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Scholarships Awarded in Athletic Trainer’s Randy Owsley’s Name

Article reposted from UPMatters.com
Author: UPMatters.com

Five undergraduate students at Michigan Technological University have been selected to receive inaugural Portage Health Foundation/Randy Owsley Memorial Scholarships.

Randy Owsley made an impact that would last a lifetime, in fact, beyond his lifetime. During the 18 years he was the Head Athletic Trainer for Michigan Tech, he worked with a group of student trainers who bonded with him and with each other. Even after Randy left Tech in 1988, he continued to influence them and their careers. That cadre of former student trainers have remained close today.

Owsley died on Thanksgiving morning, 2015. Although his former students are a living legacy of his impact, these former students wanted to establish a lasting tribute here at Michigan Tech. Working in partnership with Portage Health Foundation, these alumni have created and funded the Randy Owsley Memorial – Portage Health Foundation Scholarship.

Every dollar the alumni gave, the campus-wide Portage Health Foundation grant matched to help them reach their initial goal of providing five, $1,000 scholarships this year to five student athletic trainers. The long-term goal is to endow the scholarship fund as a lasting tribute to Randy and his influence.

The scholarships are designed to create opportunities for students participating in Michigan Tech’s Athletic Training Internship Program, for those enter health science and engineering professions.

The $500 scholarships, which are renewable for an additional semester, are named after the late Randy Owsley, who spent 18 years as the Huskies’ head athletic trainer and passed away in 2015.

Former student athletic trainers who worked with Owsley worked in launching the scholarship as a means of keeping his name associated with Michigan Tech and to show gratitude for the service he provided athletes and life lessons he taught student trainers.

The scholarships were presented at a ceremony this past fall.

This year’s scholarship winners are:

Marissa Kinney, Berkley, Michigan, a fourth-year medical laboratory science major now in her second year as a student athletic trainer.

Kelsey Saladin, Maple Grove, Minnesota, a third-year exercise science major in her second year as a student athletic trainer.

Emily Gilkes, Edgewood, Kentucky, a fourth-year biological sciences/pre-med major in her third year as a student athletic trainer.

Sydney Smuck, Traverse City, Michigan, a second-year exercise science major in her second year as a student athletic trainer.

Hali Evans, Lake Isabella, California, a third-year (transfer) exercise science major in her second year as a student athletic trainer.

In addition to submitting their resume, applicants were required to submit a 300-word written response or one-to-three minute video response addressing two questions; “How has athletic training internship played a role in health promotion in our local community” and “How has the athletic training internship helped you academically and in the profession that you desire.”

Jason Carter, professor and chair of Michigan Tech’s Department of Kinesiology and Integrative Physiology says he was impressed with the quality of the applicants.

“These are excellent students from multiple majors and I am very pleased they will have a chance to be rewarded for their high levels of engagement with our athletic trainers and our sports teams. They deal with amazing real-world situations that will prepare them well for careers in health care professions,” Carter said.

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Former Michigan Tech Athletic Trainer Fondly Remembered

On November 26, 2015, former long-time Michigan Tech athletic trainer Randy Owsley passed away after a 20-year battle with heart disease. He was 69 years old and living in Joplin, MIssouri, at the time.

Owsley worked at Michigan Tech 18 years as the head athletic trainer, working with all of the various Michigan Tech sports programs. He affected athletes from the hockey program to the tennis program and everything in between.

“Randy was just a gentle gentleman,” said current Huskies hockey coach Mel Pearson, who played for the Huskies from 1977-81. “He went about his job more quiet, but very professional.”

Pearson was privy to another side of Owsley besides the professional one.

“He had a good sense of humor,” said Pearson. “[He was] just a wonderful person. That’s how I remember him and obviously, his family. [They were] very giving and very warm people.”

Pearson felt that nearly every athlete who was at Michigan Tech was touched by Owsley in some way during his 18 years on the job, and that they were lucky to have him around.

“[He was] just a first-class type of individual,” said Pearson. “He did a great job with the student athletes. He was just a real credit to Michigan Tech.”

He was not the only hockey athlete who fondly remembered Owsley. Former goaltender Bruce Horsch, who played at Michigan Tech from 1974-78, was a member of the 1975 national championship-winning team Owsley worked with. The team went 22-10-0 that season, defeating Minnesota in the title game, 6-1, in St. Louis, Missouri.

“When I came to Michigan Tech, Randy Owsley was the head of our athletic training staff,” said Horsch. “He was very professional and was a very, very nice man to work with.”

Horsch was impressed by the depth of knowledge Owsley contained.

“Randy was exceptionally knowledgeable in every area,” said Horsch. “He took very good care of us as athletes.”

Owsley was instrumental in keeping former tennis great and current Houghton High School volleyball coach and Chemistry teacher John Christianson on the court. Christianson played for Michigan Tech from 1972-75. He also coached the men’s and women’s teams from 1981-87.

Christianson said if not for Owsley, he would have struggled through the latter stages of his collegiate career with tennis elbow. He might not have earned Northern Intercollegiate Conference co-Most Valuable Player without Owsley’s assistance.

Owsley was interviewed in 1976 for a Sports Illustrated article on former Huskies’ running back Jim VanWagner. Owsley attributed VanWagner’s durability to a “perfect blend of strength and flexibility” in a story that ran in the October 11, 1976, issue.

Owsley served on the Michigan Tech senate during his final years with the school.

After leaving Michigan Tech, Owsley started his own sports medicine/physical therapy clinic first locally before moving on to other areas of the country.

Since 1990, he has served as secretary to the Board for the National Operating Committee on Standards for Athletic Equipment (NOCSAE) which sets performance standards for most football, baseball, and lacrosse helmets manufactured in this country.

In the five years prior to his passing, he has served as coordinator for Sports Medicine Services at Mt. Carmel Medical Center in Pittsburg, Kansas.

Owsley was selected for the Michigan Athletic Trainers’ Society Hall of Fame in 1997.

His memorial service was held at Wellspring Church, Webb City, on Dec. 11. Donations can still be made to Wellspring Church through Mason Woodard.

 ORIGINAL ARTICLE:
http://www.mininggazette.com/page/content.detail/id/549964/Former-Tech-Athletic-Trainer-fondly-remembered.html?nav=5009