Emboldened by the support of her family, coach, teammates and friends, Lambert from there set out on a remarkable road to recovery. Her grit and humor helped. (“Kick my ass,” she recently told sports performance coach AJ Whitehead during training this fall.)
But equal treatment meant tough love from O’Connell, who is now on the coaching staff at Army. When O’Connell noticed Lambert shying away from drills out of fear of falling, she confronted her bluntly.
“‘Listen, you’re not going to be what you were,” O’Connell said. “Let’s make you the best at what you can be.’”
O’Connell gave Lambert the weekend to think it over. Lambert stormed in the following Monday. “Yes.”
***
After the accident, Lambert spent a couple of months on crutches, waiting for her wounds to heal and to be fitted for a prosthetic. Once she had her new leg — a shaft made of metal and plastic — it took her just two weeks to walk on her own. She paced proudly into the office for her follow-up appointment at Next Step, her prosthetic provider in Manchester, N.H.
Next Step gave Lambert a waterproof prosthetic so she could jet ski with her teammates in Cancun.
Despite suffering from phantom pain — a sensation that makes it feel like there’s pain coming from a body part that’s no longer there — Lambert shocked everyone with her positive outlook and attitude.
“It wasn’t this sob story of, ‘Poor me, my life’s over,’” said Jason Lalla, her prosthetist at Next Step. “It was, ‘When can I run?’”
Nine months after the accident, Lambert, who redshirted the 2017 lacrosse season, received her running blade and started bringing her stick to physical therapy.
“I know Next Step is amazed at how far she’s come in such a short time,” Lambert’s mom, Judy, said. “Even Jason, who himself is an amputee.”
Lalla, an avid ice hockey and lacrosse player in the late 1980s, lost his leg, also above the knee, in a motorcycle accident two weeks after he graduated from high school. He went on to win a gold medal as a rookie giant slalom skier at the 1998 Paralympics in Japan, plus silver and bronze medals at the 2002 games in Salt Lake City.
“Noelle’s a good example of this — people that are competitive and driven switch into that gear of, ‘OK, now what?’” Lalla said. “We don’t view ourselves as disabled. Now, I mountain bike and still ski. In my mind, there’s no reason why I can’t be just as good as the next guy, even though I’m using my leg above the knee. Everybody else thinks that’s unbelievable. She’s the same way.”
Lambert’s training began in May 2017 at Fortitude Health and Training with Derryfield (N.H.) coach Kirstin Kochanek, whose daughter, Madi, was then a freshman at Iona. The initial focus was to return Lambert to normalcy, meeting three times each week to relearn the basics of moving her body.
But Lambert advanced quickly to 30-yard sprints with plants and cuts, and then to daily mile runs. She reached a major milestone the following September, running the Gauntlet — UMass-Lowell’s timed test in which players sprint one mile, a half-mile, a quarter-mile and lastly a half lap around the track.
“I knew she was going to play again,” Kochanek said. “She never complained. It was insane. Maybe she saved it for her mom in the privacy of her own home. It was pretty incredible. Anything I told her to do, she would do.”
Lambert’s prosthetic chafed her leg to the point of bleeding.
“We’d wipe it off and she kept going,” Kochanek said. “There was always a reason to quit, and she just didn’t.”
It didn’t even matter if her leg fell off.
“We bought 10 new rowers for the gym and I said, ‘Have you ever rowed?’ and she said, ‘No, let’s try it.’ She gets on it and — not kidding you — she took one pull and her leg fell off,” Kochanek said. “We were laughing hysterically.”
Laughter and lacrosse got Lambert through the tough times. Her humor brought levity to the situation and also helped everyone around her feel more comfortable. One day during a team lift, as soon as her leg fell off during box squats, she started talking trash, Whitehead recalled. For Halloween, she dressed up as an iHop billboard
Get it? I hop?
“She has a sick sense of humor, which I appreciate because I do as well,” Lalla said. “It’s a way of coping with things, but that’s also who she was before. It physically changes you, but it doesn’t change what you’re made of. That’s very apparent with her.”