Grump642, Joe DeCamillis underwent surgery and the prognosis is good (no paralysis):
Cowboys assistant coach could return to work within weeks (WFAA.com newslink).
My stepdaughter is a PA at Parkland Hospital/Baylor Medical Center, and she was on duty when two of the injured were brought in. One had a shattered tibia (insert gruesome depiction of bone bits protruding through the skin) and the other a fractured vertebra -- obviously Joe DeCamillis.
¯¯¯¯¯¯¯¯¯¯
Trust me: You would not be playing outdoors in that storm.
Actually, guys, I was in the bathroom recycling some coffee water when the bolt hit, with a simultaneous flash and crack. (My first sphincter-clenching thought was that there was no electric shock or tingle, if you know what I mean.) The bolt nailed the neighbor's satellite dish on his west side; my computer stuff was along the east wall of my study on the east side of my house, within 12 feet of the dish.
It did not hit the power pole we share with our neighbor. The lights didn't even flicker that I can recall. Although the computer was strangely off -- the UPS didn't indicate any problem -- I thought the funny red lights on the cable modem merely meant it needed to be reset. When I picked it up to stick a pin in the hole to press the reset button, I heard that loose-screw sound.
The Internet coaxial cable ran along the roof line across from the dish. I'm thinking it was an induced current rather than a direct branch strike; the cable was working when I got a replacement modem and there was no difficulty with any of the other electronics in our home, other than the CRT-based TV in my wife's study a room over needed to be degaussed -- and I'm not even sure the lightning caused that.
Interestingly, in the last year I moved the TV antenna from the roof to the attic for just this reason; even a low-end HDTV is more expensive than the analog stuff. I'm pretty sure the bolt would have liked the sharp points of the higher antenna better than the satellite dish.
