The Province

Canada’s rugby team lacing up for Paisley

Abbotsford girl diagnosed with leukemia just before Christmas

- NEIL DAVIDSON

The Canadian men’s rugby sevens team are wearing orange laces at the New Zealand Sevens this weekend in support of Paisley MacRury, a four-year-old girl from Abbotsford, who is battling leukemia.

“Your strength is inspiring to us and we’re going to be taking that on the field this weekend,” Canadian internatio­nal Jake Thiel said in a social media post.

An orange ribbon promotes leukemia awareness. Paisley, who is almost five, was diagnosed Dec. 18.

“She’s doing fairly well,” Graeme MacRury, her father, said in an interview. “She’s getting a little bit better. She’s off the first-month cycle (of drugs) which is very, very hard on them, especially for little girls. They don’t seem to deal with the steroids that they get very well. But she seems to be doing pretty well.

“She’s a little sad about how her hair is falling out and how her face has kind of gotten swollen. And one of the side effects is also depression from the drugs and the steroids. But she’s off of it and it’s kind of working its way out and we’re seeing a little bit of our daughter again.”

MacRury was teammates with Thiel and fellow sevens internatio­nal Justin Douglas at Abbotsford RFC. Thiel, whose family is close to the MacRurys, came up with the idea and started wearing the orange laces earlier this month at the South America Rugby Sevens while playing for the Canada Maple Leafs developmen­t team.

All of the Canadian team will follow suit this weekend in Hamilton, New Zealand, the third stop of the HSBC World Rugby Sevens Series.

The rugby team’s support may not have quite registered with young Paisley, who is more interested in “walking her unicorn,” her father says.

“She does love rugby. And she did get to see herself on TV (on a CBC newscast),” MacRury said. “I think she might have a little idea, but not the full grasp of it.”

But he is deeply touched by the rugby team’s gesture.

“I was a little taken back by it all,” he said. “Very humbled by it. They have other things they need to be concerning themselves with leading into a tournament. And for them to take the time to do this and get the recognitio­n and acknowledg­ment going about childhood cancer and support my daughter is a massive thing.”

Leukemia is a cancer that starts in blood stem cells. According to the Leukemia & Lymphoma Society of Canada and Canadian Cancer Society Statistics 2016, approximat­ely 22,510 Canadians (13,040 male and 9,470 female) are living with, or are in remission from leukemia.

One in 53 men and one in 72 women will develop leukemia in their lifetime.

There is a PayPal site to help the family with medical and other expenses.

The family lives more than 70 kilometres away from the hospital treating Paisley and MacRury’s wife, Lauren, is off work to look after their daughter.

 ?? — THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Paisley MacRury, a four-year-old from Abbotsford, has captured the hearts of the Canadian men’s rugby sevens team, whose members are wearing orange laces at the New Zealand Sevens this weekend. An orange ribbon promotes leukemia awareness. Paisley was diagnosed with the disease on Dec. 18.
— THE CANADIAN PRESS Paisley MacRury, a four-year-old from Abbotsford, has captured the hearts of the Canadian men’s rugby sevens team, whose members are wearing orange laces at the New Zealand Sevens this weekend. An orange ribbon promotes leukemia awareness. Paisley was diagnosed with the disease on Dec. 18.

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