Another seizure knocked Gophers football coach Jerry Kill to the ground Saturday, but by Monday afternoon, he was back at work, riding a fresh wave of support from athletic director Norwood Teague and countless others.
Kill has epilepsy, a condition that affects nearly 3 million Americans, and Teague made it clear he has no concerns about the coach's ability to lead.
"I support him 100 percent," Teague said at a Monday news conference. "He's an epileptic. He has seizures. We deal with it and we move on. If I felt like it was affecting things, it would be different."
Kill is expected to participate Tuesday in his weekly news conference. While some fans and critics have suggested Kill should resign for health reasons, others have praised him since Saturday, when he suffered his third in-game seizure in three years as Gophers coach.
Bob Stein, a local attorney and two-time former All-America linebacker for the Gophers, said via e-mail, "The bottom line for me is one question, 'Is he performing competently?' … He has done a very good job, in my opinion, rescuing and righting a football program riddled with incompetent leadership and coaching for 10 years."
Stein has been critical of Kill's predecessor, Tim Brewster, along with former Gophers AD Joel Maturi.
"They had no teaching, no culture, no integrity, no discipline, terrible institutional support and really bad players when [Kill] arrived," Stein said. "They are more talented, better coached, and much more disciplined on and off the field."
'Not just about Saturdays'
Teague drove Kill's wife, Rebecca, to the hospital on Saturday, then returned to TCF Bank Stadium to be with the players. He spent time after the game talking to fans and waited to comment to the media until Monday.