The Province

Shazier won’t give up on football dream

Injured Steelers linebacker can’t walk without a cane but he’s determined to play again

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PITTSBURGH — Ryan Shazier’s routine hasn’t changed much, even after a life-altering spinal injury put his football career in jeopardy.

The Pittsburgh Steelers linebacker still arrives at the team facility around 7 a.m. He still watches copious amounts of film. He still works out regularly, often with his teammates alongside. And he still believes one day he’ll run out of the Heinz Field tunnel in full uniform, despite the many obstacles he understand­s are in his path.

“My dream is to come back and play football again,” Shazier said on Wednesday in his first wide-ranging public remarks since undergoing spine stabilizat­ion surgery last December. “I’m working my tail off every single day; have (playing again) in the back of my mind every single time I go to rehab.”

Shazier walked into the media room with help of a cane and spent 20 minutes outlining his journey since he lowered his head to hit Bengals wide receiver Josh Malone in the first quarter on Dec. 4. He called the moment after impact when he grabbed the small of his back while his legs lay motionless “a little scary,” and was quick to thank emergency responders in Cincinnati for their delicate work on the field in the immediate aftermath.

He had spine stabilizat­ion surgery on Dec. 6 and has spent the intervenin­g months remaining adamant he would play again while being a fixture at the team’s practice facility, where he has become a de facto coach. It’s a role he’s embracing, but one he’s not ready to accept on a full-time basis.

“Just because I got hurt doesn’t mean I’m going to stop loving the game of football,” said Shazier, who added that despite the injury, he’s going to give it “everything I have” in an effort to return to play.

Details of the exact nature of Shazier’s injury and his long-term prognosis remain sparse. He declined to get into specifics about whether playing again is even medically feasible, saying his medical team has told him to focus on making incrementa­l improvemen­ts.

“Honestly right now, I’m not a doctor,” Shazier said. “Every day I take it one day at a time. The further we get along in rehab, the better they can give me answers.”

Shazier has made remarkable progress in the last six months. He spent several weeks in the hospital following surgery, though he took time out to attend several Steelers home games near the end of the 2017 season. He regularly posts updates on his social media accounts and provided an indelible moment during the NFL draft in April when he walked on stage in Dallas to announce Pittsburgh’s first-round selection.

Though he’s from Florida, Shazier has chosen to stay in Pittsburgh, in part because it helps him feel like “I’m still myself.”

He’s received a massive outpouring of support from all over, including an avalanche of “Get Well” letters from more than 500 students at an elementary school.

T-shirts emblazoned with his familiar No. 50 and the phrase #Shalieve — the hashtag Shazier made famous in the early stages of his recovery — have become fashionabl­e across Pittsburgh. Several members of the Pittsburgh Pirates have donned the T-shirts after games as tribute.

The Steelers placed him on injured reserve last month, ending any chance of a comeback in 2018. The team also modified his contract so he would receive the majority of the US$8.7 million he’s due this year upfront.

The 25-year-old two-time Pro Bowler believes walking without assistance is the next milestone, one he refuses to put a timetable on.

 ?? — AP ?? Ryan Shazier greets Steelers linebacker Bud Dupree at practice on Wednesday in Pittsburgh. Shazier is slowly recovering from life-altering spinal injury in December.
— AP Ryan Shazier greets Steelers linebacker Bud Dupree at practice on Wednesday in Pittsburgh. Shazier is slowly recovering from life-altering spinal injury in December.

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