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Kill may be back in action Saturday

His hospital stay was prolonged to ensure a proper balance of preventative medication going forward.
Kill may be back in action Saturday
Image by Mark Vancleave, Daily File Photo

 

Alert, eating and in stable condition, Gophers head football coach Jerry Kill will be released from an area hospital âĂ„Ăşsooner than later,âĂ„Ăą team physician Dr. Pat Smith said Monday.

Smith couldnâĂ„Ă´t be certain, but his gut instinct was Kill would âĂ„ĂşabsolutelyâĂ„Ăą be back on the sidelines for the next game Saturday.

Offensive coordinator Tracy Claeys said that prior to the episode Saturday, Kill had âĂ„Ăşnever missed a gameâĂ„Ăą in the 16 years theyâĂ„Ă´ve worked together, hinting that he expected his boss back as well.

Kill has had several instances of public seizures in his coaching career. He had one in 2001 and 2005 while coaching at Southern Illinois and another while taping a segment for a television show in 2006.

None of the previous incidents caused him to miss a game.

âĂ„ĂşThe reality of this disorder is this is a common problem. People live normal lifestyles with this,âĂ„Ăą Smith said. âĂ„ĂşThere is medical management with current drugs in todayâĂ„Ă´s world that can make people live absolutely normal lives. We have to make sure that we are providing that for him.âĂ„Ăą

Smith said he took responsibility for the training staff not keeping Kill adequately hydrated and said the heat, humidity, stress and fatigue may have all had a cumulative effect on the 50-year-old coach.

Smith said he would classify what Kill is afflicted with as a benign idiopathic seizure disorder.

In short, it means a harmless condition that arises spontaneously, or for which the triggers are unknown.

âĂ„ĂşThatâĂ„Ă´s a mouthful,âĂ„Ăą Smith said, âĂ„Ăşbut essentially he has a seizure disorder.âĂ„Ăą

Smith added that the reason Kill has been in the hospital this long is that the medical staff is waiting for tests to come back to determine the appropriate levels of medication to provide the coach in the future.

Those tests take 48 hours and the staff preferred to keep Kill in the hospital for that time, Smith said.

âĂ„ĂşWe have hospitalized him more as a precaution [so] that we can address those issues now and not let this occur in the future,âĂ„Ăą Smith said.

âĂ„ĂşWeâĂ„Ă´re still waiting on a few studies to make the final determination about what the best appropriate medical management will be going forward.âĂ„Ăą

Part of that is better game-day hydration, which is an easy fix.

âĂ„ĂşIâĂ„Ă´m going to be his worst enemy,âĂ„Ăą Smith joked.

He added: âĂ„ĂşWe will have measures in place as a protocol as a training staff to address that issue specifically.âĂ„Ăą

What that protocol is, Smith didnâĂ„Ă´t address specifically, but it could be as simple as having someone follow him around with a water bottle and making sure he drinks.

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