Athlete Sinks 10,703 Shots in 24 Hours for Friend's Cancer Fight
A former college basketball player just shattered a world record and raised over $23,000 for his best friend battling Stage 4 colon cancer. Dalton Bolon made 10,703 three-pointers in 24 hours, turning his athletic talent into hope for someone he loves.
When your best friend is fighting for his life, you find a way to help. Former College of Charleston basketball star Dalton Bolon found his way by shooting hoops for 24 hours straight.
Bolon made 10,703 three-point shots in a single day, setting a new Guinness World Record pending official verification. But breaking records wasn't his real goal.
Every shot was for Trevor Cherry, his best friend since college who is now battling Stage 4 colon cancer. Cherry works as a conditioning coach at Coker College and needed support his friend was determined to provide.
The Charleston community showed up in a big way. Pledges poured in from across the country throughout the 24-hour marathon, allowing Bolon to present Cherry with a check for more than $23,000.
"Everybody's got their best friend. This dude's been my best friend since I went to college," Bolon said after completing the feat. The exhaustion in his voice couldn't hide the joy of what he'd accomplished for someone he calls his brother.
Cherry was overwhelmed by the support. "The amount of people that reached out and helped me through this whole journey means a lot," he said. "I can't think of anything I would do for 24 hours. It's just crazy."
Why This Inspires
This story reminds us that friendship shows up when it matters most. Bolon didn't just write a check or share a fundraiser link. He pushed his body to its limits, taking shot after shot for an entire day, transforming his athletic skill into tangible help.
The response from strangers across the country proves something beautiful about human nature. When someone steps up to help a friend, others want to be part of that circle of care. Those thousands of pledges weren't just donations. They were votes of confidence in friendship, in fighting, in refusing to give up.
Guinness World Records officials have up to 12 weeks to verify the attempt, but the real record has already been set: a testament to what friendship looks like when everything is on the line.
Based on reporting by Google News - World Record
This story was written by BrightWire based on verified news reports.
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