Kyle Walsh was in the Barnes & Noble foreign language section searching for a book to improve his Spanish. He had a scuba diving trip in Belize the next day and needed to brush up. He found a book, but it was on the top shelf, out of his reach.
Walsh scanned the store for help and saw a girl with auburn hair reading in a corner.
“There were probably 10 options to get the book,” Walsh said. “But, yeah, I chose her.”
Her name was Audra, and yes, of course, she could help this man who couldn’t reach the book from his wheelchair. But that common courtesy turned into an hour-long conversation and an invitation to a dinner date when Walsh returned from his trip.
So Walsh took the Spanish book to Belize, an English colony in Central America whose primary language is… English. But the book wasn’t useless. It connected him with his future wife. He and Audra have been married nearly 20 years now. They have a 13-year-old daughter, Adalee, and a 12-year-old son, Eli, who’ve lived their entire lives in College Station, where Walsh serves as the College Station High School offensive line coach.
Walsh is a quadriplegic, paralyzed from the chest down, with limited use of his arms and almost none in his hands. Over the years, people have tried to encourage him, saying modern medicine could help him walk again. Walsh will have none of it. He may get his legs in the next life, but this wheelchair has provided one full of blessings.
“If I had the option to go back and change it in 1992, I would never take that option because of the last 30 years of incredible things that I’ve been able to be a part of and the incredible people that are part of my life,” Walsh said. “I wouldn’t have met my wife, my kids, or had the time I’ve spent with my brother and nephew.”
Thirty years in a wheelchair has shrunken Kyle Walsh’s body. But his younger brother, Kenn, still sees him as the badass football player who started three years on A&M Consolidated’s Varsity offensive line and played in the McDonald’s All-Star Game.
Kenn was Kyle’s first protégée long before he became a coach. When Kenn felt helpless before his Algebra final freshman year, Kyle sat with him for an hour and worked through the material. Kenn made a 100 on the final. Kyle would call a nervous Kenn before all his high school football games and give his signature advice – do your best and forget about the rest.
“He was the best brother in the world,” Kenn said. “He was a First-Team All-State lineman, he’d have kicked my butt. But he’d always let me have a little bit of an upper hand.”
Kyle won a state championship his senior year in 1991 and then walked on to the University of Texas football team as a long snapper. Since he and future All-American Dan Neil were the only two linemen in the freshman class, he worked in all the offensive line drills throughout camp. His coach told him all he had to do to see the field was gain 85 pounds.
He celebrated his birthday in College Station on October 30 and drove back to Austin on Halloween afternoon. He was on a seamless career arc, a high school state champion now returning to life in Austin as a major college football player. Unbeknownst to him, his playing days were over when he shifted his truck into drive.
Walsh’s tire blew out on the highway and he rolled his truck, snapping the C6 and C7 vertebrae in his neck. He was care-flighted to Brackenridge Hospital and stayed there for two weeks. There, he learned he’d never walk again.
Walsh claims everything that comes out of his mouth is something he learned from someone else. When he coaches at College Station, he hears himself saying things his high school head coach, Ross Rogers, used to tell him. During rehab at St. David’s Hospital, his doctors and therapists became his new coaches, and they instilled in him a mindset that’s carried him over the decades.
“Life is very different, but life is not over,” Walsh said. “And there’s so many other things that I’m able to do and go accomplish.”
After rehab, Walsh had a choice: he could either return to the shelter of his parents’ house and enroll at Texas A&M or continue attending Texas. Walsh puts this decision in football terms. When someone gets hurt or moves away, you wake up the next day with the guys you’ve got and make the best of it. Walsh returned to the same dorm room at UT and learned how to wheel around the Forty Acres.
He majored in Special Education and became a student teacher at nearby Austin High, where he volunteered as a football coach. After graduation, he returned to his alma mater, A&M Consolidated, and coached there until 2012, when he joined Steve Huff’s inaugural staff at the newly built College Station High School.
“Kyle’s the type of guy that makes you hold yourself accountable as a man,” Huff said.
After watching how Kyle conducted himself since the accident, his brother Kenn said he no longer complains. How can he? It takes him 10 minutes to jump out of bed and get to work. It takes Kyle an hour and a half. How can the players or fellow coaches? Kyle’s at the fieldhouse earlier than they are.
Kenn and Kyle talk on the phone daily. Kenn is always availble to help his older brother transition from the work day if needed. Kyle made time for him growing up when other older brothers were bullies. In most ways, Kenn still looks up to him.
Kenn named his first son Kyle Walsh. Kyle became an All-State safety for College Station’s run to the state championship in 2021, coached by his namesake. He walked on to the Texas A&M football team and was in line to play in their bowl game against Oklahoma State before injuring his shoulder.
But he doesn’t complain, either.
Kyle Walsh doesn’t like the spotlight; he’s content spending his Friday nights away from the lights. Up in the pressbox, removed from the atmosphere, he sees things most take for granted and relays them to the players at halftime. He’s played this mental game since the physical one was taken away.
“He’s the smartest person on the football field,” senior offensive lineman Grant Slanker said.
And while he’s a football tactician, it’s not why he became a coach.
“It’s never about the Xs and Os; it’s about being a man and dealing with adversity,” Kenn said. “He’s always said that life is 10 percent what happens to you and 90 percent how you respond.”
His most significant impact comes off the field when junior offensive lineman Clayton Brod offers to do his monthly yard work. There is no proverbial hat he puts on or a switch he flips during practice. There’s only Kyle Walsh.
“He’s a great person, so it’s not like he just puts on a show out on the field for us,” Brod said. “I’ve really gotten to grow a deep connection with him.”
To Walsh, football is a vehicle for boys to become men. Adversity is baked into the sport, and how the kids respond builds a foundation for a better life. Because there will be some form of struggle – it’s one of life’s only certainties. His accident gave him a platform to show his players how to overcome their own obstacles. It’s why he never spends a second of his day wishing it didn’t happen.
“My disability, my hardships, are very visible and very obvious for someone to see. It doesn’t take long to figure out, ‘Hey, he’s in a wheelchair and he struggles with that,’” Walsh said. “But when I look around, there’s so many people that have a whole lot harder paths than I had or have. So if they can use my challenges to motivate them, it’d be worth it.”
This article is available to our Digital Subscribers.
Click "Subscribe Now" to see a list of subscription offers.
Already a Subscriber? Sign In to access this content.