An online fundraiser started by the Buffalo Bills safety Damar Hamlin registered more than $3 million in donations just hours after the NFL star suffered cardiac arrest during a game on Monday.
The Bills said in a statement that the 24-year-old's heartbeat was restored while on the field, but that he was sedated and remains in critical condition. The NFL suspended the game between the Bills and the Cincinnati Bengals as condolences for Hamlin poured in from across the sports world.
Fans also showed their support by pouring millions of dollars into a charity that Hamlin started in 2020, shortly before he was picked in the sixth round of the 2021 NFL draft.
"As I embark on my journey to the NFL, I will never forget where I come from and I am committed to using my platform to positively impact the community that raised me," Hamlin wrote on the foundation's GoFundMe page.
The Chasing M Foundation was running a campaign to purchase toys for children in affected by the pandemic in McKees Rocks, Pa., where he grew up.
A cached version of the GoFundMe page shows that before Hamlin's collapse, the foundation had raised a little over $2,900.
As of 8 a.m. on Tuesday, the fundraiser topped over $3.3 million in donations, 135,000% more than its goal. Thousands of fans across NFL teams shared words of support on the page, which GoFundMe verified on Twitter.
Here is the verified GoFundMe Demar Hamlin started in December to help kids have a magical Christmas.
— GoFundMe (@gofundme) January 3, 2023
Following his injury on the field tonight, fans across the country are showing their support for him and his family by donating to his fundraiser 💚https://t.co/wcubpBpdd1
Buffalo Bills fans, who call themselves the Mafia, have a track record of responding to tragedy with acts of charity.
When Bills Quarterback Josh Allen lost his grandmother, they donated $1.1 million to build a new wing at a local hospital. They also raised $75,000 for the favorite charity of a rival player, the Baltimore Ravens' Lamar Jackson, after he was removed from a 2021 playoff game for a concussion.
Hamlin, a second-year safety who played for the University of Pittsburgh, collapsed after tackling Bengals wide receiver Tee Higgins in the game's first quarter. Hamlin is being treated at the University of Cincinnati Medical Center.
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