Jerry Kill didn't want Tuesday to be about him again.
At his weekly news conference, the Gophers football coach thanked everyone for their thoughts following his seizure Saturday, but he headed off questions about his health by saying he wanted to talk about his players.
"I've talked about those other things enough," Kill said. "This game's not about a head football coach. This game's about the players, and that's how we'll approach it today."
Kill has epilepsy, a condition that affects nearly 3 million Americans, and has compared the aftereffects of a seizure to getting hit by a truck. He returned to work Monday, and it looked as if he still had some soreness Tuesday.
But it's clear Kill is determined to keep pushing forward, despite suffering three in-game seizures in three years as Minnesota's coach. This summer, he said he understood that couldn't keep happening, adding, "I'd walk away if I didn't think I could do it. But that's not going to happen because you're talking to a guy that wasn't supposed to be here anyway."
Kill overcame stage 4 kidney cancer in 2005, and those who know him well, believe he's a long way from walking away from this job because of epilepsy. On Monday, Gophers athletic director Norwood Teague said he and Kill haven't even discussed such a scenario.
While some fans and critics have suggested Kill should resign for health reasons, senior safety Brock Vereen said, "As players, we're really not reacting to it. We have a huge game this week [against San Jose State], and any attention taken away from that can hurt us Saturday. We know Coach Kill's behind us, and we're behind him."
While Kill didn't want to talk about his health, there was plenty to address regarding his players' status.