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Cristiano Loyie-Silva
February 16, 2026

I started playing football when I was 10 years old. I picked it up quickly and fell in love with the sport immediately. I live in Richmond where there aren’t high school football teams so I played in a community football team. I was the wide receiver.

My first major injury happened in the second year I was playing on Team BC when I was 16. In the gold medal game, someone landed on me and broke my collarbone. That injury sidelined me for the entire summer. I struggled mentally and went through what felt like injury depression. I was stuck at home, unable to do much, and had to rediscover who I was outside of football.

The injury was a blessing in disguise. At the time, everyone wanted to play wide receiver, so, while injured, I taught myself how to play defensive back (DB) by watching films—something I had already done growing up in community football. When I finally returned, there was a fire in me to come back stronger. I played both wide receiver and DB.

I came to STMC for my Grade 11 year. For the first time, I was on a strong team where I could rely on my teammates. The brotherhood was something I had never experienced before. I trained hard all summer, and by camp, I had naturally stepped into a leadership role. With that confidence, I began playing more freely. We had a strong season. In the playoffs, we faced the second-ranked team while we were ranked ninth. Their receiver was ranked at the top statistically in every category. As the DB, I followed him all game, and he didn’t catch any balls. Unfortunately, they still beat us which ended our season.

In early spring camps, disaster struck again. I felt my knee pop and bruised the meniscus. I rushed back too soon and played in a tournament despite warnings. That decision was pure arrogance because I was thinking about myself and showing my talents instead of thinking of the team. During the game, my knee buckled again, and on a change of direction, it snapped—loud like a gunshot. I tore multiple ligaments.

This injury crushed me because I had to accept that I wouldn’t play my senior high school season. I felt like I let my team down. My mental health suffered badly for weeks, but eventually my mindset shifted from “Why me?” to “What now?” I focused on rehab, small milestones like running again, and mental strength.

I had surgery the summer before Grade 12. I started again from zero. School helped me mentally, and my recovery progressed faster than expected. I committed myself fully to rehab and growth.

Though Canadian colleges stopped recruiting me, a blessing in disguise was learning about prep schools in the U.S.A. I took a risk, connected with an agent, and doors began opening again. My goal is to be fully cleared to play by July 2026, attend prep school for two years, and earn a Division 1 opportunity. Long-term, I want to play professionally or stay in sports as a coach or physical therapist.

Everyone’s recovery path is different. Injuries teach you through trial and error. Don’t ask “Why me?”—ask “What now?” Doing nothing gets you nothing. Doing something gets you closer. Life will throw curveballs, but there’s always a blessing in disguise—even if you can’t see it yet.

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