Enjoying each sunset
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Bryce Alderton
Nick Scandone strode carefully into a hallway Wednesday at the Balboa
Yacht Club with the afternoon sun casting an opaque glow that
brightened the grin stretched across his face and the Hawaiian shirt
nestled on his shoulders.
The 38-year-old strolled these grounds many times as a junior
sailor and successfully navigated through the first day as general
chairman of the 38th Governor’s Cup Challenge, an annual junior-match
race championship hosted by Balboa Yacht Club that enters its final
two days beginning today.
Scandone appreciated the competitive sailing of two boats battling
one another in the water in an event he raced in 20 years ago. Maybe
it’s because he is in a battle of his own, against a disease with no
cure.
Scandone was diagnosed with ALS, Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis,
two years ago. He originally went to a chiropractor because of back
pain.
“Disbelief more than anything,” said Scandone when asked about his
initial reaction to learning he had the disease, which attacks both
upper and lower motor neurons and causes degeneration in the brain
and spinal cord.
“I thought something had to be wrong.”
A chiropractor referred Scandone to a neurologist who performed
several tests that later revealed the disease’s presence. Scandone
went for a second opinion.
He got the same answer.
“More disbelief,” Scandone said.
Scandone has lost about 10 pounds in the two years since and walks
with the help of a cane and orthotic braces wrapped around his
ankles.
Instead of basketball and surfing, he has taken up fishing and
continues to golf.
And, he still sails.
Scandone will head to Chicago in August to compete in the
Independence Cup, U.S. Sailing’s national championship for disabled
sailors and then fly to Maine to help Tom Brown prepare to race for
the U.S. team in the Paralympics in Athens, Greece, host city of the
Olympics.
“I still feel good,” said Scandone, who is married and lives in
Fountain Valley. “The average is two years to live [if one has the
disease], so I didn’t figure to be doing well by this time.
“I’ve started doing a lot of different stuff to make sure I get
the kid out of me. You’ve got to look at it from the positive
standpoint: I don’t have to go to work.”
Scandone quit his job as a sales director for a company that makes
wood-fired ovens six months ago and has spent much of this time since
at the Balboa Yacht Club.
“I wanted to help out at the club in some capacity and [Len Bose,
the yacht club’s fleet manager] gave me the biggest job [as
Governor’s Cup Challenge general chairman],” Scandone said.
Bose chose Scandone for his “knowledge and passion” for sailing.
“I was happy I got a good organizer who really knows sailing,”
said Bose, who coached Scandone at Orange Coast College.
After Coast, Scandone transferred to UC Irvine, where he helped
lead the Anteater sailing team to a national title in 1988 while
earning All-American honors.
Jon Pinckney, a Newport Harbor Yacht Club member, was a teammate
of Scandone’s at UCI, which amassed a prolific winning streak for
several years in the late 1980s.
Pinckney and Scandone, friends since grade school, were regularly
UCI’s top two sailors.
“We trained and sailed all our lives together,” Pinckney said.
Scandone graduated from UCI with a social science degree in 1990
and, in 1992, competed in the Olympic trials, but failed to qualify.
He will attempt to make the Paralympic team in 2008.
“It depends on how my health is,” he said.
The average life expectancy of someone diagnosed with ALS, also
known as Lou Gehrig’s disease, is two to five years with 50% of those
diagnosed living more than three years, according to information on
the ALS Association’s website. Only 10% of those diagnosed live past
10 years.
Five-thousand new cases are diagnosed each year and as many as
30,000 Americans have the disease at a given time. Early symptoms can
include difficulty walking and painless weakness in the feet, arms
and legs.
Support for Scandone has swelled at the yacht club.
Rowell Greene, 63, remembered meeting Scandone when he was 6.
Scandone went on to coach Greene’s children in Balboa Yacht Club’s
junior program.
“He’s taught sailing to hundreds of kids and is an inspirational
leader,” said Greene, whose family has known the Scandones for 30
years. “He’s the kind of person I would want to hang out with.”
Those that know Scandone, like Greene, have rallied to his side in
the last two years.
“Everyone is torn because he has ALS,” Greene said. “At first you
don’t know what to do. It’s given us a commitment to support
[research for a cure] for ALS.”
Scandone, though, wouldn’t lead you to believe he has a terminal
illness, Greene said.
“I’ve never seen him feel sorry for himself,” Greene said. “He’s
made the determination to live life with the best quality and best
humor as possible. I’ve never heard him complain about [ALS] to any
depth.”
Scandone prefers treating every day with passion.
“I don’t look back to what I could have done differently to stop
this from happening,” Scandone said. “You’ve got to look at the
positive.”
For the next two days, his eyes will no doubt gaze toward the
white sails glimmering in the afternoon sunshine.
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