UM Athletics Creates New Performance, Health and Wellness Department

Earnest T. Bass

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There just has to be a way the Herd can twist this into a reason to fire Blake James.

University of Miami Athletics announced Tuesday that it has created a new Performance, Health and Wellness department to better serve its 400-plus student-athletes.

Performance, Health and Wellness encompasses the areas of athletic training, strength and conditioning, physical therapy, nutrition and sports psychology. Dr. Luis Feigenbaum, previously the UHealth Chief of Sports Physical Therapy, has been promoted to Senior Associate Athletics Director for Performance, Health and Wellness, and will oversee the department.

"The daily health and well-being of our student-athletes is paramount to our overall mission as an athletic department," Deputy Director of Athletics and Chief Operating Officer Jennifer Strawley said. "We conducted a comprehensive assessment of our service offerings and determined that the best model was to have all of these essential areas under one umbrella.

"Luis has been an integral part of our medical team since he arrived at UM, and his background is perfectly suited to leading this new department."

Feigenbaum is also the program director for the University of Miami Sports Physical Therapy Residency and a clinical assistant professor in the Department of Physical Therapy at the Miller School of Medicine. He also serves as UM's NCAA healthcare administrator. Feigenbaum is a Board Certified Sports Clinical Specialist (2008) through the American Board of Physical Therapy Specialties, Certified and Licensed Athletic Trainer (2003) by National Athletic Trainers Association, and a Certified Strength and Conditioning Specialist (2000) by the National Strength and Conditioning Association, a Certified Blood Flow Restriction Therapy (2016) provider, and has completed a FIFA Diploma in Sports Medicine (2017).

"I'm excited to transition into this position," Feigenbaum said. "We have a dedicated group of performance, health and wellness specialists who are constantly striving to deliver the best possible student-athlete experience. This collaborative and integrated model will help us build on that foundation and provide even more assistance going forward."

In addition to Feigenbaum's new role, Miami has created two new positions within Performance, Health and Wellness.

Dr. Eric Goldstein has joined UM as sports psychologist. He works with athletes from all 18 athletic teams, focusing on performance enhancement, coach-athlete communication/motivation and competition anxiety, as well as helping student-athletes maintain emotional/mental health and well-being.

Prior to coming to Miami, Dr. Goldstein was a consultant in private practice, specializing in performance psychology. In his corporate work, he has worked with more than half of the Fortune 100 companies, the Federal Courts of the United States, law firms, financial services firms and technology start-ups.

Megan McLeod has joined UM as sports nutrition coordinator. She is a licensed registered dietitian and meets with athletes across all Olympic teams to provide individualized nutrition recommendations for a performance edge, addresses medical nutrition conditions, injury prevention/treatment, body composition goals, etc… She also oversees the management and operations of the Nutrition Center, provides team education and develops/oversees nutrition policies and procedures.

Prior to joining the Hurricanes, McLeod worked at Virginia Tech as a Gatorade Sports Nutrition Immersion Program (SNIP) fellow, overseeing individual team nutrition and implementing various programs to enhance student-athletes nutrition skills and knowledge. In addition, she interned at EXOS performance center with the NFL training program, helping educate athletes on appropriate food options to meet their body composition goals for the NFL Combine.

Overall, the Performance, Health and Wellness department houses 34 employees across athletic training, strength and conditioning, physical therapy, nutrition and sports psychology.
 
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That's great.

What we really need is Butch Davis who will create New Performance, Health, and Wellness - in our football program.
 
I’m sorry you didn’t win “troll of the year”, Ernie.

:(

I voted for you.
 
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There just has to be a way the Herd can twist this into a reason to fire Blake James.

University of Miami Athletics announced Tuesday that it has created a new Performance, Health and Wellness department to better serve its 400-plus student-athletes.

Performance, Health and Wellness encompasses the areas of athletic training, strength and conditioning, physical therapy, nutrition and sports psychology. Dr. Luis Feigenbaum, previously the UHealth Chief of Sports Physical Therapy, has been promoted to Senior Associate Athletics Director for Performance, Health and Wellness, and will oversee the department.

"The daily health and well-being of our student-athletes is paramount to our overall mission as an athletic department," Deputy Director of Athletics and Chief Operating Officer Jennifer Strawley said. "We conducted a comprehensive assessment of our service offerings and determined that the best model was to have all of these essential areas under one umbrella.

"Luis has been an integral part of our medical team since he arrived at UM, and his background is perfectly suited to leading this new department."

Feigenbaum is also the program director for the University of Miami Sports Physical Therapy Residency and a clinical assistant professor in the Department of Physical Therapy at the Miller School of Medicine. He also serves as UM's NCAA healthcare administrator. Feigenbaum is a Board Certified Sports Clinical Specialist (2008) through the American Board of Physical Therapy Specialties, Certified and Licensed Athletic Trainer (2003) by National Athletic Trainers Association, and a Certified Strength and Conditioning Specialist (2000) by the National Strength and Conditioning Association, a Certified Blood Flow Restriction Therapy (2016) provider, and has completed a FIFA Diploma in Sports Medicine (2017).

"I'm excited to transition into this position," Feigenbaum said. "We have a dedicated group of performance, health and wellness specialists who are constantly striving to deliver the best possible student-athlete experience. This collaborative and integrated model will help us build on that foundation and provide even more assistance going forward."

In addition to Feigenbaum's new role, Miami has created two new positions within Performance, Health and Wellness.

Dr. Eric Goldstein has joined UM as sports psychologist. He works with athletes from all 18 athletic teams, focusing on performance enhancement, coach-athlete communication/motivation and competition anxiety, as well as helping student-athletes maintain emotional/mental health and well-being.

Prior to coming to Miami, Dr. Goldstein was a consultant in private practice, specializing in performance psychology. In his corporate work, he has worked with more than half of the Fortune 100 companies, the Federal Courts of the United States, law firms, financial services firms and technology start-ups.

Megan McLeod has joined UM as sports nutrition coordinator. She is a licensed registered dietitian and meets with athletes across all Olympic teams to provide individualized nutrition recommendations for a performance edge, addresses medical nutrition conditions, injury prevention/treatment, body composition goals, etc… She also oversees the management and operations of the Nutrition Center, provides team education and develops/oversees nutrition policies and procedures.

Prior to joining the Hurricanes, McLeod worked at Virginia Tech as a Gatorade Sports Nutrition Immersion Program (SNIP) fellow, overseeing individual team nutrition and implementing various programs to enhance student-athletes nutrition skills and knowledge. In addition, she interned at EXOS performance center with the NFL training program, helping educate athletes on appropriate food options to meet their body composition goals for the NFL Combine.

Overall, the Performance, Health and Wellness department houses 34 employees across athletic training, strength and conditioning, physical therapy, nutrition and sports psychology.
To be frank Ernest this and the other upgrades should've been along time ago.I know that slogan " a long time ago in a galaxy far far away".when miami was great before the dark times came .
 
You can blame the moderators. They locked the poll after an hour.

:(
My one chance to enjoy the limelight, only to be foiled by the moderators.

You have my sworn commitment that I will go into the laboratory and work day and night to further hone my trolling skillset. My goal to find one million positive aspects regarding the University of Miami Football Program will require that I shoot for the stars, or at least the ceiling in my basement.

Next year I will return with a vengeance, much like Mark Richt, and prove my doubters wrong (the Herd).

I will not rest until I have been crowned the 'The CIS Grand Poo-Pah Troll'.

PS; I've hired my son and wife as assistants, which some (the Herd) are already claiming is a blatant case of nepotism and are on record that they will destroy them so I will resign my efforts to be the greatest social media troll of all time. They've also said that I am overpaid by the University of Miami Troll Foundation and claim my wife and son are stealing money from the said Foundation.

PPS; I do worry that if the Canes somehow, someway, against all odds, and the voodoo hex the Herd has placed on the Canes beat Wisconsin in the Pinstripe Bowl that the Herd members might resort to a Jim Jones protest which is not an unusual step when cults fail, having noted that Kool-Aid sales have ominously skyrocketed in recent days.
 
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To be frank Ernest this and the other upgrades should've been along time ago.I know that slogan " a long time ago in a galaxy far far away".when miami was great before the dark times came .

Well, an indoor practice facility that has been talked about for countless years suddenly materializes, and now a state of the art Performance, Health, and Wellness Department out of nowhere materializes, the Canes win their first ACC Coastal Division crown and are invited to a major bowl for the first time in almost 15 years, all of that, and more, once Mark Richt is appointed the Canes head football coach. Coincidence? I think not!
 
I get "Health and Wellness Department", but I'm not sure "Performance" belongs in the name. I'd love to be wrong though. Maybe "Performance" is thrown in there to cover our women's b-ball program.
 
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This is a good thing for the university. Too bad it will be run in the same incompetent way that everything at UM is handled. How do I know this? Has ANYTHING at Sun Tan U EVER been run well? Not in my lifetime.
 
No, watching the continued destruction of my beloved football program and the destruction of my beloved baseball program under his watch is enough for me OP.
 
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