South Shore, Lake Tahoe, Nev. – Jim McMahon has
known his share of painful injuries during his days as a Pro Bowl
quarterback in the NFL. Those injuries left the iconic quarterback
struggling with knee injuries, hip injuries and arthritis throughout his
body.
He
also suffered with lower back pain during play this weekend that caused
him to give ground in his final two rounds at the American Century
Championship. He started with two birdies and a respectable 15 points on
Friday. But he gave most of those points back with a couple of poor
rounds on the weekend.
The
event uses a modified Stableford format that awards graduated points
for pars or better. Two points are subtracted for a double bogey or
worse.
But
there was some great news since last summer for the hard-nosed
quarterback that led the Chicago Bears to the 1986 Super Bowl title.
He
had been diagnosed with the onset of dementia and endured headaches so
painful that all he could do was lie in his dark bedroom to ease the
pain.
“I
was spending a lot of time in my bedroom, laying in the dark, said
McMahon as he was receiving treatment on his lower back. “ The only time
I felt halfway decent was lying down. When you lay down the pressure
kind of came off the vertebra and it released some of the fluid.
But
last November, McMahon found a doctor in New York City, who found that
McMahon’s problem was caused by two vertebra in his neck that were
twisted 22 degrees from the norm. He did not suffer from the onset of
dementia.
“Those twisted vertebra were choking
off my spinal cord,” said McMahon. “I got a guy who figured out how to
adjust those at levels C1 and C2. He said he couldn’t reverse the
damage, but he could relieve the pain.
“I
went there for 10 days straight and saw him twice a day. The first time
he did it he didn’t think it would hold because it had been out of
whack for 20 years. Sure enough the muscles pulled it back and I
couldn’t even move my head the next day. But since he did it the second
time, it’s been fine as far as the headaches anyway.”
And McMahon now has a different outlook, despite his worst showing at the celebrity golf event.
“I don’t want to kill myself anymore,” said McMahon. “My head hurt so bad that I can see how these guys are killing themselves.”
But
McMahon doesn’t want anyone to feel sorry for him. He didn’t hesitate
when asked if all the pounding he took as a quarterback had been worth
it.
“Hell
yeah, he said. “I got invited here since I played. If we hadn’t won
anything, I wouldn’t have gotten invited out here. I love coming here. I
don’t come here to win this tournament. I’ve met some good people over
the years.”
The event will be televised by NBC on Sunday from 3-6 p.m. (EDT).The winner receives $125,000 from the total purse of $600,000.