Emory Healthcare 500 NASCAR Sprint Cup Series Race Names
Terry "Mr. 500" Green as Grand Marshal
EMORY Health Sciences News
http://emoryhealthsciences.org <http://emoryhealthsciences.org/>
Emory Healthcare 500 NASCAR Sprint Cup Series Race Names Terry "Mr. 500"
Green as Grand Marshal
NASCAR fan and Lawrenceville native was Emory's 500th heart transplant
patient in 2008
Media Contacts:
Emory Healthcare Atlanta Motor Speedway
Lance M. Skelly Matthew Simmons
(404)775-5050 (770)946-3917
Lance.Skelly@emoryhealthcare.org
Matthews@AtlantaMotorSpeedway.com
ATLANTA - When Emory Healthcare and Atlanta Motor Speedway officials
began searching for the grand marshal of this year's Emory Healthcare
NASCAR 500 Sprint Cup Series race, they didn't have to search long or
far to find the perfect candidate - and who already possessed the
perfect tailor-made nickname for such an occasion.
Lawrenceville native Terry "Mr. 500" Green has been named the grand
marshal for this year's race, to be held on Labor Day weekend at the
Atlanta Motor Speedway.
Green's story - and how he came to be known as "Mr. 500" - actually had
nothing to do with automobile racing when the title was created back in
March 2008, after he became the 500th heart transplant recipient at
Emory University Hospital in Atlanta.
Green is also one of very few - if not the ONLY patient from Emory - who
can actually say he was born twice in the same hospital and mean it. Not
only did he receive his heart transplant at Emory almost 61 years to the
day of his birth, but he was also born in the hospital, which no longer
delivers babies (Emory University Hospital Midtown - previously Emory
Crawford Long - has long since provided these services.)
While Emory University Hospital no longer delivers babies, Green can now
claim - and really mean it - that he was literally born twice at Emory
University Hospital.
"It was a very special feeling to have a new chance at life because of
my heart transplant, and the fact that I was also the 500th person to
receive a new heart at Emory was extra special," said Green, who is a
fifth generation Gwinnett County native. "To be named the grand marshal
for the Emory Healthcare 500, an event that is such an incredible show,
and means so much to Georgia and the Atlanta metropolitan area each
year, is beyond a special surprise - it is an honor. I am so excited to
see my first race in person, and I will forever carry with me the memory
by being a part of such a special event."
According to Dane Peterson, Chief Operating Officer for Emory University
Hospital Midtown, having Green serve as the official grand marshal is a
special treat for the Emory Healthcare family, as well as Green and his
family.
"When we began to discuss who we might have as the ceremonial starter
for this event, it didn't take very long at all for Terry's name and
story to jump right into the front of the pack," said Peterson. "We were
all very familiar with Terry's incredible story, and since his
transplant a few years ago, he has befriended Emory in many ways as one
of our best known ambassadors. Once everyone quickly agreed that 'Mr.
500' should undoubtedly be our guy to officially start the engines
Sunday night, the only question left was, 'Is he a race car fan?'"
Green, who has never seen a race in person, is a fan - particularly of
No. 29 Kevin Harvick. But just how did Green become a fan of Harvick, as
opposed to any one of the other 42 race car drivers who will compete in
Atlanta?
"Interesting story," said Green. "One day I was in my local car
dealership getting my vehicle serviced, and they were sponsoring a
contest. The grand prize was a cruise ship vacation. I didn't win the
vacation ... but I won a Kevin Harvick scale model vehicle. I've been
following and rooting for him ever since."
And speaking of cruise ships - it was aboard a cruise ship in the
Caribbean during a vacation with his wife that Green suddenly suffered a
severe heart attack. He was stabilized aboard the ship, and later on
shore, before being transported back to Georgia and Emory for care. He
would later learn that the doctors that treated him in the Caribbean
were both Emory University School of Medicine trained physicians.
"You talk about another extra special link to this whole experience,"
said Green. Not only was my life saved on foreign soil by doctors who
learned their trade at Emory, but I would receive my transplant there,
was born there, and will now forever be known as 'Mr. 500' for this
once-in-a-lifetime event."
And who is Green bringing to this year's race? His wife? His son? A
neighbor or co-worker?
"My au pair," said Green.
"Lee Mitchell, who is actually a good buddy of mine who looked after me
- along with my wife, Danette, and my son Taylor Green, who is a race
fan, while I was at Emory waiting on my heart transplant. Even though my
wife is not going, I know she'll be watching for me on TV."
The Emory Healthcare 500
The biggest Labor Day party in the USA is at Atlanta Motor Speedway for
the Emory Healthcare 500 race weekend on Sept. 3 -5. For more
information or to purchase tickets, contact the Atlanta Motor Speedway
Ticket Office at (770) 946-4211, (877) 9-AMS-TIX, or visit
www.atlantamotorspeedway.com.
Emory Heart Transplant Program
The Heart Transplant Program has been in existence at Emory University
Hospital since 1985 when it performed the first heart transplant in
Georgia. Today Emory's patient survival rates are among the best in the
country.
Emory's transplant program has an experienced multi-disciplinary team
highly skilled in the care of heart transplant candidates and
recipients. This team includes the Center's cardiologists, a transplant
surgeon, transplant coordinators, a social worker, psychiatrist,
psychiatric clinical nurse specialist, pharmacist, clinical
nutritionist, physical therapist, chaplain, staff nurses and a financial
coordinator. Each member of this team offers a specialized service in
the care of our transplant patients.
-AMS-
EDITOR'S NOTE: High-resolution images of Terry Green, grand marshal of
the Emory Healthcare 500 to accompany this release can be downloaded
from:
http://www.atlantamotorspeedway.com/photos
Photo credit: Atlanta Motor Speedway
Matthew Simmons
Marketing & Promotion Coordinator
Atlanta Motor Speedway | P.O Box 500 | Hampton, GA 30228 | P:
770.946.3917 | F: 770.707.7853 | www.AtlantaMotorSpeedway.com
High Speed Hits the High Banks at Night
Labor Day Weekend | September 3-5, 2010
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