ANN ARBOR, MICH. – Last winter, many of the biggest names in Minnesota hockey attended a charity dinner benefiting disabled sled hockey players. There was hockey royalty, and there were good-hearted people who had taken an interest in the sport, and there was … Jerry Kill.
The Gophers football coach came over, introduced his wife, and chatted. Why was he the only non-hockey celebrity in the crowd? He said he liked Pat Fallon, the founder of the Minneapolis advertising agency sponsoring the event. Kill just wanted to help.
He's that kind of guy.
The last time I spoke with Kill 1-on-1, after a recent weekday practice a few days after he suffered a seizure during a game at TCF Bank Stadium, he was upbeat and determined to gain control of his condition. The conversation was off the record, but it was telling that he eventually steered it toward charitable endeavors.
Even under duress, facing the challenge of coaching at the peak of his career while suffering frequent epileptic seizures, he's that kind of guy.
All week leading up to Saturday's game at Michigan, Kill spoke of his desire for his first signature victory at the University of Minnesota. He talked about visiting Michigan Stadium when he was coaching Division II Saginaw Valley State. He was prepared Saturday to coach at The Big House for the second time as the Gophers coach.
He suffered a seizure Saturday morning. He did not make it to the sideline.
Kill grew up poor in rural Kansas. He became the first member of his family to graduate from college, and he tossed in a minor in biology as he earned his education degree.