The News Herald (Willoughby, OH)

Cleveland Clinic Sports medicine provides expert service

- By John Kampf JKampf@news-herald.com

Players participat­ing in this year’s News-Herald Senior Bowl, presented by Hooley House, will be getting profession­al treatment in terms of sports medicine.

Cleveland Clinic Sports Medicine has joined the Senior Bowl team this year, and is providing athletic training services for each practice this week as well as on game night.

Multiple athletic trainers will be on hand for practices, with Coach Rossi Santo’s white-uniformed team practicing from 5 to 7 p.m. from Sunday through Thursday, and Coach Mick Mohner’s blue-clad team practicing from 7 to 9 p.m. All practices are at Mayfield’s Wildcat Stadium, with game time set for 6 p.m. on Friday, June 17.

“We are very happy and excited to be part of this,” said Heather Fisher, head athletic trainer at Mayfield and a staff athletic trainer for Cleveland Clinic Sports Medicine. “Any time the Clinic has the availabili­ty to offer up the knowledge and expertise from its athletic training staff and the team physicians we have, it’s a great opportunit­y for kids, teams and the community in general.”

Cleveland Clinic Sports Medicine is providing its services all week free of monetary charge. Regional coordinato­r Bob Collins, who doubles as the head athletic trainer at Shaker Heights, said such opportunit­ies are valued by him, his staff and the organizati­on.

“We do sports,” he said. “We relish this. We are in tune with the high school scene. If you don’t take care of them on the high school level, athletes won’t be ready for the college level.

“We enjoy being the medical providers for everything from the high school to the national level.

What we do, we do well.”

Cleveland Clinic Sports Medicine provides athletic training services to more than 50 Clevelanda­rea high schools, as well as Cleveland State, Notre Dame College, Baldwin Wallace, John Carroll and

Tri-C.

“Dr. John Bergfeld started the sports medicine program in Cleveland over 50 years ago,” Collins said. “He’s the catalyst for Northeaste­rn Ohio sports medicine. We’ve been expanding and going from there.”

Specifical­ly for this week’s Senior Bowl preparatio­n and game-day festivitie­s, the Clinic’s athletic training staff will be on hand for pre-practice and pre-game taping and treatment, in-practice and ingame treatment and more.

Fisher, a 1994 Cardinal graduate, pointed out the marvelous facilities that will be in use this week at Mayfield’s Wildcat Stadium, including the athletic training building directly next to the football stadium that includes training tables and icebaths, if needed.

“The trainers and staff will have the availabili­ty of the training building,” she said. “Everything we’d use for a normal football set-up. We’re centrally located for the staff and athletes as well.”

Being part of the Senior Bowl, she said, is special for a multitude of reasons.

“It’s always a great experience,” she said.

 ?? JOHN KAMPF - THE NEWS-HERALD ?? Cleveland Clinic Sports Medicine is providing athletic training services all week for The News-Herald Senior Bowl. Above, athletic trainers, Tarryn Hardgrove and Patty Gehring prepare for Day 1of practice at Mayfield Wildcat Stadium.
JOHN KAMPF - THE NEWS-HERALD Cleveland Clinic Sports Medicine is providing athletic training services all week for The News-Herald Senior Bowl. Above, athletic trainers, Tarryn Hardgrove and Patty Gehring prepare for Day 1of practice at Mayfield Wildcat Stadium.

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