Congratulations to the Arab Clinic Encore Athlete of the Month, Megan Klink! Megan is a senior and multi-sport athlete at Brindlee Mountain High School. She plays Varsity Volleyball (#14) and Softball (#14) for the Lady Lions. Good luck Megan, keep up the good work!
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Hoover Encore Athlete of the Month, Austin Cherry.
Congratulations to the Hoover Clinic Encore Athlete of the Month, Austin Cherry! Austin is a senior at Hoover High School and a member of the Bucs basketball team. He is a 6’2, guard on the team and averaged approx. 19 points a game in the 2013-14 season. After high school, he plans to attend college and study Law. Good luck this season, Austin, keep up the good work!
We are excited to be partnering with Alabama Soccer!
Vernon Encore Athlete of the Month, Cole Dove.
Congratulations to the Vernon Clinic Encore Athlete of the Month, Cole Dove! Cole is a senior at Sulligent High School and a member of the Football team. His plans after graduation are to attend Bevill State and pursue a degree in Auto Mechanics. Cole is the son of Eric and Amanda Dove. Good luck the rest of this season Cole, keep up the good work!
Inverness Encore Athlete of the Month, Rodney Anderson.
Congratulations to the Inverness Encore Athlete of the Month, Rodney Anderson! Rodney is a Senior at Spain Park High School and is a member of the baseball team. He plays multiple positions including first base & pitcher. After high school he would like to attend the University of Alabama. His favorite sports team is the Boston Red Sox. Rodney is the son of Rachel & Rodney Anderson. Good luck during baseball season next year, Rodney, keep up the good work!
Muscle Shoals Encore Athlete of the Month, Joey “Doc” Wells.
Congratulations to the Muscle Shoals Clinic Encore Athlete of the Month, Joey “Doc” Wells! Doc is a junior at Muscle Shoals High School and plays offense and defense on the football team. His plans after college are to become a doctor. Doc is the son of Joey Wells and Chiquita Smith. Good lunch Doc, keep up the good work!
Winfield Athlete of the Month, Lexie Coleman.
Columbiana Athlete of the Month, Alexa Couch.
Clanton Athlete of the Month, Clay Cunningham.
Congratulations to the Clanton Clinic Encore athlete of the month, Clay Cunningham! Clay is a 16 year old, mulit-sport, junior at Jemison High School. He is a left tackle for the football team and a pitcher for the baseball team. His brother, Dillion, also plays on the baseball team. Clay is interested in attending Florida, Auburn, or anywhere that offers him a baseball scholarship. Good luck in both football and baseball seasons, Clay!
“Be it rain, sleet, or snow…” Teamwork, for the love of the game.
This article was written by Melinda Wilson, ATC, Rachael Jones, DPT, Alicia Dodd, DPT and Amber Rutledge, Receptionist from the Winfield Clinic.
“Teamwork”
Baseball may be “America’s sport,” but football runs deep in the veins of the general populace, especially in the South. We have huge pre-game parties; we buy big screen TV’s; we organize weddings around a football schedule; and the minute one season ends, fans immediately begin the countdown to when the next season starts. Like the United States Postal Service, “be it rain, sleet, or snow…” even unbearable heat, we are there supporting our team. We make consistent sacrifices for the game, yet we never step onto the field. Why? Simply put, for the love of the game. It unites us with a comparable passion, a similarity with our fellow man, even a common enemy; all this for the love of a game, a glorification of war mingled with skill, speed, and strength to defeat the enemy, push back the opposition, and hopefully, pull out a win. We “bleed” crimson, orange and blue, red and blue, orange and white, maroon and white, etc. With such significance, how then can we apply this in both our daily lives and working relations?
Firstly, let’s break a football team down into positions. You have a division in the coaching staff and players. The players can be divided into offense, defense, and special teams. Furthermore, divisions subsist of corners, tight ends, quarterbacks, receivers, centers, kickers, etc. On the coaching staff, such positions are head coach, offensive coordinator, defensive coordinator, assistant coaches, and so forth. All are united by one goal; drive the ball across the plain and win the game. Like any well-oiled machine, each part must run smoothly, flawlessly in order to provide a quality product. If at any point one of these subsets breaks or cracks, the machine shatters. The goal is lost. The game is forfeit.
Now apply this metaphor to sports medicine. We, too, are a team categorized into divisions with common goals; be it clinical or administrative. We can think of the administration as the referees, the “game callers,” monitoring the daily working processes of “the machine.” Clinical Staff such as physical therapists, physical therapy assistants, occupational therapists, occupational therapy assistants, speech therapists, exercise physiologists, and athletic trainers and so on are the coaching staff. It is through our various disciplines and our playbook, or patient protocols, in which we rehabilitate our players. Our head coach is the referring physician; our orders begin and end with him.
Each of these positions has a job to do. We come to work each day like the proverbial “football team,” our metaphorical field being the clinics, weight rooms, and school settings to which we sojourn. We share this commonality: to see the athlete get back to doing what they love. We have to have our game faces on and a shared passion to come together for achieved success. Bottom line: communication is key from the beginning of injury to the return of the player. Devising and developing a thorough game plan allows the continuation of the dichotomy that is the therapist/patient relationship. It is through our group effort that our “hail Mary pass” comes to fruition when we get to see our patients once more taking the field.












