Saskatoon StarPhoenix

Cancer diagnosis for snowboard medallist

- Mmccormick@postmedia.com twitter.com/murraylp

MONTREAL Snowboarde­r Max Parrot, an Olympic silver medallist in 2018, has been diagnosed with Hodgkin’s lymphoma, a form of cancer.

Canada Snowboard made the announceme­nt Thursday, saying the 24-year-old from Bromont, Que., was diagnosed Dec. 21 after undergoing a biopsy 10 days earlier. He will miss the remainder of the 2018-19 season.

“The first symptoms appeared when I started scratching my skin repeatedly in the fall, it started all the way back in September,” Parrot, a five-time X Games champion, said in a statement. “And then, in November, I realized I had a bump on my neck, I had a swollen gland. I saw my family doctor and he sent me for a biopsy. I received the diagnosis a few days before Christmas, confirming that I had Hodgkin lymphoma.

“It was tough to hear the news and it’s still hard now. But at first, the most difficult for me was to realize that I would have to put an end to my season. When I missed the Dew Tour in mid-december, it was because I had to undergo the biopsy and it was a challengin­g time because I had never missed a single competitio­n in seven years. And it won’t be easy to stay at home these upcoming months because I’m used to travelling at this time of year. But I have a new type of challenge to take on, this is a new kind of competitio­n I must face and I intend to do everything I can to win.”

A slopestyle silver medallist at the 2018 Pyeongchan­g Winter Games, Parrot said he underwent his first of 12 chemothera­py sessions last week.

“The word cancer is scary, as is the treatment that comes with it,” Parrot said. “But I have great people around me, I have a lot of real positive energy with my family and my friends. My sponsors are also supporting me in this. I have an awesome medical team and I have all the confidence in the world in the work they are doing. My sport psychologi­st and my coach also help me make sure that my morale is good, so that I can fight this as best I can.”

Each year in Canada, approximat­ely 900 people are diagnosed with Hodgkin’s lymphoma.

It is a cancer affecting part of a person’s immune system and is most often seen in people aged 20 to 40.

Former Pittsburgh Penguins star Mario Lemieux was diagnosed with the disease in 1993 and returned to play later that season. Riders without a proven quarterbac­k on the active roster.

Jones said he would look at all of the free agents to fill the most important position on any football team. Then he left with the cupboard still bare.

With Mike Reilly and Bo Levi Mitchell likely out of the picture, that would leave Trevor Harris as a viable option.

He led the Ottawa Redblacks to the 2018 Grey Cup game, so that is hard to overlook.

An interestin­g point is Harris and O’day are both graduates of Edinboro College. Those connection­s might help the Riders in landing a quarterbac­k of Harris’s calibre.

 ??  ?? Max Parrot
Max Parrot
 ??  ?? Jeremy O’day
Jeremy O’day

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