Texas HS football coach on leave after extremely intense workout hospitalized students

After a workout involving 300 to 400 push-ups and no water breaks hospitalized students, Rockwall-Heath football coach John Harrell was placed on leave, according to Dallas News.

After a workout in which a Texas high school football coach made players do 300 to 400 pushups in a period of an hour with no water breaks, multiple students were hospitalized, and the coach was placed on administrative leave, according to the Dallas Morning News.

A letter from the Rockwall-Heath principal obtained by the news outlet confirmed that head football coach John Harrell was placed on leave after the workout in the eighth-period athletic class he teaches. The letter stated that several students “needed medical attention, and in some cases, hospitalization.”

One parent who spoke to the news outlet said her son did 300 to 400 pushups, while two different parents said the number was more than 350.

Parents cited at least eight hospitalizations, including one to a kid who was diagnosed with rhabdomyolysis, a breakdown of damaged muscle that can lead to kidney damage or failure and other severe outcomes.

Harrell has been at Rockwall-Heath since 2019 and was promoted to head coach in January 2022. In his first season at the helm, the team went 7-5.

Miller (Corpus Christi, Texas) football’s success provides a bright spot as Hillcrest neighborhood disappears

Miller football is having one of its best seasons in more than a half century, but the neighborhood that is home to many of its players is vanishing.

John Wimbish never thought he would be packing up his life at his family home.

The home Wimbish’s father owned on Dempsey Street in the Hillcrest neighborhood on Corpus Christi’s Northside had been in the family for more than 70 years. Wimbish’s grandfather originally purchased the home in the predominately minority neighborhood and later his family lived in it. Then he lived in it as he began his career as a teacher and coach more than a decade ago.

Wimbish, now a physical education teacher at Driscoll Middle School and assistant football coach at Miller High School, recalls the day he locked the door for the last time almost a year ago, memories of his family’s life flooding over him.

“It was like somebody died,” Wimbish said. “I don’t think I’ve ever experienced anything like that. When I locked the door for the last time, I sat on the porch and I probably cried for like two or three hours. And then I went to the new house and when I came back they already had the boards up. I was like, man it’s crazy.”

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Wimbish is proud of his Hillcrest roots, as is his sister, Margaret, but he is also not alone in going through the pain of selling a family home to make way for the new Harbor Bridge.

The same fall Miller High School’s football team is having one of its best seasons in more than a half century, the neighborhood that is home to many of its athletes is slowly fading away.

Residents are slowly moving from homes that have been in families for generations to make way for the billion-dollar bridge project, and Wimbish and other Hillcrest residents are building new lives in new homes and new neighborhoods in their city.

It is why the accomplishment of this year’s Buccaneers means so much. Miller’s district championship and 10-0 season remains a beacon for a neighborhood facing the reality of being a memory in a few years.

Read The Corpus Christi Caller-Times for more.