
CalHOPE Courage Award winners Bermudez, Wang overcame physical and mental health challenges
Associated Press
Will Bermudez was simply trying to chase down a pop fly when his life changed forever.
In May 2019, the 17-year-old Air Force baseball commit collided with a teammate during a travel baseball game. The collision left Bermudez temporarily paralyzed from the waist down. He also temporarily lost five years of memory due to a traumatic brain injury.
Bermudez suffered his first epileptic seizure two months after the injury and was ultimately diagnosed with myoclonic juvenile epilepsy. The Air Force rescinded its offer for him to play baseball there as a result.
'Going to the Air Force Academy, I wanted to be an aeronautical engineer. I wanted to build aircraft and then be able to fly the jets,' Bermudez said. 'But after my injury, math and chemistry and that stuff just didn't click how it used to before.'
A difficult path forward awaited Bermudez, but his comeback culminated in a return to the diamond.
Bermudez, now a redshirt senior at UC Irvine, and Mya Wang, a junior at Cal, have been selected as the recipients of the 2024-25 CalHOPE Courage Award. Wang will be presented her award Wednesday before the San Francisco Giants' game against the Kansas City Royals as part of Mental Health Awareness Month. Bermudez will receive his trophy during baseball practice this week.
Presented monthly since February 2022, the CalHOPE Courage Award honors student-athletes at California colleges and universities who have overcome stress, anxiety, and mental trauma associated with personal hardships and adversity. Wang and Bermudez were selected from the 14 student-athletes who were honored throughout the year as those whose journeys best represent the spirit of the award.
Bermudez engaged in extensive rehabilitation, as well as developed coping skills through mental health counseling.
Steadily, Bermudez improved. He first enrolled at UC Davis as a student, and then transferred to Mount San Antonio College to give baseball another crack.
Bermudez impressed on the diamond and got on the radar of UC Irvine's coaching staff. He transferred there in 2023, and became a starter at second base.
'I have a different gratitude towards the sport and towards life in general,' Bermudez said. 'There was a time where I thought I was never going to be able to walk again.'
Bermudez is now majoring in psychology with a minor in sociology thanks to his personal experiences and is dedicated to helping people struggling with mental health challenges.
Wang faced her own challenges when she was just two weeks away from graduation from University High School in Irvine. She was diagnosed with thyroid cancer.
'I felt very blindsided by it,' Wang said. 'Hearing the words, the doctor telling me I have cancer — mentally, I don't think I processed it fast because I just never expected to hear those words.'
After her diagnosis, Wang faced a tumultuous two-year journey that included a pair of surgeries and much time spent soul-searching and learning mental coping skills.
Wang withdrew from the lacrosse team as a freshman at Cal to focus on her healing and carve a path forward. There were times she wondered if she would ever come back to the sport and instead quit lacrosse.
Yet Wang persisted. After recovering from her first surgery, Wang played for team Hong Kong at the 2022 World Championships, which reignited her drive to return to Cal's team.
'I was like, 'This is a commitment I made. I'm going to follow through on it and see how I feel,'' Wang said of the 2022 championships. 'And that was a big turning point for me. That in combination with reading all those self-help books and building upon my mental health.'
Unfortunately for Wang, she required a second surgery.
This time, though, she was much better prepared because of the coping mechanisms she had already developed. Wang ultimately returned to the Cal lacrosse team in 2023.
Though Wang has since called it quits on her college lacrosse career, she couldn't be more proud of her comeback.
'It made me realize I don't have to give up,' Wang said. 'I still have so much ahead of me. Just because I had something happen to me doesn't mean I need to give up all my goals. If anything, it's more motivation to prove that I still have the ability to do that, even if something challenging happens to me."
recommended
in this topic
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Fox Sports
37 minutes ago
- Fox Sports
Guardians' ace Bieber will not throw for 7 days after setback in comeback from Tommy John surgery
Associated Press CLEVELAND (AP) — Guardians ace Shane Bieber will not throw for seven days and will have his right elbow rechecked next week after experiencing soreness during a bullpen session on Tuesday. Bieber met with team doctors and consulted with specialist Dr. Keith Meister on Friday. The right-hander was scheduled to make his second rehab start with Double-A Akron on Friday before the setback. The seven-day shutdown started on Wednesday. He will be rechecked on June 13 before deciding the next steps. Experiencing soreness during rehab is not uncommon. Bieber underwent Tommy John surgery on his right elbow in April 2024. He began his rehab Saturday by throwing 2 1/3 scoreless innings in an Arizona Complex League game on his 30th birthday. The 2020 American League Cy Young Award winner faced nine batters, allowed one hit and struck out five. Bieber pitched 12 scoreless innings in two starts last season, was limited to 21 starts in 2023 due to elbow issues and 16 starts in 2021 because of a shoulder strain. He agreed to a one-year, $14 million contract last fall with a $16 million player option for 2026. Bieber is 62-32 with a 3.22 ERA in 136 appearances since debuting with the Guardians in 2018, when he was 11-5 with a 4.55 ERA. ___ AP baseball: recommended in this topic


Fox Sports
an hour ago
- Fox Sports
Nosek handles the guilt of his costly Game 1 penalty with a little help from his Panthers teammates
Associated Press EDMONTON, Alberta (AP) — Tomas Nosek had been dealing with the guilt of his puck-over-the-glass penalty ever since the Florida Panthers lost Game 1 of the Stanley Cup Final on the ensuing power-play goal by Leon Draisaitl. He's not sure how long it took to get over it. 'It was tough,' Nosek said Friday after an optional morning skate. 'You don't want to be the one guy who costs us the game. But obviously everybody can make a mistake. It happened in a bad time in overtime, and it cost us the game. But it's in the past, and now we're looking forward to just keep doing my job.' Nosek gets to keep doing his job. Coach Paul Maurice said he was not making any lineup changes for Game 2 against the Edmonton Oilers. That means A.J. Greer remains out with an undisclosed injury, though Maurice said the fourth-liner is on track for Game 3 on Monday in Sunrise. The penalty 18 minutes into overtime came when Edmonton's Jake Walman was pressuring Nosek in Florida's defensive zone. Power plays are rare in OT in the playoffs with officials careful about not wanting to have too big an influence on the outcome, but sending the puck over the glass is an automatic call. 'Everybody's making mistakes," Nosek said. "I think it's a part of the game. It's a sport, and you just focus on the next game and preparing yourself for it like every other game.' Nosek, one of several newcomers who weren't around last year when the Panthers won the Cup, is in his second final after helping Vegas get there in 2018. He said teammates have been good about encouraging and supporting him since the costly penalty. "They've been really helpful," Nosek said. "The guys came to me and said, 'Don't worry about it.' It's good.' Linemate Jonah Gadjovich, who reported feeling great after missing some time in Game 1 because of injury, said Nosek shouldn't feel bad about the mistake. 'It happens," Gadjovich said. 'Tough bounce, but he does so many good things for us, no one's mad at him, no one's anything. It's just stuff like that happens in a game.' Coy McDavid Connor McDavid made a pass befitting his status as the best hockey player on the planet to set up the Oilers' tying goal in Game 1, with Mattias Ekholm scoring it. Asked Friday whether the pass from behind the net was intended for Ekholm or winger Evander Kane, he was unwilling to share that information. 'I won't say," McDavid responded. "All that matters is it ended up where it needed to be, and we scored.' McDavid also assisted on Draisaitl's overtime goal, his playoff-leading 28th point in 17 games during this run. Coaching carousel Florida coach Paul Maurice said earlier this week he roots for three teams when he's watching games around the NHL: Vancouver for Jim Rutherford, Winnipeg because he was there for so long and loves the organization and the market, and Dallas for close friend Peter DeBoer. The Stars are probably off that list now after firing DeBoer on Friday following a third consecutive loss in the Western Conference final and comments made about the decision to pull franchise goaltender Jake Oettinger in the decisive Game 5 loss. 'He'll be all right," Maurice said. "He's a good coach. I think you get elite teams, you've got to push them real hard to get to where they get to, and then at some point you need a summer off, pick your spot. He's going to be OK.' DeBoer's dismissal opens a job a day after Boston hired Marco Sturm to fill its vacancy, the last one left in the league. On Wednesday, Pittsburgh went with a little bit of a surprise hiring longtime assistant Dan Muse. Ekholm, who played in Nashville when Muse was on staff there, is interested to see how it goes for a 'super serious guy' with a new school approach. 'I think he's got all the right tools to be a successful coach,' Ekholm said. "It's different to be an assistant than a head coach, so he's got some things to prove but good for him to get an opportunity.' ___ AP NHL playoffs: and recommended


Fox Sports
2 hours ago
- Fox Sports
Hilary Knight eager to introduce PWHL and women's hockey to her new team in Seattle
Associated Press As Hilary Knight winds down her international career, the four-time Olympian and long-time face of U.S. women's hockey is hardly done making inroads in her sport. Next up for the 35-year-old during a trailblazing career — in which she stood up to USA Hockey in demanding better wages and helped found the PWHL — is introducing the women's game to a new frontier as part of the league's expansion into the Pacific Northwest. 'Yeah, I guess it's sort of how my career's gone. I'm more of a builder in many ways,' Knight said with a laugh on Friday, two days after becoming the first player agreeing to sign with the PWHL's new team in Seattle. 'Ecstatic. It's an incredible honor to be part of this group and to have this opportunity. I think it's pivotal, it's important,' added the PWHL MVP finalist. 'And to have a hand in that at the ground level is an extreme honor.' And don't be fooled by Knight agreeing to sign a one-year deal. Though she's already announced the 2026 Winter Games will be her fifth and final Olympics, Knight said she is committed to continuing her pro career in Seattle beyond the PWHL's third season. 'The term doesn't really reflect my commitment or my promise to what we want to build and be a part of in the city of Seattle,' she said. The additions of Seattle and Vancouver grow the league to eight teams, and expands the PWHL's reach fully across the continent. In switching coasts, Knight bids farewell to her longtime ties to Boston, which go well beyond the two years she spent serving as captain of the PWHL Fleet. Before her college days at Wisconsin, Knight attended a prep school in New England, and later spent six years playing in Boston for its CWHL and NWHL franchises. Seattle brings Knight much closer to her offseason home in Sun Valley, Idaho, and to where she's enjoyed several fond memories. The foremost came in 2022, when she was wowed by the 14,551 fans inside the NHL Kraken's arena for a U.S.-Canada Rivalry Series game. And she was back in the same arena in January with 12,608 fans on hand to watch Boston play Montreal to open the PWHL's nine-game neutral-site Takeover Tour series. 'When the league announced that Seattle was gonna be an expansion franchise, I was like, 'Oh, my gosh, whoever has an opportunity to get out there, it's just going to be an amazing setup and wonderful fan base,'' Knight said. 'I think things aligned for me personally in the right way. And I cannot wait for puck drop.' Knight is coming off a stellar season in which her 29 points (15 goals, 14 assists) were tied for the league lead with New York rookie Sarah Fillier. She also captained the U.S. to win its 11th gold medal and her 10th at the women's world championships in April. Knight will already have some familiar faces joining her in Seattle, following the signings of U.S. national team members Cayla Barnes and Alex Carpenter. The 31-year-old Carpenter became the latest addition in agreeing to a one-year contract on Friday. She spent her first two seasons in New York and ranks third on the PWHL career list with 43 points (19 goals, 24 assists) in 50 games. Carpenter fills Seattle's fourth of a maximum five signing spots, rounded out by Ottawa forward Danielle Serdachny. Vancouver, meantime, has already signed five players. The signing period runs through Sunday followed by both teams filling out their rosters to 12 players in the expansion draft on Monday. All eight teams will then take part in the PWHL draft on June 24. Knight reflected on how upon finishing college in 2012 there were few options for women to continue pursing hockey careers outside of their respective national teams. The CWHL didn't pay its players salaries, while the NWHL did but endured several hiccups and was eventually bought out to establish the PWHL in 2023. 'We all wanted this 20, 30, 100 years ago,' Knight said of the PWHL. 'I'm just so grateful for all the people that came before us to be able to have this league,' she added. 'I think we're in really good hands with where we started Year 1 and where we're going. And what an amazing hit out of the park to be able to expand in Year 3.' ___ AP women's hockey: recommended