Princess Margaret Cancer Centre hosts charity cricket match, raises upwards of $1M
More than 400 cricketers and celebrities gathered Saturday in Mississauga at the inaugural Cricket to Conquer Cancer event to raise funds for the Princess Margaret Cancer Centre's research.
Canadian artist Jully Black was one of the celebrity ambassadors attending the fundraiser and said the event feels "personal" to her.
"Cancer has run through my family," she told CBC Toronto on Saturday. "Unfortunately, I lost my mom seven years ago to pancreatic cancer."
The Canadian Cancer Society says that two in five Canadians are expected to be diagnosed with cancer in their lifetime.
When Black was 27 years old, she found a lump in her right breast. She said doctors at the time told her she was too young for a mammogram.
She said her doctor had to advocate for her to do all the tests, but that luckily it was just a false alarm.
"Early detection is key," she said. "We need the research, but we also need the education and the early detection."
Barbados-born professional cricketer Carlos Brathwaite said the fundraising event brings together two things that are close to his heart: cancer and cricket.
Brathwaite said his mother battled cancer in Barbados while he was starting his professional career overseas.
"I know how difficult it is for friends, for families who can't be there with loved ones," Brathwaite told CBC Toronto on Saturday.
He said he also wants to bring awareness to the importance of cancer research and how that helped his mother beat cancer.
"When she told me she had cancer, I thought it was a death sentence. And really and truly, because of the research, that means that cancer is not a death sentence," Brathwaite said.
"Although she hasn't been treated here, there's a lot of research that has been done by


