DelNegro Named to Westfield State Hall of Fame

Print Story | Email Story
Don DelNegro
NORTH ADAMS, Mass. — City native Don DelNegro will be inducted into the Westfield State University Athletics Hall of Fame this October. The 1984 Westfield graduate has garnered national and international acclaim as an athletic trainer.

The most memorable moment of his 25-year professional career came this past June, when he hoisted the Stanley Cup as the head athletic trainer of the National Hockey League champion Boston Bruins.

DelNegro, now in his 19th season as the Bruins head athletic trainer, was a student trainer all four years he attended Westfield State. He performed 1,800 hours of volunteer service, working primarily with the Owl football, basketball, baseball and ice hockey teams under the guidance of legendary Westfield State athletic trainer Rich Pierce, who was inducted into the Westfield Hall of Fame following his retirement in 2006.

A graduate of Drury High School, his dream of working in professional sports, especially for the Boston hockey team he grew up rooting for, was fulfilled when he was hired by the Bruins in 1993 after a five-year stint as the director of sports medicine at Williams College. He earned a master's degree in sports medicine from Indiana State in 1986 and was the assistant athletic trainer at the U.S. Olympic training center in Lake Placid, N.Y., from 1986-1988.

DelNegro accomplished other career goals by being selected the athletic trainer for the U.S. Bobsled and Luge teams at the 1992 Olympic Games in Albertville, France, and for Team USA at the 2000, 2005 and 2007 World Hockey championships. He crossed paths with another Westfield State graduate when he was head athletic trainer for the U.S. men's hockey team at the 2006 Winter Olympic Games in Turin, Italy. At the time, Peter Laviolette (class of 1986 and a Westfield State Hall of Fame inductee in 2002) was the head coach of the 2006 Olympic ice hockey squad. DelNegro was also the U.S. wrestling team trainer at the 1991 Pan American Games in Havana, Cuba.



Read about DelNegro's day with Stanley Cup here.
As accommodating as the NHL players he treats, DelNegro always welcomes opportunities to share his experiences and expertise with aspiring athletic trainers. DelNegro has met with Westfield State student athletic trainers prior to games in Boston and he has returned to Westfield State several times to make presentations at career workshops.

DelNegro and his wife, Claire, have a daughter, Renee, 13, and reside in Lynnfield. His wife was a member of the 1984 U.S. Olympic Luge team and has been vice president of the International Luge Federation since 1998. They enjoy spending time at their summer home in Lake Placid, where they shared the Stanley Cup with family and friends for a day on July 12.

The Hall of Fame Class of 2011 also includes Amanda (Braden) Theriault ('98, basketball), Tilia Fantasia (1966-1998, administrator/coach/faculty), David Lima ('86, soccer), Kathy Norton ('87, cross country/track and field), and Jeff Stackpole ('87, football). The 16th annual induction ceremony will be held during Alumni Weekend on Friday, Oct. 28.
If you would like to contribute information on this article, contact us at info@iberkshires.com.

Affordable Housing Solutions Easy — and Complex

By John TownesSpecial to iBerkshires
This four-part series looks at the challenges in building affordable housing, and in May, Deep Dive will look at some solutions in Berkshire County. Read Part 1 here and Part 2 here.
 
The overall effort to solve the national and local housing crisis is paradoxically as straightforward as a game of checkers, but as complex and baffling as a Rubik's Cube puzzle.
 
On a basic level, the issue is clear. It boils down to two fundamental problems: There is a shortage of housing in all categories and the costs of buying or renting a home have escalated beyond the incomes of many people.
 
But because there is no single cause or "silver bullet" solution, the array of initiatives to make housing more plentiful and affordable can seem like a baffling maze of agencies, priorities, policies, regulations, and complex mathematical formulas.
 
The issue can also cause controversies and misunderstandings.
 
And for those who are seeking to buy or rent a home, the shortage of affordable housing can be personally frustrating, confusing, and even frightening. For some, it can lead to homelessness.
 
Nevertheless, while individual affordable-housing policies and programs differ in specifics, most rely on a core of basic strategies to deal with the underlying causes.
 
View Full Story

More North Adams Stories