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Oakland A’s Walt Horn Retiring at Seasons End

Article reposted from CSN Bay Area
Author: Oakland A’s media services 

Oakland A’s assistant athletic trainer Walt Horn has announced that he will retire following the 2016 season.  Horn has spent his entire 39-year career as an athletic trainer in the A’s organization.  He began his professional baseball career with the A’s in 1978 after graduating from Boise State University in December of 1977.  Horn served as the club’s Double-A athletic trainer for six seasons, all in the Eastern League, before being promoted to the Triple-A club for the 1984 season. He remained with the A’s Triple-A affiliates in Tacoma, Edmonton, Vancouver and Sacramento over the next 24 seasons and earned Pacific Coast League Athletic Trainer of the Year four times during that period (1992, ‘96, ‘02 and ’04).  Horn joined the Major League staff in 2008 and has spent nine seasons with the A’s.

“Walt has been an integral part of our organization for four decades,” said A’s Executive Vice President of Baseball Operations Billy Beane. “He has had a positive influence on thousands of ballplayers both on and off the field. We thank him for his dedication and commitment to the A’s. He will truly be missed.  We wish Walt and his wife, Stacy, all the best.”

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Irish Athletic Trainer Makes the Most of Internship with A’s

The first time Tara O’Haire saw a baseball game was, well, at the start of this month when the A’s opened the Cactus League season.

An intern with the A’s athletic trainers this spring, O’Haire, 21, is from Ireland. She didn’t have the slightest clue about the sport initially, but she has picked up knowledge quickly after a number of lengthy exhibition games.

“I like it. I’m impressed!” she said. “On the plane on the way over, I was looking at ‘Baseball for Dummies,’ trying to understand the rules. I think I was annoying everyone the first game with all my questions; but after one four-hour game, you sort of get the gist of it.”

Back home, O’Haire’s sport is Gaelic football. “Hard to explain — a little bit like soccer, a little bit like rugby, a little bit like volleyball,” said O’Haire, who still plays half forward, an offensive position, when she can. “It’s a crazy sport. I’ve gotten them all excited about it. A few of the players want to start playing it.

“They were all shocked by hurling, as well. ‘Why don’t they have gloves on?’ Well, it’s Irish, you catch it with your hand!”

O’Haire and three other women from the same college program in Carlow, Ireland, are doing internships toward their degrees back home.

“I thought I should throw myself into the deep end with a sport I don’t know,” she said. “And at home, it’s all lower-limb injuries, ankles and hamstrings and knees, so I’m seeing things we don’t usually see: shoulders, elbows. So I’m definitely learning a lot.”

Said A’s trainer Nick Paparesta: “I’m pretty impressed with how brave Tara is. She’s going across the globe to learn a sport she’s never even seen. She’s done a great job; she’s fit in phenomenally well. The guys give her as much grief as they give the rest of us.”

The A’s have not had a female trainer before, but the organization and the players have been welcoming, according to O’Haire. Assistant trainer Brian Schulman makes sure she doesn’t go outside without sunblock and reminds her to look out for foul balls.

“I feel like I have a second family here. They all look after me,” she said. “It’s surprising how easygoing all the players are. They’re all so laid back.”

O’Haire gets a kick out of the bad Irish accents she hears as the A’s try to imitate her, and she is trying to educate them about Ireland, where, no, corned beef is not a major part of the cuisine.

Here’s a compliment for the A’s: O’Haire has enjoyed her time with them so much this spring, she has decided she’d like to work with a sports team full-time when she gets back home.

“I think she would do great with a team, with her ability to fit in,” Paparesta said. “It’s been really nice to have her here.”

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