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The “Doc” is in the NATA Hall of Fame

Article reposted from Troymessenger.com
Author: Jaine Treadwell

Troy University’s John “Doc’ Anderson will be inducted into the National Athletic Trainers’ Association’s prestigious Hall of Fame on June 28 in Houston, Texas.

The Hall of Fame is the highest honor an athletic trainer can receive and it’s an honor that Anderson said  “belongs to the university.”

The NATA has 43,000 active members. Anderson said it has just hit him what this means.

“But not just to me, to Troy University,” he said. “It’s Troy. This award belongs to Troy.”

Anderson has enjoyed a career spanning nearly five decades. With the exception of a 10-year stint at Louisiana State University, he has held various roles at Troy University since 1967, including head athletic trainer, professor and program director and now serves as a professor emeritus lecturer.

He was a member of the U.S. Track and Field coaching staff for the 1984, 1988 and 1992 Olympic Games and served as an athletic trainer for the 1996 Olympic team. Anderson is the founder of Iota Tau Alpha, a national athletic training honor society. Since its inception in 2005, the organization has expanded to more than 100 chapters with more than 4,000 inductees. He previously earned NATA’s Most Distinguished Athletic Trainer Award and Athletic Trainer Service Award.

Talking about awards and recognitions seems to make Anderson a bit uncomfortable. Although he appreciates the recognition, he would rather talk about his former students and the positive changes that have been brought about through athletic training.

“Students are a university’s most precious commodity,” Anderson said, leaning forward as if putting an exclamation point on that statement. “Students are what this is all about. They and this university are what I’m all about.”

Anderson said Troy University recognizes and supports the role that athletic training plays in today’s world and has given him the reign to so what was needed for the university to move forward as a innovator in the area of athletic training.

“Athletic trainers are like nurses. They operate on evidence-based practices,” Anderson said. “They must receive national certification. Becoming an athletic trainer is not a walk in the park.”

Anderson said the norm at Troy University is that, of 65 applicants for the athletic training program, 18 will be accepted and 12 will graduate. “Seventy percent of our graduates will pass the boards the first time out,” he said. “One hundred percent of our graduates will be placed and they will be heading to high profile jobs.”

Graduates of Troy University’s athletic training program include 52 physical therapists, 10 physician’s assistants, three nurses and three physicians. And those are numbers that almost bring a smile to Anderson’s face.

“Our athletic trainers are trained to be successful,” he said. “They are dedicated, goal oriented individuals and they are continuing to help make a difference in the sports world.”

Anderson cited a 1969 ruling supported by athletic trainers that required mouth guards to be used by high school football players. Gatorade, an in-depth look into Sickle cell disease and concussions, even the dangers of lightning have been items and issues supported by athletic trainers.

“Sports Medicine is influencing the general population,” Anderson said. “Me? I’ve stood on the shoulders of giants – at Auburn, LSU and Troy and giants in Sports Medicine

Dr. James Andrews (Sports Medicine and Orthopedic Center), Jack Hughston, (Hughston Clinic) … too many to name.”

Anderson said athletic training has infatuated him, since he was in prep school in New England.

“I’m still infatuated by athletic training,” he said.  It’s research driven and it’s making such a difference. I’ve been lucky to be a small part of it.                   

“And I’ve been blessed to have the opportunities to do the things I’ve been able to do.  Working with so many outstanding individuals and with the students, has been a privilege, not an entitlement. Our students really are our most precious commodities and we have a moral and ethical responsibility to them to give them the best chance at a good life that we can.  I have tried to make the best of my chance at it.”

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Athletic Training legend “Doc” Anderson named to NATA hall of fame

Article reposted from Troy University Athletics
Author: Savanah Weed

A former Troy University coach and head athletic trainer has been chosen to be inducted into the National Athletic Trainers’ Association (NATA) Hall of Fame.

John “Doc” Anderson, professor emeritus, received a call with the news on Monday, Feb. 6, that he almost didn’t answer.

“I looked at the area code, and I thought it was one of those robocodes,” he said. “I answered and someone said, ‘Is this John Anderson?’ and I quietly said, ‘yes.’  He said, ‘This is the president of the NATA, and you’re going to be inducted into the NATA Hall of Fame.’”

John “Doc” Anderson

John “Doc” Anderson

The NATA is a professional membership organization “for certified athletic trainers and others who support the athletic training profession” that has expanded to over 43,000 members since its inception in 1950, according to its official website.

Nominations for awards are open from Aug. 1 through Sept. 15 and recipients are selected in February.

“A committee made up of members from each of NATA’s 10 districts reviews each candidate’s application materials and, after several rounds of discussion, they recommend candidates for Hall of Fame induction,” Angela De Leon-Coleman, senior honors and awards coordinator, said.

In order to be eligible for induction into the Hall of Fame, the nominee must be an NATA member in good standing, have 30 years Board of Certification certification or Retired Certified with initial certification at least 30 years prior to the award year and 30 years of membership in the NATA.

Anderson said he was surprised and grateful to be recognized, but ultimately believes the honor goes back to TROY.

“It’s Troy University’s because I stand on TROY’s shoulders,” he said. “It belongs especially to the College of Health and Human Services, the Department of Kinesiology and Health Promotion, which we are under, and the athletic training program.”

Anderson has experience at every level of athletic training: student, coach, trainer, professor and curriculum director.

As a student-athlete at Auburn, he helped lead the Tigers to their 1964 SEC Cross Country Championship before graduating in 1965.

Anderson began his coaching career at TROY four years later as the head coach for the track and field and cross country teams for 12 seasons while simultaneously serving a 14-year stint as the head athletic trainer (1967-80). During this time, his teams won three track and field conference championships and seven cross country conference championships.

He left TROY in 1980 to take on the head athletic trainer position at LSU for 10 years, but returned in 1990 and continued to coach the cross country teams.

Between his start at and return to TROY, Anderson coached 45 All-American players, including Charles Oliver who won the 1976 NAIA 400-meter National Championship, two Alabama Collegiate Conference championships in 1970-71 and one Gulf South Conference Championship in 1978 with the track and field team. The cross country teams won 10 Gulf South Conference titles and five NCAA Division II Regional Championships.

“My motto with athletics is simple,” he said. “Athletics makes you strong. Study makes you wise. Character makes you great.”

He was named the National Association of Intercollegiate Athletics Coach of the Year twice from 1973-74 and the National Cross Country Coach of the Year in 1992. He earned the conference coach of the year title six times throughout both of his careers at TROY and was also named the NCAA Division II Regional Coach of the Year four times.

As an athletic trainer, Anderson served at the 1996 Olympic Games for the U.S. Track and Field squad and was a member of their medical team in 1984, 1988 and 1992.

He received the NATA Service Award in 1997, was inducted into the Alabama Athletic Trainers Hall of Fame in 1999 and earned the title of Most Distinguished Athletic Trainer award for the NATA in 2006. In 2013, he was inducted into TROY’s Sports Hall of Fame.

On June 28, Anderson will be one of six people inducted into the NATA Hall of Fame in Houston, Texas, and will join the ranks of more than 250 distinguished men and women.

“After all the years I served in athletics, this ain’t mine,” he said. “I’m just carrying the award back from [Houston].”

He and his wife, Susan, currently reside in Troy and have two children, Cindy and John III.