Elite Training Academy sets new standard for athletic development in Baton Rouge | Sponsored: Elite Training Academy
Sponsored Content This article is brought to you by Elite Training Academy. Elite Training Academy in Baton Rouge is redefining physical fitness and sports development in the region by offering an unmatched combination of indoor and outdoor facilities, including a 3,000 square foot weight room, as well as a 60-yard indoor field and two full-sized […]
Elite Training Academy in Baton Rouge is redefining physical fitness and sports development in the region by offering an unmatched combination of indoor and outdoor facilities, including a 3,000 square foot weight room, as well as a 60-yard indoor field and two full-sized outdoor turf sports fields that can be used for soccer, football and lacrosse training and games. Elite also offers recovery services such as hot and cold plunge tubs, infrared sauna and cryogenics.
Designed to serve athletes of all ages and skill levels, Elite Training Academy provides a space that rivals college and professional facilities in size, capability and expertise. From youth sports to adult recreational leagues, Elite has quickly become a hub for people who are serious about their athletic development and overall wellness.
“Our approach is really about helping people train their bodies to reach optimal health, prevent injuries and increase sport specific skill development,” said Greg Stringfellow, president of Elite Training Academy. “With our partner Ochsner Health-Baton Rouge, we’re able to have on-site physicians and physical therapists who work with people to design workouts tailored to them and focus on how their bodies should perform. That partnership allows us to prevent injuries and build a holistic training program for each person.”
Elite Training Academy, alongside Ochsner Orthopedics and Sports Medicine Institute at Elite Training Complex – Burbank, will offer various fitness classes for youth and adults that combine training in speed, agility, strength development and overall conditioning. Classes can be taken as a group, or one-on-one sessions can be scheduled.
“One of the things we’ve been focusing on is helping middle school students with their speed, agility, strength and skill development as they get ready for whatever sports they want to play in high school,” Stringfellow said. “There really aren’t any middle school weight rooms and facilities in this area that can offer what we do, along with the guidance on training the right way.”
Sean Cripple
Inclusivity and versatility are at the core of Elite Training Academy’s mission. The facility has developed leagues for flag football, soccer and lacrosse that are open to men and women of all ages, as well as area youth. These leagues offer people the chance to play a sport that they enjoy while staying fit and forming new friendships with others who share their same interests.
“I think what sets our leagues apart is that the players learn ongoing skill development from coaches,” Stringfellow said. “Our Ochsner Performance Training team has built classes for all sports and age groups to cover the entire spectrum of performance training. The facilities we have allow them to do all that work on-site.”
Sean Cripple
In addition to therapy and training, Ochsner Health-Baton Rouge operates the only orthopedic walk in clinic in the region out of the Elite facility.
Elite Training Academy also hosts a variety of summer camps for kids to stay active while out of school. This year, the Road Trippin’ at Elite camp for children ages 5 to 8 will have sessions filled with sports, structured games, educational activities and more. The Elite Jungle Camps are for kids aged 8 and 14 and will feature competitive sports challenges, obstacle courses, adventure drills and teamwork development. Visit www.elitetrainingacademybr.com to learn more about classes, camps and leagues at Elite Training Academy.
City youth get taste of career options | News, Sports, Jobs
Isabella Bongiovanni, a junior in Dunkirk, is pictured during Career Exploration Day at Dunkirk Intermediate School. Bongiovanni is enrolled in the Small Animal Science program at the LoGuidice Educational Center. The Career Exploration Day brought student ambassadors from the LoGuidice Educational Center to the intermediate school gymnasium. It was held on May 28 as part […]
Isabella Bongiovanni, a junior in Dunkirk, is pictured during Career Exploration Day at Dunkirk Intermediate School. Bongiovanni is enrolled in the Small Animal Science program at the LoGuidice Educational Center.
The Career Exploration Day brought student ambassadors from the LoGuidice Educational Center to the intermediate school gymnasium. It was held on May 28 as part of a collaboration between Dunkirk and E2CCB.
Julie Wakelee, Dunkirk City School District counselor, said the event allowed students to experience different career options through hands-on demonstrations and interactions with high schoolers currently enrolled in the different CTE programs at LoGuidice.
“I think one of the things that we do well here is talking about college and those kinds of options. But I think it’s also essential for kids to understand that there are other pathways as well,” Wakelee said.
The following CTE programs, available to juniors and seniors in high school, were highlighted at the Career Exploration Day: Culinary Arts, Cosmetology, Construction Technology, Conservation/Natural Resource Management, Criminal Justice, Automotive Technology, Automotive Body Repair, Small Animal Science, Health Careers, Sports Conditioning & Exercise Science, and Welding/Metal Fabrication.
Alycia Lacki, school counselor at LoGuidice, is pictured with fourth- and fifth-graders at Dunkirk. The event allowed students to experience different career options with high schoolers currently enrolled in the different CTE programs through Erie 2-Chautauqua-Cattaraugus BOCES.
Representatives from WNY P-TECH, including Counselor Nicole Donato, were also present to highlight pathways available to students: Welding Technology, Mechatronics, and Mechanical Technology, with concentrations in Machine Tooling and Computer-Aided Design.
At the table to promote Auto Body Repair, students could use an airbrush to paint a decal onto the hood of a car. At Culinary Arts, they were able to frost pre-made sugar cookies. And at Construction Technology, they took turns hammering nails into pieces of wood.
“I think it’s invaluable for our students to hear from others who are still in school,” Wakelee said. “They get a chance to see that it could be them in just a couple of years. I can stand in front of a class and tell them what these programs are like, but when they see it up close and get some hands-on experience, that’s another thing altogether.”
Intermediate student Guiliana Desmond, 11, said she most enjoyed Cosmetology. “I really like what they are doing with everyone’s hair,” she said. “It looks like a lot of fun.”
Aubrey Kuras, 11, said she enjoyed the Construction Technology table, while Emersyn Krzanowicz, 11, said she most liked Health Careers, where students could listen to their heartbeats using a stethoscope.
Alycia Lacki, school counselor at LoGuidice, has been expanding recruitment efforts for CTE programs over the past couple of years with similar hands-on visits to other area school districts.
“It isn’t always easy for everyone to narrow down a career path that aligns with their personal interests,” Lacki said. “What is nice about taking our Career & Technical Education show on the road is that we have all these fields represented in one place, so the students really get an up-close look at the programs. It’s also nice to see our CTE students really take ownership of the skills they’ve developed and the confidence they’ve gained.”
She added, “The younger students considering attending BOCES really take to heart the advice and encouragement they get from the older students.”
For more information on CTE programs available at E2CCB, visit www.e2ccb.org/programs/career-technical-education/
Southern New Hampshire University announced the following students were named to the Spring 2025 President’s …
Strength-and-conditioning program is underway – Uvalde Leader News
The Uvalde CISD strength and conditioning program is underway. Open to incoming seventh-grade up to incoming 12th-grade boys and girls, the program runs from 6 p.m. to 8 p.m. on Mondays through Thursdays at Uvalde High School. The workouts, supervised by UCISD coaches, put prospective Uvalde athletes for the 2025-26 school year through a variety […]
The Uvalde CISD strength and conditioning program is underway. Open to incoming seventh-grade up to incoming 12th-grade boys and girls, the program runs from 6 p.m. to 8 p.m. on Mondays through Thursdays at Uvalde High School. The workouts, supervised by UCISD coaches, put prospective Uvalde athletes for the 2025-26 school year through a variety of activities to improve on […]
Superior students, staff shine as Grandma’s Marathon volunteers – Duluth News Tribune
DULUTH — Bill Punyko extended his arm, smiled and offered words of encouragement as one of thousands of runners took the water-filled paper cup from his hand. It was one of countless cups Superior’s longtime head swimming coach handed out alongside more than 60 other Spartan volunteers during the 49th annual Grandma’s Marathon on Saturday, […]
DULUTH — Bill Punyko extended his arm, smiled and offered words of encouragement as one of thousands of runners took the water-filled paper cup from his hand.
It was one of countless cups Superior’s longtime head swimming coach handed out alongside more than 60 other Spartan volunteers during the 49th annual Grandma’s Marathon on Saturday, June 21.
“We’ve been coming here for around 10 years,” Punyko said. “The purpose is to provide community service. It’s also fun; we’re dancing to music, handing out water, and all of the runners are very grateful for the volunteers.”
The Spartan swim team is one portion of a larger Superior presence that worked mile marker 19 near Lester River in Lakeside. In addition to their athletes, coaches and several parents, Superior also had volunteers from the Lake Superior Youth Chorus.
Ruby Feigel, a senior at Superior High School, passes out water along London Road in Duluth during the Garry Bjorklund Half Marathon on Saturday morning, June 21.
Jed Carlson / Duluth Media Group
Together, Superior’s swimming program and Lake Superior Youth Chorus volunteers — who ranged in age from young children through high school students — operated one of the largest multi-purpose water stations during Grandma’s Marathon this year.
Superior educator and Lake Superior Youth Chorus choir coordinator Elise Sterling said bringing multiple unique aspects of the community together for a day of giving back was a great way to bring everyone closer together.
“It’s a great and super-valuable community builder,” Sterling said. “As an organization, we want to make sure we’re giving back to the community. We have some swim team kids and some non-swim team kids, but we all came together as one group today.”
The Lake Superior Youth Chorus is a Duluth-based nonprofit organization that offers holistic musical education for children living in the Twin Ports. They had more than a dozen volunteers at Grandma’s Marathon on Saturday, including Sterling.
Lake Superior Youth Chorus choir coordinator Elise Sterling sets out cups for water at a table along London Road in Duluth during the Garry Bjorklund Half Marathon on Saturday morning, June 21.
Jed Carlson / Duluth Media Group
Whether it was handing drinks to parched runners, continuously filling additional cups or picking up discarded trash, Superior’s volunteers — including roughly two-dozen swimmers — made a positive impact, according to water station captain Susie Burns.
“It’s so amazing,” Burns said. “I just love the groups that we have. This is the first year in a while that the Lake Superior Youth Chorus has volunteered, so we’re super excited to have them here. The swim team is back again, and it’s always great to have them, too.”
Multiple Spartans said giving back to the community is always a rewarding experience, but when surrounded by the fun and festivities of Grandma’s Marathon, it takes the joy to a completely different level.
Lake Superior Youth Chorus outreach coordinator Rylee Newton, left, smiles with LSYC choir coordinator Elise Sterling as Newton takes a water break at the station Sterling and other LSYC folks were volunteering at along London Road in Duluth during the Garry Bjorklund Half Marathon on Saturday morning, June 21.
Jed Carlson / Duluth Media Group
Among them is Max Carey, who just finished his junior year with Superior’s swim program. He said Saturday was a fantastic day of community service and that it was an honor to represent Spartan athletics on such a large scale.
“This is my first time volunteering,” Carey said. “We’re helping people, having fun and eating hot dogs, too. It means a lot to be able to get out here and do some community service because I have a lot of pride in our sports and athletes.”
It was an action-packed day that began as early as 5:30 a.m. for many of Superior’s volunteers. They filled thousands of cups and handed them out to a percentage of the thousands of people who raced in either the half or full marathon on Saturday.
Spending time together contributing to the greater good is something Punyko and Carey believe translates far beyond one extremely humid race day in June. For Spartan swimming, it’s a jumping off point that gets the program ready for the upcoming year.
“It’s not just swimming,” Punyko said. “They’re building the bonds you need for when things get hard during the year. They’re going to have to rely on each other, trust each other and have relationships. This is the first step in coming together for next year.”
Max Carey, a senior at Superior High School, picks up paper cups along London Road in Duluth during the Garry Bjorklund Half Marathon on Saturday morning, June 21.
Jed Carlson / Duluth Media Group
The Spartans swimming program has been volunteering for essentially a decade, but this year was the Lake Superior Youth Chorus’ return to Grandma’s Marathon after a couple of summers away.
Sterling said Saturday was a perfect return to Minnesota’s largest and oldest marathon, and that she hopes it’s the genesis of a lengthy run of the Lake Superior Youth Chorus volunteering again at a truly historic event.
“The fact that they wanted to include us, that’s really cool,” Sterling said. “We were like, ‘Of course we will be there to help, even if there are just 12 of us.’ This was exciting, and it’s something I think we will definitely continue.”
Reagan Hoverman joined the Duluth News Tribune as a sports reporter in July 2023 after spending the better part of two years covering a variety of prep and collegiate sports at the Pierce County Journal in Ellsworth, Wis. Before that, he was a news and sports reporter at the Inter-County Leader in Frederic, Wis.
South Berkeley Senior League softball team wins District 6 tournament | Youth
INWOOD – In the resumption of a game that started on Tuesday, South Berkeley rallied from a three-run deficit to knock off Jefferson County 5-4 in eight innings on Friday to win the District 6 Senior League softball tournament and advance to the state tournament. Jefferson County was ahead 4-1 when the game resumed, after […]
INWOOD – In the resumption of a game that started on Tuesday, South Berkeley rallied from a three-run deficit to knock off Jefferson County 5-4 in eight innings on Friday to win the District 6 Senior League softball tournament and advance to the state tournament.
Jefferson County was ahead 4-1 when the game resumed, after it previously scored a run in the first inning, two more in the second inning and another in the third inning.
South Berkeley tied the game at 4-all with three runs in the fifth inning. After back-to-back singles by Kori Edwards and Charlotte Hawes with one out, Skyler Miller tripled to right field to score Edwards and Hawes and make the score 4-3. Addison Bushman followed with an RBI groundout to score Miller and tie the game.
After both teams went scoreless in the sixth and seventh innings and Jefferson County scoreless in the top of the eighth inning, South Berkeley notched the winning run in the bottom of the eighth inning when Hawes stole home.
South Berkeley compiled 15 hits, led by Madeline and McKenzie Hough, Chelsea Alvarez, Edwards and Miller with two hits each. Miller also drove in two runs. On the mound, Kenzie Edwards pitched the final 5 1/3 innings, allowing no runs on two hits and striking out 13.
For Jefferson County, Mariah Mayfield led her team with two hits, while Kylie Benner and Peyton Burns each drove in a run.
Jefferson County finished as the District 6 runner-up and also advanced to the state tournament.
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Ricky Pearsall hosts free youth football camp in Tempe
The San Francisco 49ers receiver is looking forward to the future, but he hasn’t forgotten where he came from. TEMPE, Ariz. — It’s been seven years since Corona del Sol High School product Ricky Pearsall committed to play football at Arizona State. His football career has taken him from the Valley of the Sun to […]
The San Francisco 49ers receiver is looking forward to the future, but he hasn’t forgotten where he came from.
TEMPE, Ariz. — It’s been seven years since Corona del Sol High School product Ricky Pearsall committed to play football at Arizona State. His football career has taken him from the Valley of the Sun to the Swamp and now to the Bay Area, but the second-year NFL wide out took time during his offseason to return to where it all began by hosting a free youth football clinic at his old high school in Tempe.
“I was just on this turf not too long ago and I know this process. I remember being a kid looking up to NFL players.” Pearsall said. “I just took a look around to remember all the memories. It’s really crazy how things go around.”
Pearsall became a standout receiver for the Sun Devils during his three seasons at ASU, then transferred to the University of Florida for two years. In 2024, the San Francisco 49ers selected Pearsall in the first round of the 2024 NFL Draft. His talent and faith took him from Friday Night Fever on 12News to Monday Night Football on ESPN.
Before heading to Training Camp in Santa Clara, Pearsall wanted to return to his hometown and give back to the community that helped foster his football dreams.
“I always had that belief, and I think that just goes back to who I was raised by: my parents. They instilled that belief into me,” Pearsall said. “I had a great group of friends at [Corona del Sol] that always believed in me as well, so I had no choice but to believe in myself. Now we’re here.”
Ricky’s mom, Erin, says the mission behind the free football camp is to make an impact off the field and leave a legacy. Her son is living out his dream but in August 2024, she and her family experienced what felt like a nightmare.
Ricky was shot in the chest during an attempted robbery in San Francisco. He made a full recovery and 50 days later, he made his NFL debut.
“It gives me goosebumps to talk about because it could’ve went the other direction and it didn’t,” Erin said. “[Ricky] had a dream since he was six years old and he’s living it out right now because of the sacrifices he made to be disciplined. This is a story about persistence and him overcoming difficult times.”
Pearsall is looking forward to his future as a 49er, but he hasn’t forgotten where he came from. He plans on hosting more youth football camps in Tempe as well as Gainesville. While he finished his college career as a Gator, he looks back on his time at ASU fondly.
Pearsall is another hometown hero young athletes in Arizona can look up to and after making his dream a reality, he offered a simple message to the kids at his football camp: just keep believing.
“Have faith and continue to believe in themselves and work extremely hard because you’re never going to get anywhere in life unless you’re super dedicated, you manifest about it and you work really hard towards it.”
Follow the conversation with Lina Washington on X and Instagram: @LWashingtonTV. If you have a sports story idea, email Lina at LWashington@12News.com.
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