Latifah Coleman's injury leaves the Tar Heels short handed

Indy Week reports:

CARMICHAEL ARENA/CHAPEL HILL UNC comes back from its Thanksgiving break to complete its five-game homestand, and the Tar Heels are going to play shorthanded.

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Guard Latifah Coleman suffered a torn ACL in her left knee on Tuesday against Presbyterian and will be out for the season. And there are new injuries. Laura Broomfield is out with an injury to her left foot and Shannon Smith is out with a pulled hamstring.

That leaves eight players to take on Kennesaw State today, so both freshmen Megan Buckland and Brittany Rountree will get the start.

KSU has visited Carmichael each of the last three seasons with an 0-3 record, and the closest approach was 34 points. Click here to continue reading.

Molly Grammer lives up to her nickname

The Morning Call reports:

When Molly Grammer went down with a torn ACL during warm-ups for a 2010 match with Emmaus, many thought Southern Lehigh's season essentially was over. However, the team dug deep and eventually made it to the PIAA semifinal round.

This year, with Grammer healthy, the Spartans again won the District 11 2A championship and went deeper into the PIAA playoffs, this time to the finals, where they fell to Brandywine Heights in the championship game. The Spartans' overall record of 31-7-7 includes three-set tournament matches. In five-set matches, they only lost to Parkland and to Brandywine Heights.

Grammer, a senior, is the Morning Call 2011 2A Player of the Year in girls volleyball.

Grammer, whose nickname, at least among the Spartan faithful, is "Hammer," lived up to that name with 473 kills in 823 attempts this year. She had 32 against Brandywine in the state final. Click here to continue reading.

Injuries derail seasons of two local hoops stars

The Herald reports:

There seems to be an epidemic attacking players before the upcoming 2011-2012 girls basketball season even starts: torn anterior cruciate ligaments.



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At least two bona fide stars from last season find themselves watching their teams from the sidelines this year after tearing ACLs: Marysville-Pilchuck's Becca Lentz and Lynnwood's Mokun Fajemisin. Both are seniors that will miss their final high school seasons because of their injuries.

"There's been ACL tears happening everywhere," said Tomahawks head coach Julie Martin. "The ACL Club is what we call it, and nobody wants to be a member."

Lentz joined the "Club" during the middle of the fall soccer season. She got tangled up with another player who fell on her leg. Immediately, she knew something was wrong.

"I knew as soon as it happened, right away as soon as I heard it pop," Lentz, a 2010 All-State Girls Soccer Second Team selection, said. Click here to continue reading.

Female athletes at higher risk for ACL injury

DuQuoin.com reports:

What do these women have in common: a 40-year-old runner, a 20-year-old collegiate volleyball player and a 16-year-old soccer player?

They are all female athletes, and as such, they are predisposed to certain injury patterns and anatomical weaknesses. Because of these predispositions, female athletes have different training needs than their male counterparts.

Research has shown that athletic women’s muscle recruitment patterns differ from men’s and that they have different muscle imbalances than men. Both of these factors can lead to an increased risk of injury, especially to the knee, and specifically to the anterior cruciate ligament, or ACL, an important stabilizing ligament in the knee.

It has also been found that 20 to 30 percent of women have one leg that is weaker than the other, which can increase injury risk by 2.6 times the normal rate. Therefore, specific training strategies need to be aimed at improving these weak/poorly functioning muscles. 

There are four main issues that affect a woman’s athletic performance:  excessive flexibility; decreased hamstring (back of the thigh) strength and recruitment time; decreased strength of the hip abductors and external rotators (the muscles that move your leg out the side and rotate your hip outward); and sub-optimal jump landing position.

Everyone wants to be flexible, but female athletes are often too flexible.  This can reduce stability of the joints around the stretched muscle. Consider the hamstrings. You may often hear, “My hamstrings are so tight, I really need to stretch them.” Many people tend to overestimate the need for increased hamstring length and, therefore, stretch too much. In fact, excessive flexibility in this area in females is common. Click here to continue reading.

Carmen Boessen overcomes ACL injury to co-captain her team

The Missourian reports:

When practice ends each day for the Rock Bridge girls basketball team, the players head off in all directions. Some stay to shoot or talk to their teammates, while others head to the locker room to shower and change clothes.

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Carmen Boessen's routine is a bit different. The senior co-captain walks down the steps and passes the locker room doors. She enters a room filled with padded tables. A sign on the wall outside the door reads "Training/Film Room." No one is there. She walks to the back of the room and fills two plastic bags with ice, carries them to one of the tables and sits down. Boessen ices her knee for 15 minutes after practice every day.

During a soccer game in mid-June, Boessen tore her ACL in her left knee while dribbling the ball toward the goal. She said she remembers hearing her knee pop and falling to the ground.

"I didn't have pain, but I knew something was so wrong," Boessen said, remembering the moment. "My first thought was, 'Oh my God, was that my ACL? This can't be real.'" Click here to continue reading.

Krista Schauder chooses Kutztown

The Mercury reports:

Krista Schauder’s senior year got off to a rather inauspicious start when the Boyertown two-sport standout suffered a torn ACL and meniscus in her right knee earlier this fall while playing for her travel softball team.

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Despite the unfortunate injury, which will keep her off the basketball court this winter, Schauder’s softball future still appears plenty promising.

Wednesday afternoon, Schauder signed a letter-of-intent to accept a partial scholarship to attend Kutztown University and play softball for the NCAA Division II power Golden Bears.

“Kutztown had the academics I want, and I liked the size of the school,” said Schauder, who plans on majoring in electronic media. “It’s just a real pretty college.” Click
here to continue reading.

Torn ACL takes Kenzie Williams out for the season

MSU Sports Central reports:

Missouri State will be without the services of guard Kenzie Williams for the remainder of the season after the freshman tore the ACL in her right knee during the first half of Sunday’s game against Louisville at JQH Arena.

Williams, who played 27 minutes in MSU’s first two games and averaged 7.7 points on 64 percent shooting in three the exhibition contests, will undergo surgery to repair the tear in the coming weeks. The average recovery time following ACL reconstruction surgery is 6-12 months.

Other recent Lady Bears who have gone through ACL reconstruction include Melissa Busby and Kendra Roberts. The injury leaves the Lady Bears with 13 players on the active roster, one of whom, Jasmine Malone, started the season suspended indefinitely for possible violations of team rules.

Missouri State will apply for a medical hardship waiver from the NCAA in hopes of regaining this year of eligibility for Williams.

A girls worst enemy: ACL injuries

NJ.com reports:

No matter the girl. No matter the sport. It usually happens the same way.

A sudden stop, change of direction or landing from a jump.

A loud pop or crack followed by a scream.

A teenager crumbles to the ground in excruciating pain.

And there’s a torn anterior cruciate ligament (ACL), the most common knee injury among female scholastic athletes.

It’s an injury to a ligament smaller than a pinkie finger, yet it carries a six- to nine-month recovery process that includes painful and tedious rehab. What’s worse, female teenage athletes are two to six times more likely to tear their ACLs than teenage boys.

Allegra Ondrejka was an all-county and all-state goal scorer in each of her first two seasons as a member of the Washington Township High School girls soccer team. Click here to continue reading.

Cassie Bohn commits to St. Norbert College following ACL injury

My.hsj.org reports:

Cassie Bohn, NDA senior, will play basketball at St. Norbert College next year.  Irnoically, the commitment comes as she recovers from ACL surgery.

“I didn’t know how I was going to play in high school or even college after my injury,” said Bohn in expressing her concern about playing her final year of high school.

However, her basketball records from previous years were so good that she had been spotted and offered a spot at many colleges to play basketball.

Bohn originally dreamed of going to Madison or Marquette for her college experience. She had not intended, or even wanted to go, to St. Norbert College because she wanted to get out of Green Bay and experience new things. Click here to continue reading.

Alena Pranckevicious' injury means young teammates must step up

MySuburbanLife.com reports:

During the offseason, Lemont’s girls basketball team suffered a blow to its experience when an injury occurred.

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Projected starting senior point guard Alena Pranckevicius tore her ACL in August while competing in a summer league game as a member of the Lady Renegades traveling team.

“The team we were playing was running a press,” Pranckevicius recalled. “I was trying to run through the press and I felt a pop in my knee.”

Pranckevicius had surgery and continues to rehab. She is expected to miss the first two months of the 2011-12 campaign and is scheduled to return to regular season games in January.

In the meantime, the underclassmen will be asked to assume veteran-type roles. Last season, Lemont’s appearance in the playoffs came to a close following a 65-49 loss to Morgan Park in a Class 3A Evergreen Park regional championship. The Indians defeated Rich East 48-33 in the previous round. Click here to continue reading.

Erica Nish tears her ACL in Tuesday's Game

The UVU Review reports:

Head coach Sam Atoa kept his fingers crossed the entire season, hoping his team’s health would hold. It did – until it mattered most.

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Middle blocker Erica Nish tore her ACL early in Tuesday’s game against Southern Utah after making a play at the net and coming down hard. She immediately grabbed her right knee and remained on the floor while team officials attended her before helping her off the court. Nish did not play the remainder of the match, though she did remain with the team on the sidelines.

Nish said she plans on undergoing surgery before Christmas.

“It’s unfortunate when situations like this happen,” Atoa said. “We feel for Erica and for her not being able to finish what she’s done all year. We’ve been relatively healthy.” Click here to continue reading.

UF Women's Basketball Loses Needles to ACL tear

The Alligator reports:

Carlie Needles thought she just needed some more ice.

It turns out the only thing on ice is Needles’ season, which ended when she suffered tears to the anterior cruciate ligament and meniscus in her left knee during practice Sunday.

She is scheduled to undergo surgery after Thanksgiving.
“When [athletic trainer John Barrett] said those three letters (ACL), I was just like, ‘What? Wait a second,’” Needles said.
Needles sustained the injury during an intra-squad scrimmage while playing defense.Coming down the court following a change of possession, Needles attempted to cut off her opponent, but her left knee buckled and she fell to the floor untouched.
Initially, Needles thought she had merely hyper-extended her knee and would be back on the court shortly.
“I’ve seen people tear ACL’s right in front of me and I’ve seen people scream, I’ve seen people just wobble off,” Needles said. Click here to continue reading.

Adding warm-ups may prevent injuries

CBC reports:

Targeted warm-ups may help reduce the risk of knee injuries in female athletes who play high school soccer and basketball.

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The study in Monday's issue of the Archives of Pediatrics & Adolescent Medicine looked into neuromuscular warm-ups, which start with easy cardiovascular exercises and progress to focusing on muscles and motions used in the sports.

Girls have between a five- and eight-times-higher risk of damage to the anterior cruciate ligament or ACL— which can cause knee injury — than boys, according to the Canadian Physiotherapy Association. Click here to read more.

Emma Dolcetti: An amazing athlete with an amazing story

The BC Local reports:

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Heart surgery in her freshman year. Torn ACL in first game of her junior year.

It has hardly been a best-times-of-your-life like story for Emma Dolcetti of the Gonzaga University Bulldogs.

The Kal Laker grad is, however, healthy and scoring some big goals this NCAA Division 1 women’s soccer season. Dolcetti had a team-leading five goals going into a season-ending Saturday game against the University of Portland Pilots.

After 11 months of intense rehab with the Gonzaga trainer, Dolcetti was cleared for contact in August during the preseason schedule. She red-shirted last year which allowed her to practise with the team. Click here to continue reading.

Women more at risk for ACL injuries

The Courier Post Online reports:

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It’s been more than a year and a half since Brianna Sandone hurt her left knee in a high school softball practice, but she remembers it like it was yesterday.

Then a junior on the softball team at Bishop Eustace Prep, Sandone had just thrown a pitch and was fielding a ball hit back to her. She stepped to her left to retrieve the ball and her knee buckled under her. The diagnosis was a torn anterior cruciate ligament.

Sandone required surgery and endured months of rehabilitation. She returned to play softball as a senior, but chose to play the outfield rather than pitch. She’s fully recovered and playing for Stevens Institute of Technology in Hoboken. Click here to read more.

Lyndsey Cloman tears ACL in right knee

ESPN reports:

The No. 15 Oklahoma women's basketball team has lost one of its captains to injury.

Junior forward Lyndsey Cloman sustained a season-ending ACL injury in Wednesday's exhibition game against Central Oklahoma, coach Sherri Coale announced Saturday.

An MRI revealed the tear in Cloman's right knee. Surgery will be performed in four weeks, followed by a six-month recovery period.

Cloman averaged 4.3 points and 3.0 rebounds for the Sooners last season, but was expected to play a significant role this season.

Keep Moving Forward

Universe reports:

Loud popping noises filled Auna Doria’s ears as pain quickly engulfed her knee. Instantly, Doria knew she would be taken out of the game she loved — the game of soccer.


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Because of a torn ACL, Doria, a senior forward on the BYU women’s soccer team, was unable to complete the rest of her final college soccer season. Although a major part of Doria’s life had been ripped from her hands, she kept a positive attitude by adhering to her husband’s motto — keep moving forward.

Doria began playing soccer at the age of 4, and immediately knew it was something she loved. She spent hours everyday in the backyard and basement, as she learned and perfected skills that would make her a better player. Even though she spent the majority of her time with a soccer ball, Doria said it was worth the time. Click here to read more.