NIU Today | Project FLEX basketball tourney hosts youth from five juvenile justice centers
Three dozen youth in the secure custody of the State of Illinois showed off their hoops skills this spring during the inaugural “FLEX Lloyd Tournament of Champions” basketball tournament at Northern Illinois University’s Anderson Hall. And, between the whistles, they enjoyed another chance to glimpse what life could look like through making different and better […]
Three dozen youth in the secure custody of the State of Illinois showed off their hoops skills this spring during the inaugural “FLEX Lloyd Tournament of Champions” basketball tournament at Northern Illinois University’s Anderson Hall.
And, between the whistles, they enjoyed another chance to glimpse what life could look like through making different and better choices.
Realizations of possibilities came in the moment: “A lot of people didn’t believe in us,” one player said, “and we ended up proving the haters wrong.”
Organized by NIU Department of Kinesiology and Physical Education faculty members and associate professors Jenn Jacobs and Zach Wahl-Alexander, the Project FLEX (Fitness, Leadership, EXperience) competition in DeKalb expanded years of programming designed to help the young people develop positive habits for post-release success.
Five Illinois Department of Juvenile Justice (IDJJ) facilities – Chicago, Pere Marquette, Harrisburg, PEACE Center at St. Charles and Warrenville – sent teams to field an eight-squad bracket that also included three lineups of NIU students.
Youth were chosen for the IDJJ teams based on a record of good behavior, staff recommendations and an interest in participating. IDJJ staff served as coaches for the teams, holding practices for the weeks leading up to the tournament and working to obtain uniforms and shoes for the teams.
Approximately 45 IDJJ staff members traveled to DeKalb to coach, cheer, assist and ensure safety protocols remained in place. Tommie Meyers, who manages several travel basketball teams in the Chicago area, donated 20 pairs of basketball shoes for youth who needed them.
St. Anthony Lloyd
NIU’s Mission II, a purebred Siberian Husky, attended the tournament so youth and staff could pet him before the kickoff of the tournament. Victor E. Huskie, the NIU mascot, also provided photo opportunities for youth and staff.
Following three rounds of spirited and full-court play accompanied by a steady soundtrack of hip-hop music, the St. Charles Phoenix Emerging Adult Career and Education (PEACE) Center climbed to the top.
It was just as confidently predicted by one athlete from that facility who reported that he and his teammates worked hard to prepare for the tournament, showed dedication to make their mothers proud and, as a result, would leave NIU with the trophy.
He and his counterparts definitely made Jacobs and Wahl-Alexander proud.
“It was cool to see some of them just zoom out of being an incarcerated person and just feel like a normal kid, and I think it was the exact opportunity where they got to feel like a high school kid for the first time,” Jacobs said. “The thing I’m most excited about is that the kids rose to the occasion, because they were the ones who could have made or broken the experience – and they just crushed it.”
“We’re trying to provide these real-world experiences for the kids – these realistic opportunities that they would have if they weren’t incarcerated,” Wahl-Alexander added, “and I think that as we’ve gotten more comfortable, and as the facility has given us more flexibility and freedom, we’ve started to push the boundaries a bit.”
Rob Vickery, acting director of the Illinois Department of Juvenile Justice, came to watch with hopes of seeing “a lot of fun, a lot of laughter, a lot of smiles” and “competitiveness that is appropriate, positive and all in good fun.”
Vickery has appreciated Project FLEX’s philosophy in action with the Chicago, St. Charles and Warrenville facilities.
Project FLEX and IDJJ began their partnership in 2018 at the St. Charles youth center, using sports to make a positive impact on the lives of incarcerated youth. FLEX now operates multiple programs in three IDJJ facilities, including an initiative that helps high school graduates at the PEACE Center to become certified personal trainers.
“We try to offer as many normal opportunities that the youth would have in regular schools and, even though they’re in our custody, we’re going to have as many opportunities as possible for them to engage in athletics and other competition,” Vickery said.
“What’s so cool about Project FLEX in particular is, yes, they’re doing sports activities, but underlying all of that is really a focus on building life skills; building a capacity to set goals and work toward them; building a capacity to work through frustrations,” he added. “This is a culminating event where they’re able to apply all the skills.”
Sean T. Frazier, NIU vice president/director of Athletics and Recreation, set an affirmational tone with a motivational speech immediately before the games began.
“This is really special for me for a lot of different reasons,” Frazier told the IDJJ youth. “I wouldn’t be standing here today if I didn’t have a chance, through athletics, to get a scholarship to go on to college. Thank the Lord I was able to do that, or I would basically be that statistic.”
Sean T. Frazier (center), with Jenn Jacobs and Zach Wahl-Alexander, delivered the keynote address.
Frazier said his mother, a single parent, “had to work three or four jobs just to put some food on our table” in Queens, New York.
Her effort provided a powerful example, he said, adding that he accepted FLEX’s invitation to speak to pay forward that gift by encouraging the youth to make the most of the opportunity they were given.
“One of the things that always struck me going through the process is that she always believed that I was going to be able to get something done. I really appreciate her to this day. I get choked up thinking about the things that she had to do for me to be in the position that I am,” he said.
“You can do whatever you want to do. It’s up to you to make the commitment and to have the discipline to make it happen,” he added. “You’ve got people here that are going to help you … and if I can be that person, please come on over to the Athletics department. I’d love to have that conversation.”
For Jacobs and Wahl-Alexander, the first-time event’s success was confirmed by the campus visitors; several IDJJ staff members told the professors that “this is my favorite day on the job ever.”
“I do want to credit our supporters. Rob Vickery and the IDJJ are just visionaries, and it takes courage to say yes to things that have not done before,” Jacobs said. “I think it’s reflective of a positive partnership. We’re delivering on our outcomes, keeping the kids safe and helping them grow.”
“To our knowledge, these types of things don’t occur in the United States,” Wahl-Alexander said, “but, hopefully, this is maybe a sign of things to come.”
St. Anthony Lloyd, IDJJ Leisure Time Activities supervisor, agrees.
Lloyd was instrumental in all aspects of planning and coordinating the tournament and served as the primary liaison between the department and Project FLEX, which he calls “a phenomenal partner.”
“For me, this tournament was about more than basketball. I truly believe that when we unite for the benefit of our youth, success naturally follow,” he said. “While the games themselves were exciting, the true significance of the event lays in its power to bring people together in pursuit of a shared goal. Basketball just happened to be the catalyst.”
NIU students also played in the tournament, fielding three squads.
Such “meaningful experiences have the power to shift perspectives.”
“Outsiders will now see our youth as more than their past. IDJJ staff can now witness firsthand that positive outcomes are achievable when we work in unison. Most importantly, our youth will begin to believe that their current circumstances do not define their future – they are capable of achieving and experiencing greatness,” Lloyd said.
There is so much more potential ahead,” he added, “and I’m excited to see what we can accomplish together in the future.”
He’s not alone.
“I like the feeling of how everyone played together and played well, with no problems,” one player said. “We should keep it going.”
One of the highlights of the Shrine Bowl football game is the presentation of the Scotty Scott Outstanding Citizens Awards at halftime of the big game. This is the 2nd class of players to be selected, and the awards honor the legacy of Sheridan’s Homer Scott, who passed away in 2023. Scott was a passionate […]
One of the highlights of the Shrine Bowl football game is the presentation of the Scotty Scott Outstanding Citizens Awards at halftime of the big game. This is the 2nd class of players to be selected, and the awards honor the legacy of Sheridan’s Homer Scott, who passed away in 2023. Scott was a passionate supporter of Wyoming High School Athletics and youth sports in general, as well as community service.
Each recipient was selected from nominations from their respective coaches based on exceptional service, volunteerism, and character. Each player received a $500 scholarship and an additional $500 to donate to a local charity.
The five honorees are as follows: Bridger Cozzens from Little Snake River in 1A 6-Man, William Knowlton of Southeast from 9-Man, Ash Doke of Big Horn in 2A, Ryan Cox from Riverton in 3A, and Masen Wekele of Rock Springs in 4A. Here are the individual player comments on what they do to help their community.
Bridger Cozzens-Little Snake River
My parents have always raised me to believe in myself and do good for others around me. They have taught me to be a leader, and that in turn has created opportunities to give back to my community. I will always be forever grateful for the support group I have had growing up in Little Snake River. I feel that the service and volunteer hours put in will never be able to repay what I have been given. I believe that it is an honor to give back to my town. My goal has always been to not just set an expectation of what a leader should be, but to be that expectation. In my various roles as a student in LSRV, I have tried to set an example for the next generation. I have been involved in every club my school offers. I have served as FFA president, NHS vice president, and a student council member. I wanted to be the change I wanted to see in my community. I have volunteered many hours in my community, such as repairing a roof for an elderly couple, serving food to hundreds of people, setting up funerals, or shoveling snow before church. Although I have dedicated myself to give back to my community in big ways I truly believe there is more to being a leader. I believe that the little things we do every day leave the biggest impact. My father says “Character is not what you do when someone is watching, Character is what you do when no one is watching”. I have tried to become a person that embodies this idea. It means a quick visit to someone, inviting others, opening a door, or even a smile. I don’t believe in bragging about myself or convincing others that I am a good person. I do this because it truly brings me joy. I believe that charity is the pure love of Christ and will always lead to a positive impact. Sometimes it can be hard and it will get difficult, but looking back I would not trade it for anything. It has made me into the person I am today. Donation will go to Little Snake River Football Program
William Knowlton-Southeast
have benefitted my community through service and volunteerism several ways, but I think the three most notable examples are from my participation in Scouting, National Honor Society (NHS), and FFA. As a scout I have participated in several community service projects, such as setting out wreaths for Memorial Day and ringing the bell for the Salvation Army. I have also participated in multiple other scouts’ Eagle Scout projects, including mapping the Guernsey cemetery and building a new hiking trail at Guernsey State Park. For my own Eagle Scout project, I grew a garden for charity that covered roughly 1.5 acres and produced just under 500 pounds of fresh produce for the local food bank over the course of a summer. As an NHS officer I have helped plan and participate in several other community service activities, including playing board games at the local nursing home, picking potatoes for charity at the local research farm, and volunteering as line judges and other assorted jobs at school sporting events. As an FFA officer I have helped plan and participate in multiple larger scale service projects, including making tie blankets for Court Appointed Special Advocates in Cheyenne and packing Operation Christmas Child gift boxes to be sent to children all over the world. Our FFA chapter has also held several more local community service events, such as cleaning up dead trees around the school and donating the firewood and building goat pens for the local fairgrounds. I feel that through these projects and organizations I have had a significant, positive impact on my school and community. Donation to Scouting American Unit 26
Ash Doke-Big Horn
The most important things to me are family, faith, friends and football. I loved playing football, but it didn’t always love me back. I have a neuropathy that decreases my mobility and balance. As a result, I never got much playing time. Instead, I walked the sidelines and made sure I was the first to celebrate others’ big moments. I celebrate others because I don’t live in self-pity. If I don’t have it, I might as well cheer on those that do. I’d come to practice knowing I’d get knocked down, and was willingly the target to make someone else better. I also demonstrated service through leadership. I never missed a day of summer weights; this is solely my accomplishment. It was important to me to put accountability into action for my team and my coaches. I also have a learning disability. To me, it’s a strength rather than a weakness. It has shaped me into the individual I am. My teacher told me, “I have been a leader and a mentor for so many other students. I stand up for and support minority students. I am a model for advocating in respectful ways and for bringing teams together and encouraging others.” Outside of school I serve in Church as the first assistant in the Priest’s Quorum. I help choose activities and service opportunities for the young men in my Ward. I’m good at this because I can talk to anyone. I go to our assisted living to administer the Sacrament. When I do, I make sure I take the time to visit, because the people I serve feel lonely. I willingly give them my time. You can’t always choose what life gives you, but I choose to uplift others, be respectful and have a positive attitude no matter what. Donation to Big Horn HS Football Program
Ryan Cox-Riverton
I have served my community in numerous ways, but each act of volunteerism and servitude I practiced through staying consistent. I have learned consistency through sports. In order to succeed in the sport I play, I have to stay consistent in all things- and especially consistent in the little things. I have to do dribbling drills to build hand-eye coordination. I have to push the sled in order to build endurance. I have to play 21-outs with a punishment to revise errors. I have to work on my footwork to be smooth and quick. I have to lift weights to get stronger. No matter how boring, tiring, repetitive, and pointless a drill or practice can seem, without them I would see little to no progress. The only way to become successful in sports is to become accountable and consistent through work. I have taken this knowledge and applied it to my everyday life. Recently, the city of Riverton has received multiple complaints about overgrown weeds. Instead of complaining about someone else not cleaning them up, I took my lawn mower, trimmer and brothers and cleaned the areas up. My mom posted pictures of me and my brothers working on the weeds and we received a lot of recognition. I have performed other similar acts of servitude in my community such as: reffing and coaching our junior football program, assisting the ill/disabled community members around town move their belongings from one home to another, volunteering for Special Olympic events, providing transportation for teammates, etc. These acts are insignificant in my life, but are significant to others because they show an impact over time. I have not done huge acts of servitude in my community, but I stayed consistent in the little acts and I feel they have the same impact. Donation to Community Entry Services Riverton
Masen Werkele-Rock Springs
I am part of multiple organizations that provide dedicated service to the community. I am an Eagle Scout and during my time in the Scouts I learned a lot about doing cheerful service. I learned the importance and impact a quality person has on a community. I have put hundreds of hours over the years into cleaning, building, and improving the community. Some examples of this service are cleaning highways, volunteering at the food bank and soup kitchen, helping others with their Eagle Scout projects, and my personal Eagle Scout project. My Eagle Scout project was building bridges at Western Wyoming Community College for a bike/hiking trail that the whole community could use at their discretion. I am also part of the Health Occupational Career Academy (HOCA). One of my favorite opportunities for service that HOCA offers is Cowboys Against Cancer. This is an event that raises money for families that are in need of a little help while a family member is fighting cancer and also provides funds for our local hospital that is meant to build and support their resources. Another opportunity that HOCA offers is student mentoring. This is an amazing opportunity to connect with the upcoming generation in which our class will go out to elementary schools and create bonds with some troubled kids. My last example was over the summer one of our football team moms needed help clearing a walkway of an elderly woman’s sidewalk. The city had been complaining about the overgrowth and was in need of some help. The elderly woman got in contact with our team mom, and with little notice we cleared the sidewalk. She offered us money for the work which we declined proudly. I would gladly take advantage of these opportunities again. Donation to Cowboys Against Cancer.
We have a handful of photos from the Scotty Scott Awards presentation and you can find them in our gallery below.
As He Finds His Stride in His Second Career, Jeff Francoeur Still Savors His Time as ‘The Natural’
The first time Jeff Francoeur saw his Sports Illustrated cover was on the afternoon of Aug. 22, 2005, when Atlanta media-relations head Brad Hainje slapped three dozen copies of the magazine on the table where Francoeur was playing cards with Chipper Jones. The next time Francoeur saw it was a couple hours later, when he […]
The first time Jeff Francoeur saw his Sports Illustrated cover was on the afternoon of Aug. 22, 2005, when Atlanta media-relations head Brad Hainje slapped three dozen copies of the magazine on the table where Francoeur was playing cards with Chipper Jones.
The next time Francoeur saw it was a couple hours later, when he went 0-for-3 with three strikeouts against the Chicago Cubs and returned to the clubhouse to find his teammates had hung the cover in the shower. “THE NATURAL,” the cover read. “Atlanta Rookie Jeff Francoeur Is off to an Impossibly Hot Start. Can Anyone Be This Good?”
“They just wore me out,” he says, still beaming two decades later. “It was one of the greatest honors of my life, especially being 21 years old. … It was kind of like, ‘Man, I’ve made it.’”
He was three years out of Parkview High School in Lilburn, Ga., he didn’t know how to tie a tie and he was setting the major leagues on fire. He hit .370 with 10 home runs in his first 34 games for his hometown team. Every night at Turner Field he’d hear his childhood friends and high-school football opponents ragging him. He couldn’t imagine how life could get better.
He’d grown up on SI, devouring the magazine every week. (“Except the Swimsuit Issue,” he says. “My mom would take that away from me, but my brother would always sneak it back to me at some point.”) So when writer Michael Farber showed up to write a story about him, complete with cover possibility, Francoeur was giddy. He was also wary of his teammates’ reaction, so he requested that they do the photo shoot first thing in the morning, before any of the other players arrived.
But once the story made the cover, there was no hiding from the hype. In the story, Farber explains to Francoeur that in Bernard Malamud’s novel The Natural, unlike in the movie version, Roy Hobbs strikes out. “That’s why books suck!” Francoeur bellows.
Francoeur’s SI cover asked: Can anyone be this good? | Al Tielemans/Sports Illustrated
“No, the reason books—or at least baseball novels—often disappoint is that authors conjure preposterous characters and absurd situations to heighten the drama,” Farber writes. “Say some hack writer invents a handsome, strapping young baseball player (aren’t they all handsome?), nicknames him Frenchy (trite), puts number 7 on his back (a la the Mick, lucky number, cheap symbolism) and summons him from the minors to bolster his talented but sagging hometown team (so 1920s). The kid proceeds to hit about 100 points higher in the majors than he had in Double A (a fanciful conceit), smacking homers and gunning down runners, all the while singing along to the soundtrack in his head (you’ve gotta be kidding!) and lifting the local nine into first place. Not even Hollywood would buy it.
“Yet since July 7, when Francoeur was called up from Double A Mississippi and became the 10th rookie on the Braves’ roster at the time, that bit of fiction has become fact—right down to the singing.”
Indeed, Francoeur slept in his childhood bed the night before he debuted. His mother, Karen, made him pancakes. Eventually the veterans started fining him and catcher Brian McCann, another local kid, $20 for every night they lived at home; they realized they were going to pay more in fines than they would have in rent on an apartment, and they moved in together.
Francoeur was living his dream. Until the league started adjusting to him, and he couldn’t always adjust back. After that first, impossible season, he hit .266. Fans labeled him a disappointment. He had breezed through high school and the minors, and he found himself completely unequipped to manage failure in the majors. And doing it in front of everyone he’d ever known exhausted him. Those high school acquaintances’ jokes began to feel more like taunts. His parents would go out to breakfast and answer questions about what was wrong with him.
Francoeur was only three years removed from high school when he made his MLB debut with the Braves in 2005. | John Grieshop/MLB via Getty Images
At first he was devastated to be sent from Atlanta to the New York Mets at the 2009 trade deadline—especially when he had to return to Atlanta six days later to play his old club. But as the Mets’ team plane took off after that series, the funniest thing happened: A sense of calm washed over him. He went 3-for-4 in the next game. “I was completely freed up after that,” he says. He still calls those two seasons in New York his favorite of a 12-year career that included that stellar start, the ’10 American League pennant with the Texas Rangers and a ’16 return to Atlanta before he retired.
When he speaks with young players now, he says, he tries to emphasize that in the end, a strong sense of self will carry you farther than a sweet swing or a filthy fastball. “You have to know you’re going to hit this adversity, and how you are going to deal with it,” he says. “And I think for a lot of these people, that’s the difference between them continuing to go up and becoming a superstar or just kind of flattening out.”
In some cases, he says, he has noticed that the hype starts in childhood. At his four kids’ youth sports games, he hears parents expecting the young athletes to do things they are simply not capable of at that age.
He coaches his seven-year-old daughter Ellie’s softball team, and for much of the season, he batted her seventh. “I’m like, ‘When she starts hitting better, I’ll move her up,’” he says. “That’s life, and that’s the expectation. And I think parents give these kids false expectations, or expect you to do something you can’t do.”
So he tries to tap the brakes on anointing young phenoms as the future, especially as a television analyst for Atlanta and on TBS.
After retiring from MLB in 2017, Francoeur has held multiple roles in broadcasting for various networks. | Matthew Grimes Jr./Atlanta Braves/Getty Images
“That’s the difference: Can you maintain it?” he says. “I think we see so many guys come up and they have flashes, and you think, Oh, my God, these are can’t-miss guys. But I think the key is: Can they make the adjustments? Can they keep up with the game? Can they do all these things they need to do to put themselves in that position? And unfortunately, us—because I’m, I guess, part of the media now—we put these expectations on these guys that, to me, sometimes they can’t reach.”
Instead he goes out of his way to discuss players such as Aaron Judge and Bryce Harper, who have proven they can star at the highest level. Francoeur knows how hard it is to get there, and he knows how hard it is to stay there. And he does reserve a soft spot for the ones who make a loud entrance. Can anyone be this good? Probably not—but it’s fun to watch them try.
Trump administration removing 988 hotline service tailored to LGBTQ+ youth in July
The 988 National Suicide & Crisis Lifeline will stop providing tailored support options to LGBTQ+ youth and young adults on July 17, according to a statement on a federal agency’s website. The decision preempts the Trump administration’s 2026 budget proposal to cut funding for 988’s LGBTQ+ youth and young adult services, and is raising alarm […]
The 988 National Suicide & Crisis Lifeline will stop providing tailored support options to LGBTQ+ youth and young adults on July 17, according to a statement on a federal agency’s website.
The decision preempts the Trump administration’s 2026 budget proposal to cut funding for 988’s LGBTQ+ youth and young adult services, and is raising alarm bells among LGBTQ+ advocates.
Federal data shows the LGBTQ+ youth program has served nearly 1.3 million callers since it started in September 2022. The services were accessible under the “Press 3” option on the phone or by replying “PRIDE” via text.
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EDITOR’S NOTE: This story includes discussion of suicide. If you or someone you know needs help, the national suicide and crisis lifeline in the U.S. is available by calling or texting 988.
Mon 9AM | Are politics, parents and pressure pushing kids out of youth sports?
Dionne Koller visits the Exchange. She’s the author of a new book, “More Than Play: How Law, Policy, And Politics Shape American Youth Sport.” About the BookTens of millions of children in the United States participate in youth sport, a pastime widely believed to be part of a good childhood. Yet most children who enter […]
Dionne Koller visits the Exchange. She’s the author of a new book, “More Than Play: How Law, Policy, And Politics Shape American Youth Sport.”
About the Book Tens of millions of children in the United States participate in youth sport, a pastime widely believed to be part of a good childhood. Yet most children who enter youth sport are driven to quit by the time they enter adolescence, and many more are sidelined by its high financial burdens.
Until now, there has been little legal scholarly attention paid to youth sport or its reform. Dionne Koller sets the stage for a different approach by illuminating the law and policy assumptions supporting a model that puts children’s bodies to work in an activity that generates significant surplus value. In doing so, she identifies the wide array of beneficiaries who have a stake in a system that is much more than just play—and the political choices that protect these parties’ interests at children’s expense.
About the Author Dionne Koller is a law professor and Director of the Center-for-Sport and the Law at the University of Baltimore. In 2021 she was appointed to co-chair the Commission on the State of US Olympic and Paralympics. She is a graduate of Harvard Law School and received the 2024 award for significant contributions to the field of sports law by the Association of American Law Schools.
Play like a Champion conference provides sports opportunities for all kids
SOUTH BEND, IN (WSBT) — The Play Like a Champion conference at the University of Notre Dame not only helps provide those resources, but it also connects coaches from all over. It’s a focus on providing equal sporting opportunities for all kids while also educating coaches on their role in a child’s life as mentors. […]
SOUTH BEND, IN (WSBT) — The Play Like a Champion conference at the University of Notre Dame not only helps provide those resources, but it also connects coaches from all over.
It’s a focus on providing equal sporting opportunities for all kids while also educating coaches on their role in a child’s life as mentors.
It’s a three-day conference that unites coaches from across the country to advocate for youth sports.
“As coach mentors, we’re coaching sports for kids, making sure it’s fun. And we are mentoring them. So, that what they learn in sports they can use for their lives and we can help them lead good lives and not just be good athletes,” said Clark Power, Play like a champion today founder,”
Organizers say it’s a community of coaches helping one another while bridging resources to reach all kids.
“We have an abundance of resources in South Bend but we don’t know how to share them as as well as we need to in the very near future,” said Clark Power.
But the common goal throughout the conference is that all children have the opportunity to be active and be part of a team.
“The thing about athletics, it’s not just for winning a championship for something. Sports is good and fun and its own right because kids just need to have fun and laugh and move their arms and things like that, And so that’s what we really want to do is make sure kids, irregardless of their ability to pay have the opportunity to play,” said Cauzae McCall, Michiana Academic and Recreation Association member.
Coaches were also educated on the importance of sports play in a child’s life.
“The way children develop as people, especially socially the way they develop as good children as good friends and then as good community members,” said Power.
It also brings awareness to what happens when kids don’t have a space for recreation and a space to play.
“That impacts their learning in school relationships, being bullied online all these things the lack of mentorship they don’t have a really strong support system at home or church or anything like that. And so, trying to bring the awareness of how much of an impact we can make collectively,” said McCall.
With the importance of sports in children’s lives, organizers just want to be able to provide recreational sports for every child in the community.
Photo Gallery: St. Aloysius summer sports camps – The Vicksburg Post
Photo Gallery: St. Aloysius summer sports camps Published 2:53 pm Friday, June 20, 2025 1 of 15 Lawson Skipper runs with the football during the St. Aloysius youth football camp Monday at Farrell Stadium. (Ernest Bowker/The Vicksburg Post) Kimberly Nippes hits the volleyball during the St. Aloysius youth volleyball camp Monday in the school’s gym. […]
Lawson Skipper runs with the football during the St. Aloysius youth football camp Monday at Farrell Stadium. (Ernest Bowker/The Vicksburg Post)
Kimberly Nippes hits the volleyball during the St. Aloysius youth volleyball camp Monday in the school’s gym. (Ernest Bowker/The Vicksburg Post)
Caroline Dornbusch follows through after hitting the volleyball during the St. Aloysius youth volleyball camp Monday in the school’s gym. (Ernest Bowker/The Vicksburg Post)
Joe Robert, top, takes a break alongside several St. Aloysius football players at the school’s youth football camp. (Ernest Bowker/The Vicksburg Post)
Kai Goodman, left, looks to throw a pass during the St. Aloysius youth football camp Monday at Farrell Stadium. (Ernest Bowker/The Vicksburg Post)
Kai Goodman throws a pass during the St. Aloysius youth football camp Monday at Farrell Stadium. (Ernest Bowker/The Vicksburg Post)
Iris Fletcher hits the volleyball during the St. Aloysius youth volleyball camp Monday in the school’s gym. (Ernest Bowker/The Vicksburg Post)
Scarlett Coutch hits the volleyball during the St. Aloysius youth volleyball camp Monday in the school’s gym. (Ernest Bowker/The Vicksburg Post)
Daniel Waring runs with the football after intercepting a pass during the St. Aloysius youth football camp Monday at Farrell Stadium. (Ernest Bowker/The Vicksburg Post)
A group of young football players all try to catch a pass during St. Aloysius’ youth football camp Monday at Farrell Stadium. (Ernest Bowker/The Vicksburg Post)
St. Aloysius football player JR Reeder throws a pass during the team’s youth camp Monday at Farrell Stadium. (Ernest Bowker/The Vicksburg Post)
Kennedy Maples hits the volleyball during the St. Aloysius youth volleyball camp Monday in the school’s gym. (Ernest Bowker/The Vicksburg Post)
Piper Keyes hits the volleyball during the St. Aloysius youth volleyball camp Monday in the school’s gym. (Ernest Bowker/The Vicksburg Post)
Benjamin Ponder, ullen Bounds and Owen Martin stand together for a photo at the St. Aloysius youth football camp. (Ernest Bowker/The Vicksburg Post)
St. Aloysius volleyball players and campers pose together for a photo during the school’s youth volleyball camp on Monday. (Ernest Bowker/The Vicksburg Post)
June is camp season at St. Aloysius, as the school hosts five fun summer youth sports camps.
The season started this week with the football camp at Farrell Stadium and the volleyball camp in the St. Al gym. Nearly 40 children in grades 1-6 attended the two camps and got instruction from St. Al players and coaches.
The sessions will move off campus next week for the softball and baseball camps.
The softball camp is scheduled for June 23-27 at the Betty Hearn Foley complex on Bazinsky Road. The camp is for players entering grades 1-6 in the fall and will run from 9 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. on June 23 and 27, and from 1 to 4 p.m. on June 24-26.
The cost of the camp is $100 and includes a daily snack. Walk-up registration is welcome. For more information, email St. Al coach Mike Foley at mike.foley@vicksburgcatholic.org.
The baseball camp is June 23-25 at Bazinsky Field, from 5 to 7 p.m. each day. It is for players in grades 1-6, and the cost is $100..
The cheer and Flashette kiddie camp is Aug. 9, from 9 a.m. to noon in the St. Al gym. It is for girls in Pre-K through sixth grade, and the cost is $75.
Online registration for all of the camps is available through GoFan.co.
About Ernest Bowker
Ernest Bowker is The Vicksburg Post’s sports editor. He has been a member of The Vicksburg Post’s sports staff since 1998, making him one of the longest-tenured reporters in the paper’s 140-year history. The New Jersey native is a graduate of LSU. In his career, he has won more than 50 awards from the Mississippi Press Association and Associated Press for his coverage of local sports in Vicksburg.