Quiet Strength: Men’s Lacrosse Team Supports Hearing-Impaired Teammates

By Jerry Durney

Catch any Florida Tech lacrosse game on campus, and the sounds of the game will become quite familiar: pads and helmets making almost constant contact; the whistles of the officials; coaches shouting plays and adjustments to players communicating, in turn, with each other; the roar of the sidelines and stands when the Panthers score.

But Panther men’s lacrosse players Drew Haffner and Griffin Martin only hear these sounds in their imaginations.

Panther men's lacrosse player Drew Haffner.
Drew Haffner, men’s lacrosse player and mechanical engineering freshman.

Haffner suffers from partial hearing loss, while Martin is almost fully deaf.

Martin, a biomedical engineering senior who transferred to Florida Tech from Division I’s New Jersey Institute of Technology, found lacrosse after a hit while playing football caused one of his cochlear implants to stop working.

After doctors recommended that he give up football immediately, family members suggested he take up lacrosse. Martin initially bristled at picking up a new sport until he realized it could take him places. He knew he had a chance to become an example for others who could relate to what he was going through.

“It’s always been my dream to overcome challenges and obstacles, and I’ve always had the mindset that I can do anything I put my mind to,” Martin says. “There’s not a lot of deaf athletes in sports, let alone lacrosse. So, I also want to be a role model for not just those who have hearing loss, but also for those who have disabilities, to show that it doesn’t limit what we do.”

Haffner, a freshman from Missouri City, Texas, just outside of Houston, is motivated by his condition.

“I didn’t want my disability to be my identity,” Haffner says. “I didn’t want that to take over like, ‘Oh, I’m just a kid with hearing loss.’ I didn’t want to be at a different school and say, ‘Oh, I didn’t play lacrosse because of my hearing loss.’”

There’s not a lot of deaf athletes in sports, let alone lacrosse. So, I also want to be a role model for not just those who have hearing loss, but also for those who have disabilities, to show that it doesn’t limit what we do.”

Griffin Martin,
biomedical engineering senior

Given the importance of communication in team sports, Haffner and Martin’s teammates and coaches have done whatever they can to make sure the pair is never out of the loop with what’s happening on the field.

Together, they came up with different ways to communicate with Haffner and Martin, who join the Panthers in attack as midfielders, about which plays they are running. Sometimes, it might be a hand gesture to mimic an animal that the play is named after; other times, it can be as simple as the pull of a shirt sleeve.

“We expect them to be good kids here and to help their teammates when they can,” says assistant coach and offensive coordinator Zach Wynne ’16. “So yeah, it does bring a smile to our face. It makes us happy to look over and see somebody run Griffin through something or get Drew ready for that next drill and say, ‘Hey, I’ll tap you on the shoulder to go in, since you can’t hear the whistle’—things of that nature.”

“You start thinking outside the box about how to keep the team involved, since Griffin’s getting ready to graduate and Drew’s coming in,” says head coach Brad MacArthur. “We’ve got three more years, and Drew is different from Griffin, but I’m just glad that we have that experience as a staff to know what to do. Because if we have another player come in who needs those accommodations, we’re not going to shy away from that.”

Griffin Martin
Griffin Martin, men’s lacrosse player and biomedical engineering senior.

MacArthur, who has prior experience coaching a deaf player, believes it’s the team’s responsibility to make sure Haffner and Martin receive the information and tactics necessary to best help the Panther offense.

“They’ve probably taught us more than we’ve taught or been able to take on our own,” says MacArthur. “Especially Griffin because he’s been able to provide us with some perspective and ideas of how to help get through it during the time we’ve been here. Ninety percent of the communication that we refer to is oral and heard, so we rely on his teammates to help. At practice, we’ll talk to guys and just say, ‘Make sure Griffin knows,’ and they’ll explain it, but he does a bang-up job.”

When Haffner, a mechanical engineering major, made his recruiting trip to Florida Tech, Martin made sure to introduce himself and assure him that he would always have someone in his corner if he made the journey to Melbourne. He told Haffner everything he thought he should know before becoming a part of the program: how the team would be understanding of his condition and that it wouldn’t prevent him from being “one of the guys.”

Martin wanted Haffner to be better prepared from the start than he was.

I didn’t want my disability to be my identity. I didn’t want that to take over.”

Drew Haffner, mechanical
engineering freshman

“I’ve given him advice: Especially on the field, if you don’t understand something, please don’t be afraid to ask questions,” Martin says. “It doesn’t have to be the coach; it can be an upperclassman. I don’t want him to make the same mistakes I made. One thing I struggled with when I was a freshman was that I was too scared to ask questions because I didn’t want to annoy anyone else, but I think the coaches know what’s best for us, and they are always here to help us.”

For Haffner, it provided further confirmation that Florida Tech was where he should be. He felt that he already belonged, that the team understood what he was going through and that they would do everything they could to make him feel at home.

“It made me more reassured that they’re accepting,” Haffner says. “Because they know how it is; they already know, and they make accommodations for it. They don’t blow it off and say, ‘Oh, this isn’t that important, it’s not really a bad thing.’ They made me feel accepted.”

Griffin Martin
Panther men’s lacrosse player Griffin Martin is almost fully deaf.

Both players have also learned ways to make their situations easier in the classroom, e.g., sitting in the front of the class in case they need a professor to repeat something they didn’t catch the first time.

Martin says that lacrosse has helped emphasize the importance of communication in other facets of life.

“Whenever I graduate and get a job, I’m going to have to learn how to talk to my boss and my co workers,” Martin says. “Developing that relationship with the people that I’m going to be working with every day is vital because if you don’t know how to work together, then not much is going to be done.”

Haffner believes the combination of playing lacrosse and his condition has taught him the value of perseverance and gratitude.

“When I was younger, I was really upset, like, ‘Why did I have this? Why am I the only one?’ Because growing up, I never saw anybody with my type of hearing loss,” Haffner says. “It has made me stronger as a person and more grateful for what I have because some people have no hearing. I have this; I should be thankful I have this.”

When the coaching staff members were asked about their one-on-one experiences with Haffner and Martin, they were all eager to rave about them as people as much as players.

Drew Haffner
Panther men’s lacrosse player Drew Haffner (left) suffers from partial hearing loss.

“They’re funny guys; they’ve got good personalities,” Wynne says. “Griffin has a great sense of humor, and it allows him to deal with things a lot easier. Drew’s the same way. He’s got the biggest smile on, and he comes in dang near every day to get an extra lift in. Figuring out what interests them and seeing them excel in what they’re doing in the classroom and on the field is fun to experience.”

Chris Hawley, the team’s defensive coordinator, agrees that being around the duo on and off the field has not only helped make him a better coach but has provided him with perspective, as well.

“Griffin’s such a happy kid; it’s just a blast to work with him,” Hawley says. “He’s just such a happy kid; he’s a goof. Drew’s the same way. He might be the goofiest, smiliest and most hardworking kid that I’ve ever met.”


This piece was featured in the winter 2024 edition of Florida Tech Magazine.

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