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Former Alouette Proudfoot passed away

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Former Alouette Proudfoot passed away

Postby XGamer » 31 Dec 2010 09:45

http://www.montrealgazette.com/news/can ... story.html

Former Alouette Proudfoot loses battle with ALS

BY HERB ZURKOWSKY,
MONTREAL GAZETTE
DECEMBER 31, 2010 8:15 AM

The start of Tony Proudfoot’s Canadian Football League career with the Alouettes was hardly auspicious, giving no indication of the greatness that was to come.

Drafted in the fourth round (36th overall) of the 1971 Canadian college draft out of the University of New Brunswick, Proudfoot couldn’t crack the Als’ roster as a linebacker, the position he played collegiately, and was released – only to re-sign with Montreal in 1973 and eventually be converted to defensive back.

It was through that will and dogged determination that Proudfoot constantly overcame the odds, until the end, when not even he could defeat the biggest fight of his life. Proudfoot died Thursday at the Montreal Neurological Institute, following a courageous, and public, battle with Amyothrophic Lateral Sclerosis (ALS). The disease, diagnosed in May 2007, is a progressive, fatal neurodegenerative condition.

He was 61.

Born in Winnipeg, John A. “Tony” Proudfoot eventually moved with his family to Pointe Claire, where he attended John Rennie High School before heading to the Maritimes and UNB. In 1970, he was nominated for the Hec Crighton Trophy, awarded annually to the top player in Canadian university ranks. He graduated with a Bachelor’s degree in physical education.

Proudfoot made a smooth transition into the Als’ secondary, playing 107 regular-season games between 1971-79. He won two Grey Cups with Montreal, in 1977 and ’79, and was named a CFL all-star both seasons.

In July 1977, Marv Levy, the Als’ head coach at the time, described Proudfoot as a “very smart football player.” Proudfoot always said he didn’t have an abundance of natural ability, crediting his success with being able to work, learn, ask good questions and quickly process that information on the field.

He is best remembered for spontaneously creating the advantage that carried Montreal to a lopsided 41-6 victory over Edmonton in the 1977 championship game, played on an icy Olympic Stadium field. Proudfoot used a staple gun, borrowed from a Bell Canada electrician, to affix staples onto the bottom of his, and his teammates’, shoes. It provided better footing and a decisive edge the Eskimos failed to overcome.

Proudfoot concluded his 12-year CFL career by playing three seasons with the British Columbia Lions, beginning in 1980.

In retirement, he had a successful career as a teacher, coach, broadcaster, journalist and author.

Proudfoot taught phys ed at Dawson College for 30 years. He lectured in Exercise Science, both at Concordia and McGill. He was a Stingers’ assistant coach for four years, including the 1998 team that reached the Vanier Cup, and continued his education, receiving a master’s degree in Sports Science from McGill.

The Als’ franchise returned to the CFL in 1996, following a nine-year hiatus, and Proudfoot became a full-time analyst with Montreal radio station CJAD, the team’s rights holder, two years later. That didn’t prevent Proudfoot from becoming an assistant coach with the Als in 2001, under head coach Rod Rust; Proudfoot continuing his career as an unbiased and opinionated broadcaster.

In 2006, during a shooting rampage at Dawson College that killed one student, Proudfoot, who was trained in CPR, risked his life, tending to a student he saw injured from his office window. While the shooting continued, and until an ambulance arrived, Proudfoot administered first-aid to a male student who survived despite being shot in the head.

It was while lecturing at Concordia, in the winter of 2007, Proudfoot noticed his slurred speech. He underwent tests before learning of the ALS diagnosis that May. One month later, before an Als home game, he publicly revealed his condition during an Olympic Stadium news conference.

Rather than sink into oblivion, Proudfoot used his condition as a platform, informing the public with regularity of his trials and tribulations through a series of articles written for The Gazette. In the final piece, published in mid December, Proudfoot poignantly spoke of his “imminent” death, sending out a goodbye message while admitting he hoped to make it to Christmas.

“I’ve been blessed with so much love and support, it’s truly overwhelming,” Proudfoot said. “The concern and compassion everyone has afforded me is amazing, unfathomable.”

He was strapped to a ventilator, for oxygen, up to 22 hours daily.

“Focusing on my next breath requires all of my energy,” he wrote. “I am starved of air and oxygen and need to rely on a ventilator just to feel stable, just to live.”

Proudfoot admitted the reality of his situation had been “awful and downright frightening,” but implored Gazette readers “not to worry about me.”

He raised more than $500,000 after establishing the Tony Proudfoot Fund for ALS research and remained active in the game he loved until the end. An Als guest coach at training camp in 2008, Proudfoot served as a special consultant to head coach Marc Trestman the last two seasons.

His last public appearance came in November, before the East Division final, when Proudfoot accepted the Hugh Campbell Award for Distinguished Leadership from CFL commissioner Mark Cohon.

In typical modest fashion, Proudfoot sent an email to Ronnie James, the Als’ equipment manager, notifying him the end had come while asking James to notify players, coaches and members of the team’s staff.

“I have finally lost the battle with ALS and I am going into a palliative care unit Dec. 28th,” Proudfoot wrote. “It should take a few days for me to die. I want to thank all the players, coaches and Alouettes staff for the support they have given me over the last three and (a) half years. Bye everybody, Tony.”

Proudfoot is survived by his wife, Vicki, and three children – Michael, Lindsay and Lauren.

hzurkowsky@montrealgazette.com

© Copyright (c) The Montreal Gazette


My deepest condolences to his family !
Season ticket holder since 2004 !

Back-to-Back Grey Cups ('09 & '10) and I witnessed it LIVE from the stands !

Like Diamond Dallas Page used to say: SELF HIGH FIVE !
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Re: Former Alouette Proudfoot passed away

Postby Trestman@Godsright » 31 Dec 2010 10:05

Godspeed Tony...



W I suggest we remove Duval picks from the header and put Proudfoot pick. After all he was an inspiration for the team in 09 an 2010 GC win.
Either we heal as a team or we will die as individual
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Re: Former Alouette Proudfoot passed away

Postby sectionu2 » 31 Dec 2010 12:25

I was blessed to meet him in person at GC in 2006, that was a year before his diagnosis, we had a supper with him and sat down for supper, he told us great CFL stories, Johnny Rodgers, marv levy etc... 
We never met him before that night we just crossed paths and away we went. Down to earth, simple, generous and courageous. His open letter in the gazette made cry to be honest. Rest in peace Tony, you fought hard, bravely and courageously.
hmmm nothing like the smell of victory, to the grey cup, Prepare to be boarded you bilge rat!!
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Re: Former Alouette Proudfoot passed away

Postby West Coast Als Fan » 31 Dec 2010 13:58

While in Toronto for Grey Cup 2007, I was at one of the Saturday afternoon hospitality suites wearing a vintage Als jersey with #75 on it. As I was standing in line to get a beer ticket, a voice from behind slurred "Gordie Johnson. Number 75"

Without looking behind me and assuming that the guy must be drunk, I said over my shoulder "No, dude. Judges. His name is Gord Judges, not Johnson".

The next thing I heard was "Well I ought to know who he is since I played with him!"

I turned around and it was Proudfoot with a big grin on his face. Maybe he was testing me to see if I was a real fan or just a poseur. In any case, we chatted for a while. Later that night at the Als Huddle I ran into him again and said hello. Later, as I was talking to a friend of mine I felt a hand on my shoulder. It grabbed me and pulled me backwards (and I have to be twice the size of Proudfoot but even after his diagnosis he was pretty strong) He spun me around and the next thing I know I'm face to face with Gord Judges himself. The three of us, along with Gord's wife, spent the next couple of hours talking football. And just like Section U2 says, it was as if we'd known each other for years. Tony was just a genuinely nice guy who loved to interact with people.

I doubt that I will ever meet a pro athlete or former pro athlete who is as down-to-earth as Proudfoot was. I'm glad I got the chance. Thanks, Tony.
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Re: Former Alouette Proudfoot passed away

Postby ro1313 » 31 Dec 2010 14:43

Godspeed Tony
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Re: Former Alouette Proudfoot passed away

Postby ro1313 » 01 Jan 2011 10:44

CJAD Tribute to Tony Proudfoot

http://www.cjad.com/Blog/MontrealHero/home.aspx


The one about his secret is great....and something I never knew
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Re: Former Alouette Proudfoot passed away

Postby sectionu2 » 01 Jan 2011 14:45

Thanks west coast, Tony touched many many people, the more I read about the more one comes out in awe, and how much he touched people all over the country. One giant of a man.
hmmm nothing like the smell of victory, to the grey cup, Prepare to be boarded you bilge rat!!
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Re: Former Alouette Proudfoot passed away

Postby XGamer » 02 Jan 2011 14:03

GoAlsGo.com Tribute to Tony:

Season ticket holder since 2004 !

Back-to-Back Grey Cups ('09 & '10) and I witnessed it LIVE from the stands !

Like Diamond Dallas Page used to say: SELF HIGH FIVE !
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Re: Former Alouette Proudfoot passed away

Postby XGamer » 02 Jan 2011 14:10

Season ticket holder since 2004 !

Back-to-Back Grey Cups ('09 & '10) and I witnessed it LIVE from the stands !

Like Diamond Dallas Page used to say: SELF HIGH FIVE !
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Re: Former Alouette Proudfoot passed away

Postby section k1 M.october » 03 Jan 2011 11:01

Bravo a goalsgo pour le vidéo en son hommage ses de la grande classe et fait avec amour pour un homme sympathique.
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Proudfoot a donné des organes

Postby XGamer » 11 Jan 2011 15:22

http://fr.canoe.ca/sports/nouvelles/arc ... 84709.html

Proudfoot a donné des organes

Agence QMI
11/01/2011 08h47

Tony Proudfoot, ancien joueur des Alouettes de Montréal décédé à la fin-décembre de la maladie de Lou Gehrig, a légué son cerveau et sa colonne vertébrale à la science.
Le quotidien Globe and Mail a révélé mardi que l’ex-footballeur a fait ce choix afin de faire avancer la recherche sur cette maladie dégénérative, aussi appelée la sclérose latérale amyotrophique (SLA), qui l’a affecté à partir de 2007.

Des parties de son cerveau seront analysées par des neurochirurgiens de Toronto et de Montréal.

Le Dr Angela Genge, directrice de l'Institut neurologique de Montréal, se trouve au nombre des spécialistes qui pourront analyser l’organe. Elle a travaillé avec le défunt à l’époque où il combattait la maladie.

M. Proudfoot a également agi ainsi afin que les spécialistes étudient la possibilité que sa maladie soit reliée aux nombreux coups à la tête qu’il a subis au cours de sa carrière.

Tony Proudfoot est décédé à l’âge de 61 ans, le 30 décembre, à la suite d’un long combat contre la SLA.


WOW !
Season ticket holder since 2004 !

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Like Diamond Dallas Page used to say: SELF HIGH FIVE !
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