Bullfighter’s chilling final words before de,ath

Renowned Spanish matador Iván Fandiño tragically di,ed in 2017 after being gored by a bull during a festival in southwest France.
The incident occurred at the Aire-sur-l’Adour bullfighting event, where the experienced 36-year-old lost his footing after becoming entangled in his cape.
Keep reading to know more about his chilling final moments, which are remembered by many even today.
During the fight, Fandiño tripped over his cape and fell to the ground, where the charging bull struck him with its horn. The animal, weighing nearly half a tonne, gored him in the torso, puncturing several vital organs, including his lungs.
Despite being conscious as he was carried out of the arena, Fandiño was bleeding heavily. Witnesses later reported his final words: “Hurry up, I’m dying.” He suffered a fatal heart attack en route to the hospital.

Fellow matador Juan del Álamo, who went on to ki,ll the bull, expressed disbelief at the turn of events: “I can’t believe it. None of us understand how it could have happened; it was all so fast. The bull knocked him down with its hindquarters and he fell face down.”
Fandiño had faced serious injuries in the past. In 2014, he was knocked unconscious in the ring in Bayonne, France, and in 2015, he was tossed into the air during a fight in Pamplona, Spain. Still, his de,ath shocked the bullfighting world, marking the first time a matador had di,ed in France in nearly a century. The last was Isidoro Mari Fernando, who di,ed in Béziers in 1921, according to Sud-Ouest, a French regional newspaper.
In Spain, tributes poured in following Fandiño’s de,ath, including one from King Felipe VI, who honoured him as a “great bullfighting figure.” Then-Prime Minister Mariano Rajoy also paid respects.
Fandiño’s ath came less than a year after another high-profile fatality in the bullring: Spanish matador Víctor Barrio, who was gored to d,eath during a televised event — the first matador to die in Spain in three decades.
Bullfighting remains a highly controversial tradition. Though banned in some regions, it was declared legal in France in 2012, with courts ruling it part of the country’s local cultural heritage. Spain, too, continues to protect the practice, despite growing calls from animal rights advocates for a total ban.