From Deseret News archives:

Coach brought holiday of love to ill daughter

Published: Monday, Dec. 24, 2007 11:53 p.m. MST
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For years the coach worked all those jobs and saved whatever money he could. They managed to buy a home in Salt Lake City, but when he was hired by BYU, they had to leave the house behind, unsold. They bought a new house in Provo, which meant they had two mortgages to pay. And then came Ann's doctor bills — and Christmas. And Ann wanted a doll.

It was just bad timing, and under different circumstances they might have simply gone without that year, but the coach and his wife weren't sure that Ann would have another Christmas. The coach borrowed $70 from a bank to buy presents.

Ann wanted a doll, but exactly which one she wasn't certain because she hadn't been out of bed since September. So the week before Christmas, when she could finally sit up a little, they bundled her in blankets and drove to Cottonwood Mall in Salt Lake County to look for a doll. The coach's wife held John's hand and pushed Jim in a stroller. The coach cradled Ann in his thick arms, as they made their way through the length of the mall, stopping frequently to peer into store windows and to look at the holiday decorations, her father smiling and pointing to this thing and that.

Ann's eyes were wide with awe as she stared at the lights and toys and colors, thrilled to be among people again, to be out in the world. The mall was crowded, but it seemed to her as if they were the only people there.

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Ann finally spotted the doll she wanted, and then they went home and Ann began her wait. On Christmas Eve, she turned off the lights early and waited for morning and Santa to come. She was still awake when her parents slipped into her room to listen to Dad's new Nat King Cole record on the family hi-fi, which was next to her bed.

"You need to leave," she told her parents. "If you don't leave, Santa Claus won't come."

"Of course Santa will come," her father assured her gently.

She persisted. The coach soothed and continued to listen as Nat King Cole's voice filled the small room. He wanted badly to listen to that record, but finally his wife persuaded him to leave.

The next morning, the coach carried Ann into the living room and there she found her Christmas doll, much to her delight and relief. The rest of the day's events are mostly lost to memory.

Ann can't remember much more about the doll, or that morning all these years later. After seven months in bed, she recovered from her illness. She grew up, moved away, married, became a writer and a mother, became Ann Edwards Cannon, while her father LaVell became a head football coach. It was only many years later that she appreciated that Christmas for what it really was.

"What I do remember about that Christmas is the look of pleasure on my father's face as he dropped his new record onto the turntable," she wrote recently. "He was so young then. Much younger than I am now.

"So please don't leave, Mom and Dad. Stay with me this Christmas Eve, with the snow lying silver on the ground beneath a wide holiday moon. Stay with me by the fire here and let us listen together to Nat King Cole and Judy Garland and Bing Crosby, too. To our half-remembered tunes.

"To all the wonderful old songs."

To all the wonderful old Christmases and the parents and children who make them.


Doug Robinson's column runs on Tuesdays. Please e-mail drob@desnews.com

Recent comments

Thanks, Doug!

Oldcougardude | Dec. 28, 2007 at 2:01 p.m.

Great article. Thanks for sharting another dimension to Lavell...

Snowing in Rigby | Dec. 28, 2007 at 1:58 p.m.

This column is a real Christmas gem of its own. I hope that Doug...

Alan Cunningham | Dec. 27, 2007 at 10:34 a.m.

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