How a San Diego Youth Soccer Club Became a Global Force
Along the San Dieguito River, nestled in Del Mar’s drying brush and quiet suburbia, sit acres of immaculate lawns. They might look like sod farms or the polo grounds they once were, but the fields comprise Surf Sports Park, the seat of a soccer empire. Surf Soccer began in 1977 as a club team for […]
Along the San Dieguito River, nestled in Del Mar’s drying brush and quiet suburbia, sit acres of immaculate lawns. They might look like sod farms or the polo grounds they once were, but the fields comprise Surf Sports Park, the seat of a soccer empire.
Surf Soccer began in 1977 as a club team for boys and girls aged 12 to 18, aiming to attract the best youth talent in San Diego’s North County. It has since fanned out as far as Massachusetts and Montana to encompass 55 affiliate clubs across the nation for kids ages 6 to 19. In 2016, Surf Soccer moved into the expansive Surf Sports Park, which hosts several prestigious club tournaments and player showcases each year. Across all its competitions, Surf Soccer serves over 200,000 youth participants annually.
“Everything we’re trying to do is be the best of the best. It’s our mantra,” says Brian Enge, COO of Pioneer Sports & Entertainment, the parent company that controls the Surf Soccer network. “When we have events, we want to make sure it’s the coolest, best experience for kids and for coaches and families. When we run our club, we want to make sure we’re developing the most college players and national team players and winning the most championships.”
Courtesy of San Diego Wave
These aren’t your typical sports platitudes. Surf Soccer’s top teams compete in the Elite Clubs National League (ECNL), one of the highest levels of youth soccer in the US, and players in the ECNL are recruited by top colleges and professional teams. Surf Soccer features a lot of that talent. Its under-13, U-15, and U-18/19 girls teams are reigning ECNL champions in their respective divisions. Surf Soccer’s U-17 team is the current champion on the boys’ side.
Perhaps no one represents the club’s success better than Melanie Barcenas. A Clairemont native, Barcenas played for Surf Soccer for 10 years, starting at 6 years old. She won several showcases and cup competitions during her time with the club, and she always pushed to play against older girls— and even the boys—which caught the attention of pro scouts. In 2023, the San Diego Wave made Barcenas, then just 15 years old, the youngest signee in the history of the National Women’s Soccer League.
Photo Credit: Tito Fajardo Melanie Barcenas credits her time with the organization for helping her develop the skills to go pro at just 15 years old.
“I think Surf gave me the platform [to turn professional],” Barcenas says. “We were always going to play the best teams. At one point before I went pro, I was playing two years up, and that was a great decision because I got to push myself playing against older girls.”
With the Wave turning over much of its roster this summer, Barcenas is expected to fill a more prominent role for her hometown team, something she’s already done for her country. Barcenas excelled at the 2024 FIFA U-17 World Cup, starting every match, scoring three times, and helping her team to a third-place finish. The Surf Sports alum’s international success reflects the club’s global ambitions.
“If we can run an event in San Diego, why can’t we run an event in Spain and Italy and Morocco?” Enge says. He helped export Surf Soccer’s signature Surf Cup competition to Europe and Africa in 2023. Surf Soccer also maintains partnerships with Manchester City, the dominant force in the English Premier League, and Club América, Mexico’s most successful professional team, to stage showcases in the US.
American soccer has long been the butt of the joke in “world football.” We use a different name for the sport, we play it in the summer, and, at least on the men’s side, we’re underachievers relative to our population size and economic strength. So why are the biggest clubs in the world— and some of the most soccer- mad countries—wanting to align with Surf Soccer?
“First, European clubs and global clubs see the US as a massive consumer market. They want to build their brand,” Enge explains. “The second is player access. Southern California and San Diego have always been a massive part of that. There’s a lot of talent here.”
Not that the organization is letting that get to its head.
“We never really focus on the growth. We focus on the service, and if the service is there, the growth will come,” Enge says. “We do want to make sure that Surf is a powerful force in the way that youth soccer is developed here in the US, and we want to continue to be a big voice in that. The bigger that we get, the louder voice we get to have. Other than that, we’re just going to focus in on great clubs and great events.”
After all, Surf Soccer may be a major international force, but it’s also just a club team from San Diego.
Tyler Little League teams set for district tournament |
The Little League Baseball District 10 Tournaments will begin on Monday. In the Little League Majors 12U Division, which culminates in the Little League World Series in August in Williamsport, Pennsylvania, Rose Capital West will take on Lufkin in the opening game at 7 p.m. Monday at Morris Frank Park in Lufkin. The winner will […]
The Little League Baseball District 10 Tournaments will begin on Monday.
In the Little League Majors 12U Division, which culminates in the Little League World Series in August in Williamsport, Pennsylvania, Rose Capital West will take on Lufkin in the opening game at 7 p.m. Monday at Morris Frank Park in Lufkin.
The winner will face Rose Capital East at 7 p.m. on June 19 at a location to be determined. There will be an elimination game on June 21. The championship game will be on June 23 and June 24, if necessary.
The winner of the district tournament advances to sectionals. The sectional winner then advances to the state tournament. The winner of the state tournament goes to the Southwest regional in Waco, where the winner will advance to the Little League World Series.
In the 11U Division, Rose Capital East and Rose Capital West will face off at 7 p.m. Monday at Faulkner Park. The winner will advance to face Lufkin at 7 p.m. on June 19 in Lufkin. There will be an elimination game on June 21. The championship game will be on June 23 and June 24, if necessary.
In the 10U Division, Rose Capital East will face Lufkin at 7 p.m. Monday at 7 p.m. at Golden Road. The winner will advance to face Rose Capital West at 7 p.m. on June 19. There will be an elimination game on June 21. The championship game will be on June 23 and June 24, if necessary.
Boys and Girls Club of Lawrence County announces 2025 Little League district teams
Boys and Girls Club of Lawrence County announces 2025 Little League district teams | WBIW
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Second-year coach Kevin Young is all about family – Deseret News
The sticky notes were the idea of Kevin Young’s mother-in-law, Tammy Bailey. She handed them out a few months ago, and encouraged family members to write “cool thoughts and words of encouragement” for others on them and leave them around the house. Young’s three children — 12-year-old Jude, 10-year-old Van and 7-year-old Zoey — took […]
The sticky notes were the idea of Kevin Young’s mother-in-law, Tammy Bailey.
She handed them out a few months ago, and encouraged family members to write “cool thoughts and words of encouragement” for others on them and leave them around the house.
Young’s three children — 12-year-old Jude, 10-year-old Van and 7-year-old Zoey — took their grandmother’s directive to heart.
Special Collector’s Issue: “1984: The Year BYU was Second to None”
Get an inclusive look inside BYU Football’s 1984 National Championship season.
Young’s BYU basketball team was struggling a bit when it hit Big 12 play in January, losing badly at Houston and starting 1-3 in conference games and looking nothing like the NCAA Tournament team it would become.
The morning before one important home game, Young got in his car and noticed a sticky note attached to his steering wheel, written by one of his sons.
“Let’s get this win tonight, dad,” the note read, followed by the word “PROvo,” a reminder that Young promised in his introductory news conference last year that he would establish BYU as a pipeline to the NBA.
The Cougars lost that game, Young remembers, but the next morning he woke up to find another note on his bathroom mirror, written by a different son, saying, “Hey dad, it is OK, we will get the next one. We are good.”
Young’s voice caught a bit when he relayed the story last week to the Deseret News in response to a question about some of the greatest joys of fatherhood.
“That was pretty cool,” he said. “It was a ‘you got this’ type of thing, and honestly, I get emotional even talking about it. But those notes were pretty awesome. … They are all-in, man. Fully invested. My oldest one, Jude, is locked in to our success, and his little brother (Van) is right behind him.”
The same can be said of Kevin Young when it comes to fatherhood and family. The 20th men’s basketball coach in BYU history, for all the success he achieved on the hardwoods in his first season in Provo, is just as locked-in as a husband to Melissa and father of Jude, Van and Zoey.
The couple’s fourth child, and second daughter, is due in late September — before Young and the Cougars embark on his second season in Provo and the most difficult schedule in BYU basketball history with what is expected to be one of the best teams in school history, led by No. 1 prep recruit AJ Dybantsa and returning all-Big 12 wing Richie Saunders.
“Coaching is just what I do. It is not who I am,” Young said. “Being a dad is definitely who I am. … I love being a dad, man. It is my favorite thing about what I get to do. It really shapes who I am. Where it intersects with my career is it really has driven my career choices. It is the thing that matters most to me.”
Featuring Kevin Young before Father’s Day
Every June, the Deseret News profiles a father in the Utah sports community, a dad who has successfully balanced his professional and family life in an extraordinary manner. We’ve featured former Utah basketball coach Craig Smith, the father of BYU football coach Kalani Sitake (Tom), the father of BYU defensive coordinator Jay Hill (Ferrell) and the father of BYU and NFL quarterback Zach Wilson (Mike Wilson).
Young, 43, is this year’s choice.
Kevin and Melissa Young pose for a picture with their children, Jude, Van and Zoey. | Courtesy Kevin Young family
He met Melissa Bailey — almost everyone calls her Missy — when she was a student at BYU and he was a volunteer assistant coach at Utah Valley University, and they married in the Salt Lake Temple in 2011. He became a father for the first time in 2013, four months after he was fired as the head coach of the Iowa Energy of the NBA’s D-League (now known as the G-League).
Young credits his own parents, Melissa’s parents, and “many, many” fellow coaches along his career path who instilled the importance of fatherhood into him. Men like John Bryant, who was a fellow assistant with the Chicago Bulls, and current St. Joseph’s head coach Billy Lange were there along the way.
So were Todd Wright, now director of player performance for the Los Angeles Clippers, and Todor Pandov, head strength coach of the Orlando Magic.
More recently, NBA head coaches who Young has worked for, including Brett Brown, and Monty Williams, have been big family guys who encouraged Young to stay close to his family.
“A large part of it is I was lucky about who I was around as a young coach,” Young said. “I could list four or five other guys who were instrumental. … Monty Williams is a huge family guy. Brett Brown is, too. That was probably as critical as anything. … If I worked for other coaches that didn’t have that, I don’t know if my desire to remain a coach would have been as high as it is. So that was something I feel fortunate about, for sure.”
Young said that prior to accepting the BYU job, he did a lot of research on a college coach’s lifestyle and ability to spend more time with his family, and talked to a lot of guys who had coached at both levels to make sure becoming a head coach would not have a negative effect on his family.
BYU Cougars head coach Kevin Young watches his players warmup during a practice held at Ball Arena in Denver, Colo., on Wednesday, March 19, 2025. | Isaac Hale, Deseret News
“They all felt strongly there was definitely more time at home in the college game, and (there) is. It has been cool. I have been able to be at a lot more of my kids’ games,” Young said. “Part of that, though, too, is being a head coach. Being an assistant, you are at the mercy of the schedule. When you are the head coach, you get to make the schedule out. So there is a lot that goes into that.
“But it has played out nicely, and probably even more so because we are at BYU. You have family importance here, and the welcoming of families and stuff like that,” he continued. “So that has been something we have thoroughly enjoyed.”
‘A legacy to live up to’ — Brigham Young is in his roots, literally
Kevin Young can trace his roots back to Brigham Young — he’s the fourth great-nephew of the second president of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, and the man whom BYU is named after.
Brigham Young’s brother, Lorenzo Dow Young, is Kevin Young’s great-great-great-great-grandfather.
“That’s quite a legacy to live up to,” he said.
It is a legacy that he wants his children to always remember, as well.
Young’s father, Phillip Young, said that of his six children — five sons and a daughter — Kevin, the third-oldest child and second-oldest son, has “always been the one that appreciates family history the most.”
Two years ago, Kevin and Melissa rented a recreational vehicle and drove from their home in Phoenix to Melissa’s family’s farm near Omaha, Nebraska, and then back through Utah so the kids could see where there ancestors lived in Huntington, Emery County.
They checked out the Stuart Guard Station in Huntington Canyon, which was built in 1930 and where Kevin’s grandfather, Jonathan Dee Young, and great-grandfather, Lee Young, lived during the summer months.
“We were able to go through the cabin, and Kevin took it as a real teaching moment to help his boys realize where they came from,” Phil Young said. “That’s always been very important to Kevin, where our family has been, who we are, and exposing his family to that, and teaching them that they have a great history.”
Establishing family atmosphere in BYU basketball
It is not uncommon to see a lot of kids running around the Marriott Center court after games, or during other times at the BYU basketball practice facility on campus (Marriott Center Annex). There’s a reason for that.
The coaching staff Young has assembled in Provo has more than 20 kids combined — although some of those kids are also in college. Chris Burgess, John Linehan, Doug Stewart, Will Voigt, Brandon Dunson, Nate Austin and Jordan Brady all have children. Burgess and Brady lead the way with five apiece.
Chief of staff Doug Stewart and his wife, Lindsay, have three.
Young’s emphasis on family and fatherhood is “tremendous,” Stewart said.
“What he does with his family carries over to our basketball team, and that becomes family. So that’s probably the biggest testimonial you could put out there,” Stewart said. “The time, energy and effort he puts into his immediate family, he brings that forth to our basketball family as well.
“When you make a nice run like last year, you don’t do it unless there is that culture, that chemistry, that energy, things of that nature. He brings what he does as a father at home to the gym, and that’s what makes it special.”
Kevin and Melissa Young pose for a picture with their children during a football game at LaVell Edwards Stadium. | Courtesy Kevin Young family
Young said during the offseason when his kids are still in school, he likes to help with breakfast, get lunches ready, and drop them off at school before heading into the office. During the season, there are more early mornings and it is 50-50 whether he gets to help out before driving to work.
“That is one thing I am big on, even with the other coaches. I am not a big office guy,” he said. “So we come in, we try to be efficient with the work that we do, so that if there are things going on at home everybody can get to them without feeling guilty or whatever. So that is a huge thing for me.”
Yes, the Young boys are fully involved in team sports — baseball, basketball, soccer and football — and Zoey is currently taking tennis lessons.
“We are a huge sports family. Games are always on TV. A lot of my wife’s brothers played football and basketball, and all of my family played sports, too,” he said. “So our kids have taken a natural liking to it.”
Young said the Utah County youth sports scene “is pretty crazy,” and he often consults with his staffers, such as Stewart, to compare notes and find the best opportunities for his kids. He said he is “pretty hands-off” at games and athletic events, not wanting to “make things feel weird” for other coaches.
“I definitely make it a point to try to get to their games. That is something that I didn’t realize as a young father — how awesome it is to watch your young kids play sports,” he said. “Like, a few years ago, I am in the NBA watching the best players in the world, and I would much rather go watch this 5-year-old soccer game. I love going to watch my kids play.”
Guiding forces: Gospel and the ‘really good dad’
No story on Kevin Young’s fatherhood would be complete without a mention of how much his own father, Phil Young, and his wife, Melissa, have contributed to his success, he said.
He called his father the person he is closest to in his life, outside of his wife.
“He is the guy I call when I just gotta run something by him, regardless of the topic, whether it is a career decision, or something with the kids, something with my wife, financial stuff, whatever it might be. He is always the first call for me,” said Young. “Although he traveled a lot when I was a kid, he did such a good job of just being present, even though he was traveling quite a bit. I just always admired him for that.”
Kevin Young poses for a picture with his father, Phil Young, at Manti-La Sal Forest. | Courtesy Kevin Young family
Phil Young was a traveling salesman, so he knows what it is like to be away from home for long stretches, like Kevin is during the season.
“As it relates to my career, the funny thing is my dad did not grow up a sports guy, which is kinda funny.
“My brothers are all into sports, too. But he is a car guy, and that is kinda his thing. He was not super athletic, so he has obviously gotten into sports a lot later, having athletic kids and so forth,” Kevin said.
The coach said that his upbringing in The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints and his relationship with Jesus Christ has been the foundation behind it all.
“That is a testament to my dad, and all the lessons he taught me. The vehicle with which he taught me a lot of life lessons was the gospel, and I think partially why he and I are so close,” Kevin continued. “You know, I didn’t go on a mission, so I am probably not the prototypical Mormon guy, or whatever. But my relationship with my dad is what helped me stay in line with the gospel. A lot of who I am is because of my dad. He’s just a really good dad.”
Will Young grow old at BYU?
Young has proven to be a really good coach, having recently signed a “long-term” contract extension that BYU said in a news release should keep him in Provo “for the foreseeable future.”
The Cougars went 26-10 overall, and 14-6 in Big 12 play, in his inaugural season. That’s the most wins by a first-year head coach in program history.
He spoke to the Deseret News a couple of hours before that contract extension was announced, but didn’t mention it in the interview. He did speak candidly about having some interest in the Phoenix Suns’ head coaching job, which was filled the day before the extension was announced.
“Our quality of life is definitely the No. 1 thing (keeping him at BYU),” he said. “Not to get super philosophical about it, but it is not about the dollar amounts for me. It is about what money allows you to do from a quality of life standpoint, what you prioritize. So that’s sort of how I view how I have steered my career as it relates to money and how that ties into my long-term goals. That’s a whole ‘nother topic. But that’s how I navigate that space.”
New BYU basketball coach Kevin Young and family members have a FaceTime call with Kansas City Chiefs coach Andy Reid at the Marriott Center on Wednesday, April 17, 2024. | Nate Edwards, BYU
Jon Nelson is pictured during a visit to the Jamestown YMCA. At 80 years old, Jon Nelson isn’t slowing down. A lifelong Jamestown resident, Jon has faced more than his share of physical challenges — including six joint replacements — but still shows up at the YMCA almost every morning. “This place keeps me going,” […]
Jon Nelson is pictured during a visit to the Jamestown YMCA.
At 80 years old, Jon Nelson isn’t slowing down. A lifelong Jamestown resident, Jon has faced more than his share of physical challenges — including six joint replacements — but still shows up at the YMCA almost every morning.
“This place keeps me going,” Jon says simply. “If I had to do my rehab at home, I probably wouldn’t do it. But coming here — it gives me structure, accountability, and people.”
Jon’s connection to the Jamestown Area YMCA dates back nearly seven decades to when he was just a kid tagging along with his dad.
“I started coming with my dad when I was a kid,” Jon recalls. “There was a space just for kids to hang out, and before long, I was getting involved in activities and meeting people from all over.”
One of those early connections — with a Jamestown High School student named George Banks — left a lasting impression and helped Jon feel right at home.
Over the years, the Y became a constant in Jon’s life. He played handball for years before joint issues forced him to scale back. Now, his workouts are simpler — light cardio, walking, stretching — but they’re just as essential.
More than the equipment or the routines, though, it’s the people who keep Jon coming back.
“The girls at the front desk greet you with a smile. The members talk to each other. You walk in and you feel like someone’s happy to see you,” he says. “You don’t get that everywhere.”
He treasures the sense of community at the Jamestown Y. It’s where he’s built lifelong friendships, and where he continues to set goals — including traveling to play new golf courses and giving back to hospitals that have supported him.
When Jon turned 80 earlier this year, he said he felt something simple but meaningful: a desire to say thank you. He penned a four-page letter to the Y staff to demonstrate his appreciation.
“I just wanted to thank the people here who’ve made it feel like a second home,” Jon said. “The staff, the members — they’ve been part of my life for a long time.”
According to John Barber, Interim CEO of the Jamestown Area YMCA, Jon’s story perfectly illustrates the Y’s mission — one made possible through the association’s annual Partner With Youth campaign, which raises funds to ensure that individuals and families of all ages and income levels have access to YMCA programs and support.
“Stories like Jon’s remind us that the YMCA is here for everyone — not just kids, but older adults who are working to stay healthy and connected,” said Barber. “Partner With Youth helps us celebrate and sustain those stories. It ensures we can serve people at every stage of life and truly live out our mission in the community.”
Even as he reflects on the difficulty of outliving many of his peers, Jon says it’s places like the Y that give him purpose.
“You stay active, you stay connected,” he said. “That’s what the Y does — it keeps you living.”
Mayor Woodfin Announces Formation of Birmingham Youth Sports League
During a press conference at Legion Field on Friday, Birmingham Mayor Randall Woodfin announced the formation of a youth sports league. He was joined by members of his administration, City Councilors, and area city officials and leaders. (Sym Posey, The Birmingham Times) By Sym Posey | The Birmingham Times Youth sports will have a new […]
During a press conference at Legion Field on Friday, Birmingham Mayor Randall Woodfin announced the formation of a youth sports league. He was joined by members of his administration, City Councilors, and area city officials and leaders. (Sym Posey, The Birmingham Times)
By Sym Posey | The Birmingham Times
Youth sports will have a new look in Birmingham after Mayor Randall Woodfin announced on Friday the formation of a league beginning this summer with youth football and cheerleading, and basketball, baseball, softball, and soccer to come in future phases.
During a press conference at Legion Field flanked by members of his administration, City Councilors and area officials and leaders, Woodfin said the Birmingham Youth Sports League “will serve as the official organization to streamline organize and elevate youth sports across the Magic City.
“This is a chance for Birmingham to support and enhance the youth sports experience across our city,” he said. “We’re not just building athletes, we’re building character, community, and opportunity … Ages as young as five to 12 years old” will have the opportunity to join.
The league will be governed by an advisory team, a commissioner, an assistant commissioner, an operations director for each sport with support from the mayor’s office, Park and recreation, and the Department of youth Services.
Woodfin said the city plans to invest $500,000 in the program. “This is not just seed money from the city,” he said. Corporate sponsors will make it a public-private partnership, he added. “We’re grateful for the private sector (support),” Woodfin said.
Cedric Sparks, chief of staff for Mayor Woodfin, said uniforms in first year will be free.
“Uniforms, training, security, all of the things that we’ve seen, that are really challenging for youth sports programs, we’re taking those costs away,” he said. “The stress that comes with trying to raise revenues for those programs, those will be eliminated.”
The program is rooted in character, excellence, equity, teamwork, and accountability, the city said. In addition to athletic training, the league will focus on providing life skills, conflict resolution strategies, and academic mentorship to participating youth.
This pilot project also builds on recent efforts to revive city-run youth engagement programs like the Police Athletic Teams (P.A.T.) by the Birmingham Park and Recreation Board and Birmingham Police Department.
The independent Birmingham Crime Commission highlighted the importance of such programs in its Jan. 6 report recommending “reinvest in mentorship, education, and diversion programs to reduce juvenile crime and foster positive relationships. Re-implement the Police Athletic Teams (P.A.T.) and other proven youth engagement and mentorship partnerships.”
For more information or to get involved, visit: www.birminghamal.gov/youthsports.
UNO ushers in civic partnership, revamping athletic facilities for youth recreation access – Crescent City Sports
NEW ORLEANS — Umbrellas were out at Privateer Park on Friday, but sunnier skies lie ahead for the University of New Orleans. UNO cut red tape with the NOLA Coalition, a collective of over 500 non-profits and businesses aimed at public safety and youth recreation initiatives. The university will collaborate with The 18th Ward, a […]
NEW ORLEANS — Umbrellas were out at Privateer Park on Friday, but sunnier skies lie ahead for the University of New Orleans.
UNO cut red tape with the NOLA Coalition, a collective of over 500 non-profits and businesses aimed at public safety and youth recreation initiatives. The university will collaborate with The 18th Ward, a non-profit dedicated to easing access to youth sports programs.
Through an influx of $1.95 million, UNO will renovate several athletic facilities to initiate recreation, mentorship and workforce opportunities for young people in Greater New Orleans. The plan also incorporates affordable youth athletic programs.
Structural enhancements include a turfed Maestri Field and resurfaced campus tennis courts, along with refurbished soccer pitches and swimming pools.
These amenities have been long overdue for improvement, deteriorating long before UNO’s recent financial crisis. A $10 million budget deficit has plagued the university, leading to staff layoffs and widespread furloughs this spring.
“It’s a win-win for everybody,” said UNO Interim Athletic Director Vince Granito.
“It gives us the opportunity to do some upgrades on some facilities that they are going to need and [will] press our capabilities to handle, for example, tennis and some other green spaces on campus … To provide some services that [18th Ward] might need. But at the same time, allow us to do some things that will help our programs too.”
Laura Rodrigue, an attorney and longtime confidant of Governor Jeff Landry, led the charge for this public-private partnership that pushes for crime prevention through youth engagement while helping UNO transition to LSU’s fiscal system.
Rodrigue’s efforts in stringing together local, state and university leadership helped acquire nearly $2 million in state funds. Representatives of the Business Council of New Orleans, the Metropolitan Commission and the NAACP joined her at the podium on Friday.
For decades, legendary Privateers baseball coach Ron Maestri has stumped for turf to blanket the field named in his honor.
He’ll likely get his wish. An artificial surface would keep the park usable year-round for the new youth programs and disallow shortstops from dodging puddles on ground balls.
“It gives the opportunity to play or practice when you can’t, like now,” said Maestri as rain poured outside. “The opportunity to have high school games, travel teams [and] generate revenue.”
Friday’s festivities shed light on the Lakefront’s next generation. After starting a union that opens a door for New Orleans’ youngest athletes, UNO introduced its newly hired baseball coach, Andrew Gipson.