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Florida’s Athletic Trainer of the Year

Article reposted from TBN Weekly
Author: TBN Weekly

Marie Freudenthal, a certified athletic trainer with Morton Plant Mease’s Sports Medicine Outreach program, was recently named the High School Athletic Trainer of the Year by the Florida Athletic Trainers Association.

Freudenthal has been with BayCare for 10 years, serving first as athletic trainer at Osceola High school and spending the last six years at Clearwater High School, where she dedicates her time to ensuring the health and safety of youth athletes.

Freudenthal didn’t plan to become an athletic trainer. Her plan was to be a physical therapist; however, she needed a bachelor’s degree to attend physical therapy school. When she decided to major in athletic training, she found her passion and has made it her life’s work.

“As a high school athletic trainer, sometimes I am the most consistent person in a student’s life,” Freudenthal said. “To work with students, day in and day out, and watch them make good decisions is very rewarding.”

Freudenthal attends football practices in the fall and spring and all home athletic events in the fall, winter and spring sports seasons. She also mentors interns from the University of Tampa and the University of Central Michigan.

“Marie (Freudenthal) takes time to get to know our coaches and athletes,” said Clearwater High School Athletic Director Kathy Biddle. “She is passionate about her job and truly cares about the athletes at our school.”

In 2016, she had the privilege of watching her Clearwater High School football team go from a losing season in 2015 to an undefeated season.

“These seniors were the first group I had worked with for all four years. Many of them have difficult life circumstances so it was wonderful to watch them stay focused, never give up and then achieve great things,” Freudenthal said.

Freudenthal works at Clearwater High School as part of the partnership between BayCare’s athletic training program and Pinellas County Schools. The program’s goal is to increase safety awareness among coaches, student athletes, and parents, and to provide educational materials and follow up evaluations to determine return-to-play timelines for student athletes.

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JENNIFER RAYBERN NAMED KCAC ATHLETIC TRAINER OF THE YEAR

Article reposted from OttawaBraves.com
Author: OttawaBraves.com

Jennifer Raybern of Ottawa University has been named Kansas Collegiate Athletic Conference Athletic Trainer of the Year. Raybern will be formally recognized at the Sport Management Conference on August 8 at the York College.

Jennifer Raybern is in her 19th year as Head Athletic Trainer at Ottawa University. Jennifer graduated from the University of Kansas in 1996 with a bachelor of science in exercise science with athletic training emphasis. She worked for two years as a student trainer at KU working primarily with the Jayhawk softball, football, women’s tennis and swimming & diving teams. While getting her Masters of Science in Kinesiology and Sports Psychology at the University of Kansas, Jennifer served as a graduate assistant athletic trainer at Baker University.

Arabie Conner, Athletic Director at Ottawa University said, “Jen’s commitment to Ottawa University and the level of care she provides our student-athletes is second to none.  As our athletic programs have grown from 14 to 25 during her time at OU, she has strategically managed to continue to provide a high level of care to all of our athletic programs including training and mentoring new staff and researching new sports in preparation.  She is a lifelong learner, never settling on past knowledge or ways of doing things.  Jen is passionate about what she does with unwavering dedication and ensures that our athletes are receiving the very latest in care methods and techniques as she stays professionally engaged in seeking out the newest practices.  Additionally, Jen is highly regarded and respected by her peers and the many professionals she interacts with daily including coaches, administrators and those in the medical field.  At OU, we know our athletes are being taken care of by a top-notch sports medicine team reflective of Jen’s vast knowledge and commitment to the field.”

As the Head Athletic Trainer for the Braves, Raybern is responsible for the prevention, care and rehabilitation of injuries for the 25 varsity athletic programs. She coordinates the sports medicine staff and supervises student athletic trainers in caring for the sports medicine needs of Braves’ athletics. Raybern works closely with the men’s and women’s soccer, men’s and women’s Basketball, men’s and women’s wrestling and softball teams. She is a member of the faculty in the school of education.

“Jen has taken over as the KCAC Athletic Training president and brought different insights than the leadership that was in place before. she is the voice of reason among the KCAC athletic trainers,” University of Saint Mary head athletic trainer, Raeann Bromert said.  “Other athletic trainers in the conference look to her for guidance and reflections. Jen has committed herself to being the best she can within the profession and within her institution.”

In addition to being a certified and licensed athletic trainer, she is a certified strength and conditioning specialist and performance enhancement specialist. She works with individuals and teams on performance enhancement programs. Raybern is trained and certified in Active Release Technique, Graston Technique, and Kinesio taping.

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Stephanie Clark named West Virginia Athletic Trainer of the Year

Article reposted from The Parkersburg News and Sentinel
Author: The Parkersburg News and Sentinel

Stephanie Clark of Cairo was named Athletic Trainer of the Year by the West Virginia Athletic Trainers’ Association at its 2017 Annual Sports Medicine Conference held March 3-4 in Flatwoods.

Clark, who resides in Elkview, works at Elk Valley Physical Therapy working outreach for Herbert Hoover High School, one of the three high schools in the state affected by the massive June 2016 flooding. Although Herbert Hoover High School is no longer in use and students go for a half-day at Elkview Middle School, Clark made it her mission to continue her work with her students.

“Fall sports were questionable, but we made it happen,” she said. “Football went to the playoffs, volleyball made a showing at the state tournament, and the boys’ basketball team went to the state tournament for the first time in the school’s history. It is easy to do my job when I work with a pretty great community to help these kids out.”

Clark is a 2013 graduate at West Virginia Wesleyan College.

The award was in line with the skills developed at Wesleyan, she said.

“Creative thinking was always encouraged at Wesleyan,” Clark said. “Working with an AA high school in a small West Virginia town under these special circumstances requires me to be able to think creatively in order to do my job well.”

She said the athletic training department at Wesleyan is among the best in the state, she said.

“I had more hands-on opportunities because class sizes were small. I was put in real-world situations every single day and was expected to answer the whys of these situations,” Clark said. “The department shows tough love, and everyone becomes a family that pushes you to achieve.”

Clark said she was humbled being named Athletic Trainer of the Year.

“It is a huge honor, really,” she said.

“I was surprised because there are so many great athletic trainers in this state. I am just doing my job, and it is good to know I am doing it well.”

At Wesleyan, Clark was a member of Zeta Tau Alpha, Kappa Alpha Rose, the concert band, collegiate 4-H club, the academic affairs committee, the National Athletic Trainers’ Association and the West Virginia Athletic Trainers’ Association.

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Vissering South Atlantic League Trainer of the Year

Article reposted from wbtv.com
Author: wbtv.com

South Atlantic League President Eric Krupa has announced the recipients of the 2016 South Atlantic League Outstanding Achievement Awards, with Hickory Crawdads Athletic Trainer Dustin Vissering receiving the Athletic Trainer of the Year Award.

Vissering, 28, just completed his first season as the athletic trainer for the ‘Dads and his third year overall in the Texas Rangers organization. He served in the same capacity with the AZL Rangers in 2014 and for the Spokane Indians in 2015. Prior to joining the Rangers, Vissering spent the 2013 season as a minor league athletic trainer in the Kansas City organization before working as an assistant athletic trainer in the Arizona Fall League. The Illinois State graduate worked as a student athletic trainer during his time on campus, in addition to time as trainer at Normal West Community High School. Vissering was also a graduate assistant at Western Illinois University, where he obtained a M.S. of Science in Sport Management.

“It’s nice to be recognized by my peers for the hard work we do,” said Vissering. “I wouldn’t have been able to win this award without the help of the great staff and team here in Hickory.”

Vissering was selected for the award by his peers in the Professional Baseball Athletic Trainers Society (PBATS).

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Williams wins Carolina League Athletic Trainer of the Year Award

Article reposted from MILB.com
Author:John Vittas

Myrtle Beach Pelicans athletic trainer Toby Williams was named Professional Baseball Athletic Trainers Society Trainer of the Year for the Carolina League, the PBATS office announced Tuesday.

Williams has helped the Pelicans to a 71-55 record and a tie for the division lead in the second half of the season. This is Williams’ first season in Myrtle Beach and third as a member of the Chicago Cubs organization.

Born in Thailand, Williams spent a year in the Atlanta Braves’ organization in 2013 after earning his MEd in Kinesiology from Auburn University. The native of Richmond, Va. served as a graduate assistant at Auburn for three years after earning his B.S. in athletic training from Samford University (Ala.).

PBATS honors one trainer every year from each of the 16 leagues in Minor League Baseball. Williams and the other 15 winners are now eligible for the prestigious Minor League Athletic Trainer of the Year award, voted on by the full memberships of PBATS. That award will be given at the 2016 MLB Winter Meetings in Washington, D.C.

The Pelicans open a three-game series with the Carolina Mudcats at 7 p.m. in Zebulon, N.C. Tuesday. Trevor Clifton (6-7, 3.05) makes the start for Myrtle Beach against Enderson Franco (5-10, 4.75) of Carolina.

The 2016 season is the 18th season for the Pelicans franchise and second as the Class A-Advanced affiliate of the Chicago Cubs. For information on tickets to see the Pelicans in 2016, please call (843) 918-6000, e-mail info@myrtlebeachpelicans.com, or visit www.MyrtleBeachPelicans.com.

ABOUT THE PELICANS: The Myrtle Beach Pelicans are the Class A-Advanced affiliate of the Chicago Cubs and play their home games at TicketReturn.Com Field at Pelicans Ballpark in Myrtle Beach, South Carolina. The park has ranked in the top eight in all of Minor League Baseball by Stadium Journey in each of the last five seasons. The same publication also placed the Pelicans in the Top 100 Stadium Experiences in all of sports in each of the last five years and the best in the Carolina League for five straight seasons as well. In May 2015, TicketReturn.Com Field at Pelicans Ballpark won the 2015 TripAdvisor.com Certificate of Excellence award. The Pelicans are the defending Mills Cup Champions, winning the title in 2015 as well as 2000 and co-Mills Cup championship honors in the inaugural 1999 season. The Pelicans have made nine postseason appearances behind 11 half-season Southern Division championships, including the first half of the 2015 season, as well as five Southern Division titles, most recently in 2015. For more information on the Myrtle Beach Pelicans, please contact the Pelicans at (843) 918-6000 or emailing Info@MyrtleBeachPelicans.com

This story was not subject to the approval of the National Association of Professional Baseball Leagues or its clubs.

 

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Welch Named GNAC Athletic Trainer of the Year

Article reposted from Simmons Athletics
Author: Simmons Athletics

Simmons College Head Athletic Trainer, Michael Welch (Raymond, N.H.) has been named the Great Northeast Athletic Conference Athletic Trainer of the Year, it was announced today by the league.

The recipient is determined by an annual vote among athletic trainers from member schools within the GNAC.

“Mike Welch is one of the finest professionals I have worked with in my career,” said Simmons Director of Athletics, Ali Kantor. “His dedication to student athletes, commitment to high ethics and standards and his compassion are intense — and separate him as an excellent porfessional. We, at Simmons, are so proud to see that his work has been recognized by his peers around the GNAC.”

Welch served as the Head Athletic Trainer for all 10 athletic programs on the Fenway campus. In addition to his daily duties of treating student-athletes on the practice field, the competition site and clinical rehabilitation, Welch also served as a mentor within the sports medicine field. The New Hampshire native created a sports nutrition internship in collaboration with the Nutrition Department on the Simmons campus and oversaw a thriving Sports Medicine internship, partnering with the Exercise Science Department at Simmons.

The Simmons Sports Medicine Department continued to serve as a top clinical site for Lasell College and Boston University athletic training students as a testament to Welch’s trusted knowledge of the sports medicine field and the level of respect he has earned throughout the industry. A graduate of Lasell College, Welch obtained a Graston M1 certification within the past year to help broaden the services available to Simmons student-athletes.

Welch’s expertise was relied upon in the design of the new sports medicine facility at the Sharks’ state-of-the-art $13 million outdoor athletic complex, Daly Field, which is set to open in August of 2016. Welch is also a certified Strength and Conditioning Coordinator and has developed in and off-seasoning conditioning programs for all of Simmons athletic teams.

Prior to his six years of service at Simmons, Welch served as a Graduate Assistant Athletic Trainer at the University of Massachusetts in Amherst, Massachusetts from 2008 to 2010. While with the Minutemen, he worked directly with the nationally ranked Women’s Softball team, Men’s Soccer Team, and assisted in the daily coverage of all 21 intercollegiate programs. While at UMass Amherst, Welch earned a Master’s degree in Kinesiology in May 2010.

He competed as a varsity athlete on the soccer team at his alma mater in addition to serving as a student Athletic Trainer.

Welch is currently pursuing a degree in Health Professions Education at Simmons, where he plans to expand his interest in exercise, sports medicine, and health care in the Boston area.

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SFA Head Athletic Trainer Wins National Award

Article reposted from My EastTex
Author: My EastTex

http://www.myeasttex.com/news/local-news/sfa-head-athletic-trainer-wins-award

The head athletic trainer at Stephen F. Austin State University has won the division one head athletic trainer of the year award.
Jeff smith was nominated by his peers for this award, it was then judged by the national athletic trainers association.
SFA has won three national awards in sports medicine this year and jeff smith is honored to be a recipient of one of them.
“It feels good,” said Jeff Smith, SFA Head Athletic Trainer. “I’m a firm believer that it is as much a staff award as it is a personal award. We’ve got a great staff here at sfa in our sports medicine athletic training department. We all work hard, long hours, and spend a lot of time here working with our student athletes. So it’s great to be recognized for some of the service we do to our student athletes.”
It is always good to know you have an excellent training staff for your athletes even if you hope an injury will never happen.
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South Carolina Athletic Trainer Named One of the Country’s Best

Article reposted from South Strand News
Author: 

Chris DeVault, head athletic trainer for Georgetown County’s high schools, was a finalist for the National Strength and Conditioning Association’s athletic trainer of the year award.

“To be considered for an award is a great honor and a privilege,” DeVault said. “If it were not for the many people I have worked with over the years and the people I work with now, I wouldn’t be where I am today. I am beyond humbled for even being considered for this type of award. My life has been blessed.”

A native of Tennessee, DeVault has been a certified athletic trainer for 19 years. He has lived in Georgetown County for the past 11 years working for Tidelands Health, which provides the athletic trainers for the Georgetown County School District.

He was nominated for the award by Conway High School head athletic trainer Jim Berry.

“It’s special and it means even more that I was nominated by a colleague that I don’t directly work with,” DeVault said. “It makes me see that all the work we’ve done to make things better over here is paying off a little bit.”

Berry called DeVault “a great guy.”

“He’s just one of those guys always looking out for other people and has a heart of gold,” Berry said. “He really cares about his community. He cares about Georgetown and the kids in his community. … He cares and wants to make life better for … the kids.”

DeVault collects toys every year to donate to Toys for Tots in memory of a beloved uncle, and Berry said that was one of the reasons he nominated him.

“(The association) looks for somebody who is doing stuff in their community not necessarily in their job and their school,” Berry said. “That’s something really special and I felt like he needed to be acknowledged for it.”

DeVault said one of his favorite parts of his job is the camaraderie between him and the three athletic trainers he oversees, as well as his relationships with the Georgetown High coaches.

“If I need to get something done, I call Chris. He’s way more than just an athletic trainer to me,” said Alvin “Stitch” Walker, coach of the GHS boys basketball team. “He’s a confidante, because the kids feel so confident going to him. They trust him. And he’s very open talking to parents.”

Walker said DeVault treats every student likes they’re his own child, and won’t be bullied by coaches.

“He’s going to make sure whatever happens is going to be in the best interest of a child,” Walker added. “He’ll go out of his way to make sure a child is ready.”

DeVault said he enjoys helping injured athletes get back on the field or court.

“It’s great to actually see the progression of athletes during rehab, and after an injury, and to be able to help them get back to playing their sport,” he said.

Some school districts don’t have full-time athletic trainers. DeVault said he believes the fact that the Georgetown County School District has a full-time athletic trainer assigned to each high school sets the district apart.

“We want to make sure (kids) are afforded the health care they need,” DeVault said. “Ninety percent of the kids we see probably don’t see anybody in the health field but us.”

DeVault was an integral part of the district receiving the National Athletic Trainers’ Association Safe Sports School award in 2015. At the time, only 15 South Carolina high schools, including all four in Georgetown County, had earned the First Team designation.

It was a proud moment for DeVault.

“What we’ve done over the past couple of years with the Safe Sports Schools program helps put the parents at ease that we are trying to do our best for the kids,” he said.

Since DeVault and the other athletic trainers work for the hospital, they’re not off for the summer like teachers and students. He’s still at the school working with athletes.

But his schedule is a little less than the 60 to 70 hours a week he works during the school year.

“You’ve got to have a passion for the job or you kind of get burned out real quick,” he said.

In naming DeVault a finalist, the association profiled him in its publication and singled him out for creating quality athletic training services in Georgetown County’s high schools.

“As the head athletic trainer at Georgetown High School, DeVault has made it his mission to provide quality athletic training services to the county’s student-athletes by placing full-time athletic trainers in each of the four high schools and organizing the Safe Sports School application process,” the article said.

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Drew Graham named NBA’s Head Athletic Trainer of the Year

Undoubtedly the most challenging season of his career ended with more than a pat on the back for Grizzlies head athletic trainer Drew Graham.

The National Basketball Athletic Trainers Association (NBATA) named Graham as its 2015-16 Joe O’Toole Athletic Trainer of the Year. The honor comes after a season in which the Griz endured an unfathomable string of injuries and used an NBA-record 28 players while earning a sixth straight playoff berth.

Marc Gasol was lost with a broken navicular bone in his foot, Mike Conley didn’t play after March 6 because of left Achilles tendinitis and his backup Mario Chalmers suffered a ruptured Achilles. Forward Brandan Wright was lost for most of the season with knee injuries and second-year guard Jordan Adams never saw the floor because of unspecified knee soreness.

“When there is an award given from your peers who know what your day and season consists of, there really isn’t anything more special,” Graham said in a statement. “I want to thank the NBATA, the Memphis Grizzlies and the entire medical staff I work with every day. Without their help, I wouldn’t have received this award.”

The award recipient is recognized for exemplary achievement or outstanding service to the NBA, NBATA and his community. It is named after Joe O’Toole, a long time former head athletic trainer of the Atlanta Hawks, long regarded as the father of the NBATA.

Graham recently concluded his 10th season as the Grizzlies’ head athletic trainer. He’s also Vice President of Player Care, a promotion he received in 2013.

Graham joined the Griz in 2006 after working the previous six seasons (2000-06) as an assistant athletic trainer/strength and conditioning coach with the New Jersey Nets.

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