Student died after slipping while using weights machine at the gym

Mohammed Farraj
Mohammed Farraj died in the gym when the bar from a weights machine fell on his head, an inquest has heard

A medical student died in the gym when the bar from a weights machine fell on his head, an inquest has heard.

Mohammed Farraj had been using an aerobic step to perform calf raises while using equipment called a Smith machine at the gym at the University of East Anglia in Norwich.

Detective sergeant Robert Waring said in a statement read by the coroner’s officer that a Smith machine is a ‘horizontal bar bell (which) runs vertically up and down on rails’.

The aerobic step was not part of the machine.

Mr Waring said the incident at the Sportspark gym on the evening of October 16 last year was captured on CCTV.

‘It’s clear from watching the CCTV footage that this was a tragic accident,’ he said.

He said that the 21-year-old was performing calf raises while using a ‘plastic step aerobic block’ and ‘the plastic block can then be seen to tip towards him’.

He said that the bar ‘drops’ and ‘forces his neck to the ground’.

Mr Waring said a safety feature on the machine was a set of adjustable stops which ‘should be set to the highest position possible’ to stop the weight bar.

He said they had been ‘left in the very lowest position’.

Fitness gym bench press equipment (Smith machine)
Mohammed Farraj had been using an aerobic step to perform calf raises while using equipment called a Smith machine(Picture: Getty Images)

The officer also described the use of the plastic step as ‘incorrect’, adding it was ‘intended for a different purpose’ and that a weight disk could have been used instead.

Norfolk assistant coroner Johanna Thompson, concluding that Mr Farraj’s death was an accident, said that ‘safety stops on the equipment hadn’t been appropriately adjusted prior to’ Mr Farraj performing his calf raise exercises.

‘He used a step aerobic block to stand on,’ she said.

‘In doing so he slipped, causing the weight he had been lifting to fall onto him. This resulted in him sustaining a fatal head injury.’

Gym user Dr Trey Koev said he had been ‘less than two metres away’ from Mr Farraj, using another piece of gym equipment – the incline bench press – interchangeably with his gym partner.

He said Mr Farraj had been using the Smith machine ‘with a stepping platform to perform calf raises’.

‘All of a sudden whilst my gym partner was finishing his set I saw him slip onto the platform,’ said Dr Koev, who is a research scientist at UEA.

‘The bar carrying the weight came down.’

University student dies after incident at gym A university student has died following an incident at a gym. Emergency services were called to the University of East Anglia's Sportspark, in Norwich, at about 19:00 BST following reports of a medical incident. Norfolk Police said a man in his 20s, who had been using gym equipment, was pronounced dead at the scene. A spokesperson for the university confirmed a student had died and the site would remain closed. "Emergency services were called to the Sportspark gym shortly after 7pm following reports of a medical incident involving a man who had been using gym equipment," the police spokesperson said in a statement. "A man, aged in his 20s, was treated by paramedics but was sadly pronounced dead at the scene. His family have been informed.
Emergency services at the University of East Anglia’s Sportspark, in Norwich (Picture: Steven Whitear)

He said Mr Farraj ‘struggled to his feet very rapidly then tumbled, then both my gym partner and I rushed to him as we were the closest to him’.

Dr Koev said there had been red-coloured weights on either end of the bar – indicating 25kg each – and the bar weighed approximately 15kg, with the total weight as 65kg.

He said he ‘heard a loud bang of the bar landing down’.

Dr Koev’s gym partner, Dr Damian Laba, said he was using the bench press when he heard a bang, ‘stood up and turned round and saw Mohammed collapsing on the floor’.

Dr Laba, who is a consultant anaesthetist at the Norfolk and Norwich University Hospital, said he ‘saw blood coming out of (Mr Farraj’s) nose and mouth’.

‘I realised this is potentially a life-threatening injury and I shouted for help to the Sportspark staff, to the reception,’ he said, adding that he attempted CPR before Mr Farraj died at the scene.

Benjamin Price, head of sports operations at UEA Sportspark, said: ‘It appears Mohammed followed another person who had been using that equipment.

‘It appears they had put the stops at the lowest level to perform the exercise they had chosen to perform – a hip thrust exercise.’

He said that it appeared a warning about the stops had not been on the Smith machine at the time, but was now in place.

The inquest was told Mr Farraj had a fast-track induction to the gym in October 2022.

His father, Hashim Farraj, said in a statement read by the coroner’s officer that his son was a devout Muslim and ‘loved life’.

Mr Farraj said his son grew up at the family home in Stoke-on-Trent, was part of a boxing club and ‘took his fitness and his health very seriously’.

‘He liked to go to the gym and would run 10k in the morning on a regular basis,’ he said.

He added that he had been training for an Ironman triathlon event.

The coroner extended her condolences to the family and friends of Mr Farraj.

The UEA Sportspark said in a statement after the conclusion of the inquest in Norwich that it was ‘deeply saddened’ by the death of Mr Farraj.

‘The safety of our gym’s users is, and always will be, our priority,’ the statement continued.

‘Following this incident, a full investigation took place, by the police and the HSE, who were both satisfied with the arrangements in place.

‘UEA Sportspark has co-operated with fully the coroner’s inquiry and acknowledges the conclusion of the inquest.’

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