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(CNN) -- The score was tied. The game was in overtime. The mood, electric.
Number 35 came charging up to the net and hit a last-moment winning layup for his undefeated Fennville High School Blackhawks to end the regular season Thursday night with a perfect 20 wins.
The other players hoisted their star, 16-year-old Wes Leonard, on their shoulders. The screaming crowd charged the court to hug him. It was the biggest moment in memory for the tiny Michigan town of Fennville.
And then it all turned to black.
Silence fell under the harsh glare of the florescent lights. Leonard lay still on the court, pale in his school colors. His family and coaches surrounded him. He wasn't breathing, his friend Arista Sauceda recalled. His heart had stopped cold.
After attempts to revive the varsity player in the gym, an ambulance transported him to nearby Holland Hospital. Doctors worked on him for an hour and 20 minutes.
They could not save him. By 10:40 at night, when Leonard should have been out celebrating with his classmates, he was dead.
An autopsy Friday determined that Leonard died of cardiac arrest due to an enlarged heart, said a statement from Dr. David A. Start, the Ottawa County chief medical examiner.
As news of Leonard's death spread, a small community on the banks of Lake Michigan convulsed in shock. A moment of enormous school pride was reduced to irrelevance, a moment of joy turned into the opposite.
A Facebook memorial page -- R.I.P. Wes Leonard -- created Friday, quickly filled with thoughts and prayers. "Blackhawk Down," the page said.
Sauceda described Leonard as an affable guy, popular for his smile and jokes. He excelled in athletics, scoring 1,000 career basketball points and playing quarterback for the school's football team.
She said Leonard's family moved to Fennville when he was in middle school. His mother, Jocelyn Leonard, teaches music and is the drama director at Fennville, and Sauceda said the family had helped bring the school community together.
Jocelyn Leonard had canceled Thursday night's performance of "How To Succeed In Business Without Really Trying" because she wanted to watch her son play in the game, reported CNN affiliate WOOD. It was a make-up game to compensate for blizzard-canceled events last month.
Everyone had so looked forward to Thursday's game -- not only was it the last of an undefeated regular season, but it pitted Fennville against Bridgman, a school that beat them by just one point last year. It was revenge, as Sauceda put it.
Fennville was down 14 points but came back to tie the game at 53. Leonard scored his team's last four points for the 57-55 victory.
Sauceda had screamed her lungs out during the game. She was running toward Leonard to hug him when he went down.
Tim Breed, a spokesman for Holland Hospital and a 1977 Fennville graduate, was also in the gym. He doesn't normally attend games, but thought he could not miss his alma mater's perfect season closer.
When Leonard collapsed, the crowds were asked to leave the gym. Breed was on his way home when he was paged by a local newspaper reporter. He rushed to the hospital to find medical teams trying to resuscitate Leonard.
Shortly after that, a text message appeared on Sauceda's phone from a friend at the hospital. Sauceda was about to go to sleep. Instead, she was jolted awake, the shock so severe she wasn't even able to immediately cry.
In the morning, she stayed home from school. And wrote on Facebook:
"Wes, you were taken from our lives too soon ... you were the most amazing friend, I will never forget you, and how you have changed us all, I am so thankful to have been apart of your life. Please watch over us, and cheer us on as our boys win state! RIP # 35 WES LEONARD."
It could be the result many things: genetics, strokes, etc. Don't these athletes have to go through physical tests--the symptom could have been easily determined.
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wow
that's horrible, seems like its right out of a movie. so sad
Quote:
Originally Posted by baggdis300
enlarged heart i doubts it.....
roids dont do that...
Actually they can, its rare but it happens LVH is usually associated with exercise alone but steroid use (and steroid + hgh) can lead to a detrimental enlargement http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1768197/
hell even extended intense aerobic exercise without steroids (like pro-athletes do) can lead to ventricular hypertrophy http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Athletic_heart_syndrome (but that isn't a concern, its even beneficial im not speaking of the steroid use btw)
There's an actual condition for athletes who exert themselves and then immediately stop exerting themselves which can cause them to go into cardiac arrest, I cannot for the life of me remember the correct term ...
From my rather rudimentary (2nd year uni) understanding, blood can only come back to the heart from the legs as long as the legs are still contracting. If you go from playing an intense game of basketball to instantly no walking, it will reduce the blood flow feeding your heart, and it'll become deprived of the nutrients it needs to contract properly ... it'll only do partial contractions, and eventually you'll collapse/die. This condition can prove deadly especially if you have an enlarged heart because the heart is just a muscle. If it's bigger it'll need more bloodflow ... so it's possible that instead of walking it off and cooling down properly, instantly going from full speed to zero (being picked up and carried around) caused his heart to become deprived and stop functioning. This is why everyone always recommends doing some type of "cool down" exercise after doing hard cardio.
If I'm wrong someone correct me, I did this 2 semesters ago so It's been awhile and I probably missed some points.
There's an actual condition for athletes who exert themselves and then immediately stop exerting themselves which can cause them to go into cardiac arrest, I cannot for the life of me remember the correct term ...
From my rather rudimentary (2nd year uni) understanding, blood can only come back to the heart from the legs as long as the legs are still contracting. If you go from playing an intense game of basketball to instantly no walking, it will reduce the blood flow feeding your heart, and it'll become deprived of the nutrients it needs to contract properly ... it'll only do partial contractions, and eventually you'll collapse/die. This condition can prove deadly especially if you have an enlarged heart because the heart is just a muscle. If it's bigger it'll need more bloodflow ... so it's possible that instead of walking it off and cooling down properly, instantly going from full speed to zero (being picked up and carried around) caused his heart to become deprived and stop functioning. This is why everyone always recommends doing some type of "cool down" exercise after doing hard cardio.