How a college baseball player in Washington saved a life, after his coach’s life was saved
- Carson Burke, a Pacific Lutheran University baseball player, donated peripheral blood stem cells in March 2025 to save a 65-year-old man’s life.
- Inspired by coach Nolan Soete’s battle with aplastic anemia and successful bone marrow transplant from his sister, Burke joined the donor registry in 2022.
- Burke missed one practice to fly to Houston for a five-hour apheresis donation that extracted stem cells from blood and returned it through his arms before he returned to class the same day.
- Burke hit nine home runs with a.267/.344/.519 batting line and led his team to a 10-7 comeback win on the day before his donation, describing the registry as a chance to "help and save a life."
- Pacific Lutheran’s donor registry drive launched in 2022, registering over 700 students, has supported multiple successful transplants and highlights the impact of athlete donors like Burke.
30 Articles
30 Articles

How a college baseball player in Washington saved a life, after his coach’s life was saved
TACOMA, Wash. — Around the same time he registered to become a stem cell donor, Carson Burke received a letter from Carson Burke. It was written in 2011, when Burke — who hails from south Seattle — was a 7-year-old…
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