Get you up to speed: British pensioner, 86, gored at wild Spanish festival which sees bulls charge through Pamplona streets | News World
A British pensioner from Halesowen was gored by bulls from the Jandilla ranch during the final bull run of the San Fermin festival in Pamplona, Spain, on 14 July 2026. He was among ten individuals taken to hospital with injuries sustained in the bullring.
Ten individuals, including one British pensioner, were taken to hospital following injuries during the bull run, although health officials have not provided updates on their conditions. The San Fermin festival, which kicked off last Monday, is scheduled to conclude at midnight with the ceremonial ‘Pobre de mi’ event marking the end of the nine-day celebration.
Health chiefs in Pamplona have stated they cannot predict the health situation of the injured British pensioner following hospital treatment, while the festival continues to draw significant international participation. Local authorities are reportedly monitoring safety measures, with the next bull run scheduled for tomorrow amid ongoing public discussions regarding the risks associated with such events.
What remains unclear — It is uncertain how the health situation of the British pensioner injured in the bull run will evolve following his hospitalisation.
British pensioner, 86, injured by bull at San Fermin festival in Pamplona

A man gored by bulls from the Jandilla ranch in Plaza Consistorial gets treatment in San Fermin festival in
(Picture: EPA)
A British pensioner has become one of the oldest ever victims of the world-famous San Fermin festival which sees bulls stampede through the Spanish streets.
The pensioner, among ten taken to hospital, is from Halesowen in the West Midlands and was hurt in the bullring at the end of the half-mile course in n the picturesque city of Pamplona.
The Brit, by far the oldest of those injured, suffered wounds to his right hand, left eyebrow and left elbow.
Health chiefs said this morning they couldn’t say how his health situation would evolve after he was taken to hospital.
The unnamed OAP became the second Brit injured during the morning bull runs at this year’s festival.
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It came after another British tourist was one of 11 people hurt in Saturday’s run.
William Mitchinson, 24, suffered an ankle injury after being knocked to the ground by one of the bulls he tried to outpace.
Speaking after his first-ever participation in this year’s fifth bull run, William told local press as he hobbled out of Navarra University Hospital after treatment: ‘I ran until the bull trampled me.
‘I’d seen the festival on social media and it looked like good fun.
‘It’s my first visit to Pamplona. I might come back another year but only for the party.’
Two people suffered gore injuries on today’s run.

Revellers run alongside Jandilla’s fighting bull during the eighth running of the bulls (Picture: AP)
One of the runners was horned in the chest near the end of the course.
Earlier by the town hall one of the six fighting bulls led by six steers broke away from the pack and charged a group of four men.
One appeared to smash his head on the ground as he was swept off his feet.
It was not immediately clear this morning if he was among the ten people taken to hospital, although health chiefs confirmed a man had suffered a gore injury to his thigh in the area where the violent knockdown occurred.
Today’s run, which lasted 2 minutes and 25 seconds, was the eighth consecutive morning revellers had taken to the streets for the traditional ‘encierros’ which are the highlight of the famous festival.
The San Fermin festival kicked off at midday last Monday with the traditional opening ceremony called the Chupinazo, with thousands of revellers dressed in the must-wear white outfits with a red bandana around their necks ending up soaked in wine and sangria.
It will be formally brought to an end at midnight with a traditional event known as ‘Pobre de mi’, Spanish for ‘Poor Me’ which involves thousand of participants gathering in the town hall square with lit candles to mark the end of the nine-day celebration.

People are injured every year at the festival (Picture: EPA)
Sixteen people have been killed during the bull runs at the annual festival, which always finishes on July 14 and was made famous by 1926 Ernest Hemingway novel ‘The Sun Also Rises’, since records began in 1910.
The most recent death was in 2009 when 27-year-old Daniel Jimeno, from Madrid, was gored in the neck by a bull called Capuchino.
Several foreigners, from Australians to Americans through to Brits and Irish, are normally among the injured.
The first of the eight bull runs in 2024, known locally as encierros, took place four hours after a San Fermin reveller collapsed and died.
Police rushed to the scene and tried to save the 40-year-old man but were unable to resuscitate him.
In 2023 a 60-year-old man from Cardiff in Wales was among those injured.
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