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Dwight Clark’s ALS Diagnosis Is as Heartbreaking as ‘The Catch’ Was Exhilarating
New York Daily News ^ | Monday, March 20, 2017 | Gary Myers

Posted on 03/20/2017 10:57:53 PM PDT by nickcarraway

Dwight Clark became emotional as we watched "The Catch" on my portable DVD player in the lobby of a midtown Manhattan hotel 10 years ago.

The television copy of the game reached third down from the Cowboys six with 57 seconds left in the 49ers-Cowboys 1981 NFC Championship Game. Clark became noticeably anxious, as if he wasn't sure what was going to happen next. The Niners trailed 27-21 and Candlestick Park was rocking.

As the business people streamed in and out of the hotel lobby that day, Joe Montana rolled right on the DVD on a play called "Sprint Right Option," and lofted a pass the Cowboys to this day insist he was trying to throw away into the second deck. Clark jumped as high as he ever had in his life and higher than he ever would again to grab Montana's pass with both hands.

As Clark watched himself spike the ball — no end zone dance — a big smile crossed his face. Then some tears formed around his eyes. As he tried to speak, his voice cracked. He was choked up. He was reliving the highlight of a lifetime.

"The cool part about that play is, the Dallas Cowboys had beaten up the 49ers team two or three times to knock them out of the Super Bowl in the early seventies, and to be able to give the 49ers fans that one signature play, I'll forever be that guy," Clark told me. "The story is passed down from generation to generation. It becomes bigger than life. That is definitely my football identity. And I'm fine with that. I actually like it a lot."

Clark is a terrific guy. I got to know him back in 2007 when I was researching my book, "The Catch," and the play that was the turning point for two franchises. It started the 49ers dynasty — they beat the Bengals two weeks later, the first of their five Super Bowl titles in 15 years — and was the beginning of the end of the Tom Landry era in Dallas.

The news from Clark on Sunday night that he has been diagnosed with ALS, amyotrophic lateral sclerosis, otherwise known as Lou Gehrig's Disease, is as devastating and heartbreaking as what he did on Jan. 10, 1982 was exhilarating and a forever moment.

Clark is just 60 years old. "The Catch" is one of the five most famous plays in NFL history. Clark leaping with Cowboys cornerback Everson Walls trailing him is an iconic picture. The battle he faces now is much tougher than jumping out of Candlestick to make The Catch.

Dwight Clark, San Francisco 49ers legend, diagnosed with ALS In a statement Clark posted, he brought up the possibility of the connection between ALS and his football career. He played nine years in the NFL after a college career at Clemson.

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Dwight Clark's signature moment came with his phenomenal catch in the 49ers' NFC Championship Game against the Cowboys in 1981. (WALTER IOOSS JR./SPORTS ILLUSTRATED/GETTY IMAGES) "I've been asked if playing football caused this," he said. "I don't know for sure. But I certainly suspect it did. And I encourage the NFLPA and the NFL to continue working together in their effort to make the game of football safer as it relates to head trauma."

There is no cure for ALS. It's just a matter of how long Clark's body can fight off the disease that weakens muscles and leads to problems speaking, breathing and swallowing. "In September of 2015, I started feeling weakness in my left hand. I was mildly paying attention to it because since my playing days, I've constantly had pain in my neck," Clark said in his statement. "I was thinking it was related to some kind of nerve damage because it would just come and go."

Former Patriots and Eagles fullback Kevin Turner was diagnosed with ALS in 2010. He died in March of 2016. Eight months later, the Boston University Brain CTE Center revealed that Turner died from a severe case of CTE. It was not the ALS that killed him, according to its findings. That raises the issue of a link between ALS and CTE and football.

Former Bears LB Lance Briggs voices concerns over CTE "This is the best circumstantial evidence we will ever get that this ALS-type of motor neuron disease is caused by CTE," Ann McKee, the director of the CTE Center, said last year.

Other former NFL players diagnosed with ALS include Steve Gleason, O.J. Brigance, Tim Shaw and ex-Raiders fullback Steve Smith.

Clark visited six neurologists and six ALS specialists once his condition began to deteriorate.

"In addition to losing strength in my left hand — which makes opening a pack of sugar or buttoning my shirt impossible — I have now experienced weakness in my right hand, abs, lower back and right leg," Clark said. "I can't run, play golf or walk any distances. Picking up anything over 30 pounds is a chore. The one piece of good news is that the disease seems to be progressing more slowly than in some patients."

Kaepernick stands up for people of Somalia that need water, food Before there was Montana-to-Jerry Rice, there was Montana-to-Clark.

It only happened because Clark was home when the phone rang in the apartment he shared senior year at Clemson with quarterback Steve Fuller. 49ers coach Bill Walsh was in town to work out Fuller and when he called to set up a time, Clark answered the phone and Walsh asked him to catch passes at the workout.

"I went and ran routes for coach Walsh and just had one of those really lucky days," Clark told me. "I caught every pass. A couple of circus catches. It was just a very fortunate day."

After the workout, Walsh asked Clark if they could go watch some game tape of him.

Colin Kaepernick opting out of 49ers contract "Coach, I only caught 11 passes this year. There's just not much to watch," Clark said.

Walsh asked if there was any game he caught two passes. So, they watched the game against North Carolina.

Walsh didn't draft Fuller. The 49ers didn't have a first-round pick and the Chiefs selected him in the first round. He drafted Montana in the third round. He wanted to take Clark in the fifth, but his scouts told him he had free-agent talent. Walsh drafted him in the 10th round.

Clark won two Super Bowls and caught 506 regular season passes and 48 more in the playoffs, including one really big one.

Just over 36 years ago, Clark jumped as high as his body would allow and made a catch that changed his life. Now, sadly, there's another reason to shed a tear.


TOPICS: Health/Medicine; Sports
KEYWORDS:

1 posted on 03/20/2017 10:57:53 PM PDT by nickcarraway
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To: latina4dubya

:(


2 posted on 03/20/2017 10:58:37 PM PDT by nickcarraway
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To: nickcarraway

Dwight is a class act. Even though the article seems
to be somewhat jumbled thanks for posting it.


3 posted on 03/20/2017 11:43:20 PM PDT by Sivad (The Federalist #46)
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To: nickcarraway

I thought they cured ALS when all those celebrities poured ice buckets over their heads


4 posted on 03/21/2017 4:31:52 AM PDT by Emergencyawesome
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To: nickcarraway

One of the guys I played rec b’ball with for years was afflicted with ALS. One fall he was playing with us; the next season he was dead. Now another guy who plays with us from time to time is showing what look like early symptoms, not diagnosed yet.


5 posted on 03/21/2017 1:22:30 PM PDT by JimRed ( TERM LIMITS, NOW! Building the Wall! TRUTH is the new HATE SPEECH.)
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To: JimRed
celebs bring attention to ALS but many people get the disease and suffer in silence...

I feel very bad for this youngish man....but I feel just as bad about all the others too...

I'm told by my husbands cousin who has ALS that the bucket challenge money really did not help like people think it did...best to give to companies that do direct research on it or local chapters that give actual help to sufferers..

6 posted on 03/24/2017 12:15:54 AM PDT by cherry
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To: cherry

Tommy passed a couple of days ago. It was not ALS, but some kind of brain infection with early symptoms similar to ALS. He was gone in just a few weeks. Still waiting for the official word on it.


7 posted on 03/25/2017 3:13:45 PM PDT by JimRed ( TERM LIMITS, NOW! Building the Wall! TRUTH is the new HATE SPEECH.)
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