How about, just for a few minutes, we forget about the scandals and arrests and impermissible benefits and everything else plaguing college football, and instead celebrate a heartwarming story involving a Div. 1-A player?
Yeah, didn’t think y’all would mind.
Back in February, USF offensive lineman Danous Estenor made an impromptu stop at an on-campus eatery. As it turns out, that decision likely saved the life of a man he’d never met.
As Estenor exited his vehicle, and as relayed by Greg Auman of the St. Petersburg Times, the lineman heard a woman screaming for help. As Estenor, listed at 6-3 and 306 pounds, made his way toward the cries for help, he saw two men and the female attempting to lift a Cadillac off a 34-year-old tow truck operator who had somehow gotten himself trapped underneath the 3,300 pound vehicle.
We’ll allow Auman to take it from here:
“I just see his legs. The car is crushing him. He’s not moving. I’m thinking, ‘Oh, God, this guy is going to die,’ ” said Estenor, a 21-year-old son of Haitian immigrants from Palm Beach. “I tried to lift the car, and when I first tried, it didn’t budge. I backed up. I don’t know. But I felt this energy come, and I lifted it. I don’t know how, but somebody pulled him from the car.”
Maria Uribe had been sleeping in the cab of her husband’s truck when she heard Arzola, 34, yelling “Ayudame!” — help me. She said the scene looked “like a horror movie … a lot of blood,” as the Cadillac’s front right tire had run over Arzola’s torso and dragged him about 10 feet. Somehow, he sustained only cuts, bruises and a dislocated shoulder that was pinned beneath the rear tire. He was back towing cars two weeks later.
“I said, ‘God, bring an angel to my side, help me,’ ” Uribe said. “In Spanish, we say, ‘milagro’ (miracle). I appreciate him doing what he did, saving my husband’s life. If nobody helps me, I don’t know if he is in the room right now.”
Suffice to say, Estenor’s coaches were impressed — but not surprised — by what their player did that day in, in all likelihood, saving a man’s life.
“He’s just a good, hard-nosed, country-strong kind of kid,” USF strength coach Mike Golden told Auman. “Danous has that extra little strength in him that people don’t just normally walk around with. You could name 100 people — I mean NFL people — and ask them to walk over to a car and pick it up like that, and they couldn’t.
“The World’s Strongest Man guys would struggle with that. He just was in the right place at the right time, got that adrenaline rush and got it done.”
So, even with all of the negativity surrounding the game these days, at least there’s a little ray of sunshine brought by the unselfish and heroic acts of one of its players.


