Disaster Lightning strike kills Peruvian soccer player during live TV match in distressing scene

  • 🐕 I am attempting to get the site runnning as fast as possible. If you are experiencing slow page load times, please report it.
(L/A)

Horrifying live TV coverage of a Peruvian soccer match caught the moment several players were knocked to the ground by lightning — with one killed in a direct strike.

The footage showed players and refs slowly walking off the field at Coto Coto stadium in Chilca when Sunday’s game between Juventud Bellavista and Familia Chocca was suspended in the first half because of the storm warning, according to the Telegraph.

With a sudden crack, at least eight players fell forward like tipped dominoes — with a flash directly hitting two of them on the right of the screen.
1730754251371.png
Jose Hugo de la Cruz Meza, 39, was struck and killed by lightning during a soccer game in Peru.NDA Deportiva Huancavelica
Jose Hugo de la Cruz Meza, a 39-year-old defender, was killed, while goalkeeper Juan Chocca Llacta, 40, was rushed to a local hospital with severe burns.

Two teenagers and a 24-year-old man were also injured, but are listed as being in stable condition, reports said.

De La Cruz Meza may have taken the killer strike because of his bracelet, officials believe.

“It was like a magnet,” said Cesar Ramos, who is in charge of the area’s civil defense.

Photos later captured scorch marks on the field near where the players landed, the outlet said.
1730754737606.png
Other players were also hurt during the strike, which hospitalized several people.NDA Deportiva Huancavelica

1730754703445.png
The game was quickly canceled after the horrific incident.NDA Deportiva Huancavelica
The game was quickly canceled after the deadly strike, which came as Bellavista was winning 2-1.

It’s not the first time such an accident happened during a game in the high-altitude region— about 10 years ago, a lightning strike put 21-year-old soccer player Joao Contreras in the hospital with second-degree burns.

In response to the most recent strike, Lucho Duarte, an engineer who also filmed the strike, called for new safety measures to protect the players, including lightning rods


“This terrible incident reminds us of the importance of protection against lightning, especially in open-air events,” Duarte said, according to the Mirror.

“We need to implement protective systems in sports installations and security protocols involving the immediate suspension of activities during storms.”
 
Last edited:
kinda morbid, but I think its fascinating people far away from the strike just fell over. Didn't know gods tazer had AOE damage.
A lot of people mistakenly believe that a bolt dies out as soon as it hits the ground but soil can and does conduct electricity for a short distance, I remember seeing vids of this all the way back in the 90s as part of a safety video we had to watch in school about the dangers of lightning. I never really had a healthy respect for it until one day I saw a bolt take out a huge tree not far from where I was, it was awe inspiring and pants shidding at the same time contemplating just how much power was being channeled that a tree exploded into splinters. I've also had an oh shit moment one day when I got out of my car at work and lightning struck the tower of a building next to the parking lot I was in. When there's CTG lightning out I try to be inside or in a car nowadays.
 
A lot of people mistakenly believe that a bolt dies out as soon as it hits the ground but soil can and does conduct electricity for a short distance
I knew THIS, but I thought "short" distance was shorter. I always thought it would be ROUGHLY the reach of about a tf2 rocket blast in terms of range, guess I was dead wrong

I know its electricity traveling through mud, water, sweat, ect, but I grossly under-estimated it here. Could also be it was one HELL of a bolt too, since the guys further away seem either instantly knocked out / dead, while the further left dude seemed crippled, as if he ACTUALLY got tazed to shit with too many volts, but still survived(?).
 
I knew THIS, but I thought "short" distance was shorter. I always thought it would be ROUGHLY the reach of about a tf2 rocket blast in terms of range, guess I was dead wrong

I know its electricity traveling through mud, water, sweat, ect, but I grossly under-estimated it here. Could also be it was one HELL of a bolt too, since the guys further away seem either instantly knocked out / dead, while the further left dude seemed crippled, as if he ACTUALLY got tazed to shit with too many volts, but still survived(?).
This kind of thing does seem more common in South/Central America so idk if it's just poorer safety standards or if there's something about the soil composition that allows the bolt to travel out further. I imagine denser packed soils would make it more likely to dissipate quickly while something like sandy or gravelly consistency is gonna allow it to travel outwards to the sides more as the current flows looking to connect.
 
A lot of people are memeing on the other soccer players falling over, but I've have lightning strikes happen that felt like they were flexing the walls of my home. I don't doubt the resulting shockwave being strong enough to knock people over.
The game was quickly canceled after the deadly strike, which came as Bellavista was winning 2-1.
Imagine if they didn't cancel and they just played around his dead body. :story:
 
Last edited:
Lightning also doesn't just conduct to the ground. It has a field like all electromagnetic events that is so powerful we have satellites in space that are able to record them. Since your body also has an electrical current running through it as part of your central nervous system, this sudden EMP can cause damage too. Notice how even the people who didn't immediately drop started clutching their heads like someone has just rammed a spike into them. I imagine for the people who didn't drop that was the most intense pain they ever felt in their lives.

This video would honestly be good for a high school physics class if we are being honest. It's the kind of thing that can get concepts to stick that an hours long lecture never would.
 
Last edited:
A lot of people mistakenly believe that a bolt dies out as soon as it hits the ground but soil can and does conduct electricity for a short distance, I remember seeing vids of this all the way back in the 90s as part of a safety video we had to watch in school about the dangers of lightning.
It's also part of the training you get when dealing with a downed power line: You can catch a fatal discharge from several feet away if the ground is wet/conductive enough.
 
  • Agree
Reactions: Procrastinhater
Some years ago, I saw a show that talked about kids getting struck and killed by lightning during Little League games *on perfectly cloudless beautiful days* because of storms taking place some miles away. The Powers That Be had to implement rules about postponing games when the weather in surrounding towns indicating storms, etc.

RIP
 
When God says "fuck this guy in particular."
Some years ago, I saw a show that talked about kids getting struck and killed by lightning during Little League games *on perfectly cloudless beautiful days* because of storms taking place some miles away. The Powers That Be had to implement rules about postponing games when the weather in surrounding towns indicating storms, etc.

RIP
My waterpark that I go to in the summer prevents anybody from being in the water if there is lightning anywhere within 10 miles of the park. Because it can pop up much farther than people think.
 
A lot of people are memeing on the other soccer players falling over, but I've have lightning strikes happen that felt like they were flexing the walls of my home. I don't doubt the resulting shockwave being strong enough to knock people over.
Doubtful, if you watch carefully, they all fall at the same speed, and the guy in red BEHIND the bolt falls FORWARD into the bolt target. That wasn't a concussive blast throwing people, it was the bonkers level of amps and volts in the muddy ground tazing the ever loving shit out of anyone in the area through their feet, which were probably wet and conductive.
 
That wasn't a concussive blast throwing people, it was the bonkers level of amps and volts in the muddy ground tazing the ever loving shit out of anyone in the area through their feet, which were probably wet and conductive.
Wet ground + metal soccer cleats + wet shoes/socks. Perfect for conductivity.

They probably took the equivalent of a few dozen tazer zaps from their feet to their heads.

Very lucky they didn't have a cardiac event from that.
 
Back