Tuesday, September 26, 2006 - The Michigan Daily - 11 Rice football player dies after collapse at practice HOUSTON (AP) - A Rice University freshman football player died yesterday, a day after collapsing during a light work- out. Dale Lloyd, a 19-year-old defensive back, collapsed on the field about 5 p.m. Sunday but was conscious when taken to a hospital by ambulance. He died about 9 a.m. yesterday, school officials said. "I just can't describe the pain we're feel- ing right now and the shock," Rice athletic director Chris Del Conte said. "It will take a long time to digest. The coaches are crushed. This is a tough time for all of us." Del Conte said Lloyd collapsed while the team was doing some light running. Although he didn't complain of anything specific, he told team trainers he didn't feel right. "No one knows what happened," Del Conte said. "It's a mystery." An autopsy is pending. Coaches met with the team Monday afternoon to talk about Lloyd's death. "He was a tremendous student who hap- pened to play football,' Del Conte said, fighting back tears. "His smile just lit up the room." Lloyd played in Rice's season opener against Houston but didn't play the last three games. The team planned to redshirt him. Rice is scheduled to travel to face Army on Saturday. Del Conte said he hasn't made a decision on the status of that game. "The Rice Owl family has suffered a devastating loss," Rice coach Todd Gra- ham said in a statement. "Dale was a tremendous person with the heart of a champion." Lloyd played football and baseball at Houston's Lamar High School, was select- ed to the Who's Who Among American High School Students and volunteered with the Mayor's Youth Council. He is survived by his parents, Dale and Bridgette Lloyd, and two brothers. The Madden curse lives on with Shaun Alexander out indefinitely due to a broken foot. Seahawks lose MV1P ","- ifi+ it 1V V L r1 1in KIRKLAND, Wash. (AP) - League MVP Shaun Alexander has a broken left foot and will be lost to the Seat- tle Seahawks for at least a couple of weeks. Coach Mike Holmgren said yester- day that a bone scan revealed Alex- ander sustained a "small crack" and "displaced fracture" on a non-weight- bearing bone in his foot sometime during the Seahawks' 42-30 win over the New York Giants on Sunday. Alex- ander ran for 47 yards on 20 carries before sitting out the fourth quarter, which began with Seattle leading 42-3. The coach said last season's NFL rushing leader was on crutches inside team headquarters yesterday. "You lose the MVP for a while, it's a hit," Holmgren said. "Let's face it, he's the MVP. We're not going to sugarcoat it." Alexander missed practices last Wednesday and Thursday because of soreness from a bone bruise he sus- tained while rushing for 51 yards on 19 carries in the Sept. 10 season opener at Detroit. Holmgren said that bone bruise led to the small crack. Alexander will miss at least Sunday night's showdown at Chicago, which is also 3-0. Seattle has its bye the fol- lowing week before playing at division rival St. Louis on Oct. 15. "I don't think it will be lengthy," Holmgren said. "He just has to stay off of it and let it heal." Holmgren said he could not yet spec- ify how long last season's league rush- ing champion would be out. "We're looking at a few weeks, let's put it that way," Holmgren said. "The good thing is, it's just a small, little crack _ if you want to talk about a good thing." Alexander has started 69 of the last 70 games for the Seahawks. His only absence in that span was a 2002 start that he missed to help with the birth of his first daughter. He entered that game in the second quarter. Last season, Alexander rushed for 1,880 yards and 27 touchdowns. He has just 187 yards and an average of 2.9 yards per carry through three games. His career average is 4.5 yards per rush. He has gained fewer than 100 yards in each of Seattle's three games this season, his first such streak in two years. Sunday, the Seahawks welcomed former Super Bowl MVP Deion Branch by featuring four-wide receiver forma- tions, and Matt Hasselbeck threw a franchise record-tying five touchdown passes. Maurice Morris will make his fourth career start for Alexander against the Bears. Morris rushed 15 times for 18 yards against the Giants on Sunday. Bullet fragment removed from head of Duquesne player PITTSBURGH (AP) - Doctors of swelling. The fragments that which would have resulted in paraly- removed a bullet fragment yester- remain still pose a problem - if they sis. day from the head of Sam Ashaolu, shift into vital areas of the brain, they Ranked by several scouting servic- the most seriously injured of five could cause a dramatic change in es as one of the top five junior college Duquesne University basketball play- Ashaolu's condition. transfers in the country, Baldonado ers shot on campus. It's too early in Ashaolu's rehabili- had been expected to be an impact The fragment, initially believed to tation to tell whether he will move player at Duquesne, rebuilding after a be an intact slug, was removed from normally or play basketball again, but 3-24 record last season. behind his left ear, Duquesne officials his improvement has been rapid and He's moving around and looking said. The player's medical team now dramatic. .great," Everhart said. "We may have believes Ashaolu, a junior forward He has stopped receiving oxygen, him running this week." from Toronto, Canada, has three bul- several days after doctors removed The other three players who were let fragments remaining in his head. his ventilator. shot - Shawn James, Kojo Men- Ashaolu, fighting for his life a week "When you think where he was sah and Aaron Jackson - all have ago following the early morning Sept. a week ago, I couldn't be happier," returned to class. Neither James nor 17 shootings, moved from his Mercy Everhart said. Mensah were eligible this season Hospital bed to a chair yesterday - Duquesne officials said they hope after the former prep school team- the first stage of rehabilitation efforts Ashaolu can move from the intensive mates transferred to Duquesne this to get him back on his feet. care unit to a rehabilitation facility in year to be reunited. Duquesne coach Ron Everhart joked the near future. Mensah might miss up to eight his reputation as a taskmaster might Ashaolu's family, in Pittsburgh weeks of practice. have proven beneficial to Ashaolu, overseeing their brother's care, has In honor of Ashaolu and the other who remains in serious condition. set up a fund to help offset the fami- injured players, Duquesne football "The doctors were trying to get him ly's medical and travel expenses. players and spectators wore wrist- to move into the chair," Everhart told Stuard Baldonado, the 6-foot-7 bands with the number "5" during The Associated Press after a lengthy junior college transfer who was hos- Saturday's game against Sacred Heart visit with Ashaolu. "My assistant pitalized until Friday, planned to - representing the number of play- coach, Daryn Freedman, told him that resume classes yesterday evening. ers involved but the number Ashaolu coach Everhart was coming and want- Shot in the lower back and left arm, planned to wear this season. ed him to be in his chair. Daryn said his rehabilitation might require a red- Ashaolu's brother, Olu, a Texas Sam got up immediately and went to shirt this season. high school basketball player and one the chair without saying a word." The bullet that struck Baldonado in of the nation's most recruited juniors, Doctors had been reluctant to the lower back was about one-quar- is expected to change his number to remove any bullet fragments because ter inch from hitting his spinal cord, "5" in Sam's honor this season. Our scholarship covers tuition, textbooks and supplies and even gives you a monthly stipend for living expenses. But it's the experience you'll gain after graduation that sets this program apart. As an Air Force dentist, you'll be in a supportive team environment where teaching and mentoring are ongoing. You'll have exposure to various specialties, and the weight of emergencies or difficult cases won't rest on your shoulders alone. 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