Tulane RB Devon Walker facing Paralysis – From WWLTV

Tulane player seriously injured in collision will need spinal surgery . Credit: Tom Gilbert / Associated Press

Tulane’s Devon Walker, far left, watches as teammate Zach Davis takes down Tulsa’s Willie Carter during an NCAA colllege football game in Tulsa, Saturday, Sept. 8, 2012. Later in the game, Walker was seriously hurt in a head-to-head collision with a teammate.

Print
printEmail
Email this article|MORE
MORE!X DiggDeliciousTumblrShare on TumblrLinkedInStumbleUponNewsvineReddit Pinterestwwltv.com
Posted on September 8, 2012 at 1:42 PM

Updated today at 10:15 PM

By ROCHELLE HINES and JUSTIN JUOZAPAVICIUS / Associated Press

TULSA, Okla. (AP) — Tulane safety Devon Walker fractured his spine in a head-to-head collision with a teammate during a game in Tulsa, the team doctor said Saturday.

Dr. Buddy Savoie said during a postgame news conference that Walker is in stable condition and will need spinal surgery in the “the next day or two.”

“He was stable when we transported him,” Savoie said. “I do not think, based on the information we have, his life was ever in danger.”

Tulsa was leading 35-3 and facing a fourth-and-2 with the ball at the 33-yard line when the Golden Hurricane called timeout. Tulane then called timeout.

When play resumed, Tulsa quarterback Cody Green tossed a short pass to Willie Carter, who caught it at about the 28, and turned upfield. He was tackled around the 18-yard line, with defensive tackle Julius Warmsley and Walker sandwiching him and apparently smashing the crowns of their helmets into each other.

Medical personnel from both teams came out about 12:37 p.m. to attend to Walker as he lay on the field.

Savoie said after the game that Walker “actually never completely lost consciousness” and was breathing.

About 12:52 p.m., he was lifted onto a stretcher and loaded into a waiting ambulance about two minutes later. The ambulance drove off the field about 1 p.m.

FOX Sports reported a hush went over the crowd at H.A. Stadium as Walker was attended to on the field, and that several coaches were in tears. Spectators bowed their heads as someone on the field led the stadium in prayer.

The game resumed at 1:20 p.m.

Walker is a senior majoring in cell and molecular biology. His brother, Raynard, told The Associated Press that their mother was watching the game on television when her son was injured.

Tulane head coach Curtis Johnson said after the 45-10 loss that while Walker was on the field, Johnson told Walker that he was praying for him and that help was on the way.

He said the mood among players was somber, and called the day his most difficult ever.

“Just seeing a young man, one of our family members, on the ground. It was just difficult for our guys,” Johnson said in the postgame conference. “It’s no excuse, but I don’t know if they could have focused.

“It was tremendous that they finished the game, as I thought about just saying `Hey look, let’s not do anything else. Let’s just get on the road and go.’ ”

About watchdogofladisability

Hi, My name is Jason W. Weill and I am a 2007 graduate of the University of Louisiana at Lafayette as well as an individual diagnosed with Asbergers Syndrome, an Autism Spectrum Disorder. I created Watchdog of La Disability because I am a non-partisan watchdog who not only holds our leaders accountable in Baton Rouge but also turns heads. Watchdog of La Disability will also focus on important Disability related issues using the most powerful media sources in TV,Print, and Radio: KTBS-TV Shreveport, WWL AM/FM/TV New Orleans along with the Times Picayune Newspaper and WAFB-TV along with the Advocate in Baton Rouge. I hope you find my Watchdog side to be of use because being a watchdog means being fair to both sides and holding anyone accountable who decides to take avantage of the disabled.
This entry was posted in Uncategorized. Bookmark the permalink.

Leave a comment