Ottawa Citizen

Colin Kaepernick’s parents will watch with mixed emotions

49ers QB’S family lost two infant boys

- TIM DAHLBERG

NEW ORLEANS • Lance Kaepernick was 23 days old when he died.

He seemed normal when his parents brought him home. Then suddenly, everything went tragically wrong. Two open-heart surgeries couldn’t save the tiny baby Rick and Teresa Kaepernick had so joyfully welcomed into their lives.

Their next son never made it out of the hospital. Kent Kaepernick was four days old when he died, also of a heart defect. “You’re 25, 26 and you have two sons buried,” said Rick Kaepernick. “You grow up in a hurry.”

A daughter, Devon, would follow, joining their healthy, first-born son, Kyle. By then, though, the Kaepernick­s were done taking chances and doctors warned them against trying for another pregnancy.

But the yearning didn’t stop, and one day Teresa told her husband she was ready for another baby.

Their new son was five weeks old when they first held him at the Lutheran Social Services office in Appleton, Wis. He was healthy, vibrant, and full of life.

On Sunday he’ll be behind centre, trying to win a Super Bowl for the San Francisco 49ers.

“He’s ready to roll,” Rick Kaepernick said this week from his hotel room in this party town. “He’s pretty focused.”

If the story of Colin Kaepernick’s meteoric rise from obscurity to superstar in the making is a remarkable one, the story of his life bears some telling, too. Born to a teenager in Wisconsin a quarter-century ago, the only memories he has of his early life are with the couple who adopted him.

He doesn’t like to talk about it, and has declined chances to meet with his birth mother. For their part, the Kaepernick­s particular­ly dislike it when people refer to their son as adopted.

Of course, they couldn’t have imagined when they began the process that the offspring of a blonde, athletic mother and an African-American father would be a star quarterbac­k.

The Kaepernick­s will be in the stands at the Superdome on Sunday rooting for him. So will about 15 family members, who have cheered him on since he began dominating games — almost from the minute he was old enough to throw a ball.

The Colin Kaepernick the public knows is cool and collected, not the least bit nervous about the stage he will be on or the job he has to do. He remains a man of very few words. “What you’re seeing is the way he’s always been. He’s not one to talk a lot about himself,” his dad said.

That was evident Thursday during Colin Kaepernick’s last media appearance before the big game. He dutifully answered questions without elaboratin­g, never veering off task before it was finally over and he could return to practice.

That’s the quality former Nevada coach Chris Ault saw when his starting quarterbac­k went down and he turned to the redshirt freshman. Kaepernick threw for five touchdowns. It’s what Jim Harbaugh saw when the backup electrifie­d a national audience with a Monday Night Football rout of the Chicago Bears in November. Starter Alex Smith was on the bench the rest of the season.

It’s the same quality his parents have seen almost from the time he first began to talk in complete sentences.

That the Kaepernick­s are proud parents goes without saying.

They’re just as proud, though, of how he honours his brothers, who never made it. Colin quietly donated part of his first game check to Camp Taylor, a California charity his parents are involved in for children with heart defects, and last July he visited the camp with them. He showed off his many tattoos while swimming with the kids, letting them climb on his back as he paddled about. He sat on the floor with them and listened as they told him about their different heart conditions, joined them in crafts and ate dinner with them.

When it was time to go, the kids hid his car keys, knowing that if you lose something at Camp Taylor you have to sing to get it back.

And so, the quarterbac­k towered over them and was joined by his parents for a chorus of This Little Light of Mine, a song he learned in Sunday school.

While their son has been the definition of coolness under pressure in games and in front of cameras and microphone­s this week, Rick Kaepernick admits to feelings of anxiety and excitement heading into Sunday. He and Teresa have been watching their son compete all his life but this, obviously, is on a different level.

And while they savour this moment, they’ll also be thinking of two little guys who never got to live a full life.

“There’s not a day that goes by we don’t think of the kids,” Rick said.

“Everybody grieves differentl­y and you try to get through it. But you never forget.”

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 ?? SCOTT HALLERAN/GETTY IMAGES ?? Quarterbac­k Colin Kaepernick of the San Francisco 49ers will take on the Baltimore Ravens on Sunday at the MercedesBe­nz Superdome. His parents and a large gathering of family members will be cheering him on in the stands.
SCOTT HALLERAN/GETTY IMAGES Quarterbac­k Colin Kaepernick of the San Francisco 49ers will take on the Baltimore Ravens on Sunday at the MercedesBe­nz Superdome. His parents and a large gathering of family members will be cheering him on in the stands.

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