Truro News

Schwarber draws inspiratio­n from boy with illness

-

Kyle Schwarber signed a baseball for Campbell Faulkner, and Faulkner gave Schwarber a green wristband. Twin acts of kindness, and a friendship was born.

The slugger with the big Ohio heart, and the sunny boy with a life-threatenin­g illness. A bond that made each of them better.

Some 1,700 miles away from Wrigley Field, no one is enjoying Schwarber’s comeback from a major knee injury more than Faulkner and his family. The 10-year-old Faulkner stays up to watch his buddy in the World Series, and Schwarber proudly wears his Campbell’s Crew wristband while trying to help the Chicago Cubs to their first championsh­ip since 1908.

“He’s a kid who can always put a smile on my face,” Schwarber said.

Faulkner has a rare mitochondr­ial disease. His body doesn’t know how to use food and oxygen properly.

Doctors knew something was wrong with Faulkner just days after he was born. The youngest of Carrie and Shane Faulkner’s four children never cried and was never hungry.

On Day 4, he was labelled “failure to thrive,” his mother, Carrie Faulkner, said. He got his first feeding tube in his stomach when he was four and a second tube at seven.

He struggles to stand and walk for extended periods of time.

“On the outside he looks perfect,” Carrie Faulkner told The Associated Press in a phone interview. “On the inside, it’s just a trainwreck, it’s a disaster in there.”

So when Carrie Faulkner heard about what Schwarber said after one of the biggest games of his life, she just lost it. Moments after Schwarber hit two RBI singles in Chicago’s 5-1 victory over Cleveland in Game 2 on Wednesday night, he was asked about his green wristband.

The son of a retired Ohio police chief jumped on the question like a belt-high fastball.

“Yeah, Campbell Faulkner, he’s a kid that I met down in Arizona. He’s got a rare genetic disease, and I met him my first spring training,” Schwarber said. “Really young, smart kid and he’s just always got a big smile on his face.”

Schwarber kept right on going.

“We stay in contact through email. He’s a smart kid, man,” he said. “The kid’s, I think, got an IQ of like a college kid for being so young. That tells you how smart he is.”

A day later, Carrie Faulkner was still floored.

“I don’t even have words,” she said. “I have tears ... Oh my heavens what an amazing man to think of my son at that moment.”

For Campbell, it was no big deal. After all, they’re friends.

“It made me feel good, and I knew that he was thinking of me,” he said.

 ?? Ap pHoto ?? Campbell Faulkner, 10, shows his custom-made baseball bat given to him by Chicago Cubs’ Kyle Schwarber, at his home in Queen Creek, Ariz.
Ap pHoto Campbell Faulkner, 10, shows his custom-made baseball bat given to him by Chicago Cubs’ Kyle Schwarber, at his home in Queen Creek, Ariz.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada