10:02 am | December 27, 2018 | Go to Source | Author:
11:48 AM ET
In the spring of 2000, Jimmy Conrad was carrying a heavy burden. His stepfather, Rob Doty, was dying of cancer. With Conrad’s family based in Southern California, an upcoming match at the Rose Bowl between his San Jose Earthquakes and the LA Galaxy was set to be the last time he would be able to play in person in front of his ailing stepfather.
There was one problem, and it was a big one. Conrad was suspended for the game due to yellow card accumulation. So the defender called up his old college coach, Sigi Schmid, then-manager of the Galaxy, and made a most unusual request. Would Schmid agree to delay Conrad’s suspension until an Earthquakes-Galaxy game later in the season so he could play in the upcoming match? Schmid not only agreed but he helped make it happen with league administrators. It was the last time Doty saw Conrad play, as Doty died later that summer.
On Tuesday, Conrad was met with adversity again. Schmid passed away at age 65, while awaiting a heart transplant. And in addition to a loving family that included wife Valerie, sons Kurt, Kyle and Eric, daughter Lacey Nicholl and several grandchildren, he left a host of players whose careers and lives were impacted by his work, Conrad among them.
“What I really liked about him was that he was human,” Conrad said via telephone of Schmid. “If you had a personal thing going on, he was very sensitive to that. He had a big heart and when you strip everything away, I hope that’s what people will remember him for.”