A fight for sight
Weber State back hoping for 'miracle' cure for daughter
He's brash, head-strong and as confident as anyone you'll find on a football field.
Put his infant daughter in his arms, though, and Trevyn Smith becomes a much different person. He's a doting father who talks about how having a child has changed him and made him grow up after being a self-described party animal at college.
It's not surprising, then, to learn Smith will stop at nothing to fight for his daughter's sight.
"I'll do whatever it takes," Smith said. "It doesn't matter to me. I'm willing to do it for her."
Ryan Rae Smith, less than a year old, was born with a rare condition that affected the development of her optic nerves. Her vision is limited to only blurs seen when within a few inches of her face.
Local doctors the Smith family have seen tell them there is little that can be done.
Still, Smith and his wife, Erica, searched for options. Not wanting to accept that there was nothing available to help prevent their newborn from losing all eyesight, they are planning a trip to China for what might best be described as experimental stem-cell treatment to help Ryan Rae see.
"I'm not worried about it in the least bit," Trevyn said. "It's worth whatever risks there might be."
Those risks involve using a medical procedure not approved in the United States. One that despite doubts expressed by many in the medical community locally, Smith says is "two steps ahead" of what is available here.
"All the research I've done tells me they are performing miracles over there," he said. "I don't know how they can judge something they can't even step into. I don't see what's wrong with trying."
And so try is what the Smiths will do.
With a price tag exceeding $60,000 and Smith restricted by NCAA rules regarding when he is allowed to even have a job, the WSU Wildcat junior and former Springville High standout is getting help from family and friends. Fundraising golf tournaments are being held with the entry fee set at $500 per four-person team. Harry O's in Park City is hosting a fundraiser. An anonymous person has pledged to match funds raised.
Slowly but surely kind of like the yardage Smith accumulates in football games the money to pay for the trip and the medical treatment is being raised.
Erica Smith, five months pregnant with their second child, has her passport prepared and is waiting for the call. Because Trevyn is working and will soon begin school and football practice again, he is not expecting to make the trip to China with his wife.
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