First, you dont cry.At least thats how Ive gotten through the 180 or so individual interviews weve conducted over the past 11 years with our My Wish families. Yes, my fingernails have carved arcs of suppressed feeling into chairs, sofas and love seats across the country. Ive pinched my right leg through my trousers multiple times in a single day. When in deep trouble, Ive broken eye contact with our subject, looked down and tried to just hold on for a few moments, as if clinging to a raft careening through whitewater. During our first year, I asked a 10-year-old boy who loved Tracy McGrady how the tumors in the back of his neck felt. He paused for a moment, dropped his head into an open palm and sobbed. Had I been holding a pen, I might have stuck it between my ribs right there, like a prison shank. Its not that I think getting emotional would be a breach of professional decorum. I just dont want to be disruptive as memories start pouring forth. The best way to respect and honor the people who share their stories with us is to listen.Sometimes, in Carolina or Georgia or Iowa, the car goes to the end of the asphalt road and then the end of the dirt road before I get out. Maybe its a big house in the Pacific Northwest on a cul-de-sac, with a front lawn and a friendly dog. Or its a trailer in the Midwest, with a satellite dish on the outside and no room within. Setting up our cameras already has disrupted the home. Tables and couches and shelves have been moved, revealing remote controls so old they cant always recall where the TV is. Food and morning beverages, lots of them, sprawl across the kitchen counter. And then I knock on the front door and ... well ...Maybe 30 years ago, walking into a strange home while in a suit and a tie would have established you as a person of probity, someone to be trusted. Football coaches on recruiting trips back then: they must have worn jackets and ties, right? Anyway, it feels like the opposite now, as if I represent a corporation or renegade arm of the government with twisted plans for the property and the people living there, and a slick line of shop talk to make those plans a reality. More than a decade in peoples living rooms or dens, and no one has ever worn a suit and tie in the chair opposite me. I often feel as though I have to apologize for my clothes, though when my hair turned gray and I started wearing reading glasses, kids like the unstoppable Rylee Durham began calling me Harry Potters grandfather, which really isnt bad at all, youve got to admit.I walked into one house in the south, and the sibling of our wish child took my hand and quietly showed me her room, and where she did all her homework, and the books shed been reading recently. Illness in a family reshapes everyones world. To put one nervous mother at ease while we were setting up, I sang most of Mary J. Bliges Work That. I guess she figured the interview couldnt be any more unpleasant than that.I have nothing in my hands. Usually, Ive read a summary of a childs health history. If there have been posts on social media or CaringBridge, there are often specific milestones in treatment for me to ask about. But most of the time, Im asking two questions, in a small variety of forms: What happened? and How did you feel about it? As I sometimes tell our subjects before we begin, I ask questions they know the answers to. Anyone with a sick child has had to deal with inquiries from many people; often they have come to expect that most people dont want that much detail, and so they have crafted their responses to suit the demand. Early on, I try to convey that were interested in the long answers. This is one I recall, from Judy Krause, whose daughter, Danielle, was being treated for a brain tumor. Her answer was one of the best descriptions of the chaos of a medical crisis:There must have been 12 family members there, all walking out. I just for some reason turned around one last time to take a look at her, and all her numbers just dropped, and I went, Whats going on? Then they just immediately yelled Code Blue. They were on me in like one second, trying to get me out of the room, and I said, No, I dont want ... Im not leaving. Then they said, Can we get you a minister? I said, What? You know, can we get you somebody to talk to? I said, Why would I need that? And I remember somebody handing me orange juice or something. I mean, it was just the craziest moment of my life, and I thought, oh my God, shes not going to make it, and then they pulled us all out of the room, and, thank God, they got her back.The mother of Jacob Trammell, who loved baseball so much, remembered the nights that shed sit at their dining room table and go over game situations with her son, as if they were times tables; Kyle Byrds mother, Cassandra, recalled how her tears would fall onto her then-infant son days after his Spinal Muscular Atrophy diagnosis; and then there was the sheer delight on the face of Matt Vosejpkas younger brother, Mitch, when he learned hed be the perfect bone marrow donor:Mitch: I was like, This is great. This is unbelievable. I like this.Me: Were you scared?Mitch: Not really. I was more focused on the excited part.I dont go on the wishes, which is surprising only to people who have never seen me at a childs birthday party, wringing my hands like a pastry chef convinced that his popovers will not rise, hiding in the kitchen as the pi?ata is demolished in the yard, asking over and again if everyone is having a good time. So when these wishes make you feel something, hope or sadness or joy or uplift, thats the skill of our producers and editors; the generosity of the athletes and teams involved; the abundant and unfailing love, resourcefulness and advocacy of a sick childs parents; and the pluck, the humor, the strength, the swag and the wonder of our My Wish recipients. When we put these stories together, its important that viewers find something to like about these children -- their athletic skill, their attitude, their wit -- before finding out that theyre sick. Making sure they emerge as unique individuals and not as victims. Thats key.This week is the 10th anniversary of My Wish, and our stories begin Sunday. Before working on My Wish, my journalism background featured a lot more irony than earnestness, and at first I might have thought Make-A-Wish was too sentimental for my taste. I got over that real fast, thanks to such young people as Charlie Pena and Katie Morris and Jailen Cooper, whose stories you can read in this space -- and to the kind, clever and giving staff members and volunteers at Make-A-Wish, with whom weve been privileged to partner with for My Wish. Like a lot of people, I once thought Make-A-Wish was only for children facing a terminal diagnosis, and this proved to be very much not the case. So many My Wish children are flourishing, bolstered by the resilience they showed during their illness and their capacity for exhilaration during their wish.In 11 years of getting to talk to these amazing young people and their families, some of the best words came from Hailey Cannaday, who got to swim with Olympic champion Michael Phelps. If Im not crying, you shouldnt be crying, she said. If Im smiling, smile with me. Last I heard, she was driving from Ohio to Chicago with her mom for a K-Pop concert. So Im with her, on both the smiling and the crying. Maybe not the K-Pop.Chris Connelly is an ESPN reporter and essayist who has served as correspondent and host for ESPNs annual My Wish series since 2006, done in collaboration with Make-A-Wish. Deebo Samuel Super Bowl Jersey . But the quarterback hopes to stay involved in football after officially calling it quits Tuesday. "Id love to look at those opportunities as they arise," Pierce said in an interview from his Winnipeg eatery. Mitch Wishnowsky Super Bowl Jersey . -- Eastern Kentucky thrives off creating havoc for others. http://www.thesf49ersshoponline.com/Youth-Adrian-Colbert-49ers-Jersey/ . The 15th-ranked Canadian men lost the opening two games of their European tour: 19-15 to No. 17 Georgia and 21-20 to No. Tom Rathman Super Bowl Jersey . The judges scored it 48-47, 48-47, 49-46 for Jones (19-1). It was the champions closest call. Despite the loss, it was a remarkable show by the confident Swedish challenger, who had the best of the early rounds and then hung on in the fourth and fifth. Emmanuel Sanders Super Bowl Jersey .ca NBA Power Rankings, ahead of the Miami Heat and San Antonio Spurs.Chris Morris proved England’s nemesis once again as South Africa won a thrilling first T20I at Cape Town by three wickets. Watch as Reece Topley had an easy stumping to win the first T20I - but dropped the ball Morris 62 from 38 balls in the preceding ODI encounters helped the Proteas level a series they would go on to win 3-2, and his 17no from seven deliveries at Newlands scraped South Africa past Englands total of 134-8 off the final ball.Reece Topley fumbled a chance to run out Kyle Abbott at the non-strikers end as the hosts scampered through for the match-sealing two, but England will really be ruing their under-par display with the bat, as they lost five wickets for 29 runs in the middle overs after being derailed by Imran Tahir (4-21). Alex Hales scored a brisk 27 before England collapsed Alex Hales (27), buoyed by five fifties and a ton in his previous six knocks, and Jason Roy (15) gave England a rip-roaring start, blasting 38 for the first wicket within four overs before Roy skewed a slower ball from recent Kent signing Kagiso Rabada to midwicket. Watch this cracking catch from JP Duminy despite being rugby tackled by Kagiso Rabada! JP Duminy then atoned for dropping Hales at deep midwicket on 24 by catching the opener at deep fine leg off Imran Tahir, despite being accidentally rugby tackled by Rabada in the process.Joe Root (8) soon picked out point, with Ben Stokes (11) then stumped by AB de Villiers - standing-in as wicketkeeper for the rested Quinton de Kock - having drilled Tahir for six and four off his preceding two balls.Tahir continued to bamboozle England, dismissing the out-of-sorts Eoin Morgan (10) and Moeen Ali (0) from successive deliveries in the 13th over and coming close to bowling Jordan through the gate with the hat-trick ball. Imran Tahir was inches away from grabbing a hat-trick against England in the first T20 Jordan helped Jos Buttler (32no from 30) lift England above 100 but Abbotts wickets of the Sussex player (15) and Adil Rashid (2) ensured Morgans men set the lowest total batting first in a T20I at Newlands, David Willey (6no) with Buttler at the death.ddddddddddddilleys contribution with the bat was quickly erased as the hosts amassed eight runs from his first two balls, four leg byes followed by Hashim Amla clipping the left-armer off his pads and to the fence.De Villiers, though, top-edged Jordan to Hales in the fifth over and Amla was caught sharply at mid-on by Willey an over later, having been shelled on 14 by Buttler. Faf du Plessis scored 25 for South Africa Faf Du Plessis (25) and JP Duminy (23) propelled the Proteas to 76-2 in the 13th over but when the batsmen, who added 41 for the third wicket, each lashed to long-on, South Africas innings began to unravel. We hear from Eoin Morgan, Faf du Plessis and Imran Tahir after South Africas win over England in the first T20. Jordan (3-23) returned to snare Rilee Rossouw (18) and David Miller (13), complete career-best figures and leave the home side needing 15 from the last over - which they managed thanks to Morris six and four and that madcap finale.England captain Eoin Morgan: The bowlers up front set the tone, we created a lot of chances and we probably should have won, but we didnt deserve to with our poor batting display. We didnt do the basics of adapting to the wicket well enough.The hardest thing is to get your nut down and score 150-155, which would have been par.South Africa skipper Faf du Plessis: With the bat, we tried to learn from their mistakes - they possibly went too hard at the ball. We almost messed it up towards the end but the Million Dollar Man [Morris] saved us. Well take a lot of confidence from this. We didnt play as well as we can but still got across that line, which is huge credit to us.Will England level the series in Johannesburg on Sunday? Find out from 12pm on Sky Sports 2. The game follows South Africa Women and England Womens deciding T20I, which is live at 7.55am on the same channel. ' ' '