Jacket Footsteps
Pané grew up in a family of engineers and educators. Both of his parents are high school science teachers; his grandfather and uncle studied engineering at Georgia Tech. And all of them love the Mets. Well, maybe not his mother, who is from Philadelphia, home of the hated Phillies. (“She’s coming around now, I think,” Pané said.)
Growing up, his favorite baseball player was Mets third baseman David Wright, although Pané was probably a little more like pitching ace Jacob deGrom. Because Pané was a pitcher, and he had this very specific idea since he was a little kid. He was going to a small Division III college, where he could play baseball and study engineering.
“I always wanted to be some kind of engineer but didn’t know what,” he said. “I loved everything about math and science, so it was just a matter of deciding what kind engineering. I stumbled on biomechanics.”
The summer before his junior year of high school, Pané blew out his elbow at a college showcase. His college baseball fantasy ended in an instant. He was devastated. Doctors said he’d torn his ulnar collateral ligament but not enough to get surgery. They suggested physical therapy and plasma injections. He tried that, but the elbow still hurt.
“That put me in the mindset of, ‘If they aren’t going to help me, I’m going to do it myself,’” Pané said.
With the other half of his dream still viable — studying engineering — Pané started researching engineering disciplines that would help him address the elbow problem and satisfy his career interests: “That was biomedical engineering, and Georgia Tech became the dream school, due to its great BME program.”
He’d never wanted to follow in his family’s Yellow Jacket footsteps, but Pané made it work in Atlanta. He even got to play ball — four years of club baseball while at Georgia Tech.
“I took every biomechanics class I could and did a physiology minor for the sole purpose of taking sports science and kinesiology,” he said. “I’ve become more practical and know that I won’t fix every elbow or prevent every injury. But the experience introduced me to the world of baseball biomechanics, which has impacted my entire life and career. And I got to play baseball in college.”
Now he has big league experience and achieved a childhood dream — every day, he gets to walk into Citi Field to make a difference for the baseball club that sparked his love the sport.
So, he doesn’t want to think too far ahead about what’s next. Though he has some ideas.
“I’d love to continue working for the Mets and see how far that takes me in the baseball world,” Pané said. “When all is said and done in my baseball career, I want to shift to teaching. Seeing the impacts my parents and grandparents had on their students left a lasting impression on me. Whether there is an opportunity to merge my love of baseball and teaching is yet to be seen, but one day I would like to try that.”