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    Tennessee's Summitt has early onset dementia

    Pat Summitt made it clear. She won't accept a "pity party."

    The winningest coach in women's basketball just wants to focus on getting Tennessee back on top.

    Summitt surprised the sports world with her announcement Tuesday that she had been diagnosed with early onset dementia — the Alzheimer's type. The Hall of Fame coach appeared stoic during a minute-long video posted on the school's website.

    "I plan to continue to be your coach," the 59-year-old said in the video. "Obviously, I realize I may have some limitations with this condition since there will be some good days and some bad days."

    There is no cure for the disease and even Summitt's icy glare that has struck fear in many an opponent, official or Lady Vols player, won't be able to stop its advances.

    Still she said she won't have her time at Tennessee turn into a "pity party."

    Summitt isn't sure how much longer she will coach only saying that she would do it "as long as the good Lord is willing".

    Before Tuesday's news, Summitt was trying to figure out a way to end a three-year drought of missing the Final Four — one of the longest in her 37-year tenure at the school. She does have one of the top recruiting classes coming in this year as freshmen.

    She met with her team Tuesday to discuss her diagnosis. Junior guard Taber Spani said the meeting was businesslike, with Summitt telling the Lady Vols nothing would get in the way for their quest of a ninth national title this season.

    "It's shocking, just because you don't expect that to happen to someone you look up to," Spani said. "I admire her, and just seeing her just gave me more confidence in her as a coach. We're going to rally."

    Summitt will rely more on her assistants — Holly Warlick, Dean Lockwood and Mickie DeMoss — but they aren't sure exactly how things may change.

    "We're here to help Pat as far as coaching and will help this program continue its tradition. And I'm here for Pat as a friend," Warlick said. "I know she's going to be here coaching, but she is quick to say this is Tennessee basketball. We're going to carry on the tradition no matter what."

    Warlick said Summitt also wanted to crush any speculation about her health after the announcement.

    "We got on the phone immediately and called kids and commitments and had nothing but a huge amount of support," Warlick said. "I think it's one thing to see it on the (TV news) ticker. It's another thing to hear from Pat Summitt that we're here, we're going to be here and nothing is going to change about Tennessee basketball."

    Summitt's family and closest confidants have known about her condition since she first learned of it, but the Hall of Fame coach first revealed the news publicly to the Washington Post and Knoxville News Sentinel.

    She also told her former players early Tuesday morning.

    "As a player, we know coach is the type who's not going to give up. She's going to fight, she's going to do everything she can," said Michelle Snow, who played for Tennessee from 1998-2002. "She's probably going to be the best patient they ever had. She's a fighter and she's been through a lot. She knows how to fight and she's going to continue to do that."

    As the stunning news swept across the women's basketball world Tuesday, the reaction was simple: she'll meet the disease head on.

    Indiana Fever coach Lin Dunn first met Summitt 40 years ago at Tennessee-Martin. The two used to play softball in the summer together and were sorority sisters. She was floored this morning when she got the phone call with the news.

    "My first reaction was tremendous respect, how she was publicly acknowledging this disease. I know how tough minded she is, tremendous perseverance," Dunn said by phone. "She will bring national attention to this disease and she can spearhead a move to try and fight it."

    That sentiment was echoed by former Lady Vols star Candace Parker.

    "I don't think she is going to let it affect her," the Los Angeles Sparks star said. "I think she is going to continue on coaching as long as she can. She came out with (the news) and now we're going to move forward."

    Summitt's biggest rival, Connecticut coach Geno Auriemma was shocked and saddened by the news.

    "You don't necessarily associate dementia with people our age, so this announcement really put things in perspective," he said.

    Summitt has won eight national titles at Tennessee and is 29 victories short of 1,100 — that would give her 200 more than former Texas coach Jody Conradt, who is No. 2 on the list.

    "It always seemed she had no vulnerability," Conradt said. "She's the solid rock everyone looked up to. ... I'm very happy she's not going to walk off the court at this point. When you have made it your life, there needs to be transition."

    Summitt has been bothered for a while by rheumatoid arthritis. Tennessee athletics director Joan Cronan said that the coach initially chalked up her memory problems to side effects from medicine she was taking to treat it.

    The coach first consulted local doctors, who recommended she undergo a more extensive evaluation. In May, she traveled to the Mayo Clinic in Rochester, Minn., where doctors performed a spinal tap and other tests that eventually produced the diagnosis.

    Summitt's first reaction was anger, but that soon gave way to determination.

    "She's ready to fight this and move on," Cronan said. "She had to come to grips with how she wanted to face it."

    Talking about it was a big step and her son Tyler was instrumental in making that happen.

    "Tyler has been so courageous in this," Summitt's longtime associate head coach Holly Warlick said. "He encouraged her to come forward."

    Tyler has been supporting his mother throughout this process; he went to the Mayo Clinic with her in May. And though he has been a great sounding board, the 20-year-old said his mom's revelation is a life lesson for everyone.

    "It seems like she teaches me something new everyday, and she is currently giving me one of the best life lessons of all: to have the courage to be open, honest, and face the truth," he said. "This will be a new chapter for my mom and I, and we will continue to work as a team like we always have done."

    ___

    AP Sports Writers Beth Rucker and Jim Vertuno contributed to this story.

    ___

    Follow Doug Feinberg at http://twitter.com/dougfeinberg.

     

    74 comments

    • Rachel  •  9 mths ago
      May God bless you and hold you close Pat!
    • Bama  •  9 mths ago
      Good luck to coach Summitt. She has coached with class and dignity. All coaches, college, pro, high school and little league can pattern their programs around what this lady has done. She has my respect. She'll handle the disease with the same class and dignity as she has her coaching career.
    • Still Confused  •  9 mths ago
      She is one tough and classy act. Bravo Pat for what you have and will continue to acheive. Thank you for making womens basketball what it is today.
    • Outrun My Gun  •  9 mths ago
      Dementia is an epidemic - tea partiers are running rampant with it...
      • A Yahoo! User 9 mths ago
        There aren't enough relevant political stories where you can post? Take your lame agenda and your lame jokes somewhere else, jackass.
      • Outrun My Gun 9 mths ago
        Bite me...
    • clyde e  •  9 mths ago
      My most memorable picture of Coach Summitt is when she did the cheerleading thing for the men's basketball team and sang old rocky top, made my day
    • clyde e  •  9 mths ago
      We love ya coach, a classy lady.... I pray there is cure soon...
    • bjohn18x  •  9 mths ago
      Long before she won fame and recognition, Pat Summitt was one of the finest people -- in or out of coaching -- i ever had the pleasure to work with in 25 years of journalism. New York Times or Podunk Press, she treated the media with respect. Never once did I suspect she was putting on a show at attract attention or using her increasing profile for anything but the good of her team and development of the women's game. Away from the court, the best I can say is that when I knew her she was simply a good person. You'd never guess she was 'somebody.' No pretense. Given all her awards, tributes and accomplishments, that's pretty important, too. Right?
    • oldfatguy1  •  9 mths ago
      I am a bit confused as to the stories....one says dementia, one alzheimers.......There is a clinical difference between the two
      It's sad to see someone with her ethics, skills, ability to relate to young people and be the face of the University. It is especially hard for a woman to attain that status in todays big business of college sports. She had become the only bright spot in Tennessee's athletic's with the likes of Bruce Pearl in basketball and the whole slimey mess the football program became.
      • A Yahoo! User 9 mths ago
        What "clinical difference" are you talking about? Alzheimer's is a disease. Dementia is a symptom. Patients with alzheimer's exhibit dementia. There's nothing wrong with the story's use of these terms.
      • oldfatguy1 9 mths ago
        My point being....just because you have dementia, you don't automatically have alzheimers. If you have ever known anyone very close and dealt w/them on a daily basis, there are some noticable differences in the the brain reactors. Alzheimers..pacing, complete loss of memory able recognition, repetitive motion. Most if not all of these are not interchanghe story able w/ dementia. I just wonder when you see a story lead with one diagnosis and the story line carry another. for example, Glen Campbell's story carried the alzheimers diagnosis all the way through
    • Jack  •  9 mths ago
      Who Cares
      • oldfatguy1 9 mths ago
        I think most people that have a little bit of common sense and understanding of life and consequences. If you have never had to see a family member go through not being able to remember their kids and grandkids, be able to remember to eat or tjust ate a few minutes before. It sounds comical to think of going into a restaurant and forgetting what they ordered before they get their food, but it's not to the family.
        Grow up......it may be your cross to bear later in life. Hopefully, those around you won't say....who cares.
    • Grand Imam O'Reilly  •  9 mths ago
      Classy lady. Sorry to hear this.
    • K-SHE95 Fan  •  9 mths ago
      There are millions of liberals walking around with the same ailment.
      • oldfatguy1 9 mths ago
        Not really, dementia and alzheimers aren't contagious and terminal which apparently liberalism is.
      • A Yahoo! User 9 mths ago
        There aren't enough political stories where you can post? Take your lame agendas and your lame jokes somewhere else. Jackasses.
    • Texasroper  •  9 mths ago
      Terrible things always seem to happen to the best people ........................
    • BillE  •  9 mths ago
      Wow..a college sports icon and soooo young. She is a national treasure. Her program has produced some Americas best citizens. Hang tough Coach Pat, with your grit and determination you'll handle this thing....
    • benjamin63_99  •  9 mths ago
      @Torgo "Ronald Reagan ran the country for years during his onset of Alzheimer's."

      So THAT'S why Iran-Contra happened on his watch. Thanks for clearing that up!
      • R U Serious 9 mths ago
        Obama is dumber than all people in the early stages of dementia, and dumber than half the people with full blown alzhiemers.
    • Don  •  9 mths ago
      I'm truly sorry for Pat Summitt and her family. One wonders, however, why they are calling it "early onset dementia, Alzheimer's Type," rather than calling it "early onset Alzheimer's" which apparently it is. Perhaps that's the proper diagnosis or terminology, but when most others are afflicted with this terrible disease, including a number females in my wife's family, it's always diagnosed as simply "Alzheimer's." I sincerely wish the best to her and her family, as it will become a very rough road in the future. A good friend of mine's husband was recently diagnosed with early onset Alzheimer's, and he's only 49, so it can indeed strike early in life.
    • Ray  •  9 mths ago
      My son and I saw her walking in the mall in Knoxville. She has a few folks following and asking her for autographs. My son asked who she was and I answered "Son thats what a champion looks like".
      I can only hope my son grows up with half of her character. God Bless you Pat.
    • RyanC  •  9 mths ago
      Sorry to hear this, My father was diagnosed at age 60, and all I got to say is she needs to make the decision soon, because the worst part of this disease is she may never feel she is unable to coach, and then go through the pain of being forced out. The best description I have heard for people aflicted with Alzheimers is, "They don't know what the don't know".
    • Gamblor  •  9 mths ago
      That's crazy
    • Kevin  •  9 mths ago
      This disease is no joking matter, I hope she fights it just as hard as she teaches her teams to fight on the court. Good luck and God Speed Coach Summit, from a college hoops fan and fervent member of Husky Nation.
    • roughrider  •  9 mths ago
      She is a fighter and will find a way to win this battle.
      Good luck Pat!
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