
Kilmarnock's Stryjek 'never had doubt' about return from heart surgery
Stryjek 'never had doubt' about return from heart surgeryImage source, SNSImage caption, Max Stryjek has played the latest two games for KilmarnockByClive Lindsay and Martin DowdenBBC Sport ScotlandPublished34 minutes...
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Breaking news from the world of sport: Stryjek 'never had doubt' about return from heart surgeryImage source, SNSImage caption, Max Stryjek has played the latest two games for KilmarnockByClive Lindsay and Martin DowdenBBC Sport ScotlandPublished34 minutes agoDescribed as a "walking miracle" by his previous manager for his rapid recovery from life-saving open heart surgery in November, Kilmarnock goalkeeper Max Stryjek has revealed that his condition had been a ticking time bomb with which he has lived for the past 10 years. But the 29-year-old Pole insists that, despite six months on the sidelines, he "never had a doubt" that he would return to playing football. Stryjek made his first appearance since October in last month's 1-0 defeat in Aberdeen then kept a clean sheet at the weekend in a 3-0 win over Dundee United that lifted his side above St Mirren and out of the Scottish Premiership's relegation play-off spot.
Now he has opened up on the condition that led Kilmarnock to reveal six months ago that he would sit out a match against Heart of Midlothian because annual screening had picked up something that required further investigation. 9m bid for Sassuolo's Doig' - gossip Published5 hours agoWhat are European stakes for Scottish clubs in closing games? Published4 hours agoCeltic could win double - but is change inevitable?
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Published19 hours agoFormer Livingston and Wycombe Wanderers goalkeeper Stryjek, who returned to the Premiership last summer after a spell with Jagiellonia Bialystok in his homeland, revealed that his aorta, the body's largest artery, "was a bit bigger than usual". "I think the margin for normal human being is 40-41 millimetres is maximum you can have," he explained. "Mine rose to like 55 and there was a danger of being basically ripped apart and I would just collapse and die.
"So they just told me, listen, there's a high risk of that, so you need to have operation as soon as possible. "Stryjek admits it was a frightening moment, but it was not a complete shock. "When I moved to Sunderland when I was 16, obviously we had all the medical tests," he said.
"Then we got to the point where I was like 18, 19, so 10 years ago, when they actually told me like, listen, you've got this issue, it might be in the future, you might need an operation for it. "I wasn't really stressed about it, so I just thought, okay, it's something I've got, I have to look after myself, look after my body and then, 10 years later, I'm getting operation done, which I never thought I will have to deal with, but you know, life, it's so unpredictable. "Stryjek felt confident he was "in really good hands" when he travelled to London Bridge Hospital for surgery.
"I knew a doctor who was doing the operation - I think he made 1,500 operations by himself and there was only 3,000 operations in the world made," he said. "He pushed the confidence inside me and I just knew I'm going to get back as soon as possible and everything went to the plan.
The story has climbed to the top of the sports agenda, with fans and analysts following closely.





