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Rec Sports

As a parent and coach, I was blown away by the lessons I learned from a college QB

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Editor’s note: This story is part of Peak, The Athletic’s desk covering leadership, personal development and success through the lens of sports. Follow Peak here.

Kansas quarterback Jalon Daniels arrived in Texas this July with a unique distinction: It was his fourth time representing his school at Big 12 media day. It’s not exactly Archie Griffin’s two Heismans, but the Kansas star figures in the NIL and transfer portal era, no one will duplicate his feat.

“I tried to tell Commish (Brett Yormark), ‘You might as well go ahead and put a banner: JD up here four years in a row, baby!’” Daniels said, laughing.

It was the type of levity and self-awareness that comes from a player who has experienced just about everything a quarterback can have thrown at him.

Two years ago, Daniels wore a silver suit with a red tie and an Apple Watch pendant around his neck that displayed his 2022 highlights on a loop. As remarkable as some of the footage was, or as glitzy as the jewelry looked, the most impressive thing was his words. He told a story back then that wasn’t just about how he’d arrived at this moment. He also gave one of the best lessons in parenting I’ve ever heard.

I’ve been a sportswriter twice as long as I’ve been a parent. I’ve coached my son in football for the last five years. Youth sports can be amazing. It can also be mind-numbing, frustrating and baffling, especially if your kid loves it even more than you do.

It’s human nature for kids to compare themselves to others their age. Their parents often are guilty of doing it too (I am guilty of this). Every practice can feel like a defining moment (guilty of this, too). Only it isn’t.

But the more I learned about Daniels, the more insightful and applicable his story became to me — and hopefully will be for other parents and young athletes as well.

Daniels’ career is a testament to playing the long game, something that gets increasingly harder to do in this era of instant gratification and online rankings. Here are my four favorite lessons I learned from his story.

Lean on your support system early

Daniels was part of one of the most stacked quarterback recruiting classes to come out of one area in recent memory.

He graduated in 2020 from Lawndale High in Southern California, not far from where the country’s top two overall recruits, Bryce Young and D.J. Uiagalelei, also played. Fellow five-star QB C.J. Stroud was from the area. Daniels was ranked behind 22 other quarterbacks in the state of California alone and didn’t even have a recruiting profile, much less any stars, until just before his senior season.

How exactly did a young Jalon stay grounded and not get discouraged?

“Honestly, I did have that perspective even back then,” he said. “My freshman year humbled me for real. Going into freshman year, I did think I was the best. That humbled me so much because then I saw D.J., balling (as a) freshman. I’m barely playing as a freshman. He got offers; I don’t. Bryce Young’s ballin’ on varsity as a freshman. He got offers; I don’t. What am I doing wrong? I’m not in the same situation.”

Daniels credits his mom, Star, for instilling in him a drive and determination to stay on the path.

“I can’t even imagine how it is for a parent seeing your child doing as much as they can, as much as they are willing to do to try and get to where they’re going, and things aren’t happening,” he said. “I just have to give props to my mom and stepdad for being able to keep me grounded. Now that I’m looking back on it, it’s so easy to get hard on yourself about stuff like that.”

Find the positive in your situation

The low point for Jalon and Star came during his sophomore year of high school. His coach told him, depending on how this practice goes, that he’d either get to move up to the junior varsity team or stay on the freshman squad for another year.

A few hours later, Daniels got back into his mom’s car and slunk into the seat.

“He is making me do freshman (football) again,” he told his mom.

Star’s heart broke for her son. “You could tell that he wanted to cry,” she said.

She wasn’t about to start the 20-minute drive home until his perspective changed.

“When Jalon is in his head about something, we stop and we deal with it right then and there,” she said. “When he’s having those moments, I need Jalon to see my face. I need him to see where I am because if I am passionate about what it is that you want, I need you not to lose that passion.”

She made sure he understood the situation as she saw it. He was still small and hadn’t yet hit his growth spurt. Those kids on JV were big. Maybe the coaches didn’t think he was physically ready to move up. Also, she told him, perhaps the coaches thought he would be able to motivate the new kids who might be scared coming onto the freshman team, since Jalon was a good leader.

“You know what it’s like to play in these Thursday games,” she said. “Use that to your advantage!”

After 15 minutes, Star felt Jalon had received the message, and she was ready to pull out of that parking lot.

“By then, all that negativity and doubt was gone,” she said. “By the time we got home, he was putting his plan into action, thinking about what he can do.”

At the end of that season, Daniels not only moved up to JV but was one of a handful of sophomores who joined the varsity team at Narbonne High when it played for the state title. He even got into the game for a snap.

Star told him, “Do you see what patience and perseverance can get you?”


Jalon Daniels and his mom, Star. Photo courtesy of the Daniels family

Comparison is the thief of joy

As a sophomore, Daniels was the third-string quarterback behind two talented athletes: Jaylen Henderson, who is now at West Virginia, and Kyle Williams, who now plays for the New England Patriots.

It wasn’t just his parents’ support that helped drive him. Daniels’ teammates also saw how well he played when he got the chance to start on the junior varsity team. Just keep doing what you’re doing, they encouraged. You’re gonna be OK, they kept telling him.

“I’m like, ‘All right, bet! Keep playing,’” Daniels said. “I made a whole lot of highlights with some guys … and then Jake Garcia transferred in.”

Garcia, now at Michigan after going from Miami (Fla.) to Missouri to East Carolina, was another Southern California five-star QB at the time. Daniels decided to bet on himself and transferred to Lawndale for his junior year.

“If you’re good enough to play at that next level, somebody’s going to find you and you’ll be able to put your talents at that next level,” Daniel said. “So it was no longer just about trying to compare myself to Bryce, D.J. or C.J. because at the end of the day, comparison is a thief of joy.”

The internet is also a thief of joy, as Daniel was reminded of before his junior season.

“I type in J-A-L-O-N Daniels in Google,” Daniels remembered, “and Jayden Daniels (another blue-chip QB from Southern California who was a year ahead) came up, and I thought, ‘Well, I will be able to fill up this page one day.’”

‘You never lose. You either win or you learn’

Daniels received only a few offers from mid-major programs and committed to Middle Tennessee the week before his senior season. It wasn’t until the very end of that season that he finally received that one elusive Power 4 offer. Daniels bet on himself again and flipped to the Kansas Jayhawks.

Daniels started six games as a 17-year-old freshman in 2020 under coach Les Miles. The following offseason, Miles was fired and replaced by Lance Leipold, who took over a dreadful program that hadn’t won more than three games in a season in a dozen years.

The Jayhawks started 1-8 in 2021, but then Daniels led them to a stunning 57-56 upset of Texas, snapping the program’s 56-game road losing streak. He threw four touchdowns and no picks.

In 2022, Daniels sparked Kansas to its first bowl game in 14 years and was a second-team Academic All-American. The 2023 season, though, brought more mental challenges. He played in only three games because of a back injury. In 2024, Daniels was healthy, but he and the offense struggled. Daniels threw 14 touchdowns and 12 interceptions. The team lost five of its six games decided by six points or less.

It led to some honest conversations with Leipold.

“He was right,” Daniels said. “Early on, I was pressing. I was trying to make up for lost time. I was trying to do as much as I can to be able to get the guys around me to the NFL instead of focusing on winning the game right now.”

Leipold said Daniels is the same person he was four years ago when Leipold first arrived in Lawrence.

“He’s as positive a teammate as you could ask for,” Leipold said. “He’s just one hell of a kid. He’s humble. He’s hardworking. He doesn’t make excuses. He walks around with the same smile on his face. And he’s never once made an excuse or deflected anything that hasn’t gone his way.”

Again, Daniels credits his mom for that mentality.

“Most of life is a mental game,” he said. “When you lose, it hurts you mentally more than anything else, but one thing my mom told me is, ‘Son, you never lose. You either win or learn.’ ”

When I asked what advice he’d give his younger self or any other kid, Daniels started to answer before I finished the question.

“I’m telling my 13-year-old self to stay the course,” he said. “Stay patient. Everything’s going to happen the way it’s supposed to. Make sure you believe in God because there’s going to be tests.

“There’s going to be trials and tribulations that try to knock you off your pivot and try to make you feel less confident than you already are. Stay confident because you’re in that situation for a reason.”

(Illustration: Dan Goldfarb / The Athletic; James Black/Icon Sportswire / Getty Images)



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Rec Sports

North Charleston basketball league inspires youth on and off the court

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In North Charleston, the High Hoops Basketball League is making a significant impact on nearly 500 kids from schools across the Lowcountry.

The league, organized by Dr. Justin Beaufort, aims to mirror the excitement of the NBA with media highlights, player jerseys, and post-game interviews.

“If I’m a kid, second or third grader walking down the hallway and I see my face on the screen at school, I’m definitely excited about that,” Beaufort said. “I wanna do everything in my power so I can get that same feeling next week as well.”

READ MORE | “Carolina Champion: Group combines basketball and faith to inspire youths in the Lowcountry”

The league not only focuses on basketball skills but also emphasizes academic engagement.

“We only play our games on Saturdays, so the kids can focus on the scholastic aspect of things throughout the week,” Beaufort explained. He believes the program helps lower criminality by keeping kids engaged.

However, the league faces challenges in finding enough courts to accommodate its growth.

“The lack of resources as far as gyms inside the community, we’re not able to get into ’em,” Beaufort said. “It just puts us inside a situation where we have to go rent gyms in order to do it.”

Beaufort is hopeful for community support to expand the league. “We would love that opportunity and we think that we can raise the number of kids that can be a part of it,” he said.

With backing from the city of North Charleston, Beaufort envisions the league growing from 448 kids to 4,000, which he sees as a win for everyone.



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Crystal Community Ski Club honored by national ski organization

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PSIA-AASI Central serves more than 3,500 teaching professional members in the Midwest through snowsports education, certification and promotion, according to the organization’s website. 

“We are extremely thankful for all in our CCSC community who have contributed to our success as a club,” the organization said in a press release. “It is due to this community that we have been awarded PSIA-AASI Central Member School of the Year.”

The release said members and supporters of the club played a role in its efforts and recognition.

“It is a huge honor coming from one of our premier partners,” said Hunter Steinkamp, executive director of the Crystal Community Ski Club, in an interview with the Record Patriot. “Using their materials and education, we’ve been able to train some of the most highly trained coaches in the state. That allows them to be as effective as possible in our programs.”

The Crystal Community Ski Club operates as a youth-focused nonprofit, offering a range of skiing programs designed to build skills and interest in winter sports among young people in northern Michigan. Programs include alpine and Nordic teams, holiday camps, race academies, junior ski patrol and instructor training for middle and high school students, from beginners to competitive athletes.

The club also has initiatives such as the Nordic Rocks program, aimed at introducing elementary school students to cross-country skiing, often at little or no cost. The club partners with school districts and community organizations and offers scholarships to help reduce financial barriers and expand access to the sport.



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Harlingen working to revive lake at local park

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Harlingen working to revive lake at local park

For some Harlingen residents, the lake at the Tom Wilson Youth Sports Complex has not been the same in over a year.

The lake, located at 3139 Wilson Road, has been receding due to evaporation and a lack of a natural water source. The decreasing water levels have left fish unable to thrive.

To address the problem, the city’s parks and recreation department began pumping water from a newly tapped well into the lake last month.

It’s part of a conservation project fully funded by a state grant. 

Crews also installed catfish spawning boxes and structures throughout the lake to give fish a place to hide and grow.

More fish will also be added as part of the project.

The lake is open for anyone to come fish. City officials said fishermen are only allowed to take home five fish of any species. 

Those wanting to participate must have a valid fishing license, and city crews and game wardens will be at the lake enforcing the rule.

Watch the video above for the full story. 





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Legacy of Portland youth basketball coach lives on

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Jodi Darling Peterson didn’t know all the details of her brother’s work coaching youth basketball with the Boys & Girls Club in Portland. But when she watched Joe Voisine’s teams play, when she watched him on the sidelines, she recognized the most important thing.

“Those kids did not want to let him down,” she said.

That feeling was mutual.

Joe Voisine died on Dec. 8 after an illness. He was just 48.

His legacy echoes in the lives of all the players Voisine coached with the Yellowjackets and Blue Wave, the club teams he coached over the years.

Demitrius Covington, left, played for Joe Voisine, right, at the Boys & Girls Club of Southern Maine. Voisine, who coached the Boys & Girls Club and club teams in Portland for a number of years, died on Dec. 8 after an illness. (Photo courtesy Demitrius Covington)

“He was the guy, man. He was the guy,” Demitrius Covington said of Voisine.

A 2012 graduate of Portland High, Covington was the first captain of the Yellowjackets. He recalled the intense Saturday morning practices where Voisine taught the Yellowjackets to be a brotherhood. To look out for each other. For the guys from Portland’s lower income communities, who went home to places like Sagamore Village, Riverton Park or Kennedy Park, Voisine provided the opportunity to belong to something bigger than themselves that was hard to find.

“He helped so many kids find their way,” said Covington, who served eight years in the Navy. “He was our father figure. Look out for your brother. That’s what he taught us.”

If a player needed a ride, Voisine was the chauffer, Peterson said. If a player couldn’t afford basketball sneakers, Voisine bought them. He grew up a gym rat at the South Portland Boys & Girls Club, going often with his uncle, Peter Darling. Basketball was a passion for Voisine, and he wanted to share it, instill that passion in others.

“Without Joe, I don’t think I’d be the player I am today,” said Terion Moss, who was Mr. Maine Basketball as a Portland High senior in 2018.

When Moss was playing for Voisine at the Boys & Girls Club in middle school, Voisine had him playing with high schoolers, pushing the youngster to appreciate his talent. At the University of Maine at Farmington, Moss became North Atlantic Conference Player of the Year and an All-Region selection by d3hoops.com. He even played a little pro ball in Ireland.

When Moss and Lewis Gaddas didn’t handle a tough loss well, Voisine sat them down and had them talk to Covington about winning and losing with grace.

“That was a big deal for me, to hear that from somebody I looked up to,” Gaddas said.

Voisine took his teams to out-of-state tournaments. For many players, that was their first time outside Maine, Gaddas said. He treated everyone with so much respect. He taught every kid how to play the game, no matter their experience or talent level. If you wanted to play basketball, Voisine wanted you to love it as much as he did.

They had fun, Gaddas said. They gave each other good-natured jabs when Gaddas’ Portland High team played Voisine’s beloved South Portland in back-to-back Class AA state finals in 2016 and 2017.

Now an equipment coordinator for the Boston Celtics, Gaddas was working for the Maine Celtics a few years ago when the team made a run to the G League finals. Voisine reached out to Gaddas with messages of good luck and congratulations.

“He made me fall in love with basketball. He’s a big reason I’m where I am now,” Gaddas said.

You hear that, or similar sentiments, from many of Voisine’s players. He set them on a path of success.

“His biggest lesson was, just try,” Covington said. “The moment we started playing, he gave us confidence.”

Moss is now the gym coordinator at the same Boys & Girls Club in which he played for Voisine. Passing the game on to the next generation. Living Voisine’s legacy.



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Fargo students use their swimming experience to help teach youth – InForum

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FARGO — Learning to swim often brings a mix of excitement and fear, from awkward doggy paddling and struggling to float to finally feeling comfortable in the water. Many can recall the early days of clinging to the pool’s edge or feeling overwhelmed without the help of a pair of arm floaties.

But on Sundays at the Hulbert Aquatic Center, traditional whistles and drills are replaced with laughter, patience and encouragement — thanks to AquaFun.

AquaFun is a free, weekly swim program designed to make swimming enjoyable and less intimidating for kids. It is a volunteer-run, youth-led initiative founded by Davies High School senior Justin Jiang, with fellow Davies swimmer Helen Wu serving as a head coach, alongside assistant coaches and sisters Sunisha and Nashatawn Tangpong.

As Jiang puts it, the goal is simple: “to make the water fun.”

Justin Jiang and Helen Wu, pictured on Thursday, Dec. 4, 2025, at the Hulbert Aquatic Center in West Fargo, are swimmers at Fargo Davies and instructors with AquaFun, a youth-led non-profit organization that teaches youth essential swimming skills.

Justin Jiang and Helen Wu, pictured on Thursday, Dec. 4, 2025, at the Hulbert Aquatic Center in West Fargo, are swimmers at Fargo Davies and instructors with AquaFun, a youth-led non-profit organization that teaches youth essential swimming skills.

Chris Flynn / The Forum

Inspired by their own memories of learning to swim, both Jiang and Wu are committed to encouraging kids of all skill levels to give swimming a try — especially those who are “scared to even put their feet in.”

Jiang has been swimming since he was 8 years old, participating in club swimming and now swimming competitively in high school. He started AquaFun about three and a half years ago after a family friend asked him to teach their children how to swim.

Word spread quickly, and what began as lessons for two kids soon grew into a community program helping dozens of children.

Using their years of experience in the pool, Jiang and Wu’s aim to create a welcoming experience — enjoyable for all newcomers and swimmers developing new skills.

Helen Wu and Justin Jiang, pictured on Thursday, Dec. 4, 2025, are swimmers at Fargo Davies and instructors with AquaFun, a youth-led non-profit organization that teaches youth essential swimming skills.

Helen Wu and Justin Jiang, pictured on Thursday, Dec. 4, 2025, are swimmers at Fargo Davies and instructors with AquaFun, a youth-led non-profit organization that teaches youth essential swimming skills.

Chris Flynn / The Forum

AquaFun typically works with up to 15 kids at a time, ranging from about 6 or 7 years old to 11 or 12, and split into groups by age and skill level with Jiang teaching the more advanced swimmers and Wu and the sisters assisting the younger or less experienced children.

“We take all levels,” Wu said, noting Jiang’s observation that “some kids show up and they don’t want to get in.”

Unlike traditional swim lessons, AquaFun instructors embrace a more relaxed atmosphere, focusing on the fundamentals like floating, kicking and comfort underwater before progressing to strokes and harder skills like flip turns and diving techniques.

‘There’s no like yelling or drills,” Jiang said.

“I don’t like yelling,” Wu added with a laugh.

Lessons typically begin with a name game to help the kids feel comfortable with their instructors and fellow swimmers, followed by a group demonstration and skill practice — and always a snack break provided by the coaching crew.

The two are quite the pair — the type of teenagers that are seemingly chill in nature and just looking to have a fun time — and both say that teaching their lessons has made them better swimmers themselves.

“Teaching the little kids like reminds me to do stuff that I don’t do, don’t usually do,” Jiang said.

“Yeah,” Wu agreed. “You think about it more and then you’re like ‘Oh wait, I should work on this too.’”

The program operates entirely on volunteer time and grant funding. Jiang has raised thousands of dollars through science competitions and company grants which cover the lane rentals and snacks and allow AquaFun to remain completely free for families.

Alongside their happiness to volunteer, the pair say the most rewarding part is seeing the swimmers grow and become more confident.

“I remember this one student … at the start she couldn’t like put her head in the water,” Jiang mentioned, “But now, she just went off the high wall.”

“I was so proud of her,” Wu added. “She started when we first started teaching.”

Helen Wu, a state champion swimmer at Fargo Davies, discusses being a teacher on Thursday, Dec. 4, 2025, with AquaFun, a youth-led non-profit organization that teaches youth essential swimming skills.

Helen Wu, a state champion swimmer at Fargo Davies, discusses being a teacher on Thursday, Dec. 4, 2025, with AquaFun, a youth-led non-profit organization that teaches youth essential swimming skills.

Chris Flynn / The Forum

Parents are encouraged to watch, especially if their children are new, but many grow comfortable enough to sit back — or run errands — as their kids gain confidence. Over time, the coaches often see swimmers “graduate” from AquaFun and move on to club teams.

“Most stick around for a while,” Jiang said. “Some of them, after taking AquaFun for a while, they try out a club, and that’s when the intensive training starts.”

The youth swimmers typically transition to club programs around ages 11 or 12, with Fargo-Moorhead being home to several clubs, including the F-M Gators Swim Team at the YMCA, West Fargo Flyers, Moorhead Marlins USS Swim Club and Red Dragon Swimming.

Wu,15, has been swimming since she was 7 years old. She swam in club and has been swimming competitively for the Davies High School girls team since seventh grade. A sophomore, she recently concluded her swimming season in November by claiming the individual 50-yard freestyle state title, as well as claiming third in the 100-yard freestyle.

Jiang, 17, has been swimming since he was 8 years old. He started competitively swimming in high school and has been a captain on the Davies boys swim team since his junior year. His senior season started at the beginning of December, but last season, he qualified for state in the 100-yard breaststroke and the 200-yard individual medley.

Sunisha and Nashatawn Tangpong, both swimmers at Fargo Shanley High School, joined AquaFun through their connections with Jiang and Wu in club swimming and now serve as assistant coaches.

Justin Jiang, a swimmer at Fargo Davies, discusses being a teacher on Thursday, Dec. 4, 2025, with AquaFun, a youth-led non-profit organization that teaches youth essential swimming skills.

Justin Jiang, a swimmer at Fargo Davies, discusses being a teacher on Thursday, Dec. 4, 2025, with AquaFun, a youth-led non-profit organization that teaches youth essential swimming skills.

Chris Flynn / The Forum

With Jiang preparing for college next year — and hoping to attend someplace warmer than North Dakota — leadership of the program will largely transition to Wu, with Jiang returning to help during the summer.

“I am excited, but a little scared,” Wu said. “I haven’t done it by myself, but I feel like it’ll be good.”

Both coaches hope AquaFun continues to grow and welcome new volunteers. For both Jiang and Wu, fun is at the heart of the program.

“If you’re curious, just try it,” Jiang said. “It doesn’t cost anything. You can show up and see how it feels.”

To learn more about AquaFun, visit

aquafuns.org.





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