Larry Fitzgerald Sr., the longtime Spokesman-Recorder sports columnist and broadcaster, has been held hostage — gently — in Arizona since some January health procedures.
"Please tell people I did not have a heart attack," he said when I first called to wish him well. He had a transcatheter aortic valve replacement, necessitated by the narrowing of an artery.
"That was creating a lot of discomfort in terms of my ability to just breathe, walking for any length of time and carrying all this weight," said Fitz. "I started retaining water, was borderline diabetic, sleep apnea — all that from a bad valve. Decided to do what they suggested. I'm better. Had my third follow-up with my doctors. Everybody says I'm doing well. Feel like I've got a whole new lease on life"
April 2017 at the Final Four in Arizona was the first time he and his son, NFL player Larry Fitzgerald Jr., noticed something was not right. "There were 75,000 people in there and everybody knows who he is and it was a challenge," said the Original Fitz. "[Larry] was, Come on Dad, you've got to keep up, and I was doing the best I could. I realized something was different."
Since his medical procedures, which included a pacemaker, Big Fitz said sons Larry and Marcus have wanted him nearby. Big Fitz is getting a kick out of seeing his grandsons daily. Since his syndication business, the National Programming Network, can be done anywhere, Big Fitz may spend less time in Minnesota. Still, his fiancée of nearly two years, Sharrie Warner, lives up here. Asked if he was a little old for a long engagement, Big Fitz teased: "I would tell you when my date is for getting married but that would really create a buzz." His wonderful wife, Carol, died in 2003.
Q: How much weight have you dropped?
A: Forty-two pounds. When you are walking a mile a day and sweating and on 1,800 calories, it goes fast. I just eat salads. I've lowered my intake of beef. No more bacon, sausage — those days are gone. I can't eat grits anymore; I'm going to miss them. Grits without butter ... that's not going to happen. I'll just think about the good ol' days.
Q: You think you've gotten so light you can beat me at tennis?