Quarterback Landon Pierce and wide receiver Jamal Ortiz were volunteering at a children’s hospital during the off-season. They organized a mini “team huddle” for kids who loved football but were too sick to attend games.
During the huddle, Jamal handed a game-worn helmet to 9-year-old Emily, who had been in and out of chemotherapy. She hugged it tightly, whispering, “Now I feel like part of the team.” Weeks later, Landon received a package in the mail — inside was a tiny signed jersey and a note: “Emily wanted you to know she scored a touchdown in her dreams last night.” Nobody had expected the connection to be real.
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The children’s hospital smelled like antiseptic and crayons, the way only places full of small brave hearts can.
It was late June, the kind of sticky afternoon when the whole world is on vacation except the kids stuck behind these pastel walls.
Landon Pierce and Jamal Ortiz had come without cameras, without handlers; just two grown men in team T-shirts carrying bags of stickers, wristbands, and one game-worn helmet that still smelled faintly of grass and sweat. They had done visits like this before, but something about the seventh-floor oncology wing always made the jokes die in their throats.
They gathered eight kids in the playroom, some in wheelchairs, some bald and beautiful, all wearing paper wristbands instead of the silicone ones the players handed out at training camp. The nurses pushed the IV poles to the edge of the circle like silent goalposts.
Landon crouched so he was eye-level with everyone.
“Alright, team,” he said, voice soft, “this is the huddle. No playbooks, no X’s and O’s. Just us.”
Jamal grinned the grin that sold a million jerseys and knelt beside a tiny girl with a purple bandana and the biggest brown eyes either man had ever seen. Her name tag read EMILY – 9. She was clutching a stuffed tiger like it was the only thing keeping gravity working.
Jamal set the helmet in her lap. It was comically large, the same one he’d worn the night he torched the league for 212 yards and three scores. The face mask still had a scuff from the Thursday night game in November.
“This one’s yours now, Captain,” he told her.
Emily’s mouth fell open. She ran one small finger over the team logo like she was checking it was real. Then she pulled the helmet against her chest the way other kids hold teddy bears.
“Now I feel like part of the team,” she whispered, so quietly only Jamal and Landon heard.
Landon felt his throat close. Jamal’s eyes glistened, but he covered it with a wink.
They ran “plays” for twenty minutes: Landon calling imaginary cadences, kids shouting hike, everyone collapsing in giggles when Jamal pretended to get tackled by a four-year-old with a plastic lightsaber. When it was time to go, Emily refused to give the helmet back. The nurses said it was fine; they’d figure out a pillowcase or something.
Landon ruffled her bandana. “See you at the Super Bowl, Em.”
She gave him the fiercest nod a nine-year-old on chemo can manage.
They left thinking that was the end of it, the best kind of off-season afternoon.
Six weeks later, training camp was a furnace and Landon was icing his shoulder in the quarterback room when the mail guy dropped a small brown package on the table. No return address, just his name written in careful purple marker.
Inside was a child-size jersey, number 11, the one the team gives to Make-A-Wish kids. Across the shoulders someone had written in glitter glue: EMILY’S TEAM.
Tucked in the folds was a single sheet of hospital stationery.
Dear Landon & Jamal,
Emily wanted you to have this.
She said to tell you she scored a touchdown in her dreams last night.
She ran a go route against Cancer and stiff-armed him at the 5.
Then she spiked the ball so hard the chemo ran away scared.
She’s really tired today, but she keeps the helmet on the bed and smiles every time the doctors come in.
Thank you for making her feel like she belonged on the field with you.
She says when she grows up she’s going to catch passes from both of you.
Love,
Nurse Sarah (and Captain Emily)
Landon read it three times before the words blurred.
He walked straight to Jamal’s locker without saying a word and handed him the note.
Jamal’s hands started shaking halfway through. When he finished, he looked up at the ceiling like he was trying to keep the tears from falling south.
“She stiff-armed Cancer, bro,” he finally said, voice cracking. “That’s the toughest kid I ever met.”
They didn’t tell the media. They didn’t post it. They just hung the tiny jersey in the wide receiver meeting room, right above the projector screen, so every route concept, every film session, every rookie who ever doubted why they play this game would see it.
Two months later, on a Sunday night in October, Jamal broke loose down the sideline for 68 yards and a score. As he crossed the goal line he pointed straight up, then tapped the nameplate on the back of his jersey twice: ORTIZ. But everyone watching at home swore they saw something shimmer in the night sky above the stadium, something small and fierce in a purple bandana, wearing an oversized helmet, running right alongside him.
The tiny jersey still hangs in that meeting room.
Some nights, when the building is empty and the lights are low, the training staff say they hear a little girl’s laugh echo down the hallway.
And every time a player puts on the pads, they remember:
The team isn’t just the fifty-three on the roster.
Sometimes the smallest captain calls the loudest signals.
And touchdowns count double when they happen in dreams nobody else can see.