|












| | 
Testimonials
|
Virginia Tech
|
|
Virginia Tech’s
Winning System Of Integrated
Care
|
By James Panter
In making its ninth straight
bowl appearance after the
2001 season, Virginia Tech’s
football team further
solidified its position in
the upper echelon of NCAA’s
Division I schools.
Guided by Head Coach Frank
Beamer, the Hokies compiled
an 8-3 regular season record
after losing a nail-biting
26-24 decision to top-ranked
Miami, and they captured a
berth in the Gator Bowl to
play perennial powerhouse
Florida State.
|
 |
In 1999, the Big East
Conference champion Hokies
finished at No. 2 in the
Associated Press poll after
compiling an 11-1 record and
playing Florida State for
the national title in the
Sugar Bowl. The next season,
they achieved a No. 6
ranking with another 11-1
record and the Gator Bowl
crown.
The success of the Virginia
Tech program stands as a
testimony to hard work,
commitment and preparation.
Not only do the Hokies
depend on a crafty game
plan, a balanced offense, a
stingy defense and solid
kicking game to win, but
they also rely on a
comprehensive, integrated
training and care model that
elevates athletic
performance.
"If an athlete has a back
injury, more than likely
he’s going to see our team
doctor, trainer,
chiropractor and physical
therapist," says Mike
Goforth, head athletic
trainer at Virginia Tech.
"We’re all going to come to
some type of common ground
in the care of the athlete,
and that’s what separates
our program from others."
Goforth, who implements a
"think tank" strategy,
utilizes the services of
Blacksburg, Va.,
chiropractor Dr. Greg Tilley
in his well-coordinated team
of providers.
"A lot of times, athletic
trainers either are not
shown what chiropractic can
do, or we are steered away
from it," Goforth
emphasizes. "I was a little
apprehensive at first,
because I wasn’t educated on
what Dr. Tilley could do.
But as I started to see some
of the work he did on our
athletes, and how he
interacted with them, I
really felt strongly about
what he could do."
|
 |
Three years ago, Tilley
initially had approached Dr.
Duane Lagan, the team physician,
to discuss how he could assist
Virginia Tech in delivering
care.
"I told him I would be willing
to volunteer and help in any way
I could," recalls Tilley, a Life
University graduate. "My
approach was not to push myself
on them, but for them to contact
me if they had a question
concerning an injury that I
could help with. It was a
completely new idea to them.
They had never really even
thought about chiropractic as
being a viable option for the
sports medicine department." |
|
After Goforth and Mike Gentry,
the assistant athletic director
for athletic performance, saw
the athletes get results from
Tilley’s care, they began
envisioning chiropractic as an
element to include in their
integrated model. Trainers, as
well as Dr. Lagan, now refer
athletes to the chiropractor for
care.
Tilley’s background in athletic
training gave him insights into
Goforth’s needs.
"Not pushing myself on him was
the big thing," he notes. "I
just let him know that I could
help and came up with ideas to
make his job easier and help his
athletes perform better," he
says. "I know how the training
room and the referral system
works."
Tilley educated the trainers
one-on-one by using spine
models, X-rays and literature.
In providing care for athletes,
he uses Diversified, full spine
and Thompson drop techniques and
analysis protocols.
"In the beginning, there were
times when I only saw one or two
patients," he says. "Now, I have
been allocated an office in the
sports complex where I have my
own portable table, and they
have a schedule where the
trainers can schedule times for
their athletes to see me."
Tilley, a Life University
graduate, sets up his table to
give adjustments on Wednesdays,
and also on Saturdays before
football home games. On game
days, he begins his work two
hours prior to kickoff and
adjusts approximately 15 Hokies,
most of them starters, who wait
in line for care.
"I have to make some adaptations
because I’m adjusting 300-pound
linemen," he describes. "I’ve
made a couple of biomechanical
adaptations so that I can be
really specific with my
adjustments. The most common
conditions we see are
sprain/strain-type injuries and
low back injuries, and we see a
lot of lower cervical and upper
thoracic subluxations."
"In the lower back, and even the
hamstring area, we see increased
flexibility, as well as better
range of motion through the
shoulder and neck region," he
continues. "So we’re seeing less
muscle tightness, increased
range of motion and better
flexibility, which adds up to
better performance."
Junior quarterback Grant Noel,
who began receiving adjustments
in July 2001, feels that
chiropractic gives him better
flexibility and range of motion.
According to Tilley, he
concentrates on adjusting the
"arm and shoulder girdle, which
relates to the mid-back" and
checking the lower cervical
area.
"Just getting my back adjusted
and loose helps with my trunk
mobility, as far as twisting and
throwing," Noel says.
Senior linebacker Ben Taylor,
whose outstanding play made him
a candidate for the prestigious
Butkus Award, has been under
Tilley’s care for 1-1/2 years.
Jarring collisions with
powerful, fast runners make
chiropractic care a weekly
necessity.
"It helps me a lot because I’m
stiff and I’m trying to get more
mobile," he points out. "A lot
of times, when you have a
head-on-head collision with the
fullback, it puts a lot of
stress on your upper body,
especially the neck, because
you’re leading with your head
and that gives you a jolt.
Usually on Sundays, your neck is
really, really stiff." |
|
Tilley takes SOAP notes on every
athlete and sends reports to
Lagan and Goforth to keep them
informed of the progress of
care. Paid through a grant
study, he not only adjusts
football players, but also
athletes in other sports, such
as swimming and diving,
lacrosse, soccer, men’s and
women’s basketball, golf, tennis
and cheerleading. In addition,
he provides care for Blacksburg
High School athletes. |
 |
|
"A lot of our players have asked
why Dr. Tilley isn’t traveling
with the team now," Goforth
describes. "I’m hoping that his
frequency in the training room
will increase. We don’t just let
anybody into our system, because
we have to be very protective of
our kids. But whenever we find
somebody like Dr. Tilley, I’ll
do whatever I can to support him
and promote him. I think this is
a step in the right direction.
We hope it serves as a model."
Gentry, who has been at Virginia
Tech for 15 years, oversees
three full-time strength coaches
and four graduate assistants in
facilities spanning 20,000
square feet. He notes that his
department’s mission statement
is to help athletes "realize
their physical potential in
order to increase their
performance on the field or
court and also decrease their
severity and incidence of
sports-related injury."
After measuring strength, speed,
weight, body fat and other
factors, the staff uses a
sport-specific program to devise
a tailored plan for each
athlete, based on individual
needs.
"I see chiropractic has having
two functions, from my
perspective," Gentry states. "It
helps our athletes return to
competition faster, if they have
sustained some injuries, and
secondarily, it seems to be
preventive, in the sense that it
keeps our athletes more mobile
and flexible and feeling better.
The numbers of athletes that use
it, want to use it or have
benefited from it, has continued
to grow."
Beamer, who was named the NCAA’s
"Coach of the Year" in 1999, has
been coaching since 1972 and has
served as Virginia Tech’s since
1987. He has seen dramatic
changes in the care of athletes
during that time.
"Several of our kids have
benefited from going to a
chiropractor," he says. "They go
there, and they feel better when
they come out. Mike Goforth has
opened it up so that we’ve got
massage and all the different
ways of treating. Some people
probably react to it better than
others, but it’s available."
Athletic Director Jim Weaver
emphasizes that this approach
shows the university’s concern
for the well-being of its
student-athletes.
"I have always been a believer
in chiropractic," he says, "and
I am very supportive of the
integration of all facets in our
total approach at Virginia Tech
of the care of our
student-athletes. We believe
that everybody has a role to
play."
Goforth, who has been at
Virginia Tech since 1998, has
developed a system that
institutes a true team concept.
"At many schools, you have
different levels of care," he
points out. "You might go to the
trainer, and if the trainer
doesn’t get you better, you go
to the team doctor. If the team
doctor doesn’t get you better,
you go to the orthopedic
specialist. Then you might try
physical therapy, or you might
try chiropractic. I don’t
believe it ought to be a stepped
approach like that. It ought to
be more of a think tank
situation.
"The key is everybody knowing
their role," he adds. "We have
to work within a system here. If
everybody is not on the same
page and everybody is not
supporting each other, that
system will fail, and that’s the
biggest obstacle to adding
chiropractic care into a
Division I athletic setting.
It’s the trainer’s job to
maintain that communication,
that flow, and the more people
you have involved, the harder it
gets. But I have complete
confidence in Dr. Tilley that
he’ll communicate effectively to
the athletes and myself."
Goforth supervises a
"performance-based" training
room, where athletes are
prepared to compete at the
highest level possible.
"If an athlete doesn’t believe
in what we‘re doing, they’re not
going to get better," he says.
"We try to do everything we can
to keep them 100 percent, to
play or to work out to better
themselves, and that’s the way I
look at chiropractic.
"I don’t think you have to be
injured to see Dr. Tilley,
because there are some
performance issues prior to a
contest that he can help you
with, regardless of whether you
are injured or not. It’s an
attitude of ‘I feel like I need
a little adjustment. The
adjustments make me feel better.
I play better.’ I feel having
chiropractic helps us win." |
|
|
|
|
 |