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The room was not air-conditioned. Members of the coaching staff who were on hand did not say the room was uncomfortably hot, Russell said.
McMinnville Police Capt. Dennis Marks said his force hasn't begun an investigation.
"We haven't gotten any information from the school or medical officials to give us reason to open one at this point," he said.
Kearin, a veteran of nearly three decades at the high school and college level in California, spoke briefly at Monday's news conference, reading from a prepared statement.
He described routine exercises in which players work with a partner. He did not answer questions.
McMinnville High's campus was closed off to visitors, and two police cars were parked in the parking lot or Wartman Stadium, where practice was held.
Draper said many players were concerned that the team would be tainted by the suggestion that steroids or other performance-enhancing supplements were involved.
However, he expected such adversity would bring the team together.
"The worst has already happened," Draper said. "It will only get better from here, I think."
The athletes who were hospitalized will have to get signed permission from their doctors to return to practice. There is a chance the Grizzlies will have to forfeit their season opener.
Kearin has been head coach at Cal State Northridge, which cut football in 2001. Most recently, he coached Loyola High School in Los Angeles to the Southern Section Division I championship before leaving the post in 2009.
Adam Guerra, who worked as an assistant under Kearin at Loyola and took over as Loyola's interim coach last year, said Kearin "always put his players' well-being as a top priority."
"He was never a rule-breaker. I would describe him as a player's coach. He was not one of those old-school, smash-mouth kind of guys," Guerra said in a telephone interview from Los Angeles, where he is taking a year off from football.
He said Kearin never encouraged players to use supplements to build strength, believing that good conditioning and good nutrition were enough.
[Associated Press;
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