Noeller Posted November 6, 2014 Report Posted November 6, 2014 680 CJOB Sports @CJOBSports #Bombers DB & #Winnipeg Product Donovan Alexander has retired following an injury plagued season with his hometown team. #CFL
gbill2004 Posted November 6, 2014 Report Posted November 6, 2014 680 CJOB Sports @CJOBSports #Bombers DB & #Winnipeg Product Donovan Alexander has retired following an injury plagued season with his hometown team. #CFL He's taking his teaching degree at the U of M so he's nicely set for life after football.
saskbluefan Posted November 6, 2014 Report Posted November 6, 2014 Donovan Alexander played for the Bombers this year? Nah, I kid. I kid. Best of luck to the guy. Carved out a good pro career. FrostyWinnipeg 1
Fred C Dobbs Posted November 6, 2014 Report Posted November 6, 2014 Given how he started out life, the kid's done okay for himself. This article is from 2006: I don't remember if the tall, handsome young man was introduced by Beau or Tom, the Q94 morning guys. Or if it was Variety Club executive director Wayne Rogers who handed him the microphone. What I do remember is how gracefully and politely Donovan Alexander silenced the not-so-polite chattering and clattering behind me. "Can everyone at the back of the room hear me?" he began with a big, Tiger-Woods look-a-like, smile. The golfers quickly composed themselves, as if Tiger himself was about to putt. And Donovan began his story. He began by acknowledging that at 21 years old, he doesn't appear to be the typical, cute and cuddly Variety child. But when he was born, Donovan explained, he had a heart defect so rare only one other Canadian had been diagnosed with it. At first, the symptoms were as ominous as they were mysterious. He had difficulty swallowing and eating. Initially, doctors told his mother, Marilyn, that it was just post-birth fluid buildup. Later they told her it was asthma. As time passed, and asthma was ruled out, doctors probed deeper. Finally, they found why little Donovan was struggling to breathe. "I was born with two aortas," Donovan told the hushed room. And one of the aortas was wrapped around his wind pipe. Like a choke hold. So every time young Donovan's heart beat, his airway was squeezed by the rogue aorta. This was serious. Aortas are main arteries that carry oxygenated blood from the heart to the smaller arteries that in turn supply the rest of the body. By this time, Donovan was 18 months old. Without prompt surgery, doctors told them, the tike could be dead by his second birthday. The problem was the Variety Club's pediatric heart centre had only recently opened at the Health Sciences Centre, and it didn't have a dedicated surgeon. That meant an expensive trip to Toronto for the family. Even then, there was no guarantee because young Donovan would have to go on a wait list. As far as the Variety Club was concerned, there was only one thing to do. They located a pediatric heart surgeon and flew him to Winnipeg to perform the surgery. Donovan recalled how, as his bed was being wheeled down the hall to the OR, he was standing, gleefully jumping up and down, and waving bye-bye to his parents. He didn't know where he was going. But his parents did. What they didn't know was whether they'd ever see their baby boy alive again. Not only did he live, of course, he thrived. Donovan went on to be an elite athlete, setting the provincial junior record for the 100-metre sprint in a time of 10.75. Today he's attending the University of North Dakota on an athletic scholarship, playing defensive back on the football team, running track and thinking about following his dad, Derek's, path into law. Standing there Tuesday at the charity golf dinner, Donovan Alexander wanted everyone to know how much he appreciated their presence, what sponsors like the Free Press contribute, and what Variety The Children's Charity had done for him and his family. "I owe my life to them," Donovan said. http://www.winnipegfreepress.com/historic/31724144.html blitzmore 1
DR. CFL Posted November 6, 2014 Report Posted November 6, 2014 Thanks for the memories Donavan....oh I don't seem to remember them.
Mark H. Posted November 6, 2014 Report Posted November 6, 2014 680 CJOB Sports @CJOBSports #Bombers DB & #Winnipeg Product Donovan Alexander has retired following an injury plagued season with his hometown team. #CFL He's taking his teaching degree at the U of M so he's nicely set for life after football. There is actually an oversupply of teaching candidates these days - many end up working in another field.
Tracker Posted November 6, 2014 Report Posted November 6, 2014 Good luck to Donovan- glad he had the sense to quit when he heeded to instead of risking permanent damage.
rebusrankin Posted November 6, 2014 Report Posted November 6, 2014 Wish him well but as Mark stated, there is a huge surplus of teachers.
Jesse Posted November 6, 2014 Report Posted November 6, 2014 Well, fortunately for Donovan (although unfortunately for us teachers looking for permanent contracts), people with his unique background are often given priority for positions. Atomic 1
Tracker Posted November 6, 2014 Report Posted November 6, 2014 Teachers never retire- they just lose their class.
gbill2004 Posted November 7, 2014 Report Posted November 7, 2014 The dominos are starting to fall. Let's hope Kuale is next to announce his retirement. KptKrunch 1
Blueandgold Posted November 7, 2014 Report Posted November 7, 2014 The dominos are starting to fall. Let's hope Kuale is next to announce his retirement. He doesn't deserve to announce ''retirement''.
SPuDS Posted November 7, 2014 Report Posted November 7, 2014 Oh noes! Alexander AND Norris in one day? We so screwed! Best of luck to Donovan in his post football career. Shame he didnt get to play for his home town team for at least one season...
Recommended Posts
Create an account or sign in to comment
You need to be a member in order to leave a comment
Create an account
Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!
Register a new accountSign in
Already have an account? Sign in here.
Sign In Now