Current:Home > NewsHow a student's friendship with Auburn coach Bruce Pearl gave him the strength to beat leukemia -TrueNorth Capital Hub
How a student's friendship with Auburn coach Bruce Pearl gave him the strength to beat leukemia
TradeEdge View
Date:2025-04-11 07:53:21
Auburn, Alabama — Auburn men's basketball coach Bruce Pearl often sneers and snarls his way through games. But off the court is a different matter.
"You see him on the court being tough and stuff to all the players, but there's a whole, totally different side of Bruce outside of basketball — which is a nice, loving and caring person," Auburn freshman Sam Cunningham told CBS News.
Cunningham's unique perspective comes from his greatest struggle. In 2017, he was diagnosed with leukemia at the age of 12. Not long after, someone asked Pearl to record a video for him.
"You're going to beat this, son," Pearl said in the video. "Cancer picked the wrong hombre — picked the wrong dude to mess with, OK."
"Which was just real funny to me, 'Cancer picked the wrong hombre, it picked the wrong dude to mess with,'" Cunningham said. "And that quote is what I kept with me when I got in my darkest days in the hospital and stuff."
Through all his complications, through his relapse and through the days that felt like they would be his last, Sam kept watching that video, over and over.
Eventually, Pearl delivered the same lines in person, and they became friends. And then one day Pearl gave him another even more inspiring message.
"'I tell you what, you're going to get better, you'll come to Auburn, and you're going to be my assistant,'" Pearl said he told Cunningham. "And he takes me at my word."
Cunningham was declared cancer free in March 2022. And today, he is the team manager, and he's so happy to be here. In fact, Cunningham says Pearl's encouragement may have saved his life.
"That truly healed me," Cunningham said. "I didn't think I'd really get to this point from all the complications I had. So that was pretty amazing. I'm just a miracle to be here right now."
Come March Madness, college coaches across the country will be praying for a national championship. But at Auburn, Pearl will be asking for something far more consequential.
"In my prayers it's, 'God don't let this thing relapse, take me, let Sam live,'" Pearl said.
- In:
- College Basketball
- Cancer
- Basketball
Steve Hartman has been a CBS News correspondent since 1998, having served as a part-time correspondent for the previous two years.
veryGood! (9348)
Related
- McConnell absent from Senate on Thursday as he recovers from fall in Capitol
- Today’s Climate: May 27, 2010
- In the Outer Banks, Officials and Property Owners Battle to Keep the Ocean at Bay
- Whatever happened to the Malawian anti-plastic activist inspired by goats?
- Could your smelly farts help science?
- A 1931 law criminalizing abortion in Michigan is unconstitutional, a judge rules
- Maria Menounos Recalls Fearing She Wouldn't Get to Meet Her Baby After Cancer Diagnosis
- Catholic health care's wide reach can make it hard to get birth control in many places
- Apple iOS 18.2: What to know about top features, including Genmoji, AI updates
- Crazy Rich Asians Star Henry Golding's Wife Liv Lo Is Pregnant, Expecting Baby No. 2
Ranking
- Trump issues order to ban transgender troops from serving openly in the military
- How the Love & Death Costumes Hide the Deep, Dark Secret of the True Crime Story
- This Mexican clinic is offering discreet abortions to Americans just over the border
- New 988 mental health crisis line sees jump in calls and texts during first month
- Gen. Mark Milley's security detail and security clearance revoked, Pentagon says
- A news anchor showed signs of a stroke on air, but her colleagues caught them early
- Robert Hanssen, former FBI agent convicted of spying for Russia, dead at 79
- Mothers tell how Pakistan's monsoon floods have upended their lives
Recommendation
Meet the volunteers risking their lives to deliver Christmas gifts to children in Haiti
New 988 mental health crisis line sees jump in calls and texts during first month
Michael Bennet on Climate Change: Where the Candidate Stands
Today’s Climate: May 25, 2010
Military service academies see drop in reported sexual assaults after alarming surge
The Michigan supreme court set to decide whether voters see abortion on the ballot
Whatever happened to the Botswana scientist who identified omicron — then caught it?
Selfless by Hyram: Why Women Everywhere Love This Influencer's Skincare Line