 |
 |
|
|
| |
|
Office Hours: |
Monday 8a-6p
Tuesday Closed
Wednesday 8a-6p
Thursday 8a-6p
Friday 7:30a-2:30p |
| |
|
|
|
Hockey Referee has Career
Saved by Chiropractic
The January 12, 2003 issue of the Washington Post
featured an article that highlights the difficulties of
being a referee in the National Hockey League. The
article highlights the career of one of hockey's more
enduring referees, Andy Van Hellemond, who refereed
1,475 games, more than anyone else in league history.
Van Hellemond, now serves as the NHL's director of
officiating.
During his active career as a referee he broke his hand,
broke three ribs and separated his sternum after a
collision with Hall of Fame defenseman Larry Robinson
along the boards. Van Hellemond was twisted awkwardly
upon impact and spent five weeks in the hospital with a
badly pinched nerve. He recalls the effects of his
injury, "I couldn't feel my right leg for the longest
time," Van Hellemond said. "They would put pins and
needles in my leg up to my hip and I didn't feel a
thing. It was completely blocked." The article then
explains that his career was saved by chiropractic. The
article stated, "Eventually a chiropractic adjustment
saved Van Hellemond's career."
Van Hellemond, was elected into the Hockey Hall of Fame
in 1999. He is also at the vanguard of a sweeping
evaluation system in which every official travels with a
laptop computer and receives daily critiques via e-mail
and video downloads. He was also the first official to
wear a helmet. His innovations and contributions to
hockey would have been sorely missed had his career been
cut short. Andy Van Hellemond, and Chiropractic have
made their mark in hockey's history. |
|
|