Pat Summerall getting Liver Transplant

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Happy29

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Possibly one of the game's greatest broadcasters and announcers, keep him in your thoughts and prayers.

DALLAS (AP) -- Veteran broadcaster Pat Summerall is scheduled to undergo a liver transplant after being flown to Jacksonville, Fla., by air ambulance Thursday.

The surgery is expected to occur this weekend at the Mayo Clinic in Jacksonville, The Dallas Morning News reported in its online edition Thursday night.

Summerall's longtime agent, Sandy Montag, confirmed to The Associated Press that Summerall, 73, was flying to Florida to have the transplant.

"It's been a difficult time for the Summerall family," Montag, said. "But I think the support of family and friends have been very important to Pat and his family at this time."

Summerall is a recovering alcoholic, who was convinced by friends in 1992 to enter the Betty Ford Treatment Center in California. His wife, Cheri, told the Morning News that he accepted that his alcohol abuse is the reason he is in the hospital now.

"Although this month marks his 12th year of sobriety, alcoholism is a progressive disease, and the damage to his liver reached the point where a transplant is the only option for survival," she said.

Summerall, who played in the NFL for 10 years before becoming a broadcaster, spent more than 40 years in the booth. He teamed with John Madden to call Fox's lead game from 1994-01, and they were the No. 1 team on CBS for 13 seasons before that. The two called eight Super Bowls together, and Summerall has called a total of 16.

The Morning News reported that Summerall, who lives in Southlake, had been hospitalized this week at Methodist Medical Center in Dallas to undergo tests and wait for a possible transplant surgery there. But a donor was then found in Florida, the newspaper reported.

The newspaper said Summerall qualified for a transplant through blood tests that rank potential recipients anonymously through a computerized system known as the MELD Model.

Summerall told the newspaper that he had recently undergone tests at the Mayo Clinic in Florida that confirmed he needed the transplant.
 
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