For DJ LaMartina, what
started as a high school hockey championship celebration ended with celebrity
at the sharp edge of an upturned skate.
It happened around
7:30 p.m. March 3 at the Scottrade Center in downtown St. Louis, where
17-year-old LaMartina’s Francis Howell North High School hockey team had just
beaten Fox High School of St. Louis, 3 to 1, to win the Mid-States Club Hockey
Association’s Wickenheiser Cup.
LaMartina, who’s a
junior at Francis Howell North in St. Charles, Mo., and the team’s center and
sometime left wing, sped over the ice to join his teammates on their celebratory
pile. His dash ended abruptly when he hit a teammate's skate, which sliced a
deep gash in his face and broke a tooth.
News stories with
gruesome photos and video of the injury soon started popping up on the Internet,
including on the websites of USA Today (http://usatodayhss.com/2015/teen-hockey-goalie-suffers-horrendous-facial-injury-celebrating-title) and CBS Sports (http://www.cbssports.com/nhl/eye-on-hockey/25094658/watch-high-school-hockey-player-suffers-scary-injury-during-celebration).
LaMartina stood up on
the ice, saw blood on his hands, skated to the bench and then was taken to the
locker room. Trainers gave him first aid, and soon he was in an ambulance
headed for nearby Children’s Hospital in St. Louis. A reconstructive plastic
surgeon there used more than 60 stitches to close the wound. The hospital
released LaMartina about 5 o’clock the next morning.
The wicked-looking
injury, though, didn’t stop him from returning to the ice three days later at
the St. Peters (Mo.) Rec-Plex for a national qualifier, playing right wing
for Twin Bridges Elite, a club team in East Alton, Ill. LaMartina scored a goal
in his team’s victory. He played again the next day, though Twin Bridges lost
that one.
LaMartina said he felt
almost no pain right after the injury, and he supposed that shock and
adrenaline probably accounted for it. He started feeling pain after his
surgery, though, and his surgeon prescribed the pain killer oxycodone, but he's
sticking to ibuprophen.
His father, Dan LaMartina,
said the surgeon had told them that, because DJ has very little body fat, as
many athletes do, the wound opened wider than it otherwise would’ve, which made
it look worse. The surgeon said the wound should heal completely in two to
three weeks.
Brycon Johnson, a senior at Francis Howell and one of LaMartina’s teammates for the past few years, said he’d been on the bottom of the pile when LaMartina’s injury occurred.
“It’s tough for
anybody to get hurt, especially celebrating,” Johnson said. “As a hockey
player, he’s getting a lot better. He started out shy, but he’s getting more
confidence. He’s a real neat kid.”
Joel Herr, LaMartina’s
coach at Francis Howell North, described him as “a great player with a lot of
potential. He’s always willing to learn.”
Herr said he’d “seen
guys take some pretty gruesome injuries” on the ice.
“It was a freak
accident,” he said.
Jamie Barada, coach of
the Twin Bridges Elite team, said he’d also seen quite a few nasty injuries on the
ice, including broken legs and head gashes. LaMartina’s was “definitely in the
top 10,” he said.
[ Author's note: Dan and DJ LaMartina and I are cousins.]


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