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Chicago Cubs Medical Staff Visit President Obama at the White House

Article reposted from Chicago Cubs
Author: Jesse Rogers 

It wasn’t lost on President Barack Obama or the Chicago Cubs that Monday’s White House celebration of the team’s World Series victory would be the last official event of his presidency. It also wasn’t lost on team president Theo Epstein that the Cubs were being honored by a notoriously loyal Chicago White Sox fan.

“We have taken the liberty of offering you a midnight pardon,” Epstein joked to Obama during the afternoon ceremony. “We welcome you with open arms today to the Cubs family.”

Obama responded in kind.

“Among Sox fans I’m the Cubs’ No. 1 fan,” he declared.

Both Obama and Epstein spoke to a packed East Room of the White House filled with current and former players along with White House staff, many of whom are Cubs fans.

“They said this day would never come,” Obama began his remarks. “I will say to the Cubs, it took you long enough. I only have four days left. You’re just making it under the wire.

“Even I was not crazy enough to suggest that during these eight years we would see the Cubs win the Worlds Series. But I did say there has never been anything false about hope.”

Annual hope for the Cubs from their large fan base was finally rewarded in 2016 with a title, the first in 108 years for the organization. It’s the second team Epstein has guided to a World Series win after a long drought, having taken the Boston Red Sox all the way in 2004 after 86 years without a title. It prompted a job offer from Obama — and a few laughs from the crowd.

“His job is to quench droughts,” Obama said of Epstein. “He takes the reins of an organization that’s wandering in the wilderness. He delivers them to the promised land. I’ve talked to him about being DNC chair, but he’s decided wisely to stick to baseball.”

After the ceremony, first baseman Anthony Rizzo called the day the “icing on the cake” of their championship season. Current players were reunited with popular outfielder Dexter Fowler and catcher David Ross, along with Chris Coghlan and Trevor Cahill. None will be with the Cubs next season.

“What an amazing experience we had today,” Rizzo said. “Something we’ll never forget. … Michelle [Obama] showing up was pretty cool.”

President Obama claimed that among the 50 or so teams the White House has welcomed over his eight years as president, the first lady has never made an appearance until Monday. Before the official ceremony, the lifelong Cubs fan met with the team. Rizzo recalled the moment when she and her husband walked into the room.

“It’s a room that’s all chatter, chatter, chatter, and then the president and first lady walk in and it’s complete silence,” he said. “You could hear a pin drop. You get chills running through your body.”

Later, in its attempt to convert the president to a Cubs fan, Rizzo and the team presented him with a No. 44 Cubs jersey, a lifelong pass to Wrigley Field for him and his family, a “W” flag and the “44” panel from the center-field scoreboard.

“That’s some nice swag,” Obama said.

As impressed as the president was with his gifts — and despite an urging from Hall of Fame pitcher Fergie Jenkins — Obama wouldn’t go so far as to put on the Cubs jersey. As for Cubs manager Joe Maddon, Obama called him “cool” for wearing a turtleneck and suede coat to the White House. Obama also remarked that he and Ross had something in common: The two of them have been on a “yearlong retirement tour.”

After acknowledgements of the team’s success as well as a few more jokes, Obama took note of celebrating the Cubs’ championship on Martin Luther King Day.

“There is a direct line between Jackie Robinson and me standing here,” he said. “It’s worth remembering that throughout our history sports has had this power to bring us together even when the country is divided. Sports has changed attitudes and culture in ways that seem subtle but ultimately made us think differently about ourselves and who we are. … Sports has a way of changing hearts in a way politics or business doesn’t.”

After a tour of the White House, a talk with both the president and first lady and then the official ceremony, Maddon summed up the Cubs’ day.

“It’s pretty magnificent to be invited to the White House,” he said. “It’s a powerful moment. It’s a humbling moment.”

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Cubs Athletic Trainer Gets Support from Alma Mater

Article reposted from Chicago Tribune
Author: Kimberly Fornek

Cub fans at Lyons Township High School are sending photos and greetings to an alumni who is helping keep the Cubs healthy for their playoff run.

Matthew Johnson, a 1997 graduate, is an assistant athletic trainer for the Chicago Cubs team, said the high school’s registrar and big Cubs fan, Roxanne Gerardi.

Gerardi’s daughter went to school with Johnson and he has become a family friend, Gerardi said.

She and Therese Nelson, the associate principal at LT’s south campus, got the idea that since this is homecoming week at LT and students were encouraged to wear spirit wear, the Cub fans at the school could assemble and show their spirit for the Chicago team that has not won a championship in more than 100 years.

Students and staff, wearing Cub T-shirts and caps, gathered at both campuses for the photo shoot Thursday morning. Nelson was attired in a full Cubs uniform, having gotten it when she attended the Cubs baseball fantasy camp in Arizona in 2011 with her older brother.

They come from a long line of Cubs fans. Nelson, who played shortstop and second base in high school and college, said it was a thrill to meet former Cub infielders Don Kessinger and Glenn Beckert, along with other ex-Cubs.

Her brother had begged her to go to the camp with him for years, she said, but she was afraid she would be the only woman. It turned out there were two other women who had been attending the camp for at least 10 years.

Nelson had nothing to be ashamed of, as she had the best batting average in the camp, she said.

She was wearing an LTHS sweatshirt, when Johnson came up and asked if she was from La Grange. She explained she was an LT administrator and he told her he was an LT graduate.

So now eight years later, she and the LT Lions are sending good wishes to Johnson and the Cubs as they prepare to start the playoffs.

“Absolutely,” it’s their year to go all the way to the World Series, Nelson said.

kfornek@pioneerlocal.com

Twitter @kfdoings

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Garofalo campaigns for athletic trainers’ recognition

By George Castle, CBM Historian Posted Thursday, May 12, 2016

The baseball trainer is the guy you see but don’t hear from – the silence now legislated via HIPPA health privacy laws and baseball dictum. A player is hit in the head with a pitch or collides with another fielder. Armed with towels and scissors typically protruding from his back pocket, the trainer shoots out there in seconds for potential emergency M*A*S*H* work and follow-up clubhouse care for the wounded gladiator. Along with the clubhouse attendants, head trainers and their assistants work far longer hours than players, managers and front-office types, for less money. Even more importantly, for far less acclaim. That’s why Tony Garofalo is spreading the word to get the pioneering members of the Professional Baseball Athletic Trainers Society honored by the teams for which they once worked. Some teams remembered not only their star players, but behind-the-scene supporting cast like trainers. Others need a nudge. West Dundee, Ill. resident Garofalo, the Cubs’ trainer from 1977 to 1986, is trying to do just that with his old team in his spare time as a trainer consultant with Athletico. P.J. Mainville certainly honors his predecessors. He operates a Taj Mahal of a training room that includes a pilates area in the Cubs’ spacious new subterranean clubhouse. Garofalo was wowed by Mainville’s workplace, having had to work in little better than a closet in the old left-field corner clubhouse when he began in 1977. Head trainer Mainville plans to list all the 10-year head trainers in his luxurious quarters. That’s in keeping with a mini-museum of historical displays in the long corridors leading to the dugout and the old clubhouse-turned-batting cage.

Problem is, the stunning collection of photos is out of sight of the general public. Not that Garofalo stays up at night worrying about personal credit. But characters like Andy Lotshaw and Al “Doc” Scheuneman more than doubled Garofalo’s own service at Wrigley Field. They were as much a part of team history as anyone else in their longevity and loyalty. In a letter to Cubs chairman Tom Ricketts, business president Crane Kenney and corporate spokesman Julian Green, Garofalo gave a timeline primer, logical reasoning and precedent elsewhere in baseball for public remembrance of team trainers. “In the 101-year history of Wrigley Field, 17 men have helped to keep hundreds of players healthy and ready to compete on a daily basis each Championship season,” Garofalo wrote. ‘Four of these individuals have accounted for 70 of those 101 years at Wrigley Field. The hard work and dedication of all of these men has gone unnoticed by the fans, but the athletes that they have worked with on a daily basis, know the important part they play in the day-to-day grind of a MLB season and the importance that they provide to their individual careers. “A few organizations, such as the Yankees, Cardinals, Braves, and Orioles, have included their Athletic Trainers into their respective Halls of Fame. Hopefully, in the future, this will be the norm rather than the exception.” Trainers may have to wait in line In the Cubs’ case, however, the trainers will have to get in line behind the players, managers and front-office types. Ricketts has been busy rebuilding Wrigley Field and surroundings, and acquiring rooftop clubs to maximize every dollar out of the property they already control or covet. The ruling family is emphasizing the here and now. Unlike many of the teams to which Garofalo referred, and other small-market clubs not mentioned, the Cubs do not have a Hall of Fame, team museum, formal alumni association or speakers bureau. Thus someone who drew a Cubs paycheck for a decade needs to bring the history angle to the brass’ attention. The Chicago National League Ballclub may not have any championships since 1908, but it still has as riveting a history as any other team.

In his letter, Garofalo traced the 1983 founding of the trainers’ society under somewhat harrowing circumstances. The Lords of the Game feared the trainers desired to form a union and, fearing for their jobs, had to meet secretly. Not until Bud Selig’s commissionership did PBATS gain the full acceptance and cooperation of MLB. Garofalo wrote: “The Professional Baseball Athletic Trainers Society, which I am a founding member, has done an outstanding job recognizing the efforts of all MLB Athletic Trainers and those who helped to start their organization. When we started PBATS, we put our jobs on the line because we believed in our profession and wanted the respect that was deserved as being part of Major League Baseball. “The evolution of PBATS has gone from getting a letter from the League President stating that we would be fired if we continued to pursue the organization to having Commissioner Selig consult with the PBATS Board prior to testifying before Congress. Even those of us who are retired PBATS members, still continue to help spread the word about safety and injury concerns that plague young baseball players around the country by speaking to coaches, parents and athletes. “I understand that the players are the ones with name recognition, which is rightly deserved, but if you ask any current or former player about their Athletic Trainer, I am sure that they will speak very highly of them and the important part that they have played in their careers.” Garofalo cited two top achievers in Cubs annals as remembering their trainers at key moments. He started with the Cubs’ clinching of the NL East at old Three Rivers Stadium in Pittsburgh in 1984. Cey, Sutter give credit to trainers “Ron Cey was waiting for me to enter the clubhouse and proceeded to pour a bottle of champagne over my head and saying ‘this is for all your time and effort that you did this past season to help make us champions.’ I still have and treasure that empty bottle. “The other instance was when Bruce Sutter was inducted into the Baseball Hall of Fame in Cooperstown. During his acceptance speech, he thanked his athletic trainers by saying, “People will never realize how important you were and what you have done for my career.” Many other athletes have done the same to their athletic trainers as well. Ryne Sandberg and Cal Ripken are two names that come to mind.”

Garofalo listed all the trainers in Cubs history. The colorful Lotshaw, who also served the Bears, worked from 1922 to 1952. Scheuneman, frequently seen on Arne Harris’ dugout TV shots in 1969, took over and worked until 1972. Gary Nicholson preceded Garofalo for a four-year run in which he assembled data showing the all-daytime home schedule hurt the Cubs. But Nicholson and all other team employees realized nothing would change under the Wrigley family ownership. Garofalo was succeeded in 1987 by John Fierro. Northwest Indiana native Dave Tumbas got to come home for seven seasons starting in 1997. Dave Groeschner lasted just one season in 2004 because he was not licensed as a trainer in Illinois. Mark O’Neal, still working for the Cubs, had to deal with almost daily questions over Kerry Wood’s and Mark Prior’s ailments from the moment he began in 2005. O’Neal was shifted upstairs when Mainville took over in 2013. Assistant trainers were Nicholson in 1972, Dave Cilladi (1986-92), Brett Fischer (1993- 94), Brian McCann (1995-97), Steve Melendez (1998-2000), Sandy Krum (2001-04), Ed Halbur (2004-present) and Matt Johnson (2012-present). The whole craft has certainly come a long way from Garofalo’s first season with the Cubs. Then-farm director C.V. Davis, an import from the White Sox, once threatened to fire Class-A trainer Mike Palmer for daring to compare notes with Garofalo, in a farless organizationally coordinated era. Garofalo went to then-GM Bob Kennedy to head off the firing. Kennedy also raised Garofalo’s first-year trainer’s salary $5,000, from $12,000, when Garofalo protested he could not live on that pittance as a family man in Chicago. Amazingly, Kennedy also allowed Garofalo to take over a coaches’ dressing room to expand his training area in the old left-field corner clubhouse. The coaches then had to dress with the players. Dallas Green finally built a bigger clubhouse in 1984 that was just replaced by the huge underground quarters. He gave Garofalo the privilege of designing the then-new trainer’s room. Garofalo made the most with still-limited space. He said the ’84-vintage clubhouse was still smaller than almost all road locker rooms the Cubs visited. Wedged in with just two tables and no desk or spreading their wings, trainers are baseball’s unsung heroes. “Players come and go but one consistent thing each year is the athletic training staff,” Garofalo concluded in his letter. “Many of the original PBATS members are no longer in the game, but if you ask each one of them, I’m sure that each of them will still consider themselves as part of the organization that they served.”

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Bonacci Speaks to Cubs Medical Staff at Spring Symposium

The Chicago Cubs invited University of Arkansas professor Jeff Bonacci to speak at the team’s annual sports medicine and athletic training staff spring training symposium in Phoenix recently.

Bonacci, clinical assistant professor of kinesiology, directs the graduate athletic training education program in the College of Education and Health Professions. Mark Oneal, the director of sports medicine for the Cubs organization, asked Bonacci to discuss the future education of athletic trainers and how it will affect the professional development of the Cubs’ current staff and hiring of future athletic trainers.

“Based on the reputation of the athletic training education program at the University of Arkansas, our staff believes your program provides a strong foundation for previous and future graduates for the athletic training profession,” said Oneal, who is a 1989 graduate of the University of Arkansas.

The Commission on Accreditation of Athletic Training Education recently announced a new requirement that athletic training education be offered as a graduate-level degree. The entry level master’s program at the U of A was initially granted national accreditation in 2005 and it received a 10-year re-accreditation in 2010. For the past six years in a row, the program has a 100 percent pass rate for the Board of Certification exam. It has a 95 percent pass rate overall since its inception.

Bonacci said the invitation from the Cubs also gave him the opportunity to make connections to help students acquire internships and full-time positions in professional baseball. While in Phoenix, he visited with Adrian Pettaway, a 2011 graduate of the U of A athletic training education program. Pettaway is an assistant athletic trainer with the Cubs.

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