Scoble was prepared for the worst, as he had been informed that the chances of a negative test were slim. But the test came back negative. Beating overwhelming odds, Scoble was immediately relisted for a transplant.
“On Mother’s Day, I got a call that I had a match,” Scoble said. “It was a special day. My mom, having been through all that, to get the news on Mother’s Day was special. Two days later, on May 11, I went under for my operation.”
With transplants, though, the operation is just beginning. Once again, Scoble was met with a challenge unlike any most people will ever face.
“Two days after the operation I had complications with a device I had implanted that kept my heart rate,” he said. “I flatlined for 11 seconds.
It’s funny how life can work sometimes, as his mother later said. An operation on May 11, and just two days later, he had died for 11 seconds.
“I guess 11:11, for some, symbolizes rebirth and renewal,” Scoble said. “After that flatline, my perspective was completed renewed.”
Being just 21, Scoble had an immune system much stronger than most heart transplant recipients. As a result, his body rejected the new heart at first, and he had to spend extra time in the hospital for his body to learn that this heart was his.
He was released in summer but was told he couldn’t go back to school — let alone play lacrosse. Never one to back down from a challenge, Scoble set out to prove that wrong. He had to rest and recover for a full year. Having lost 60 pounds during his hospital stay, his body was weak and exhausted, and Scoble would spend months just getting his bearings.
But getting back to lacrosse was always front of mind.
“My journey back, in my case, everyone around me was making excuses for me,” he said. “I received insane amounts of support, but it got to the point where people were kind forecasting my life in their perspective. People kind of expect your life to go a certain way.”
It was clear that few really expected him to be back on a lacrosse field again, let alone at a Division II contender. Scoble took that personally.
“For me, lacrosse was something that just brought me so much joy,” he said. “It was freedom. Something I enjoyed my whole life. People were implying I might never play again, and that made it personal to me.”
Two months removed from the transplant, he asked his doctor when he could be cleared to play. The doctor’s response was about what one would expect.
“He looked at me like I was a psycho,” Scoble said. “I died in front of this doctor two months ago.”
He remained undeterred. Scoble had to prove that he could exert himself to the levels required of a collegiate lacrosse player. There wasn’t any expectation that this could happen soon. His athletic career was essentially restarting from scratch.
He couldn’t run or lift anything over 10 pounds. So, he walked. Then he was cleared to jog. Then he jogged until he was cleared to lift. Once he could lift, he found a job selling office supplies and spent his pay on a membership at a performance gym in Cincinnati.
He’d call Coach Ryan to update him on his progress. The day he squatted 315, the day he put up a new max on the bench, the day he ran his first mile. And then, after eight months, he called to say the Cleveland Clinic cleared him.
Doctors told Scoble that it takes around four years to fully become in sync with a new heart. He was on a lacrosse field in about 18 months.
“He would call me and say, ‘I’m crushing pullups now, I’m benching this,’ that kind of thing,” Ryan said. “He tells me he started taking a martial arts class with swords. I say, ‘Hey, good way to get a workout in.’ Two weeks later he says he got out of the class: ‘Have you seen the type of people that play with swords?’”
Getting back to Mercyhurst for the first time brought forth a range of emotions.
“I remember it was the first week we were back. I open the door to the locker room and got that first scent — plastic of sticks, smell of pads — and I choked up,” Scoble said. “Putting on the green and white pinnie and the pads, I was tearing up in warmups. I’m trying so hard to stay cool because everyone is fired up, but I’m on a whole other emotional level.”
There wasn’t huge fanfare for his return. No “Welcome Back!” signs, no big event in the locker room. After Scoble was cleared, Coach Ryan told him his equipment and his pinnie would be there in his locker. They were, and that’s all. That’s just how Scoble wanted it.
“I still have times where I have some perspective, and I realize, ‘Wow, I’m on the bus going to Buffalo to play RIT. This is insane,’” Scoble said. “Two years ago, I never thought this would be possible. There are times where it might be a [tough] practice or a tough day, and just being able to be around friends and wear the jersey, get screamed at by coach, it’s all so extra special now.”
Scoble called his journey the hardest thing he’s ever done. He still wants to push himself to reach new levels. His personal goals are the same, but the experience has brought out some new ones.
“Before, it was just to be a positive benefactor on the team,” Scoble said. “I don’t play a glorious position. On defense, you want to prevent people from making big plays. So, it was about doing my job effectively. Now, it’s similar. But I have had this experience of a different kind of goal setting. And I try and share that tenacity with the guys around me.”
The player Ryan first recruited from Turpin High School was intact.
“He was a driven kid going into it, but the situation gave him a heavy dose of maturity,” Ryan said. “He came back with a focused, older outlook on things.”
The sense of humor the Mercyhurst coaching staff loved at first glance never went away. Even the darkest moments became subjects Scoble enjoys laughing about.
After flatlining, Scoble and his coaches joke about whether he “saw anything.” Scoble even suggested his player bio for his junior year be updated to say “Medical Redshirt – Deceased.”
In the days leading up to this season, Scoble and Ryan met for an hour. They discussed the way people treated Scoble now, and how it had begun to bother him. He never wants pity. Ryan assured him that he has nothing to prove.
“He actually wasn’t happy with me in the beginning of the year,” Ryan said. “He didn’t feel like I was getting on him enough. I wasn’t treating him differently; he was just playing well.”
On January 28, Scoble took the field for a scrimmage against Cleveland State, 22 months after receiving his new heart.
Mercyhurst opens officially against Wingate on February 11, and Scoble will be in the lineup. He is still adjusting. His heart is not his born heart, so it’s still finding a rhythm with his body.
Scoble still has eligibility beyond this spring but said he plans on moving on after graduation. He said it still feels great to be back. Nobody takes it easy on him, and nobody makes excuses for him. That’s what he loves most about it.