Home Sports Miami Grand Prix doctors bring racing passion, trauma expertise to trackside care
Sports

Miami Grand Prix doctors bring racing passion, trauma expertise to trackside care

Share
Share

If there’s a serious crash during a race at the Miami Grand Prix, drivers need the best care as quickly as possible.

Thankfully, the team of doctors at Jackson Memorial Hospital who are working the race are uniquely qualified.

Dr. Antonio Marttos Jr. told Local 10’s Clay Ferraro on Friday that he grew up watching his hero, Ayrton Senna, race for championships.

Marttos was originally in school to be a plastic surgeon.

But after watching Senna lose his life in a crash in 1994, Marttos decided to change course and become a trauma surgeon.

“When he died, I realized I was supposed to become a plastic surgeon,” said Marttos. “His crash really changed my career.”

Marttos says that his first trackside assignment was a truck race in Brazil where a fiery crash forced a driver to leap and roll out of his burning vehicle.

He said he ended up face-to-face with the shaken driver — and with his own future in trauma medicine.

He’s now used his experience to design a fully functional training bay that mirrors the one used at the race track. It’s modeled after the meticulous choreography of a pit crew — only with much higher stakes.

Marttos leads the team of doctors from JMH who work the Miami Grand Prix.

Dr. Gabriel Ruiz is part of that team — and he’s also a race car driver himself.

“I’m a surgeon, so I like to work with my hands,” he said. “It also serves as a kind of relaxing thing for me to be working this job. This job is very stressful, so that’s how we decompress in the garage. And I’ve been working on it for a year, building it little by little, piece by piece, learning from people that know, and getting the car to what it is now.”

Ruiz races at Homestead and Sebring. He also built his own race car from scratch.

That dual perspective gives him unique insight.

“Yeah, it gives you the kind of perspective of what a driver goes through when they’re going around that, you know, 250 mph on the track,” Ruiz said.

Following a crash, seconds matter. And it’s hard to imagine anyone better or faster than the team from JMH.

Share

Leave a comment

Leave a Reply

Latest News

Related Articles
Sports

Michigan to suspend Sherrone Moore for 2 games to address NCAA allegations, AP sources say

Michigan is expected to suspend coach Sherrone Moore for two games next...

Sports

Atkinson, Bickerstaff and Udoka are the finalists for NBA coach of the year

Kenny Atkinson got Cleveland off to a 15-0 start to the season...

Sports

The Met Gala, fashion’s biggest night of the year, is here. Here’s how to watch and follow along

Pharrell Williams has high hopes for the Met Gala, the first to...

Sports

Ex-Dolphins DL Jason Pierre-Paul claims $400K watch was stolen during Hollywood F-1 event

Former NFL defensive end Jason Pierre-Paul is speaking out after claiming that...

About Us

Founded by Francesca Perez in Miami in 2022, A BIT LAVISH is your go-to source for luxury living insights. Covering yachts, boats, real estate, health, and news, we bring you the best of Miami's vibrant lifestyle. Discover more with Miami's Magazine.

Newsletter

Sign up for our newsletter to get the latest updates and articles directly to your inbox.

Please enable JavaScript in your browser to complete this form.

Copyright © 2024 ABIT LAVISH. Miami's Magazine Est. 2022, All rights reserved.

Legal Notice: At A Bit Lavish, we pride ourselves on maintaining high standards of originality and respect for intellectual property. We encourage our audience to uphold these values by refraining from unauthorized copying or reproduction of any content, logo, or branding material from our website. Each piece of content, image, and design is created with care and protected under copyright law. Please enjoy and share responsibly to help us maintain the integrity of our brand. For inquiries on usage or collaborations, feel free to reach out to us +1 305.332.1942.

Translate »