Connect with us

Sports

From chemo back to the diamond: Michigan softball’s Kaylee Rodriguez survived cancer and is now fighting to play again

Published

on


Michigan softball player Kaylee America Rodriguez was about a month removed from her cancer diagnosis in fall 2022 when she thought about what she now calls “the last leg” of her recovery.

Rodriguez faced two stretches of grueling chemotherapy on either side of a partial hip replacement surgery in January 2023. A large tumor in her left hip, the result of Ewing sarcoma, a rare form of bone cancer, had forced her to withdraw from Michigan for the 2022-23 academic year. She had returned home to Miami for treatment and would miss the ensuing softball season. Rodriguez would eventually lose her hair, her appetite and the ability to walk without assistance.

But even in those early days, Rodriguez, who had several specialty roles on Michigan’s Big Ten championship team in 2021, never let softball drift away.

“That was the entire goal,” she said. “Very early on, I was like, ‘There’s no way I’m not playing again. There’s no way I’m going to be on a softball field and not playing.’ It was my motivation, my inspiration.”

Rodriguez’s quest to return carries distinct circumstances.

She sat in the same hospital where her brother Keanu had just a year earlier and consulted with the same oncologist on how to fight her own cancer. Keanu had a different type, non-Hodgkin lymphoma, in the summer and fall of 2021. He never had to fully step away from baseball, finished high school and earned a spot as an outfielder and pitcher at Miami Dade College.

“He’s living his dream,” Kaylee said.

Her cancer experience would be longer and more damaging, removing her completely from softball and putting her return in doubt. The Wolverines have started their second season without “K Rod,” as Rodriguez is known to her teammates and coaches. Her progress is undeniable but, like many going through cancer recoveries, not linear.

Will Rodriguez ever complete her last leg?

“I’m not taking myself out of the race.”

UNTIL EARLY 2022, Rodriguez had a fairly charmed path in softball. She had no history of major injuries. She’d never missed more than a day or two in a season. Rodriguez became a star athlete in high school, helping her teams to multiple district titles in both softball and soccer, while also competing in track, before pivoting midway through to focus on softball. She signed with Michigan in April 2020.

Rodriguez spent her first two seasons with the Wolverines primarily as a pinch runner, scoring 11 runs as a freshman and then recording nine runs and four stolen bases as a sophomore. She immediately hit it off with her teammates.

“She was my best friend, just a bright light,” catcher Keke Tholl said. “She is fun, energetic, always positive. She’s like a yes woman, very reliable, will always be there for you when you need her.”

Tholl, who lived with Rodriguez and other team members during the 2021-22 school year, remembered Rodriguez complaining of pain in her hip. Rodriguez initially thought it was a flexor strain, which she had in the same hip while playing soccer at age 12 or 13. But the pain worsened, worse than she had ever experienced. She struggled to sleep through the night.

Still, she completed the 2022 season.

“She started to become limited at the beginning of May,” said Michigan coach Bonnie Tholl, then an assistant for longtime coach Carol Hutchins, and the aunt of Keke. “We recognized she wasn’t available in the pinch-running role or the defensive role or even in the pinch-hit role for us. Our season was coming to a close, so with any student-athlete, they go through a series of rehab or treatment.

“Cancer is not the first thing that comes to mind for a very healthy 20-year-old.”

For months, those around Rodriguez suspected a sports-related injury, tendonitis perhaps. There were no scans or X-rays ordered.

“We never thought cancer. What are the odds?” said Rodriguez’s mother, Ketty Gonzalez Evora. “Even when you start Googling all the symptoms, the last one that you think is cancer. The fact that it was, I was completely dumbfounded.”

When infielder Maddie Erickson arrived for her freshman year in fall 2022, she immediately clicked with Rodriguez. On a sweltering September day, they attended Michigan’s season-opening football game but left at halftime because of the heat.

As they walked back from the stadium, Rodriguez was in tremendous pain. Erickson even offered to carry her.

“She was walking on her tumor, her femur was about to break because it was so big,” Erickson said. “Knowing now how much pain she was in on that mile and whatever walk back, that was really insane. But we had a great talk and I just knew that we were going to be friends. This girl was fiery, she was driven — someone I wanted to put myself around.”

Days later, Rodriguez had testing that revealed the tumor. While her teammates were practicing, she texted them to gather at her apartment, where she broke the news. She didn’t yet know if the tumor was cancerous.

“Everybody in the room was crying,” Keke Tholl said. “Just to see her down and upset kills me, but then also, everything that she’s gone through and what had just happened to her brother and the great recovery that he had. He had just beat cancer and they were on such a high. To be knocked right back down again was so heartbreaking.”

Gonzalez Evora rushed to Ann Arbor to be with her daughter. Rodriguez could have had further testing and treatments in Michigan, but she elected to return home.

Along with her mother, Rodriguez met again with her team in the dugout along the first-base line at Alumni Field. She told the team she would be leaving to receive treatment and was unsure of when she would return.

“I was in tears, just looking at my daughter, so strong, keeping her chin up for everybody else crying around her,” Gonzalez Evora said. “She was being strong for them.”

WHEN RODRIGUEZ FIRST learned of the tumor in her leg, she said two words: “not again.”

The doctor in Michigan who delivered the news looked at her, confused. Rodriguez had never dealt with cancer or any other serious health problems or injuries. What the doctor didn’t know is Rodriguez’s brother had received a cancer diagnosis in July 2021. A third Rodriguez sibling, Kassem, had a spitzoid lesion on his skin removed in the spring of 2022. If Kassem’s lesion had not been caught and had spread into his lymphatic system, he could have died.

Gonzalez Evora had just gone through the trauma of Keanu’s cancer and Kassem’s scare when Kaylee called her at work.

“She says that it’s a bone tumor, and I just burst into tears,” Gonzalez Evora said. “I’m usually trying to be the rock for them. I just couldn’t believe it. She was taking all this news by herself. I felt just powerless.”

Gonzalez Evora texted Dr. Guillermo De Angulo, the oncologist at Miami’s Nicklaus Children’s Hospital, who had treated Keanu. At first, De Angulo assured her that Kaylee would need surgery and be fine in the long run. Then, he received the full MRI report from Michigan.

“The hairs on my neck stood up,” De Angulo said. “I looked at this and said, ‘This isn’t good. This is malignant.'”

De Angulo knew of cases in which siblings had contracted cancer as children or young adults, but often they were multiples diagnosed with the same type of cancer, like leukemia. After Kaylee’s diagnosis, she was tested for cancer predisposition syndrome, which contains genetic defects that put people at increased risk for malignant tumors.

To De Angulo’s surprise, she tested negative.

“They’re all rare, they’re not linked, and there’s no family history,” Kaylee said. “[De Angulo] basically said, ‘You guys won the lotto, just not the lotto anyone wants to win.”

Keanu’s reaction was much like his sister’s.

“It’s like, ‘Wow, man. We don’t get it once, we get it twice,'” he said.

Keanu had come to De Angulo with a large mass in his neck in summer 2021, between his sophomore and junior years of high school. According to his family, he had given a verbal commitment to play for the University of Miami. At first, the mass was believed to be caused by mono, but after it didn’t go away, De Angulo called for a biopsy that showed Burkitt lymphoma.

The treatment was straightforward but intense. Keanu lost his hair and couldn’t eat the hospital food, resorting to protein shakes. But he continued playing baseball, participating in every practice and game that he could, and sitting on the bench when he couldn’t. He had his final treatment in late September and rang the bell, signifying he was cancer free, in November.

Kaylee attended some of Keanu’s treatments before heading back to Michigan and got to know De Angulo and her brother’s medical team.

“She was very supportive,” Keanu said.

Although Keanu’s health improved, the ordeal had consequences. Keanu said he was a “completely different player,” pivoting to contact hitting because he lacked his standard power.

In late September 2022, just weeks after Kaylee’s cancer diagnosis, Keanu was informed he no longer had a spot at Miami, his mother recalled. He would end up with Miami Dade, where he has appeared in 25 games this season.

“Thankfully, very fortunately, praise God, he’s still an athlete to this day,” Kaylee said. “I love to see him do it. We talk all the time that he very much would have wished I could have been playing as well, but regardless, I’m just so happy to see him doing what he loves, and that the cancer didn’t take away his love and passion for the game.”

KAYLEE’S TREATMENT PLAN spanned about 50 weeks.

“When we got to the hospital, she had never had an IV put in,” Gonzalez Evora said. “Everything was a new experience.”

Kaylee separated her treatment into three parts. First came months of chemotherapy, both inpatient and outpatient, which brought side effects like losing her blond hair and even her eyebrows. She lost weight and, like Keanu, struggled to eat the hospital food, turning mostly to soup and items without strong tastes.

Then came surgery on Jan. 10, 2023, which she called “Everest.”

“It was my first-ever surgery, other than getting the [chemotherapy] port in, on top of the fact that it was one of the biggest surgeries that anyone that I knew had ever gone through,” she said. “It was definitely something I couldn’t really relate to anybody, something I really didn’t know how to prepare for. I just prayed daily, just kept my spirits high and leaned on my family for everything and just knew that at the end of the day, I’m loved.”

Keanu wanted to be there for his sister, but at first, he struggled to set foot in the same hospital where he had received treatment. He had splitting headaches and nausea — post-traumatic stress, De Angulo said.

Toward the end of Kaylee’s treatment, Keanu found a way to “show face” whenever he could. He was encouraged by what he saw from Kaylee.

“She was very relentless, nothing was bringing her down,” Keanu said. “But of course, when you’re by yourself in a room, that’s when you really express the negative sides. Everyone saw she was a very happy and prosperous person. She did say once: ‘It’s easier to go through this since I saw my brother go through this,’ which hit me, and I was like, ‘You got this.’

Kaylee kept in touch with her teammates over FaceTime and text message during her absence, but she had not seen them since leaving campus. About a month after the surgery, she felt strong enough to travel to Clearwater, Florida, where the Wolverines played in the St. Pete Clearwater Elite Invitational.

She told Bonnie Tholl and the coaches of her plan but surprised her teammates at their hotel before a game. Keke Tholl thought something was up when Michigan’s video staff started recording a team meeting.

“It was a great surprise and it was just so therapeutic for all of us to see K Rod in person,” Bonnie Tholl recalled.

Added Keke Tholl: “I got up immediately and I started crying. Just seeing that smile and how much charisma she brought into the room and how much love she brings is just amazing.”

As Rodriguez’s teammates continued with the season, they remained connected to her, wearing “Kaylee Strong” T-shirts and ribbon decals on their batting helmets. She would track their scores and stats, but watching the games “hurt a bit.”

Rodriguez focused on getting through the 22 weeks of treatment after her surgery. Whenever De Angulo came to her hospital room, she greeted him with, “Hey, hey, hey,” from the 1970s sitcom “What’s Happening!!”

“The nurse many times would say, ‘She had a rough night,’ and I’d walk in and there would be a smile, a thumb’s up,” De Angulo said. “That really helped her, actually, that positive attitude. Whenever I have a patient that’s around her age or is going through something difficult, like what she went through, she’d be the person I’d call for them to talk to, because she can really shepherd them through.”

On Aug. 16, she rang the bell to signify being cancer-free.

“It was a party, everyone was smiling, they were having the time of their lives,” Keanu said. “Kaylee was like the ‘it’ girl on the floor, the nurses loved her. She had an amazing goodbye.”

Days later, she said hello again to Michigan.

RODRIGUEZ’S RETURN TO campus in late August was a reset. She enrolled in the classes she had withdrawn from a year earlier and reintroduced herself to her professors. Although Michigan never removed her from the roster, some of her close friends on the team had graduated, and new faces had arrived.

“At first, we talked about pressing play again, but she almost took it in a way that, ‘I’m creating a new thing,'” Erickson said. “She’s a new K Rod. She’s letting that year be a year in her life. It’s 2024 now. She’s not going to relive 2023.”

Rodriguez and Erickson share a second-floor apartment near campus. At first, the stairs were an obstacle. Rodriguez went from using a cane to climbing the stairs one by one to reaching her apartment without assistance. The colder months also brought challenges, and Rodriguez was walking way more than she did during her year of treatment.

She does physical therapy with Michigan’s athletic training staff and spends as much time around the team as she can. Rodriguez is at almost every Michigan practice and home game, and she started consistently traveling with the team for road contests in mid-March. She tells people who don’t know her story that she’s simply on injured reserve.

“When you go through chemotherapy, your muscles don’t recover as quickly as if you pull a muscle,” Bonnie Tholl said. “She’s in that phase of trying to get all of that strength back, and really walking without any limp or hitch.”

Rodriguez plays catch and takes grounders from Erickson. She recently has started taking swings off a batting tee. Rodriguez had been a switch-hitter before cancer but has since worked mostly from the left side (her preference). She swings at about 50% out of a new, more open stance, where she moves back her right foot and steps into the swing to avoid rotating her hips too much.

“I am not at all dismissing her goal of getting back on the ballfield,” Bonnie Tholl said. “It’s way too early to reevaluate whether that’s going to occur. You see signs of her gaining strength.”

Tholl plans to talk with Rodriguez late this spring about comeback goals and realities, stressing that the decisions ultimately rest with the player.

“Especially after seeing what my family’s gone through, I don’t think I could ever rule out anything,” Rodriguez said. “I can never rule out just completely taking myself out of the race when I even think that there’s a slight chance that I could make a full recovery, or just even a recovery to the point that would get me back on the field again. This is just going to take a route of its own.”

Rodriguez’s overall health is on a good trajectory. She had her chemo port removed March 7. Patients with Ewing sarcoma have a 65% to 70% chance of survival, according to De Angulo, and while there’s a risk of recurrence, Rodriguez’s scans have remained clear so far. Her softball outlook, though, is murkier.

Although De Angulo would clear Rodriguez to play again, he doesn’t know if an orthopedic oncologist would, given the extent of her surgery and the risk of fracturing the bone that was replaced.

She might never complete the last leg, but after the past 18 months, she’s ready for whatever comes her way.

“I just have such a different appreciation for it all now,” Rodriguez said. “It means so much more just to be a student at the University of Michigan, to be a player on the Michigan softball team. I’m just so fortunate for the life that I have.”

Continue Reading
Click to comment

Leave a Reply

آپ کا ای میل ایڈریس شائع نہیں کیا جائے گا۔ ضروری خانوں کو * سے نشان زد کیا گیا ہے

Sports

PCB advertises for Red Ball High-Performance Coach

Published

on

By


Lahore: Pakistan Cricket Board (PCB) issued an advertisement to search for a High-Performance Coach for the Red Ball Team.

The High-Performance Coach will assist the Head Coach in game planning while he will also work closely with the Head Coach in pre- and post-tournament preparations to enhance performance.

As per PCB, five years’ experience and minimum level two coaches are eligible to apply, aspirants can submit applications till October 7.

In the series against Bangladesh, Tim Nelson took over as high-performance coach, brought in by Red Ball coach Jason Gillespie from South Australia.

It is also reported that Tim Nelson will be Red Ball’s high-performance coach, advertised as a necessary step for a permanent appointment.

Continue Reading

Sports

Is continuity enough to get the Bucks back into title contention?

Published

on

By


A few days after the official start of NBA free agency this summer, Milwaukee Bucks coach Doc Rivers flew from his Los Angeles-area home to Miami for a recruiting visit. After the initial flurry of signings around the league were complete, Rivers was surprised to see a familiar face without a team — shooting guard Gary Trent Jr.

Trent had known Rivers since he was 6 years old thanks to his father, Gary Trent Sr., whose NBA career overlapped with Rivers’. Trent Jr. had been a productive player with the Toronto Raptors for three and a half seasons but failed to reach an extension or find a multiyear deal on the free agent market. Word was out that Trent could be seeking a one-year deal for the 2024-25 season, and Rivers jumped at the opportunity.

The Bucks were seeking a replacement in their starting lineup for guard Malik Beasley and saw a youthful energy in Trent, who could fit smoothly alongside Milwaukee’s superstar duo of Giannis Antetokounmpo and Damian Lillard.

Signing Trent to a one-year deal served as the biggest offseason addition for a team that prioritized depth signings over bold moves. The Bucks also swapped out players such as Jae Crowder and Patrick Beverley, who saw their roles and production reduced during the postseason, for a new crew of veteran backups in Delon Wright and Taurean Prince.

After a year of change and turnover for the Bucks — in the past 12 months they swapped Jrue Holiday for Lillard, and hired and fired coach Adrian Griffin before turning to Rivers midway through the season — a quiet summer was welcome for a team that enters the 2024-25 season trying to balance the benefits of continuity with the urgency of its championship expectations.

“We have that stability,” Antetokounmpo said the day after the team’s first-round playoff loss to the Indiana Pacers. “We’re not questioning and trying to figure out how it’s going to look moving forward.

“Now that you know, you just got to work.”

Bucks general manager Jon Horst was limited in his flexibility to change his roster this offseason. Milwaukee’s draft picks were depleted by the trade for Holiday in 2020 and for Lillard last year. Because of the restrictions of the new collective bargaining agreement, the Bucks did not have salary cap space and weren’t allowed to aggregate contracts, acquire a player via sign-and-trade or use the tax midlevel exception.

It left them with little options aside from adding players via the veterans minimum.

Besides, it had still been less than a year since Milwaukee swooped in for Lillard before training camp, sending a package to the Portland Trail Blazers that included Holiday — the starting point guard on the Bucks’ 2021 championship team — who was then sent to the eventual champion Boston Celtics. It was a bold move that paired an All-NBA guard in Lillard with a two-time MVP in Antetokounmpo, with each being the most accomplished teammate either player had ever played with.

Lillard’s arrival also paid off in another way, as Antetokounmpo committed to the Bucks by signing a three-year, $186 million max extension that begins this season.

Antetokounmpo inked his deal one day before the start of the season, but the Bucks’ positive momentum didn’t carry into the games.

Lillard was slow to adjust to a new environment and struggled to find on-court chemistry with Antetokounmpo. Griffin was fired 43 games into the season (with a 30-13 record) before the team turned to Rivers, who went 17-19. With Antetokounmpo missing the entire six-game series against the Pacers because of a strained left calf and Lillard limited by an Achilles injury, the Bucks crashed out in the first round of the playoffs for a second straight season.

When Rivers took over the team in February, he acknowledged how difficult it would be to turn a team around midseason. Now with a full offseason and training camp, he will have an opportunity to establish a style of play, including by adding role players who better fit his vision.

“Think about it: Giannis worked out all [last] summer not knowing he was going to have Dame,” Rivers said the day after last season’s playoff exit. “Dame worked out a little bit, not knowing he was going to have Giannis. Khris [Middleton], the same way. Now all three of them get to work out this summer knowing some of the things we’re going to do.

“The most important stuff is the sets and the stuff that you’re going to run, giving it to them long before camp starts. Because it’s easy for a star player to understand what he can do, it’s better when he understands how he can make everybody else better through those sets.”

The Bucks are betting on a full offseason and training camp to help build chemistry for Lillard and Antetokounmpo. Still, they were encouraged by the numbers with those two players on the floor last season: The team was plus-10.2 points per 100 possessions last season when their two stars shared the floor.

“I’m willing to put in work this summer. I think I have guys around me that they’re willing to do so,” Antetokounmpo said at the end of last season. “I saw how Dame was after the [playoffs]. I saw how Khris [Middleton] was after the game. … I know they’re going to put in the work.”

The question for Milwaukee is how the Bucks will compare to the rest of a stacked Eastern Conference.

Boston is coming off a historic season in which it won its league-leading 18th NBA championship. The Philadelphia 76ers just reloaded by adding superstar Paul George to play alongside Joel Embiid and emerging star Tyrese Maxey. The New York Knicks strengthened their core by adding Mikal Bridges. Emerging young teams, the Cleveland Cavaliers, Orlando Magic and Pacers, are on the rise, having finished with playoff spots last season.

Meanwhile, the Bucks return one of the oldest rosters in the NBA with four of their projected starters over 30. Antetokounmpo, who has been injured during the last two postseasons, turns 30 this season. Lillard will be 35 in October. Middleton is 34 and coming off offseason surgery on both ankles. Center Brook Lopez is 36.

“I always like a team that wins to have a little bit of experience, which comes from being a little bit older, knowing how to play the game and have that corporate knowledge of the game,” Antetokounmpo said at the end of last season. “And a little bit of energy.”

The age of its roster and the pressure to maximize each season of Antetokounmpo’s prime — “With Giannis, you’re always on the clock,” Horst told ESPN at the start of last season — guided Milwaukee’s bold moves over the past year in pursuit of another title.

Now the Bucks are counting on an offseason defined by continuity, a few additions to their depth and some better health during the postseason to give them a chance at another championship.

“We’re getting older. We’re not getting any younger, but that doesn’t mean we cannot still perform at a high level,” Antetokounmpo said. “It’s hard to say, ‘Yeah, we’re old and you have to make changes.’ Because these guys, they’re beasts.”

Continue Reading

Sports

Will Sauce Gardner’s quest to be the best CB be overshadowed by lack of interceptions?

Published

on

By


FLORHAM PARK, N.J. — Sauce Gardner doesn’t do vacations. The New York Jets cornerback doesn’t believe in them. The idea of chilling at a five-star resort, sipping fruity libations on a white-sand beach, doesn’t appeal to him. First of all, he doesn’t drink alcohol. No sauce for Sauce. Secondly, he’s a homebody. The Jets’ trip to London in two weeks to face the Minnesota Vikings will be his first time out of the country. He said he hasn’t taken a true vacation since entering the NFL in 2022, offering an existential reason. “Me, personally, I just feel like you’re just trying to escape the lifestyle that you live,” Gardner said in a quiet moment at his locker. “We play football, and we should be training. So going on that long vacation is getting away from what you’re supposed to be.” Which explains why he reported to the Jets’ facility two weeks after last season ended to begin training, three months ahead of the official start to the offseason program. It’s why his new, sprawling home in New Jersey includes a recovery room, complete with a red-light therapy bed, sauna, cold tub, treadmill and stationary bike. From the time he was 4 years old, playing flag football in the Tiny Mites league in the Seven Mile section of Detroit, Gardner’s singular focus has been to play in the NFL and be the best cornerback there ever was. A lot of kids dream that dream, but his early-career trajectory aligns with his life plan, and he’s just 24. Gardner is the only cornerback since the NFL-AFL merger in 1970 to be named first-team All-Pro in each of his first two seasons. Only three defensive players have pulled that off: former New York Giants legend Lawrence Taylor, Dallas Cowboys pass rusher Micah Parsons and Gardner, who said his individual goal this season is to be Defensive Player of the Year. Now if he could just get his hands on a pass or two, maybe that would silence critics who suggest the sauce isn’t as advertised. He will take a 26-game interception slump into Thursday night against the New England Patriots at MetLife Stadium (8:15 p.m. ET, Prime Video). Big deal or nah? LONG BEFORE HE shadowed wide receivers, Gardner shadowed his big brother, Allante. Despite a six-year age difference, the two were inseparable growing up. Even though there was an open room in their house, they decided to share the same bedroom. Allante played football, so Sauce played football, following him into backyard games against the big kids. When Allante changed his uniform to No. 2, Sauce switched to No. 2. When Allante worked out with a trainer during his college offseasons — he was a running back/wide receiver at Saginaw Valley State and Lakeland University — Sauce tagged along. “He was always right next to me,” said Allante, who knew there was something special about Sauce when he learned at the age of 5 to ride a bike with no training or training wheels. Gardner was always fearless, according to Allante, who said his kid brother once broke his arm doing a backflip off a fence. He said they both acquired their work ethic from their mother, Alisa, a single mom who worked two jobs to support them. If one of them wanted to attend a football camp, she worked overtime to pay the fees. Gardner said one memory of living at the corner of Rowe Street and Seven Mile East made an impact. When he was 14, he saw a man fatally shot outside a liquor store. Out of fear, he didn’t tell anyone. “It just made me come to the realization that you can’t take anything for granted,” Gardner said. “Me just witnessing that, I was like, ‘Dang.’ I just had to make sure I was locked in on everything — football, school, all that — because I knew ultimately where I wanted to go.” Whatever direction Gardner goes, Allante is there with him — even if it’s not physically. Allante, who still lives in Detroit, is a vice president at Vayner Sports — the company that represents his brother. Sounding like an agent, but speaking as a blood relative, Allante believes Gardner has the potential to be “a once-in-a-lifetime player.” Cornerbacks are often evaluated based on their interception total. That calculus can’t be applied to Gardner, who has as many Pro Bowls on his résumé as career picks (two). In an ESPN survey of nearly 80 NFL coaches, scouts and executives, one unnamed personnel evaluator called Gardner “one of the most overrated players in the league.” The same survey ranked him the third-best corner, behind the Denver Broncos’ Pat Surtain II and the Cleveland Browns’ Denzel Ward. Former star Richard Sherman, a three-time All-Pro cornerback, believes Gardner has benefitted from geography. “Obviously, being in the New York market helps,” Sherman, a Prime Video analyst, said on a conference call with reporters. “It helped [Darrelle] Revis, it helps Sauce. … He’s incredibly worthy [of his accolades]. He has been named first-team All-Pro. It’s not because he hasn’t played well, but it definitely helps playing in that New York market and getting that focus on you and then playing well while you’ve got that focus.” For his money, Sherman said Surtain is the best all-around corner in the sport, adding, “If he was in a big market, if he was playing for the Dallas Cowboys, I don’t think there would be any debate because people would be watching him all the time.” WHEN TOLD OF Sherman’s comments, Gardner shrugged. He agreed to a certain extent, saying he does profit from playing in New York. But he said that it’s a double-edged sword: More eyes on you means more pressure. Even Sherman acknowledged, “New York can chew you up and spit you out the same way it can raise your game.” Gardner added, “A lot of times, there’s no in-between.” Gardner welcomes the scrutiny. Asked if he’s the best corner, he said simply, “I try to do it as if I’m the best.” Former cornerback Jason McCourty, who played 13 years, had initial questions about Gardner despite his lofty draft pedigree — fourth overall in 2022. Those questions didn’t last long. “Even coming in, I’m wondering how he’s going to do it, covering these guys man-to-man, coming from [the University of] Cincinnati — and he’s just been awesome,” said McCourty, now an ESPN analyst, in a phone interview. “To step into the NFL and to be able to cover some of the best wide receivers, to be an All-Pro and to hit the ground running is just completely elite.” But what about the lack of interceptions? McCourty said it shouldn’t be a barometer, that Gardner’s ability to neutralize wide receivers trumps his low interception total. Sherman believes the game has changed. Gone are the days, he said, when corners such as Deion Sanders and Champ Bailey made the Pro Football Hall of Fame with gaudy interception totals — 53 and 52, respectively. In 2023, Revis, the former Jets star, was elected on the first ballot with 29. “I do think interceptions are important, but I guess, in this day and age, [people] don’t because there’s just not a lot of guys getting them,” said Sherman, who made 37 in his career. While the interception total may not be eye-popping, Gardner is a pass-breakup machine. His career total of 33 is the third most among corners since he entered the league. If he’s getting close enough to defend passes, in theory, he should be catching some of them. He knows this; he doesn’t shy away from it. Asked his goals for 2024, he said, “Get more picks and keep grinding for that Defensive Player of the Year [award].” He wants at least four or five interceptions. Gardner spends time after practice on every-day drills, including catching balls from a Jugs machine. His coaches love his work ethic. As cornerbacks coach Tony Oden likes to say, “Just when you think you’ve arrived as a player … bad things start to happen.” Whenever coach Robert Saleh is asked about ways in which Gardner can improve, he usually responds: Intercept the ball more often. Oden, always pushing his protégé, said “there’s more meat on the bone.” Perhaps, but his career is off to a historic start. He has pitched a league-high six shutouts since 2022 — games in which he allowed zero receptions as the nearest defender with a minimum of 20 coverage snaps, according to NFL Next Gen Stats. Gardner received the All-Pro nod with a zero-interception performance last season. For a corner, that hadn’t occurred since 2010, when Revis and Nnamdi Asomugha both did it. Uncommonly tall for a corner at 6-foot-3, with 33½-inch arms, Gardner makes it difficult for receivers to escape his clutches. His size and physicality allow him to jam bigger receivers at the line of scrimmage, according to McCourty. What really impresses McCourty is how Gardner can stick to smaller, quicker receivers at the top of their routes. These skills, he believes, could make him one of the best corners of this era. “When you have a longer guy, a taller guy that can run, it’s kind of tough for a receiver,” Tennessee Titans receiver Tyler Boyd said. “It’s tough to just run away from the guy, knowing how long and athletic he is. But don’t get me wrong, he’s beatable. Every DB in this league is beatable.” The Titans proved that Sunday, beating Gardner on a 40-yard touchdown pass to Calvin Ridley. The coverage was tight, but quarterback Will Levis dropped the pass between Gardner and safety Chuck Clark. All told, Gardner allowed five catches for 97 yards when targeted, his most yards allowed as the nearest defender in his career, according to NFL Next Gen Stats. It was an uncharacteristic day for Gardner, who rarely surrenders chunk plays. Afterward, in the locker room, he was shaking his head. “I still don’t know how he caught that,” he said. IN THE SEASON-OPENING loss to the San Francisco 49ers, Gardner recognized a gadget play was coming. On a third-and-5 from the Jets’ 29, he alerted teammates to watch for a reverse. Linebacker C.J. Mosley heard him before the snap, adjusted and helped trap wide receiver Deebo Samuel in the backfield. Mosley credited Gardner, calling him one of the smartest players on defense. “He’s become a real student of the game,” Mosley said. “He’s a lot more vocal than he was as a rookie.” Gardner made the tackle and was credited with his first career sack because of Samuel’s intention to throw a pass. “He’s a film junkie,” Allante said. Allante said Gardner watches about an hour of game film every night in his home theater, learning opponents’ tendencies and critiquing his own performance. He described it as a singular focus, saying his brother possessed it at an early age. “He’s a different guy,” Allante said. “He don’t drink, he don’t smoke, he don’t party.” Outside of football, Gardner plays video games — he’s an accomplished gamer — and hones his golf swing in his home simulator. Golf is a new passion. He proudly declares that he broke 90 for the first time before training camp. Life is good for Gardner. Business is booming. The price for Gardner will increase in the coming years, perhaps next year, when he’s eligible for a contract extension. The ceiling on the cornerback market was raised recently, when Jalen Ramsey ($24.1 million per year) and Surtain ($24 million) signed extensions. With another good year, Gardner could leapfrog both to become the highest-paid corner. Gardner received a phone alert when Ramsey’s deal was completed, saying his first thought was: “Dang, Pat wasn’t even the highest-paid corner for a day.” He applauded the contracts, noting that corners finally are closing the gap with the highest-paid receivers, but said he’s not looking ahead to his potential blockbuster deal. Gardner’s job as a corner is to make those receivers seem invisible. He’s also had a knack for making quarterbacks shy away from him. In two games, he has been targeted only eight times as the nearest defender, having allowed five receptions for 97 yards. In the offseason, he asked the coaches to give him the added responsibility of covering the opponents’ No. 1 receiver. Philosophically, the Jets’ staff is opposed to doing that on an every-down basis, citing scheme and personnel considerations, but they’re giving him a taste of it. In the opener, Gardner traveled with Brandon Aiyuk for a handful of plays and allowed no catches. In Week 2, despite the long touchdown to Ridley, Gardner was given a huge responsibility with the game on the line. In the final minute, with the Titans in the red zone, down by a touchdown, Gardner shadowed DeAndre Hopkins on four straight pass plays. Levis avoided that matchup. The result: Three incomplete passes, a sack and a 24-17 victory for the Jets (1-1). “We have a special talent in No. 1,” defensive coordinator Jeff Ulbrich said, “and Sauce can do some things that are so unique and special.” Gardner welcomes the challenge. He doesn’t mind playing on an island, the same way Revis did back in the day. Given his dislike for vacations, it might be the only island he enjoys.

Continue Reading

Sports

Revised schedule of Pakistan vs England Test series announced

Published

on

By


Players from the Pakistan and England teams during a match. — AFP/File

KARACHI: Pakistan’s cricket board on Friday announced a revised schedule for a series it will hold against England next month, ending weeks of uncertainty including reports it could be moved abroad.

The first two Tests will be held back-to-back in Multan and the last in Rawalpindi, skipping Karachi where ongoing construction at the National Stadium has forced the Pakistan Cricket Board (PCB) to tweak the schedule.

“The series will start in Multan with the first Test from October 7-11 and the second Test — originally scheduled for Karachi — has been shifted to Multan, as the stadium in Karachi is undergoing (a) major facelift for next year’s Champions Trophy,” said a statement from the PCB.

The second Test will start from October 15, while the third in Rawalpindi will be staged from October 24.

The England men’s cricket team will arrive in Multan on October 2 for their second tour of Pakistan in two years.

The announcement ended weeks of frustrating wait by the England and Wales Cricket Board who were seeking clarity on the schedule.

Moreover, there were media reports of shifting the series to the United Arab Emirates (UAE) where Pakistan was forced to play its home matches from 2010 to 2019.

Revised schedule:

7-11 Oct – First Test, Multan

15-19 Oct – Second Test, Multan 2

4-28 Oct – Third Test, Rawalpindi

Continue Reading

Trending