IFWT_Nets superfan 1

If you’ve ever been to the Barclays Center to watch a Brooklyn Nets game then you’ve seen Nets’ “superfan” Jeffrey Gamblero.  He became widely known however after he was kicked out of Madison Square Garden during the Nets game against the New York Knicks.  According to Gamblero and his family, the event severely changed and affected him.  Now he’s gone…

Shay Marie

Jeffrey Gamblero, a popular Brooklyn Nets fan, died Sunday night due to injuries he sustained when he jumped out of a second-story window at his father’s house in Flushing, Queens, on Saturday night.

Gamblero, who was recently in the news after being taken out of Madison Square Garden by security without his prosthetic leg, sustained severe brain damage and a fractured spinal cord as a result of the fall, according to his fiancee, Kristi Evans.

Evans, in an interview earlier Sunday at the hospital, said she believed the Dec. 2 incident during a Nets-Knicks game at MSG changed Gamblero for the worse.

“After that, he was a completely different person,” an emotional Evans said. “He was paranoid. He was erratic. He was frightened. He was horrified. He was a bit delusional. And he was having a lot of trouble sleeping. He couldn’t sleep at all. When he would sleep or try to sleep, it would only take about 10 to 15 minutes before he would wake up screaming, covered in sweat.”

“If you try to stay the same after a life-changing event, then you’re lying to yourself because when your life has changed you are now a different person,” Gamblero said Friday in an interview with OurBKSocial.com that was published to YouTube. “I mean, I even got alter-egos going and stuff, but I’m not going to get into detail because the world’s not ready for that.

“I had the worst week of my life,” he continued. “You guys don’t understand, but I’m putting myself through the same training that I did when I lost my leg. When my leg got chopped off, I was [feeling] horror and trauma, and I had to focus on getting back to what I had to do.”

The next day, Gamblero went to a friend’s house, then told Evans he was going to stay with his father, Sylvester, that night. Evans told him she thought it would be a good idea, so Gamblero could get some peace of mind. But an hour-and-a-half after Gamblero arrived, Evans got a call from Sylvester saying Gamblero had jumped out of a window.

“He’s never, ever exhibited any suicidal tendencies,” Evans said. “He jumped out of the bed, ran down the hallway … and then threw himself out of a window headfirst and landed on his head.”

ESPN