Team
Hoyt consists of 66‑year‑old
Dick Hoyt and 44‑year‑old
son Rick, and together they compete
in marathons and triathlons across America.
This would not be remarkable, except
for Rick having cerebral palsy and being
unable to walk.
“When
Rick was being born in 1962, the umbilical
cord was twisted around his neck,” said
Dick Hoyt in a telephone interview from
his Massachusetts home. “It took minutes
before the doctors could untangle it.
(The lack of oxygen) caused brain damage.”
The
United Cerebral Palsy Web site claims
an estimated 764,000 Americans have
cerebral palsy, which almost always
occurs in a child before, during, or
shortly after
birth. Cerebral palsy affects the brain’s
ability to control muscle movement,
but usually it doesn’t affect intelligence.
“Our
doctors said Rick should be placed in
an institution because he would be nothing
more than a vegetable his entire life,”
said Hoyt. “On the way home from the
doctors, my wife and I cried and talked,
and decided we wouldn’t put Rick away
in an institution. Instead, we took
him home to raise him like any other
child. And we tried proving the doctors
wrong.”
Rick
couldn’t talk or use his arms or legs.
And he still can’t at age 44. Yet he
has graduated from public high school,
and Boston University, and now lives
by himself in an apartment.
“We
knew he was smart,” said Hoyt. “When
we talked to him he looked right in
our eyes. We tried getting him into
public school, but they turned us down,
saying that Rick couldn’t understand
anything said.”
In
1974, the Hoyts met with Tufts University
engineers, who agreed to build an interactive
communicator through which Rick could
“talk” to others.
So
what were his first words at age 12?
“We
thought they’d be ‘mom’ or ‘dad,’” said
Hoyt. “Back then the Boston Bruins were
going for (ice hockey’s) Stanley Cup.
His first words were ‘Go Bruins!’ He’d
been following their progress all along.”
Next
column learn how Dick and Rick have
completed almost 1,000 athletic events
together, including 25 Boston Marathons.