Gary Lineker opens up on heartache of his son George’s leukaemia battle at eight weeks old

‘They came to us with a 10% to 20% survival rate’: Gary Lineker opens up on heartache of his son George’s leukaemia battle at eight weeks old… and how football was his only ‘escape’ from ‘tiny coffin’ nightmares

  • Gary Lineker has lifted the lid on son George’s leukaemia battle at eight weeks
  • He was given a ’10 to 20 per cent’ survival rate but got through it and is now 30
  • Lineker explains about his recurring nightmares and how football was his solace
  • Gary and his eldest son are regularly pictured together now on social media 

England legend and Match of the Day host Gary Lineker has lifted the lid on the heartbreaking moment he was told his son George had hours to live after being diagnosed with leukaemia at just eight weeks old.

Lineker, 61, is one of the most famous names in English footballing history, but he has rarely spoken out about his son George’s seven-month stay in hospital as a baby.

Now 30, George was diagnosed with acute myeloid leukaemia just two months after his birth, with father Gary told on a number of occasions that his son wouldn’t make it through the night.   

Speaking exclusively to The Athletic’s new ‘The Moment’ podcast with Kelly Cates and Geoff Thomas, Lineker explains his feelings on the first night at Great Ormond Street Hospital in London back in 1991.

‘I’ll never forget that first night,’ he begins. ‘I was with Michelle [Cockayne, George’s mother] and they did all these tests and stuff. At the end of the night they gave us some sort of evaluation of prospects and they said it’s not good. They came to us with a somewhere between 10%- 20% survival rate with this thing at this age. 

Gary Lineker opens up on heartache of his son George’s leukaemia battle at eight weeks old

Gary Lineker (centre) has opened up about his son George’s battle with leukaemia as a baby

Lineker poses holding his son George after he had fully recovered from his battle as a baby

The pair are now regularly pictured together at events, and George recently turned 30

Lineker explains his heartache at the time back in 1991 – but George is now 30 and healthy

‘It was such a difficult time because we were being told that it would be incredibly difficult for him to make it through the night. They said they’ve got to start chemotherapy immediately because the leukaemia is in such a state. 

‘So the first thing they told us was “we’ve got to try and get him over the next two or three days and then we’ll evaluate. So it was pretty grim. Pretty grim.”‘

Lineker was playing for Tottenham at the time, and was one of the most famous footballers in the world having left Barcelona in 1989.

He was also a mainstay in the England team, but football was far from the front of his mind as he cared for his first-born son at the start of the 1990s. 

‘I wanted it to be me that had it [Leukaemia],’ he continues. ‘I didn’t want it to be my little kid. But whilst there was hope that he’d get better, I was alright. 

‘I used to have this recurring dream, and I’d had it for quite some time even after he finished treatment, of carrying a tiny little white coffin. It’s horrible. 

Lineker explained that the diagnosis was not good on a podcast with Kelly Cates (left) and Crystal Palace legend Geoff Thomas (right), who has also battled leukaemia

Lineker explained that the diagnosis was not good on a podcast with Kelly Cates (left) and Crystal Palace legend Geoff Thomas (right), who has also battled leukaemia

TV host Gary (left) poses with George at the latter's 30th birthday party in London recently

TV host Gary (left) poses with George at the latter’s 30th birthday party in London recently

Gary (centre) poses with his then-girlfriend, now ex-wife Danielle and son George in 2008

Gary (centre) poses with his then-girlfriend, now ex-wife Danielle and son George in 2008

‘It woke me up so many times, but actually living through it even when you’re in hospital, there were good moments as well and bad moments. There were ups and downs.’

That said, Gary explains that football was a solace for him at the time, with training and matches the only time he was able to stop thinking about the hospital.

‘Football was the only time I could almost get it out of my mind,’ he explains. ‘I had three weeks without training and then I said ‘”Right, Terry [Venables, then-Tottenham manager], can I come in’” because I needed it for me, in a way. 

‘There’s a little bit of an escape from a whole day in the hospital ward looking for the worst signs or sometimes looking for good signs or whatever it was.’

George is now healthy and has just turned 30, with the pair regularly pictured together on social media. 

WHAT IS LEUKAEMIA?

Leukaemia is a cancer that starts in blood-forming tissue, usually the bone marrow.

It leads to the over-production of abnormal white blood cells, which fight off infections. 

But a higher number of white blood cells means there is ‘less room’ for other cells, including red blood cells – which transport oxygen around the body – and platelets – which cause blood to clot when the skin is cut.

There are many different types of leukaemia, which are defined according to the immune cells they affect and how the disease progresses.

For all types combined, 9,900 people in the UK were diagnosed with leukaemia in 2015, Cancer Research UK statistics reveal.

And in the US, around 60,300 people were told they had the disease last year, according to the National Cancer Institute. 

Most cases have no obvious cause, with the cancer not being contagious or inherited.

Leukaemia generally becomes more common with age – the exception being acute lymphoblastic leukemia, which peaks in children.

Other risk factors include being male, exposed to certain chemicals or radiation, and some bone-marrow disorders.

Symptoms are generally vague and get worse over time.

These can include:

  • Tiredness
  • Frequent infections
  • Sweats
  • Bruising
  • Heavy periods, nose bleeds or bleeding gums
  • Palpitations 
  • Shortness of breath

Acute leukaemia – which progresses rapidly and aggressively – is often curable via chemo, radiotherapy or a stem cell transplant.

Chronic forms of the disease – which typically progress slowly – tend to incurable, however, these patients can often live with the disease. 

Source: Leukaemia Care

Listen and subscribe to The Athletic’s The Moment podcast, including the first episode with Gary Lineker, here 

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