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NFL Career May Have Saved Jerome Harrison's Life; Awareness Could Help Save More

Ty SchalterOct 20, 2011

Jerome Harrison has a brain tumor.

Yesterday, the Lions traded Harrison back to Philadelphia, whoโ€™d originally released him after free-agent signee Ronnie Brown made Harrison expendable. Per Jay Glazer of FOX Sports, Harrison was packaged with a seventh-round pick in exchange for Brown, who had struggled to make an impact for the Eagles.

When the news broke, I was writing a post about arbitrageโ€”the practice of swapping commodities for similar commodities and getting a small advantage. Itโ€™s how a kid hit Craigslist with an old cell phone and ended up with a Porsche convertible. Itโ€™s how the low-budget Tampa Bay Rays perennially make the playoffs out of a division containing the blank-check Yankees and Red Sox.

The parallel here is obvious: The Lions were trading a talented-but-unused running back and the least-valuable draft pick for a more talented running back. However, Harrison and Brown are not wireless devices or cars or pork bellies or shares of stockโ€”they are not commodities. They are human beings.

Brown was devastated, "lost for words" when the diagnosis nullified the trade. He was excited to get a chance to play for a winning Lions franchise, and now thatโ€™s gone. Harrison is already undergoing treatment for a tumor he didnโ€™t know he had two days ago. The trade, in detecting the tumor early, might have saved his life: according to ESPNโ€™s Adam Schefter, Harrisonโ€™s long-term prognosis for lifeโ€”and footballโ€”is โ€œgood.โ€

This is where should I say football is meaningless against a backdrop of life and death, but I wonโ€™t, because it isnโ€™t.

Football is part of our lives. Our fandom is woven into our work, our leisure, our money, our time, our families. Itโ€™s our respite from the banalities of life and a connection that passes through mortal boundaries.

Just this week, my aunt sent my son an old Michigan State football hat that used to belong to my grandfatherโ€”literally, half a foam football that sticks up like a conehead. I couldnโ€™t believe my straight-laced Italian Grandpa had ever put that crazy thing on his head. He never met my five-year-old son, but they share a bond through football fandom.

For Harrison and Brown, football is a job, a career, a way of life. Football helped detect this tumor earlyโ€”and if Harrison makes a full recovery, heโ€™ll go right back to playing football for a living; itโ€™s what he does.ย 

The Detroit Lions franchise has outlived generations of players, coaches, staff, owners and fans. It existed long before I was born, and hopefully will long after I die. Football doesnโ€™t lose its meaning because Jerome Harrison has a brain tumorโ€”people get brain tumors every day. Itโ€™s only because of football that Harrisonโ€™s sickness is relevant to our lives.

That may sound callous, but think about it: Harrisonโ€™s condition is relevant to our lives. If pink shoes and pink gloves and thousands of twirling pink towels didnโ€™t raise the awareness of the importance of research, screening and early treatment, maybe whatโ€™s happened to Harrison will.

Football may have saved Harrisonโ€™s life. If even one person does a self-exam or gets screened or donates to research because of his experience, even more lives could be saved.

Hint, hint.

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