Life is a little sweeter for Jason Maurer these days. Smiles, never in short supply before, are even more frequent. For Maurer, now in his third year as wresting coach at Buffalo, a windowless wrestling room is a little slice of heaven.
And why shouldn't it be? Barley six months ago, he was flat on his back on a softball field, a victim of a complete cardiac arrest at age 34. Staying alive was the only thing that mattered.
"It wasn't like it was something I could see coming," said Maurer, a 1998 Buffalo graduate. "I'm a big guy, but my heart was OK. There weren't any blockages or anything. I found out that it was just too big."
In this case, having a big heart didn't mean he was a softy. Maurer's abnormally large ticker, a genetic anomaly, stopped for nearly two minutes that early June evening. One minute he was returning to the bench after an at-bat in a men's league softball game. The next he had two softball fields of players rushing to his aid and trying to revive him.
"There was a doctor on the other team," Maurer said. "And the next field over was a game with police and paramedics. So I guess there were a lot of people to help out. Thing is, I don't remember any of it."
Maurer was taken to the hospital in Buffalo before being transported to the University of Minnesota. Word spread among those he coached that he was in bad shape.
"I think I broke down crying right away," junior heavyweight Robert Sahli said. "We went down to the hospital that night. He's meant so much to the wrestling program, and he's been a great coach to me."
Visitors were frequent, but Maurer's condition and the medications used to combat it kept him in a semi-permanent fog.