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DU_stud04
10-08-2006, 01:34 AM
COLORADO SPRINGS, Colo. -- A 17-year-old Harrison High School football player who died shortly after collapsing during a game had a heart condition, El Paso County Deputy Coroner Dawn Miller said Saturday.

Fermin Vialpando collapsed during the third quarter and died on the field Friday night, Miller said in a telephone interview. She said he had a heart condition but further testing would be needed to determine the exact cause of death.

The teen's mother, Sundae Vialpando, told The Denver Post her son had no known health problems. "Doctors said sometimes with an athlete -- it puts a strain on their heart," she said.

Players, coaches and students met at the school Saturday morning. "We needed to talk about what happened. Everybody liked him. He was a nice person to talk to," athletic director Dave Hogan told The Post. The school canceled its homecoming dance Saturday and held a vigil on the football field.

"I'm having a tough time right now and I'm trying to deal with a whole lot of kids in grief," Harrison coach Shawn Mitchell told The Gazette.

The center on Harrison's offensive line, Vialpando was about 6-foot-1 and 210 pounds.

Vialpando tried to call a huddle just before he collapsed, said Harrison cornerback Miki Eltagonde. "He was running down the field and he just stopped and fell. He tried getting up and then fell back again and it happened again."

Offensive lineman Bryant Perryman yelled to coaches that Vialpando was having a seizure. A team doctor was on the field within a minute of Vialpando's collapsing, said Hogan.

Hogan and Mitchell also said they knew of no medical problems concerning Vialpando.

"Fermin did everything that was asked of him," Mitchell said. "He was the ultimate team player and a great citizen in our hallways. You wish you had a team full of kids like him."

Hogan told the Gazette on Friday: "Everybody's in shock. You see what you think is a healthy young person. It's a hard thing," he said, choking back tears as he spoke to reporters at Memorial Hospital.

"You get that sinking feeling in your chest when you've lost a special person," Hogan said. "He meant so many things to so many people. A good, young kid. He was quiet, had a great smile. Everything you consider a good person, that was him."

Chris Valentine, public relations manager for Memorial Hospital, said chaplains were called to help grieving players and friends.

"We didn't want anybody driving home alone," Valentine said. "We wanted all students to go home with adults."

The Class 3A South Metro Conference game was stopped immediately with Harrison ahead of Ridgeview Academy 40-15.

Vialpando, a first baseman on the baseball team and member of the marching band, was also an aspiring chef. He was taking a culinary class at Pikes Peak Community College and worked in The Wyndham Hotel kitchen.

"His outlook on life was to dream big and go for it," Angela Vialpando said about her nephew. "He was a real outgoing kid, always on the go. He was quiet and shy sometimes around people he didn't know very well. But around us he was a chatterbox."

Pudlugger
10-08-2006, 06:18 AM
He probably had Hypertrophic Cardio Myopathy, a condition of thickened walls of the heart that one is born with and is free from symptoms. The wall next to the aorta, when contracting excessively in extreme exertion, bunches up and blocks the outflow of blood causing sudden death. Every year a handful of young men die on the football field from this condition. It can be diagnosed with a simple inexpensive echocardiogram (ultrasound of the heart). Austin Heart does them on all UT players each year. If a player is diagnosed he must give up football. Mack lets him keep his scholarship. Austin Heart was doing the tests for free to area high school players a couple of years back. If your school is interested call them for the details.

God bless this young man and comfort his family and friends. This is so sad.