By Annie Renz
From the moment Grace
Robison tied her soccer cleats for the first time at five-years-old, she said
she knew that she wanted to compete at as high of a level of soccer as she
could.
Today, Robison lives out
her dream by playing Division 1 soccer at Stonehill College, but her journey
the past three years as a collegiate player is not what she could have imagined
at five-years-old.
In the summer of 2020
going into her junior year of high school, Robison had what she called the
“goodbye going into high school soccer scrimmage.” Fifteen minutes into the
game, she went to defend an opponent and her knee buckled.
“People are like ‘it’s
not that painful.’ No, it was so painful when I did it,” said Robison, “and
come to find out, I completely destroyed my ACL, lateral meniscus, and medial
meniscus.”
It was the first of six
injuries and surgeries for the now 21-year-old who continues to power through
repeated obstacles.
Robison’s recovery for
this first surgery began the way any injured athlete could hope for. “The first
few days post-op went really well. I was using the machine that helped bend my
knee. I was getting 70 degrees with it which is huge,” said Robison.
Unfortunately, after
about a week, her progress took a striking halt. “Day six or seven hit and any
time I got up to go to the bathroom, or any time I wasn’t horizontal, I was in
excruciating pain from my knee down,” said Robison.
The throbbing, burning
pain that she felt was initially believed to be the numbing wearing off.
However, her shin swelled, turned yellow, and burned to the touch – three
things that caused her physical therapist to send her to the hospital.
As it turns out, Robison
had two blood clots in her shins. Because of this finding, all of her progress
with the bending machines and exercises were shut down for two weeks.
As any athlete with a
knee injury like Robison’s would know, a two-week rest that early on into
recovery is risky because it causes the knee to stiffen. However, the rest was
mandatory to deal with the blood clots.
Robison needed a
manipulation surgery three months later to remove stiffened scar tissue that
built up from the blood clot. She also couldn’t walk normally for five months.
The following year,
Robison battled through pain during her senior season at Bishop Feehan High
School in Attleboro, Massachusetts. However, the pain intensified when she went
to college for freshman year preseason.
Her dream of playing
collegiate soccer came true when she began her career at Sacred Heart
University. However, after retearing her lateral meniscus two weeks into
preseason combined with wanting to be closer to home when dealing with this
injury, Robison decided to enter the transfer portal in November 2022.
She said she wound up at
Stonehill College for her freshman spring semester because of the support Head
Coach Alex Wilson showed her.
“Thank God for Coach
[Wilson],” said Robison, “she believed in me. I was very transparent about my
injury which needed three months recovery, so I was getting cleared right when
I showed up to Stonehill.”
Robison said she was
excited to play again when Stonehill faced Boston University in the first
spring 2023 game. Unfortunately, she suffered her third severe injury during
the game, tearing her lateral meniscus for the third time.
Then, she tore her medial
meniscus during a strength and conditioning session over winter break that
year. This injury needed a serious operation in May 2024 that basically
repaired her “incompetent” ACL but left her lateral meniscus destroyed.
“I only have 50% of it
left,” she said.
To put Robison’s ACL
injury into perspective, she said her surgeon told her in March 2024, “I’m
worried that your ACL is no longer competent. It’s there but it’s not doing
anything which is equivalent to a torn ACL. It’s like a lose elastic band, it’s
not doing anything.”
The surgeon told Robison
about the dire state pf her ACL before the operation for her lateral meniscus.
There wasn’t a thought that her ACL would be involved this time around.
The loss of half a
lateral meniscus, in addition to what Robison called a practically nonexistent
ACL, is the current result of a four-year injury cycle.
A career with highs and
lows like this makes or breaks an athlete, but if you ask any of Robison’s
teammates, they will tell you she is one of the most positive, high-spirited
people they’ve ever met.
“Despite numerous
setbacks in which most athletes will never have to experience, Robo continues
to show up for herself and the team even on the hardest of days,” said Lily
Roslonek, Robison’s teammate at Stonehill.
Another teammate, Emma
Cranston, had kind words to say of Robison’s perseverance. “Even while facing
her long-lasting injuries, she continues to bring such a positive energy to
every single practice, lift, and game. Her resilience and upbeat attitude reminds
us that everyone’s own battles can be easily overcome and faced with optimism,”
said Cranston.
To stay positive, Robison
said she has a short-term goal setting mentality to get through long term
recoveries.
“It starts to get better
the more activity you can do. Once I started running five months post-op that
was really helpful. I always tell people when they get hurt to make short term
goals. It puts a lot of pressure on yourself to be like ‘I need to be cleared
nine months post-op.’ The small goals really keep me going,” she said.
In reality, the hardships
that come with recovery and being positive may not be realistic.
“When you’re hurt, you
realize how much bonding goes into being at practices, drills, games, who
you’re on with. You feel a little disconnected, and I felt sad then,” said
Robison.
Not only does having
short term goals keep Robison motivated, but finding a new role within the
Stonehill soccer team outside of being an impactful player on the field keeps
her going.
“I had to realize my role
was going to change. Obviously, I want to be out [on the field] so bad I know I
can’t so I have to control the controllables. How else can I be there for the
team? I’m in SAAC so I’m an advocate and I’m an empathetic person so just being
there for the team emotionally, checking in, supporting the team,” said
Robison.
She said she has learned
to bring her skills on the field to her new role off the field.
“One thing I was big
about when I was a player was communicating like crazy when I’m on the field.
So now I’m like, ‘I can do that from the bench now.’ I can give the girls
advice when they come out and when they’re waiting to go in,” she said.
She has the potential to
return to play as early as February 2025. Her determination to power through is
because of her father, Scott Robison.
“My dad played hockey at
UNH so he had a really big impact on knowing what it took to get [to the
college level],” she said, “He tore his ACL three times and he had to medically
retire. He wishes he could go back and keep fighting through it. I’m doing this
for him and myself in a way.”
Robison offered advice for any athlete going through a similar experience. “It is very hard in the beginning, you just have to take it day by day and know each day it will get better, but it’s not linear so try not to be a perfectionist about it all. Just be patient with yourself because it’s a whole other side to you that you’ll never experience so embrace the journey and embrace what you’re going to become,” she said.
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