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Thursday, 26 March 2015
SPORTS
Jonas Gutierrez: I will never forgive Newcastle United for how I was treated during cancer battle
In an honest and open interview, Magpies midfielder speaks as never before about the traumatic last two years of his life
Jonas Gutierrez
insists he has no plans to quit Newcastle - but has never forgiven the
club for the way he was treated during his long battle with cancer.
It’s a remarkable story and, in his own words, the 31-year-old details everything that has happened to him
He said: “It was exactly the last game of the 2013 season. I had a clash with Bacary Sagna, the Arsenal defender.
“From then on I started having pain in a testicle. The doctor said he
couldn’t see anything wrong, that he could see everything was normal
but if I continued to experience discomfort then I should tell him.
“I then went away on holiday, we had a month off work, and the pain
persisted. When I returned from my holiday I mentioned to the doctor
that the pain persisted.
“He said that, well, that I should remain calm, that he couldn’t see
anything weird, but in the following weeks I had considerable swelling,
for which I went back to the doctor.
“I said I could see something wasn’t going well (laughter) and that’s
when he decides to carry out further analysis. So they performed an
ultrasound scan.
“I went home and two or three hours later the club’s doctor called me
and said, ‘loand then I feared
the worst, that something wasn’t going well.
“Then when we go to the specialist. He sat me down along with the
club’s doctor and said, ‘look what you have is a tumour’ and they wanted
to operate on me the next day.
“I never thought it could happen to me, but well, nobody is exempt
from these things. It could happen to anyone, but at the time it was a
shock.
“From then on I had in my head to be able to overcome it and to be OK again and play football again.
“I was operated on in Argentina. They removed the testicle. It was a
seminoma, then they blocked everything so it couldn’t do metastasis
anywhere.
“The post-surgery studies were good and well, I went back to England after being discharged.”
Gutierrez explained: “I returned mid-November and at the beginning to
mid-December the manager said I should find myself another club, that
it was best... er, I understand a lot of things about football that,
well, that for the directors it is a business, no?
“It is clear that they look after the club’s interests, but I think
in a situation like that, you need to save (consider) other things, even
more if you see I had been playing for five years before having this
problem, I was always playing.”
Gutierrez was loaned to Norwich City
during this time, but he picked up an injury after only four games and
then former United boss Chris Hughton, a great supporter of the
Argentinian, was sacked by the Canaries.
So the player returned to Newcastle where he had a contract until
2015, which included a clause of automatic renewal according to the
number of games played.
And this is where more problems arose with Newcastle.
Gutierrez said: “I won’t be able to forgive the way I’ve been treated, no?
“Because I understood the team at that time (wasn’t doing so well?) that one needed to fight to return to the pitch.
“Well I don’t think it was the right time nor the circumstances and I
think at times like that, you should look after the individual, the
player.”
It is believed at this time that Newcastle did not pay for their player’s medical expenses.
Gutierrez added: “I never asked for anything. I paid for it because
for me, the most important thing, as I told you, was my health.
“If they thought it was OK to do it that way, then it’s OK. I never asked for anything and that’s it. I wasn’t interested.”
Then he began a road to recovery, a long road at that, but one which
ended up with him running a marathon and then eventually playing
football again.
However, there was still a lot for him to go through before he could even think about any of that, as he emotionally explained.
Gutierrez said: “The first control I had after the surgery, it showed
like a metastasis in the suprarenal gland. It was difficult to be told
you had to have a chemotherapy treatment, when you don’t even have much
information about what the treatment really was.
“It’s a word that every time you hear it you are scared, without
doubt it was very hard to subject myself to a treatment like
chemotherapy, that it’s a treatment that precisely tries to fight
whatever is wrong in the body
It is clear it’s an empty feeling but it fights whatever one has
wrong and tries to take it out, so the best thing to do was to undergo
the treatment as quickly as possible and to remain positive to get
through it.
“From the first moment from the surgery I remained positive and always trying to look ahead.
“My friends and my family, it probably was harder because, well, they
had to support me during a time like that, sometimes with chemo you are
very down, you go down .
“Then for those who support you, it is also very difficult to know how to act at certain times.
“Then well, not even to mention my girlfriend, this happened very
early in our relationship, we were only starting to know each other and
she was next to me like a lioness, like a warrior, and was next to me at
all times
As we all know, this has a happy ending.
He said: “The people from Newcastle, the fans have behaved amazingly.
“When I go around the city they congratulate me and say I’m looking very well.
“Very emotive words that make you very proud when you hear them.
People have been so concerned for me and they’ve sent me those messages.
“I enjoy every day, my training, to share with my colleagues, to get
better every day and after a treatment like this the first days were
difficult but after the body takes everything better, it has memory and
you start feeling every time better.
“Every player with an injury feels this.”
Despite his problems with the club, and he clearly remains bitter,
Gutierrez wants at least one more year playing in the famous black and
white jersey.
He said: “I know the situation here (at Newcastle) isn’t the easiest
but I’m going to fight to remain here. Time will tell, what I can do and
it’s in my control is to leave everything, to give the best of me and
see how far I can get.
“Without doubt one, after a problem like I had, sees things from a different perspective and the order of priorities changes.
“But it’s also difficult to get other people to understand because
for everyone their own troubles are more important, aren’t they?
“I think the most important thing is health. Health and happiness.
Sometimes we get into a lot of trouble for things that really aren’t
significant."
Gutierrez has emerged from this a real hero. Not for just surviving,
but the way he has conducted himself. The guy is a true role model.
Not that he wants to be seen as any different.
Gutierrez said: “I always say this when people say I’m an example, I say that I shouldn’t be taken for example, I don’t like it.
“I’d like to leave maybe my experience, what I lived and how I lived it.
“To be an example (role model) is for others that are real role models in life.
“I’d like to show that in the same way I overcame this problem I wish
I could help many people to see this illness in a different way.
“Nowadays science has also moved forward a lot. Not every cancer is the same.
“There are all sorts of different ones, but it is clear that it is
very important to prevent it, to attend your control meetings and if you
have to go through a situation like this, to have faith on anything, to
surround yourself with the people you love and always look ahead.”
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