Kansas star Darryn Peterson is set to likely be a top-five pick in this summer’s NBA Draft, but there was a time a few months ago he did not think that day would come.Peterson missed 11 games this season and had his time cut short in several others due to a series of cramping issues, but the worst one came before the season even started.Peterson told ESPN recently that in September, he was taken to a hospital from a practice with severe cramping throughout his entire body.”I made it to the training room and just started begging them to call 911. They were trying to get a vein to get me the IV, get me back hydrated. But I was cramping so hard they couldn’t get a vein,” Peterson said.”I thought I was going to die on the training table that day.”After months of searching for answers, Peterson said that high doses of creatine resulted in the cramping.Creatine, used to increase muscle size, is perhaps the most studied supplement on the market and has numerous benefits. But for Peterson, it prompted a scary situation.PGA TOUR GOLFER BEN GRIFFIN SAYS HE ‘OVERDOSED’ ON CREATINE AMID BAD START TO BMW CHAMPIONSHIP FINAL ROUND”I’d never taken it before [going to college]. But after the season I took two weeks off and they did tests which showed my baseline level was already high. So, they said when I dosed, it must’ve made the levels unsafe,” he said.NCAA TOURNAMENTS EXPAND TO 76 TEAMS: NEW FORMAT, REVENUE BOOM AND ADDITIONAL GAMES AHEAD”It kind of put me in a tizzy because I didn’t know what was causing it. Nothing has ever been wrong with me before. Basketball is my life. What I love to do. But something was going on and I couldn’t figure it out.”Peterson no longer takes creatine and has not had any issues since. He even played at least 30 minutes in eight of Kansas’ last nine games this past season.Peterson’s lack of play, of course, drew criticism, but he did all he could to play.”They saw I was in rehab every day before practice, after practice. Get massages. Trying all types of stuff. Carb loading because they thought I didn’t have glucose or something. Electrolytes. Liquid IV, LMNT. I changed my diet. I meal-prepped. Everything I could think of,” he said.Head coach Bill Self even decided that playing off-ball would keep him from overexerting himself, which could potentially lead to more cramping.Peterson averaged 20.2 points per game and is widely expected to be one of the first names off the board next month.Follow Fox News Digital’s sports coverage on X, and subscribe to the Fox News Sports Huddle newsletter.
NBA Draft prospect says he thought he was going to die from cramping caused by creatine
