I'm happy for him.  When I started moving my shoulders, arms, then fingers, I 
couldn't feel anything either. I then felt numbness and progressed to feeling 
so I have hope for him.  Ithink it's great news.

Stacy


----- Original Message ----
From: KK <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: [email protected]
Sent: Monday, September 24, 2007 6:11:11 PM
Subject: [QUAD-L] Houston Texans defensive tackle Cedric Killings was able to 
stand


Houston Texans defensive tackle Cedric Killings was able to stand in the 
hospital on
Monday and doctors are confident he’ll soon be walking.
Killings’ progress came one day after he left the field on a stretcher after a
headfirst collision with Indianapolis receiver Roy Hall.
Killings fractured his C-4 vertebra and was unable to move any of his limbs for 
a
time on the field on Sunday, Dr. Rob Parrish, a neurosurgeon working with 
Killings,
said.
He has since gained movement in his arms and legs, though he’s weak in both 
hands
and his left arm.
“He stood for me this morning at the bed side,” Parrish said.  “So I think 
Parrish said the biggest concern now is the weakness in his left arm, but that 
it
was too soon to tell if would be permanent.
“That’s his deficit right now,” Parrish said. “It might all come back.”
Texans team physician Dr. Walter Lowe said it is too soon to know if Killings 
will
play football again.
“He’s still in the process of recovering,” Lowe said.
The 6-foot-3, 310-pound Killings, playing special teams, hit Hall on a block as
Jerome Mathis was returning a kickoff in the second quarter.
“It’s a scary part of football,” said Houston coach Gary Kubiak. “Cedric is a 
great
kid and we’re just going to cross our fingers and say some prayers and hope
everything is going to be all right.”
Hall and Killings went down together and Hall walked slowly off the field with
trainers helping him. Colts coach Tony Dungy said Hall suffered a shoulder 
injury.
Killings lay motionless as trainers attended to him and a stretcher was wheeled 
onto
the field. Kubiak watched medical personnel strap Killings to the stretcher as
players from both sides waited intently.
“Initially, he made a couple of comments that he couldn’t feel down low,” Kubiak
said. “As he laid there and talked to us, he did move everything. He talked to 
me.
His teammates called out to him from a distance and they don’t know it, but he 
was
respondent to them.”
The 30-year-old Killings was cut by the Texans on Sept. 1, then re-signed on 
Sept.
14 to add depth to the defensive line when Travis Johnson injured his ankle.

NFL.com
Cedric Killings
“We all come out on this field and our intentions are to walk off the field at 
the
end of the game,” said Houston cornerback Dunta Robinson. “For him to be 
carried out
on a stretcher, it was a scary situation.”
In the season opener, the Buffalo Bills lost tight end Kevin Everett to a
life-threatening spinal cord injury. Everett, however, is making a strong 
recovery
and doctors expect he’ll be able to walk again.
“You pray for these guys to recover,” said Colts quarterback Peyton Manning. 
“You
don’t wish that on anybody.”
“It’s a rough business, you know.  It’s a rough business we’re in.  To the fans 
it
seems like we’re out there having a good time and it’s exciting, but the truth 
of
the matter is that on any given play, any given player could be done for the 
rest of
his life from playing football,” Texans tackle Ephraim Salaam.
Texans center Steve McKinney left with what was believed to be a sprained knee 
in
the fourth quarter, but doctors said Monday he's out for the season with a torn 
ACL.
Early in the second quarter Sunday, Houston running back Ahman Green left the 
game
with a left knee sprain.
Green, Houston’s leading rusher, caught a short pass and was tackled after a 
9-yard
gain by Colts safety Bob Sanders. Green hopped up, but limped off the field as
trainers attended to him on the sideline.
Green hobbled to a training table behind the bench as Kris Brown kicked a 
33-yard
field goal to put the Texans up 10-7.
On Wednesday, the Texans said Green was limited at practice with a knee injury.
Samkon Gado replaced Green on the Texans’ next offensive series.
Green sat on the bench with ice wrapped around his left knee.
Houston rookie Jacoby Jones left in the third quarter after separating his left
shoulder on a 74-yard punt return.
Jones is the Texans’ leading kick returner and started for the first time on 
Sunday
in place of Andre Johnson, who injured his left knee last week.
Late in the third quarter, Jones took a punt from Hunter Smith, weaved to 
midfield
and sprinted down the sideline before Smith pushed him out of bounds. Jones got 
up
holding his left shoulder and limped to the bench.
Trainers attended to Jones on the sideline before he went to the locker room for
X-rays. Jones said after the game he was having an MRI exam on Monday.


KK

Remember: life is like a roll of toilet paper. 
The closer it gets to the end, the faster it goes...


       
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