Feb. 15, 2005
Tom FitzGerald
San Francisco Chronicle Staff Writer
Baseball is all about playing the percentages. So Michael Thompson, the
strapping 6-foot-4 third baseman for Santa Clara University, liked his
chances. On his Internet searches, he found success rates of 90 t0 95
percent.
You immediately look for survival numbers when cancer hits you. You
want to hit back, preferably with the biggest bat possible, and if you
have Hodgkin's disease, the numbers can help you lift that bat.
He was batting .320 near the end of April, right after a three-hit game
against Stanford, when he decided to have the swelling in his neck
checked. "I was getting more fatigued at practice,'' he said. "Things
didn't seem right.''
A campus doctor referred him to the Kaiser Permanente Medical Group,
which ran a few tests, including a biopsy. Thompson and coach Mark
O'Brien thought he had an infection, so he accompanied the Broncos to
Washington for a three-game series against Gonzaga. With stitches in his
neck from the biopsy, he felt sore and tired.
"On the last day, I prayed for the strength to get through the game,''
he said. He turned to shortstop Mike Lange after the first inning and
said, "I don't know if I can do this today.'' He mustered the strength
to collect three singles and a homer in an 11-2 rout. "There definitely
was a greater strength with me that day,'' he said.
Thompson, 20, had other factors in his favor in his battle against
Hodgkin's disease, also known as Hodgkin's lymphoma, one of two common
types of cancer of the lymphatic system. He was healthy -- his dad says
he'd never been sick -- he was young, and the disease had been caught
early.
Hodgkin's was named after British doctor Thomas Hodgkin, who first
described the disease in 1832. It's not nearly as common (nor as deadly)
as non-Hodgkin's lymphoma. First baseman Andres Galarraga, who played
for the Giants in 2001 and '03, missed most of the 2004 season
recovering from non- Hodgkin's lymphoma for a second time. Galarraga,
43, recently signed with the New York Mets.
Thompson's oncologist, Dr. Minggui Pan, says there are 9,000 new cases
a year of Hodgkin's in the United States, compared with 30,000 cases of
non- Hodgkin's. Dr. Pan says somebody like Thompson has a 77 percent
probability of being cancer-free in five years. He said the survival
rate is close to 90 percent in five years.
Those hopeful numbers didn't soften the shock of the diagnosis for
Thompson, his family or his teammates.
A couple of days after that Gonzaga trip, the doctors summoned his
parents, Rick and Dorris, from Mission Viejo (Orange County). Dr. Pan
gave them all the bad news at the same time. "If you're going to get
cancer,'' Thompson said, "he said it's one of the better cancers to
get.''
They promptly went to Buck Shaw Stadium, where O'Brien interrupted
batting practice and was shocked by what Thompson told him. He also was
amazed by the player's attitude. "Here's how it's going to be fixed,''
Thompson told him, "and, by the way, I'm playing this weekend.''
All the encouraging statistics didn't help O'Brien explain the disease
to his team. "The looks on our players' faces -- some were pale white,''
he said. "Some put their heads down. It was very emotional. Some thought
I was out of my mind telling them that one of their friends, a
19-year-old baseball player, had cancer.''
With a charge of support from his teammates, he played that weekend in
a series at USF. In a 7-3 win Sunday, he had the decisive hit, an RBI
double. "The top of the dugout almost came off,'' O'Brien said. "It was
one of the best feelings I've ever had in coaching.'
It wasn't long before Thompson became well acquainted with the
quadruple whammy of chemotherapy: the potent drugs adriamycin,
bleomycin, vinblastine and dacarbazine ("ABVD'' for short) that were fed
into his body intravenously for four months.
"For a while, I couldn't tell myself I had cancer,'' he said. "It was
hard for me to say it. Finally, one day I said, 'You know what? This is
something I have. I'm going to deal with it as quickly as I can, and get
back out there and play again.' ''
Whenever the going got tough, baseball drove him, just the way it once
caused him to miss his sister's wedding -- he was on a traveling team
and there was a schedule conflict. Baseball caused him to switch high
schools after his junior year in a falling-out with a coach who,
according to his father, told the teenager (incorrectly) he'd never get
a baseball scholarship.
The first day of chemotherapy, O'Brien drove him to SBC Park, and
several Giants welcomed him on the field as a way to lift his spirits.
He chatted with players and heard Barry Bonds and Phillies closer Billy
Wagner talk amiably about challenging each other. He and O'Brien watched
Bonds take batting practice under the stands.
"There's been a lot of things said about Barry Bonds,'' O'Brien said,
"but he made it a special day for Mike.''
Thompson was too sick to stay for the game. He threw up three times
that day. Before cancer, his parents said, he had thrown up exactly once
in his life, after drinking a can of soda as a 2-year-old.
He even tried to play the following weekend but quickly found it was
impossible. "The doctors said he could give it a try,'' O'Brien said.
"He played three or four innings, but it was tough for him just to get
off the field. He looked at me and started to cry. He was dizzy. It just
hit him like a ton of bricks. He said, 'Coach, I can't do it anymore.' "
The doctors were aghast when they found out he had cut his knees diving
for a groundball. His immune system, already weakened, was battered by
the chemo, making him vulnerable to infection. With five games left in
the season, he was done.
Taking the coach's place for the pregame talk the next day, he told his
teammates he was leaving school to undergo treatment near his home in
Orange County. "It was emotional to see a guy who competes every day get
something taken away from him,'' Lange said.
But what Thompson really wanted to give the Broncos, still in
contention for the West Coast Conference title, was a pep talk.
"It was one of the most inspirational things you'll ever see,'' O'Brien
said. "He said, 'Do this for yourselves and for our team and our
program, but don't do it for me. Don't feel sorry for me.' It was
gut-wrenching. We swept Pepperdine, and I think his speech had a lot to
do with it.''
During his chemotherapy, his hair thinned, and his weight ballooned
from 210 pounds to 245. But a surefire way to lose weight followed --
radiation. "You only got in there 5 to 10 minutes every day,'' he said.
"They zap you and you're gone. But the aftereffects are just killers. I
couldn't eat. If I drank, it felt like razor blades were going down my
throat.''
Still, he had no doubts that he'd be playing again. He returned in
September, then left after a month because he had no energy. But in
January, he was back in school, back in workouts and feeling
"fantastic.''
"He's cancer-free right now,'' Dr. Pan said. "I'm very hopeful.''
So is Thompson. "We think we're invincible,'' he said, "but going
through that, you see things can be taken from you as easily as they can
be given to you. ... I felt like I went through this for a reason. I
didn't look at it as a negative thing happening to me. It was a positive
thing, something I'm going to grow from.''
Thompson went hitless in Santa Clara's opening series against UC
Riverside two weeks ago, although his bases-loaded walk was the
game-winning RBI in the Broncos' only win of the weekend. "It was ugly
but it worked,'' he said.
He adjusted at the plate the following weekend, and his improved
balance paid dividends with seven hits and four RBIs in 13 at-bats as
Santa Clara swept three games from Utah. The cancer patient of a few
months ago was the WCC Player of the Week.
And, after homering in each game of the Broncos' doubleheader split at
San Diego State on Sunday, Thompson is batting .345 (10-for-29).
It's not easy to keep this guy down.