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'I'm the son of Poison': Scot Pollard's ESPN Father's Day doc will bring you to tears

'I'm the son of Poison': Scot Pollard's ESPN Father's Day doc will bring you to tears

INDIANAPOLIS -- Scot Pollard unbuttons the top of his shirt and stands up, bearing his chest which inside beats the heart of Casey Angell.
With tears in her eyes, Angell's widow walks over to Pollard, puts a stethoscope in her ears and places the tiny monitor to Pollard's skin.
Pamela Angell hears thumping. Strong and steady. Thump-thump ... thump-thump ... thump-thump. It is a beautiful sound.
Angell may no longer be with Pamela but, inside this room, he is with her. Living inside Pollard.
Soon, it's not just Pamela crying, but Angell's sister, Megan Tyra, Pollard's wife, Dawn, and Pollard, too. He is meeting the family of his heart donor for the first time, the people who loved the man who saved his life.
The emotional scene plays out in the ESPN "E60" film, "Heart of Pearl," which debuts 1 p.m. Sunday for Father's Day. It tells the story of former Indiana Pacers player Pollard who received a heart transplant in February 2024.
The film also examines the impact Pollard's father, Pearl "Poison" Pollard, had on his life. The elder Pollard died waiting on the transplant list in 1991 when Scot was 16.
ESPN followed Pollard as he waited on a heart at Vanderbilt University Medical Center and as he received his new heart and then as he recovered. The film ends with Pollard meeting the family of the donor who gave him another chance at life who, in turn, received their own gift.
"We're grateful, yeah, we're grateful that Scot's here with Casey's heart," Pamela tells Pollard and Dawn in the film. "And William has another person to look up to as a father figure."
William Angell was 12 when his dad died.
"I feel for you. I know what it was like. I was 16 when my dad died," Pollard says to William. "And I was the last one in my family to see him alive."
Pollard had gone surfing the morning of Oct. 28, 1991, for a physical education class he was taking at Torrey Pines High in San Diego.
As he was coming up off the beach, his dad drove by in a white truck. Pearl was a public works director for the city of Solana Beach who made sure the roads were taken care of and the sand was raked.
When Pollard spotted his dad, he raised his hand and waved. Pearl stopped and asked, "What are you boys doing?" Pollard told his dad they had just finished a surfing class. Pearl said, "Get back to school."
"I said, 'Alright, dad,'" Pollard says. "He said, 'Take care.' That was the last thing he said."
A couple of hours later, a friend of Pollard's called him. "Scot, I just saw your dad's car. It's crashed, and there are paramedics working on him."
Pearl Pollard had died. He died when his heart failed him as the truck he was driving rolled gently through a stop sign and into a parking lot, then came to rest against some parked cars. Pearl died waiting on a heart transplant.
The autopsy said the cause of death was cardiomyopathy. He was 54.
One year before he died, Pearl was diagnosed with heart issues, but he had been sick much longer. The family noticed he was falling asleep a lot, passing out. Pearl would be talking to them and the next thing they knew, his skin was gray and he was out.
They finally convinced him to go to the doctor, who told Pearl he needed to be put on the heart transplant list. But at 6-9 and 380 pounds, doctors said, it would be tough to find a heart big enough.
"We knew it was a death sentence," Pollard says in the film. "So, obviously, 16 years old, that kind of stuck in my brain."
Pollard was still 16 as he stood at his father's funeral, unable to believe and accept the man he loved and looked up to so much was gone.
"He was a giant of a man in every single way possible. Everybody loved my dad," said Pollard. "Everywhere I went in Utah when I was a little kid. 'You're Pearl's son, aren't you. Is that Poison's kid?'"
Now, Pearl was gone and Pollard was facing a dark reality.
"I was just thinking, 'God, I'm going to grow up without a dad,'" he said. "On the other hand, I was mad at him for not taking better care of himself."
Pollard's sister, Lyne Jorif, says in the film she remembers hugging her brother a lot, trying to comfort him, trying to make him feel better.
"And just the look on his face. Nothing was going to console him," she said. "His worst fear of losing his dad had just happened."
That basketball season at Torrey Pines, the team wore black bands in memory of Pearl and as a way to show their support for Pollard. He changed his jersey to No. 31, his dad's number.
"He said, 'I'm going to honor my dad,'" said Jorif. "'I'm the son of Poison.'"
Pearl Pollard had been a standout basketball player in high school and at the University of Utah, nicknamed 'Poison" because he was so lethal on the court, it was as if he was poisoning his opponents. Playing basketball was something Pollard had done for his dad. Now, he was gone.
"It hurt too much to pick up a basketball and not have his dad. We just both kind of hit the wall and we slid down to the floor and we cried and cried, and it took him a while," said Jorif. "I told him, 'It's OK. You don't have to. Dad would never push you. Dad would tell you to do what you need to do."
Pollard knew what he had to do.
"The real reason I was ever successful at basketball was because my dad died. That was the catalyst. My dad passing just sharpened everything inside of me and made me angry," said Pollard. "And I went bat(expletive) nuts."
Pollard took his anger and turned it into a passion and fierceness on the court as he played at the University of Kansas and then in the NBA. He was known for his relentless, competitive drive. Just like his dad.
And 15 years after Pollard retired from the NBA, he found himself re-living the exact same health journey his father had lived.
"We've got to talk about transplant," Dr. Sunit-Preet S. Chaudhry, a specialist in congestive heart failure at Ascension St. Vincent, told Pollard in September 2023. Pollard had been short of breath, his skin was gray and he was sleeping all the time.
"I thought, 'Well, I'm going to die,'" Pollard told IndyStar inside his Carmel home in December. "I was 16 when my dad died on the transplant list because in 1991 you couldn't transplant a giant. That's it. I'm going to die just like my dad."
Doctors tried to encourage Pollard that medicine had come a long way in the more than three decades since his dad died from cardiomyopathy, a heart muscle disease that weakens the heart's ability to pump blood effectively. There was a good chance they could find a heart big enough for Pollard's monstrous body.
"I very seriously considered just letting it ride," said Pollard, who played in the NBA 11 years, including for the Indiana Pacers from 2003 to 2006. "You know what? I've had a wonderful life and family. Maybe it's just ... let's just ride this out because I don't want to die in the hospital.
"And thank God, (Dawn) talked some sense into me."
Pollard couldn't give up on his failing heart. He couldn't leave behind Dawn and his four children. He might be the son of Poison, but he was going to take a different road than his father had.
In February 2024, Pollard got his new heart. Angell's heart. When he woke up, he realized how close to death he had been. He was so very grateful. And he knew, he had to meet his donor's family.
"Thank you guys for making that decision (to donate Angell's organs)," Pollard tells the family in the ESPN film. "Because if you hadn't made the decision, I may not be here."
"Heart of Pearl" premieres 1 p.m. Sunday on ESPN. Streaming will be available after on ESPN+
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A Furphy leap, 3rd PG and final roster spot: What we learned about Pacers in Summer League
A Furphy leap, 3rd PG and final roster spot: What we learned about Pacers in Summer League

Indianapolis Star

timean hour ago

  • Indianapolis Star

A Furphy leap, 3rd PG and final roster spot: What we learned about Pacers in Summer League

The Indiana Pacers weren't an NBA Summer League headliner for obvious reasons. As tends to be the case, the Eastern Conference champions' success meant they weren't sending marquee names to Las Vegas. The Pacers had just two players on the summer roster who will start the season on standard, full-time contracts. Both of them — wing Johnny Furphy and guard Kam Jones — were second-round picks as the Pacers did not have a first-round pick in either of the past two drafts. They didn't have a single first-round pick on the Summer League roster and their leading 2024-25 scorer on the roster was two-way contract guard Quenton Jackson, who played just one summer game before he was effectively shut down with leg soreness. Accordingly, the Pacers played just one of their five games in Las Vegas' Thomas & Mack Center — which has a much larger seating capacity than Cox Pavilion, the alternative court — and that game didn't happen until Thursday when the much bigger crowds from the first weekend had dispersed. Ultimately, little about how the Pacers will function in 2025-26 with All-Star point guard Tyrese Haliburton injured and stalwart center Myles Turner moved on to Milwaukee was determined in the desert. But that's not to say nothing in Vegas mattered. There were at least a few notable developments that could affect the end of this year's roster and the Pacers' future. They also went 3-2, a good showing for a team that wasn't anywhere near the best in the event. Here are five things we learned about the Pacers in the Summer League: Insider: Ranking Pacers' most important players for 2025-26 Coach Rick Carlisle and the Pacers spent much of this season joking about Johnny Furphy's baby face that makes him look even younger than his 20 years, but they also made a point to note he was progressing quickly and he was tougher than he looks. Furphy didn't get to play much in the way of meaningful minutes outside of November and December when the Pacers were injury riddled and needed wing depth and the season's final two games once they'd clinched home-court advantage in the playoffs' first round. However, the Australian's athleticism and grit flashed and his physical development was clear as the season went on. By the time he went to Vegas, Furphy had put on 20 pounds of muscle according to president of basketball operations Kevin Pritchard. The added confidence that came with a bulked up frame made him more aggressive going to the rim throughout the three games he played. That showed up most in his windmill dunk for the ages in which he posterized Bulls lottery pick Noa Essengue in possibly the most impressive slam of Summer League but he had other dunks and other finishes through contact. Furphy averaged 11.3 points per game and shot 52% from the floor, but that number was lower because he struggled from beyond the arc. He made 10-of-13 2-point shots (76.9%) with most of those coming at the rim. He averaged 4.0 rebounds per game and the Pacers would like to see that number higher, but a number of those were boards he had to fight for. Furphy's 3-point shooting still leaves something to be desired as that was considered a strength when he was drafted and hasn't necessarily been one yet. He made just 3-of-12 3s in Las Vegas (25%) after he made just 15-of-50 (30%) in the regular season. 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RayJ Dennis — who appeared in 11 games with the Pacers last year compared to 36 G League games — started at point guard in four of the Pacers' five Summer League games and the comfort he earned in the Pacers system was evident. With him at the helm, the Pacers' Summer squad functioned very similarly to the regular season and playoff edition. He obviously wasn't dealing with nearly the same level of offensive talent or working against nearly the same level of defensive prowess, but he kicked the ball ahead to keep the Pacers attacking in transition and kept it moving from side to side when they were in the half court. The 6-2, 180-pound right-hander has a tight handle and is seemingly no less comfortable going to his left or passing with his left hand than he is with his right and that's helpful in keeping the ball popping. In four games, Dennis posted 29 assists against 15 turnovers. 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The left-hander from Marquette is a natural scorer with a dizzying array of spin moves and pivots and other methods to get into the paint and score. He can finish at the rim with either hand and he has good touch on floaters and pull-ups. He's streaky as a 3-point shooter, but he does have range well above the 3-point arc. He can occasionally get too focused on finding his own shot, but he did grow a lot as a distributor as a senior at Marquette when he took the point guard job with Tyler Kolek moving onto the NBA. That skill set showed up in Vegas as Jones averaged 13.5 points and 5.2 assists per game in four games. That included a 21-point, 11-assist performance in a win over the Knicks when Dennis was not playing and the Pacers were focused on getting Jones work at the point. He was 21-of-43 from the floor (48.8%) and 6-of-18 from 3-point range (33.3%) meaning he was 15-of-25 (60%) inside the arc. 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Dick Vitale Doesn't Hold Back After WNBA Players' Salary Demand
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Pacers' TJ McConnell Sounds Off About Kyrie Irving
Pacers' TJ McConnell Sounds Off About Kyrie Irving

Newsweek

time8 hours ago

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Pacers' TJ McConnell Sounds Off About Kyrie Irving

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