SI Vault
 
Kevin Estevez: Regis centerfielder overcomes size, diabetes to become a star
Decrease font Decrease font
Enlarge font Enlarge font
June 02, 2008

Regis centerfielder overcomes size, diabetes to become a star

Heineken Banner
Print This PRINT E-mail This EMAIL Most Popular MOST POPULAR SHARE SHARE

On a cool, crisp day at Keyspan Park, Tony Negrin digs in for his first at bat amidst the jeers of the opposing team.

Come on shorty, you ain't got nothing.

Easy out. Easy out.

The opposing pitcher, a towering figure, stares down Negrin -- all 5-foot-6 of him. On the first pitch, Negrin swings and laces a grounder to the third baseman. Racing down the line, he beats out the throw and offers a mischievous smile to the fans, perhaps foreshadowing his attempt to steal second base on the very next pitch.

Last spring, the speedy Negrin swiped 27 bags in 30 games, while sporting a .452 batting average in the leadoff spot for Manhattan 's Regis High. This season he's hitting .430 with 24 steals. The senior captain and center fielder from New Rochelle , N.Y., refuses to slow down -- spending his offseason as the starting point guard and co-captain for Regis' basketball team. And while many are amazed at just how passionately Negrin competes -- most don't know that for the last 12 years Negrin has been combating a disease that robs many children of the ability to lead normal lives, let alone excel in sports.

When Negrin was just 6 years old, he underwent a routine checkup and was diagnosed with Type-1 diabetes. "The test results came back and my mother came into the room crying," he says. "I had to be rushed to the hospital."

As a child, Negrin did not initially understand how his life had changed, but after spending a week in the hospital, he realized that this sickness wasn't something that was just going to go away. When doctors failed to even mention the prospect of playing sports in their initial conversations with him and his family, Negrin began to fear the worst: "I figured that baseball and basketball were done with," he says.

In such heartbreaking times, Negrin's family and friends remained supportive and were dedicated to making Negrin's childhood as normal as possible. "We allowed Tony to face his disease straight on," says his mother, Gina. "When in a public place, if Tony had to take an insulin shot or prick his finger to check his blood sugar, it was done. We never allowed him to feel sorry for himself."

By teaching their son to accept his affliction, Negrin's parents instilled within him the confidence he needed to excel in all facets of life, including academics. During his senior year at Regis -- an all-scholarship, tuition-free Jesuit school -- Negrin balanced baseball, basketball and his academics while maintaining a 3.8 GPA.

And although Negrin seems to handle his condition with ease, living with diabetes is a daily struggle in more ways than one. "It's not just a finger prick," Negrin says. "I have to eat right and I have to sacrifice sometimes going out if my blood sugar is too high."

Continue Story
1 2
Related Topics
  ARTICLES PHOTOS GALLERIES VIDEO COVERS
Tony Negrin 1 0 0   0
Dan Dougherty 3 0 0   0
Manhattan 176 5 1   2
The Bronx 76 327 1   1
KeySpan Park 1 0 0   0