Etheridge: After neck injury, walking "a miracle"

Etheridge: After neck injury, walking "a miracle" Photo By AP

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Auburn safety Zac Etheridge feels blessed to be able to walk after a serious neck injury and expects to play football again.

With his neck immobilized by a brace, Etheridge spoke to reporters and teammates Tuesday, three days after sustaining an injury in the Mississippi game that landed him in the hospital for two nights.

He said his fifth vertebra was cracked and he tore ligaments in his neck in a headfirst collision with teammate Antonio Coleman.

Etheridge said he wants to play again and doctors told him he should be able to. He has to wear the brace, a harness-like device with a support under his chin and running up the back of his neck, for three to four months.

The junior said he probably will not attend Saturday's game against Furman, but "I will definitely be at the Iron Bowl" against rival Alabama on Nov. 27.

He was taken by ambulance to a Birmingham hospital Saturday night and was released on Monday. Etheridge and Coleman crashed into each other while trying to tackle Ole Miss running back Rodney Scott.

Etheridge praised Scott for remaining still underneath him on the ground. He planned to talk to him later in the day, and had already spoken to Rebels coach Houston Nutt.

"When it first happened, I was paralyzed for a little bit," Etheridge said. "Just laying on that ground, it felt weird not being able to control your body. I've got to take my hat off to Rodney Scott. It was a blessing that he didn't move.

"If he would have moved anywhere, I wouldn't be here today. I'd still be laying in the hospital bed."

Lying on the ground, temporarily unable to do more than wiggle his toes, Etheridge said he could only offer a brief prayer.

"I was in shock, just not being able to move. There was a lot going through my mind," he said. "The only thing I could say was 'Jesus, Jesus,' just calling out his name."

He said one of the first questions he asked doctors was, "Will I be able to play again?" Etheridge gingerly walked up and down the stairs at the football complex Tuesday, but he wasn't complaining about the brace.

"It's tough to sleep," he said. "It's something I'll have to deal with just to get a chance to try to continue my career.

"I would love to be able to step out on the field and continue to play the game but right now I've just got to take it one day at a time."

Auburn coach Gene Chizik said junior college transfer Demond Washington would move from cornerback to strong safety to replace Etheridge. The secondary has also been without injured starters Mike McNeil and Aairon Savage all season.

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