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Cowboys' practice facility collapses

Posted: Sat May 02, 2009 8:52 pm
by Deadskins
12 injured, 1 critically, in Dallas Cowboys practice arena collapse

(CNN) -- An air-supported roof over the Dallas Cowboys' practice field collapsed during a heavy thunderstorm Saturday afternoon, leaving 12 people injured, one critically, authorities said.


ImageA photojournalist from CNN affiliate WFAA captured the collapse of the practice facility on Saturday.

1 of 2 About 70 people, including more than two dozen of the team's rookies, were in the facility when it was blown down shortly before 3:30 p.m. (4:30 p.m. ET), team officials said.

"Everyone, as far as we know, is accounted for," said Mike Adams, a dispatcher for the Irving, Texas, fire department.

A line of heavy thunderstorms was moving through the Dallas area at the time, he said.

Dr. Paul Pepe, the fire department's medical director, said 12 people were hurt. The most seriously injured was sent to Baylor University Medical Center in Dallas, while the rest went to other hospitals in the area.

Video from CNN affiliate WFAA showed the roof caving in during a heavy storm, sending players, coaches and a handful of reporters and photographers scrambling to escape.

WFAA-TV photojournalist Arnold Payne, who was on the sidelines of the indoor practice field when the collapse occurred, said the wind "just started shaking the sides of this big huge plastic practice tent."

"The lights started swinging from the ceiling, and just like that, the thing just started collapsing," WFAA quoted Payne as saying. "They could hear people under there screaming; I could see two or three people injured."

Cowboys' owner Jerry Jones told NBC that about 27 rookies from the NFL team and members of the team's coaching staff were inside the suburban Dallas facility at the time.

"They did not get good warning there, and the structure did collapse," Jones said, speaking from the Kentucky Derby in Louisville. "We're assessing who's injured at this particular time."

http://www.cnn.com/2009/US/05/02/cowboy ... index.html

I wish no one had gotten injured so we could laugh at this.

Re: Cowboys' practice facility collapses

Posted: Sat May 02, 2009 10:16 pm
by Hoss
Deadskins wrote:I wish no one had gotten injured so we could laugh at this.


:roll:

Hopefully everyone is well.

Posted: Sun May 03, 2009 12:03 am
by Jake
Injuries reported at Cowboys' facility

IRVING, Texas -- Whenever a storm hits while the Dallas Cowboys are inside their practice facility, the sound of rain pelting the tent-like structure can drown out conversation. No matter the noise, safety rarely was an issue -- until Saturday.

Winds that were just shy of tornado strength, and perhaps stronger, ripped through the roof during a rookie minicamp practice, essentially popping the so-called bubble. Between the falling debris and the furor to get out, special teams coach Joe DeCamillis broke his back and 11 more people were hospitalized.

About 60 others felt lucky to escape with only cuts and bruises.

"I saw it coming down and didn't have time to react," secondary coach Dave Campo said. "I hit the ground and was able to get back up."

DeCamillis, hired a few months ago, is likely to need surgery to fix "a couple of broken vertebrae" in his lower back but is expected to recover, said his father-in-law, Dan Reeves, the longtime NFL coach.

When you look at the destruction, it's hard to imagine how everyone survived, writes ESPN.com's Matt Mosley. Blog.

"They say he's lucky not to be paralyzed," said Reeves. The coach was seen being removed on a stretcher wearing a neck brace.

DeCamillis was among 10 people taken away by emergency vehicles. Two others went to hospitals on their own.

"This worked out very, very well from a medical point of view," said Dr. Paul Pepe, head of emergency medical services for Dallas County. "Right now, I think we don't have anybody who is in a life-threatening situation."

Assistant coach Brett Maxie suffered a laceration on his leg, a source told ESPN.com's Matt Mosley. Team scout Chris Hall suffered multiple arm injuries after being trapped underneath the frame, the Fort Worth Star-Telegram reported.

"We're lucky no one got electrocuted with all the water in the building," head coach Wade Phillips said. "A couple of players had minor injuries, but they were all right."

Cowboys spokesman Rich Dalrymple said all players and coaches were accounted for.

Just before the facility was flattened, winds were clocked at 64 mph, a single mph shy of the threshold for a weak tornado. However, National Weather Service meteorologist Gary Woodall said a "microburst" may have pushed the wind beyond 70 mph at the top of the structure. A microburst also was to blame for a 1985 Delta Airlines crash at nearby DFW airport that killed 137 people.

"The fact that there weren't more injuries is rather miraculous," Woodall said.

Also incredible: An Irving police spokesman said there was hardly any damage beyond the Cowboys' facility.

Image
AP Photo/Tony Gutierrez

A fire fighter stands surrounded by the collapsed canopy that covered the Cowboys' indoor practice facility in Irving, Texas.

"We checked and we can't find any other damage than this particular location," said David Tull, an Irving police spokesman. "The nearby area didn't have any reports of structural damage."

Before Bill Parcells was hired as coach in 2003, the Cowboys rarely practiced indoors, unless weather was bad enough for them to ride buses to a high school team's bubble. Parcells suggested that owner Jerry Jones build one, and it was finished in time for Parcells' first season at a cost of more than $4 million.

The no-frills building was pretty much a 100-yard football field with a few more yards of clearance all the way around. The roof was 80 feet high, the equivalent of an eight-story building.

On Saturday, there were 27 players -- almost all drafted last weekend or signed as undrafted rookies -- working out when the storm hit. Also in the building were coaches, support staff and media.

Overhead lights swayed violently, prompting players, coaches, staff members and reporters to vacate the building. Several people were trying to exit the facility as the roof came down at about 4:30 p.m. ET.

According to the Star-Telegram, a portable toilet was blown over outside the facility and blocked an exit.

TV cameraman Paul Riggs found shelter with several offensive lineman under a raised platform when the facility began to collapse, according to the Morning News.

"It fell all around us," Riggs said. "Then it was pure chaos."

Nick Eatman of DallasCowboys.com escaped, but was knocked down by something hitting his back. He then heard someone screaming for help and realized it was coming from under a door frame. He recognized that it was Todd Archer of the Dallas Morning News because of a tattoo on his ankle.

Eatman and colleague Josh Ellis tried freeing Archer but the structure wouldn't budge. "It was like a car," Eatman said. Then safety DeAngelo Smith and linebacker Brandon Williams managed to lift it just enough for Archer to squirm out.

"All I saw was blue jerseys," said Archer, who figures he was down 20 to 25 seconds. "I was trapped, I couldn't move. Then those guys lifted it up -- not very far, but I was able to move from my side to my back. ... Once I got out of there, I looked back and the whole thing was down."

Archer, whose right elbow and legs were scraped, said that as he fled for shelter, other players appeared to be stepping through the debris looking for others in need of help.

Eatman said one of the swaying lights wound up more than two football fields away. The giant blue star atop the building lay crumpled on the ground. The storm knocked out power at team headquarters and splintered trees across the property. Power was out at team headquarters for about an hour.

"We're lucky no one got electrocuted with all the water in the building," head coach Wade Phillips said.

Larry Rodriguez, a television cameraman who in 2005 was attacked by Kenny Rogers while filming the former Texas Rangers pitcher, received six stitches to close a cut on a hand.

The team canceled Sunday's practice, the final one for the rookies. The first voluntary full-squad minicamp is May 19-21.

Matt Mosley is an NFL reporter for ESPN.com. The Associated Press contributed to this story.


I'm glad that coach isn't paralyzed. This had to be a very scary situation. Yes, they may be Cowboys but the important thing is they're human and no one died.

Posted: Sun May 03, 2009 12:30 am
by brad7686
That must have been terrifying. I can't even imagine a building falling on me.

Posted: Sun May 03, 2009 9:06 am
by thedcnative
I heard about this yesterday. That's one of my worst fears. I hope they recover.

Posted: Sun May 03, 2009 1:22 pm
by Skinsfan55
Even if no one got injured what would be funny about this? A tornado freaking hit it.

Posted: Sun May 03, 2009 4:03 pm
by jeremyroyce
Man this is terrible. I hope that everyone is okay. And I hope that the coach can recover quickly

Posted: Sun May 03, 2009 11:08 pm
by Scottskins
Being from the Northwest, I know nothing about tornadoes. Did this thing just come out of nowhere? Didn't they have any warning? I hope Jerry really takes care of Rich and his family...

Posted: Mon May 04, 2009 6:40 am
by tcwest10
One of the scouts, a 33 year old man, has been paralyzed for life due to a severed spinal cord.
Any joke made at any time in regards to this tragedy will instantly lower the IQ and class of the poster, to me.
This includes any "I hate to burst your bubble, but..." to Cowboy posters.
Hopefully, we'll leave the classlessness to Eagle fans, and live vicariously through them, if we must.

Posted: Mon May 04, 2009 9:25 pm
by Scottskins
Just goes to show you that they should stop building these tent buildings, especially when they are that big!

Posted: Tue May 05, 2009 6:39 am
by tcwest10
Scottskins wrote:Just goes to show you that they should stop building these tent buildings, especially when they are that big!


....or, at the very least, not inhabit them when you're under tornado watch. I think this is an unsafe practice in the workplace, to say the least.

Posted: Tue May 05, 2009 9:57 am
by langleyparkjoe
Man that's horrible that someone died from that

Posted: Wed May 20, 2009 1:04 pm
by Deadskins
langleyparkjoe wrote:Man that's horrible that someone died from that

No one died. The coach was paralyzed, but will live. Still horrible, though.

Posted: Thu May 28, 2009 3:23 pm
by Deadskins
Deadskins wrote:
langleyparkjoe wrote:Man that's horrible that someone died from that

No one died. The coach was paralyzed, but will live. Still horrible, though.

Turns out, the coach wasn't paralyzed. I saw on the NFL Network yesterday that he is back at practice, after having been fitted with a back and neck brace, and walking under his own power.

Posted: Thu May 28, 2009 4:24 pm
by Chris Luva Luva
Deadskins wrote:
Deadskins wrote:
langleyparkjoe wrote:Man that's horrible that someone died from that

No one died. The coach was paralyzed, but will live. Still horrible, though.

Turns out, the coach wasn't paralyzed. I saw on the NFL Network yesterday that he is back at practice, after having been fitted with a back and neck brace, and walking under his own power.


Terrific news!

Posted: Thu May 28, 2009 5:23 pm
by 1niksder
Chris Luva Luva wrote:
Deadskins wrote:
Deadskins wrote:
langleyparkjoe wrote:Man that's horrible that someone died from that

No one died. The coach was paralyzed, but will live. Still horrible, though.

Turns out, the coach wasn't paralyzed. I saw on the NFL Network yesterday that he is back at practice, after having been fitted with a back and neck brace, and walking under his own power.


Terrific news!

FYI: Special Teams Coach Joe DeCamillis had a fractured cervical vertebra and has returned to work, however Rich Behm, a scouting assistant, was paralyzed in his lower body after suffering a spinal injury and going through surgery. Greg Gaither the team’s assistant athletic trainer was the other staff member that got hurt pretty bad, he's out of the hospital and doing well.

DeCamillis had been working from home until this week.

Posted: Mon Jun 08, 2009 9:59 pm
by 1niksder
Rich Behm returns home

Scout Rich Behm returned to his home Friday after spending nearly a month at the Baylor Institute for Rehabilitation, according to the family's journal on the CaringBridge Web site.

Behm had been in the rehab center since May 8, less than a week after becoming paralyzed from the waist down after the team's indoor practice facility collapsed. Behm's home has been modified for his wheelchair, according to the update, and he was able to go to a driving range to hit golf balls in a specialized chair.

The Cowboys have said Behm's job is waiting for him when he is able to return to work. In addition to scouting duties, he is responsible for getting video for the college scouts on the road as well as setting up highlight tapes on prospects before the draft.

Posted: Sun Jun 14, 2009 3:16 am
by tcwest10
Three guys who undoubtedly are counting their lucky stars, despite the reason for doing so.
As people, I'm rooting for them. The minute they slip back into work clothes, it's business as usual!