Pain , Pain , Go Away Physician helps patients reduce chronic back and neck pain without surgery, shots or drugs. Alum To Coach Academy gets former star for baseball team. Steve Stein Special to the Jewish News F rankel Jewish Academy's first and only NCAA Division I athlete has returned to his roots. Sam Yashinsky, who pitched for two seasons at the University of Michigan after making the U- M baseball team as a walk-on, is now the West Bloomfield-based Academy's base- ball coach. Academy athletic director Michael Sandweiss is certain he has hit Sam a home run by hir- Yashinsky ing Yashinsky to revive the school's baseball program: "This is our 10th year as a school. Can you think of a better way to celebrate than by bringing back our most accomplished athlete and a superb role model? Playing at the Division I level gives Sam instant `street cred' with our kids." Yashinsky, 23, graduated from U-M last year and is on his way to medical school. He plans to take the Medical College Admission Test in May and start applying to medical schools in August. While he pre- pares to tackle the MCAT, he's vol- unteering at the Karamanos Cancer Institute in Detroit. Neither Yashinsky nor Sandweiss knows how long Yashinsky will be able to coach at the academy. "The baseball season is only a couple months a year. I don't see any reason why I can't be a coach by day and a medical student by night dur- ing that time," Yashinsky said. "I understand this probably isn't a long-term commitment," Sandweiss said. "But this is an opportunity I couldn't pass up." Yashinsky doesn't think he'll have any problems relating to his players. "Every kid has talent. I want them to know that," he said. "I also want them to take on the mentality of a walk-on, like I had to do at Michigan. The mentality is everyone is impor- tant to the team. As my coach at Michigan used to say, 'Everyone needs to pick up their brother. — Yashinsky also is confident he can help his students academically. "The Academy places an empha- sis on preparing kids for the college experience," he said. "Coaching baseball will give an opportunity to show my players how to concen- trate on their studies even while they're playing a sport." Yashinsky's stellar four-year career on the academy baseball team was capped by a Catholic League division championship in 2005, his senior season. It's one of two Catholic League division crowns won by Academy teams. The boys basketball team was a division champ last season. After failing to make the U-M baseball team in 2006, Yashinsky lived a dream by playing for the Big Ten Conference champion Wolverines in 2007 and 2008. With his off-the-baseball-diamond dream of practicing medicine loom- ing on the horizon, Yashinsky talked with U-M coach Rich Maloney before his senior season. They decided it was best for Yashinsky to give up baseball and focus on academics. Yashinsky pitched in six games for Michigan in two seasons and he did not allow a run in seven innings. That gave him a career ERA of 0.00. The athletic director ran into Yashinsky in November while Yashinsky was shooting baskets at the Jewish Community Center in West Bloomfield. Sandweiss told Yashinsky about the job opening and made him an offer. Yashinsky has spoken at an open house for prospective academy students and also met with his baseball players. Sports Shorts A tryout schedule for Detroit teams that will play in the JCC Maccabi Games this summer is posted at maccabidetroit.org ... Players and teams are needed for the B'nai B'rith Great Lakes Region's 35th basketball season. Games are played Sundays at Walled Lake Central High School. Call Marty Melton, (248) 921-1539. Li Please send sports news to sports@thejewishnews.com . in etroit Lions team chaplain Dave Wilson "practically crawled" into Dr. Sol Cogan's office in Farmington, unable to func- tion because of excruciating leg pain. "My sciatica was so bad, it felt like there was a knife stuck in my left hamstring," said Wilson, 51. Hoping .,7 ' - - — to avoid his sched- uled surgery, I Wilson set up a consultation with Cogan, the official chiropractor for the Detroit Lions. After performing an exam and re- viewing Wilson's Dr. Sol Cogan MRI, Cogan deter- mined he was a good candidate for spinal decompres- sion therapy, a safe, nonsurgical treat- ment for certain adults suffering from severe, chronic back and neck pain caused by bulging, herniated, degen- erative and protruding discs, pinched nerves, sciatica, spinal stenosis, pos- terior facet syndrome and related conditions. Today, Wilson feels like a new man. "After the first session, I knew it was going to work," said Wil- son. "Now I can walk, run, even play basketball, pain free. My pain level went from unbearable to nonexis- tent." Cogan, 41, a spinal specialist, has served as chairman of the Michigan Board of Chiropractic since 2005. He founded his company, HealthQuest, in 1992 and has treated thousands of people with back and neck pain, in- cluding Olympic and professional athletes. When a Chicago colleague talked to him about spinal decompres- sion technology in 2004, he was skeptical. Cogan mentioned that he had some nagging pain due to a high school wrestling injury, and his colleague convinced him to have a treatment. "Within 10 minutes, the discomfort I'd been living with for years significantly decreased," said Cogan. Today, HealthQuest is the only company in Michigan with four of the leading spinal decompression machines: DRX9000C, DRX9000, Accu-SPINA and VAX-D G2. By reducing the pressure on damaged discs during half-hour decompression sessions, pressure on the spinal col- umn is relieved as well. Painful symptoms are greatly reduced and often eliminated. Several medical studies support that, "in the properly selected patient, this treatment type may help individuals suffering from low back pain," said Marc Witten- berg, M.D., a board certified pain management specialist with Pain Care Associates in Bloomfield Hills. Dr. Wittenberg trained at the University of Michigan's School of Medicine and was recently named one of HOUR Detroit magazine's 2009 Top Docs in pain medicine. "Dr. Cogan is well known in the field of chiroprac- tic care and has a strong involvement in spinal decompression therapy," said Wittenberg. On any given day in the U.S., 6.5 mil- lion people are in bed because of back pain and 5.4 million individuals are disabled for a full year or more. Every day, Cogan and his team of specially trained doctors see how pain severely impacts patients' moods and lives. Cogan recently converted five of the 11 Michigan locations he's built to Health- Quest's Back & Neck Solution Centers of America. Helping patients avoid work loss, inconvenient recovery time, drastic surgery, invasive procedures, ineffi- cient injections and addicting drugs while creating a renewed quality of life is Cogan's passion and profes- sional mission. "Spinal decompres- sion therapy helps the body heal itself naturally," he said. "While spinal de- compression is not for everybody, watching those patients who are candi- dates gain freedom from their excruci- ating pain after these truly ground- breaking treatments, which many peo- ple actually describe as enjoyable, has been remarkable." Last year, former Detroit Lion and NFL Hall of Famer Charlie Sanders felt his back tighten up and within hours was wheelchair bound due to damage to his L4/L5 disc. "I did not want to have surgery," said Sanders. "By the end of my spinal decompres- sion therapy regimen, I was pain-free and remain that way to this day." He credits Cogan with permanently alle- viating his back pain. "Too many people sacrifice the qual- ity of their life because of an ache or pain that can be corrected," said Cogan. "Our specialists correct the cause of the problem instead of just treating symptoms. We can often make the pain go away for good." Cogan is president of the Pro Football Chiropractic Society and a founding member of the International Chiro- practors Association Council on Fit- ness and Sports Health Sciences. Call 1-800-LIONS-DN or visit livepainfreeusa.com . Advertisement 1560480 January 28 • 2010 29