DETROIT – Eric Kilburn Jr. is getting a shoe deal and he’s not even a pro athlete.

He’s a 14-year-old kid with feet that hurt from wearing size 22 shoes that are too small. Now, after media reports of his mother’s desperate search to find him shoes that fit went viral, he will be getting proper footwear.

“It’s crazy,” Eric Jr., a 6’10 high school freshman and JV football player, said. “I mean, I am going to be in comfortable fitting cleats and shoes and I am astounded at the doors this has opened for me. I am excited to see where this goes. Thank you.”

Hometown Life, part of the USA TODAY Network, first reported the Kilburns’ struggle in a story on March 16. Other media outlets have since written about the family’s plight.

His mother, Rebecca, can’t stop crying after hunting for the past year to find shoes to fit her son.

“It’s been overwhelming,” she said. “I have been this puddle of emotions, all of them good… It’s the coolest thing to be able to say we did it! He has shoes! I am not usually a crier, but I have been in a constant state of happy tears…We are so grateful.”

The outpouring of support has been non-stop since last Thursday, with social media shares, phone calls and emails from as far as Asia and South America.

Eric Kilburn, 14, plays on the Goodrich High School junior-varsity football team. The defensive tackle sprained his ankle early in the season, likely due to a lack of cleats for his size 23 feet.

Among the companies offering to help the Kilburns are Under Armour and PUMA, both of which have already scheduled representatives to come to Michigan to begin fitting Eric for shoes. Both will arrive within the next two weeks.

Under Armour Senior Director of Footwear Development Robb Cropp has scheduled a visit and will scan the biggest pair of feet the company has ever made shoes for.

“We are in rareified space, there are not that many people in the world in these sizes,” Cropp said. “We had to help. We know the importance of sports to kids and their development.”

Max Staiger, head of basketball operations for PUMA, said extreme sizes like this come with basketball players and although he had only seen perhaps two or three players in a size 23, the company can build custom shoes for Eric after measuring his feet.