Carl Superina has seen some hard hits over the years as a football official. For the past 28 years he’s had his share of close calls on the gridiron. But Saturday afternoon the 72-year-old Superina, the head official of one of Suffolk’s top officiating crews, couldn’t avoid a big hit.

East Islip defensive end Jovan Bonilla was in pursuit of Garden City quarterback Brayden Robertiello. The Trojans junior rolled to his right and tried to elude the hard-charging 6-2, 235-pound end. Robertiello fled right toward Superina, who couldn’t get out of the way, as Bonilla tackled Robertiello and both players crashed into Superina.

The crowd gasped as Superina lay motionless on the Stony Brook University turf.

After a 15-minute delay, Superina was helped to his feet and taken to the locker room.

“The play was coming to my side. I was trying to follow the play and I got caught,” Superina said. “It was like a chop block, one guy went low, one went high, and I went down.”

He suffered a shoulder injury and left the stadium  for X-rays.

“He was alert on the field and complained of shoulder pain,” said Dr. James Paci, who is the attending physician for the Long Island football championships. “We brought him into the locker room for further evaluation. He was taken to Orlin & Cohen in Bohemia where he had X-rays and was referred to the emergency room at Mather Hospital for further management.”

Official Tom Magier came off the chain crew to fill in for Superina and finish the game.

“We have an extra crew on for things like this and when a man goes down such as today, we bring one of them on the field,” Section XI executive director Tom Combs said. “It goes through his insurance first, and then we pick up whatever is left,”

Superina told Newsday he was disappointed with the accident.

“I’m sad because I waited all year for this game,” Superina said. “But the number of coaches and officials who called me all afternoon to check in was phenomenal.”

Superina is a special guy. He becomes Santa Claus during the holidays at various events, including one on Friday at the Smithtown Theater for a community showing of “The Polar Express”.

“Well, now I have to see if it can happen,” Superina said. “I was really looking forward to it, and I was also looking forward to being Santa for my new grandson Krew and the rest of my seven other grandchildren. But Santa will find a way.”

Newsday’s Gregg Sarra contributed to this story.

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