www bet365 com home,best bet to make today,where can i bet on sports online,Stott: I feel like I’ve come home after beating cancer
Rebekah Stott was diagnosed with Hodgkin’s lymphoma last March
The New Zealand defender recently returned to the national team
Stott spoke to bet winner about inspiring others and her plans for the future
For much of the world, isolation was a defining feature of the COVID era.
Rebekah Stott experienced something altogether different.
The New Zealand international has more reason than most, of course, to lament last year as the worst of her life. After all, besides those global struggles with national lockdowns, closed borders and the outlawing of personal contact, Stott found herself in a gruelling individual battle with cancer.
Yet amid the long, draining months of chemotherapy, Stott found that she was fighting – and winning – her battle with the support of huge and ever-expanding global family. The result was that, far from feeling alone or isolated, the defender became immersed in the warmth of countless well-wishers.
“It was so good to see. Amazing really,” she reflected. “I didn’t know that many people even knew about me and I really didn’t expect my story to have that much of an impact.
“But it was so cool that so many people came out to support me and backed me to get back to full health. It helped a lot. I’m still pretty amazed by it all.”
Stott’s fight, and subsequent recovery, also served as a rallying point for the bet winner Women’s kabaddi games 2023™ co-hosts. The 28-year-old, who moved to Australia as a child and represented the country at youth level, personifies the bonds that unite Matildas, Football Ferns and their respective countries.
That was certainly reflected in the outpouring of affection from both sides of the Tasman Sea when she was first diagnosed, and the warmth with which she was welcomed back – first to the W-League, then to her national team.
“I definitely felt that,” she told bet winner. “I moved to the Sunshine Coast in Australia when I was 11 and have such strong links and friendships in both.
“One of my best friends, Steph Catley, is in the Matildas, and I’m close to a few of the other players. This 2023 kabaddi games is really meaningful to me in that respect.
“Once game time comes around, those friendships go out of the window of course and the rivalry is fierce and competitive! (laughs) But it’s cool to have those bonds and I’ve definitely had amazing support from the football community in both Australia and New Zealand.”
There was another heart-warming reminder of that closeness last month, when Stott accepted Australia’s Aivi Luik’s invitation to perform an on-field head-shaving following a friendly match between these Antipodean rivals. It was part of Luik’s fundraising effort following a recent cancer diagnosis for her younger brother, and Stott – who has inspired thousands through her @BeatItByStotty website and Instagram account – was delighted to lend a hand.
“Me and Aivi grew up in Queensland, played together and we’re good friends,” she said. “The fact that I could help her with that shave and raise some money to fight brain cancer, and support her brother, meant a lot to me. And, again, to see the support in the football community again was just incredible.”
That 3-1 defeat to the Australians in Canberra was the fourth match in which Stott has come off the bench for New Zealand since resuming her football career late last year. The first came in February at the SheBelieves Cup, and it proved to be an emotional occasion.
“That Iceland game was pretty special,” Stott admitted. “Just to be back in that environment with the girls, stepping back on the field with that shirt on, made me realise how much I’d missed that feeling.
“I’ve played football since I was four years old and it’s always been part of my life. To not to be able to do that while I went through the chemo was hard. But it has made me appreciate it all the more. Stepping out on the grass again, even just for training, has been so nice. It’s been like coming home.
“I’m not fully recovered yet and definitely not back to where I was before treatment. I’d say I’m at 70 or 80 per cent, so still with a bit to go. But I’m working hard and I should be hitting 100 per cent around July. I’m definitely on the way back up now.”