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Lady Vols' Amber Gray recovering from brain surgery
Updated 8/12/2009 12:25 PM ET
CINCINNATI (AP) — Amber Gray walks with a limp. Her left eyelid droops almost shut, the lingering effect of a life-threatening stroke. Her left arm is in a sling.

There's no doubt in her mind that she will play basketball again for Tennessee. But not this year.

"I'm not sure of the timetable ... but I definitely will play again," she said Monday as she prepared to leave a long-term rehabilitation facility to continue her recovery at home in nearby Mason. "As soon as they say I can go out on the court, I'm getting out there.

"I'm still working on my walking," she said. "I do eyebrow raisers every day."

Gray was voted the top girls prep basketball player in Ohio a year ago by a panel of sports writers and was recruited by all the top college programs. She chose perennial power Tennessee and played in 27 games as a freshman.

It wasn't until after the 6-foot-1 forward had shoulder surgery in July that doctors found a brain aneurysm, later repaired in a 12 1/2-hour procedure that may have saved her life.

"I think I took life, in general, for granted," said Gray, 19. "You don't know what it (a life-threatening situation) is like until you go through it. I'm a lot stronger mentally, which is where I struggled last year."

Dr. Mark Goddard, who helped oversee her rehab at Cincinnati's Drake Center, said it might have been a lucky thing that the aneurysm showed up while Gray was hospitalized.

"Whether you call it serendipity or divine providence, they noticed that something wasn't right," he said. "She probably had this all along, but people don't generally notice it until their 30s and 40s."

Gray averaged 2.7 points and 1.9 rebounds in 7.6 minutes a game last season. She expects to return to classes in Tennessee in January.

"Amber's strong will, positive attitude and determination, coupled with the excellent work of her medical team, has allowed for her release 2 1/2 weeks ahead of schedule," Tennessee coach Pat Summitt said in a statement released in Knoxville.

"The Lady Vol basketball family continues to keep Amber in our constant thoughts and prayers. We know she will approach the next phase of her rehabilitation with the same strong will, determination and intensity."

Goddard said Gray had successful rotator cuff surgery on July 2 in Knoxville, and the aneurysm was unrelated. But within hours of that surgery, Gray's lungs filled with fluid and doctors performed more tests as her mother prayed.

"We went from celebrating to not knowing if my daughter would ever wake up again," said her mother, Tonya Carter.

It was days before the broken blood vessel that caused a stroke showed up. Meanwhile, Gray had been transferred to University Hospital in Cincinnati for neurosurgery, and then to the rehabilitation center on July 23.

Goddard called Gray's progress "meteoric," and said it's been inspirational to other patients.

"I've always known that she was a strong person, but she was amazingly strong," Carter said.

Gray averaged 18.2 points, 8.1 rebounds 4.5 assists and 3.5 steals a game her senior year at Lakota West High School, the runner-up that season in the Division I state title game.

"Regardless if she plays basketball again or not, people have been able to see what kind of person she is," said her father, Carlton Gray, who said he never faced such adversity in an eight-year NFL career as a defensive back with Seattle, Indianapolis, the New York Giants and Kansas City.

"Ninety-nine percent of athletes you deal with, they all are great when everything is going well for them," he said. "What kind of personality, what kind of character do they show when they go through something negative? I've been extremely proud of how she's handled herself."

Gray said the world of sports often trivializes the meaning of "life or death," applying it to a crucial but hardly life-threatening first down situation or a must-win game.

"It takes on a whole new meaning because she literally was fighting for her life," he said.

Copyright 2009 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
Posted 8/11/2009 8:58 PM ET
Updated 8/12/2009 12:25 PM ET
Amber Gray, a forward at the University of Tennessee basketball team, leaves the Drake Center in Hartwell, Ohio, with supporters, from left, physical therapist Kristy Black, mother Tonya Carter, and occupational therapist Diana Lee, on Tuesday.  Gray, 19, underwent elective surgery on July 2 to repair her rotator cuff. Post-surgery complications led to the discovery of an unrelated brain aneurysm that began to hemorrhage, causing a stroke.
By Carrie Cochran, AP
Amber Gray, a forward at the University of Tennessee basketball team, leaves the Drake Center in Hartwell, Ohio, with supporters, from left, physical therapist Kristy Black, mother Tonya Carter, and occupational therapist Diana Lee, on Tuesday. Gray, 19, underwent elective surgery on July 2 to repair her rotator cuff. Post-surgery complications led to the discovery of an unrelated brain aneurysm that began to hemorrhage, causing a stroke.
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