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Rudy's Medical Condition: Diagnosed with bladder tumor

Discussion in 'Houston Rockets: Game Action & Roster Moves' started by dragon167, Mar 17, 2003.

  1. saleem

    saleem Member

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    I'm sad to hear about the news but Transitional Cell Carcinoma of the Bladder is a slow growing tumor and if it's superficial then it has a good prognosis.
    Rudy T is a brave man.God bless him and his family. We all pray and hope for a early recovery to complete health and to see him back on the court with the team.
     
  2. dischead

    dischead Member

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    Are you a priest of somthing?
     
  3. craziaries

    craziaries Member

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    Hang in there Rudy!! We love you!! Get well soon!
     
  4. finalsbound

    finalsbound Member

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    No, I'm a Christian.

    Experience gives me enough reason to give all worries to God.
     
  5. ewfd

    ewfd Member

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    Please, bicker about your personal beliefs in the Hangout, not in this thread :rolleyes:
     
  6. yahooforyao

    yahooforyao Member

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    Rudy you set the standard for what coach should be, and how a coach should hold himself. You are a great coach, and thats only elipsed by how great of a human you are. Your big heart shines right through the tv screen when i see you, and i belive that your heart is what will give you the strength to overcome this. Stay strong and we all are confident that you'll be just fine. We will all pray for you.
     
  7. Scarface

    Scarface Supremely FocASSed
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    I bet this championship ring will be even more precious to Rudy than the first two.... hint hint.... Heres to the Rockets bringing the trophy home to ClutchCity! This ones for Rudy.

    Where it rightfully belongs.
     
  8. getsmartnow

    getsmartnow Member

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    Get well soon, Rudy. Best wishes to you and your family. Keep fighting.
     
  9. HtownRocks3

    HtownRocks3 Member

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    Get well soon Rudy. We miss you. We need you.

    Rudy...Rudy...he's our man. If he can't do it, no one can.
     
  10. RocketfanfromLA

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    Rudy is a good guy.
     
  11. arno_ed

    arno_ed Member

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    get wel soon Rudy
     
  12. Rockets34Legend

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    Rudy, get well soon! We need you back on the court! May God be w/ you through your recovery...
     
  13. cmellon

    cmellon Member

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    Rudy... if you read this thread....

    If I were you, I am going to seriously consider quiting.

    I don't think it's worth that much compared to what you're currently facing. I know you love basketball very much, and a lot of us here love you too.

    However... all that stress... all that pressure... pressure to prove that you can coach this young team into championship team... pressure from a lot of media, analyst, and bandwagoners questioning your ability to coach.

    People blaming you, swearing at you, mad at you, say really nasty things about you, ask you to quit through petition, and all other things. These things won't stop... I can guarantee. And it's really hard to get all of these.

    Now you're diagnosed with bladder cancer. I'm not sure if anyone can 100% says it's a minor thing. But please consider carefully... Do you really think basketball is that worth it at this point in your life that you want to sacrifice your health for it.

    In the end... if I were you... my answer is NO. You're not only responsible for pleasing Houston, the bandwagoners, and the media analyst, you are also responsible to take care of yourself, your family, and your close friends.

    Please consider quiting.... not for the sake of Rockets like all those Rudy haters... but for the sake of you, your family, and people who care for you.

    May God bless you and your family and may God gives you a quick recovery.
     
  14. x_trepidation_x

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    Give me a break!!!

    Pray for him if u want but don't shove your religion on me.
     
  15. morganmanor

    morganmanor Member

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    Jack McCallum of CNNSI talked about Rudy and Yao Ming.

    http://sportsillustrated.cnn.com/inside_game/jack_mccallum/news/2003/03/19/insider/

    Well wishes for Rudy T

    Tomjanovich's attitude will help him back to good health
    Posted: Wednesday March 19, 2003 12:21 PM

    The proper time to write this kind of tribute is before someone has a medical problem; otherwise, it tends to look like a pre-obituary and that is definitely not the case here. If there's anyone who can beat the odds, after all, it's Rudy Tomjanovich, who Tuesday night missed his first game as coach of the Rockets (a 100-94 loss to the SuperSonics at Key Arena) while recovering back in Houston from an evaluation and biopsy of his bladder lining which revealed a superficial tumor.

    Tomjanovich hopes to soon rejoin the team, whose road trip continues through Monday with games in Portland, Golden State, Sacramento and Los Angeles (against the Clippers). That is a nightmarish swing for a team fighting for a playoff spot -- and the Rockets get the Lakers when they return home next week -- but it's not nearly as bad as hearing that Rudy T has cancer. Against the Sonics, Houston players wore red headbands in honor of their coach, though Tomjanovich no doubt had one thought as he watched the game on television: Man, that didn't work.

    The prognosis for Tomjanovich's type of cancer, which is treated with medication, not surgery, is promising if found early, as Rudy's was. There's every reason to believe he'll return; he's already made one astounding comeback -- 25 years ago, when Kermit Washington's horrifying punch pulverized Tomjanovich's face and nearly killed him. The following season, Rudy was an All-Star, and the grace and courage with which he handled that incident defines the man. He is one of those quiet fixtures of the NBA, a perma-presence, reassuringly old school yet always on top of his game.

    But I noticed something different about Tomjanovich in January when I went to Houston to do a story on Yao Ming. The coach still had those rugged good looks and that captain-of-the-team head of hair, but he looked younger and healthier. He had lost some weight and finally kicked his long-time smoking habit (tobacco is the No. 1 cause of bladder cancer) but, more obviously, he was mentally recharged. I remember commenting to somebody, "Man, Rudy's like a 21-year-old kid." He smiled when I told him he seemed like a new person.

    "I'll tell you, I'm really enjoying what's going on around here," he said, his eyes darting around the Rockets' practice facility. What was going on was a fair amount of chaos. It was the day before the Rockets would host the Lakers in the first Yao-Shaquille O'Neal battle (the one in which Yao blocked five of Shaq's shots as Houston pulled out a 108-104 overtime win) and more than 100 reporters were elbowing for space around the Great Wall of China. It was the kind of scene that would've driven most coaches, particularly veterans like Rudy T, wild with worry. What about our preparation? What about our game face? How's all this attention going to affect Yao's mental state?

    Tomjanovich did have some of those concerns, and, indeed, had already decided that access to Yao would be reduced in coming weeks. But Rudy also knew that this was a happening and you have to let happenings happen. Anyway, he was glad to be part of it and talked about how Yao had energized him personally and even helped him grow.

    "Looking at Yao go at things in a different way, to approach this game from a different culture and a different personality, has taught me a lot," said Tomjanovich. "He has the competitive demeanor, the passion and the pride, but that doesn't mean you can't look at things a different way. Watching him has helped me accept the way I am."

    Tomjanovich described with delight an incident in a timeout huddle when Yao suddenly grabbed a clipboard and sketched for a teammate the proper foot position for defending an opponent in the low post. "I'm all for that openness, that communication," said Tomjanovich. "And when players hear it from a peer, it means so much." Watching Yao's teammates extend to him that kind of acceptance provided Rudy with what he described as "goose-bump moments." Tomjanovich recalled one game when he approached his quicksilver point guard, Steve Francis, and asked what he would do in a certain situation. "Steve looks up at me and without hesitating says, 'Throw it to the big man.,'" remembered Rudy. "That really got to me. Because for most young players it's all about, 'Me, me, me.'" Francis talked about his coach after Tuesday's game, remembering how Tomjanovich had supported him during his battle with Meniere's disease last year.

    When you've been around as long as Rudy T has -- he's been a Houston Rocket as a player, scout, assistant and head coach for the last 32 years -- you're supposed to act like you've seen it all, or, at least, act like you have nothing more to learn, especially when you've won back-to-back NBA championships, as he did in '94 and '95. But on that January afternoon, and through most of this season, Rudy T was just the opposite, a turned-on, adrenaline-hyped kid watching something new and different and getting a charge out of it.

    I hope he comes back soon and gets to watch it again.
     
  16. rvpals

    rvpals Member

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    Get well soon, Rudy.

    I hope the Rox will do better and better as Rudy will do.

    Seeing a great Rox team grow together and become something will certainly make Rudy fill with joy.
     
  17. MiniMing

    MiniMing Rookie

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    i liked it how the whole team played with their red headbands on. i thought it was tight.
     
  18. montelwilliams

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    Get well soon, Rudy. The team needs you very much. The red headbands are a nicee tribute. My prayers and thoughts are with you.
     
  19. twhy77

    twhy77 Member

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    I'll make sure to pray for you Rudy.
     
  20. YaoTheMan

    YaoTheMan Member

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    My best wishes for you, Rudy.
     

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