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Home / Whanganui Chronicle

Kiwi football legend Wynton Rufer thanks stranger who saved his life after heart attack on Lime scooter

Ben Leahy
By Ben Leahy
Reporter·Herald on Sunday·
12 Jan, 2019 04:00 PM5 mins to read

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Former All White Wynton Rufer recovers in Auckland Hospital after suffering a heart attack last weekend. Photo / Jason Oxenham

Former All White Wynton Rufer recovers in Auckland Hospital after suffering a heart attack last weekend. Photo / Jason Oxenham

New Zealand football legend Wynton Rufer says he's "lucky to be alive" after suffering a heart attack while riding a Lime scooter.

In an exclusive interview with the Herald on Sunday from hospital, the All Whites great has thanked the stranger who leapt from his car to perform lifesaving CPR for five minutes, while warning others to get regular heart checks.

Rufer said his heart simply stopped without warning last Sunday.

"The crazy thing is I felt nothing and just collapsed. Imagine if I was driving down the motorway - I could have passed out and had a head-on and killed myself or someone else."

Having enjoyed watching the New Zealand Breakers at Spark Arena with a friend, the pair had set off home to Parnell on Lime scooters.

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But as they headed up Parnell Rise, Rufer, 56, passed out and crashed to the ground, luckily avoiding hitting his head.

His friend Florian Wellman's frantic screams for help brought passerby Nick Moss running. The 35-year-old, who completed a first aid course three months earlier, told the Herald on Sunday, he saw Rufer prone on the pavement as he was driving past and jumped out of his car.

As others at the scene called an ambulance, Moss tirelessly performed CPR and mouth-to-mouth for five minutes.

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Nick Moss performed CPR on Wynton Rufer and saved his life. Photo / Supplied
Nick Moss performed CPR on Wynton Rufer and saved his life. Photo / Supplied

Rufer showed "no sign of life" and wasn't breathing, except for an occasional "struggling breath in".

When paramedics arrived, it took about three shocks with the defibrillator before Rufer's heart got going again and he was taken to Auckland City Hospital.

He woke two days later from an induced coma.

"I could have died … it's crazy," Rufer said. "I was gone, and then I came back. I'm very lucky to still be here."

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Moss said he did what he hoped anyone else would do.

"Everyone should be able to learn first aid - the more people that know it, the more people will get home to their families when something goes wrong," Moss said.

Rufer, former German professional league Bundesliga star, managed to thank Moss by phone for the first time yesterday and has invited him around for dinner once he is out of hospital.

Rufer said doctors have told him he will make a full recovery, although he's been told to slow down and rest after what had been a stressful month in which his father-in-law battled serious illness.

They suspect genetic causes played a strong part in Rufer's heart attack after his Maori mum also had a triple bypass operation when she was 52.

Cardiovascular disease is responsible for one in three deaths in New Zealand. While many people get some early warning signs before heart attacks hit, Rufer said he had none.

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He also didn't fit the risk profile for a heart attack as someone who ate healthy and was fairly fit, showing how important it was to get regular heart checkups, he said.

Doctors operated by pushing stents into the veins in his wrists and then up to the "two small" blockages in the vessels leading to his heart.
Auckland City Hospital nurses have also been tending to the "nasty scrapes" on his legs and lower back that he suffered when he slid along the concrete footpath.

Wynton Rufer said his heart simply stopped without warning last Sunday. Photo / Jason Oxenham
Wynton Rufer said his heart simply stopped without warning last Sunday. Photo / Jason Oxenham

Rufer said his Christian faith means he's not fearful of death.

But waking up to see the worry on the faces of his family and friends, showed the father-of-two that he wanted to be around longer to spend more time with them and keep enjoying his work promoting soccer.

"At that moment when you wake, it is more of a shock for your family than yourself," Rufer said.

"I'm really lucky to still be alive and I'm glad I am because I love working with kids, love what I'm doing and passionate about the game."

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Rufer became a household name when he was added to the All Whites squad late in their bid to qualify for the 1982 World Cup in Spain; instantly making a presence on the field.

His showings in the All Whites jersey saw him be snapped up by Swiss clubs FC Aarau and Grasshoppers.

He then starred for glamour German team Werder Bremen across 170 matches between 1989-95.

Named the Oceania Footballer of the Century by the Oceania Football Confederation, he is still a leading figure in New Zealand football and runs the WYNRS football academy.

His continued promotional work led him to travel to 13 countries last year, including as a scout for former club Werder Bremen in the US, Argentina and Brazil.

He was also supposed to be playing this week in a five-a-side tournament in the Swiss mountains.

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Another project he is passionate about at the moment is his Wynton World Cup competition.

This will give Kiwi kids of all football abilities aged 8-13 who participate in a three-day Auckland camp the chance to win a trip to Germany and possibly run on to the ground at half-time during a Werder Bremen game.

- Additional reporting: Michael Burgess

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