In the meantime, Kimmorley has thrown his support behind the NRL’s Beanies for Brain Cancer to help the Mark Hughes Foundation raise $500,000 for research into the disease, while caring for daughters Maddi, Mia, Ava and Ivy.
The former Australian halfback, who was a member of the 2000 World Cup winning team, said he couldn't leave them while the Hawks played in Townsville on October 28 against Fiji and November 5 against Italy before travelling to Port Moresby to play Papua New Guinea on November 12.
“It was a great opportunity to do the World Cup and to be a part of that with the US team was pretty exciting but to be away for 27 days in Townsville and PNG is just impossible for me now,” Kimmorley said.
Kimmorley was running late for the launch of the NRL’s dedicated Beanies for Brain Cancer round in Sydney on Thursday morning as he had do the daily school drop off but the cause is important to him and he has been willing to speak openly about Sharnie’s eight month battle with the disease.
“It is something that we tragically went through last year and this year so any of way of helping is good and I think the NRL is doing an amazing thing with the round,” Kimmorley said.
“What you probably don’t notice is how many people are affected because most people don’t go and hang out at cancer centres too often but when you do that pretty regularly you get to see how many people are going through it.
The Beanies for Brain Cancer round was the idea Channel Nine NRL executive producer Matt Callander, who was diagnosed with brain cancer last year, and he has joined forces with the foundation run by Hughes, the former Newcastle Knights and Catalans Dragons centre.
After suffering headaches for two days in 2013, Hughes visited a doctor and was told he had brain cancer – a disease which last year claimed 1200 lives in Australia and is the deadliest cancer for people under 40.
“I had a scan and within minutes my world was turned upside down,” Hughes said.
“That is what the Mark Hughes Foundation is about – to help people like myself. To help the Kimmorleys, that situation is gut wrenching.”
Fans are able to donate through markhughesfoundation.com.au or by buying beanie at the ground during NRL matches this weekend, while there is also an auction for two people to join Hughes and team-mates from the Knights 1997 premiership winning team in climbing Mt Everest.
Among them are former Australian World Cup representatives Paul Harragon, Andrew Johns, Matthew Johns, Matt Gidley, Adam MacDougall and Kurt Gidley, along with Danny Buderus, Bill Peden and coach Malcolm Reilly, who played for Great Britain at the 1970 tournament.
“A lot of the boys have put their hands up to come on this trip and help raise money,” said Harragon, who captained the 1997 team. “Our coach Malcolm Reilly, who is over in England, heard about and he is in his 70s now but he is fired up and he is raising money to get over there too.”
Harragon said the aim of the Mark Hughes Foundation was to raise $500,000 to fund a fellowship at Hunter Medical Research Institute, which would enable a specialist to work solely on researching brain cancer and conducting clinical trials for treatment.
By Brad Walter | @BradWalterSport
Chief Correspondent, RLWC2017