Basketball Teams To Take Part In Coaches vs. Cancer Suits & Sneakers On Saturday
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE - FOR MORE INFORMATION:
Contact: Seth Cole - Phone: 802.654.2537
| Saint Michael's Women's Game Notes | Saint Michael's Men's Game Notes |
|
| SMC's basketball coaches will take part in the Coaches vs. Cancer® Suits and Sneakers awareness weekend on Saturday against Adelphi. |
COLCHESTER, Vt. - Coaches for the Saint Michael's College men's and women's basketball teams will wear sneakers with their suits on Saturday, as the Purple Knights host Adelphi University in a Northeast-10 Conference doubleheader starting at 1:30 p.m. at the Ross Sports Center.
The unique footwear is to celebrate the seventh annual Coaches
vs. Cancer® Suits and Sneakers awareness weekend, taking place
from Friday-Sunday, with Saint Michael's coaches demonstrating
their support for the American Cancer Society and its vision of a
world with less cancer and more birthdays. Basketball fans are
encouraged to also wear sneakers to Saturday's games to show their
support.
Coaches vs. Cancer is a collaborative initiative of the American
Cancer Society and the National Association of Basketball Coaches
(NABC) that empowers coaches, their teams and local communities to
make a difference in the fight against cancer.
Saturday's doubleheader tips off at 1:30 p.m., as the Saint Michael's women (8-8, 6-7 NE-10), led by eighth-year head coach Jen Niebling, host Adelphi (7-11, 4-10 NE-10). The twinbill concludes at approximately 3:30 p.m., as the Saint Michael's men (7-10, 5-8 NE-10) and first-year head coach Michael Harding host Adelphi (11-7, 7-7 NE-10).
See below for the complete release from the American Cancer Society.
Coaches vs. Cancer Suits and Sneakers Awareness Weekend Set for Jan. 28-30, 2011
Basketball Coaches from Coast to Coast Address the
Importance of Exercising and Eating Right in the Fight against
Cancer
ATLANTA – Jan. 13, 2011 – During Coaches vs.
Cancer® Suits and Sneakers awareness weekend, Jan. 28-30,
basketball coaches nationwide will wear sneakers with their suits
to demonstrate their support for the American Cancer Society and
its vision of a world with less cancer and more birthdays.
Basketball fans are encouraged to also wear sneakers to games that
weekend to show their support.
Coaches vs. Cancer is a collaborative initiative of the American
Cancer Society and the National Association of Basketball Coaches
(NABC) that empowers coaches, their teams and local communities to
make a difference in the fight against cancer.
By lacing up sneakers with their suits on the event’s seventh
annual awareness weekend, college and high school basketball
coaches across the country will spotlight the fact that while
cancer remains a major health concern, everyone can take daily
steps to reduce their risk of the disease. For those who do not
smoke, weight control, exercise and a healthy diet are the best
ways to improve health and reduce cancer risk. In the U.S.,
overweight and obesity contribute to 14-to-20 percent of all
cancer-related deaths.
Increasing evidence also points to being overweight as raising the
risk for cancer recurrence and decreasing the likelihood of
survival for many cancers. The prevalence of obesity in the
United States more than doubled between 1976-80 and 2003-04, and
although rates appear to have stabilized by 2005-06, more than one
third of U.S. adults – more than 72 million people –
are obese. Overweight and obesity are of particular concern in
minority populations, with higher rates of both reported for
Hispanic men and women and for African American women, than for
non-Hispanic white adults.
“Coaches vs. Cancer is a vital link between the basketball
community and the American Cancer Society’s commitment to
saving lives by helping people stay well and get well, by finding
cures and by fighting back against a disease which has taken too
much,” said Stephen L. Swanson, 2010-11
national volunteer chair, American Cancer Society Board of
Directors. “Like so many of us, these coaches have a personal
connection to cancer. And, because of their visibility in their
communities and nationwide, they also have a unique and invaluable
opportunity to reach people with important information about how
they can reduce their risk of cancer, particularly by maintaining a
healthy weight and by being physically active.”
"We may be battling on the court night in and night out, but as
coaches, we’re on the same team when it comes to reminding
our basketball community and our fans about taking an active role
in reducing our risk of cancer and in fighting back on behalf of
those who face a cancer diagnosis,” said Lon
Kruger, UNLV head coach and Coaches vs. Cancer Council
member. “Suits and Sneakers awareness weekend is all about
challenging us all to get involved in the fight for every birthday
threatened by cancer in every community.”
In addition to Kruger, among active Coaches vs. Cancer Coaches
Council members are: Jim Boeheim (Syracuse);
Mike Brey (Notre Dame); Jim
Calhoun (Connecticut); Bobby Cremins
(College of Charleston); Ed DeChellis (Penn
State); Fran Dunphy (Temple); Mark
Few (Gonzaga); Jeff Gamber (York
College); Mike Krzyzewski (Duke); Phil
Martelli (Saint Joseph’s); Oliver
Purnell (DePaul); Orlando “Tubby”
Smith (Minnesota); Bruce Weber
(Illinois); Gary Williams (Maryland), chair; and
Roy Williams (North Carolina).
The Coaches vs. Cancer Council brings together NABC members,
American Cancer Society volunteers and business leaders from across
the country to explore new and innovative ways to fund the fight
against cancer and send the powerful message that the fight can be
won.
Thanks to the dedicated efforts of college and high school coaches
and fans throughout the nation, Coaches vs. Cancer participants
have raised more than $60 million since 1993 to help the American
Cancer Society fund groundbreaking cancer research, provide
up-to-date cancer information and education, advocate for public
health policies that benefit communities, and deliver services that
improve the quality of life for patients and their families.
Additional information is available at coachesvscancer.org.
Several events throughout 2011 will continue to highlight the
productive work of Coaches vs. Cancer, including Fight
Cancer In Style – an event for coaches’ wives
during NCAA Final Four weekend, April 2-4 in Houston; the annual
Coaches vs. Cancer Golf Invitational, June 12-13
at The Ocean Course, Kiawah Island (S.C.) Resort; and the annual
2K Sports Classic benefitting Coaches vs. Cancer
(12-team nationwide basketball tournament) in November.
The American Cancer Society combines an unyielding passion with
nearly a century of experience to save lives and end suffering from
cancer. As a global grassroots force of more than three million
volunteers, we fight for every birthday threatened by every cancer
in every community. We save lives by helping people stay well by
preventing cancer or detecting it early; by helping people get well
by being there for them during and after a cancer diagnosis; by
finding cures through investment in groundbreaking discovery; and
by fighting back by rallying lawmakers to pass laws to defeat
cancer and by rallying communities worldwide to join the fight. As
the nation’s largest non-governmental investor in cancer
research, contributing more than $3.5 billion, we turn what we know
about cancer into what we do. As a result, more than 11 million
people in America who have had cancer and countless more who have
avoided it will be celebrating birthdays this year. To learn more
about us or to get help, call us anytime, day or night, at
1-800-227-2345 or visit cancer.org.
FOR MORE INFORMATION, CONTACT:
Jamie Kimbrough
Director, Media Relations
American Cancer Society
Phone: (404) 417-5889
Email: jamie.kimbrough@cancer.org
-PURPLEKNIGHTS-

