Arena football player’s touchdown celebration landed fan in hospital, lawsuit says

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An arena football player’s touchdown celebration turned into a medical emergency for one Upstate New York fan, who was rushed to the hospital with a spinal fracture, among other serious injuries, according to court filings reviewed by The Independent.

When the Albany Firebirds took on the Southwest Kansas Storm at MVP Arena on March 21, 2025 – opening day – an unnamed Firebird leapt into the stands after scoring, states a lawsuit filed April 13.

Stephen Wieland Jr. was watching from the arena’s “Party Zone,” a “premium spectator area” behind the end zone, as the player “ran directly over the barrier” and barreled into the 49-year-old, “striking [him] with significant force and propelling him approximately five feet through the air,” his complaint says.

Wieland landed on his back on the concrete floor, after which paramedics took him to the Albany Medical Center, where doctors diagnosed him with a T12 compression fracture, a traumatic rotator cuff injury to his left shoulder, and head trauma, the complaint goes on.

“The incident was captured on video and witnessed by multiple spectators present in the impact zone,” according to the complaint, which was filed in Albany County Supreme Court.

Wieland contends the Party Zone did not have barriers high enough to properly protect ticketholders, lacked adequate protective netting, and claims there was “insufficient setback distance between the spectators and the field.”

The Albany Firebirds are at at the center of a lawsuit by a fan who claims he was badly injured by an ecstatic player (Getty Images)

Further, the complaint continues, the area’s “unpadded concrete flooring” and “lack of warnings to patrons regarding the risk of player collisions” were obvious dangers that had gone unaddressed.

The team and arena operators “should have known that players would inevitably go over the barrier during play,” and that this posed a “foreseeable risk” to spectators in the Party Zone, the complaint contends. It does not name the player who scored.

Wieland, it says, continues to suffer from chronic pain and “sleep disruption.”

Attorney Scott Peterson, who is representing Wieland, told The Independent that his client is on the mend but is “still dealing with the significant impact of this incident.”

“Arena football provides an exciting, up-close experience, and that’s exactly what makes venues like MVP Arena special,” Peterson said on Thursday. “But that proximity to the action comes with a responsibility, and… it’s critical that they account for the reality of the game and the safety of the spectators.”

Arena football, unlike more traditional football, puts fans right next to the action with little distance between the sideline and the seating area.

What happened to Wieland “was not a freak occurrence,” according to Peterson, but rather, “a foreseeable consequence of the sport and lack of safety measures by the arena.”

“Mr. Wieland wasn’t taking an unreasonable risk,” Peterson said. “He was standing exactly where he was told to stand.”

Stephen Wieland was watching the Albany Firebirds play at the city’s MVP Arena when he was allegedly injured by a player celebrating a touchdown (MVP Arena)

Wieland’s case, Peterson argued, “is about making sure venues and organizations take their responsibility seriously, so that fans can enjoy the game safely.”

Tickets in the Party Zone range from $45 to $62, and generally include all-you-can-eat food and soft drinks, along with access to a private bar and restrooms. The Firebirds scored 11 touchdowns that day to defeat the Storm in a 78-20 win. The team was undefeated in 2025, and defeated the Nashville Kats 60-57 that June to bring home the Arena Crown Championship.

Fan injuries amid touchdown celebrations are rare, but do happen.

Last year, University of Kentucky running back Seth McGowan threw a football into the stands after a touchdown, accidentally striking the opposing team’s quarterback’s grandfather in the head.

Players have also hurt themselves while celebrating a touchdown, such as Washington Redskins quarterback Gus Frerotte, who in 1997 , spraining his neck and putting himself in the hospital.

In 2001, following a successful 42-yard field goal, rookie Arizona Cardinals placekicker Bill Gramatica jumped in the air and tore his ACL upon landing.

Firebirds officials did not respond to a request for comment.

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