Shooting
for a Storybook Finish
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| Noble:Kicking
a Condition |
| photo:duke
university photography |
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cott Noble kicked off his soccer career at Duke with a storybook
play: a game-winning goal against the University of North
Carolina at Chapel Hill minutes after being inserted into
the game. "That was a watershed event," says Noble
of the corner kick he headed into the back of the cage. "I
went from no playing time that day to starting."
The former bench warmer from Southaven, Mississippi, started
the rest of the season for a Blue Devil team that rose to
the No. 3 ranking in the country. Noble continued that on-field
success as a sophomore and junior--until the onset of chronic
kidney failure threatened to end his collegiate soccer career
a year early.
Shortly after the start of the Atlantic Coast Conference
2000 soccer tournament's semifinal game, Noble felt his legs
get increasingly heavy. He knew it was a bad sign. "I
knew all the symptoms," Noble says, explaining that his
older brother, Phillip, had the same genetic condition and
had required a kidney transplant in 1995. "I was just
hoping it would happen later in my life."
Facing an extended and potentially painful regimen of dialysis
treatments and the uncertain prospect of waiting for doctors
to secure a viable donor kidney for transplantation, Noble
turned to his father. "It's not every day you ask your
dad to go under the knife--something which he's terrified
of--to help you. There was a bit of a guilty feeling about
it."
Despite some trepidation, Gary Noble agreed to help his
son. The father and son flew to Duke and on August 15, 2001--the
start of pre-season soccer practice--doctors removed one of
Gary's kidneys and nestled it beside Scott's two existing
kidneys. Gary was out of the hospital within forty-eight hours;
Scott emerged six days later.
Despite the potential dangers that playing collegiate-level
soccer posed to his son, Noble said he never questioned Scott's
decision to return to Duke for one last season. "I think
I had enough respect for the decisions that he had made in
the past. I was willing to go along with his decision if that
meant that much to him."
Scott Noble harbored early hopes of playing again his senior
season, but recovery took longer than expected. By mid-October,
he had resigned himself to missing the entire season. As winter
turned to spring, he began considering his options.
A double major in sociology and economics, he was on target
academically to graduate with the Class of 2002. Lehman Brothers
offered him a job to begin this summer. In the end, Noble
deferred his job and decided to come back for one last soccer
season. After participating with the team this spring, his
teammates responded by naming him a co-captain for the upcoming
season.
Noble, who acknowledges he has more work ahead of him, is
just hoping to add a final chapter to his storybook career.
"I know I've been through a lot, but I'm just taking
it day by day. I missed the intensity of playing in a game.
I really want to come all the way back and get that feeling
back.
--By Blake Dickinson
Dickinson '87 is a writer for the
Duke News Service.
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