<?xml version="1.0" encoding="ISO-8859-1"?>
<BODY.CONTENT>
<UID>
9302100498
</UID>
<PUBLICATION>
DETROIT FREE PRESS
</PUBLICATION>
<DATE>
931107
</DATE>
<TDATE>
Sunday, November 07, 1993
</TDATE>
<EDITION>
METRO FINAL
</EDITION>
<SECTION>
COM
</SECTION>
<PAGE>
1F
</PAGE>
<ILLUSTRATION>

</ILLUSTRATION>
<CAPTION>

</CAPTION>
<BYLINE>
MITCH ALBOM
</BYLINE>
<AFFILIATION>

</AFFILIATION>
<MEMO>

</MEMO>
<COPYRIGHT>
Copyright (c) 1993, Detroit Free Press
</COPYRIGHT>
<HEADLINE>
NFL SHOW GOES ON, DESPITE THE RISKS
</HEADLINE>
<SUBHEAD>

</SUBHEAD>
<CORRECTION>

</CORRECTION>
<BODY>
Maybe you see God. Maybe that's the sensation football players whisper
about, after a crunching hit coughs the life from their bodies and they
collapse like puppets into the turf. Maybe it's a  religious thing, the gates
of heaven swinging open, your maker taking a fleeting look, ready to call you
home.

  But only for a moment. Then, there is nothing. You say "fingers, move" but
your fingers  will not move. You say "legs, rise" but your legs are stiff as
wood. The gates have swung closed and you are still on the field, and macho is
replaced by fear, tears, a cry for help. "Oh, please," you pray, "not me,
please . . ." You lay there, weak as paper, as the paramedics rush out with
the stretcher.

  Tim McKyer was facedown on the Astroturf of the Minneapolis Metrodome last
Sunday, going  through all of this. No legs. No toes. No feeling. The doctors
were poking him up and down his calves and thighs.
  "Tim, can you feel this? . . ."
  He thought about his mother, watching in Port  Arthur, Texas, where
football is religion and they avoid talk of moments like this. He thought
about his wife, Fontella, whom he married several years ago. They had no kids.
 We should have had kids,  he thought.
  "Don't move him!" the doctors kept saying. "Everybody back!" McKyer, a
cornerback,  was still flat, just the way he'd landed after  the Vikings'
Robert Smith smacked a knee into his head. The impact was so great that Smith
flipped over. But Smith got up. McKyer, crumpled, could see only dark green
carpet now. A distant buzz of stadium noise seeped into his helmet. How
strange. All  these doctors, unstrapping the spine board, barking orders, "Get
ready to roll him . . . one . . . two . . ." And meanwhile, to fill the break,
cheerleaders danced, and rock music blasted from loudspeakers,  like a
carnival.
Ready for more 
  The game goes on. No surprise. This is not grade school, where you walk
the injured kid back to his house, and his mother comes running out the door.
Before  the ambulance doors were closed, football had resumed at the
Metrodome. At the hospital, McKyer asked to see the final minute on a TV set.
They rolled him around, and when the Lions scored the winning touchdown he
mumbled, "They did it. All right." He was immobile at the time.
  No surprise. Neither is the fact that McKyer, who thankfully regained all
feeling in his body -- bad concussion, they  said -- still stayed at that
Minneapolis hospital two days, for tests on his spine and brain.
  Here is the surprise: On Wednesday, McKyer was back in Detroit,  at
practice. On Thursday,  he was there  as well. And while he did not take part
in drills, today, if he feels up to it, he may play against Tampa Bay.
  And this is unbelievable.
  If one of us -- a nonprofessional athlete -- took a blow that left us
temporarily disconnected from our body, we would not be back next week for
more. We might  not be back next year. 
  "I'm ready if they let me," McKyer said Thursday, stretching gingerly  in
the Silverdome.  "The doctors  said  I'm OK."
  "Aren't you worried?" he was asked.
  "You can't think about getting hurt. That's when you get hurt."
  That is a very brave sports cliche. 
  It's a lie.
Injuries are a constant 
  Mike Utley was not thinking about getting hurt when he landed on his head
that day against the Rams. Neither was Dennis Byrd when he broke his neck last
year.  Chucky Mullins, from Mississippi, was not thinking hurt when he made
the brutal hit that left him paralyzed for life. Darryl Stingley was not
thinking hurt when he flew across the middle and landed in  a wheelchair.
  Football is like dropping bodies from a second-floor window and hoping they
land on a mattress. You needn't think about injury; it will happen. Knees will
be destroyed. Shoulders will be ripped from sockets. Perfectly healthy young
men will ensure, each week, their need for canes and crutches when they reach
their 50s.
  Tim McKyer -- or the coaching staff -- even thinking about his playing
today, despite the encouraging tests, is insane. A week ago he couldn't move.
Isn't that some kind of sign? The doctors say they're still not sure why he
lost feeling. On Thursday, as he  spoke, McKyer winced occasionally, bent
over, said, "I don't know, man, my legs feel weird." Then, in the next breath,
"I'm ready to play."
  He should not play. It's on the Lions' conscience if he does. In a normal
world, he would not even attend today's game. But in a normal world, you don't
tackle moving objects. The truth is, Sunday comes around, and for all the
noise we make, Utley, Byrd,  Mullins, Stingley, they're just names to shake
your head over before kickoff.
  This is pro football. You bandage your wounds, get back in line. Next time,
maybe you see God for real.
</BODY>
<DISCLAIMER>

</DISCLAIMER>
<KEYWORDS>

</KEYWORDS>
</BODY.CONTENT>
