Greg Barron was the inaugural winner of the Michael Breschi Memorial Scholarship in 2007, presented by US Lacrosse. The 2019 recipients were announced today. His inspirational story follows:
It’s not always easy being the coach’s son. A coach’s son can’t call attention to himself. He has to carve out his own role, and show the team he’s there for the right reasons. Practice never really ends. The lessons keep coming on the drive home, at the dinner table, and before bed.
But when life throws something that others might see as insurmountable, Leukemia for instance, a coach’s son realizes that some of those lessons his dad taught him just might help him overcome more than a defender.
Greg Barron is a doctor now. He’s also a cancer survivor. But before he was any of that, before he was chief resident at UConn Health, before he was the first winner of the Michael Breschi Memorial Scholarship, he was the son of a coach.
“Not only the son of a coach, but the son of a teacher,” Barron said, referring to his father, Frank Barron, who coached high school lacrosse in Connecticut for almost 40 years. “At times it’s hard for him to turn it off. But it’s also very motivating. He gave me a lot of self-discipline and motivated me to set a lot of goals.”
The coach’s son had always set ambitious goals. He decided he was going to be a doctor when he was seven. He'd also be a college athlete. Maybe Division III lacrosse. Maybe football. But in January 2006, Barron was diagnosed with Childhood Leukemia.
One would think, with chemotherapy and a long road to recovery ahead, those athletic goals might be the furthest thing from Barron’s mind. But he'd been taught to never give up.
“It was the only thing on my mind,” Barron said. “A few doctors thought I was insane. I wasn’t going to allow the disease to stop me from doing what I wanted to do. I didn’t want to be defined by it.”
Chemotherapy forced him to miss his junior year of lacrosse, but he was back by football season. He'd been a center before cancer, but came back as the backup kicker. It wasn’t all bad. There’s more glory in being the backup kicker.
When he connected on an extra point, the crowd went so wild that a referee went up to the old football coach, the backup kicker’s father, to find out what was going on.
“He asked me, ‘Did your kid break some sort of record?” Frank Barron said. “And I said, “No, he just got back from chemo.’”