HERSHEY, Pa. — After more than three strikes from cancer, Carlisle native and professional baseball player, scout and executive Doug Harris is not out — in fact, far from it. Even though he has lost much to the disease, Harris is determined that when the final score is tallied at the end of each day, it will be a win for him and others who find themselves in the same game.
“The very simple meaning of faith is believing what you can’t see,” said Harris, who credits his strong faith with helping him rebound from leukemia not just once but four times. “That’s why I’m sharing my story — to say what I’ve been through is not the end of me, and it won’t be the end of you either.”
Up to bat
Harris, a standout athlete at Carlisle High School, was a pitcher for James Madison University and then drafted by the Kansas City Royals in 1990. He was one of the team's top pitching prospects before shoulder injuries cut his playing career short. He became a scout for the Texas Rangers in 1997 and later for the Cleveland Indians. In 2010, he became the director of player development for the Washington Nationals, where he was eventually promoted to assistant general manager and vice president of player personnel.
However, Harris, 53, doesn’t wear his impressive World Series ring, commemorating the Washington Nationals' 2019 championship, but rather a ring that celebrates the Nationals' 2013 rookie team championship, achieved with a record of 52-9, the best domestic record in minor league history.
“Through my difficulties, this ring reminds me that you can win, each day, each moment,” he said.
Those difficulties have been numerous since the fall day in 2015 when his push mower felt like it weighed 1,000 pounds. He was tired and dizzy and thought he had the flu.
Life-changing news
Subsequent tests showed something much worse. His white blood cell count was 270,000 per microliter — normal is 4,500 to 11,000.
In the Emergency Department at Penn State Health Milton S. Hershey Medical Center, he met Dr. Kevin Rakszawski, then a resident, who first mentioned the possibility of chronic myelogenous leukemia (CML), a slowly progressing blood-cancer that begins in the bone marrow.
Rakszawski also gave him something else that every cancer patient needs — hope.
Targeted therapy for CML worked well, and Harris was back to his old self in time for spring training. However, by April 2016, he felt sick again. The leukemia was back aggressively, and Harris needed a stem cell transplant. Once again, Rakszawski was among his biggest supporters.