Aug/10/08 10:56 AM Filed in:
Kevin Everett
WATKINS GLEN — After
his catastrophic injury in 2007, to see former
Buffalo Bills tight end Kevin Everett walking is
an inspiration.
But for some of the more than 100 fans who waited in
line almost an hour to get Everett’s autograph,
seeing him was more than inspirational. It was an honor
and a thrill.
“I work in an emergency room and my wife is a
nurse, who works with people who have had the type of
injury Kevin had,” said Robert Alexander of
Hornell. “It was something just to shake his
hand. I’ve been a Bills fan forever, so this is
really special for me. I know the whole story and I
know his family has a lot of faith and they were behind
him all the way through in the recovery process. I was
thrilled to meet him.”
Everett, 26, was a third round draft choice of the
Bills in 2005. In the opening game of the 2007 season,
while making a tackle on the second-half kickoff, the
6-4, 235-pound Everett fractured and dislocated his
cervical spine. It was an injury that, doctors said,
threatened his life.
The young athlete from Port Arthur, Texas, who attended
the University of Miami, suffered immediate paralysis
from the neck down after the accident, but began to
regain some movement within a couple of days. The
prognosis improved, still, doctors said in the first
week after the injury that he would probably not walk
again.
When he began to regain movement in his hands and feet,
doctors revised his prognosis to include being able to
walk. Not quite a year later, he stood on pit road
today as the grand marshal of the Zippo 200 and gave
the command, "Gentlemen, start your engines."
“He’s amazing,” Steve Rand of Auburn
said. Rand described himself as definitely not an avid
NASCAR or Buffalo Bills fan. But Rand felt compelled to
be the first in line at the WGI Pyramid to get his copy
of “Standing Tall: The Kevin Everett Story”
signed by Everett.
Now, every day presents and opportunity for Everett to
advocate for people with spinal injuries. He says he
doesn’t take anything for granted.
“It’s been a tough recovery — a
lesson from God and a lot of work,” Everett said.
“I still rehab three days a week, about three
hours a day, and I’d say I’m somewhere
around 60 percent. I’m working on endurance and
trying to get stronger. But we’re trying to help
people. We have a foundation and we’re doing some
things together with the Buoniconti Fund to Cure
Paralysis to raise money.”
Everett, who married in April, was accompanied his
wife, Wiande, at WGI and he credited her with being the
impetus behind the book.
“My wife is the reason for the book,”
Everett said. Wiande was Everett’s fiancée at the
time of the accident and she has supported him all
along the road to recovery. “We thought it would
be a good idea for people out there going through the
same thing and need some inspiration. Just waking up
every day and going to therapy seeing different people
with injuries worse than mine. That’s one of the
things that gave me the strength to keep trying to get
better.”
(stargazette.com)