Posted on

T.J. Saunders Named Eastern League Athletic Trainer of the Year

The SeaWolves are pleased to announce that Athletic Trainer T.J. Saunders has been named the Eastern League Trainer of the Year by the Professional Baseball Athletic Trainers Society (PBATS).

“It’s a great honor to receive the Athletic Trainer of the Year award,” Saunders said. “There are great athletic trainers at every team in this league and to have them choose me as Athletic Trainer of the Year is very humbling. I am very proud and thankful of this honor my peers have bestowed upon me.”

Saunders is in his seventh season as an athletic trainer in the Tigers organization and his second with the SeaWolves. The Annapolis, MD native graduated from Florida State University in 2001 with a bachelor of science in sports medicine, with an emphasis in athletic training. In 2009, he graduated with a master’s degree in exercise physiology from the University of Tennessee.

Saunders is the second SeaWolves Athletic Trainer to win the award in recent years. Chris McDonald, who currently serves as the Athletic Trainer of the Toledo Mud Hens, won the award in Erie in 2012.

The awards are given annually to one member of each of the 16 leagues in Minor League Baseball. All 16 league winners, the Dominican Summer League winner and the Minor League Coordinator of the Year will now be eligible for the prestigious Minor League Athletic Trainer of the Year award voted upon by the full membership of PBATS. That award will be presented at the 2015 Major League Baseball Winter Meetings in Nashville, Tenn

ORIGINAL ARTICLE:
http://www.milb.com/news/article.jsp?ymd=20150820&content_id=144286276&fext=.jsp&vkey=news_t106&sid=t106

Posted on

Student grips pro baseball internship like a fastball

After growing up in a country where baseball is a national passion, a University of Central Missouri student got an inside-look at what it takes to keep professional players in top condition while preparing for his own professional career.

Hoping to someday work in the Major Leagues, Takao Iwano, an athletic training major from Abiko, Chiba, Japan, was one of only seven individuals selected to participate in an internship program sponsored by the Japan Baseball Athletic Trainers Society in cooperation with the American Professional Baseball Athletic Trainers Society.

The experience took him to Arizona in early March, where he spent a week with the Kansas City Royals at their training facility in Surprise, and the Seattle Mariners in Peoria.

Iwano said the internship gave him an opportunity to see players that he watched on televised baseball in Japan and America. He was particularly excited about the opportunity to work with the Royals, which won the American League Pennant in 2014. He was in the dugout during games, and was “fist-bumped” by Major League players.

More than just a fun experience for a longtime baseball fan, this opportunity entailed long hours and lots of work. Iwano said he would be on the job by 5:15 a.m., performing tasks such as setting up the hydrotherapy station, and getting ice and towels ready for the players. He participated in pre-game, pre-practice, and field setups, in addition to working with professional Athletic Trainers to observe pre-game, pre- and post-practice treatments. Iwano interacted frequently with the certified training staff.

Brian Hughes, professor and athletic training program director, applauded Iwano for seeking out the opportunity with JBATS. Although students are required to participate in for-credit athletic training internships which are imbedded in the curriculum throughout each semester of their four-year program at UCM, he said Iwano’s experience was on his own, and for no academic credit.

Iwano paid his own expenses, including air fare and hotel costs. Hughes insisted, however, the investment and time were well spent for Iwano.

Iwano said this will not be the last time he applies for a baseball internship as he is looking to land another opportunity through PBATS next year.

ORIGINAL ARTICLE:
http://www.dailystarjournal.com/people/community/article_12bceda8-0e7a-5f45-9d16-f96101de1224.html