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After defying death, Arizona Coyotes minor leaguer Craig Cunningham has new lease on life

The firefighters from Tucson Fire Pipes and Drums who saved Craig Cunningham's life by performing CPR on him when he collapsed before a game have made him an honorary member of their corps. Courtesy of Heather Cunningham

It was past midnight ET, and the conversation with Craig Cunningham was winding down. He made a simple request: Don't focus on the amputation -- not when there are so many positives to highlight, so many people to thank, a life to live.

When a guy defies death, when he makes a miraculous recovery after his heart stopped before a hockey game, when he lives through 83 minutes of CPR to stay alive, the least you can do is honor his request.

So let's get the news out of the way in order to move on. On Dec. 24, fearful that an infection would complicate Cunningham's recovery, doctors amputated part of his left leg. He still has most of his leg, and he fully expects to function normally once he's fitted with prosthetics after the healing is done. But he has come to so completely trust the doctors who have cared for him that he didn't question the decision.

They said it was best to remove it. So they removed it.

And now, Cunningham, 26, and his family are focused only on what's next. It's how they've always lived and how they'll continue to live.

"Every time I think about how I can't play anymore, I just think back to [the fact that] I'm lucky I'm not 10 feet under," Cunningham told ESPN.com on Monday evening from Banner-University Medical Center in Tucson. "If I have to sacrifice playing hockey to be alive -- and it's a tough pill to swallow for sure, it's been my whole life since I was 4 years old -- it's time for me to move on."

On Nov. 19, Cunningham, a former Boston Bruins forward who was playing in the Arizona Coyotes organization, suffered cardiac arrest before the opening faceoff of a Tucson Roadrunners American Hockey League game. He still marvels at the series of events that kept him alive: the trainers who were so quick to react, the firefighters who were there to play the national anthem with bagpipes but instead helped perform CPR, all the doctors and nurses who made the right decisions at the right times.

And his family. Cunningham has never felt closer to his family, which is saying a lot. He has seen his brothers more in the past month than in the previous several years, and his girlfriend, Sarina Gyurkovits, hasn't left his side.

Then there's his mother. Cunningham has long had an appreciation for the sacrifices his mom, Heather, made to allow him to play hockey after his father died in 1996, starting with the daycare she opened in their home to help pay the bills. He feels even more indebted to her now.

Cunningham made it to the NHL. His older brother is an engineer. His younger brother is studying to be a lawyer. Their mother is clearly a saint. She was in the stands the night of Cunningham's cardiac arrest and hasn't left his side since. She has been relentless in her support and has guided her son through every step of his recovery.

"She's been through a lot of trauma," Cunningham said. "She's a warrior."

That -- not the amputation -- is what he's choosing to focus on.

"I'm really appreciating life. Before, you don't think about how precious it really is," he said. "F---, man, in an instant, everything can be taken from you."

Cunningham might be finished playing hockey professionally, but the hockey world has embraced him. He has heard from teammates, former teammates and guys he never played with. He has received stacks of letters and drawings from hockey fans offering their encouragement. He even has an autographed hockey stick signed by the doctors and nurses who saved his life.

Hockey also permeates the way he talks about those surrounding him during his recovery. He says he's grinding through recovery, a phrase used constantly in the hockey world. To him, his mom is a battler and a warrior, like he's describing Jonathan Toews.

And his doctors and nurses? He has been overwhelmed by what he calls their "elite skill." He talks about Dr. Zain Khalpey, whose use of an extracorporeal membrane oxygenation machine saved Cunningham's life, like those in the game describe Connor McDavid or Sidney Crosby.

"It's opened my eyes, seeing the skill set of these guys," Cunningham said. "Dr. Khalpey, man, he has a special skill set. Between what Dr. Khalpey was able to do, what the surgeons were able to do with the amputation, the nurses -- they have the best here."

They've given him a chance.

Heather says the three proudest days of her life were the days her sons Ryan, Craig and Mitchel were born. The fourth was the day Dr. Khalpey took Cunningham off the ECMO machine -- and her son lived. His kidneys were starting to fail, so the call to take him off the machine was made at just the right moment.

"Dr. Khalpey said, 'He survived. We're going to get through this,'" Heather Cunningham said. "[Craig] was actually reborn on that day when they took him off the machine."

It was Nov. 25.

There is no questioning or anguish among the Cunninghams about why any of this happened. They still aren't sure why Craig's heart stopped, going into ventricular fibrillation. There's no history of it in the family.

All they know is it took a miraculous series of events to keep Cunningham alive, and the payoff has been a family that is closer than ever -- and one that is now growing.

The firefighters from Tucson Fire Pipes and Drums who saved Cunningham's life have visited him multiple times, making him an honorary member. They've given him patches and a coin that makes him part of their group.

Doctors and nurses have come in on their days off to check on Cunningham. Dr. Khalpey is in constant communication, texting two or three times a day from outside the country. They're all family now.

"I told [Dr. Khalpey] I loved him 30 times," Heather said with a laugh.

"He's amazing," Cunningham said.

So, yeah, Cunningham doesn't want an amputation to be the story. It's just a smaller part of a bigger story, one that is still being written.

He hopes to leave the ICU this week for a rehab center, where he's going to learn how to function in life without part of his leg. He has to learn how to get out of bed. He has to learn how to stand next to a stove and cook. Then it's off to another rehab center for athletes.

At some point, everyone around him expects Cunningham to start skating again, and he has now turned his aspirations to working for an NHL team, rather than playing for one. He'd love to scout or work in management -- anything to keep him in the game he loves.

He told his mom at 2 years old that he was going to play in the NHL, and he made it, playing 34 games for the Bruins over the course of two seasons. Now, she has watched him battle through near-certain death to live. She has stopped doubting him. If he says he's going to work for an NHL team, he's going to work for a team.

That's just how this family operates.

"It's certainly not what we plan for in life, it's what's dealt to you," she said. "You have two choices: You either go forward, or you go backward. We choose to go forward."