Steve Ludzik played almost 500 games, mostly with the Chicago Blackhawks with a handful for Buffalo.  He also coached Tampa Bay for 120 games at the beginning of the millennium, and spent some time on the Score Network.
He is in stage 4 liver failure and desperately awaiting a transplant.
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		| It was the final, inevitable word on a battle Ludzik has been  fighting for decades, several years without his knowledge. In addition  to the colitis and Crohn's disease which almost ended his hockey career  before it began, Ludzik had chronically high liver enzymes. One night near the end of his playing career with the AHL's  Rochester Americans – after NHL stints with the Chicago Blackhawks and  Buffalo Sabres — he went into liver failure. Though he tried to keep  playing, his energy and strength was gone. He was 30 years old.
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		| But he wasn't just battling on the ice. The medication he took for  his Crohn's was making his bones brittle and, unknown at the time, doing  massive damage to his liver. Ludzik recalls a game near the end of Tony Esposito's career in  which fans booed the Hall of Fame goalie. He was appalled and told  MaryAnn that night to tap his shoulder when it was time to quit.
 "I had broken my foot, my shoulder, my collar bone, my sternum  was the final one. MaryAnn said 'Remember that tap? I'm giving it to you  right now.' "
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		| He recalls some cruel remarks about his appearances on the TV network.  Because he slurred some words, people suggested he was drinking. What  the public didn't know is that he had been diagnosed with Parkinson's  disease years earlier at age 39. He kept it hidden, worried it would  cost him some jobs. | 
	
 
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		| Thus far, Ludzik says there is one good candidate who has come forward.  He was told there needs to be at least four or five prospects to choose  from. Good as intentions may be, there are numerous physical  requirements. | 
	
 
https://www.stcatharinesstandard.ca/...save-his-life/