Dallas Cowboys' practice facility collapses

Discussion in 'National Football League' started by JetMonkey, May 2, 2009.

  1. JetMonkey

    JetMonkey Member

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    Injuries reported at Cowboys' facility


    http://sports.espn.go.com/nfl/news/story?id=4127852

    IRVING, Texas -- Dallas Cowboys special teams coach Joe DeCamillis was among 12 people injured when winds just shy of tornado strength ripped through the roof of the team's indoor practice facility during a rookie minicamp Saturday.

    The storm hit while 27 players were going through workouts. There were about 70 people in the facility, counting coaches, other team personnel and media, officials said.

    Ten of the injured were taken 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."

    DeCamillis was seen putting on a neck brace and being taken out of the team's main office building on a stretcher.

    Coach Wade Phillips told the Dallas Morning News that DeCamillis suffered a neck injury, but was moving his hands and talking at the hospital.

    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.

    Storms often make loud noises inside the so-called bubble, but this time 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."

    One of the team's video staff was the first out the door as the roof began to fall, followed by Nick Eatman of DallasCowboys.com. Eatman was hit by something and went down a few feet away, then heard someone screaming for help. He recognized it was Todd Archer of the Morning News.

    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 were able to get it up just enough for Archer to squirm out.

    "All I saw was blue jerseys," said Archer, whose right elbow and legs were scraped. "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 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.

    Larry Rodriguez, a local television cameraman who was in the news several years ago after he was attacked by Kenny Rogers while filming the former Texas Rangers pitcher, was treated with six stitches for a cut on a hand.

    "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."

    The storm was producing winds measured at 64 mph just before it struck the Cowboys facility, said National Weather Service meteorologist Joe Harris in Fort Worth. A weak tornado is in the range of 65-110 mph, according to NWS guidelines. Power was knocked out for less than an hour.

    "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."

    This was the second of three scheduled days of practices, but Sunday's session has been canceled.

    The white, tent-like building is large enough to be seen from miles away. It was built in 2003, for Bill Parcells' first season as coach. The roof is a large air-supported canopy with aluminum frames covering a regulation 100-yard football field.

    Power was out at the Valley Ranch facility.

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

    The Uniform Bomber Spivey's Agent

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    Yeah, I just heard about this.

    Wonder if it'll be on the next episode of Hard Knocks....
     
  3. 624

    624 Banned

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  4. Murrell2878

    Murrell2878 Lets go JETS!
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    Cowboys staffer paralyzed after accident
    Sun May 3, 8:42 pm ET

    IRVING, Texas – A Dallas Cowboys scouting assistant was permanently paralyzed from the waist down after his spine was severed during the collapse of the team's tent-like practice structure in a severe storm.

    The team announced Rich Behm was in stable condition at Parkland Hospital on Sunday after surgery to stabilize a fracture to the thoracic spine.

    The 33-year-old Behm was among a dozen people hurt in the accident Saturday, and was one of three Cowboys staffers who remained hospitalized.

    Joe DeCamillis, 43, the team's new special teams coach, sustained a fracture of one of his cervical vertebrae without paralysis. He was in stable condition at Parkland and scheduled for surgery Monday.

    Assistant athletic trainer Greg Gaither, 35, had surgery Saturday night to repair a fracture to the tibia and fibula in his right leg. He is expected to be released from the Baylor Regional Medical Center later this week.

    "To the Behm family we extend our love, comfort, and the full support of every person and resource within the organization," Cowboys owner Jerry Jones said in a statement. "Rich is a courageous member of our family and someone for whom we care deeply. We ask for all friends and fans of the Dallas Cowboys to join us in embracing him and his family with their thoughts and prayers at this very difficult time."

    Behm has a brother who works in the Cowboys television department.

    Jones, who was attending the Kentucky Derby on Saturday when the accident occurred, didn't stop to talk to media outside the team's Valley Ranch headquarters Sunday morning when he arrived or left.

    Jones had a somber look on his face and his hands tucked in his pockets when he surveyed the mangled mess.

    About 70 people, including 27 players attending a rookie minicamp, were in the structure when the storm hit. Wind in the area around that time was clocked at 64 mph, a single mph shy of the threshold for a weak tornado.

    National Weather Service officials said a "microburst" may have pushed the wind beyond 70 mph at the top of the structure that was built in 2003.

    Most of the 27 players taking part in the minicamp were drafted the previous weekend or signed as undrafted rookies. None of the team's veterans were involved. Coaches, support staff and media were also in the structure.

    The final scheduled practice of the three-day minicamp was canceled Sunday, though the players attended meetings. Cowboys spokesman Rich Dalrymple said all 27 players were there Sunday, and that none were considered among the injured.

    Media were restricted from the Cowboys headquarters Sunday, a ban the team said would continue through at least the next week "due to ongoing work that is scheduled to take place in the aftermath of the accident."

    The players arrived together Sunday morning on a bus from the hotel where they were staying. They were off limits to the media, and instructed by the team not to talk about what had happened.

    Dalrymple said Jones spent "considerable time" Saturday night and Sunday visiting those in the hospital.

    "As we share concern for everyone who was touched by this accident, we also extend our heartfelt and best wishes to Coach Joe DeCamillis and his family as they prepare for Joe's surgery," Jones said. "We are grateful that Greg Gaither's surgery was successful, and we feel blessed that others involved were able to walk away from this accident after receiving medical attention."

    Behm, DeCamillis and Gaither were standing on the field when the $4 million structure gave way, sending debris such as the framework and lights crashing to the ground.

    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.

    Calls to Summit Structures LLC, one of the companies involved in building the $4 million facility, were not returned to The Associated Press on Sunday.

    A Pennsylvania court ruled in December 2006 that Summit was negligent in the design and construction of a membrane-covered building that collapsed in 2003 after a major snowstorm in Philadelphia. The building was constructed for the Philadelphia Regional Port Authority.

    The first voluntary full-squad minicamp for the Cowboys is scheduled May 19-21.

    http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20090504/ap_on_sp_fo_ne/fbn_cowboys_canopy_collapse
     

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