OK. Despite what the authors of the paper say let's assume this really is a baseline of all the SAD deaths (66 per year? Really?).
What's the number of SAD deaths reported in those same databases post-vaccines?
If you're going to compare against a baseline you need to use the same sources used to establish that baseline.
For all we know there are fewer reported deaths than in prior years.
If this is the best data available I suggest refraining from making stupid claims about vaccine injuries. You can't back them up.
Except that the source which you claim is incomplete and unreliable, is the one covering *pre-jab* injuries.
That's important for three reasons.
First, you're assuming the unreliability of that list, necessarily propagates to the list of known athlete deaths after the jab. It doesn't follow.
Second, given the immense political and professional pressure exerted on people to sing happy songs about the jabs (including for example a regular propaganda feature on Steven Colbert's Late Night TV show, "The Vax Scene"), and the demonstrated track record of out-and-out LYING (Pfizer pushing to have data from clinical trials hidden for 75 years), and the utter and deliberate mischaracterization of deaths by the medical establishment during COVID (e.g around 2,000 cases of the flu while COVID was raging; using PCR as a diagnostic when the Nobel-Laureate inventor of the method said it shouldn't be used as such-- let alone gaming the number of cycles; counting people who died WITH Covid as dying FROM Covid, including the infamous case of the motorcycle crash) there is no reason to believe that the sources for the Lausanne data will suddenly report adverse effects *honestly*.
Third -- one of the "deBOOOOOOONKING" (Reuters, IIRC) sites "disproved" claims about side effects from VAERs by doing a word search on a single key term in VAERS; not realizing the large number of medical words which can be used to describe inflammation of the heart and/or surrounding tissue; similar games in the reporting of deaths of athletes, are (as your own source liked to say) "likely".
Do you ever recall any year in which so many athletes at the professional level, collapsed and/or died on the field? I don't.
Nice try, troll-boi.