{"id":25765,"date":"2003-04-14T12:44:28","date_gmt":"2003-04-14T17:44:28","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/www.uscho.com\/2003\/04\/14\/trust-and-believe\/"},"modified":"2010-08-17T19:55:28","modified_gmt":"2010-08-18T00:55:28","slug":"trust-and-believe","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.uscho.com\/2003\/04\/14\/trust-and-believe\/","title":{"rendered":"Trust and Believe"},"content":{"rendered":"
Dr. Heechin Chae entered Joe Exter’s room at Spaulding Rehabilitation Hospital to deliver the prognosis. “You will never play hockey again,” the doctor told him.<\/p>\n
Considering Exter, 24, was clinging to life just days earlier after a near-fatal head injury, this bit of news might have seemed irrelevant. But it wasn’t.<\/p>\n
Joe Exter lives to play hockey.<\/p>\n
In fact, during his career at Merrimack College, especially this past season, the senior goaltender and his team reached heights nobody ever expected.<\/p>\n
As Dr. Chae exited the room, Joe began to cry.<\/p>\n
But then the team captain inside him took over.<\/p>\n
“I gave him the same speech that I gave the team at the start of the season,” an alert and determined Exter said last week while continuing his remarkable recovery at his Cranston, R.I., home.<\/p>\n
“I told him, ‘I’ve got to trust you and you’ve got to believe in me. If we don’t do that, I’m not going to get healthy and you’re not going to do your job.'”<\/p>\n
Before last month’s frightening high-speed, on-ice collision with Boston College’s Patrick Eaves, which left the all-star goalie in critical condition with a skull fracture and severe brain swelling, the visionary in Exter adopted “Trust and Believe” as his team’s catch phrase, trying to convince the youthful and underrated Warriors they could compete in college hockey’s toughest league.<\/p>\n
“I loved that I came to Merrimack. Merrimack is the place I had to go,” says Joe. “That was the place that needed me. And the place I needed.”<\/p>\n
Now throughout the close-knit hockey and Merrimack College communities, “Trust and Believe” has become the slogan for his miraculous recovery.<\/p>\n
“When the doctors tried to tell me that I won’t play again, the first thing I told them: ‘I will be back,'” declares a grinning Exter, who attended both his team’s awards banquet and the senior class formal this weekend.<\/p>\n
Witnessing his incredible progress since the shocking March 7 accident, his many loved ones — both related and otherwise — can attest he’s already back.<\/p>\n
“I don’t think he had a grasp of what he went through until the morning he was crying at Spaulding,” says Exter’s girlfriend, Erin Van Bruggen, a fellow Merrimack student. “We watched him in a coma for 10 days, and none of us will ever look at him the same way again.”<\/p>\n
Donna Exter doesn’t mince words when reliving those terrifying 25 minutes her son lay on the Boston College ice, violently convulsing with blood streaming from his left ear. At the same time, her husband, Mark, has had difficulty finding any.<\/p>\n
“I thought he broke his leg or something, because he was moving,” says Donna Exter, who anxiously prayed alongside her son during his entire 28-day hospitalization. “Then it got so quiet. When I got down to the ice, I thought he was dead.”<\/p>\n