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Disney's Wide World of Sports Spirit Award

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American college football award
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Disney's Wide World of Sports Spirit Award
Awarded forCollege football's most inspirational individual or team
CountryUnited States
Presented byDisney
History
First award1996
Most recentMegan Twist and Richard Bremer
Websitehttp://espnwwos.disney.go.com/about/spirit-award/

Disney's Wide World of Sports Spirit Award is presented annually tocollege football's most inspirational individual or team. The award is one of 21 that are part of theNational College Football Awards Association (NCFAA).

Previous winners

[edit]
YearRecipient/School
1996Daniel Huffman, Rossville-Alvin High School (Rossville, Illinois)
Huffman gave up a promising football career todonate a kidney to his grandmother.
1997Dwight Collins,University of Central Florida
Collins overcame a loss of hearing frommeningitis to get a football scholarship at UCF.
1998Matt Hartl,Northwestern University
Hartl, after being diagnosed withHodgkin's lymphoma in 1996, returned as a starter in 1997. *The disease returned in 1998, and Hartl died on August 30, 1999, at the age of 23.
1999East Carolina University
ECU overcame damage to theirGreenville, North Carolina, campus fromHurricane Floyd to finish the season 9–3.
2000Hameen Ali, theCollege of William & Mary
Ali overcame "a troubled youth, poverty-stricken living conditions and foster homes, among other obstacles."
2001United States Service Academies
In the aftermath of9/11, the members of theUnited States Air Force Academy,United States Military Academy, andUnited States Naval Academy teams were honored for their academic and athletic achievements, and their commitment to the military.
2002Dewayne White,University of Louisville
White overcame the loss of both his parents, two fires that destroyed family homes, and a serious knee injury during his senior year of high school, and was selected 2001Conference USA Defensive Player of the Year.
2003Neil Parry,San Jose State University
Parry broke his leg in a game for SJSU; a week later, following an infection and nerve and arterial damage, it was amputated. Three years later, Parry, wearing a prosthetic leg, returned to the field for SJSU.
2004Tim Frisby,University of South Carolina
Frisby walked on atwide receiver for the Gamecocks at age 39, after a 20-year career in theArmy.
2005Tulane University
In the wake ofHurricane Katrina, andthe closure of the campus for the fall semester, Tulane was forced to play all 11 of its games on the road.
2006Patrick Henry Hughes,University of Louisville
Hughes, Louisville's second recipient, is a member of Louisville's marching band, even though he was born with no eyes and cannot straighten his arms and legs. He shared the award with his father, Patrick John Hughes.
2007Zerbin Singleton,United States Naval Academy
Singleton overcame personal tragedy and a broken collarbone that initially prevented him from enrolling in Annapolis.
2008Tim Tebow,University of Florida
Tebow was honored for his "countless hours preaching and providing support to less fortunate people, capitalizing on virtually every opportunity to touch the lives of others."
2009Mark Herzlich,Boston College
Herzlich was honored for his fight to overcomeEwing's sarcoma, and inspiring his teammates and other football teams to raise money for cancer research.
2010D.J. Williams,University of Arkansas
Williams, his mother and two sisters fled their home inDallas to escape a drug-addicted and abusive father. They landed in Arkansas, where they put down roots of their own. Williams used his stature on the Razorbacks football team and spread his story and message to others in groups like theBig Brothers and Big Sisters program, the localBoys and Girls Clubs andChildren's Hospital.
20112011 Alabama Crimson Tide football team
The Alabama football team was honored for their collective efforts to assist in the rebuilding ofTuscaloosa following theApril 27, 2011, tornado that devastated the city. The award was accepted bylong snapperCarson Tinker who suffered a broken wrist when he was thrown from his home during the storm, with his girlfriend being one of the 43 fatalities attributed to the storm in Tuscaloosa.[1]
2012Nate Boyer,University of Texas at Austin
The Longhorns long snapper was recognized for his service as a Green Beret and his work with Darfur refugee camps.
2013Devon Walker,Tulane Green Wave
Devon Walker has "exhibited tremendous courage and perseverance following a severe spinal cord injury last season, and has become a motivational figure for the football team, the university and the New Orleans community."[2]
2014Sterling Shepard,Bob Stoops;University of Oklahoma
Stoops and Shepard formed an inspirational bond from tragic death of former Sooners receiver, and Sterling's father, Derrick Shepard 15 years ago. Derrick Shepard was graduate assistant coach and former receiver at the university. Stoops became a father figure to the then six year old Sterling.[3]
2015Hank Goff,Concordia University (Saint Paul, Minnesota)
"After a nine-month combat stint in Afghanistan in April 2008, Goff struggled with post-combat trauma and post-traumatic stress disorder, which led to depression and excessive drinking. It was a dark period during which Goff said he felt like a monster. Goff credits football with helping him find his way back to the light. Today, at the advanced football age of 28, Goff has become a stellar Division II football player (this year, he was a preseason second-team All-American) who has begun to counsel fellow veterans coping with similar post-war challenges."[4]
2016James Conner,University of Pittsburgh
Returned from a December 2015 diagnosis ofHodgkin lymphoma and subsequent chemotherapy to run for over 1,000 yards and 20 touchdowns in 2016.[5]
2017University of Iowa
Created the"Kinnick Wave", in which fans turn toward thechildren's hospital that overlooksKinnick Stadium and wave toward patients and their families watching the game from the hospital.[6]
2018Tyler Trent,Purdue University
Tyler gained notoriety with the university after receiving chemotherapy and camped outsideRoss Ade Stadium before the 2017 homecoming game. In 2018, he grew to national lore by predictingPurdue would beat then ranked #2Ohio State in Tyler's first game back to campus since entering hospice care. Tyler celebrated with the team on the field and in the locker room after the win. Tyler's story has generated thousands of donations for cancer research and created anendowment with the Purdue Cancer Center. Tyler died from the rare bone cancer osteosarcoma on January 1, 2019, at the age of 20.[7]
2019Casey O'Brien, University of Minnesota
Overcame four bouts of cancer to play college football at Minnesota.
2020Darien Rencher,Clemson University
An original walk-on who overcame multiple ACL tears during his high school career in Anderson, S.C. before walking on at his dream school, Clemson. He grew into one of Clemson's most respected leaders, primarily during a tumultuous 2020. He was a staple in the Upstate South Carolina community, serving as a frequent community servant and public speaker, and during the offseason he helped organize the Clemson Community Peaceful Demonstration against social inequality and also helped mobilize college football players nationwide to rally in support of playing safely during the pandemic with the hashtag #WeWantToPlay.[8]
2021Tre Tipton, University of Pittsburgh
Growing up outside Pittsburgh, life wasn’t always easy. Tre struggled to deal with one family tragedy after another, as well as four season-ending injuries at Pitt. That eventually led to multiple suicide attempts and turned a traditional four-year college football experience for him into what is now his seventh year.

But instead of letting his misfortune bring him down, he’s using his circumstances to help others. Tre eventually committed to seeking the help that he needed for his mental health as well as his physical health. And he’s helping to rescue others fighting similar demons with L.O.V.E. — Living Out Victoriously Everyday, a nonprofit organization he launched with a classmate aimed at providing mental health support for fellow students on campus and beyond. Tre also does motivational speaking about mental health around campus, at his old high school and the surrounding community.[9]

2022Tylee Craft,University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
Craft embodies the essence of the award after being diagnosed with stage 4 large cell neuroendocrine carcinoma, a rare form of lung cancer, on March 14, 2022. According to his family, doctors said he was just weeks away from dying when they realized he was sick and took him to the hospital. Doctors at UNC Lineberger Comprehensive Cancer Center immediately started Craft on an aggressive regimen of chemotherapy and immunotherapy.

“It felt good to be recognized and be surrounded by my teammates and coaches,” said Craft after practice recently when he learned that he had won the award. “That bond that we share on and off the field gets me through my days.”

The UNC community quickly rallied around Craft. Teammates frequently visited him in the hospital, and, on April 9, the Tar Heels dedicated their annual spring football game to Craft, renaming the event the #TyleeStrong Spring Game.[10] Craft died from the cancer on October 12, 2024, at the age of 23.[11]

2023Brian Dooley,Eastern Michigan University
Dooley showed the character and strength of spirit that makes him one of the country’s best teammates when he donated his football scholarship to another Eastern Michigan player, Zack Conti, before the season. Conti, who initially had to try out for the team, had been working multiple jobs and donating blood plasma for money to pay for college while his mother fights polycystic kidney disease, which typically requires transplant surgery.

Dooley, whose mother is a nurse and father is a truck driver, is a graduate student in his final season at Eastern Michigan. He’s been a team captain for several years and played a leading role in helping the team make it to a bowl game this season. After giving away his scholarship, he is now paying for college with his own savings along with a loan his mother took out to help cover tuition and expenses.

“I think it’s just the beginning. If people see what I’ve done they might take it to a whole new level,” said Dooley. “I wish I could do more. To me it wasn’t that big of a deal what I did. I was just doing it for one of my brothers. So, hopefully I can do a lot more now.”[12]

2024Megan Twist and Richard Bremer,Georgia Bulldogs fans
After being a life-long Florida Gators fan, Richard Bremer developed his intense love for the Georgia Bulldogs from a most unusual source – the compassionate spirit of a young University of Georgia fan and her lifesaving lung donation. Bremer's life was saved by Twist's decision to become an organ donor, and that led to Bremer relinquishing his long-time devotion to the Gators in favor of the rival Bulldogs as well as inspiring donations that are saving the lives of so many others.

In 1996, Bremer, a carpenter from Jacksonville, Fla., was diagnosed with a degenerative lung disease called sarcoidosis. By 2012, his lung function had plummeted to just 20 percent, necessitating a lung transplant. After four years of waiting, he received a life-changing phone call that a match had been found. The donor was Twist, a 23-year-old from Georgia who was tragically killed in a car accident. Remarkably, Twist registered as an organ and tissue donor just a few months prior on her 23rd birthday. The surgery to save Bremer's life lasted 10 hours, and he was placed in a medically induced coma for several weeks. Upon waking and learning of Twist's loyalty to the Georgia Bulldogs, Bremer felt compelled to shift his own football loyalty to the Bulldogs in honor of her.

Since the surgery, Bremer and Twist's family have been dedicated to raising awareness for organ donation. He has served as a spokesperson for LifeLink Foundation, a non-profit with a mission to help as many people as possible through organ and tissue transplantation. Bremer keeps a photo of Twist on his phone, which appears six times a day whenever his alarm goes off, reminding him to take his medications.

"I celebrate (Twist's organ donation) every day when I wake up," said Bremer. "Getting to breathe every day, having her as a part of my life. She's with me every day. Getting to bring her to Walt Disney World with me and receive the Spirit Award, I'm carrying her spirit with me."[13]

References

[edit]
  1. ^Deas, Tommy (November 22, 2011)."Alabama wins Disney Spirit Award for efforts following storm".The Tuscaloosa News. RetrievedDecember 7, 2011.
  2. ^"Tulane University's Devon Walker to Accept 2013 Disney Spirit Award".Disney Sports News. Retrieved2 January 2019.
  3. ^"Disney Sports Spirit Award and The Home Depot College Football Awards Show".Disney Sports News. Retrieved2 January 2019.
  4. ^"Hank Goff to receive 2015 Disney Sports Spirit Award Thursday on ESPN".Concordia University, St. Paul Athletics. Retrieved2 January 2019.
  5. ^Eisenberg, Matt (December 8, 2016)."Holly Rowe, Shelley Smith present James Conner with Disney Sports Spirit Award".ESPNW. RetrievedDecember 9, 2016.
  6. ^Fry, Darrell (November 20, 2017)."Disney Salutes the 'Kinnick Wave' with the 2017 Disney Sports Spirit Award".Walt Disney World. Archived fromthe original on December 5, 2017. RetrievedDecember 4, 2017.
  7. ^Murphy, Dan (January 1, 2019)."Tyler Trent, cancer patient who inspired many, dies at 20".ESPN. RetrievedJanuary 1, 2019.
  8. ^"Rencher Wins 2020 Disney Spirit Award". December 2020.
  9. ^"Disney Spirit Award Winner, Pitt's Tre Tipton Named Most Inspirational in College Football". December 2021. Archived fromthe original on December 9, 2021.
  10. ^Kepner, Joe (November 29, 2022)."Walt Disney World Selects University of North Carolina's Tylee Craft for 2022 Disney Spirit Award". Archived fromthe original on November 29, 2022.
  11. ^Dinich, Heather (October 12, 2024)."Tylee Craft, beloved UNC receiver, dies at 23 from cancer".ESPN. RetrievedOctober 12, 2024.
  12. ^Kepner, Joe (December 4, 2023)."Disney Selects Eastern Michigan's Brian Dooley as 2023 Spirit Award Winner". Archived fromthe original on March 4, 2024.
  13. ^"Disney Spirit Award Given to Georgia Fans for Connection and School Spirit".georgiadogs.com. December 11, 2024. RetrievedDecember 12, 2024.
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