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Justin Lauer and William Bil Quinter Make Significant Contributions to Youth and Rec Soccer in Brevard

Space Coast Sports Hall of Fame 2025 inductees Youth soccer on the Space Coast enjoys more participation than any other sport, and Justin Lauer and William “Bill” Quinter have made significant contributions over the past three decades as promoters, officials, and administrators, supporting players, coaches, and related organizations EDITOR’S NOTE: The Space Coast Sports Hall […]

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Space Coast Sports Hall of Fame 2025 inductees

Youth soccer on the Space Coast enjoys more participation than any other sport, and Justin Lauer and William “Bill” Quinter have made significant contributions over the past three decades as promoters, officials, and administrators, supporting players, coaches, and related organizations

EDITOR’S NOTE: The Space Coast Sports Hall of Fame selection committee announced that the 2025 induction ceremony will occur on Saturday, May 24, at Eastern Florida State College in Melbourne. This will be the first in-person induction since the COVID-19 pandemic in 2020. To make a reservation for the Space Coast Sports Hall of Fame induction ceremony, e-mail Contact@SpaceCoastDaily.com or call 321-323-4460. CLICK HERE to see the 2025 Space Coast Sports Hall of Fame Class.


REC SOCCER LEADERS

BREVARD COUNTY, FLORIDA – Youth soccer on the Space Coast enjoys more participation than any other sport, and Justin Lauer and William “Bill” Quinter have made significant contributions over the past three decades as promoters, officials, and administrators, supporting players, coaches, and related organizations.

They started hosting local soccer tournaments 20 years ago to provide affordable competition for local teams, while also attracting out-of-area teams to play and enjoy the terrific Brevard County park venues.

Their first youth soccer tournament was the Brevard Hurricane Classic, played on Merritt Island.
The two friends also created a recreational tournament 16 years ago, after the state association discontinued the popular District Commissioners program, designed for recreational teams.

Now, they plan and organize multiple tournaments across Brevard County, from Melbourne to Titusville. Lauer and Quinter have served in numerous leadership roles within the Brevard Youth Soccer League. Lauer currently serves as chairman, and Quinter has previously served as Vice Chairman.

JUSTIN LAUER AND BILL QUINTER started hosting local soccer tournaments 20 years ago to provide affordable competition for local teams, while also attracting out-of-area teams to play and enjoy the terrific Brevard County park venues.

OFFICIALS, ADMINISTRATORS

Together, they launched the Brevard Youth Soccer League Hall of Fame to recognize adults who have significantly contributed to youth soccer in Brevard County for at least 10 years. They also created the Joe Goldian Memorial Scholarship fund for high school seniors, all in memory of Joe Goldian, a past BYSL chairman and sports official.

Ten years ago, the two soccer leaders also started BYSL’s summer banquet to recognize important club presidents and directors. Lauer is the Florida Youth Soccer Association’s Region B Vice president and was elected in August 2024 during a hotly contested race at the FYSA state convention.

Justin Lauer, left, and Bill Quinter have officiated youth soccer for over 30 years and have supported the development of hundreds of referees during that time. This includes Lauer’s son and daughter, who also referee, and Quinter’s two sons, who also referee.

Region B covers Vero Beach through Jacksonville to the north and Orlando through Gainesville to the West. Lauer and Quinter also volunteered to serve as tournament directors for the USA Junior Olympics soccer competition that moved to Florida unexpectedly during the COVID pandemic.

This was the first competition played with COVID-19 accommodations, showing that playing safely and getting kids back outside was possible. Lauer has been a referee assignor since 2002, developing consistent processes to staff soccer games across Brevard County.

Lauer achieved State Referee Emeritus distinction, less than one percent of soccer officials. Both men have officiated youth soccer for over 30 years and have supported the development of hundreds of referees during that time. This includes Lauer’s son and daughter, who also referee, and Quinter’s two sons, who also referee.

They have also served as volunteer soccer coaches for their kids when they played recreational soccer in BYSL.

“We have always believed that soccer is a great community activity that helps to keep kids involved with positive activities, and we have done our very best to encourage involvement at all levels of soccer through playing, officiating, and volunteering,” said Quinter.

THE 2025 SPACE COAST SPORTS HALL OF FAME Banquet and Induction Ceremony will occur at Eastern Florida State College in Melbourne on Saturday, May 24. FOR INFORMATION about the Space Coast Sports Hall of Fame, or to make a reservation, e-mail Contact@SpaceCoastDaily.com or call 321-615-8111.

CLICK HERE TO SEE MEMBERS OF THE SPACE COAST SPORTS HALL OF FAME

The Space Coast Sports Hall of Fame selection committee announced that the 2025 induction ceremony will occur on Saturday, May 24, at Eastern Florida State College in Melbourne. To make a reservation for the Space Coast Sports Hall of Fame induction ceremony, e-mail Contact@SpaceCoastDaily.com or call 321-323-4460.

The 2025 Space Coast Sports Hall of Fame induction dinner and ceremony is sponsored by Health First and presented by Tom and Suzie Wasdin

BREVARD COUNTY, FLORIDA—The Space Coast Sports Hall of Fame selection committee announced that the 2025 induction ceremony will occur on Saturday, May 24, at Eastern Florida State College in Melbourne. This will be the first in-person induction since the COVID-19 pandemic.

The Space Coast Sports Hall of Fame induction dinner and ceremony, sponsored by Health First and presented by Tom and Suzie Wasdin, will be held on the evening of May 24. The Meet-and-Greet will begin at 6 p.m., and dinner and the program will start at 7 p.m.

Tom and Suzie Wasdin are longtime Brevard County entrepreneurs, community supporters, and philanthropists. Tom, an NCAA Final Four basketball coach and Brevard Sports Ambassador, was inducted into the Space Coast Sports Hall of Fame in 2015.

The meet-and-greet will include an opportunity to talk with the area’s sports royalty. Dinner and the induction proceeding, which will include compelling video tributes to each inductee, will follow.

The Brevard County High School Breakfast of Champions recognition awards will be held Saturday, May 24, from 9 a.m. to 10:30 a.m., also at Eastern Florida State College.

During the Breakfast of Champions, more than 40 awards will be presented to the best of the 2024-2025 male and female high school student-athletes in each sport. For sponsorship information, call 321-323-4460 or e-mail Contact@SpaceCoastDaily.com.

Both the Breakfast of Champions and the Space Coast Sports Hall of Fame events will be streamed live on Space Coast Daily TV.

Health First, Erdman Automotive, Eastern Florida State College, All Points, Clear Choice Health Care, Brevard Public Schools, Space Coast Office of Tourism, EDC of the Space Coast, 4Ever Young Merritt Island, and Savings Safari sponsor the 2025 Space Coast Sports Hall of Fame induction event and the Brevard County High School Breakfast of Champions recognition awards.

To make a reservation for the Space Coast Sports Hall of Fame induction ceremony, e-mail Contact@SpaceCoastDaily.com or call 321-323-4460.

INDUCTEES SELECTED IN FOUR CATEGORIES

Nominees are chosen in four categories: professional sports, college sports, high school sports, and amateur sports. Special honorary recognition is also bestowed upon individuals and groups that have made significant contributions to sports on the Space Coast.

SPACE COAST SPORTS HALL OF FAME CLASS OF 2025

■ PROFESSIONAL CATEGORY INDUCTEES: Jamel Dean, Football; Hacksaw Jim Duggan, Wrestling; Chauncey Gardner-Johnson, Football; Randy Pobst, Auto racing; Juwaan Taylor, Football

■ COLLEGE CATEGORY INDUCTEES: Paulette King, Basketball, Dylan Lewis, Soccer; Steve Freeman, Soccer; Bryan Cook, Baseball

■ PREP CATEGORY INDUCTEES: Lexy Denaburg, Volleyball; Andi Sellers, Soccer; Kaira Simmons, Track & Field; Jayvan Boggs, Football

■ AMATEUR/RECREATION CATEGORY INDUCTEE: Alli Penovich, Free Diving; Peter Blount, Track & Field; Caylor Williams, Wrestling

■ COACHING CATEGORY INDUCTEES: Doug Butler, Cross Country and Track; Gerald Hodgin, Football; Jim Oler, Basketball; Don Smith, Basketball

• SPORTS OFFICIAL INDUCTEES: Ted Ruta

• SPORTS JOURNALISM INDUCTEES: Steve Vaughn

• SPORTS DEVELOPMENT INDUCTEE: Loren McClanahan

■ LIFETIME ACHIEVEMENT INDUCTEES: Larry Garrison, Clint Hurdle

■ SPORTS AMBASSADOR AWARD INDUCTEE: Rusty Buchanan

■ CHALLENGER AWARD INDUCTEE: Joshua Dillon

■ TEAM OF THE YEAR: Cocoa Tigers Football

■ LEGACY CHAMPIONS: Merritt Island Baseball, 1999-2000

■ COMMUNITY SPORTS ADVANCEMENT: Justin Lauer and Dr. Bill Quinter

■ SPECIAL TRIBUTE: Tim Wakefield

Space Coast Daily created the Space Coast Sports Hall of Fame in 2011 and has inducted over 200 of Brevard County’s most outstanding athletes, coaches, and sports personalities. Eastern Florida State’s Titan Fieldhouse on the Melbourne Campus hosts the Space Coast Sports Hall of Fame. Portraits of the Hall of Famers are displayed on the wall in the building’s main hallway, which runs parallel to the gym and outside the athletic department offices.

To make a reservation for the Space Coast Sports Hall of Fame induction ceremony, e-mail Contact@SpaceCoastDaily.com or call 321-323-4460.

CLICK HERE TO SEE THE MEMBERS OF THE SPACE COAST SPORTS HALL OF FAME

SPACE COAST DAILY TV: Tim Wakefield talks about his induction into the first class of the Space Coast Sports Hall of Fame. Space Coast Daily created the Space Coast Sports Hall of Fame in 2011 and has so far inducted more than 200 of Brevard County’s most outstanding athletes, coaches, and sports personalities.

The main athletic building on the Melbourne Campus hosts the Space Coast Sports Hall of Fame. Portraits of the Hall of Famers are displayed on the wall in the building’s main hallway, which runs parallel to the gym and outside the athletic department offices.





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Rec Sports

Silverwood donates $200K for indoor school and youth sports complex

RATHDRUM — An indoor sports complex will be a game changer for Lakeland High School. With a $200,000 gift from Silverwood Theme Park, fundraising for the $850,000 fieldhouse project has approached the halfway point. Ground is expected to be broken next spring. “I would just like to say thanks to Silverwood Theme Park,” Lakeland High […]

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RATHDRUM — An indoor sports complex will be a game changer for Lakeland High School.

With a $200,000 gift from Silverwood Theme Park, fundraising for the $850,000 fieldhouse project has approached the halfway point. Ground is expected to be broken next spring.

“I would just like to say thanks to Silverwood Theme Park,” Lakeland High Principal Jimmy Hoffman said Wednesday during a brief presentation at the school, “so much gratitude to donating this amount of money to help us get started on our project that we’ve been thinking about a lot.”

The fieldhouse, expected to be 15,000-20,000 square feet, would support Lakeland’s extracurricular activities as well as youth sports in the community, Hoffman said. It will be built adjacent to Corbit Field.

Paul Norton, Silverwood’s chief operating officer, said the theme park and Lakeland are partners.

“It was awesome to get the opportunity, when they reached out to see if there was something we could do,” Norton said. “It was a no-brainer to jump right in and help out this community. We’re not an island; we need each other’s support.”

He said with the area growing so much, kids need something to do. 

“I’d rather have them do more athletic stuff than a bunch of stuff they’re not going to be proud of later in life,” Norton said.

Hoffman said the facility will be available for use by students as well as youth sports teams and feeder clubs. Lakeland is a big youth sports community, Hoffman said, from Junior Tackle Football to wrestling and basketball, starting as young as third grade.

“Our entire community is going to benefit from this,” Hoffman said. “Our facilities are being crammed until 10 o’clock at night here in our gyms. We just need more space.”

The complex will feature an open field turf area, a full-size court and hitting facilities. It will be able to accommodate basketball, volleyball, baseball, softball, golf, wrestling and more. The all-purpose facility will also provide a space for tournaments and social events such as banquets and award ceremonies. It will provide covered indoor space during cold, snowy winters and hot, smoky summer days, as well.

“It’s just a big, big wide-open multi-use facility,” Hoffman said.

Superintendent Lisa Arnold said the charm and the specialness of the Lakeland School District is rooted in community support.

“The man hours that have been put in by the Lakeland High School administrative team and the generous outpouring of support for a project like this will allow families to engage in different ways and provide a space for our kids to hone their skills and be healthy people,” she said.

    A rendering of the future fieldhouse at Lakeland High School.
 
 



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Johnson retiring from Youth Health Service | News, Sports, Jobs

ELKINS — After 37 years with the agency, Executive Co-Director Peggy Johnson will be retiring from Youth Health Service, Inc. on June 30, and her successor, Sarah Begg, will join the established leadership team, consisting of Executive Co-Director, Tammie Rizzio, and Director of Business Operations, Amanda Arbogast, to lead the agency. While Johnson has spent […]

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ELKINS — After 37 years with the agency, Executive Co-Director Peggy Johnson will be retiring from Youth Health Service, Inc. on June 30, and her successor, Sarah Begg, will join the established leadership team, consisting of Executive Co-Director, Tammie Rizzio, and Director of Business Operations, Amanda Arbogast, to lead the agency.

While Johnson has spent the last 10 years serving in the role of executive co-director, her contributions to the agency in its tenure are varied. During the formative years of the agency, she served as a case manager providing maternity and parenting support and education for young women and their families.

As the community needs shifted, Johnson moved into an Early Intervention role working with little ones and their families aimed at increasing opportunities and reducing barriers to learning and developmental growth.

By the mid-90’s, the agency transitioned to providing behavioral health programs for kids of all ages, allowing her to further her specialization in early childhood, providing individual play therapy as well as group and family therapies and coordinating early childhood programming, which included the addition of Home Ties Child Development Center.

Johnson has served as the Project Director for several grant programs around early learning opportunities in participating in childcare programs in the area and the development of the child and adolescent trauma center which led to YHS being an affiliate of the National Child Traumatic Stress Network.

When asked about memorable moments and hopes for the agency moving forward, Johnson said, “The memories that stand out the most involve the people I have been blessed to know here – the amazing leaders who hired me all those years ago and not only mentored but befriended me as well; the dedicated co-workers past and present, so many who have become life-long friends; those caring professionals throughout our communities who supported the mission of YHS and the children we serve; the volunteers who donated their time, talent, and energy to help us; and the faces, the voices, the stories of the children and caregivers who have passed through this way.

“As I am wrapping up my last days as co-director, I am filled with gratitude for the experiences of the past and tremendous hope and confidence for the future of Youth Health Service and the important work being done here.”

Johnson will certainly be missed by her YHS family, community partners and clients; her contributions to the agency and the community at large have been forever impactful and the field of early childhood education and development, and behavioral health are better in our community because of her influences.

Begg will assume her new role on July 1 and brings with her 14 years of experience in the field. After receiving her BSW from Concord University, she went on to receive her MSW while also working for the WVDHHR CPS before transitioning to Southern Highlands Community Health Center as a Therapist. In 2015 she continued her work as a Therapist at Youth Health Service before transitioning to a School Social Worker in Randolph County Schools and back to YHS in 2022.

Begg has long had a passion for helping others that led her to social work. When asked what she would like to achieve in her new role, Begg stated, “I aim to continue the legacy YHS has of helping children and families through new and innovative processes, growing behavioral health to meet the ever increasing and changing needs of the communities we serve, and support and empower the qualified, compassionate, and wonderful staff at YHS.”

The community may express their well wishes and congratulations to both Johnson and Begg by sending cards to Youth Health Service ATTN: Ms. Johnson/Ms. Begg 971 Harrison Ave. Elkins, WV 26241.



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Youth Shooting Sports Donations | Journal Review

Community Matt Nelson, center, chairman of the Crawfordsville Friends of the NRA presented donations to Lori Roe, left, from the Montgomery County 4-H program, and Eric Small, right, of the Crawfordsville Gun Club. Roe received $5,100 for youth shooting sports and Small received $7,000 for youth training and shooting sports. Photo Provided Posted Thursday, June […]

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Impact Of A Scholarship: Megan Kelly Walter

Walter was officially a two-sport athlete at Maryland. She was a speedy forward in field hockey and a gritty defender in lacrosse during her career from 1998-2001. Furthermore, she was a key contributor to two of the most decorated collegiate athletic programs during some of their most dominant years.  In her freshman season with the […]

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Walter was officially a two-sport athlete at Maryland. She was a speedy forward in field hockey and a gritty defender in lacrosse during her career from 1998-2001. Furthermore, she was a key contributor to two of the most decorated collegiate athletic programs during some of their most dominant years. 

In her freshman season with the women’s lacrosse team in spring 1999, Walter won a national championship. Then, in the fall of the same year, Walter’s sophomore season with the field hockey team, she won another national title. The feat allowed her to become one of a select few athletes to win two titles in a single year.

Walter is also the last athlete to accomplish the feat, despite Notre Dame’s Jordan Faison coming close to the same achievement in lacrosse and football. According to an article published by The Wall Street Journal, before Walter, Anthony Muñoz was an offensive tackle on the USC football team that claimed the 1978 national championship, months after he pitched for the Trojans’ baseball team, which won the College World Series.

In addition to winning two championships in the same year, Walter accumulated seven ACC titles: field hockey (1998, 1999, 2000, 2001) and lacrosse (1999, 2000, 2001). She won four NCAA titles overall, with three earned on the lacrosse field. She even helped Timchal’s team extend its remarkable NCAA championship streak to seven in a row dating back to 1995, while Walter was still in high school. 

“It could have gone very differently had I not had stress fractures,” Walter said. “Or had the trainers not said to me, ‘You shouldn’t be playing on turf in January, but you can go play lacrosse on grass.’”



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Island youth baseballer set to represent Team Netherlands in international play

STATEN ISLAND, N.Y. — Soccer may be considered the unofficial national sport of the Netherlands, but Staten Islander Dex Zimmerman — who holds dual American-Dutch citizenship — is set to don the iconic Oranje for the Dutch U12 national baseball team at the upcoming Youth Baseball European Championship hosted in the Czech Republic. Zimmerman, who […]

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STATEN ISLAND, N.Y. — Soccer may be considered the unofficial national sport of the Netherlands, but Staten Islander Dex Zimmerman — who holds dual American-Dutch citizenship — is set to don the iconic Oranje for the Dutch U12 national baseball team at the upcoming Youth Baseball European Championship hosted in the Czech Republic.

Zimmerman, who will soon graduate from PS 60 in Graniteville and move onto IS 72 in New Springville, is currently in Europe for a scrimmage against the Belgian national team on Wednesday ahead of the European Championship, which begins on July 2.

Dex’s path to international baseball began about four years ago, when his father, Todd, reached out to a coach from the Dutch program to explore opportunities for Dex to get involved. At the time, he was told Dex was too young — but now, he’s ready to take the international stage.

“Out of nowhere this year, the same coach reached back out and told us they were having a tryout; we went a little less than a month ago, and he made the team,” Zimmerman proudly said of his son’s accomplishment.

Though he primarily serves as a pitcher for the Dutch squad, Zimmerman is also effective at shortstop and center field — a testament to the versatile skillset his father helped cultivate during his years as Dex’s coach, prior to his transition to club coaching with the New York Prospects last year.

“He’s a very humble boy,” Zimmerman said of his son’s attitude despite his talent at such a young age.

“We started playing baseball together when he was around 1-year-old, and I try to keep him humble, but that’s something he’s always had in him,” Zimmerman continued.

Island youth baseballer set to represent Team Netherlands in international play

Staten Islander Dex Zimmerman poses outside the home stadium of the Hoofddorp Pioniers, a local Dutch baseball team, ahead of representing the country in a youth baseball tournament.Todd Zimmerman

Zimmerman has firmly established himself as a young talent locally, but his father acknowledged that competing on the international stage will bring a new set of challenges.

“While he’s playing for the Dutch team, the field is 46 feet from the mound to home and 60 feet between the bases; those are dimensions similar to Little League, but when he’s playing travel ball for the Prospects, the field is definitely bigger,” Zimmerman said of one of the ways Dex may need to readjust his game while playing in Europe.

Dex will also get the chance to meet his Dutch national teammates for the first time, as this marks his debut traveling abroad for competition. While some cultural differences may arise, his father is confident that Dex —fluent in both Dutch and English — will form friendships that last a lifetime.

“They’re not into the small talk like we are,” Todd said with a laugh.

“He’s a little bit of an outsider for now; they’re a little bit different than us, but he’s a social kid,” he continued.

In addition to reconnecting with his Dutch roots, Zimmerman is also contributing to the global growth of baseball in real time — a role his father finds especially meaningful with the World Baseball Classic on the horizon next year.

“We’re really into that competition,” Todd said of their own fondness of how the WBC has promoted the sport globally.

“The Netherlands is ranked seventh in the world currently, since they also include Aruba and Curaçao. Andruw Jones is the head coach of the Netherlands and has recruited guys like Xander Bogaerts and Jurickson Profar to play for him, so it’s a very good breeding ground for baseball,” Zimmerman said of the nation’s senior team.

While Dex still has a long road ahead to reach that level, his involvement in the global baseball community is already laying the foundation for a lifelong love of the game — and a chance to see the world through it.

“He’s really looking forward to it,” Todd said of Dex’s excitement ahead of the tournament.

“It should be a really interesting experience getting to interact with different countries and hear different languages; he’s just really always loved the game of baseball, the fact that they took a chance on somebody from New York was really cool. They want him to stay with it for the long haul,” he continued.

The Dutch U12 team will kick off its 2025 European Championship campaign when it takes on Ukraine in Hluboká, Czech Republic on July 2.



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Bates to Join International Summer Tour with Athletes in Action

Story Links RUSTON – Louisiana Tech guard AJ Bates has been selected to join Athletes in Action Basketball for an international tour this summer, traveling to the Czech Republic from June 28 to July 11.   Bates will be part of a select team comprised of student-athletes from eight college basketball programs […]

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RUSTON – Louisiana Tech guard AJ Bates has been selected to join Athletes in Action Basketball for an international tour this summer, traveling to the Czech Republic from June 28 to July 11.
 
Bates will be part of a select team comprised of student-athletes from eight college basketball programs across the country.  The team will compete in exhibition games against the Czech Republic’s U20 and U23 national teams while also participating in outreach activities, including a one-day youth basketball camp and coaching clinic.
 
Athletes in Action is a faith-based organization that partners with college athletes across the country, organizing sports tours and leadership training experiences aimed at fostering personal development and global impact.
 
As a freshman for the Bulldogs this past season, Bates appeared in 29 games with four starts.  He averaged 4.6 points per game, including four double-digit scoring outings.  Bates also contributed 57 rebounds, 49 assists, and 22 steals.
 
The two-week experience will offer Bates the chance to sharpen his skills in a competitive international setting while representing both Louisiana Tech and Athletes in Action abroad.
 
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