Austin American-Statesman

Chiefs draft medical student, 23

Lineman was delivering twins on last day of draft.

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The long hours Laurent Duvernay-Tardif spends at practice will seem like a vacation of sorts. The playbook will seem like a comic book. Success would be sweet, failure merely a disappoint­ment.

The moment he heard his name called in the sixth round of the NFL draft on Saturday, the Montreal native went from being a medical student at McGill University spending 60 hours a week in neonatal intensive care units to an aspiring offensive tackle for the Kansas City Chiefs.

You see, in a draft full of intriguing stories, Doc Larry is unique.

After all, how many 23-year-olds are late to their adviser’s house to watch the draft because they were helping to deliver twins by emergency C-section? And how many NFL hopefuls have spent their spring working at children’s hospitals, first in the emergency room and later in the NICU, often handling babies that fit comfortabl­y in his massive hands?

How many players who heard their names called over the three days of the draft have just one more year of medical school before they can call themselves a doctor?

Duvernay-Tardif plans to fit that in during summers, when he is able to take a break from football. But for now, his focus has shifted entirely to the Chiefs. He planned to be in Kansas City this week for rookie orientatio­n.

“Thing is that a year ago, my dream was to play in the CFL,” said Duvernay-Tardif, who played so well at the East-West Shrine Game that several teams — including the Chiefs — took notice.

“At that point, I was like, ‘Oh, damn! I think the NFL is the place for me to play,’ ” he said. “Everything went well after that. I was training in the States. I had two visits and hosted my own Pro Day in Montreal and a few teams showed up. Everything went really well for me.”

Let’s be clear about one thing: There’s a good chance that Duvernay-Tardif is a better doctor than he is a football player at this point.

The competitio­n in the Canadian Interunive­rsity Sport system — which has produced 10 draft picks total — is not exactly the same as the Southeaste­rn Conference.

Some of the rules of the Canadian game are also a bit different. Then throw in the fact that Doc Larry will be going against players bigger, faster and stronger than ever before, and chances are he’ll be in for a rude baptism when he finally straps on a Chiefs helmet.

“Competitio­n (in Canada) is really a step backward,” said Pat Sperduto, the team’s area scout, “(but) football is blocking and tackling. Nothing changes there. It’s still the same there. You just watch him, you realize that this kid has physical talent.”

For one thing, he has prototypic­al size at 6-foot-5, 315 pounds. He also has what Sperduto called a “nasty” streak on the field, which is a bit hard to reconcile with the affable med student who has been spending his time working with sick children.

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