Chicago White Sox Pitcher Danny Farquhar Wants To Play Again, Despite Suffering Brain Hemorrhage

(ABC NEWS)- Chicago White Sox pitcher Danny Farquhar is lucky to be alive after suffering a brain hemorrhage caused by a ruptured aneurysm, and now, the dedicated player is focusing on getting his career back on track.

On April 21, the 31-year-old had just finished pitching at Chicago’s Guaranteed Rate Field against the Houston Astros when he entered the dugout and told the trainer that he had head pains, he told ABC News.

Then, he passed out and “immediately started vomiting,” he said.

The trainer then got him into the ambulance and to the hospital within about 15 minutes, before his wife, Lexie Farquhar, was even able to get down from the suite where she was watching the game, she said.

Lexie, 30, was in the suite celebrating the birthday of a team member’s wife when she received a call from her mother-in-law. At that point, “they didn’t really know what had happened,” and she gathered her three children — one of whom was in the stadium’s daycare center — and rushed to the hospital.

 

Doctors waited for Danny Farquhar to stabilize through the night, and he underwent two surgeries the next day, which involved fracturing his skull and placing two drains to alleviate the pressure of the fluid that was building up on his brain.

He now has a scar on the left side of his face, starting at the middle of his hairline and going down past his ear, and a numbness throughout his whole head that doctors say may never go away.

Despite his dire condition, there wasn’t a moment when Lexie Farquhar thought her husband wouldn’t pull through. The couple has been together for more than 15 years, she said.

“But, I did know that it was gonna be unlike anything we’ve ever experienced before,” she said. “That it was gonna be something that was gonna take everything we had emotionally and physically, but that he was gonna be OK.”

 

Danny Farquhar remembers nothing from that day, something his wife is grateful for.

“I don’t really want him to really remember the first parts of it,” she said. “So, he gets a pass on that one.”

Lexie Farquhar said doctors warned her that her husband’s loss of memory was going to “be the burden” for her and her family. Danny experienced his first memory about four of five days after he got out of surgery, but it’s still “spotty here and there,” he said.

Before that day, he said he had not been exhibiting any symptoms. He spent 17 days in the ICU after the surgeries.

Danny Farquhar has been told by doctors that he’s a walking miracle, especially for how functional he is after suffering such a major medical emergency, he said.

Doctors told him that about 40 percent of people who experience ruptured brain aneurysms die, and about 60 percent of the ones who survive do so with severe disabilities.

 

When asked if he’ll be back in the game for opening day in 2019, the pitcher said he’s been joking with his wife that he hopes to be back for winter ball in the offseason.

“It didn’t go over well,” he said, laughing.

Danny Farquhar said that, even with 28 staples and a drain coming out of his head, he figured he would be ready as soon as he got out of the hospital.

“To be honest with you, I was shocked that they put me on the 60 days” of low activity, he said.

Lexie Farquhar described her husband as an “outside dog” who “does not like to stay home,” but said he’s been honest and accepting of his current physical limitations.

“He’s been true to himself and how his body feels,” she said. “He understands that a setback in this will mean a lot more. You can’t just push through the pain.”

Danny Farquhar said he’s humbled by the whole experience, adding that he’s “thankful” to be on the “good end of it.”

“The positives are just the outlook on my life and children — you know, how lucky I am to be here,” he said.

 

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