a small child in the place of this man, what could have happened? And if we have a serious injury to a child, in addition to a tragic event, then can they imagine what legal adventures, with litigation and litigation, they can be drawn into?
So why don’t they preempt instead of waiting for something bad to happen and then running to collect the unattached? But we wrote it again:
Greece, country of drunkards. Then we do what we should have done in the first place… The tragedy at Tempe showed us – and should have taught us a lot. But do suffering become lessons?
Source: Kathimerini

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