Published March 4, 2010
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Okanogan girls
basketball coach Gary Smith talks to his team during the first quarter
of Wednesday's game against Cedar Park Christian in the SunDome.
SARA
GETTYS/
Yakima Herald-Republic |
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Back where he belongs
Okanogan's Smith returns to sidelines after heart scare
By
SCOTT SANDSBERRY
YAKIMA HERALD-REPUBLIC
The first time Gary Smith felt the pain in his chest,
he blamed it on all that red meat. Not eating it. Lifting it.
A neighbor near Smith's ranch on the outskirts of Omak raises beef cattle,
and Smith, coach of the Okanogan girls basketball team playing at the SunDome in this week's 1A state tournament, had hauled several boxes of
fresh-cut beef from his car inside to the freezer.
"I thought I'd pulled a muscle because I'd lifted those boxes out of the
car," Smith, 69, recalls of a series of events that began in December 2008.
So he took half a pain pill he still had lying around from a shoulder
surgery, and he felt fine. The next night the pain returned; he took another
half-pill, and the pangs went away. The next night, the same thing.
He just wasn't worried about it.
"The thing is, I don't drink, smoke or chew. Never have. I exercise, I eat
good stuff," says Smith.
So the night after that first pain in the chest, Smith did what came
naturally to the guy who demands solid physical conditioning from every
football, track and basketball team he has coached: He worked out.
"I went down and did 20 minutes on the elliptical," he says.
"I could have dropped dead on the elliptical."
He didn't find that out, though, until his fourth straight night of chest
pain, which came while he was in Wenatchee after scouting a game involving a
future opponent. He and his wife, Dannis, headed to the emergency room at
Central Washington Hospital, just to be safe.
The only thing good about the news was that Smith received it before it was
too late.
"My blood pressure was 217 over 104," he said. "The doctors said, my gosh,
when you're in the 220s you're having a heart attack."
They also said Smith had three major arterial blockages and that they needed
to do open-heart surgery. Now.
* * * *
That Gary Smith was once again coaching, after state high school
hall-of-fame coaching careers in both football and track (and state titles
in both) and after taking girls teams to the state title game at both Omak
and Tonasket, is simply because he has to coach.
Already long retired, Smith had left Tonasket after 10 years as girls coach
so he could coach his grandsons in second- and third-grade basketball. When
the boys moved with their mom to Bellevue, though, there was just too much
time in the day. Smith grew restless.
"My wife said, you've got to do something, you're driving me crazy," Smith
recalls with a grin. So when the Okanogan girls job opened up, he took it.
Three games later, he had those chest pains and what turned out to be a
quintuple bypass and eight nights in the hospital.
Doctors told Gary and Dannis Smith his coaching days were over. Gary,
naturally, talked a nurse into bringing a VCR to his room so he could grade
the game film Dannis had shot at the game they had scouted. "So," Dannis
says with a sigh, "he was still in the game."
At the end of his hospital stay, Smith says, his doctor told him,
"After
knowing you for eight days, I can see you maybe going back to the school and
sitting in a chair and coaching from there ... "
* * * *
The sitting down, though, was critical. And, for now, only at practices. The
doctors were having none of Smith being jostled around on a team bus, and
gesticulating and storming the sidelines at games was out of the question --
it might split open the breastbone, still healing from the surgery.
So he sat at practice for two weeks. And at every practice, Dannis would sit
behind him, making sure he didn't even think about getting out of his chair.
He was still weak as a kitten. "I'd be talking and I'd just run out of air,"
Smith says. And if he deigned to rise, either Dannis or one of the girls
would demand, "Sit down, coach!" And he would.
Smith was back coaching games by the last month of the season, though
assistant coach Kevin Daling did all the standing up. The Bulldogs finished
with a 10-13 record, and this year -- with a clean bill of health, a team
with three freshman starters and only one senior, and the energy of a man
with a new heart -- Smith has worked yet another coaching miracle.
His team has won 22 of 24 games, with a date in today's quarterfinals
against Connell, which upset top-ranked, defending champion Seattle
Christian.
Dannis carries her husband's nitroglycerin tablets should his heart pains
return, but he's never taken a one. And Smith -- ever the coach -- believes
coaching may well have saved his life.
"Things worked out," he says. "If I hadn't been down
there scouting in Wenatchee, where they have that big hospital, I could be
dead."
Nope. Gary Smith's basketball team is still alive. And so is their coach. |