Current:Home > ScamsHow a student's friendship with Auburn coach Bruce Pearl gave him the strength to beat leukemia -Streamline Finance
How a student's friendship with Auburn coach Bruce Pearl gave him the strength to beat leukemia
View
Date:2025-04-15 05:05:21
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! (99)
Related
- Head of the Federal Aviation Administration to resign, allowing Trump to pick his successor
- Oklahoma panel denies clemency for man convicted in 1984 killing of 7-year-old girl
- Who won Tony Awards for 2024: Full list of winners and nominees
- US aircraft carrier counters false Houthi claims with ‘Taco Tuesdays’ as deployment stretches on
- In ‘Nickel Boys,’ striving for a new way to see
- Social Security is constantly getting tweaked. Here's what could be changing next.
- The Ripken Way: How a father's lessons passed down can help your young athlete today
- 8 injured after shooting at 'pop-up' party in Methuen, Massachusetts
- Nevada attorney general revives 2020 fake electors case
- An emotional win for theaters, Hollywood: ‘Inside Out 2’ scores massive $155 million opening
Ranking
- The Louvre will be renovated and the 'Mona Lisa' will have her own room
- New Jersey’s attorney general charges an influential Democratic power broker with racketeering
- The Daily Money: A Chick-fil-A child labor camp?!
- US military targets Houthi radar sites in Yemen after a merchant sailor goes missing
- Jamie Foxx reps say actor was hit in face by a glass at birthday dinner, needed stitches
- The Best Hotels & Resorts Near Walt Disney World for a Fairy-Tale Vacation
- A search for a biological father, and the surprise of a lifetime
- Real Housewives' Melissa Gorga Shares a Hack To Fit Triple the Amount of Clothes in Your Suitcase
Recommendation
Travis Hunter, the 2
Police: 5 shot during event in Cincinnati park; all injuries considered non-life-threatening
Biden campaign calls Trump a convicted felon in new ad about former president's legal cases
6 injured in shooting at home in suburban Detroit
DoorDash steps up driver ID checks after traffic safety complaints
Police officers fatally shot an Alabama teenager, saying he threatened them with knives and a gun
How Zac Efron Really Feels About Brother Dylan Competing on The Traitors
Shooting at Michigan splash pad leaves 9 injured, including children; suspect dead