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Lyndon Dykes viewing soccer differently after pneumonia scare

Lyndon Dykes has spoken of his "scary" battle with pneumonia which left him hospitalised and struggling to breathe.

The QPR striker had to come off in a match against Swansea in January due to illness and, despite returning to training, he eventually had to seek medical help and spent eight concerned days in a hospital bed.

The 27-year-old former Livingston forward recuperated and returned to action against Watford earlier this month and, after three appearances for his club, he joined up with Steve Clarke's squad this week for the upcoming Euro 2024 qualifiers against Cyprus and Spain at Hampden Park.

However, his recent experiences have left their mark on Dykes, who said: "It was scary. I had flu symptoms and I played against Swansea and tried to battle on but had to come off.

"Walking into a critical illness wasn’t very nice. It went from zero to 100 pretty quick. It was concerning.

"My breathing was heavy, you could see my chest move quite a lot and it was quite hard to get my breaths out.

"It is not a nice feeling. I didn’t have any energy and couldn’t get out of bed. I couldn’t do much.

"I was on antibiotics and medication that week, but it didn’t touch it.

"I needed a CT scan and that’s when I knew there was pneumonia in my lungs and by that time I was struggling to breathe and it was hard to move around.

"I was in hospital for eight days and it was quite tough. I wish no one to be in that situation.

"But I am feeling much better, happy to be back on the pitch playing football and not in a hospital bed."

Dykes has scored eight goals in 26 appearances for Scotland but admits football became of no importance to him during his spell in hospital.

He said: "It opens your eyes a bit. You think about your health.

"The days when I was

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