ORESKOV
SPORTS &
ENTERTAINMENT
INSURANCE
Helping active people become safely insured and financially protected. We are always on your side and by your side.
WHY OSE INSURANCE?
The importance of having a pro run your claim.
We care about you as a person as much as we care about making sure you are protected. This is why we choose to take an active role in your life. We also believe in supporting you through both the highs and lows of your journey and will be there for you throughout the whole claim process. In this way, we’re more like family.
OSE INSURANCE
Helping active people become safely insured and financially protected. We are always on your side and by your side.
What does OSE Insurance do?
HOW CAN WE HELP YOU?
Providing hope for moving on with your life
PATRICK’S STORY
Former West Coast Eagle secures $500,000 payout after suffering career-ending neck injury
Ex-Eagle Patrick Bines’ brutal injury saw him drop 40kg and use an injecting room. He was left in “excruciating pain” and ready to end his life years after an innocuous on-field spoil cost him everything
Earlier this year, journalist Jon Ralph spoke about his story on Fox Footy’s On The Couch when insurance and claims expert Adriana Oreskov was watching. This one moment saved him and changed his life.
On her own accord, Ms Oreskov reached out to Bines on LinkedIn. She was able to successfully re-activate his claim on 11 May 2022 and exactly 60 days later on 11 July 2022, Bines had his total and permanent disability with AMP approved, after two unsuccessful attempts. He was finally able to have closure so that he can focus on healing and getting his life back on track.
Guy’S STORY
Former AFL and Big Bash League player Guy Walker opens up on life-changing disability claim
Guy Walker had the world at his feet before a devastating injury left him disabled and feeling hopeless. During a trip abroad, he received a phone call that changed his life, writes Code Sports journalist, Daniel Churney.
Walker played a single game for the Renegades, in December 2015 at the Gabba. His three overs went for 47, but copping some tap from Chris Lynn and company wasn’t the worst thing to happen to him that night. He hurt his shoulder throwing, setting off a chain of shoulder surgeries that ultimately led to that match being the last professional sporting fixture he would ever play.
“There’d be days and weeks where I’d be in bed all week, I’d be in that much pain, it’d feel like someone was stabbing me in the shoulder, in the neck. And then if I sat up, I felt like my neck couldn’t support my head,” Walker says.