Newsletter 5-20-10
I receive a fairly large amount of email from readers asking one of two questions: 1) How do I get into professional sports and 2) What is your typical day like? I’ve talked about how to land a job in professional sports in the past, but wanted to take the time to share a typical day for me (sure you want to work in pro sports?):
- During the baseball season my working hours are from about 12:00 to 12:00, 7 days a week, from February 1st to October (hopefully longer…). Yup, 7 days a week for 8+ months. My day typically starts around noon but more often than not I am on the phone and Blackberry here and there in the morning checking up on any loose ends from the day before.
- My staff and I typically head to the ballpark around noon, give or take. We start by preparing for the day before it gets busy. This involved making sure the training room is stocked, materials for the bench during the game are ready (towels, water, hydration drinks, energy snacks, etc), and mapping out what the healthy and injured players need to do that day.
- The afternoon involves rehabbing the injured players early in the day and working with the pitchers, who are pretty routine based. They know when they are starting and what they need to do each day to prepare for their next start. This keeps us pretty busy for most of the day. In a sense, it is very similar to a small PT clinic in the day time. Myself and my two assistants knock out treatments together as a team. The rest of afternoon revolves around getting the rehab players better and getting the healthy players prepared for batting practice.
- Later in the afternoon the team goes out for a team stretch, throwing for the pitchers, and batting practice for the hitters. As a fan, this is the part of the game you get to watch if you get there early enough. The pitchers roam the outfield shagging while the position players hit, take ground balls, and perform outfield drills. Pretty basic stuff but a chance for the medical staff to take a breather. I tend to check in emails and send out updates as needed during this time. You may catch me roaming around during BP, sometimes checking in with players and sometimes just enjoying a little breather on a nice day!
- Once BP is over, our gears shift to getting ready for the game. Massages and stretches are popular, and all go much better with loud music.
- Once the game starts, the medical staff is split covering the bench and training room. During the game we monitor for injuries but also need to help our reserve players get ready for the game in a pinch if needed. Our gears shift to retrospective care of injuries instead or rehab and prevention. I am lucky to have a great seat to every game. It is definitely an amazing experience to be able to watch and participate to an extent in a game from the dugout.
- After the game, players stretch and ice to get ready for tomorrow. Our season is LONG and we only have about 2 days off a month. It is extremely demanding on the body of the players (and staff!). Anything we can do to help recover for tomorrow is a priority.
- Once we get our paperwork done and shower up, it’s usually around midnight and time to get some rest. We either head home or hope on the team bus and head back to the hotel. Sad to say that we spend so much time in hotels but I can tell you some weird things like which hotels have the best shower heads (Westin) and the closest Dunkin Donuts to each hotel!
- My mornings start off a little late, but hey, I work a night job! Sleep is important and you have to remember we don’t get a chance to catch up on the weekends like many people, I don’t have a day off for 8 months in a row! There are always treatments on our “off days.” In fact, we’ll have a day game on the weekend and get even less sleep, or worse fly across country overnight and get no sleep. I can’t sleep on planes, hurts my neck, but I get a lot of computer work done – like this newsletter. I am sitting on a runway as I write this…
- When I am on the road I get a lot of work done on this website and other presentations, research projects and manuscripts. It is a good way to pass time in a hotel.
- At home, I try to shut off my responsibilities as much as possible and just get some much needed family time. So, yes at times I slack off on things like this newsletter and website, but now hopefully you have a better understanding of why.
- It’s definitely long hours and you need to love your job. There are huge personal sacrifices that are made. I am away from my family way too much, I haven’t been able to attend a friend’s wedding in years, and I miss Pearl Jam concerts every time they come to town in the summer. Luckily I have an understanding family. I still get the occasional friend that asks if I can grab dinner one night when we are in town. Ummmm…. yeah that isn’t going to be possible.
- But it is worth it at times. It is hard to beat the excitement you feel each night when we start the game or the feeling of clinching in the playoffs. Though, if you took my online class last year, you may have noticed I had a fat lip from taking a champagne cork to the mouth during a celebration last year! And I am lucky to have experienced winning a World Series, that is a feeling that is hard to explain.
- People always ask me what I want to do next with my life/career. I think it’s more simple than most people realize. All I want next is a 4-day work week!
Hope you see the day in a life of a professional baseball athletic trainer a little different now. It’s not all roses, but hard work and long hours. It’s not for everyone, but for those that truly love it, it can be very rewarding. So for the delay in writing this everyone, thanks for your patience!


June 1, 2008 
















As a chiropractor who works on the PGA Tour medical staff (who also happens to have a family member who was an ATC in the NFL and upper levels of the NCAA), I can say that Mike hits the nail on the head with this post. Long hours with brief, brief moments of relaxation scattered about. Thanks for showing everyone how amazing (and demanding) a sports job can be.
Don't forget the red sox and yankees stress factor on top of it all!
Well, Mike, couldn't help but fall off my chair laughing when you were on camera last weekend on ESPN talking to Francona.
When the camera started rolling with you and Francona talking, you were eye to eye….then you apparently stepped off the dugout steps and you were then about eye-level with the "Red Sox" lettering….just looked really funny but congrats on all the success with the team.
Mike,
Thanks for sharing.
That was very cool.
Rick Kaselj
Mike, thanks for sharing. I spent the 2009 season interning in an independent league as an athletic training student. Great experience. Loved it although it was unpaid so I worked another job during that time too! I'm looking at the NFL or professional baseball as possible career choices once I graduate…