Gary Kubiak did not suffer heart attack

Houston Texans head coach collapsed pitchside on his way to the locker room at half-time and was taken straight to hospital

Houston Texans head coach Gary Kubiak. Photograph:   Richard Clement/Reuters
Houston Texans head coach Gary Kubiak. Photograph: Richard Clement/Reuters

Houston Texans head coach Gary Kubiak did not suffer a heart attack in his team's NFL loss to the Indianapolis Colts, defensive co-ordinator Wade Phillips has confirmed.

As Kubiak headed back to the locker room at half-time, he collapsed pitchside at Reliant Stadium and, after being treated on the sideline and taken away on a stretcher, was rushed to hospital.

The Texans confirmed "he is conscious and his family is with him" and Phillips — who deputised for Kubiak in the second half — offered further encouragement in his post-game press conference, streamed on the Texans' website.

“All his vital signs are good,” Phillips told reporters. “He did not have a heart attack but they’re still checking on him.” Asked to reflect on the scenes in the locker room at half-time, he added: “There was a lot of unknown.

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“Everything was unknown as to what was going on, what happened to ‘Kube’. It was a shock to everybody. I was travelling in (when Kubiak collapsed) and I saw him on the ground. I kept asking what happened.

“That’s kind of what happened with everyone — ‘What’s going on?’We finally got word they took him to the hospital but we were unsure with everything.”

Lead Rookie quarterback Case Keenum added: “It was really weird (at half-time), they started calling for a trainer and said (Kubiak) had passed out.

“We went back out, they told us he was alright, he was stable, but they didn’t know what had happened yet. We were all very worried and upset about that but trying to stay focused at the same time.”

Keenum had produced a stunning first half to lead the Texans to a 21-3 lead, but the Colts roared back in the second half to win 27-24 as Andrew Luck threw three touchdown passes to TY Hilton.

Phillips refused to use Kubiak’s collapse as an excuse for his team’s second-half woes, saying: “I look at the second half and we had our opportunities. The ball game came down to them playing well, especially at crunch time, and we didn’t. We made all the big plays in the first half, they made the big plays second half.”

National Football League: Buffalo Bills 13 Kansas City Chiefs 23, Carolina Panthers 34 Atlanta Falcons 10, Cleveland Browns 24 Baltimore Ravens 18, Dallas Cowboys 27 Minnesota Vikings 23, New England Patriots 55 Pittsburgh Steelers 31, New York Jets 26 New Orleans Saints 20, Oakland Raiders 20 Philadelphia Eagles 49, Seattle Seahawks 27 Tampa Bay Buccaneers 24 (OT), St Louis Rams 21 Tennessee Titans 28, Washington Redskins 30 San Diego Chargers 24 (OT), Houston Texans 24 Indianapolis Colts 27