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Dodgers Make History By Hiring 1st Ever Female…

Sue Falsone makes history with her appointment as head athletic trainer. (credit: The Los Angeles Dodgers)

Sue Falsone makes history with her appointment as head athletic trainer. (credit: The Los Angeles Dodgers)

LOS ANGELES (AP) — The Los Angeles Dodgers have hired Sue Falsone as head athletic trainer, making her the first female to hold that job in major professional sports.

General manager Ned Colletti announced Falsone’s hiring Monday and said Stan Conte has been promoted to senior director of medical services.

Falsone became the first female physical therapist in the major leagues when she was hired by the Dodgers in 2007. She worked in that role through the 2010 season. The 37-year-old trainer will continue to work for Athletes’ Performance in Phoenix.

Falsone has also worked with players in the NFL, NBA and NHL.

She and current assistant athletic trainer Nancy Patterson give the Dodgers the first pair of female trainers on one staff in the history of the major leagues.

(© Copyright 2011 The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.)

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Dodgers hire 1st woman as head athletic trainer

Associated Press

Posted on October 31, 2011 at 4:36 PM

LOS ANGELES (AP) — The Los Angeles Dodgers have hired Sue Falsone as head athletic trainer, making her the first female to hold that job in major professional sports.

General manager Ned Colletti announced Falsone’s hiring Monday and said Stan Conte has been promoted to senior director of medical services.

Falsone became the first female physical therapist in the major leagues when she was hired by the Dodgers in 2007. She worked in that role through the 2010 season. The 37-year-old trainer will continue to work for Athletes’ Performance in Phoenix.

Falsone has also worked with players in the NFL, NBA and NHL.

She and current assistant athletic trainer Nancy Patterson give the Dodgers the first pair of female trainers on one staff in the history of the major leagues.

Not much else going on in the MLB planet today.

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Dodgers first to hire female trainer




LOS ANGELES – The Los Angeles Dodgers have hired the first female head athletic trainer in major professional sports.

Sue Falsone was also the first female physical therapist in Major League Baseball when she was hired by the Dodgers in 2007. She held the position through the 2010 season.

“This is a very special day not just for Sue, but for the Dodgers and Major League Baseball,” general manager Ned Colletti said. “The Dodgers have always been an organization of firsts and this promotion for Sue continues in that tradition.”

Falsone, 37, said in a statement that it was “a true honour” to work with a progressive and historic organization.

“My work with the Dodgers over the past few years as well as my time with [Athletes' Performance] will serve me well in taking this next step,” she said. “I look forward to helping develop innovative and creative programs to reduce injuries and keep our players on the field so that they can achieve their potential.”

Jackie Robinson was the first African-American to play in the major leagues when he debuted for the Dodgers in 1947. The Dodgers were also the first team to have a Korean-born player and a Taiwanese player on their big league roster.

Their signing of Hideo Nomo in 1995 paved the way for Japanese players to compete in the majors.

What do you guys think about this.

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Dodgers hire 1st female trainer in pro sports

Written by

TSN The Sports Network

Los Angeles, CA (Sports Network) – The Los Angeles Dodgers have hired the
first female head athletic trainer in major professional sports.

Sue Falsone was also the first female physical therapist in Major League
Baseball when she was hired by the Dodgers in 2007. She held the position
through the 2010 season.

“This is a very special day not just for Sue, but for the Dodgers and Major
League Baseball,” general manager Ned Colletti said. “The Dodgers have always
been an organization of firsts and this promotion for Sue continues in that
tradition.”

Falsone, 37, said in a statement that it was “a true honor” to work with a
progressive and historic organization.

“My work with the Dodgers over the past few years as well as my time with
[Athletes' Performance] will serve me well in taking this next step,” she
said. “I look forward to helping develop innovative and creative programs to
reduce injuries and keep our players on the field so that they can achieve
their potential.”

Jackie Robinson was the first African-American to play in the major leagues
when he debuted for the Dodgers in 1947. The Dodgers were also the first team
to have a Korean-born player and a Taiwanese player on their big league
roster.

Their signing of Hideo Nomo in 1995 paved the way for Japanese players to
compete in the majors.

The Sports Network

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Giants fan’s lawyer criticizes Dodgers attorney

Posted: 10:35 pm PDT October 28, 2011

LOS ANGELES — An attorney for San Francisco Giants fan Bryan Stow has responded to comments made by a lawyer for the Los Angeles Dodgers who suggested Stow might be partly to blame for a brutal attack he received in a Dodger Stadium parking lot on opening day. Thomas Girardi told the Los Angeles Times on Friday it was wrong for attorney Jerome Jackson to say Stow may have to share some of the blame for the attack. Jackson told ESPNLosAngeles.com that the Dodgers and their owner Frank McCourt shouldn’t be held fully liable by a possible jury. The Stow family filed a lawsuit blaming the Dodgers organization and owner Frank McCourt for the attack. Jackson filed a cross-complaint last week saying two men charged with beating Stow should be held liable.

Copyright 2011 by KTVU.com. The Associated Press contributed to this report. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

That’s all for today.

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Dodgers’ attorney says Stow may be partly to blame…

An attorney representing the Los Angeles Dodgers said Bryan Stow might be held partially to blame for the beating that left him in a coma, saying that the San Francisco Giants fan was intoxicated at the time.

Attorney Jerome Jackson’s comments come as the team is mounting a defense against a civil lawsuit that Stow’s family has filed against the Dodgers.

Jackson said that if the lawsuit goes to trial, a jury may lay some of the responsibility on Stow. He cited a Sports Illustrated story that reported Stow’s blood-alcohol level was more than twice the legal limit in California for driving when he was admitted to the hospital.

“Bryan Stow was admitted with 0.176% blood-alcohol level and that is something that will be considered at trial,” Jackson said.

Lawyers for Stow’s family expressed outrage over Jackson’s comments, saying that Dodgers’ owner Frank McCourt is trying to shift focus away from what they consider poor security at the stadium.

“How you are judged in life is how you react after mistakes,” said attorney Thomas Girardi. “Oh so here it is: let’s blame the innocent guy for the lack of security at Dodger Stadium.”

Stow, a Northern California paramedic and father of two, was walking through Dodger Stadium’s Parking Lot 2 with two friends after the opening-day victory over the Giants in March when he was allegedly punched, kicked and slammed to the ground by Marvin Norwood, 30, and Louie Sanchez, 29.

Both have pleaded not guilty to assault and mayhem charges.

Stow suffered brain damage in the attack and only this month was able to leave a hospital for a long-term rehab center.

Girardi said Stow has already incurred more than $3 million in medical costs, and that exceeds the Dodgers’ insurance coverage. He estimated that Stow’s total costs could exceed $50 million.

The Stow family’s lawsuit accuses the Dodgers of failing to take adequate measures to prevent violence. The suit cites insufficient lighting, weak security and a lack of promotion of responsible alcohol consumption. Girardi said stadium security ignored the two assailants’ unruly behavior in the stands in the hours before Stow was beaten.

Jackson, however, said the Stow family attorneys wrongly assert that the Dodgers are 100% responsible for the incident. The Dodgers are pursuing legal action against Norwood and Sanchez, arguing that they also are responsible.

In another case, he said, a jury found an assailant 85% responsible for a 2005 fight with a woman in the Dodgers’ parking lot and the remaining 15% fault was hers, not the Dodgers. “I have never seen one yet which it didn’t take at least two people to tango,” Jackson told ESPN in an interview Thursday.

Civil attorney Glen Jonas, a veteran of such lawsuits, said the Dodgers will probably be stuck with much of Stow’s bills because it has the deep pockets.

“For economic damages, such as lost income or medical expenses, the defendants are jointly liable,” he said. That means if the jury finds the Dodgers liable, Stow’s lawyers could collect all the economic damages from the team if the others don’t pay up.

“For non-economic damages such as pain and suffering, the defendants are only liable for their percentage of fault,” he said

“If the plaintiff were at fault, the damages would be reduced by that portion of fault found by the jury,” he added. “No reasonable jury will find Mr. Stow at fault for falling victim to that vicious and cowardly assault.”

richard.winton@latimes.com.

Running low on time today, i’ll be back tomorrow hopefully with some more news.

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