Sunday, August 29, 2010

Mikhail Torrance - He's ALIVE!

Former Heat prospect Mikhail Torrance is, according to his agent Happy Walters, conscious, ambulatory and improving.

August 28: Great news on Mikhail Torrance. He walked today! He had assistance, but he followed commands! He knows his right from his left, and he is starting to focus on objects. Doctors pinched him and he grimaced, an improvement from a few days ago when he showed no [response]. Tomorrow he will be able to leave ICU and go to a private room. All your prayers and good wishes are working! Myself and family thank everyone so much.

August 27: [Mikhail Torrance] is opening his eyes. Trying to focus. Starting to recognize some things. This is great news and everyone is excited. We hope that he will be able to follow some commands soon!




Earlier

Tim Povtak for AOL Fanhouse:
Former Alabama star Mikhail Torrance, who suffered a heart attack Friday during a workout at the IMG Basketball Academy in Bradenton, Fla., began breathing on his own for the first time Wednesday after being taken off a ventilator. A CT scan done late Tuesday also came back negative, adding to the recent optimism surrounding him. "This is great news, very significant," said Happy Walters, Torrance's agent, who has been in constant contact with the family at the hospital. "And we're hoping for more soon. We're hoping he wakes up soon."

Torrance still has not regained consciousness since he collapsed on the court and was rushed to a nearby hospital by paramedics. Walters said there has been some movement in his arms and legs. A hospital spokesperson said Wednesday afternoon that his condition has been upgraded to "serious but stable." Walters said if Torrance awakens soon, he expects doctors to do immediate surgery to implant a device to protect him from having another heart attack.

Torrance, 21, has known for years that he had a heart condition, but it was not considered life-threatening by most doctors who had talked to him. He had played four seasons at the University of Alabama without a problem. He was expecting to be drafted by the NBA in June, but individual teams shied away after he underwent extensive medical testing at the pre-draft camp. So instead, he signed a contract to play professionally in Israel for Maccabi Tel Aviv, and he was preparing for the upcoming season when he suddenly collapsed.

His family has asked for privacy at the Sarasota Regional Hospital, where they have been since Friday evening.



Earlier

Tim Povtak for AOL Fanhouse:
With his family now by his side, former University of Alabama basketball star Mikhail Torrance remained in the Intensive Care Unit at Sarasota Memorial Hospital, a day after collapsing on the court at IMG Academy in Bradenton.

A hospital spokesperson told FanHouse Saturday afternoon that Torrance is listed by doctors as being in "critical but stable" condition, but she would release no other information at the family's request. Agent Happy Walters wrote on Twitter Saturday that Torrance "is stable and in an induced coma. His heart is fine. The [d]octors are going to bring him out of his coma tonight in order to evaluate brain function. Staff attended to him within 2 minutes and administered CPR. He had a heartbeat and was breathing on [his] own."



Earlier

Tim Povtak for AOL Fanhouse:
Less than 10 minutes after he came to the sideline with a smile to greet a writer he had met only once before, former Alabama basketball star Mikhail Torrance collapsed on the basketball court Friday afternoon, touching off a dramatic, emotional and urgent rescue attempt to save his life.

Before leaving to join Maccabi Tel Aviv, the Israeli powerhouse with whom he signed earlier this summer, Torrance wanted to work out at the acclaimed IMG Academy, where he also worked out before the 2010 NBA draft. Friday was his third day there, and he looked and sounded excited before the workout began. There was hop in his step.

Then everything turned tragic. Torrance had just finished his first shooting drill and was heading toward the sideline for a drink when his knees buckled and he crashed to the floor, hitting his head. Hard.

Within seconds, one trainer was by his side, then another and another in a busy training facility that was quickly cleared. He moved a few times as they tried to keep him conscious, but that didn't last long. Paramedics arrived within a few minutes and started pumping his chest, trying to revive him. Torrance had stopped breathing. They also tried using the defibrillator to shock his heart. He was not breathing when he was taken from the gym.

He was rolled onto a stretcher while CPR continued to be administered, then whisked to nearby Blake Memorial Hospital in Bradenton, where he was treated for an hour before being transferred to Sarasota Memorial Hospital.

Although the hospital still would not release any information on his condition, a source close to Torrance confirmed Friday that he was breathing with the aid of ventilator. A hospital spokesperson would only confirm that Torrance had been admitted to the ICU, while his family was rushing in from Birmingham, Ala.

"I was shocked and saddened to hear about Mikhail this afternoon," Anthony Grant, Torrance's college coach at Alabama, said in a statement. "My thoughts and prayers are with him and his family at this very difficult time. I want Mikhail and his family to know that his teammates, coaches and the entire university community are praying for his full recovery."

A spokesperson from the IMG Basketball Academy, where he had just begun a workout in its air-conditioned gymnasium, could only confirm that he had been taken to the hospital.

"Maybe we'll know more in the morning,'' said a person at the hospital familiar with the situation but not authorized to release information.

This much was certain:

Torrance just completed four years at the University of Alabama, where he established himself as one of the better point guards in college basketball. He averaged 32 minutes and 15 points per game as a senior, consistently showing NBA skills.

Yet his heart issue was well known, although not considered dangerous. Some people had referred to it as "an enlarged heart.'' Torrance himself had said several times that he had "an athlete's heart,'' which he described as "just a little bit bigger'' than most. Earlier this summer, Torrance told The Birmingham News and Mobile Press-Register that team doctors at Alabama cleared him to play and said his heart condition was common to athletes.

He blamed the heart issue for not being drafted, especially after he was examined by doctors at the NBA's pre-draft camp, which didn't prohibit him from playing, but it raised red flags with individual teams that might have been interested.

"After seeing the reports, we took him off our draft board, and we didn't think it was in his best interest to play basketball,'' one NBA executive said Friday evening after learning what happened. "He had the talent to play, but we didn't think he was physically qualified (because of the report on his heart)."

Torrance spent four days in the Miami Heat's summer camp, but they never signed him to a contract, and released him before they opened play in the Las Vegas Summer League.

It was soon after he left Miami that he signed a contract to play professionally in Israel for highly regarded Maccabi Tel Aviv. He was expected to leave soon to join his new team.