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Cameron Lyle is a senior at the University of New Hampshire and a member of the track and field team, focusing primarily on the shot put. In his sophomore year, the team encouraged players to join the bone marrow registry and Lyle signed up and got his mouth swabbed.


Two years later, he learned he might be a match for someone—donors and donees must remain anonymous for a year. A few weeks ago he learned he was a 100 percent match.

“They told me it was a one in 5 million chance of me being a match for a non-family member,” Lyle said. “They gave me the timeline and everything’s been moving quickly after that.” Lyle will be donating to a 28-year-old male who is suffering from acute lymphoblastic leukemia.


Time is a factor and due to the donee's condition—he's been given six months to live, without a marrow donor—Lyle must donate now or never, which means he can't finish out the track season. He'll undergo the procedure at Massachusetts General Hospital in Boston and won't be able to lift anything over 20 pounds for weeks.

It's a bummer to essentially forfeit the remainder of a collegiate career, but he made the decision pretty easily, so he's winning at being a good dude.

Image via

h/t @JohnWFerguson

Local UNH athlete ends career to donate bone marrow [Eagle Tribune]