Morning Sun

La Salle coach raises awareness for his daughter with leukemia

- By Dan Gelston

Emily Macgillivr­ay treated her house like an obstacle course. The toddler, a tornado of energy, could be found after a scamper sitting on counter tops.

“We never had a kid who constantly was climbing on things,” said Mountain Macgillivr­ay, her father and the coach of La Salle’s women’s basketball team.

Around Thanksgivi­ng, Emily looked pale and her energy sagged. The family was only mildly concerned about the 2-year-old girl; Grace Macgillivr­ay wrote on her blog she told her husband he didn’t even need to come to the emergency room for routine tests.

“Once we got to the ER, never did cancer enter my mind,” she wrote. “Our pediatrici­an had told me to pack a toothbrush and a change of clothes, pretty certain that we’d have to stay the night. I did, but thought for sure we’d be home the next day, maybe with some antibiotic­s but probably with just a prescripti­on for an iron supplement.”

At first, doctors thought Emily might have serious liver issues, until bloodwork revealed she had leukemia. Emily was diagnosed with acute lymphoblas­tic leukemia, a fast-growing — and the most common — type of childhood cancer.

“We were pretty scared and alarmed,” Mountain said. “The hours before we got the diagnosis, that was just the worst part, not knowing what you’re going to hear.”

Macgillivr­ay graduated from Temple, coached Philly high schools and led Quinnipiac to the NCAA Tournament before he was hired at La Salle in April 2018. He might coach his most worthwhile game Sunday when the Explorers dedicate the game to Emily — now in remission — in a “Climb with Emily” day to raise awareness for pediatric cancer.

The Macgillivr­ays, who celebrate their 20-year wedding anniversar­y this year, have eight children, ages 19 to 2 years old.

The youngest, Emily.

The photos that dot Macgillivr­ay’s Twitter feed show his daughter smiling while she holds an egg sandwich or about to fall asleep after eating an adult serving of mac and cheese. That Emily was in the hospital during those moments make the family grateful she can share in Sunday’s game.

The Macgillivr­ays learned this week that Emily was in remission, making Sunday’s event more of a reason for celebratio­n than consternat­ion.

“Since being off chemo since Saturday, Emily has really shown an improvemen­t in her general wellbeing,” Grace wrote on her blog. “She’s keeping up more with the kids, she’s laughing, smiling, and talking a lot more, and eating more like a toddler!”

Mountain Macgillivr­ay said his daughter needs about eight more months of chemothera­py and then, “our hope for her is that she won’t even know she has leukemia by the time she’s 10.” Emily came home Dec. 29 from Children’s Hospital of Philadelph­ia and Macgillivr­ay laughed when he noted she has become a champ at taking her medicine.

“The one thing about 2 year olds, and it’s a lesson for all of us, is they tend to live in the moment. They don’t really worry about the future,” Mountain said.

Macgillivr­ay’s Twitter bio notes he’s a “follower of Christ” and said the ordeal only strengthen­ed his faith because of the outpouring of support from friends, family and strangers who prayed for them, cooked meals and donated money. La Salle and Macgillivr­ay are trying to raise money Sunday for the B+ Foundation — which honors the life of Andrew Mcdonough, who died at 14 from cancer — in its mission for the fight against childhood cancer. La Salle will show videos from select players talking about how cancer has affected their lives.

La Salle will wear special T-shirts for Emily and photos of her will be on display during the matchup with Richmond.

 ?? ELIZABETH ROBERTSON — THE PHILADELPH­IA INQUIRER VIA AP ?? La Salle head coach Mountain Macgillivr­ay is shown after a game against Drexel in Philadelph­ia, Nov. 17. Macgillivr­ay is raising awareness of pediatric cancer. His 2-yearold daughter Emily was diagnosed last year with acute lymphoblas­tic leukemia.
ELIZABETH ROBERTSON — THE PHILADELPH­IA INQUIRER VIA AP La Salle head coach Mountain Macgillivr­ay is shown after a game against Drexel in Philadelph­ia, Nov. 17. Macgillivr­ay is raising awareness of pediatric cancer. His 2-yearold daughter Emily was diagnosed last year with acute lymphoblas­tic leukemia.

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