Michigan AD Statement on Shane Morris Situation

JonDMiller

Publisher/Founder
This was released at 12:50am Michigan time:

Statement from U-M Athletic Director Dave Brandon Regarding Student-Athlete Health and Welfare
Ultimate responsibility for the health and safety of our student-athletes resides with each team’s coach and with me, as the Director of Athletics. We are committed to continuously improving our procedures to better protect the health and welfare of our student-athletes.

I have had numerous meetings since Sunday morning to thoroughly review the situation that occurred at Saturday’s football game regarding student-athlete Shane Morris. I have met with those who were directly involved and who were responsible for managing Shane’s care and determining his medical fitness for participation.

In my judgment, there was a serious lack of communication that led to confusion on the sideline. Unfortunately, this confusion created a circumstance that was not in the best interest of one of our student-athletes. I sincerely apologize for the mistakes that were made. We have to learn from this situation, and moving forward, we will make important changes so we can fully live up to our shared goal of putting student-athlete safety first.

I have worked with Darryl Conway, my Associate Athletic Director for Student-Athlete Health and Welfare, to develop a detailed accounting of the events that occurred. Darryl is the person who oversees all athletic training personnel and serves as the liaison to the physicians we work with through the University of Michigan Health System and University Health Services.

It is important to note that our athletic trainers and physicians working with Michigan Athletics have the unchallengeable authority to remove student-athletes from the field of play. Michigan Athletics has numerous medical professionals at every football competition including certified athletic trainers and several physicians from various relevant specialties.

I, along with Darryl and our administrative and medical teams, have spent much of the last two days carefully reviewing the situation regarding Shane Morris. We now understand that, despite having the right people on the sidelines assessing our student-athletes’ well being, the systems we had in place were inadequate to handle this unique and complex situation properly.

With his permission, I can share that Shane Morris suffered an ankle injury during the third quarter of Saturday’s game. He was evaluated for that injury by an orthopedic surgeon and an athletic trainer several times during the game. With each of these evaluations it was determined that his ankle injury did not prevent him from playing.

In the fourth quarter, Shane took a significant hit and stumbled after getting up. From the field level and without the benefit of replays, medical and coaching staffs did not see the hit. Because they did not see the hit, the athletic training staff believed Shane stumbled because of his ankle injury. The team neurologist, watching from further down the field, also did not see the hit. However, the neurologist, with expertise in detecting signs of concussion, saw Shane stumble and determined he needed to head down the sideline to evaluate Shane.

Shane came off the field after the following play and was reassessed by the head athletic trainer for the ankle injury. Since the athletic trainer had not seen the hit to the chin and was not aware that a neurological evaluation was necessary, he cleared Shane for one additional play.

The neurologist and other team physicians were not aware that Shane was being asked to return to the field, and Shane left the bench when he heard his name called and went back into the game. Under these circumstances, a player should not be allowed to re-enter the game before being cleared by the team physician. This clearly identifies the need for improvements in our sideline and communication processes.

Following the game, a comprehensive concussion evaluation was completed and Shane has been evaluated twice since the game. As of Sunday, Shane was diagnosed with a probable, mild concussion, and a high ankle sprain. That probable concussion diagnosis was not at all clear on the field on Saturday or in the examination that was conducted post-game. Unfortunately, there was inadequate communication between our physicians and medical staff and Coach Hoke was not provided the updated diagnosis before making a public statement on Monday. This is another mistake that cannot occur again.

Going forward, we have identified two changes in our procedures that we will implement immediately:

We will have an athletic medicine professional in the press box or video booth to ensure that someone will have a bird’s eye view of the on-field action, have television replay available and have the ability to communicate with medical personnel on the sidelines.

We are also examining how to reinforce our sideline communication processes and how decisions will be made in order to make sure that information regarding student-athlete availability to participate is communicated effectively amongst the medical team and to our coaches.

We have learned from this experience, and will continue to improve ways to keep our student-athletes’ health and safety our number one priority.
 
"Following the game, a comprehensive concussion evaluation was completed and Shane has been evaluated twice since the game. As of Sunday, Shane was diagnosed with a probable, mild concussion, and a high ankle sprain. That probable concussion diagnosis was not at all clear on the field on Saturday or in the examination that was conducted post-game. Unfortunately, there was inadequate communication between our physicians and medical staff and Coach Hoke was not provided the updated diagnosis before making a public statement on Monday. This is another mistake that cannot occur again."

This is the biggest load of dung I have read in a while. Sure, nobody informed Hoke Monday that Morris had been diagnosed with a concussion on Sunday. Let's just assume that is true, which I don't believe to be the case...that means nobody chose to tell the head coach, before meeting with the media, one of the most important bits of information of his career and what everyone in CFB is talking about....and that Hoke didn't seek out the answers himself, by not reaching out to anyone for an update.

What a bunch of clowns.
 
"In the fourth quarter, Shane took a significant hit and stumbled after getting up. From the field level and without the benefit of replays, medical and coaching staffs did not see the hit. Because they did not see the hit, the athletic training staff believed Shane stumbled because of his ankle injury. The team neurologist, watching from further down the field, also did not see the hit. However, the neurologist, with expertise in detecting signs of concussion, saw Shane stumble and determined he needed to head down the sideline to evaluate Shane."

1) So none of Michigan's coaching or medical staff was watching the play, the play that caused their quarterback to get rocked backwards quite a bit and viciously. None of them. That's simply BS.

2) Just one person on Michigan's staff noticed the quarterback wobbling and woozy after the play?

3) That line about expertise in detecting concussions....what a load of garbage that is. None of us are medically trained in that field yet it was pretty obvious the kid had his bell rung and was shaking out the cobwebs.

This thing gets worse the more I read it.
 
"We are also examining how to reinforce our sideline communication processes and how decisions will be made in order to make sure that information regarding student-athlete availability to participate is communicated effectively amongst the medical team and to our coaches."

It would be funny if Michigan made Hoke actually wear a headset, but that's immaterial now because Brady Hoke will not be Michigan's coach next year...and Michigan deserves him the rest of this year if they are dumb enough not to replace him (and AD Brandon) before the season is over.
 
From Brian Cook of mgoblog on twitter: "This statement took so long because the medical staff refused to lie."
 
This is where Mary Sue needs to step in and fire both their a$$es. Today.

I felt she wasn't all that great of a leader at Iowa as it related to sports. Iowa really lost out when Skorton left (over the Regents)...and they have a new prez now
 
I didn't see the play. How was it compared to when Bullock was knocked unconscious on the sideline and played the rest of the game?
 
I felt she wasn't all that great of a leader at Iowa as it related to sports. Iowa really lost out when Skorton left (over the Regents)...and they have a new prez now

That's right, I forgot that she's no longer there. My comment still stands, though, that someone in a leadership position (University President) can't just let these statements be made without doing something. It's not enough to just say, "We messed up and we will do better.". It's one thing to say that you lost a game and need to do better. It's another thing entirely to say that we put a kid's health and future in danger and we have to do better. When something like that happens, you shouldn't get the opportunity to do better. And based on the statements that have come out on Sunday after the game, Monday at Hoke's regular press conference, and then this last one released in the dead of night.....either people in positions of power are flat out lying, or they are so incompetent that they shouldn't even be flipping burgers. It's one thing to have confusion as to what's going on during a game (although if Hoke would wear a headset, he might have been able to ascertain better what the heck was going on). But to still not get the information, facts, or communication right two freaking days AFTERWARDS....that's minor league stuff right there. Unfortunately for Hoke and Brandon, they play in the majors, not the minors.
 
How does no member of the coaching staff not see that hit?!? (You could enter a joke of how that explains the product on the field).

I figured the loss would be what costed Hoke his job; but this incident seals the deal. How much longer this season will he be the coach?
 
I didn't see the play. How was it compared to when Bullock was knocked unconscious on the sideline and played the rest of the game?

Didn't Adam Robinson have a pretty obvious concussion during the Michigan St game in 2010 once it was already well in hand and continue to play too?
 
Didn't Adam Robinson have a pretty obvious concussion during the Michigan St game in 2010 once it was already well in hand and continue to play too?

No, he stopped playing that game....later in the year when he was cleared, he got clobbered by OSU and was never the same...
 
No, he stopped playing that game....later in the year when he was cleared, he got clobbered by OSU and was never the same...
Actually pretty sure Adam kept playing that game then got caught later in the saison with tha cherb in Des moines

Like someone stated earlier, what about Bullock last year as well and how about
RHABDO? Hmmmmm, that whole glass house thing jon..
 
More corporate doublespeak by those trying to protect "the company" at all costs. Wasn't this the statement released @ 1AM today? The timing alone of this is suspect.
 
How does no member of the coaching staff not see that hit?!?

This.

What the heck are they watching if they don't see their QB take a hit to the head, stay down for a little bit, get up woozy, and almost fall down? Minnesota even got called for roughing the passer on the play. Can't tell for sure, but before the goes back under center you hear the crowd start to boo. Considering how the game was going, they could be booing the decision to leave him in since he was doing poorly, or they saw the replay on the video board.
 
Hell, I diagnosed a concussion the moment he was hit.

Its just basic physiology.

What a bunch of liars. Of course they saw it, at least on replay. There was a roughing call.
 
"In the fourth quarter, Shane took a significant hit and stumbled after getting up. From the field level and without the benefit of replays, medical and coaching staffs did not see the hit. Because they did not see the hit, the athletic training staff believed Shane stumbled because of his ankle injury. The team neurologist, watching from further down the field, also did not see the hit. However, the neurologist, with expertise in detecting signs of concussion, saw Shane stumble and determined he needed to head down the sideline to evaluate Shane."

1) So none of Michigan's coaching or medical staff was watching the play, the play that caused their quarterback to get rocked backwards quite a bit and viciously. None of them. That's simply BS.

2) Just one person on Michigan's staff noticed the quarterback wobbling and woozy after the play?


.

There are about 5-6 coaches up in the pressbox and one had to see this.

There was a penalty called and plenty of time for eyeballs to see that this kid was half-way knocked out.

It didnt look quite as bad as the Dan Reeves wobbling late in the NFL championship in Dallas in the '60s but the kid had a bum leg and then takes a vicious hit to the head and needs help to walk off the field.

Terrible.
 
between the NFL and big time college athletics I am blown away that so many well-educated, smart, powerful people are soooo bad at PR. I get it--it is not easy, but I am talking about just complete ineptness.
 
After listening to several ex-players and coaches talk about this I can give a pass to the coaching staff.....The medical staff is a completely different matter, it was clear Morris was concussed and how they let that get to the point of "miscommunication" is beyond me.
 

Latest posts

Top