ECAC Announces Five Award of Valor Recipients
.jpg)
CAPE COD, Mass. - Eastern College Athletic Conference (ECAC) Commissioner Rudy Keeling announced today the five recipients of the ECAC Award of Valor. This year's winners are Meghan Bain (James Madison University), Brendan Finneran (Siena College), Dan Rhault (University of Rhode Island), Francesca Testa (Western Connecticut State University), and Kindra Lewis (Alvernia University). They will receive their awards at the Honors Luncheon on Tuesday, October 6 presented by Jostens. The luncheon will be held at The Resort and Conference Center in Hyannis, Massachusetts during the 2009 ECAC Fall Convention and Trade Show.
Established in 1985, the ECAC Award of Valor honors ECAC athletes whose courage, motivation, and relentless determination serves as an inspiration to all. The recipients exemplify strength of character and perseverance deserving recognition as being truly triumphant.
Bain, a senior field hockey player at James Madison University,
was struck by a car while running across the road to meet up with
friends during the early morning hours of March 15, 2008. She was
taken to the emergency room at Rockingham Memorial Hospital and was
then
airlifted to UVA Hospital in Charlottesville, Va., where she was
in a coma for three days due to the traumatic brain injury
classified as a diffuse axonal injury (DAI). Other injuries were
caused to Bain's body including a right lung collapse, multiple
facial fractures, right retinal hemorrhage, lacerations to the
scalp and shoulder, and a right tibial plateau fracture. A stunning
10 days after the accident, Meghan was sent to an in-patient
rehabilitation program in Pennsylvania and was released 13 days
later to continue with out-patient care. When doctors told Bain she
would not be able to compete in athletics again, it gave her drive
and motivation to prove them wrong. After many months of cognitive
therapy sessions and physical therapy, Bain was cleared to run on
July 9, 2008. By mid-July, Bain completed her cognitive
therapy program and was enrolled again as a full time student at
JMU, making her eligible for the fall 2008 field hockey season.
Despite the doubts of many, Bain was back on the field hockey field
for the Dukes' 2008 season, required to wear protective headgear
and a specialized mouth guard. Meghan started 20 out of 21
games her junior year and contributed to the best winning
percentage in the program history. She is currently 10th in all
time career goals at JMU (38) and is also ranked second at JMU for
game-winning goals.
During Finneran's high school days, counselors doubted his
ability to be able to enroll into Siena College and play Division I
lacrosse for the Saints because of his 2.0 grade point average. To
prove doubters wrong, Finneran worked hard on his academics,
entered into a prep school, boosted his GPA to a 3.2, and developed
into a skilled lacrosse player. He was
soon accepted into Siena and received a lacrosse scholarship.
Unfortunately, about a month after acceptance, Finneran was hit
near his knee during lacrosse practice, causing severe pain which
trainers advised to take four ibuprofens a day. As the pain
grew worse over the next week, Finneran saw many doctors, had an
x-ray and MRI, a biopsy, and met with an oncologist. The
oncologist then announced that the six-foot-three, 210 pound
athlete had bone cancer, would need surgery, and had to undergo
chemotherapy. Finneran underwent chemo, dropping his weight to 125
pounds. When things couldn't seem to get worse, one night Finneran
experienced a cramp in his chest and was struggling to breathe. He
had an infected lung, and by the middle of the night was dying in
the hospital. After discussing burial plans and creating a will
with his parents, Finneran miraculously lived. On June 15, 2006,
doctors removed almost all of the bone between the top of his calf
and the bottom of his thigh, and replaced it with titanium.
Despite being told he will not walk for six months, Finneran was
walking six weeks later, and on the day he realized he could stand,
he immediately picked up his lacrosse stick. After being told he
would not be able to run again for years, by the summer of 2007
Finneran was running and biking. Siena let him keep his scholarship
whether he played lacrosse or not. During his freshman year, he
kept stats for the Saints and assisted with radio
broadcasts. A year later during the fall of 2008,
Finneran was back on the lacrosse field, practicing with his
teammates, and gearing up for the 2009 spring season. As of right
now, Finneran is still cancer free.
Rhault, a 2009 graduate of the University of Rhode Island, was
reminded of his scary childhood after running into a former
physician during URI's three-game series at Xavier this past
spring. When Rhault was four years old, he was diagnosed with
acute leukemia. After
undergoing four years of treatment, including spinal taps and
chemotherapy, he went into remission and has been ever since.
Rhault spent many years of his early childhood in the hospital,
having numerous shots and injections, along with taking several
medications daily. Because of the struggles faced during his
childhood, Rhault uses his past as a way to overcome things in the
future. As a freshman, he appeared in 12 games. He
recorded just three hits in 24-at-bats, giving him a .125 average.
Because of his "never back down" attitude, he improved his batting
average to a .222 his sophomore year, a .316 his junior year, and a
.402 his senior year. His senior year he was an All-New
England selection and received the Atlantic 10 Player of the Year
award after ranking among the league leaders in almost every
statistical category. He led the Rams in RBIs (57), walks (27),
home runs (11), grand slams (3), multiple hit games (23), multiple
RBI games (14), slugging percentage (.628), and on-base percentage
(.472). On the defensive end, Rhault has contributed to 28 double
plays and one triple play. This year, Rhault was one of 38
NCAA Division I baseball players named to the watch list for the
2009 Brooks Wallace Award, given to the nation's top shortstop. In
the annual Major League Baseball First-Year Player Draft, he was
selected by the Tampa Bay Rays in the 26th round, 799th overall. He
signed, and is currently playing in their system for the Princeton
Rays (rookie ball).
After a stellar freshman year, earning team MVP, breaking
multiple school records, and earning All-Little East Conference and
All-New England honors, Testa was starting her swimming career at
Western Connecticut State University with a bang. With those
honors,
no one would have guessed she has daily complications from a life
threatening disease. In April of 2006, Testa contracted bacterial
meningitis from a source the health department is still unsure of.
After suffering from severe headaches and extremely high fevers for
over two weeks, doctors told Testa she had the flu and sent her
home. It was then one morning when Testa's mother found her
unconscious in her bedroom with purple spots all over her body,
which are caused by bleeding under the skin and tissue death, that
they knew this was not the flu. After several spinal taps, it
was determined that Testa had bacterial meningitis, and it had
turned septic from lack of treatment, giving her only a 20 percent
chance of living. Because of her illness, doctors used an
experimental drug treatment on her. After being in a coma and on a
respirator for a week, the drug finally started to work and Testa
was out of the coma. After leaving the hospital, Testa had to
relearn how to walk again because the septicemia destroyed muscle
and tissues in her legs. She also had a visiting nurse and
physical therapist. Because of the illness, Testa now faces
physical impairments every day, including vision problems, hearing
loss, permanent headaches, and loss of cognitive function.
Testa still works with an immunologist and neurologist on a regular
basis, along with a specialized team at Yale New Haven Children's
Hospital. Despite the daily challenges Testa faces, she continued
her swimming career, earning conference and school honors her
freshman, sophomore and junior years. Testa is a three-time
team MVP.
Lewis was a four-year member of the women's volleyball team at
Alvernia University from 1999-2002. Throughout her playing career
at Alvernia, Lewis held over 13 school records, while being named
to the Pennsylvania Athletic Conference first team all four years
of her
career. Lewis is a career leader in games played, kills, hitting
percentage, aces, solo blocks, and assisted blocks. While Lewis was
earning these accolades, no one would have guessed she had
cancer. During Lewis' sophomore year of high school, the two
sport athlete and mom of a nine month old baby, was diagnosed with
cancer. Despite the chemotherapy, radiation, and operations
that she had to undergo, Lewis still continued to play sports and
graduate on time. At Alvernia she continued her battle with
cancer, but that did not stop her from being successful in the
class room and on the court. Lewis was two credits shy of
graduating due to consuming cancer treatments. After leaving
Alvernia in 2003, her 12-year battle with cancer soon began to take
its toll, with doctors removing a tumor from her chest, the left
side of her jaw, her collarbone and two ribs. Lewis was determined
to graduate, so the university researched the graduation
requirements, and realized Lewis could be honored with a liberal
studies degree. In the fall of 2008, Lewis was notified of her
graduation, but unfortunately she lost her battle to cancer before
the December graduation ceremony. Lewis' 12-year old daughter
accepted the diploma in honor of her mother.

