Sanzone made it his goal to improve every day, whether that meant doing the steps or making a meal on his own. His weight started normalizing, and soon he was able to get back to doing some physical activity.
Amazingly, a few months later, Sanzone not only returned to the practice field, but also he participated in Canisius’ fall ball scrimmages under close surveillance by the school’s medical staff.
“I didn’t think I’d be playing at this point at all,” he said. “The leaps and bounds I’ve made has surprised me, my parents and everyone around.”
Miyashita didn’t expect Sanzone would be on the field yet, either. He figured he would be limited to stick work in the fall until they could start ramping up his activity in the winter.
“We limited his minutes,” Miyashita said. “But the fact that he’s on the field competing pretty much every day in practice and scrimmaging is a far cry from being unresponsive in July and on the verge of death.”
Sanzone was thrilled to return to a somewhat normal life and regain his independence. “Making food for myself, going to class, going to the library, it just helps,” he said.
Miyashita, a British Columbia native with a box lacrosse background, takes a cue from the indoor game when it comes to his captains. One player has the “C” stitched on the chest of his jersey, while others wear “A’s.” The team announced in October that Michael would serve as captain for 2019.
“He embodies everything that we want in a young man that’s a part of our program,” said Miyashita, whose Griffins are coming off a Cinderella season in which they won the MAAC championship as a No. 4 seed, shocking Detroit Mercy on a stolen faceoff outlet that turned into an open net goal in overtime. “He’s never going to get outworked. In terms of the effort, he’s a lead-by-example guy, but he also knows when he needs to talk and how he needs to talk. He’s definitely the shepherd of the team.”
Sanzone’s health scare did not at all sway his intentions about the ROTC or joining the Army. He’s planning on finally completing his ruck march in Buffalo soon.
His family, meanwhile, is trying to take a lesson from the experience. They emphasized that all athletes, no matter how young or physically fit, should be aware of hydrating and staying at a safe temperature.
Sanzone takes a more philosophical route.
“One thing that comes to mind is just cherishing every day,” he said. “You never really know how fast things can change.”