Former Expos pitcher fighting to stay alive in Miami ICU unit
January 18, 2020
By Danny Gallagher
Canadian Baseball Network
Continue to keep Bob Sebra in your thoughts.
The former Expos pitcher has been in the intensive-care unit at Jackson Memorial Hospital in Miami since last July, fighting to stay alive.
Sebra's son Ryan told me in a direct message on Twitter today that his father has survived two multi-visceral transplants that took place in 2019.
"The first multi-visceral transplant did not go good and the pancreas failed,'' Ryan said. "So he had to have another multi-visceral transplant. He's been fighting infections and has had dozens and dozens of surgeries since then. But he's still fighting.''
A multi-visceral transplant involves the liver, pancreas, spleen, stomach and the small and large intestines.
Sebra, 58, has been in and out of a coma and on and off a breathing tube for many months, his son said.
"They did a tracheotomy a few months ago. He just seems to always be fighting a new infection,'' Ryan said.
The elder Sebra had told me about eight months ago -- when I last had contact with him -- that blood clots and portal hypertension issues had caused his problems. He said a typical multi-visceral transplant takes up to 16 hours.
"It's going to be a tough year but anybody that knows me knows I'm going to go down fighting. I will fight my ass off,'' Sebra had told me back then.
And it appears that it is what he's doing: he's fighting his ass off.
Sebra was a tough-luck 6-15 with a team-leading 157 strikeouts in 1987 when the Expos almost made the playoffs. He also pitched for the Rangers, Reds, Phillies and Brewers during a big-league career that spanned parts of six major league seasons from 1985 to 1990.