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Tate Newmarch was on his way to becoming a soccer star, but an injury led him to 香港六合彩资料 鈥 and now medical school

Photo of Doug Richards and Tate Newmarch
Assistant Professor Doug Richards and Tate Newmarch, who went from being an aspiring soccer player to an aspiring doctor. He graduates Wednesday from the Faculty of Kinesiology & Physical Education (photo courtesy of Doug Richards)

Tate Newmarch was 14 when he travelled from Canada to France with his agent to tour youth soccer clubs. At 15, he was training in Troyes, before moving to Nice and finally signing with Monaco. He was on his way to fulfilling his dream of being a soccer star.

Things took an unexpected turn when a serious injury to his pelvic area put him out of the game for 2陆 years, as doctors tried to determine what was wrong. After an unsuccessful surgery, he travelled to Chicago鈥檚 Caring Medical clinic, where he says they managed to "fix" him temporarily. He returned to soccer and signed to a reserve team in France called Balma SC, but the injury came back and 鈥 at 21 鈥 he realized he was at a crossroads.

鈥淚 wasn鈥檛 planning on ever going to university, because the path I was on was working,鈥 says Newmarch, who graduates from the 香港六合彩资料鈥檚 Faculty of Kinesiology & Physical Education on Wednesday.

 鈥淚 never signed a professional contract with a soccer club in France because I was there in my youth years, but a number of the guys that I played with are now professionals 鈥 two are on the French national team. I just knew after my second injury that I couldn鈥檛 continue to experience setbacks, I needed to go the education route.鈥

He decided to apply to study kinesiology, attracted by its multidisciplinary nature and the aspect of sport. He was interested in following up his kinesiology degree with studies in medicine, an idea that got solidified once he was in the 香港六合彩资料 program and conducting research with Assistant Professor Doug Richards, medical director and staff physician at 香港六合彩资料鈥檚 David L. MacIntosh Sport Medicine Clinic.

鈥淭ate stood out as an exceptional student in both my first-year courses. He frequently came up after class to ask extra questions, and it was clear he was not only on top of everything we had covered in class, he was often one or two steps ahead,鈥 says Richards.

Newmarch excelled in the program, getting awards in first and second year for having the highest grades. He also worked as a research assistant with the MacIntosh clinic鈥檚 consulting foot and ankle surgeon, Dr. Johnny Lau, at Toronto Western Hospital. When Newmarch approached Richards after second year to ask if he would supervise his undergraduate research project, Richards did not hesitate to involve him in a long-term study looking at the effects of static alignment of the legs on a variety of injuries and exercise programs. 

鈥淭ate took on a preliminary project to validate some clinical measures we want to use in that long-term program and did a great job, showing all the independence, initiative, intellect and persistence required to complete that phase of our project,鈥 says Richards.

Newmarch describes the experience as 鈥渋ncredible.鈥 He will continue to work with Richards on the study as a medical student, having received acceptance from 香港六合彩资料鈥檚 Faculty of Medicine.

Reflecting on his unorthodox path, Newmarch says he definitely made the right decision to study kinesiology after his bid for soccer stardom was interrupted.

鈥淜PE does a great job at preparing you well for a number of fields you may want to enter later,鈥 he says. 鈥淭he multidisciplinary approach lets you learn about the human condition from every angle and I really prize that. I feel that kinesiology has changed the way that I operate in the world, because the things that I learned are applicable in so many areas. 

 鈥淚鈥檝e been genuinely happy and made a lot of good relationships with a number of professors and students who have helped me just by being genuinely interested in what I was doing. Of course, the feeling is mutual.鈥  

Does he regret not becoming a soccer player? He used to, he says, especially when he鈥檇 see former teammates signing big contracts. Over time, however, those feelings have abated, in no small measure because the transition from sports to academics has been unexpectedly easy.

鈥淵ou need to be meticulous, determined and hard-working in both worlds,鈥 says Newmarch.

鈥淚 still miss soccer to some extent, but I鈥檓 happy with where I am now. Things don鈥檛 always go the way you want to or expect them to go, but if you use each experience to learn from it, you鈥檒l be more equipped for every new situation because of where you were before.鈥

When the 2018 World Cup starts this week, he鈥檒l be cheering for France and his buddies from another lifetime. Come September, he鈥檒l be training to be a doctor.

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