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DeAndre Hopkins’ mother, Sabrina Greenlee, recounted the terrifying acid attack from 2002 that resulted in her blindness, expressing her fear that she would not survive the incident.
Sabrina shared her story in the ESPN docuseries ‘The Kingdom’, which delves into the Chiefs’ dynasty (Hopkins had spent most of the previous season in Kansas City following a trade).
In the series’ fifth episode, which the Daily Mail previewed before its August 14 premiere, Greenlee looked back on the day 23 years ago that started with her car going missing.
Greenlee soon got a call from her boyfriend at the time, who gave her the address of a home to get the car back at.
Once Greenlee arrived there, the pair began arguing before another woman came outside and threw what Greenlee described as a ‘concoction’ on her body, hitting her in her face, neck and back and leaving her with severe burns.
ESPN wrote in a 2019 story about Hopkins and Greenlee that she was doused with a mixture of bleach and lye.
‘The skin instantly falls off of my body,’ Greenlee recalled in ‘The Kingdom.’

DeAndre Hopkins is seen celebrating with his mother and grandmother after winning the AFC Championship

NFL star Hopkins and his mother, Sabrina Greenlee, have an extremely close bond
‘In that moment, I was thinking this is how I’m going to literally die.’
Greenlee, who raised Hopkins and his three siblings as a single mother following the death of their father in a car wreck, said she was in a coma for about a month before eventually awaking, and also had to learn how to walk again.
And Hopkins, who was only 10 at the time, can still remember what it was like seeing his mom after the attack.
‘The day I finally got to see my mom with my siblings, once she came from the hospital, her whole face was wrapped up,’ he said in the docuseries. ‘And I just remember seeing her eyes and how different they were.’
Greenlee also recalled a somber moment in which she and her kids sat in bed and cried: ‘We just didn’t understand why somebody would wanna do that to somebody,’ she said..
Greenlee’s attacker, Savannah Carlita Grant, was sentenced to 20 years in prison for assault and battery with intent to kill. The boyfriend was not charged.
‘We just really didn’t wanna leave her side, I guess we felt like if we could be around her and protect her – we didn’t wanna let her go,’ Hopkins added.
Despite being just 10 years old, Hopkins ‘became the man of the house,’ his mother said.
‘He’d read to me, describe what’s on the television. And it’s like if he’s not giving up, how dare I. I sat my children down and I said: ‘This doesn’t define us.”
Of course, Hopkins has gone on to have a stellar career in football, racking up five Pro Bowl nods, three All-Pro selections and the second-most receiving yards in Texans’ history.

Greenlee has been a huge supporter of her son throughout his stellar NFL career

She said Hopkins became the ‘man of the house’ following her acid injury when he was just 10

Hopkins spent most of last season with the Chiefs after being traded there from Tennessee
Last season, after being traded to the Chiefs from Tennessee, he had the chance to compete in the Super Bowl after his squad defeated the Bills in a memorable AFC Championship Game.
And the moment brought Greenlee to tears for a much happier reason.
‘This is so big,’ she said on the field after the game. ‘You understand like, with you playing in the Super Bowl, you have put so much time and work in. So many sacrifices in your playing.
‘Nobody understands what that feels like, baby. I saw you [play] for two years and then I couldn’t see you no more. But you kept going.’
Hopkins and the Chiefs ultimately lost in the Super Bowl to the Eagles, and he departed the team this offseason for the Ravens.
His connection with his mother, though, remains incredibly touching.
In the years that followed the attack, Greenlee was hesitant to attend her son’s games and step out in public due to her scars.
In high school, however, Hopkins was able to convince her to cheer him on in person.
‘I visualize everything that he does,’ she previously told ESPN. ‘The dreads, the body movement.’
And Hopkins said: ‘I’m always picturing her, whenever I make a catch, her reaction. ‘And sometimes, when I drop a ball, I’m like, ‘Darn it. I let my mama down.”