Lew Alcindor/Abdul-Jabbar has Leukemia

ABQCOWBOY

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http://sports.espn.go.com/nba/news/story?id=4640518

Abdul-Jabbar has rare form of leukemia

Associated Press
Updated: November 10, 2009, 8:16 AM ET

NEW YORK -- Kareem Abdul-Jabbar is being treated for a rare form of leukemia, and the basketball great said his prognosis is encouraging.

"I've never been a person to share my private life. But I can help save lives. It's incumbent on someone like me to talk about this.
” -- Kareem Abdul-J


The NBA's all-time leading scorer was diagnosed last December with chronic myeloid leukemia, he told The Associated Press on Monday.

The 62-year-old Abdul-Jabbar said his doctor didn't give any guarantees, but informed him: "You have a very good chance to live your life out and not have to make any drastic changes to your lifestyle."

Abdul-Jabbar is taking an oral medication for the disease. He is a paid spokesman for the Swiss pharmaceutical company Novartis, which makes a drug that treats the illness.

Citing the way Los Angeles Lakers teammate Magic Johnson brought awareness to HIV, Abdul-Jabbar said he wants to do the same for his form of blood cancer, which can be fatal if left untreated.

"I've never been a person to share my private life. But I can help save lives," he said at a midtown Manhattan conference room. "It's incumbent on someone like me to talk about this."

Abdul-Jabbar became concerned last year after feeling odd sensations. He went for tests at UCLA, where he dominated college basketball in the late 1960s, winning three straight NCAA championships from 1967-69.

"I was getting hot flashes and sweats on a regular basis," he said. "That's not normal, even for my age."

An exam showed his white blood cell count was "sky high" and a doctor quickly diagnosed his condition. At first, all Abdul-Jabbar heard was the word "leukemia."

"I was scared," he said. "I thought it was all the same. I thought it could mean I have a month to live."

"That was my first question," he said. "Was I going to make it?"

A longtime student in martial arts, Abdul-Jabbar said he took the approach of a samurai, to face death without fear.

"I had my face on," he said.

Instead, doctors told him CML was treatable with proper medication and monitoring.

Abdul-Jabbar is a special assistant with the Lakers and said he hasn't had to cut back his level of activity of coaching, change his regimen or adjust his diet. "I'm able to sneak out for Thai food," he said.

"There is hope. This condition can be treated. You can still live a productive, full life," he said. "I'm living proof I can make it."

Abdul-Jabbar recently returned from an academic conference in Abu Dhabi and has several speaking engagements planned. Among the people he regularly talks to about his condition is his son, a third-year medical student at the University of California, San Francisco.

The six-time NBA MVP intends to post updates to his Facebook and Twitter accounts and stay connected through www.CMLearth.com, a Web site for those afflicted by the disease.

About 5,000 cases of CML are expected to be diagnosed in the United States this year, the Leukemia & Lymphoma Society said. More than 22,000 people are living in the US with the disease.

The disease tends to initially be diagnosed by people in their mid-to-late 60s, and usually affects men more than women.

"I want to spread the word," Abdul-Jabbar said.


Copyright 2009 by The Associated Press


___________________________________________________________________

This, to me, was the best player I've ever seen play in the NBA.
 

Yeagermeister

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He was in talks with the Grizzlies about becoming an assistant coach but I guess that has been put on hold.
 

Temo

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Is there any reason to still associate him with the name "Lew Alcindor"? It's not like anyone will say "Kareem? Who? Oh you mean big Lew!"
 

ABQCOWBOY

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Temo;3069370 said:
Is there any reason to still associate him with the name "Lew Alcindor"? It's not like anyone will say "Kareem? Who? Oh you mean big Lew!"

Yes. It is the name I first learned of him as. I'm sure many who followed basketball prior to the 1980s still recall him as Lew Alcindor.
 

joseephuss

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Temo;3069370 said:
Is there any reason to still associate him with the name "Lew Alcindor"? It's not like anyone will say "Kareem? Who? Oh you mean big Lew!"

Anyone who still refers to him as Lew Alcindor is too old to know how to work a computer and post on a message board. :D
 

ABQCOWBOY

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joseephuss;3069397 said:
Anyone who still refers to him as Lew Alcindor is too old to know how to work a computer and post on a message board. :D

Right on que it would appear.
 

Temo

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ABQCOWBOY;3069396 said:
Yes. It is the name I first learned of him as. I'm sure many who followed basketball prior to the 1980s still recall him as Lew Alcindor.

I mean, do people still call Ali "Cassius Clay" when they talk about him? It's about the same thing to me. I'm a big basketball fan, I've never heard anyone refer to him as Lew Alcindor first.

He came into the league in 1969, changed his name in 1971 and played basketball until 1988. Even people who watched basketball pre-80s call him Kareem.
 

ABQCOWBOY

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Temo;3069533 said:
I mean, do people still call Ali "Cassius Clay" when they talk about him? It's about the same thing to me. I'm a big basketball fan, I've never heard anyone refer to him as Lew Alcindor first.

He came into the league in 1969, changed his name in 1971 and played basketball until 1988. Even people who watched basketball pre-80s call him Kareem.

Yes, some do still call him Clay. Got news for you. Some also still call him Lew. Amazing to me that the article is about the man having leukemia and yet it's Lew Alcindor that is apparently the biggest news.

Really?
 

Yeagermeister

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Temo;3069533 said:
I mean, do people still call Ali "Cassius Clay" when they talk about him? It's about the same thing to me. I'm a big basketball fan, I've never heard anyone refer to him as Lew Alcindor first.

He came into the league in 1969, changed his name in 1971 and played basketball until 1988. Even people who watched basketball pre-80s call him Kareem.

His momma named him Clay so I'm gonna call him Clay.
 

Bonecrusher#31

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Temo;3069533 said:
I mean, do people still call Ali "Cassius Clay" when they talk about him? It's about the same thing to me. I'm a big basketball fan, I've never heard anyone refer to him as Lew Alcindor first.

He came into the league in 1969, changed his name in 1971 and played basketball until 1988. Even people who watched basketball pre-80s call him Kareem.

I agree with you.....They are Kareem and Ali to me too.
 

Temo

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ABQCOWBOY;3069553 said:
Yes, some do still call him Clay. Got news for you. Some also still call him Lew. Amazing to me that the article is about the man having leukemia and yet it's Lew Alcindor that is apparently the biggest news.

Really?

If you say so about Cassius Clay.

It just kind stuck out to me. I had not heard anyone call him Lew Alcindor in a modern sense like "Lew Alcindor will be signing autographs after the game today!" kinda thing or "Lew Alcindor has Leukemia", so it was kinda weird.
 

Temo

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Yeagermeister;3069585 said:
His momma named him Clay so I'm gonna call him Clay.

A man has the right to change his name to whatever he wants to change it to. And if a man wants to be called Muhammad Ali, ******** this is a free country, you should respect his wishes, and call the man Muhammad Ali!

Coming to America ftw :D
 

Yeagermeister

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Temo;3069639 said:
A man has the right to change his name to whatever he wants to change it to. And if a man wants to be called Muhammad Ali, ******** this is a free country, you should respect his wishes, and call the man Muhammad Ali!

Coming to America ftw :D

One of my favorites

Who's next? :D
 
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