Brandon Statement On Morris Incident Comment Count

Brian

In Full:

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 beginning 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 communications 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.

Comments

Brian

September 30th, 2014 at 2:07 AM ^

They wouldn't say "lie." They would say something like "perspective." This is the kind of statement that every word is combed over, every word is fought over. There were immense fights over various words. The right ones got in and were surrounded by attempted mitigation. 

Brian

September 30th, 2014 at 2:23 AM ^

I don't think "wow just wow" or "incredible" or "paranoid" is justified here, guys. There is reality, and then there is how that is presented, and people are fighting over both halves of that all the time. For the word concussion to make the final thing is an achievement given the events preceding this statement. Because that is *all* that matters in the PR/reality war. That single word. 

Is that a cover up? No. It's there, that word. That is going to  be a shitstorm tomorrow. I only have small windows into these things. I do think that this was a battle that the right people won and the wrong people dressed up. 

Maybe I just have a dimmer opinion of Brandon PR than the majority?

Don

September 30th, 2014 at 9:39 AM ^

Brian, if there was even the slightest argument about including the word "concussion" in the 1am press statement, it was an attempt to cover things up.

if the right people—I assume you mean the medical people—had to fight a fucking "battle" of even the mildest sort to get their professional medical diagnosis put in the statement, that's an attempt to cover things up.

It's an attempt by employees of the University of Michigan—the same university that prominently highlights its medical school and health system in virtually every piece of communications it puts out about itself—to alter a medical professional's diagnosis for PR purposes.

If corroboration of what your source is telling you about how things went down comes out, then the situation will escalate rapidly far beyond what it is already.

aiglick

September 30th, 2014 at 2:30 AM ^

Thank you for your hard work.

Thanks to the medical staff for helping to get the truth out.

Thanks to so many of the community taking action even at this late hour.

Brandon and Hoke: I know you'll never see this but please just resign in the morning and just apologize for the sake of the university you claim to love and represent.

Dang tomorrow/today is a work day.

westwardwolverine

September 30th, 2014 at 8:43 AM ^

Seriously. 

Here's an honest question: Why would some "respected" posters try to downplay a cheap shot to Michigan's quarterback's head? What is the reasoning behind that? What is the gain behind intentionally trying to not see Shane Morris get his chin caved in by the brunt of Cockran's helmet? 

Some people just baffle me. 

Reader71

September 30th, 2014 at 9:41 AM ^

I think we worked back from the idea that because Morris was allowed back into the game after talking with Schmidt, he must have been cleared of a concussion. Wrong. I held Schmidt in high regard, and even though I thought he could have fucked up, I just didn't believe it. Personal biases blinded me. Wrong. Wrong, wrong, wrong. I am the wrongest person in the world. Even still, he was clearly hit more on the pads than on the helmet, but like I said, even a small hit to head can cause a concussion. I never ruled out a concussion, I just honestly believed, from my long and personal interactions with Schmidt, that this didn't happen. I am sorry if anyone was ever swayed by my wrongness. I feel like Franco Harris over here, defending the indefensible because I can't believe in the alternative. The alternative is fucking me in the ass right now.

go16blue

September 30th, 2014 at 9:56 AM ^

I said previously that I have a friend on the athletic training staff (a student) who insisted that there was no concussion, and that was the truth. He was still saying this as late as yesterday. If anything, the fact that they can't get their full training staff on the same page about an injury like this reflects even more poorly.

Jon06

September 30th, 2014 at 2:26 AM ^

This statement says exactly what needs to have been said. The only issue is the utter incompetence in producing and communicating it. Given access to the doctors, I could have written the goddamn thing in less time than it took them to let Shane walk back on the field. 

Reading between the lines, it sounds like Brandon wanted to avoid these frank concessions of the concussion and the communication problem. But the medical professionals behaved as employees at a public university must, and insisted on the release of a thorough and honest statement. I said it in the 'silver lining' thread and I'll say it here: acknowledging what happened and getting things fixed when you fuck up is the way Michigan operates. It does not seem to be the way that Dave Brandon operates, and that is why he needs to go.

Re: the press conference: Hoke was hung out to dry on this, and I hope he's fucking livid. I don't know if I'm back in his corner--as much as I think having failsafes in place falls in the AD's lap, Hoke has to keep himself more informed than he was. I think going forward, given that this statement says exactly what needed to be said, and exactly what should have been said about 3 minutes after the game ended, I think Hoke can be saved if he shows total contrition about the failure that occurred on his watch together with righteous anger that there was so much foot-dragging in admitting what happened. But Brandon must go.

caup

September 30th, 2014 at 3:09 AM ^

that Shane was concussed then you are incredibly gullible.  In his presser, Hoke admitted to the reporters that he saw and spoke to Shane on two different occasions since the diagnosis!  What, you don't think that came up?  At all?  Puh-lease!!

 

Sure, Hoke is an idiot. But he is also a fucking liar.

Blue2000

September 30th, 2014 at 7:02 AM ^

Sure, Hoke is an idiot. But he is also a fucking liar.

Sadly I think this is right.  Brandon's statement says that beginning Sunday morning, he met with everyone involved with Shane's care.  That had to include Hoke.  But at his presser, Hoke said that he hadn't spoken with Brandon about this.  One of those statements is almost certainly untrue. (It's "possible" that "involved in Shane's care" is a phrase intentionally crafted to exclude Hoke and to refer only to medical staff.  But given the firestorm, and Brandon's concession that he needed to look into the matter, it's highly improbable that he wound't havespoken to the head coach first.)

bluebyyou

September 30th, 2014 at 6:35 AM ^

Brandon claims to have had numerous meetings with those involved with the situation.  One assumes that the head coach, the central figure in the controversy, would be one of those members, yet Hoke denies meeting with Brandon, at least before the presser.  Is Hoke going to come back and say that they met yesterday afternoon?

From Hoke's presser yesterday. 

So, Brady, you haven’t had any conversations with Dave Brandon, or have you, about this or about job performance in general?

“No.”

In the last day or two…

“No.”

So he wasn’t involved in the discussion about the Shane Morris injury?

“Not that I know of.”

ESNY

September 30th, 2014 at 7:34 AM ^

Does Hoke make it through the day? Does Brandon? Through 48 hrs of media shit storm and 24 hrs after the apparent diagnosis while the shit storm is raging, he still has no clue that his QB was concussed? He is either negligent or absolutely incompetent. This is bad on many levels.

If Hoke didn't know, By sending him out to his press conference Brandon had him walk to his own execution. If he knew and still played dumb, Hoke walked to his own execution.

M-Dog

September 30th, 2014 at 10:02 AM ^

If there was no reason before to fire Hoke, that ended the moment he started the Monday press conference.  
 
He either:
 
A) Made proclamations in front of a national audience that he never even bothered to find out were true or not, or
 
B) Made proclamations in front of a national audience that he knew were false.
 
He is either grossly negligent, or maliciously deceitful.
 
At this point, it really doesn't even matter which one is true.  He is not fit for the job and can not continue in it any longer.

FreddieMercuryHayes

September 30th, 2014 at 7:48 AM ^

If this is true, I cannot understand how Brandon has a job by weeks end. It would be a travesty if he does. Same with Hoke if he was involved in a potential pseudo-cover up. This is a players long term health; there should be nothing more important, and massaging the truth to make the AD and HC look better seems borderline criminal to me.


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njv5352

September 30th, 2014 at 8:31 AM ^

You are correct that the Medical Team should get props for checking out the health of Morris.  Getting the diagnosis right it way more important than the image for the University.  As for Brandon, he is am idiot.  He just threw his head coach under the bus to make himself come off as a caring individual.  He let his head coach do multiple interviews and media requests yesterday while answering questions about the incident.  If they were truly doing more testing to diagnose Hoke should have responded that there is further testing being done and we do not have the results yet.  Now he is on record saying he only had an ankle injury and lookng like a fool.  Dave Brandon is trying to save his own neck.

M-Dog

September 30th, 2014 at 10:21 AM ^

But Hoke has a responsibility too to make sure what he says in a public press conference with the media eye on him is true.  Or don't say it.  He is supposed to be in charge, not just told what to say.

Would you go in front of a national media audience and specifically address a contoversial issue that could get you fired without knowing what you are about to proclaim is true?  Who does that?  I'm afraid to say something in a minor staff meeting that I don't know is true three times over.  And if I don't know, I hedge and say nothing. 

 

CompleteLunacy

September 30th, 2014 at 9:10 AM ^

I'm ashamed that they tried to commit a blatant coverup. That's not the Michigan I know and love. The Michigan I know stands up and takes responsibility for their actions, always striving to maintain integrity and to tell the truth, however painful it may be. It's sad and embarrassing.

robpollard

September 30th, 2014 at 9:19 AM ^

Obviously it's very commendable on their part (and pathetic on the AD & aynone else) if the medical staff stood up to be sure the statement confirmed medically accurate, if embarrasing to UM, information.

However, why should they be let off the hook? Is it not the medical staff that has the primrary responsibility to ensure players with possible head injuries are properly evaluated and before that happens they do NOT get back into thte game? They somehow completely missed that. That's on them -- primary responsibility means it's their job, over Hoke, Nuss, etc. If it's everyone's responsibility, in big groups, it can be no one's responsibility.

There has--correctly, in pretty much everyone's view--been a big push to take the decision on who plays after possible head injuries away from coaches (who want you, generally speaking, to rub some dirt on it and get back in there) to medical staff, who have the proper training to assess the situation, are able to focus on injuries (as opposed to how in-game strategy should be handled) and (in theory) less pressure to re-insert into the lineup an injured player.

UM's medical staff, unless someone heard differently, failed Shane Morris on Saturday. I don't see how you can say any differently. I am 100% sure it was not intentional, but they did.

CompleteLunacy

September 30th, 2014 at 9:36 AM ^

But it all comes back to one simple question...how come not one person saw the hit and Shane's obvious wobble?!? If the medical staff didn't know...what were they watching? And, whose job is it to inform them of a potential head trauma injury? It baffles the mind that not one adult saw it or took action on it.