Former Gophers tight end Ben Utecht won't be returning to the Metrodome as a member of the Cincinnati Bengals on Sunday.
Lori and Jeff, his mom and dad, won't be in the stands jumping up and down. His wife, Karyn, the former Miss Minnesota, and their first child, 9-month-old Bella Grace, won't be leaning over a railing for one of those cute postgame embraces. And Ben's old buddies from Hastings High School are on their own if they want tickets.
Utecht won't be playing anywhere Sunday. At the still-tender age of 28, he might never play again.
His story is but one of the many troubling tales that come hand in hand with the popularity of the NFL, particularly this season as the dangers of concussions have taken center stage.
On Aug. 5, Utecht collided with a teammate during a basic blocking drill and suffered his fifth concussion since his redshirt freshman season at the University of Minnesota. Three weeks later, while struggling with short-term memory loss, dizziness, headaches and other post-concussion symptoms that would continue through November, Utecht was placed on injured reserve. His season was over.
In November, the Bengals' neurologist cleared him to play. On Nov. 17, Utecht was released with an injury settlement.
The Bengals have gone 9-3 a year after starting 1-10-1. Utecht has done little but put his Cincinnati home on the market and seek a second medical opinion from Robert Cantu, a concussion expert based in Boston, who has yet to determine whether he thinks the Bengals' decision to clear Utecht was the right move.
Utecht declined an interview request for this story, but he explained his reasoning for seeking a second opinion during an interview with USA Today last week.