(HERE IS THE ARTICLE THAT WAS NOT LINKING PROPERLY)
Grapevine ballplayer injured in batting cage dies
By DOMINGO RAMIREZ JR. and KATHERINE CROMER BROCK
STAR-TELEGRAM STAFF WRITERS
Chris Gavora, a junior pitcher at Grapevine High School, remained in grave condition Friday after being hit in the head by a baseball.
www.myspace.com / Chris Gavora
Chris Gavora, a junior pitcher at Grapevine High School, remained in grave condition Friday after being hit in the head by a baseball.
More photos
* Chris Gavora's MySpace page
GRAPEVINE -- Grapevine High School athlete Chris Gavora, who was injured Thursday while practicing at a school batting cage, died sometime after noon Saturday, the Dallas Medical Examiner's Office reported Saturday.
No other details were available.
School leaders are trying to find out why a protective screen netting that might have prevented Gavora's fatal injury was absent Thursday from the high school's batting cages.
Gavora, 17, was struck in the back of the head by a line drive during batting practice Thursday afternoon as Grapevine High's varsity team warmed up for a tournament game.
Gavora, who wrote on his MySpace page about his love of "sports, friends, girls, music, having fun," had undergone surgery Thursday night.
"Our hearts and support have been extended to the family," Grapevine-Colleyville school district Superintendent Kay Waggoner said in a news release. "It is always incredibly difficult when a member of our GCISD family is involved in an accident or injury of any kind, and we are keeping the student and his family, along with teammates, friends, staff and coaches, in our thoughts and prayers."
Three tournament games at Grapevine High were canceled Thursday. Play resumed Friday, but the batting cages will be closed throughout the tournament this weekend.
On Friday, Grapevine High School's baseball team took to their home field Friday night with "17" painted on each player's left cheek after a long team prayer in the left-field grass.
Hanging in the dugout was a red T-shirt with the same number under the name Gavora -- a reminder of missing teammate Chris Gavora.
When he was struck, Gavora was in one of the school's four batting cages, pitching to a teammate from behind a pitcher's net, according to the news release.
A teammate in a batting cage behind Gavora "hit a line drive that went through an opening in the net, across an open area, and through the other batting cage's opening," where Gavora was pitching, the news release said.
Coaches and trainers who were on the field rushed to Gavora and administered first aid, the release said.
District officials said Friday that a second layer of netting should have been installed over the cage openings, which are behind the pitchers in each cage.
All batting cages at Grapevine and Colleyville Heritage high schools and at Cross Timbers Middle School were inspected Friday. Baseball and softball safety procedures were also being reviewed, according to the release.
The Grapevine High batting cages will be re-opened when the second layer of netting is installed, probably on Tuesday, according to the district.
A crisis counseling team was at Grapevine High on Friday to assist students and staff. During morning announcements, school officials honored the family with a moment of silence.
Gavora last logged into his MySpace account on Thursday. His page says that he is a New York Yankee fan who likes rock music and digitally animated movies, such as Ice Age.
After the accident, a list of friends on the page shows that several of his teammates have changed their profile names to "Pray for 17," in honor of Gavora's uniform number.
Starting at 3:36 p.m. Thursday, minutes after the accident, messages of support started flooding in.
"Stay strong chris," one friend wrote. "you've got about a million people ready to see your gorgeous smile again. see you soon."
Another friend wrote: "Hey man, you gotta get better ... we have to many memories left to make. you gotta open your resteraunt. you gotta graduate and we have to find somewhere to live like we talked about 800 million times."