Montreal Gazette

Life-giving gift offers solace to Reuland

- TIM BAINES

Real life for Ottawa Redblacks receiver Austin Reuland has been an especially emotional rollercoas­ter ride the last eight months or so. It’s the kind of thing you make movies about.

In this script, there are tears, buckets of them. And there are the feel-good moments and more crying. Within the storyline, a baseball legend is saved and the heart of a son and a brother lives on.

It’s a story about three brothers, basketball players until high school, who discover a passion for football.

The oldest, Konrad Reuland, works and works to get to the NFL. He plays three seasons (2012, 2013 and 2015) as a tight end with the New York Jets and Baltimore Ravens.

Then on Nov. 28, 2016, he suffers a brain aneurysm. Two weeks later, he’s dead at 29. In San Juan Capistrano, Calif., it was devastatin­g for parents Ralf and Mary and brothers Warren, now at med school, and Austin.

It’s heartbreak­ing, then heartlifti­ng.

A couple of days after his death, Konrad’s heart and a kidney were transferre­d into the body of Baseball Hall of Famer Rod Carew, who had survived a massive heart attack in 2015.

Austin, who was selected by the Redblacks in the sixth round of a CFL supplement­al draft July 6, says he still lives with the pain of losing an older brother far too young.

“I’ve been bawling my eyes out, I’ve had trouble sleeping,” said Reuland. “I’m not getting used to it, I think about him all the time before everything I do on the field.”

Carew, whose children went to school with the Reulands, has become family. Through the stethoscop­e of Ralf, who is a doctor, they’ve listened to Konrad’s heart beating within Carew. It’s provided solace and comfort in pushing aside the enormity of the grief.

“We’ve been meeting with (Carew),” said Austin. “He wants to be part of our family, he even says he wants to be on our Christmas cards. I was with my mom at the grave for Konrad’s birthday when he would have turned 30. Rod showed up. So for Konrad’s birthday, I was with his body, but I was with his heart. I’m so thankful that they’re willing to meet us and be part of our lives. It’s comforting knowing that a part of him is still down here on Earth. We listen to his heart. It’s a powerful heartbeat.”

When Austin got the call from that he was coming to the CFL, he was alone at home.

“I was so emotional, I was by myself,” he said. “I yelled out as loud as I could, my dogs went crazy, then I started bawling my eyes out because I knew (Konrad) could be celebratin­g right beside me. He was the one who always encouraged me to keep playing if I could, he was kind of my motivation to make it this far.”

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