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<UID>
0312300258
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<PUBLICATION>
DETROIT FREE PRESS
</PUBLICATION>
<DATE>
031230
</DATE>
<TDATE>
Tuesday, December 30, 2003
</TDATE>
<EDITION>
METRO FINAL
</EDITION>
<SECTION>
SPT; SPORTS
</SECTION>
<PAGE>
1C
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<ILLUSTRATION>
Photos J. KYLE KEENER/Detroit Free Press
</ILLUSTRATION>
<CAPTION>

This self-portrait by Thomas Winfrey, a 15-year-old sophomore who
died playing basketball last month, hangs in a hallway at East Catholic High
in Detroit.

Coach Dave Soules, who has won eight state championships, prepares his East
Catholic Chargers for tonight's game against Detroit Deporres
</CAPTION>
<BYLINE>
MITCH ALBOM Free Press columnist
</BYLINE>
<AFFILIATION>

</AFFILIATION>
<MEMO>
DREAMS DEFERRED; FIRST IN A SERIES
</MEMO>
<COPYRIGHT>
Copyright (c) 2003, Detroit Free Press
</COPYRIGHT>
<HEADLINE>
BUT HE WAS SO YOUNG . . .
</HEADLINE>
<SUBHEAD>

</SUBHEAD>
<CORRECTION>

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<BODY>
First in a series on the challenges of state athletes and their families.

There's something wrong with Thomas! It is the only sentence the coach really
remembers. There's something wrong with Thomas! After that, things began to
blur, kids and adults, doctors and nurses, belief and disbelief, life and
death.

There's something wrong with Thomas! It was the day after Thanksgiving, and a
half-dozen Detroit prep teams were playing a six-way scrimmage in the Denby
High School gym. Six teams, two courts, 20 kids at a time, the cacophony of
squeaking sneakers and pounding balls and teenaged yelling and suddenly, in
the middle of all that, this: Thomas Winfrey, a 15-year-old East Catholic
sophomore who already towered over most grown men, was lying in the bleachers,
flat on his back, gasping for air. He had made a weird noise, someone said, as
if he were laughing.

Then everything stopped.

There's something wrong with Thomas! Dave Soules, his white-haired coach, came
racing into the crowd. In his three decades of coaching, this had never
happened. He tried to talk to his player. He asked him what was wrong. He told
him to hang on, EMS was on its way. The balls had stopped bouncing and the
sneakers had stopped squeaking and now dozens of teenaged boys were watching
something they should never have to watch.

Another coach began CPR. Breathe in. Breathe out. The ambulance came. The
medics, according to Soules, laid Thomas on the gym floor and tried
resuscitation. Then they wheeled him to the emergency vehicle, and players and
coaches jumped in cars and followed to St. John Hospital.

Even to that moment, no one really knew what happened, that the boy's heart,
enlarged to almost twice a normal size, had gone into some kind of arrest,
that the short, laughing sound he had made before falling over was the
beginning of the attack, that he was not coming back, not to the scrimmage,
not to the team, not to his family.

You couldn't miss Thomas Winfrey, friends said. He stood out. He was nearly
6-feet-6, and he was always smiling and squeezing into those small school
desks. You couldn't miss him. But now, at the hospital, he was behind closed
doors, and a nurse appeared and took Soules aside -- at 64 years old, he
seemed to be the one in charge -- and she told him something that he still
cannot believe, that Thomas "didn't make it." That he was dead.

And then the boy's parents arrived and Soules was stunned and his players were
stunned and at one point, with the nurse's permission, they entered the room
to say good-bye. And there was Thomas, on a gurney, looking like he was
sleeping. He was just this big kid -- "T-Sport" was his nickname -- this big,
smart, soft-spoken kid who a blink ago was playing in a basketball scrimmage.
("He was still wearing his uniform," Soules says. "No. 55, the biggest number
for the biggest kid.") Only now the kid was without breath in a hospital bed,
as if someone had fast-forwarded his life 70 years. Children don't die of
heart attacks, old people do, right?

Wrong. One by one, the East Catholic players approached the body, to say
good-bye to a teammate, and farewell to childhood.


The season must go on

"Ballgame!"

Dave Soules blows a whistle and his Chargers players go into motion. One kid
makes a defensive mistake and Soules blows the whistle again. They stop.

"Hold up, hold up! . . . Guys, all you have to do is not move. Don't move!
It's not that hard, not moving. Is it?"

Well, yes and no. Soules himself has not moved much. He has been coaching at
East Catholic, in this building, in this gym, for more than 30 years. He looks
like an old high school coach, a little stooped, keys around his neck,
sneakers with his khakis. Thirty-plus years of teaching and discipline and, on
occasion, state championships. But this, he says -- recovering from a death of
a player -- there is nothing like this. Thomas was in his first year on
varsity. He hadn't even played an official game yet. He played maybe 10
minutes in that scrimmage. He was just . . . a child.

"When it happens, you want to crawl and hide under a blanket. But you can't.
They told me the best thing for the kids is to get back in the routine. So we
practiced."

On the first day back, Soules addressed his players. He told them to focus "on
the good things about Thomas," the way he "took care of his business," the way
he studied, the way he stayed out of trouble. They could honor their teammate,
he said, by being like him.

And still, the gym seemed too quiet. They went through drills, "but it was
like they were playing with a 50-pound pack on their back."

You want to freeze time. Go back to your innocence. But standing still is
harder than it looks.


The pictures of health

There is no sure answer for what happened to Thomas Winfrey. The autopsy
report cited "hypertrophic cardiomyopathy" and said his enlarged heart had
scar tissue. His condition could have been congenital; he could have been a
ticking bomb. He had passed a physical several weeks earlier. He had been fine
to that point. And then, suddenly, gone.

His mother is still too upset to speak much about it. "This is a difficult
time," she said, when reached. Soules recalls when his younger brother, "thin
as a rail, in great shape," dropped dead of a brain aneurysm at age 56. At
that time, Soules says, 56 was "too young to die."

Now "too young" has been redefined.

You watch the East Catholic players go through practice, shirts versus skins,
their bodies slick with sweat, their underwear protruding from baggy sweats.
They are tall and muscled and seem to lack an ounce of body fat. The pictures
of health.

But there is another picture of health, on the wall in the East Catholic
hallway, a self-portrait cartoon drawn in art class by Thomas Winfrey. It is a
young man in a basketball outfit, built like a superhero, small waist, broad
shoulders, big biceps. Above the drawing are the words "basketball is my
life."

How long ago did he draw that? A few months? A lifetime?

Back in the gym, Soules blows the whistle, says a few words, and dismisses his
team. He rubs his white hair, and watches his players pull their coats on and
head into the winter chill.

"When I was their age," he says, "I thought tomorrow was forever."

Nothing is forever. There's something wrong with Thomas. If there is any
lesson here, it is that that sentence can come at any time, to anyone, young
or old. The East Catholic Chargers have a game tonight, against Detroit
DePorres. They have one fewer player on the team. You couldn't miss Thomas
Winfrey. But they all do.



Contact MITCH ALBOM at 313-223-4581 or  albom@freepress.com. Catch "The Mitch
Albom Show" 3-6 p.m. weekdays on WJR-AM (760).
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<DISCLAIMER>
THIS ELECTRONIC VERSION MAY DIFFER SLIGHTLY FROM THE PRINTED ARTICLE.
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<KEYWORDS>
COLUMN;THOMAS WINFREY
</KEYWORDS>
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