Injured Little Leaguer expected in Utah Tuesday; Dad hopeful of full recovery


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WILLIAMSPORT, Pa. — The father of the Little League World Series player who seriously injured his head when he fell out of his top bunk in the dorms said there is a chance his son can make a full recovery when he returns home to Utah.

Jace Oliverson told The Associated Press Sunday night his 12-year-old-son, Easton, was expected to fly back Tuesday to Utah and will remain in a hospital there. CNN reported Monday that an Instagram account said doctors from the hospital in Pennsylvania have been in contact with Primary Children's Hospital in Salt Lake City to set up "travel plans."

The post also said the results from a CAT scan performed after Easton Oliverson fell and hit his head a second time came back "normal." It said the boy hit his head going to the bathroom unaccompanied on Saturday night, CNN reported.

Easton Oliverson, a pitcher and outfielder for the Snow Canyon team out of Santa Clara, Utah, suffered the original injury last Monday.

"I'm just grateful that he's still alive because I was pretty much told he had a zero percent chance to live," Jace Oliverson said. "We feel very fortunate."

"There is a chance of a full recovery," he added. "It's just a matter of how long and the therapy that he's going to receive. We're just asking for prayers. Continuous prayers."

The Snow Canyon team, the first ever from Utah to make the Little League World Series, was eliminated from the tournament on Sunday with a 10-2 loss to the team from Iowa.

Oliverson said the traumatic week "most definitely played a part" in the two losses.

"I feel bad that this incident with East had to happen and it kind of put a damper on their week," Jace Oliverson said. "It was the first time Utah's ever been here, done that. It's a big deal, especially in Utah."

The Oliverson family has kept Easton's condition continuously updated on social media with photos of the boy — in a wheelchair and wearing baseball T-shirts — posing for pictures with his family and friends. He watched the team's first Little League World Series game from his hospital bed dressed in his team gear. Easton can communicate with his parents and a video attached to a recent post also showed him drinking and feeding himself.


We want to show that modern-day miracles can still happen.

–Jace Oliverson


"We want to show that modern-day miracles can still happen," Jace Oliverson told the AP. "Our message the whole time is to remind people that we have a loving, Heavenly Father and a savior who wants us to be happy. If we just go to them in prayer, anything is possible, and we're seeing that with Easton."

Mark Ence, the manager for Snow Canyon, representing the Mountain Region, FaceTimed with Easton on Friday.

"I'm not familiar with the recovery process of that sort of injury," Ence said. "But he definitely is improving and the family wanted to let everyone know that they are grateful for the thoughts and prayers and they feel like the prayers are working."

Oliverson wore team identification badges for himself and Easton as Snow Canyon walked into Historic Bowman Field for the MLB Little League Classic between the Boston Red Sox and Baltimore Orioles.

Oliverson held hands with his 10-year-old-son Brogan, who took big brother's roster spot in the Little League World Series. Brogan wrote "Go Tank" on his cleats during games.

"We just want to relax and have some fun," Jace Oliverson said before the MLB game. "It's been a crazy week."

Contributing: Linda Williams, KSL.com

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