Jordan Marvin Sigalet (born February 19, 1981) is a Canadian
ice hockey coach and former goaltender. He is the goaltending coach for the
Calgary Flames of the National Hockey League. His brother Jonathan also played
on the Bowling Green hockey team
When Jordan Sigalet first heard the doctor say multiple
sclerosis, his initial reaction was, No way.
Nope. Not him.
Must be wrong.
"For me, I didn't really accept that it was MS,"
Sigalet, a former Boston Bruins prospect, told ESPN.com on Thursday.
"I just thought it must be something else. I kept
getting opinion after opinion."
But every opinion came back to the same jarring answer: He
was suffering from the incurable disease that attacks and scars the protective
covering of nerves in the brain and spinal cord.
All of those memories were made new again Thursday with the
news out of Minnesota that Minnesota Wild netminder Josh Harding has multiple
sclerosis.
In a fine story in the Star Tribune by veteran hockey writer
Mike Russo on Thursday, Harding told how he had been diagnosed with the disease
a month before sharing the information with more than just immediate family.
Harding decided he would share his story in an effort to move
on with his life and begin spreading awareness of the disease. He has pledged
to continue his hockey career.
Jordan Sigalet said the support he received after sharing his
diagnosis was extraordinary. Almost immediately Sigalet and Harding began
trading text messages, and Sigalet said they were hoping to chat Friday.
"It's pretty courageous what he did; it sounds like Josh
has the right attitude," Sigalet said.
Sigalet was a junior at Bowling Green University when he woke
up one morning with numbness in his right foot.
The numbness remained for the rest of the day. By the next
day, the numbness had spread to his chest, then to other parts of his body.
An MRI, spinal tap and a battery of other tests followed,
leading to the diagnosis of multiple sclerosis. For six months Sigalet, now 31,
did not share the news of his diagnosis.
He had been drafted 209th overall in the 2001 draft by the
Bruins and was afraid that news of his medical condition would mean an end to
his NHL dream.
"I thought if I went public, they'd just want to sweep
me under a rug," Sigalet said of the Bruins.
If he was dizzy or fatigued, Sigalet made up stories about
what had caused him to feel unwell.
"I was hiding behind lies," he said.
But when Sigalet finally opened up about his medical
condition, the Bruins responded by signing him to a deal after his senior year
at Bowling Green. He ended up playing for three years with the Bruins' top farm
team in Providence, getting into one NHL game.
"They said as long as I could play, it didn't mean
anything to them," Sigalet said.
The support he received from teammates, coaches, doctors,
fans was extraordinary.
"I wish I hadn't waited six months," he said.
It's the same kind of support Sigalet imagines Harding will
experience.
After finishing out his playing career in Vienna in 2008-09,
Sigalet said he had had enough of bouncing around as a player and decided to
explore coaching options. He is now the goaltending coach for the AHL-leading
Abbotsford Heat, the top farm team of the Calgary Flames.
Sigalet has settled into a rhythm of treatment for MS that
includes injections three times a week. Now there are also pills that help
treat the disease.
The options for treatment are a personal choice, Sigalet
said.
A native of New Westminster, British Columbia, Sigalet has
also remained involved in the tightly knit MS community. He has hosted three
fundraising dinners and auctions that have raised more than $210,000, much of
which has gone to MS research.
As a player, he also raised money through a number of
different programs.
Now he is looking forward to sharing his experiences with
Harding and, while it is bound to be a comfort to the Minnesota netminder,
Sigalet expects he will gain as much from the contact himself.
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