Driving through cancer
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Bryce Alderton
The 16th annual Jack Errion Memorial alumni basketball tournament in
the Corona del Mar High gym will begin at 8 a.m. today.
Some might consider that early, but for Geoff Probst (CdM Class of
1988), the word “early” has a whole different meaning since last
spring.
Probst, a regular in this tournament, learned in April that he had
non-Hodgkin’s lymphoma, a disease where malignant cancer cells form
in the lymph system.
Early detection, however, allowed Probst, a 34-year-old Newport
Beach resident, to begin chemotherapy treatments promptly and the
tumors have started shrinking.
Through five of seven chemotherapy treatments in the past eight
months, Probst said he has missed two days of work as a director of
sales for an office systems company.
He keeps active by playing basketball in a Newport Beach
recreation league in addition to participating in countless other
pickup games, intent on combating fatigue, which initially sparked
Probst to get a physical in December.
“I would feel light-headed or tired, a little bit off, but I
thought it was because I wasn’t eating right or not getting enough
sleep,” Probst said of symptoms that can include fever, night sweats,
pains in the chest, abdomen and bones, along with painless swelling
in the lymph nodes. “I went in and a blood test came up funny and
[physicians] wanted me to retake it. When I retook it, everything
came up normal, a sign that something was up.”
A kidney stone also caught Probst’s attention and the former
All-Sea View League and All-CIF Southern Section point guard had a CT
scan taken in April, which revealed something more.
Tumors had formed in Probst’s abdomen, back -- near the kidneys,
below the sternum and in the neck. The kidney stones were a product
of the tumors, Probst said.
Chemotherapy treatments began a week later, when Probst learned,
following bone and tissue marrow biopsies, he had the disease.
“I was on the way to play golf and the doctors called and told me
it was cancer,” said Probst, who started at point guard three of his
four years at the University of San Diego. “I was pretty shocked when
I found out.”
But after meeting with physicians shortly after the diagnosis,
Probst, a Newport Beach resident, felt more comfortable about a
recovery.
“[Non-Hodgkin’s lymphoma] is treatable 85 to 90% of the time if
you catch it at the right time,” Probst said. “The symptoms are mild
lots of times for people my age.
“The real key was not having [tumors] in the bone marrow,” Probst
said. “But you don’t really know until five years have gone by to
tell if the cancer is gone.”
Learning he had cancer caused Probst to view life through an
altered lens.
“In terms of attitude, I’m much more positive,” said Probst, who
will join alumni such as Todd Katovsich, Scott McCarter, Trey Bonner,
Kurt Ehmann, Tom Schriber and Ty Price on the 1988-89 squad in today’s tournament that features 16 teams.
“I don’t get bogged down with work issues, because, in the big
picture, they’re not that important. I’m trying to survive a disease
that could kill you. Now I enjoy driving the car to work, whereas
before, I was in a rush to get there.”
Price, a quarterback on the Sea Kings’ CIF Southern Section
Division VI championship team of 1988 and a friend of Probst since
grade school, has noticed an added commitment since his friend
learned he had the disease.
“Everything he’s done work-wise to love of basketball, he has
always been totally committed,” said Price, a standout setter who
played volleyball at USC. “He has committed himself to what he has to
do to beat the disease. He’s extremely active in basketball and stays
in the best shape of his life.”
Katovsich, the Sea View League Defensive Player of the Year as a
CdM defensive tackle in 1987, has known Probst since 1986, when the
two lived in the same neighborhood.
“Geoff can sometimes be pessimistic, but he has taken [the
disease] on with a positive attitude and will fight it until it’s
100% cured,” Katovsich said.
Team 1988-89, along with the 15 other squads, will have two pool
play games this morning to determine seedings into the
single-elimination tournament, scheduled to begin about 12:15 p.m.
today.
Tournament director Robert Hess (Class of ‘83) expects the
championship game to begin between 3:30 and 4 p.m.
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