USC AD Pat Haden suffers episode of light-headedness

LOS ANGELES (AP) - Outgoing Southern California athletic director Pat Haden became faint on campus Wednesday and went to visit his doctor.

Sports information director Tim Tessalone said the episode was similar to one that Haden had last October in South Bend, Indi., before a football game against Notre Dame. The 63-year-old administrator briefly went to the hospital that day.

In this case, Tessalone said Haden was walking back from a campus meeting when he felt light-headed and sat down. Medical personnel arrived to help him but Haden was alert, talking and walked to his office before he was taken to see his doctor, apparently at a hospital.

There was no word on his condition.

Haden, who has a pacemaker, announced last week he will retire on June 30. The former USC quarterback will start a one-year job overseeing the renovation of the Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum after leaving the athletic department.

Haden has run USC's athletic department for 5 1/2 years, taking over from Mike Garrett in 2010 and leading the Trojans through a multiyear stretch of NCAA sanctions against its vaunted football program.

USC endured a two-year bowl ban, probation and significant scholarship losses for alleged misdeeds surrounding Heisman Trophy-winning tailback Reggie Bush during the tenure of former coach Pete Carroll.

Haden cited unspecified health concerns when he stepped down from the College Football Playoff committee last October, two weeks after the episode at Notre Dame.

Haden has made four football head coaching changes during his tenure, starting when he fired Lane Kiffin at the airport five games into the 2013 season. Ed Orgeron and Clay Helton held the job on an interim basis before Haden chose Sarkisian, only to fire the former USC assistant last season.

USC has won 10 national championships in other sports during Haden's last five years, second only to the University of Florida in that span.

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