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Longtime Mariners athletic trainer Rick Griffin to take emeritus role

Article reposted from The Seattle Times
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While players, coaches, managers and executives have come and gone over the years and seasons — winning and mostly losing — Rick Griffin remained a constant in the Mariners organization as the team’s head athletic trainer.

But after 35 seasons in that role, the longtime fixture will take step back in his duties. On Friday, the organization announced that Griffin will transition to the role of athletic trainer emeritus for the 2018 season. In this dialed-back position, Griffin will remain a a part of the Mariners’ medical team, but will no longer work in the training room on an every day basis.

“I have spent the past 35 seasons as the head athletic trainer with the Mariners, a tremendous experience that has allowed me to create amazing relationships with players and staff members from Jim Beattie, Mark Langston and Alvin Davis to Jay Buhner and Ken Griffey Jr. to Robinson Canó, Felix Hernández and Kyle Seager,” he said in a statement. “I value those friendships more than I can say. Moving to this new role will allow me to continue to be involved with the Mariners organization, its players, staff and fans, but will not require the year around, 24-7 demands of the past three-and-a-half decades.”

The plan for this transition started near the end of the 2017 season and was not a direct result of the recent hiring of Dr. Lorena Martin, who will serve as the organization’s “director of high performance” — a job created to coordinate all aspects of the Mariners’ physical and mental training approach of players and staff.

Griffin was the team’s second-ever head athletic trainer, starting his tenure on Feb. 3, 1983. He worked 5,543 regular season games for the Mariners and 34 postseason games.

“On behalf of the Mariners franchise, I want to thank Rick for everything he has done for the Seattle Mariners,” general manager Jerry Dipoto said. “He has truly touched every team and every player of the past 35 seasons, and his impact will continue to be felt for years to come. We’re thankful that he has agreed to continue as athletic trainer emeritus, giving all of us the benefit of his expertise even as he takes a step back from the day-to-day grind of the baseball season.”

Griffin picked up several awards during his tenure. In 1999, he and this staff were named the Professional Baseball Athletic Trainers Society’s “Major League Baseball Athletic Training Staff of the Year.” In 2013, Griffin and his staff were presented with the Martin-Monahan Award as the best medical staff in MLB. Griffin was inducted into the Washington State Athletic Trainers Association (WSATA) Hall of Fame in 2016. Griffin was also a part of four American League All-Star teams (1987, 1995, 2001 and 2010)  and also worked as an athletic trainer for a MLB All-Star team that toured Japan in 1996.

Prior to joining the Mariners, Griffin served as an athletic trainer at the Sports Medicine Clinic in Seattle. He spent four years (1977-81) as an athletic trainer with the Eugene Emeralds in the Northwest League.

Besides his work in baseball, he’s worked in the offseason at professional rodeos in Montana.

A native of Brigham City, Utah, Griffin earned his Bachelor of Science from Utah State University in Health Education, and followed with an M.S. in Sports Medicine from the University of Oregon. Rick has three adult daughters, Ashley, Nicole and Lauren. He and his wife, Rachel, reside in Bothell, and have three children: Gabrielle, Nainoa and Keanu.

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Mariners Head Athletic Trainer Featured on insider podcast

No technical difficulties this week as James Osborn joined me for an hour of baseball talk in the 710 ESPN Seattle studio.

We go in depth into Thursday’s news that the Dodgers’ deal with Hisashi Iwakuma had not completed due to a reported failed physical. It turned out to work in the Mariners’ favor, as later in the day he signed a contract to return to Seattle.

Related: Mariners re-sign Hisashi Iwakuma after Dodgers deal falls through

James and I also take a look at where the Mariners stand with payroll, what the rotation depth is at this date, and just how much better their bullpen looks after the signing of closer Steve Cishek.

My guest this week is longtime Mariners head athletic trainer Rick Griffin. I conducted the interview on Wednesday, and interestingly enough my first question to him was about the physicals players take before deals are completed. While the discussion was not Iwakuma specific, Griffin gives good insight into both medical reviews and the physical process for players about to join the Mariners.

He also talks about how current players are monitored while away, the plan for Felix Hernandez in 2016, what the Mariners do with their pitchers that is different from most clubs and what Franklin Gutierrez goes through to get on the field. Griffin also looks back at the trip to Ground Zero that the team took in 2001.

ORIGINAL ARTICLE:
http://mynorthwest.com/374/2873332/Mariners-Insider-podcast-Iwakumas-situation-key-role-of-trainer

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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