cubreporter718
Member
- Joined
- Jul 26, 2005
- Messages
- 34
All,
This was a tough one to do -- my first writing about this kind of tragedy. It's long (too long?). What does everyone think?
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There was never a happier time for Michael Cavataio. His choice to attend Christ the King was paying immediate dividends. Even though his father Mike was pushing him toward his own alma mater, Archbishop Molloy, his whole family knew this was the right choice.
For a basketball player in Queens, Christ the King is like the Holy Grail. The Royals, coached by Bob Oliva, are a perennial power and when Michael decided he enjoyed his time on the court more than his time on a baseball diamond, the decision was clear for the Forest Hills family.
"The basketball there was amazing," Michael says.
And Michael wasn't just any old player, he was good à damn good. That winter of 2003 he led the freshman team to the city championship. The following spring he would be on Oliva's varsity squad with a chance to win another city title. Michael was thin, but he was 6-foot-3 and had the skills of a guard: a smooth shooting stroke and a slasher's mentality. Division I scholarship offers were only a year or two away.
But then tragedy struck hard and without warning.
Only a few short months after the city championship celebration ended, Michael's mother Joanne died of a heart attack on April 4, 2004 after suffering from a blood clot in her leg.
Cavataio, who was 15 years old at the time, had one initial feeling that penetrated the numbness of losing someone close to you: anger.
The following months were a struggle, for Michael and his sister Jackie, and for Mike. But Michael had some salvation that they didn't. He had basketball.
Bad things happen to a lot of people, he thought at the time, worse things than this. So, he threw himself into the game he loved. He worked harder, trained harder, played harder. Until basketball, too, was taken away from him.
In the first game of his sophomore season, his first with the varsity, Michael broke his left ankle. But, undeterred, he fought back. Worked harder, trained harder. He came back midway through the season. His first game back, he broke the same ankle.
This time, his season was over.
*******
Something just clicked in Michael's mind. There was nothing apparent that set it off, no immediate catalyst. But after attending the first day of class at Christ the King in September, he decided the Middle Village school was no longer for him.
That weekend he told his father he wanted to transfer to St. Francis Prep, where his sister went, where his friends from the neighborhood went. Maybe it was time to erase all the negative feelings, maybe he wanted a clean slate, a new beginning. He didn't know then and he doesn't know now what changed in him all of a sudden.
"When my mom died, I was kind of confused about what to do," Michael said. "Sometimes you just have to be happy. You appreciate things more when something like that happens."
Mike told him to sleep on it, don't make any hasty decisions. That Monday morning Michael's mind hadn't changed: he wanted to be at Prep. Mike said fine, but you have to call Coach Oliva.
"I don't want him to hear from anybody else except for you," Mike said. "...Me and my wife chose that school because of Bob Oliva."
His father didn't agree with the decision, he knew the opportunities that were present at Christ the King: more exposure, more college coaches. Like any father would be, Mike wasn't sure his son was making the right decision. Even more so, he wasn't sure, because Michael went to Christ the King for the first week of school, if the CHSAA would let him play that season for Prep. The league's transfer rules prohibit any player that attended one school during a given school year to play for another school's athletic team during the same year. No exceptions, no exemptions.
Not even for a troubled kid who lost his mother. Not even for a teenager who clearly needed a change of environment, not just to play basketball, but for his own health.
"I thought they should have an exemption for someone who loses a brother or sister, or a guardian à or a parent," Mike says. "...They have their reasons and they're good reasons. But I thought there should have been an exemption for this."
(cont.)
This was a tough one to do -- my first writing about this kind of tragedy. It's long (too long?). What does everyone think?
*****************************************************************************************************
There was never a happier time for Michael Cavataio. His choice to attend Christ the King was paying immediate dividends. Even though his father Mike was pushing him toward his own alma mater, Archbishop Molloy, his whole family knew this was the right choice.
For a basketball player in Queens, Christ the King is like the Holy Grail. The Royals, coached by Bob Oliva, are a perennial power and when Michael decided he enjoyed his time on the court more than his time on a baseball diamond, the decision was clear for the Forest Hills family.
"The basketball there was amazing," Michael says.
And Michael wasn't just any old player, he was good à damn good. That winter of 2003 he led the freshman team to the city championship. The following spring he would be on Oliva's varsity squad with a chance to win another city title. Michael was thin, but he was 6-foot-3 and had the skills of a guard: a smooth shooting stroke and a slasher's mentality. Division I scholarship offers were only a year or two away.
But then tragedy struck hard and without warning.
Only a few short months after the city championship celebration ended, Michael's mother Joanne died of a heart attack on April 4, 2004 after suffering from a blood clot in her leg.
Cavataio, who was 15 years old at the time, had one initial feeling that penetrated the numbness of losing someone close to you: anger.
The following months were a struggle, for Michael and his sister Jackie, and for Mike. But Michael had some salvation that they didn't. He had basketball.
Bad things happen to a lot of people, he thought at the time, worse things than this. So, he threw himself into the game he loved. He worked harder, trained harder, played harder. Until basketball, too, was taken away from him.
In the first game of his sophomore season, his first with the varsity, Michael broke his left ankle. But, undeterred, he fought back. Worked harder, trained harder. He came back midway through the season. His first game back, he broke the same ankle.
This time, his season was over.
*******
Something just clicked in Michael's mind. There was nothing apparent that set it off, no immediate catalyst. But after attending the first day of class at Christ the King in September, he decided the Middle Village school was no longer for him.
That weekend he told his father he wanted to transfer to St. Francis Prep, where his sister went, where his friends from the neighborhood went. Maybe it was time to erase all the negative feelings, maybe he wanted a clean slate, a new beginning. He didn't know then and he doesn't know now what changed in him all of a sudden.
"When my mom died, I was kind of confused about what to do," Michael said. "Sometimes you just have to be happy. You appreciate things more when something like that happens."
Mike told him to sleep on it, don't make any hasty decisions. That Monday morning Michael's mind hadn't changed: he wanted to be at Prep. Mike said fine, but you have to call Coach Oliva.
"I don't want him to hear from anybody else except for you," Mike said. "...Me and my wife chose that school because of Bob Oliva."
His father didn't agree with the decision, he knew the opportunities that were present at Christ the King: more exposure, more college coaches. Like any father would be, Mike wasn't sure his son was making the right decision. Even more so, he wasn't sure, because Michael went to Christ the King for the first week of school, if the CHSAA would let him play that season for Prep. The league's transfer rules prohibit any player that attended one school during a given school year to play for another school's athletic team during the same year. No exceptions, no exemptions.
Not even for a troubled kid who lost his mother. Not even for a teenager who clearly needed a change of environment, not just to play basketball, but for his own health.
"I thought they should have an exemption for someone who loses a brother or sister, or a guardian à or a parent," Mike says. "...They have their reasons and they're good reasons. But I thought there should have been an exemption for this."
(cont.)