Youth football coach suffers heart attack; bystanders help save his life


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HERRIMAN — Call it instinct, a miracle, or training that paid off.

Whatever it was, a series of small events that took place at a Herriman football practice just before Labor Day is the reason one of the coaches is alive tonight.

Taylor Cowan has coached with the Herriman Youth Football Bantam team for years. Last week he was doing drills with the teens when he collapsed on the field.

"I saw out of the corner of my eye, Taylor stumble and then collapse," said Nate Rothe, head coach of the youth team.

Taylor Cowan and his brother, Scott Cowan, have helped Rothe coach the team for years. Across the field, the Herriman High teams were just finishing practice when the coaches heard yelling.

"All of a sudden I just heard somebody yell that they needed a trainer," Heath Holverson said. "I looked down there and I could see a coach was down. And so I ran over."

Holverson coaches the Herriman High School freshman football team. While he started compression, head coach Dustin Pearce said something prompted him to get the automated external defibrillator and get over to the other field, fast. He said he didn't know why but, at that moment, he knew exactly what to do.

"For some reason, everything was crystal clear," Pearce said.

He grabbed the defibrillator and made a run for it. Taylor Cowan was unresponsive. His brother knew he had been having heart issues for a few months and even had medication just in case something like this happened. But, on this night there was no warning. Taylor Cowan doesn't recall collapsing.

Football coach Taylor Cowan collapsed during a football practice in Herriman just before Labor Day. Quick action by those who were at the practice saved his life.
Football coach Taylor Cowan collapsed during a football practice in Herriman just before Labor Day. Quick action by those who were at the practice saved his life. (Photo: Family photo)

"The first thing I remember, just waking up in the hospital with my friends and family nearby telling me I had chest compressions," Taylor Cowan said. "They shocked me and it looked like I wasn't going to survive there for a little bit."

Taylor Cowan's nephew Cole is on the team. The night was terrifying for him.

"I was really scared to see him down on the ground like that. I thought he was dead," Cole said. As a family member, he was aware of the concerns about his uncle's heart.

For everyone involved, football brings them together and this moment on the field has bonded them for life.

On Wednesday, Taylor Cowan describes the day he collapsed during a football practice in Herriman. It happened just before Labor Day. Quick action by those who were at the practice saved his life.
On Wednesday, Taylor Cowan describes the day he collapsed during a football practice in Herriman. It happened just before Labor Day. Quick action by those who were at the practice saved his life. (Photo: Jay Hancock, KSL-TV)

"It was very unique how everything came together and I believe that, you know a string of miracles occurred on that day to save Taylor's life," Rothe said.

Many of the adults present that night were certified in CPR training. The youth league is looking to make that training mandatory for all coaches.

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Debbie Worthen

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