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Ex-Rice star stricken by ALS out to deliver message of hope

03:36 AM CDT on Sunday, April 26, 2009

Column by KEVIN SHERRINGTON / The Dallas Morning News | ksherrington@dallasnews.com

Kevin Sherrington

Once an effervescent star at Rice and in the Canadian Football League, then an overachieving, 6-foot, 236-pound special teams ace on a Super Bowl champion, O.J. Brigance fights just to hold his head up these days.

Lawrence Ghoram leaned in to hear what Brigance had to tell him last week. The voice was weak. The message was clear.

"Enjoy every moment."

His body ravaged by Lou Gehrig's disease, ALS, a fatal motor-neuron disease that inexorably weakens its victims, making every movement, every word, an impossible struggle, Brigance nevertheless pounded his point.

"Enjoy every moment."

He said it three times. Ghoram got it.

The former Rice linebacker and Ghoram, a junior guard on Rice's basketball team, met on the university campus last week. Brigance grew up in Houston and attended Willowridge High. Now director of player development for the Baltimore Ravens, the team he helped to the 2001 Super Bowl title, he was in his hometown with his wife, Chanda, and an assistant to help raise funds for an endowed scholarship in his name and to raise contributions for the Brigance Brigade, dedicated to ALS research.

Only a shadow of the specimen he once was, Brigance, 39, makes a powerful witness for his cause. On an NFL Films video made last fall, True Courage, he recalls his reaction upon learning in the spring of 2007 that most ALS patients die within two to five years.

"I'm going to be dead by the age of 40."

In the six-minute video, Brigance's withered arms and legs tremble as he walks, but his rich baritone still rumbles.

Now, seven months later, his voice is little more than a whisper. When he's tired, his assistant reads his lips.

SHARON STEINMANN / Special to DMN
SHARON STEINMANN / Special to DMN
O.J. Brigance, a former star linebacker at Rice who suffers from Lou Gehrig's Disease, is greeted by his childhood football coach Zeke Moore of Houston during a fundraiser in Brigance's honor.

But there's no mistaking the smile.

"He's still the same guy," said Donald Hollas, a former NFL quarterback who played with Brigance at Rice in the early '90s. "He always had a great attitude. In practice, he'd do anything to help. He'd finish his work on defense, then play on the scout team for us or run plays at fullback.

"He changed the whole environment at Rice."

He still does.

Ghoram was struck by the message in the video. He thought about his own life. A sister died of leukemia. He's suffered injuries, losses, depression. Big problems and small, like all of us. And his reaction has been just as universal.

"Why is this happening to me?"

He met Brigance, and he was cured of that question. Maybe it was seeing how an ALS victim lives what's left of his life.

Maybe it was something he told him.

"Never ask why."

He said it three times. Ghoram got that message, too. So should we all.

A LA CARTE

■ When he was the Rangers' GM, Doug Melvin said pitchers need some success at each level of the minors before moving up. Love Melvin, but it's not always so. Derek Holland's initial success, while a small sample, indicates he has a plan as well as the tools. What's more important now is that the Rangers remain consistent with Holland. No yo-yoing between the bigs and minors; no moving back and forth between the bullpen and rotation. ...

■ Asked what made Jason Terry Sixth Man of the Year, Rick Carlisle said it was his willingness to embrace the role. Terry had a great role model in Jerry Stackhouse. In an era of ego, the Mavs have been fortunate. ...

■ Speaking of Carlisle, let's hope no one's still asking if the Mavs would be better off if Avery Johnson were here. Would Johnson have paired Jason Kidd and J.J. Barea at times? Would Johnson have given Kidd the reins? Would Johnson have been as creative with plays after timeouts? Johnson got his team to the NBA Finals before losing the players. Now it's Carlisle's time, and good for that. ...

■ Milton Bradley's vital stats since the Cubs gave him a three-year, $30 million deal: 23 at-bats, seven strikeouts, one hit, one groin pull, one media boycott. ...

■ If the Cowboys draft a QB, and they must, they could find one with better credentials than Texas A&M's Stephen McGee, but no one tougher or more loyal. Turned heads at the combine, too. ...

■ Draft West Virginia QB Pat White to run the Wildcat? Darren McFadden operated the original Wild Hog, and Ronnie Brown runs it for Miami. Bottom line: If he can catch a shotgun snap and flick a 10-yard pass, good enough. Don't waste a pick on a player who gets only a handful of snaps and takes them away from, say, Felix Jones . ...

■ Greatest legacy of Houston's departing AD, Dave Maggard , is not hiring Art Briles or Kevin Sumlin, but this: In his seven years, UH's athletic graduation rate improved from embarrassing 27 percent to all-time high of 59 percent. ...

■ So all it took was an explanatory letter from Lance Armstrong to get French officials to back off possible sanctions after a dispute with a drug tester. Seems like the French were just looking for a way out. ...

■ Moral: If your high school concession stand allows you to run a tab, don't. Not if you have multiple kids running unchecked.

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