High School Athlete Found with 6 Foot Long Clot In
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video: https://twitter.com/i/status/1567194335086616579
It’s difficult to match the level of excitement for high school football players when their season is about to start. Yet, imagine all that build come crashing down on you.
Unfortunately, that turned out to be the reality one Wauseon junior had to tackle.
There was never a doubt, Kaden Clymer would have impact on the field. Yet, to do so without pads on came without warning.
“It started on August 1st,” Kaden’s mother Maurine Clymer said. “His dad took him to the emergency room after he was having severe pain in his back and legs.”
Teammate Tyson Rodriguez added “I was a bit confused because I didn’t really know what was happening. He just told me that he wasn’t feeling good.”
The night before the Wauseon Indians took to the field for their first Fall team practice, Clymer unexpectedly had to be taken to Toledo Children’s Hospital.
“His calves were swelled up four inches larger, in circumference, than they are now,” Maurine Clymer said. “So, he was very uncomfortable.”
Kaden Clymer added “I just wanted to go home honestly. I didn’t really care what they did to me, I just wanted to go home.”
Full of pain and uncertainty, Clymer received word that he had blood clots in his legs.
“I was really sad. I was crying and upset because I’ve played football my whole life and I just wanted to play with my friends,” the junior lineman said.
Six feet of blood clots were removed and because of the blood thinners he now has to take, Clymer’s football career is over.
A life-changing experience that has proven the toughness of this young man.
"I'm very strong and well-minded because it took a lot of effort to be able to stay in the hospital for nine days straight," Clymer said. "Eat the hospital food and go through all those procedures, it really sucked."
With Grant Kinnee sidelined because of an injury, Morrison is now the guy running the show for the Generals. In his first start against Whitmer, he was steady while playing both sides of the football.
"Friday was awesome. It was a complete blast," said Marco Morrison. "Our coaches and our team, we prepared all week. I couldn't have asked for a better night, a better gameplan, and we came out with a win so that just topped it all off."
But when you start to look in to Morrison's background a little bit, you shouldn't be surprised that he's had success on the football field.
His mom played softball at Michigan, and his dad is Steve Morrison. He was a star for the Wolverines and was their captain in 1994. He went on to play in the NFL.
Steve is now an assistant coach at BGSU, but the highlights that Marco has seen are few and far between. Still, he's certainly aware of all his dad accomplished.
"First of all, the video is on VHS tape and we don't have a VCR player anymore," said Steve. "Their mom played softball at Michigan so they've been around sports all their life, but I don't make a big deal. I wanted those guys to pave their own way and they've done a good job."
"There's a few games recorded on YouTube so I've seen a few of them, but it's a lot of more stories than it is video," said Marco.
Steve tries his best to let Marco do his thing and let the coaches do their job at Anthony Wayne, but he's there when he gets home with any questions.
"It's awesome to know that he had all that success and it's great coming home if I have a football question I can go to him," said Marco. "He's a great figure in my life and I'm honored to have him as my dad."
"Obviously were a sports family. My wife being an athlete and our kids playing," said Steve. "So we do talk a lot about sports, and really the lessons you take from the sport, not talking a lot of scheme and all that stuff."
Dad was a star linebacker at Michigan, and his son was following in his footsteps, but that little taste of quarterback is definitely intriguing to the younger Morrison.
https://www.wtol.com/article/sports/it-couldv...079f8c9049
The Gateway Pundit previously reported that embalmers are finding long, rubbery clots inside of corpses since the implementation of Covid vaccines.
According to one Alabama embalmer who has been treating corpses for over 20 year, the strange fibrous clots emerged in May of 2021, shortly after the Covid vaccines first became available to the public.
“In 20 years of embalming, I had never seen these white fibrous structures in the blood, nor have others in my field. In the past year, I have seen these strange clots in many different individuals, and it doesn’t seem to matter what they die of, they often have similar substances in their blood. This makes me very concerned because if something is wrong in the blood, it begs the question: is something causing people to die prematurely?” Hirschman told the Epoch Times.