D1 softball did a great story on the Aggie softball fan seen doing high kicks during the game Monday night.
https://d1softball.com/that-crazy-am-fan-shes-a-survivor/?fbclid=IwZXh0bgNhZW0BMQABHcKmtiojZJ0PYHH5r5r3T3jnnndLeyYrxwH1lSy20Xtqt260V4jT0SUdZg_aem_AdmJwQxOz9XYMunTg7km9Kf01UGgaO0ppDiw9MJNVMD8Um9Bxgfdix54XT_bS5dgZoE
This @AggieSoftball super fan is lit 😂 pic.twitter.com/kKRC2JFalU
— Rhiannon Potkey (@RPotkey) April 16, 2024
Quote:
Revis Ward-Daggett doesn't care how silly she looks. She isn't bothered by what other people might think of her.
After being given only a 1% chance to live a few years ago, Ward-Daggett treats every day as a gift. All she wants to do is have fun and make people smile.
Worth a read. Gig'em and God Bless Ms. Ward-Daggett!Quote:
Ward-Daggett is the aunt of A&M first baseman Trinity Cannon. Although she's always been a supporter of Cannon, she's made a concerted effort to attend as many games as possible this season because it's Cannon's senior year.
Cannon and Ward-Daggett share a special bond that was fortified in 2018 when Ward-Daggett was diagnosed with Stage 4 ovarian cancer. She was given a 3% chance of surviving upon diagnosis, and the odds dropped to 1% two years later.
It took Ward-Daggett "hours and hours" to find a doctor who would take her as a patient, "because who wants a rsum where you know this person is already 11 or 12 steps towards death right?" Ward-Daggett said.
Ward-Daggett chose to get her chemotherapy treatments at Baylor White & Scott Health, a hospital in Dallas that has both clinical and research campuses for the Texas A&M Health Science Center College of Medicine.
https://d1softball.com/that-crazy-am-fan-shes-a-survivor/?fbclid=IwZXh0bgNhZW0BMQABHcKmtiojZJ0PYHH5r5r3T3jnnndLeyYrxwH1lSy20Xtqt260V4jT0SUdZg_aem_AdmJwQxOz9XYMunTg7km9Kf01UGgaO0ppDiw9MJNVMD8Um9Bxgfdix54XT_bS5dgZoE