| James Roberts Wins Scholarship from NHSCA |
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| Written by NHSCA Public Information |
| Monday, 11 June 2007 17:00 |
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CARNEY, DELUCA, HAMMER, OLSON, ROBERTS NAMED WINNERS OF NHSCA/REGENT SPORTS JOSEPH P. LIPMAN SCHOLARSHIPS
EASTON, Pa. – The National High School Coaches Association (NHSCA), in partnership with Regent Sports, today announced the winners of the 3rd annual NHSCA/Regent Sports Joseph P. Lipman Scholarships. The five winners for 2007, each of whom will receive a $1,000 college scholarship, are Ken Carney of Jackson, N.J., Jason DeLuca of Dillsburg, Pa., Dana Hammer of Garden City, N.Y., Erica Olson of Traverse City, Mich. and James Roberts of Wilmington, N.C.
Named for
the founder of Regent Sports, a Long Island, N.Y.-based sporting goods retailer and distributor, the
NHSCA/Regent Sports Joseph P. Lipman Scholarships are presented to five high
school athletes who have overcome the most adversity in their high school
athletic careers. "These five young men and women have worked extremely hard not just to overcome adversity, but to excel in their sport," NHSCA associate executive director Joe Boardwine said. "We are happy to have developed this partnership with Regent Sports, a company that has been a pioneer in the sporting goods industry for well over a half-century."
Following
are the NHSCA’s selections as the NHSCA/Regent Sports Joseph P. Lipman
Scholarship Award winners for 2007. Ken Carney, Jackson, N.J.
A key
member of a Jackson Memorial High wrestling squad that was voted the No. 1 Team
in New
Jersey the past two seasons and was nationally ranked as well,
Carney, a 160-pounder, has competed anywhere between 152 and 189 pounds when
necessary to help his team.
Carney has
been a four-year member of the team despite overcoming hardships. Blindness in
one eye hasn’t hampered his success. But shoulder surgery following a junior
season in which he qualified for the New Jersey state tournament nearly ended his
athletic career.
The
surgery resulted in four anchors being inserted in Carney’s shoulder. Doctors
were unsure the operation would permit Carney ever to return to the mat. After
six months of rehabilitation, however, Carney was back in the wrestling room.
He finished his senior season with a 38-3 record and the 160-pound state
championship, and also served as a valuable workout partner for junior teammate
Scott Winston, the only unbeaten wrestler in New Jersey high school history. Carney added
to his state championship by becoming a National High School All-American,
finishing seventh in the NHSCA National High School Seniors Wrestling
Championships in April at Virginia Beach, Va.
"Kenny
has been able to compensate for his disabilities without any of his opponents
knowing this," wrote Michele Carney, Ken’s mother. Ken plans to begin his
collegiate career at a community college as he works toward his goal of
becoming a Division 1 All-American at Lock HavenUniversity. Jason DeLuca, Dillsburg, Pa.
DeLuca
started wrestling in the first grade, and was successful from the very
beginning. He became the first wrestler to finish unbeaten in Pennsylvania Interscholastic
Athletic Association junior high competition in the history of the Northern
High program.
As a high
school freshman, however, DeLuca was hampered by swollen joints that eventually
forced him to withdraw from the sectional tournament. Visits to one doctor
after another finally resulted in a diagnosis of chronic juvenile arthritis.
DeLuca
battled the effects with a variety of medications, including weekly injections
that he eventually learned to administer himself. One doctor cautioned him that
wrestling would place too much strain on his joints and advised him to give up
the sport. The medications made his legs swell to the point where he could not
even walk without a cane, with classmates having to carry his books for him
through the halls at school. Despite barely being able to walk, DeLuca cheered
his teammates on at the sectional, district and state tournaments.
Another
doctor finally diagnosed DeLuca with Lyme disease, contracted through a tick
bite. A round of intravenous drug therapy allowed him to return to the mats as
a sophomore. He holds all of Northern’s wrestling records, winning more than
140 matches in his career. He also became a three-time state qualifier,
finished fifth in the Class 3A state tournament at 125 pounds as a junior and
earned a scholarship to the University of North Carolina.
"Jason
has the character of a real warrior," wrote Fred DeLuca, Jason’s father
and a Northern assistant coach. "He challenged himself in school as well
as on the mat. His doctors, friends, coaches, and even his parents questioned
whether he could ever wrestle again. Athletically and academically, he never
gave up." Dana Hammer, Garden City, N.Y.
Athletics
have been a major part of Hammer’s life since she first stepped on a soccer
field at the age of five. From the excitement of running up and down the field
to backyard practice sessions trying to score on her grandfather, Hammer, who
idolizes former World Cup standout Mia Hamm, dreamed of earning a college
scholarship and perhaps playing in the World Cup or the Olympic Games one day.
But an
injury in eighth grade that was slow to heal revealed a major life challenge:
Hammer was diagnosed with Frieberg’s disease, a condition that caused her red
blood cells to collapse. Instead of healing normally, the disease caused the
tip of the second metatarsal bone on her left foot to die. She was forced to
walk down the aisle at her middle school graduation – and on trips to the beach
that summer – on crutches. As a high school freshman in the midst of seven months
of physical therapy, she had to be a part of the soccer team as manager rather
than player.
When she
was finally able to get back on the field, other physical ailments followed.
Bruised fingers, sprained ankles, a concussion and the discovery of an ovarian
cyst were obstacles to overcome. Recently, Hammer suffered a broken nose and a
deviated septum when she was struck across the face by a stick at a field
hockey camp in Pennsylvania. She faces plastic surgery after
she finishes competing on her school’s defending state champion soccer team as
a senior next fall.
"Every
day, I can’t help but wonder, what could have been? Could I have been an
All-American in three sports? Could I have been recruited to a Division 1
school?" Hammer wrote. "I may not have those answers, but one thing I
do know is that I am not giving up on my dreams to play sports in college. I
now feel I can face any situation positively…everything does happen for a
reason." Erica Olson, Traverse City, Mich.
By the
time she was in the third grade, Olson was a member of a YMCA basketball league
with dreams of playing college basketball. As a 5-foot-5 high school freshman,
she earned the backup point guard spot on the Traverse City West High varsity
girls basketball team. She became the starter as a sophomore, and by the end of
the season, she was listed by the Detroit Free Press as one of the state’s top
100 players.
In
December of her junior year, at a tryout for an AAU basketball team, Olson
experienced pain in her hip, which didn’t heal despite four months of rest and
rehabilitation. A special MRI administered by a Michigan State University orthopedic surgeon revealed a
possible torn labrum. Surgery took place in June, ending her chances for any
participation in elite summer camps or tournaments at a key point in the
recruiting process. The operation showed no labral damage, but the resulting
diagnosis was much worse: avascular neurosis, a condition that causes bones to
soften, was discovered in her femur. The treatment was to keep all weight off
the femur for six weeks, followed by another MRI. The worst-case scenario: a
hip replacement and the possibility of adjoining bones being affected.
Miraculously,
however, the pain disappeared last July, a month following the surgery, and the
condition resulting in the avascular neurosis diagnosis had disappeared as
well. Despite the promise of a Division 1 scholarship having evaporated, Olson
returned to the court this year with a new sense of resolve. She earned
All-Conference and All-Region honors and will play basketball at Indiana Wesleyan University.
"Erica’s
story is truly a miracle," wrote Melanie Olson, Erica’s mother. "She
faced an extremely difficult and challenging situation with strength, character
and selflessness. People tell her how her story has instilled faith and hope in
them and encouraged them as they faced their own challenges. She truly believes
that sometimes our dreams have to be altered for a greater purpose." James Roberts, Wilmington, N.C.
Illnesses
and injuries plagued Roberts throughout his athletic career at Emsley A. Laney
High, but he overcame them to experience success as a football player and as a
wrestler. He was a starter on the wrestling team as a freshman when he was
diagnosed with hypertension, or high blood pressure. The condition was
addressed with medication and seemed to be corrected.
Roberts
was having an outstanding sophomore season when he experienced an adverse
reaction just a week prior to the conference tournament, in early February.
When he experienced a severe headache during a conditioning drill, he was
rushed to the school nurse’s office, where it was discovered that his blood
pressure had become elevated to a life-threatening 190/120. A pediatric
cardiologist finally put Roberts on new and more effective medication, and
despite having lost mat and conditioning time, he qualified for the Class 4A
state wrestling tournament.
But an
accident at a wrestling camp that summer damaged nerves in his lower left leg.
The process of weeks of rehabilitation forced Roberts to miss most of the
football season. He finally returned to the gridiron for the second half of the
season, but his wrestling season was interrupted for five weeks by a separated
shoulder and a severe case of the flu that dropped his weight from his normal
189 pounds to 176. Still, Roberts fought through them, and missed placing in
the state tournament by one match.
Roberts
finished second in the NHSCA National Open Wrestling Championships last June
despite torn knee cartilage. Surgery and rehabilitation again forced him to
miss most of the football season. In his first game back on the field, he made
a game-saving tackle in overtime, then played two games before tearing
cartilage in his other knee, necessitating another operation. Recovering
quickly, he had a senior season to remember, going 59-6 with a school-record 40
pins and finishing second in the state tournament. He went on to win one match
at the NHSCA National High School Seniors Wrestling Championships.
The NHSCA
selects Coaches and Senior Athletes of the Year in 20 boys and girls sports,
and sponsors more than two dozen national championship events in 11 sports. The
18th annual National High School Wrestling Championships attracted nearly 2,300
wrestlers from all four grade levels to Virginia Beach, Va., and the NHSCA conducted 16
championship events in Virginia Beach, Va. last summer. The NHSCA, in partnership with the NFL
Coaches Association, conducted the National High School Football Coaches
Convention in conjunction with U.S. Army All-American Bowl All-Star Game. For a
complete list of this year’s programs and events, visit the NHSCA’s web site at
www.nhsca.com. Founded in 1989, the National High School Coaches Association is a not-for-profit 501c3 service organization providing support and leadership programs for the nation’s 500,000 high school coaches and 10 million high school athletes. |

