Sean MacDonald may be the most over-qualified junior varsity coach in Massachusetts this spring.
He may also be one of the most appreciative people just for having the opportunity to coach the Athol junior varsity boys volleyball team this spring.
It certainly didnโt seem like MacDonald would be anywhere near a sideline on Jan. 8 when he dialed 911. MacDonald, who has coached the Frontier Regional girls volleyball team to 14 straight Western Massachusetts championships in the fall, hadnโt been feeling well since December, but assumed he was mired in a cold he just couldnโt kick. Even as family members and friends told him to get checked out, he brushed it off, saying it was just a cold. As it became more and more difficult for him to breathe, he went to a doctor and was prescribed antibiotics, but still no change in his health.
Things got bad enough that simply walking short distances had MacDonald out of breath, so on Jan. 8, he dialed 911 and was taken to Athol Hospital. It didnโt take doctors long to figure out that something was wrong, and a CT scan of his lungs gave it away. MacDonald was informed that he had a pulmonary embolism, which occurs when a blood clot elsewhere in the body breaks apart and travels through the heart and to the lungs.
โI had a sub-massive embolism,โ MacDonald said. โI had clots in both lungs, and quite a few of them. The specialist at Baystate said, โYouโre lucky to be alive. God is not done with you yet, thatโs the only reasonable explanation as to why youโre alive.โโ
MacDonald was sent to Baystate Medical Center in Springfield, and when the doctor came to see him, instructed MacDonald to lift up the covers to take a look at his legs. MacDonald informed the doctor that his issue was in his lungs, but the doctor insisted.
โHe noticed a little swelling in my right leg. Turns out thatโs where the clots started and pieces of it were breaking off, traveling up through my veins, through my heart and into my lungs,โ MacDonald said. โIโm really lucky that I had symptoms. Some peopleโs first symptom is to drop dead.โ
MacDonald was put on anticoagulants and also had an IVC filter placed in his chest. Despite finding the source of the clot, doctors still had no reason as to why it happened.
After a week in the hospital, MacDonald returned home but was still not feeling great. Doctors told him it could take as long as four to six months to get back to normal.
The diagnosis left MacDonald at a crossroads regarding the boys volleyball season. With just two months until the season was to start, MacDonald had to make a decision. After coaching Athol varsity for the past two springs, MacDonald felt he would not be strong enough to return. He made the decision to email Athol athletic director Dan Bevis and vice principal Dave King to inform them of the situation and explain that he was unable to coach.
โIt killed me to do it so close to the season,โ MacDonald said. โI just didnโt feel like I could be at practice every day. Didnโt feel like I could take bus rides from Athol to Westfield and be in the gym every day.โ
After facing a life-threatening situation, MacDonald said he was also struggling mentally.
โThey tell you that you almost died and suddenly every little twinge you are thinking โAm I going to die? Whatโs that?โโ MacDonald said.
MacDonald began to feel better psychologically as tests began to reveal that he was in fact healing. While he is still at risk, he said he will happily take a pill once a day if it means living an otherwise normal life. MacDonald is also looking to drop some weight, and he said that cutting out soda should go a long way toward accomplishing that goal.
โI needed to drop a couple pounds anyway,โ he said. โPepsi is probably holding meetings trying to figure out why Mountain Dew sales have dropped in the Northeast.โ
MacDonald was happy to hear that Athol girls junior varsity coach Harrison West-Mather was going to assume the varsity boys job this season.
โHe stepped up and saved the team, the season, maybe the program,โ MacDonald said.
As the season approached, MacDonald felt well enough to get into the gymnasium and he offered West-Mather some help. Eventually, West-Mather asked MacDonald if he would be comfortable filling the junior varsity post, which had gone unfilled. MacDonald thought about it over a weekend and early last week he texted Bevis to say he was interested. By mid-week, he was officially hired.
โIโm hoping I can figure it out,โ MacDonald joked about coaching at the junior varsity level. โSeriously, it has been an adjustment. At the varsity level, you donโt have to teach some of the things Iโm teaching these guys.
โIt is fun, but it is different,โ MacDonald continued. โI have a new appreciation for (my assistants at Frontier), who lay a lot of the framework for me. This is about teaching people how to pass and how to set and how to serve.โ
MacDonald continues to heal and is doing better every day.
โIโm thankful to be able to coach somebody and still be on the right side of the grass,โ MacDonald said. โAnd to anyone reading, if you think something is wrong with you, you should probably get it checked out.โ
