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the ground, and was just holding my face," he said. "I had tears pouring out of my eye because it hit me directly in the eye. I thought it was blood so of course I was like, 'Oh my gosh, I'm bleeding. I cut my eye open.' The trainer took me to the dugout and was like, 'Can you see anything?' I remember the last thing I saw was the bottom of his feet probably a minute or two after it happened.""I've never coached a kid who's lost vision through baseball," said head coach Pete Hughes, "so I thought maybe he had a black eye or a little fracture in the orbital bone. Unfortunately it was a lot worse."The trainer couldn't do much, and the school doctors were not present at the time. Padgett waited, all the while his situation deteriorated."At that point, I couldn't see anything at all not a flashlight, not a hand in front of my face, not anything," Padgett said. "I was completely blind."When doctors finally reached Padgett, they drove him to the emergency room. On the way, doctors told him that he might not see out of his eye again. Tests were done to analyze the damage, but without a broken orbital bone, Padgett was sent to an eye specialist in Roanoke.By that time, night had fallen and the eye specialist's office was closed. But the eye doctor came on his own time to meet Padgett. The inside of his eyeball tore, and blood filled the eye, rendering him blind. The prognosis wasn't looking good. Playing baseball again seemed like a miracle."When I first got hurt I asked, 'Am I going to be able to play again?' and he said, 'I'm not going to tell you yes or no, but it doesn't look like it,'"