From her daughter's golf, an ill mother's
dream
is realized
Sports Illustrated.com
Apr. 2006
She wants to live in a New York apartment when she heads
to college in five years. She'll be a bass guitar player by
then. Maybe even a champion figure skater, too.
Barring a miracle, her cancer-ridden mother won't be around
to see her daughter - one of the country's top golfers her
age - realize any of those dreams. But mother and daughter
will get to share another one real soon.
"This isn't about golf,'' Dakoda says. "This is
about my mom, and her getting to see me play.''
Kelly Jo Dowd's wish - perhaps her dying one - is to see
her little girl compete against the world's best. So Dakoda,
a winner of countless junior events, will tee it up in the
LPGA's Ginn
Open near Orlando on April 27-30, after the Ginn Resorts
heard of the family's plight and extended the invitation.
"It will mean everything to me,'' says Kelly Jo, who
is fighting cancer for the second time in four years.It's
obviously a dream come true. There's no other way to put it.
I'm going to take that day as one of the most special days
in my whole entire life. This is a chance for me to do what
I want to do.''
What she wants to do is this: Let women know she has terminal
bone and liver cancer - and, realistically, only months to
live - because she didn't heed the warning signs. She ignored
a lump and waited months to get checked.
And through Dakoda's golf, the family hopes to get that message
out to the masses, in part from the hubbub generated by the
girl's appearance in the LPGA event.v But this is no publicity
stunt. She can play.
"She's got talent,'' says Annika Sorenstam, one of Dakoda's
idols and the women's top-ranked player who met her earlier
this month and watched her swing. "She can really hit
the ball. She's got a great head on her shoulders. She's really
strong and her attitude is really something great.''
The story really begins about five years ago.
Dakoda was 8 and already earning national acclaim for her
golf potential, becoming the subject of magazine articles
that are framed and displayed in the living room of the family's
tiny condo in a Tampa suburb.
It was December 2001, and Kelly Jo - a former Hooters
calendar cover girl who worked her way out of the orange waitress
shorts and into the company's management team - noticed a
lump in her breast.
She was 36 years old. Ten months later, she was diagnosed
with breast cancer.
"I'm not supposed to get this disease,'' Kelly Jo says.
"I'm not obese. I don't smoke. I drink, but not nearly
like I used to. There wasn't breast cancer in my family. I'm
not a statistic. But I got it.''
The first fight seemed won - until last May, when doctors
found the cancer was back and worse than ever, now in her
hip bone, her liver and nearing her spine. This time, Kelly
Jo vows to fight harder; she started another round of chemotherapy
April 6.
"When we had the opportunity to give Dakoda an exemption,
I really didn't think about it,'' says Bobby Ginn, the CEO
of Ginn Clubs and Resorts. "The strength they have individually
and collectively is just unbelievable. I don't know if I could
stand up to the pressure they're feeling right now.''
Kelly Jo met Mike Dowd in the mid-1980s at the Hooters restaurant
where she worked. They'd strike up the occasional conversation,
and eventually started dating. Eleven weeks later, they were
married, and 5 1/2 years after that, they had a daughter to
whom they gave a unique name. Mike had two older daughters
from a previous marriage, both of whom have names that begin
with 'K.' He wanted to keep that trend going, but Kelly Jo
preferred the name "Dakota.'' Eventually, they agreed
on "Dakoda,'' which Mike shortened to "Koda.''
"Got my 'K' in there,'' he says.
She started golfing at 4, and made her first birdie before
she turned 7. She's shot 70 from the men's tees and would
be in the mid-60s if she played from shorter ones, her father
says. She hits her driver long and true, and is confident
enough to have photographers stand 30 yards in front of her
while she swings.
"I won't hit you,'' she calls out.
Sure enough, the photographer is unharmed, although Dakoda
giggles when one ball whizzes a little closer to his head
than he'd like.
"This family is almost like the perfect storm in this,''
says Hooters co-founder Ed Droste, whose chain has raised
more than $56,000 for the Dowd family and their medical expenses.
"Kelly Jo and Mike just want to tell it like it is for
women. And Dakoda is the blend of these two great people.
I just dread when it's down to being two of them, because
the three of them together are so great.''
Golf, Dakoda says, is a release from the reality of her family's
situation - even though the reminders are everywhere when
she plays. There's a pink breast cancer ribbon embroidered
on her bag, and her mother's initials "KJ'' are embossed
in pink letters on her irons and putter cover.
Her father wears the initials, too. On his right wrist is
a tattoo with the initials "KJD'' with two ribbons for
his wife, and "DFD'' with a cross for his daughter. The
'F' stands for Flowie, Dakoda's middle name and the name of
a sister Mike Dowd lost to ovarian cancer in 1991.
"I want it to be at the forefront of my life for the
rest of my life,'' says Mike, a counselor in the Pinellas
County school system. "This whole process has been one
horrible thing and 100 great things. It's tragedy and triumph.
Every day, people treat my wife the way God wanted us to all
treat each other. How many of us get that opportunity?''
Now that they're down to one income, the family sold its
home and moved into a 600-foot condo at the Westin Innisbrook
resort, site of the PGA Tour's Chrysler
Classic and where Hooters arranged for Dakoda - who sleeps
in the living room - to play golf whenever she wants.
"The only thing I really, really want is for my mom
to be better,'' Dakoda says. "And my own room.''
They are, by all accounts, a regular family. They eat at
Whataburger, McDonald's and Olive Garden. They just have a
girl who hits a golf ball better than most people, and a mother
who's sicker than most.
With her dream about to come true, one of Kelly Jo's outlets
these days is trying to raise money for groups such as Making
Memories, which grants wishes to people diagnosed with
terminal breast cancer. She and Dakoda also schedule mother-daughter
days, so both can get their shopping fix.
Most importantly, though, the family just wants to be together,
for whatever time they have left.
"Anything special that Dakoda does that I'm able to
be here to see is the next special thing for us,'' Kelly Jo
says. "It could be a tournament she wins. A day of shopping.
Going to a concert together. Whatever comes next is what's
special. The bottom line is it'll be her and me together,
at least a little while longer.''
|