Hermes hid severity of injuries to get back on field

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Ryan Hermes (middle), who graduated from Sterling this past spring, has suffered nine concussions since middle school. He and his parents, Mark and Becki, are confronting what those injuries could mean for his future. (Philip Marruffo/pmarruffo@saukvalley.com)
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“If somebody made a bad play, I’d be like, ‘Coach, I’m right here; I can go in,’ “ Hermes says.

On the second series, No. 44 was called.

“My heart was racing just knowing I could play again. It was about being out there with my friends,” Hermes recalls.

The Warriors grinded out an 18-14 victory over Julian and in the second round drew powerhouse Montini, which would go on to win its third straight state title. In that game, Hermes was shaken up while blocking and pulled himself out of the game with about 10 minutes to play.

The Warriors lost 35-10. But perhaps the biggest sting for Hermes’ parents was learning that it wasn’t the first time their son didn’t remember the entire fourth quarter of a game.

“We didn’t realize at the end of the season that he wasn’t 100 percent,” Becki says. “I don’t think he was completely honest with us, his doctor or his trainer.”

The hiding continued a few months later when the spring sports season arrived. Sumerfelt wasn’t crazy about Hermes playing baseball. Her fears were validated just 2 weeks into the season. Although she would never have known.

Hard to let go

Until his senior year, Hermes committed himself to football year-round, including attending speed and acceleration camps during the winter. As baseball season approached, he knew all he had left was high-school sports. He called a chance to play baseball “a bonus.”

He wasn’t ready to let go. The habit of playing hurt fully formed, he ignored lingering symptoms from the football season.

A relatively mild collision along the first base line during an early-season trip to O’Fallon, Mo., sent Hermes to the ground.

“I just hit my back and kind of laid there,” Hermes says. “I thought, ‘Crap.’ Then my right fielder was standing on first base. I had no idea why. He said he came to get the ball and I didn’t realize why. I thought the game paused.”

An athlete who endures three concussions in a single school year is ruled ineligible by the IHSA. So Hermes put on his game face and masked the pain.

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