A baseball-mad schoolboy whose leg was ravaged by cancer can return to the diamond - after it was reattached backwards.
Dugan Smith, 13, now has two feet pointing in opposite ways, but it hasn't stopped him chasing his dream of playing in the Major League thanks to the leg-saving operation.
He only discovered he had the killer disease when he broke his leg aged ten.
X-rays revealed a tumour the size of a cricket ball growing from his thigh bone and doctors told him they had to operate fast.
'I didn't know if I was ever going to be able to run again. I didn't know if it was going to work so there was a hundred things running through my mind and I just try to stay positive,' he told Fox 8 News.
Although a number of procedures were available, such as a full prosthetic or an artificial bone, there was only one that meant he could keep his leg.
So Dugan, from Fostoria, Ohio, travelled to Ohio State's James Cancer Hospital where surgeons performed a rare operation called Van Ness Rotation-Plasty.
Doctors cut out the middle part of his leg, rotated the bottom half 180 degrees, moved it up and reattached the blood vessels.
So good, that he has made lead pitcher for his local Fosteria youth team.
But Dugan gets no special treatment from father Dustin who coaches the team.
Dustin said: 'When parents try to come up and say let's help him out... no. I want him to be treated like every other kid playing baseball.'
Dugan now wants to take his ball-throwing skills all the way to the top and hopes he can one day play Major League baseball.
'Just because you have a prosthetic leg doesn't mean you can't do it, so I just go out on the field and do it,' he added.
Counting to my birthday on 28 Mei..
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