The Day

Giants assistant dealing with cancer

- By TOM CANAVAN AP Sports Writer

East Rutherford, N.J. — Thomas McGaughey has been doing more in the offseason than getting the New York Giants' special teams ready for the opener against the Jacksonvil­le Jaguars.

The 45-year-old coordinato­r has been undergoing treatment for a rare form of cancer that strikes roughly 8,000 people in the United States annually.

It's called Periampull­ary cancer, a bile duct cancer located near the small intestine. McGaughey has been receiving oral medication and chemothera­py. He is now on his fifth round, and has a couple more left.

"It's going good," McGaughey said Thursday while disclosing his diagnosis and treatment with the media for the first time.

Still, the treatments have left him drained at times. He missed time during organized team activities in the spring. The Giants compensate­d by asking Tom Quinn, the team's special teams coordinato­r under Ben McAdoo and Tom Coughlin, to join Pat Shurmur's staff.

The thought of taking time away from football and concentrat­ing on his healthy never entered McGaughey's head. He even returns to work as soon as his chemo is finished.

"As a football coach, you don't think of that stuff," McGaughey said. "You get up. You do what you do, and live life. I am not going to let any chemothera­py, cancer or anything else get in the way of what I do. I am a football coach. I am a father, a football coach and that's what I do. I've got to get up every day. Nobody really cares, and they are not going to feel sorry for you. It's get up and go to work."

McGaughey isn't the only member of the organizati­on being treated for cancer. General manager Dave Gettleman was diagnosed with lymphoma this spring.

"We share our chemothera­py stories, and talk about the medication, and that stuff," McGaughey said with a smile. "We definitely have our conversati­ons. Dave's a great man and it is what it is. We just have to fight through it and keep it moving."

McGaughey said a scan of his system three weeks ago was fine.

McGaughey said the cancer was discovered by good fortune after he had two bouts with sepsis, a condition that happens when the body's response to infection causes injury to its own tissues and organs.

Doctors performed an endoscopy and found a growth in his bile duct.

"They removed it," McGaughey said. "I had a very extensive procedure called a Whipple Procedure, and during the Whipple they found a cancer on one of my lymph nodes and I have been undergoing chemothera­py for the last about two months."

Shurmur said Quinn was brought to help McGaughey on the "tough" days. However, he said McGaughey is handling everything.

"T-Mac has been doing a great job and he has our guys ready to play," Shurmur said.

 ?? TOM CANAVAN/AP PHOTO ?? New York Giants special teams coordinato­r Thomas McGaughey leaves after speaking to the media on Thursday at East Rutherford, N.J.
TOM CANAVAN/AP PHOTO New York Giants special teams coordinato­r Thomas McGaughey leaves after speaking to the media on Thursday at East Rutherford, N.J.

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