The Capital

Durkin staffers placed on leave

- By Don Markus and Jonas Shaffer

Maryland has placed members of football coachDJ Durkin's support staff on paid administra­tive leave based on the initial findings of the external review examining the circumstan­ces leading to the death of redshirt freshman Jordan McNair, the university announced Friday.

Aschool spokeswoma­ndeclined toname the individual­s who were placed on leave, pending the outcome of the review being conducted by Walters Inc., a South Carolina-based sports medicine consulting firm. That review is expected to be finished no later than Sept. 15.

McNair died June 13, 15 days after having difficulty recovering from the conditioni­ng test players need to complete in order to participat­e in preseasonw­orkouts.

McNair's family announced on awebsite to announce the establishm­ent of a foundation in his honor that the 19-year-old lineman died fromheatst­roke.

The school issued a statement Friday on the decision to put staffers on leave: “Following the death of Maryland football player Jordan McNair in June, the University of Maryland commission­ed an external review of the procedures and protocols surroundin­g athletes' health and safety. Pending the final outcome of this review, the university has placed members of the athletics staff on administra­tive leave. We will be able to speak in greater detail when the review is complete and shared with the public. Our thoughts remain with Jordan McNair's family, friends and teammates.”

A source confirmed that Durkin, who is going into his third season with the program, will remain Terps coach. On

Friday, in his first interview since the start of fall practice, Durkin told Big Ten Network that McNair's death was a “tremendous loss.”

“Every guy is at a different stage of a grieving process, and we are as a team,” he said. “So the one thing we've done here through camp, and we said this and we've done it, we're going to talk about it. It's OK to talk about it. We're not going to just ignore it and pretend we're going to move on. We're going to talk about it. So we have guys getupandta­lk to theteamat night, and that's been brought up quite a bit.

”There's not a day that goes by that anyone doesn't think about it, talk about it.

So, all in all, I think our guys have done a good job. They've handled things. We've had some really good practices, but it's certainly present.“

In releasing some details about the incident, the university confirmed Durkin was on the field when the conditioni­ng test consisting of 10 110-yard dashes was being administer­ed.

An unidentifi­ed caller described McNair's breathing problems to a Prince George's County emergency dispatcher just before 6 p.m. according to an audio copy of two calls and an incident report released by the county's Office of Homeland Security

after a public-records request.

According to the 911 tape obtained by The Baltimore Sun, McNair appeared to have suffered a seizure and was ”unable to control“his breath after the football practice that led to his hospitaliz­ation. In a second call, a first responder reported to dispatcher­s thatMcNair had a seizure.

McNair arrived atWashingt­on Adventist Hospital, in nearby Takoma Park, at 6:36 p.m., according to the county's report, before being transporte­d to the Cowley Shock Trauma Center in Baltimore, where he remained until his death.

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