Shane Cavinee Resigns Head Coaching at Hardin Northern
#1
Posted 08 January 2012 - 05:56 PM
#2
Posted 08 January 2012 - 07:05 PM
Bandido- November 24, 1957- August 12th, 2011.....RIP, my good friend... things will never be the same here without you. :(
Gonemad -June 26th, 1962-May 13th, 2008
sliceslicebaby@facebook.com
sliceslicebaby@twitter.com
#3
Posted 08 January 2012 - 08:32 PM
#4
Posted 08 January 2012 - 10:27 PM
#5
Posted 08 January 2012 - 10:29 PM
Bandido- November 24, 1957- August 12th, 2011.....RIP, my good friend... things will never be the same here without you. :(
Gonemad -June 26th, 1962-May 13th, 2008
sliceslicebaby@facebook.com
sliceslicebaby@twitter.com
#6
Posted 09 January 2012 - 01:39 AM
Edited by jeffcat-bucki, 09 January 2012 - 01:41 AM.
#7
Posted 09 January 2012 - 08:40 AM
#8
Posted 09 January 2012 - 10:38 AM
reddevils, on 09 January 2012 - 08:40 AM, said:
Care to enlighten us, then, since we seem to be so in the wrong????
#9
Posted 09 January 2012 - 11:23 AM
#11
Posted 09 January 2012 - 03:38 PM
#12
Posted 09 January 2012 - 05:09 PM
#13
Posted 09 January 2012 - 05:20 PM
also, it does sound like a hardship per the previous posts, so as usual, no matter the situation, my best wishes to him & the family.
Bandido- November 24, 1957- August 12th, 2011.....RIP, my good friend... things will never be the same here without you. :(
Gonemad -June 26th, 1962-May 13th, 2008
sliceslicebaby@facebook.com
sliceslicebaby@twitter.com
#14
Posted 09 January 2012 - 05:40 PM
reddevils, on 09 January 2012 - 03:38 PM, said:
Not trying to be an ass, but you may as well just let the cat out of the bag. Especially if someone needs prayers, which I would be more than happy to offer.
#15
Posted 09 January 2012 - 05:49 PM
DOLA--Shane Cavinee may be facing one of the biggest challenges of any coach around the area this season.
Cavinee is replacing Pete Brunow as Hardin Northern head coach. All Brunow did in his 26 seasons at Hardin Northern, one of the smallest football-playing schools in the state, was compile a 221-70 record, take the Polar Bears to the playoffs 12 times, and win a Division VI state championship in 2004.
This is not be the first time Cavinee has faced a challenge, however, not in his coaching career and not in his personal life.
Cavinee was head coach at Upper Scioto Valley when that school, which was struggling to find enough players to have a squad, was making the transition from a junior varsity program in 2004 and 2005 to a varsity team in 2006.
More recently, Cavinee and his family were dealt a more considerable test.
Cavinee's third son, Liam, was born about a year and a half ago. But Cavinee and his wife, Jennifer, quickly knew something was wrong while he was in the hospital.
Liam was born with jaundice and could not keep anything in his body due to vomiting and diarrhea. Doctors originally thought Liam's digestive system hadn't started working yet and he was suffering from colic, a problem that causes babies to cry excessively.
When the ailments continued, it was clear something else was going on.
Eventually, Liam was diagnosed with a digestive disorder, but doctors are not sure of the specific type.
"It's been tough, because it is kind of like the unknown right now," Cavinee said. "We don't know exactly what is going on."
Doctors have specified the digestive illness is either Food Protein-Induced Enterocolis Syndrome (FPIES) or eosinophilic esophagitis (EE).
FPIES is an immune reaction in the gastrointestinal system to one or more specific foods. Vomiting and diarrhea are common symptoms. Because of this, if a child continually ingests food, poor growth may result.
On the other hand, EE is an allergic inflammatory disease in which there are too many eosinophils in the esophagus. Many of the effects from EE are similar to the symptoms of FPIES.
"Our hope is that it is FPIES, because the likelihood of a child growing out of FPIES is really high," Cavinee said. "If it's the EE disorder, he'll have to live with it for life."
Currently there is no method to test for FPIES, but EE can be diagnosed through an endoscopy. In the endoscopy, doctors will use an endoscope to look at the esophagus, stomach and duodenum, take multiple biopsies and have a pathologist review the samples with a microscope.
There is a chance the endoscopy could be a false negative, however, meaning the results might show that he doesn't have the disorder, even if he actually does.
"If they do the scope in November and if that scope comes back negative, it's a good thing and a bad thing, because we don't know if it is true or not," Cavinee said. "So they don't really know."
Liam is also affected by several other ailments related to his digestive disorder.
He suffers from protein intolerance, gastroesophageal reflux disease (GERD), and pruritus, which causes him to itch and dig at his skin whenever it flares up. Because of the disorder, he is also generally sick more often than a typical child and has difficulty sleeping.
Since Liam cannot keep any food in his body, he is fed using a medical formula that is amino acid based and already broken down. That way his body doesn't have to do any of the digesting.
The Cavinees take Liam to Nationwide Children's Hospital in Columbus and Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center. They primarily travel to Cincinnati anywhere from every few weeks to every couple months to see two doctors and a feeding team that make sure he is growing like any other child.
"So far with the medical food and the formula, he is still in the 50th percentile with his weight and everything, so they are really happy about that," Cavinee said.
So far, most of the feedback from the doctors has been encouraging.
"The doctors are giving us positives," Cavinee said. "They really think that it is the FPIES and they don't know how long it is going to be, but after time they think he will grow out of it and this will be a thing of the past, which that is what we are praying for."
Without tremendous support at home, Cavinee would not have been able to fulfill his goal of being a head football coach.
"That was the first question asked of me when I was hired, as far as the time commitment," Cavinee said. "My wife and I, we discussed it and she is a rock.
"She supports me 100 percent. She told me that she knows that this is what I want to do and she was willing to basically take the load of it. She is home with the kids all day every day and I am at practice, meetings. I'm doing this and that and I know it is tough on her and I just can't thank her enough."
This allows him to focus on his responsibilities as a football coach.
"When I'm at football, I'm at football," Cavinee said. "Sometimes it gets a little tough, but for the most part when I am at football that is my focus."
When he is not at football or school, he makes sure to spend plenty of time with his family, especially his two older sons Mason and Ayden.
"Whenever I get a moment's time at home to spend with the boys and my wife, that is what we do," Cavinee said.
"We spend family time together and that is very important to us, especially to my older two (sons). They get kind of get shuffled around in the mix sometimes. I know it is tough on them, so we just try to spend a lot of time together when we can at the house, playing in the backyard, just spending time with each other."
#17
#18
Posted 10 January 2012 - 03:35 PM
#19
Posted 14 January 2012 - 01:47 PM
Edited by bearclawz, 14 January 2012 - 02:56 PM.
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