The good news for the Gophers: Trey Potts, the person, is back in Minnesota recovering from an injury suffered late in the Oct. 2 game at Purdue that caused him to spend six days in two Indiana hospitals.
"He's back here [on campus],'' Gophers coach P.J. Fleck said Monday. "It's unfortunate what happened and really scary what happened. … He's doing way better and will be OK.''
The bad news for the Gophers: Trey Potts, the running back, will miss the remainder of the 2021 season, and Fleck said it's "too early to tell'' if the injury is career-threatening.
Fleck would not go into details about the extent or type of injury, deferring to Potts and his family to speak if they choose.
Potts, the Gophers' leading rusher with 552 yards and six touchdowns on 112 carries, left Minnesota's 20-13 victory over Purdue in West Lafayette, Ind., late in the fourth quarter, appearing to be in no obvious distress. He was observed and treated by the team's medical staff on the sideline before being taken by ambulance to a hospital. He was transferred to Indiana University Health Methodist Hospital in Indianapolis and remained there until Friday.
"You win a football game like that and there's this excitement of winning, but then there's real life that you're incredibly concerned about him and his safety and his health and his well-being,'' said Fleck, adding, "I'm really thankful for the medical team that we have.''
While Fleck and the team flew home after the Oct. 2 game, Gophers athletic director Mark Coyle, head football athletic trainer Mike Sypniak and team physician Dr. David Jewison remained in Indiana overnight with Potts. Potts' parents, Jerome and Georgia, traveled from their Williamsport, Pa., home to be with their son in the hospital.
"I talked to Georgia right after. Obviously, she was really upset. Those are the parent phone calls you never want to have — ever,'' said Fleck, who, accompanied by his wife Heather, flew to Indianapolis last Monday to visit Potts.