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Notre Dame’s Spond has made difficult journey back

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(MCT) — SOUTH BEND, Ind. — Practice churned on like any other practice on a Wednesday in August, full of sweat-flecked expectation, until Danny Spond got halfway through it. His head started to hurt. Football players get headaches, and they play through headaches, so the Notre Dame linebacker pressed on.

About the time his vision blurred and his face tingled, Spond figured he should stop. He approached head athletic trainer Rob Hunt with a self-diagnosis: I don’t feel well.

The medical staff proceeded with questions to puzzle out the junior’s condition. It was then that Spond lost feeling in the left side of his body. Soon he was at a hospital, where he would stay for two days, enduring a torrent of exams and scans, petrified that his brain and legs never would let him take another step.

“The pain was one thing — I can handle the pain,” Spond said. “I wanted to be able to move again, I wanted to be able to walk again. There were moments I didn’t know if that was going to be a possibility, or when that was going to come back, if at all.”

He tries not to, but sometimes Spond takes a moment after playing nearly every defensive snap for the BCS No. 3 Irish and juxtaposes that with fearful days followed by weeks of therapy to retrain the muscles in his leg — to move forward by reminding his body how to do that all over.

Days after that first attack, a specialist gave Spond an answer: He had suffered a rare hemiplegic migraine. Still, if he could tackle the arduous recovery from that, there was no guarantee he’d tackle anything else.

“Certainly the concern wasn’t whether he would play football but how well he would function,” Hunt said. “Once his function returned, it was: OK, football is in the picture — is he going to want to play football again? ... Danny is so faithful and so goal-driven that I don’t know there was ever a point that he doubted it.”

Initially, Spond worried his body wouldn’t let him. If a hemiplegic migraine sounds a lot like a stroke, it’s because it is.

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