College wrestler died after being refused water during ‘punishment practice’

File photo: 2023 NCAA Division I Men’s Wrestling Championship | Photo by Shane Bevel/NCAA Photos via Getty Images

Grant Brace was 20 years old. According to CNN The University of the Cumberlands in Kentucky has agreed to…


2023 NCAA Division I Men’s Wrestling Championship
File photo: 2023 NCAA Division I Men’s Wrestling Championship | Photo by Shane Bevel/NCAA Photos via Getty Images

Grant Brace was 20 years old.

According to CNN The University of the Cumberlands in Kentucky has agreed to pay $14.1 million to the family of Grant Brace. Brace died in 2020 after a so-called ‘punishment practice’ as part of the University’s wrestling team. He was 20 years old.

Brace died of heat stroke. The lawsuit alleged that Brace died after his coaches “ignored” his “deteriorating medical condition throughout practice.”

The practise involved coaches Jordan Countryman and Jake Sinkovics requiring wrestlers to spring up and down ‘punishment hill’ for seven circuits (per Kentucky.com). Brace completed a number of these circuits before sitting down due to exhaustion.

The lawsuit further alleged that Brace had repeatedly begged for water, but his coaches, who were accused of creating a “toxic and abusive culture”, refused to let him hydrate. His coaches are also accused of not letting anyone help Brace and sending him out of the facility on his own.

The lawsuit states that Brace’s body was discovered close by “with his hands clinched in the grass and dirt after a desperate and erratic search for assistance and water.”

The university claimed that it could have defended the claims made in the lawsuit, but it chose to settle with the Brace family out of respect.

The Brace family has announced that the university will now implement something called the B.R.A.C.E Protocol. That program is designed to educate coaches and athletes on exertional heat strokes in order to prevent others from dying like Brace.