Mike Wein wasn’t going to give up easily, so he sent letters and spoke with those involved with the law and eventually got his son the treatment he needed. The Wein family moved back to Mike’s hometown of Framingham so that they could drive to New York City for an experimental treatment.
Through it all, Brady was every bit as cheery as a typical toddler. He wasn’t familiar with another life. He and his father played sports as best they could, whether Brady was connected to tubes at home or in the hospital.
Mike Wein, a former coach at Chapparal High School in Arizona, made sure lacrosse was part of his son's life.
“As soon as he could sit up, Mike had a lacrosse stick in his hand and he was scooping in the hospital bed,” Rachel Wein said. “Brady loved it. I thank God for sports. I don’t know what he would have done without that. What would Brady have done without lacrosse? … We’re following him around with a backpack just holding the formula being pumped into his nose. He’s walking around our house scooping with a wooden lacrosse stick.”
During his son’s treatment, Mike Wein established Brady’s Bunch Lacrosse, a nonprofit that helps raise money for those effected by pediatric cancer. Through Brady’s Bunch, lacrosse players from around the country got to participate in the game they loved, while supporting Brady’s cause.
It started with a small number of players at Brady’s Bunch events, but it has expanded to thousands across the country. Brady’s story became so familiar that it reached professional athletes.
Professional baseball player Johnny Gomes developed a personal relationship with Brady Wein while Gomes was an outfielder with the Boston Red Sox.
Then there are the Major League Lacrosse players that have passed through the Brady’s Bunch ranks. Stars like Drew Snider, Peter Baum, Ryan Simps and Wes Berg all played with Brady’s Bunch before making it to MLL.
Others like Tom Schreiber, Will Manny, Kyle Harrison, Kevin Buchanan, Myles Jones and Boston Cannons coach Sean Quirk have been touched by Brady’s story. Schreiber even sent a signed Princeton jersey to the Wein family.
Brady Wein was quick to name drop his favorite team, and he hinted at his future plans.
“I’m hoping to play with the Boston Cannons,” he said. “I know the whole team.”
Manny, the former Cannons’ attackman that was recently traded to New York and who will try out for Team USA July 10-12 in anticipation of next summer’s FIL World Championship, played with a Brady’s Bunch team when he was in eighth grade. He has kept in touch with the Wein family throughout his career, and gets to see Brady at practice a few times each season.
“You have a long week of work and then you come to Friday night practice and Brady is just flying around, slashing guys in the back of their legs while he’s running around at practice,” Manny said. “I’ll see him interacting with [Josh] Hawkins or a different guy and I’ll just watch from a distance and smile. I’ll be like, ‘Look at him just running around and having a blast. He’s living the dream, being at one of our practices.’ ... Just seeing him suited up in gear and all that and knowing the situation, is exactly what the lacrosse community is about.”