Yow was quick to embrace her role as an example for others
battling the disease. She often found herself going about
her daily activities in Raleigh only to have someone stop
her and say they were praying for her or that she was an
inspiration to them.
"When they say that, it really gives me a lift because
it's at that time I know for sure that I'm not going through
it for nothing," Yow said in 2007. "That means a lot to me.
I have to go through it. I accept that, and I'm not panicked
about it because the Lord is in control. But it just would
be so saddening if I had to go through it and I couldn't
help people.
Born March 14, 1942, Sandra Kay Yow originally took up
coaching to secure a job teaching high school English at
Allen Jay High School in High Point in the 1960s. Her boss,
along with the boys' coach, agreed to help her plan
practices and to sit on the bench with her during games.
Midway through the season, Yow was on her own.
"Really, it was like love at first sight," she said in
2004.
She spent four years there followed by another year in
her hometown at Gibsonville High, compiling a 92-27 record.
She moved on to Elon, going 57-19 in four seasons before
being hired at N.C. State in 1975.
Her original cancer diagnosis came the year before
coaching the United States to the gold in the Seoul
Olympics. She had a mastectomy as part of her treatment,
then discovered a lump in November 2004 close to where
cancer was first discovered. She had surgery that December
and started on a regimen of radiation and daily hormone
therapy. Still, the cancer came back again and again.
She missed two games of the 2004-05 season while
attending an eight-day nutritional modification program,
which called on her to eat an organic-food diet free of
meat, dairy products and sugar. She stayed on the diet for
eight months, losing 40 pounds by keeping junk food and
Southern favorites like biscuits and gravy off her menu.
Still, she cheated on her organic diet during home
recruiting visits because she didn't want to offend anyone
by passing on a home-cooked meal.
Over the years, Yow never lost her folksy, easygoing
manner and refused to dwell on her health issues, though
they colored everything she did almost as much as
basketball. Ultimately, her philosophy on both were the
same.
"If you start to dwell on the wrong things, it'll take
you down fast," Yow said in '07. "Every morning, I wake up
and the first thing I think of is I'm thankful. I'm thankful
for another day."
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