Abington working toward big win – Sports – The Intelligencer

Posted: December 26, 2019 at 3:47 am

The Galloping Ghosts are looking beyond the scoreboard to help classmate Juwan Adams battle pediatric cancer.

Khalis Whiting and her Abington girls basketball teammates have a different perspective this holiday season. A perspective that changed when through Kisses for Kyle they were put in touch with two area families who have a child battling pediatric cancer.

One George Hamlin is a student in Upper Dublin High School. The other, Juwan Adams, is a senior at Abington. Both families were on the receiving end of gifts and gift cards at the Abington-Upper Moreland game last week. It is the 10th annual giving back game since coach Dan Marsh initiated the project.

It was an amazing experience, said Whiting, the Ghosts sophomore point guard. I was not familiar with the families, but I have seen (Adams) a few times in school, but I never really knew the story until this came up and I researched him.

He has a powerful story, and hes such a strong young man to be going through this. Every time I see him in the hallways, hes always smiling and so positive. So you know give it to his family.

Adams, who has been battling Hodgkins Lymphoma since April of 2016, is in need of a match for an allogeneic stem cell transplant.

Right now, he is out of options, his mother, Andrea Adams, said. We know for sure that an allo stem cell transplant will cure him, but unfortunately, in order to do that, we need a donor.

We have tested everyone in our family, and no one is a full match, so were relying on the Be the Match registry to locate a donor. Sadly, for minorities theres a very slim chance to actually find a full 10-out-of-10 match because we dont have enough minorities on the registry.

Hes had almost every treatment available for Hodgkins, including an auto stem cell transplant, which is where he gave himself his own cells in February of 2017. He was in remission for about a year, and unfortunately, in May of this year, we found out the cancer is back, and its been spreading consistently since May.

Despite missing more than half of the last three-and-a-half years of school, Juwan maintains a 4.25 GPA and is a member of the National Honor Society.

Abington School District has been really great with accommodating him, giving him tutors, and whenever hes an in-patient, he does hospital school, Andrea said.

Juwan is the drum captain and lieutenant of Abingtons marching band, and since September is Pediatric Cancer Awareness month, for the past four years, the marching band has worn gold ribbons on their uniforms.

Since his diagnosis in eighth grade, Juwan has been active in pediatric cancer awareness events, and for the past four years, he has held toy and book drives that he presents to the children at CHOP on his birthday in July.

Last week, Juwan and his family were on the receiving end.

It was great because Juwan never wants gifts, Andrea said. Having a child with cancer, financially its tough, especially now that we have only have one person working fulltime, and that lifted a tremendous burden, and it was so unexpected.

To have him honored by his school and his peers, he was super excited about it, and he really appreciated it because a lot of kids (battling cancer) have to give up school, or their friends tend to abandon them.

I want to thank the team and the Abington students because it is very easy to turn your back on kids that are going through these things. These kids have really rallied around him. This is one of the reasons he fights so hard to be in school. He sometimes sneaks to school because he feels the love from his school and his peers. That was one thing he definitely wanted to do to finish his senior year with his class. They have really rallied around him, and this kind of thing gives him the extra push he needs to keep fighting.

Statistics say Juwan has a 23 percent chance of finding a perfect match, but the Abington senior has been proactive.

When they told him the odds of finding his match, he said he had to do something about it, Andrea said. He set a goal to register a thousand people on the national registry, half of those being minorities.

We have gone around holding bone marrow drives. Hes now an ambassador for Be the Match, and hes been an ambassador for CHOP for about two years.

Juwan is inviting everyone to join his fight.

"People are starting to wake up and realize kids with cancer more and more are dying each day, and if they have a chance to do something, they should take every step they can," Juwan said earlier this fall. It's been hard sometimes, but I have my friends and family to support me.

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Abington working toward big win - Sports - The Intelligencer

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