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M. H. Mandelbaum Orthotic & Prosthetic Services, Inc. articles of interest. Article : Newsday features M. H. Mandelbaum Prosthetic client and high school athlete; Peter McClinchy "This Is My Life" In his mind, Peter McClinchy told himself, " I got shot." And then, realizing he somehow had shot himself, told himself, "Don't pass out." And so he crawled. Crawled them dragged himself. Through the kitchen, through the living room. Through the foyer an to the front door. Somehow, sprawled in the doorway, the chill of an October night and death staring him in the face, he managed to yell. He was shivering now - so cold, so cold - as the blood spilled out of him. Next door, at her house, his grandmother heard him scream. And then his aunt and uncle and grandfather and soon they were all there. Calling 911. The ambulance carried him from his father's house on Elizabeth Place in Center Moriches to Brookhaven Memorial Hospital. From there, the helicopter airlifted him to the University Medical Center in stony Brook. The next thing he knew, a doctor was talking to him. "Once I stick this needle in you, you're going to go out." he heard the doctor say. It all seems so distant now as McClinchy sits in the dugout of the baseball field at Center Moriches. Seems so distant because McClinchy is a senior and a left-handed pitcher for the team. Seems distant---despite the fact that it is May 9 and this happened Oct.5--because he is talking about a game from the previous afternoon when he threw five innings in relief against Port Jefferson, losing on a wild pitch in the 10th. Losing after they started bunting on him. Distant, that it, until you look at the leg. It is right there, sticking out from under his shorts, $13,000 worth of hinges and springs and bearings and hydraulics, the graphite foot--just a curved shape really, but worth $7000 by itself---extending from a casing around his upper leg and tucking into his sneaker where his left foot once had been. "The first time I pitched I was pretty nervous," he said. "Not because of the pitching, but because of the people watching." That was March 28. He is fine with it now. As he said, "This is my life. There is nothing I can do about it now. I might as well go on." "In the hospital, "his mother, Sharon McClinchy, said, " the doctors came and said, "This is what has to be done. I didn't have a decision to make. It had to be done. They had to amputate. My first thought was baseball, how much he loved the game. All night long, all I could think of was, 'What are you going to say to him?' Around six o'clock the next morning, I was in the room and he woke and he looked at me and said, 'Did they take my foot?" I said, 'Yes.' "He said, ' I can handle that.' That's what he said, 'I can handle that.' "And since then, he has. Peter McClinchy has forgiven his father, Robert, who, according to Suffolk County police spokeswoman Cecelia Clausing, had threatened to commit suicide with the shotgun, a 12-gauge Stevens Model 58. Robert McClinchy, according to his family members, had called his son and Peter had raced from his mother's home on Chichester Avenue--Sharon and Robert have been divorced almost seven years--in an effort to stop him. He did. But, with Peter holding the shotgun by the barrel, according to his attorney, Jim Hogan, it accidentally discharged, leaving him wounded. Robert McClinchy, who police said was "under the influence of alcohol," was not charged in the incident, He did not return phone calls to his house this week. "We've talked about it," Peter McClinchy said. "I have no anger toward him." More incredible, Peter McClinchy has no anger at all. Not toward his father, or himself. Not toward his situation. "It was devastating, what happened," Sharon McClinchy said. "But he has always been very determined. He has always had this drive to get where he wants to be. I don't know how he did what he did. But he did it. He could have felt sorry for himself. But he made up his mind he wasn't going to do that. he was going to be positive." McClinchy was in the hospital for six days. He missed just seven days of school. Three weeks and three days after the accident, he took a pair of crutches and walked the last mile of the "One-to-One Walk" with amputee athletes Dennis Oehler and Todd Schaffauser. In December, he began throwing a baseball with former Yankees and Mets pitcher Paul Gibson, a graduate of Center Moriches. He taught himself how to compensate for the limited motion in his mechanical knee and learned how to pitch from the stretch. Frustrated when he was sidelined for almost five weeks at the start of the season after he strained his right knee, McClinchy has overcome that setback and done well. Having hit .486 last season as he went 5-1 with a 3.28 ERA with 48 strikeouts and 17 walks in 47 1/3 innings, McClinchy has pitched 6 2/3 innings this season and has a 3.15 ERA. He has struck out five, walked one. He is batting .250 and has thrown 80 mph- and, most remarkable, is still being recruited by an NCAA Division I school, the University of Hartford. "The real victory," Center Moriches baseball coach Chris O'Brien said, "is Peter getting out on the field again and playing a game. A lot of kids would have said, "I'm never going to play again.' Two days after the accident, he told me, ' I can't wait to start throwing.' His mother may call it stubbornness. I call it competitive drive. This kid is amazing." "You learn a lot about yourself," Peter McClinchy said, as he sat there in that dugout earlier this week. "What I learned was what I can do, what I have done. How strong I am. That if you set your mind on something, you can do it. That you can't sit around and feel sorry for yourself because you have to live." Which he has.
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