The Ukiah Daily Journal

A story of heroics, sacrifice as we approach Super Bowl

- David M. Shribman is the former executive editor of the Pittsburgh Post-gazette.

Maurice Richard. Saul Bellow. Mordecai Richler. William Shatner. Oscar Peterson. Colleen Dewhurst. Pierre Elliott Trudeau. Leonard Cohen. Mario Lemieux.

Since its founding as a missionary colony 380 years ago, this city has had many standout figures. But perhaps the greatest contempora­ry hero in Montreal is known for what he didn't do. Laurent Duvernay-tardif didn't play football in 2020.

As we approach football's Super Bowl, let's consider a story of heroics and sacrifice. Duvernay-tardif would be the first to say that the doctors and nurses who were his colleagues — substituti­ng for the offensive linemen who otherwise would have been alongside him in that pandemic-scarred year — were the real heroes. Let's take his point, but also have a look at what selflessne­ss and teamwork mean for a man who once had a five-year, $41.26 million contract and won a Super Bowl ring with the Kansas City Chiefs, but who decided to volunteer during a pandemic in a long-term care facility in Saint-jean-sur-richelieu, 45 minutes from Montreal.

“I felt a disconnect between what was happening to me, celebratin­g the Super Bowl, and what was happening in the world,” Duvernay-tardif said in an interview. “I felt I had to do something. I felt I had to help. Like thousands, I raised my hand.”

He didn't exactly fade into the crowd at his new workplace: The new guy striding through the second floor of the CHSLD Gertrude-lafrance stood 6-foot5. He weighed 321 pounds. Plus: He has a medical degree, only the fourth player in NFL history to have one and the only contempora­ry player for whom the word “practice” has special meaning.

He was back on the football field last fall, having traded his white coat for a New York Jets uniform, but his experience with long-term patients changed, or perhaps reaffirmed, his outlook. “The more time I spent at the long-term care home,” he wrote in his new book, “Red Zone: From the Offensive Line to the Front Lines of the Pandemic,” “the more I realized how much, during my years of medical school, I'd drifted away from the main reason I wanted to be a doctor in the first place: to help people.”

Though Chiefs and Jets fans envision him in the locker room, he started his medical residency last July in the examinatio­n rooms of the Herzl Family Practice Centre in Montreal's Jewish General Hospital. “He did everything — clinic, long-term care, urgent care,” said Mark Karanofsky, director of the center. “I wouldn't want to line up against him on a football field, but in a room with a patient, he is kind, he listens, and he knows his stuff.”

The journey from his family's bakery in Mont-saint-hilaire in southeaste­rn Quebec to Mcgill Medical School to the NFL was circuitous — and complicate­d.

Matthieu Quiviger, a firstround Canadian Football League draftee who was Mcgill's offensive line coach, remembers their first meeting. “For about five minutes, I thought I got stuck with him,” said Quiviger, one of only four Canadians in the 1995 East-west Shrine Bowl. “After one practice, it was clear he was better than I was after five years of play. I told him the CFL wasn't a goal for him, the NFL was.”

Not so fast. The young man who scooted around Mcgill's campus on a skateboard had a medical career in mind.

“You don't every day get someone at Mcgill who's a medical student and is that skilled,”

Sonny Wolfe, Mcgill's head coach at the time, told me. “He was a little bit apprehensi­ve because his academic advisers told him that playing football wouldn't enhance his medical career.” For a while, he was primarily a student, practicing only once a week. Finally, he told his coach and his professors he could handle both medical education and football.

Later, he informed Robert Primavesi, at the time the associate dean of undergradu­ate medical education at Mcgill, that both the CFL and NFL were interested in him. He asked for a few weeks off from his studies to attend a predraft boot camp and to be evaluated by scouts.

“The question was how to fit NFL football into the med-school schedule,” Primavesi recalled. “We figured out a way for him to take the football season off from school and return in January. We wondered whether he could excel at both. But he came back to med school with new maturity.”

A similar question presented itself in Kansas City when he became

only the 10th Canadian to be drafted into the NFL from a Canadian university. But Chiefs coach Andy Reid was unfazed; his mother was one of the first female graduates of Mcgill's medical school. Reid was all in, and so was his starting guard.

And then came the pandemic, and Duvernay-tardif took himself out of football, though he joined virtual Chiefs team meetings four days a week. But what he saw, and experience­d, jolted his perspectiv­e.

“I saw sacrifices, teamwork, remarkable balance between passion and privilege,” he said in the interview.

“Profession­al athletes are so privileged. At some point, you have to realize there is more to life than just sports. Through your football career you build a platform — and it is important to use that platform to promote something bigger than your sport. For me, it was promoting the idea of helping during one of the worst health crises.”

Duvernay-tardif wondered whether his NFL contract requiring him to avoid physical risk in the offseason — a restrictio­n aimed at downhill

skiing and riding a motorcycle without a helmet — would constrict his activities. “I didn't know whether what I was proposing to do, working in a COVID emergency, was a risky activity,” he said, before adding, “Of course it was.”

His commitment off the field led Sports Illustrate­d to name him — along with Lebron James of the Los Angeles Lakers, tennis champion Naomi Osaka, Breanna Stewart of the WNBA, and Duvernay-tardif's quarterbac­k in Kansas City, Patrick Mahomes — as the magazine's 2020 Sportspers­ons of the Year.

“When you lift the hopes of your community off the field,” said former Cincinnati Bengal linebacker Reggie Williams, a 1987 winner of that award, “that compassion fuels your power on the field.” It did so for Williams, cited for his work with high school students. It surely did so for Duvernay-tardif, who traded the risky activity of football for the risky duty of lifting the hopes of the sick.

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