The Palm Beach Post

Ex-UM star: 'I'm actually blessed'

Former cornerback avoided paralysis, now encourages others.

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University of Miami sophomore Malek Young had already been told his football career was over about two weeks after a Dec. 30 helmet-to-helmet collision in the Orange Bowl.

The deep, 3-plus-inch scar running down the back of the gifted cornerback’s neck makes that pretty obvious to anyone who notices it under his neatly styled dreadlocks. Surgery in late January fused Young’s C1 and C2 vertebrae, held together by rods and screws.

But on this day, before kickoff of the 2018 spring game at Hard Rock Stadium, Young, who escaped what could have been paralysis in the bowl game and spent every day of spring practice on the sideline helping his teammates, was approached by defensive coordinato­r Manny Diaz.

“You know what your job is today, right?’’ Young recalled Diaz saying.

“Yeah, I’m holding up the personnel cards,” answered Young, whose job during spring was to hold up each play for the offense.

“No,” Diaz told Young. “You’re going to be hoisting the turnover chain.”

“I was ecstatic,” Young said. “It shocked me. Coach Diaz was like, ‘There it is, right over there on the bench. The box is unlocked. Whenever there’s a turnover, run and get it.’

“So, as I’m holding the personnel card, I see Gilbert Frierson get the intercepti­on. I throw the cards down, run and open the box and get the chain. I’m running and holding it up and putting it over his head.

“It was exciting.’’

This season, don’t be sur-

prised if Young becomes the new in-game keeper of the vaunted turnover chain — 5½ pounds of 10K gold “Cuban Link” bling. It’s a possibilit­y that has been discussed, and one Young would welcome.

“If me doing business doesn’t get in the way, I would look forward to doing that,” Young, who has a clothing line of T-shirts and caps called “Humble Child,” told the Miami Herald last week. He has had his clothing line since high school (humblechil­dapparel.com) but couldn’t promote it during football. He savored being a student-coach of sorts during the spring, and said he plans to attend practices and games in a similar role if he’s able to this fall.

“Individual­ly, I’d talk to the young corners,” he said. “Sometimes they’d be on the field and be like, ‘Hey, what do I do?’

“I have the script for everything we’re running in practice and I’d tell them. That just lightens my day when there’s somebody coming and asking for help.”

New goal: Encourage others

Seems like Young, 5-9 and 180 pounds, has been helping others as much as they have helped him since he crashed into 6-1, 255-pound, then-fifth-year-senior blocker Austin Ramesh of Wisconsin during a first-quarter Badgers kickoff return. Young said he tore a ligament near his skull, and a bone went slightly off kilter, and just like that — though he didn’t know it yet — he was done.

“My body actually vibrated,” he said.

Young said he was told football was over for sure during his second meeting with his doctor and father John Young, team chaplain Mike Blanc, cornerback­s coach Mike Rumph and head trainer Vinny Scavo a couple weeks after the game.

A thick silence permeated the room, the Youngs recalled, but Malek was his same, even-keeled self. No tears, just “mixed emotions,” he said.

“It was a moment of both sides, like, I’m in shock I can’t play football … but at the same time, I’m able to speak to others and encourage others … I thought, ‘I’m actually blessed. … At least I get to live again.’ I could have had a spinal cord injury. I could have ended up in a wheelchair.

“… I want to talk to the kids and tell them, ‘If there’s a will, there’s a way. Everybody has trials and tribulatio­ns. It’s how you overcome them.”

Young, 20, is now painfree, still on full scholarshi­p and will earn his degree in his new major sociology, with a minor in sports administra­tion, within two years. His grade point average is 3.1, he said, 3.6 when he graduated from high school.

UM chaplain Mike Blanc, a former Auburn defensive tackle, knew Young in high school when Blanc served as director of Broward County’s Fellowship of Christian Athletes.

“We all love Malek for not just the player he was but the young man he is,” Blanc said. “He’s a very special individual with the heart to do more than just football.”

Still in the game

Young’s girlfriend since high school, Karen Devaliere, stayed with him the three days he was in the hospital and for a week afterward, making sure he took his medication and comforting him when the pain got unbearable.

“This opened his eyes to see things differentl­y,” Devaliere said, “like football is not the only way out.”

Young still performs the same daily workouts he did during football, just on his own. He lifts weights at least four times a week and three days a week runs “at least 10 minutes on a treadmill, 6.5 miles an hour — nothing major, just a light jog.”

He also plays recreation­al basketball with his family.

He conceded that most football players just talk about “a Plan B’’ should football end, but really don’t have that plan. “It’s kind of hard to go to school and play football,” Young said. “If you want to be great you focus on football to a whole different substantia­l. But it’s not your only way out, it’s your way to financiall­y be stable to do something past it.

“Now I can have two years to figure out my Plan B as I take step by step.”

Young’s father and mother, who will celebrate their 30th anniversar­y in August and raised him in a household steeped in faith, said they’re unbelievab­ly proud.

“He’s always been relentless and driven,” said John, who grew up in Savannah, Georgia, and does detailing on boats and yachts for a living. “He’s not that much of an emotional person, but we talked about this backward and forward to see where his head was at. I never questioned God, but I questioned, ‘Why now?’ I told him I had lost it one day as I lay in bed and couldn’t stop crying. He was in the hospital, and I asked God to help give him direction.

“But that was already in him.”

“God has a better plan for me,” Malek told his father.

“When I think of this situation and how he came out of it,” John said, “tears still come to my eyes.”

Terry Young, who said football “has been Malek’s life since he was 5,” is grateful her son is “is still connected to the team.”

Now, about that turnover chain.

Young got to wear the first one ever awarded in last year’s season opener.

“It’s heavy,” he said, “and fun.”

He got to wear it again in the victory against Notre Dame.

And soon, he just might be draping it around other players’ heads if that should work out next season.

“It’s championsh­ip time this year,” Young said, grinning. “We’re gonna be great.”

 ?? AL DIAZ / MIAMI HERALD ?? Former University of Miami cornerback Malek Young had surgery to fuse vertebrae.
AL DIAZ / MIAMI HERALD Former University of Miami cornerback Malek Young had surgery to fuse vertebrae.
 ?? AL DIAZ / ADIAZ@MIAMIHERAL­D.COM ?? UM’s Malek Young wears the turnover chain after intercepti­ng a pass in the second quarter against Notre Dame at Hard Rock Stadium on Nov. 11.
AL DIAZ / ADIAZ@MIAMIHERAL­D.COM UM’s Malek Young wears the turnover chain after intercepti­ng a pass in the second quarter against Notre Dame at Hard Rock Stadium on Nov. 11.

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