One runner gored in the face at Spain’s San Fermin bull run festival

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The six bulls and accompanying steers charged through crowds of thrill-seekers who packed the narrow street course in Pamplona
People dressed in white with red neckerchiefs run from bulls on the brick streets of Pamplona.
Participants dodge running bulls during the San Fermin festival in Pamplona, northern Spain, on Friday. Jorge Guerrero / AFP via Getty Images

PAMPLONA, Spain — A runner was gored in the face and many more were fortunate to not be seriously injured during a chaotic bull run at Spain’s San Fermin festival on Saturday.

The six bulls and accompanying steers charged through crowds of thrill-seekers who packed the narrow street course in Pamplona. The huge animals knocked down bodies to the cobblestones, and stumbling runners caused several pileups during the two-and-a-half-minute run from the pen to the bull ring where bullfighters will kill the bulls later in the day.

People dressed in white with red neckerchiefs run from bulls on the brick streets of Pamplona.
Many runners appeared completely unaware when bulls were breathing down their necks and, instead of trying to gore them, just shoved them out of the way.Jorge Guerrero / AFP via Getty Images

One runner was pierced by a horn in the face, while 12 more people needed medical treatment for an assortment of knocks, according to the University of Navarra Hospital.

A black bull broke away from the pack early in the 875-meter (957-yard) run and plowed into a group of people, smacking one full in the side of the face with a horn. It was not clear if that was the moment of the goring.

Many runners appeared completely unaware when bulls were breathing down their necks and, instead of trying to gore them, just shoved them out of the way.

Saturday’s was the fifth morning run of the eight-day festival in northern Spain.

People dressed in white with red neckerchiefs run from bulls on the brick streets of Pamplona.
Observers watch from safe distance as bulls from the Cebada Gago bull ranch make their way through the streets of Pamplona on Wednesday.Ander Gillenea / AFP via Getty Images

This year’s festival comes 100 years since the publication of Ernest Hemingway’s novel “The Sun Also Rises,” whose publication launched the San Fermin festival to international fame.

The last death at San Fermin’s bull runs occurred in 2009, but gorings and broken bones are common, partly due to the large number of novice bull runners and foreign tourists who join the experienced locals.

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