As a former collegiate player and now a longtime men’s lacrosse referee, Jim Loffredo, 50, knows what it feels like to be “in the zone.”
It’s a unique and often rare feeling of being singularly focused on just one task. All distractions and background noise seem to disappear as you develop a laser sharp connection to just one function.
That’s the condition that Loffredo reached last Thursday afternoon during the game he was officiating in the Men’s 65+ Division of the Lake Placid Summit Classic. Unfortunately, it wasn’t due to the action on the field, but rather the inaction.
Running up field while he followed the ball, Loffredo heard players yelling for help at the other end of the field. He looked back and saw a player on the Ultra Legends team lying on the ground. Loffredo stopped play and immediately ran back to the scene.
“As I arrived, another player was already doing chest compressions on the fallen player,” Loffredo said. “Since I have had CPR training, I relieved him and continued doing the compressions. Another player, who I believe was an anesthesiologist, was around the goalie’s head and trying to clear his airway. There was a third person who was checking for his pulse.”
It was at this point, as Loffredo continued the chest compressions, when his focus dramatically narrowed.
“I think adrenaline just took over,” Loffredo said. “My vision shrank down to just a small circle, and I was simply focused on what I was doing. I’m really not sure what else was happening around us.”
Within a minute, two doctors who were at the game and two athletic trainers that were working the event arrived on the scene. The athletic trainers had an AED and utilized it on the fallen player, restoring his pulse. He had regained consciousness by the time the Emergency Medical Technicians (EMTs) were on the scene and preparing him for transport to the local hospital.
“I just crashed once the trainers got the AED on him,” Loffredo said. “I was wiped out and exhausted.”
The good news is that Loffredo’s CPR and the on-site AED saved the player, Peter Tracy of Lutherville, Md., who spent one night at the hospital and was discharged the following day.
“All I remember was feeling lightheaded before I went down,” Tracy, 70, said. “When I woke up, there were about 10 people kneeling around me with concerned looks, so I knew that something had happened to me.”
Now back home, Tracy, who had open heart surgery 13 years ago, is undergoing more testing with his cardiologist to determine what may have caused the cardiac incident, which was not commotio cordis. He’s hoping to get clearance to resume his active lacrosse lifestyle, which includes Sunday pick-up games and tournament participation at Vail and in Florida, in addition to his annual trip to Upstate New York.
“I want to keep on going,” said Tracy, who has been playing in the senior divisions at Lake Placid for 20 years.