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NU’s head athletic trainer named president of National Athletics Trainers’ Association

Article reposted from The Daily Northwestern
Author: Amy Li

Northwestern’s head athletics trainer, Tory Lindley, will serve as the 14th president of the National Athletics Trainers’ Association, the organization announced last week.

Lindley has served as the vice president for NATA — an organization that supports athletic training professionals — since 2016 and has worked as NU’s head trainer since 2002. Lindley said he has been interested in athletic training since he was a high school student, and has worked in the field since graduate school.

“The best part of my job is the impact we make on the health of our patients,” he said. “It’s what drives you every day.”

As president, Lindley said he will represent NATA at health care meetings and health care projects across the world. He said he also hopes to expand the athletic profession internationally and looks forward to opportunities for global collaboration.

In addition to his new role, Lindley will continue his role as the University’s head athletic trainer. He said he enjoys working in a collegiate environment, adding that NU’s athletic department is “fantastic” to work with.

“The college setting has always been the professional draw for me,” he said. “I love the academic environment in addition to providing professional health care for all of our 500 student athletes.”

Lindley said the college setting is unique because he has the chance to teach other athletic training students.

Danielle Colegrove, a senior athletics trainer, said Lindley has doubled the program’s staff during his tenure. More importantly, however, she said Lindley has fostered a group of people who are motivated to do the right thing.

“He is a proactive, energized, forward-thinking leader with a good vision and great ideas,” she said. “He always puts students first.”

Assistant athletic director Paul Kennedy said Lindley is a hands-on leader. He said when athletes are injured during a game, Lindley is among the first to run out on the field.

Kennedy also said Lindley’s genuine care for patients can be seen in the conversations he has with student athletes in the waiting room, where they come for various injuries. Lindley and his team always work to maintain the emotional support students need when they’re the most vulnerable, Kennedy said.

“Tory and his staff take it upon themselves to certainly always be honest and realistic, but also create a culture that’s always upbeat, high energy and positive,” Kennedy said.

Over the six football seasons they have worked together, Kennedy said he has admired Lindley’s ability to manage and lead.

Lindley is capable of leading under pressure, which is important in a department that cares for students in the “prime” of their athletic careers, Kennedy said.

“The staff team, they respect him, they like him, and they work hard for him,” he said. “That’s what any national organization needs.”

Email: amyli2021@u.northwestern.edu

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Lindley Elected Vice President of the NATA

Article reposted from Traverse City Record Eagle
Author: Traverse City Record Eagle

Suttons Bay native Tory Lindley has been elected vice president of the National Athletic Trainers’ Association.

Lindley has worked in the collegiate setting throughout his 23-year career and currently serves as associate athletic director, director of athletic training services and head athletic trainer at Northwestern University, where he has worked since 2002. He previously served as head athletic trainer at Eastern Michigan and Hamline University and as a staff athletic trainer at Michigan State.

Lindley was the recipient of the 2012 Illinois Athletic Trainers Association Hall of Fame and the 2012 NATA Most Distinguished Athletic Trainer Award. He received the GLATA Golden Pinnacle Award, the district associations’ highest honor, in March.

He was also recognized as the 2012 Division I Head Athletic Trainer of the Year. He is currently an associate editor for the journal Athletic Training & Sports Health Care and is the NATA liaison to the Commission on Accreditation of Athletic Training Education. Lindley has been an NATA board member since 2014.

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TORY LINDLEY HONORED WITH GLATA GOLDEN PINNACLE AWARD

Northwestern University Associate Athletic Director and Director of Athletic Training Services Tory Lindley will receive the Great Lakes Athletic Trainers’ Association (GLATA) Golden Pinnacle Award, the association’s highest honor. He will be recognized formally on Friday, March 11, during the GLATA Awards Ceremony.

Tory Lindley is at the core of Northwestern’s belief in student-athlete well-being as its paramount priority, his dedication to the health and safety of our Wildcats is unwavering,” said Northwestern Vice President for Athletics & Recreation Jim Phillips.  “Tory and his staff have been innovators, both in research and in practice, on the leading edge of an industry that is constantly evolving. He is among the nation’s most respected professionals in his field, and we are sincerely fortunate to have him on our team.”

Lindley joined Northwestern in 2002 and, in addition to serving as the head athletic trainer for Wildcats football, oversees all athletic training services for NU’s 19 varsity programs. He has been consistently recognized for his contributions to the field, honored as Division I Head Athletic Trainer of the Year by the National Athletic Trainers’ Association (NATA) in 2012 and inducted into the Illinois Athletic Trainers’ Hall of Fame in 2011. He currently serves as a NATA Board Member and District 4 Director.

He earned his bachelor of science in education with a specialization in athletic training from Michigan State University and went on to receive a master’s degree from the University of Minnesota. In addition to professional experience at both institutions, Lindley has worked at Eastern Michigan University and Hamline University, as well as with the New York Giants, Washington Redskins and Houston Oilers.

Formal criteria for the Golden Pinnacle Award include:

  • Nominees must be active members of the GLATA for a minimum of 15 years preceding nomination
  • Nominees may be nominated no more than every five years. Any unsuccessful nomination will be retained and reconsidered for one additional year after the original nomination
  • Nominees must have served in a leadership capacity for the GLATA for a minimum of five (5) years. This may include serving as an officer, committee chair/coordinator, educational program chair, etc
  • Nominees must have exhibited exemplary leadership in their service role, significantly advancing the mission and goals of the GLATA and the profession of athletic training.

GLATA is a professional membership association for more than 9,000 athletic trainers and athletic training students in the states of Illinois, Indiana, Michigan, Minnesota, Ohio, and Wisconsin. The association strives to enhance the quality of health care for the physically active, promote the athletic trainer and advance the profession of athletic training through education and research in the prevention, evaluation, management and rehabilitation of injuries.

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