Rec Sports
Lwanga awardee finds blessings in mixing faith, science as Catholic educator
Jacob Wiegand | jacobwiegand@archstl.org Cardinal Ritter College Prep High School biology/genetics teacher Venus D. Spain is a recipient of the Father Edward F. Feuerbacher Lifetime Achievement Award from the St. Charles Lwanga Center. Spain is a graduate of Cardinal Ritter and teacher at the school for more than two decades. One of the perks of […]

Jacob Wiegand | jacobwiegand@archstl.org
Cardinal Ritter College Prep High School biology/genetics teacher Venus D. Spain is a recipient of the Father Edward F. Feuerbacher Lifetime Achievement Award from the St. Charles Lwanga Center. Spain is a graduate of Cardinal Ritter and teacher at the school for more than two decades.
One of the perks of working at a Catholic school is discovering ways to incorporate faith into academics.
That’s exactly what Venus D. Spain has done with her freshman biology class at Cardinal Ritter College Prep High School. This past school year, she invited students to attend Mass at her parish, St. Peter Claver, which was followed up with a reflection paper on the “biology of God.”
Students were asked to make a connection between biology — the scientific study of life and living organisms — and what they’ve learned in theology class.
“It was, what’s the correlation, where does the faith fit into their study of science and the theology that they learned?” she said. “The Eucharist was a big part of that connection.”
It’s one example of how Spain integrates faith into her work as a science teacher at Cardinal Ritter. Earlier this month, the St. Charles Lwanga Center honored Spain with the Father Ed Feuerbacher Lifetime Achievement Award at its annual Testimonial Dinner and Celebration. She was one of several who were honored for their contributions in the community.
A career in education wasn’t originally in Spain’s plans, but as a student at Xavier University in the 1990s, she became involved in several youth-focused programs and helped coach basketball. It was there that a fellow coach encouraged her to pursue teaching.
Once she returned to St. Louis, Spain continued to coach youth sports and was hired as a third-grade teacher at the former Bishop Healy School. Three years later, she received a call from former Cardinal Ritter principal Carmelle Hall, who asked her if she’d consider a job teaching high school science. She recently celebrated her 25th anniversary at the school. In addition to freshman biology, she also teaches genetics to juniors and seniors.
In her nomination for the award, Spain was described as having aspired, inspired, and empowered her students to achieve their best and as modeling the threefold mission of Cardinal Ritter: academic excellence, leadership and faith development.
Spain said that the most rewarding part of her career has been being able to practice her Catholic faith through education.
Biology is largely focused on the characteristics of living things, but students also understand it through the lens of faith, she said. “We begin with cells, but they know there is a higher power connected to our whole formation as living human beings,” she said. “God formed us, and He formed this earth and living things in six, seven days, and He saw that it was good, right? He gave us the ability to think, to take care of all the other living creatures, and it is our responsibility to make sure that we’re doing that.”
Spain has been inspired in faith by the women of her parish and her late mother, Elizabeth Spain, who taught her that daily devotion, prayer, and service to God would manifest in abundant blessings. Over the years, she’s served at several parishes as an acolyte, an extraordinary minister of the Eucharist and a youth Sunday school leader. At St. Peter Claver, she’s involved in the Sister Antona Ebo Women’s Ministry.
Spain, who recently assisted with tornado recovery efforts, said it’s not about the things she has done but the blessings she’s received from God through the people and she’s encountered throughout her life, whether that’s at school, in church or in the community.
“I am really humbled that I was nominated to receive this award, and I just think there’s more to do,” she said. “I’m starting to realize that there’s more than I can do beyond my church.”
Father Carl Scheble also lifetime honoree

Father Carl Scheble was honored with the Father Ed Feuerbacher Lifetime Achievement Award from the St. Charles Lwanga Center in June.
Father Scheble was raised in the former Our Lady of Mount Carmel Parish in the Baden neighborhood of north St. Louis. He later attended the former Prep North High School in Florissant, where he felt a calling to the priesthood.
After ordination in 1983, Father Scheble spent 18 years of his priesthood serving several predominantly African-American parishes on the northside of St. Louis, including Holy Rosary, Visitation-St. Ann and St. Elizabeth, Mother of John the Baptist. In all, he’s been a parish priest for 41 years, serving in urban, suburban and rural parishes across the archdiocese.
In 2023, he was named archdiocesan vicar general and moderator of the curia (the archdiocesan staff). He works closely with the episcopal vicars who oversee the archdiocese’s three vicariates (groupings of parishes within the archdiocese) to provide parish support and administration.
The Lwanga Center played an instrumental role in introducing him to the Black Catholic community, he said. Through the center, he became involved in youth and young adult ministry, marriage prep and the National Black Catholic Congress, among other activities. He also heard speakers hosted by Lwanga, including the late Benedictine Father Cyprian Davis, a prolific chronicler of black Catholic history, and Sister Thea Bowman.
“There were just incredible experiences that the Lwanga Center afforded me that I would have never had otherwise,” Father Scheble said. “For me, as a white clergyman, it was wonderfully formative.”
Father Scheble has overseen several parish mergers over the years, which he said is always a difficult process. However, at the same time, he has always felt welcomed by each parish community he has served.
“Coming as a priest … I was brought into their families, literally,” he said. “What a blessing to experience that.”
Lwanga Center awardees
Fr. Edward F. Feuerbacher Lifetime Achievement: Venus D. Spain and Father Carl Scheble
Trailblazer Award: Sister Gail Guelker, SSND, and Lynn Woolfolk
Torch Bearer Award: Jesuits of the Central and Southern Province, USA
Leon Henderson Award: Jessica Pou
Parish adult, young adult and youth honorees
Christ the King: Mimi Taylor-Hendrix (adult)
St. Ann: Dr. James Paunicka (adult); Ke’Von Reynolds (youth)
St. Josephine Bakhita: Sister Janice Munier, SSND (adult); Markus Willem Dowdy (posthumously, young adult)
St. Norbert: Jane Kariuki (adult); Kadin A.J. Anderson (youth)
St. Peter Claver: Rosalind Williams (adult); Andrea Lowe (young adult); Kennedy Thomas (youth)
Rec Sports
New flag football tournament coming to Camp Casey
New flag football tournament coming to Camp Casey The YMCA of Snohomish County is holding its inaugural Camp Casey Flag Football Tournament Aug. 2. Flag football is coming to Coupeville. On Aug. 2, the YMCA of Snohomish County is holding its inaugural Clash at Camp Casey Flag Football Tournament at the YMCA Camp Casey Sports […]

New flag football tournament coming to Camp Casey
The YMCA of Snohomish County is holding its inaugural Camp Casey Flag Football Tournament Aug. 2.
Flag football is coming to Coupeville.
On Aug. 2, the YMCA of Snohomish County is holding its inaugural Clash at Camp Casey Flag Football Tournament at the YMCA Camp Casey Sports Fields. Teams comprised of kids of all ages and skill levels are guaranteed to play at least three 5 vs. 5 games, according to the YMCA of Snohomish County website, with the chance to make the playoffs.
Although registration closed July 16, the “festival-style” tournament will also feature food trucks, music and more for those in attendance, according to the press release. Proceeds generated by the event will benefit YMCA Youth Sports Scholarships.
“This is more than a tournament – it’s a celebration of youth sports and community,” said Chris Bellecourt, Association Director of Youth Sports, YMCA of Snohomish County, via a press release. “We designed the Clash at Camp Casey to be a bridge from summer to fall, offering a competitive and inclusive environment for kids to grow, connect, and get ready for the season ahead.”
“This is exactly the kind of opportunity that builds confidence and community,” said Jacob Hiatt, Flag Football Coordinator, YMCA of Snohomish County, in the press release. “We’re not just running a tournament – we’re investing in young athletes. Every entry supports scholarships so more kids can experience the power of sports and belonging.”
Questions can be directed to Chris Bellecourt at cbellecourt@ymca-snoco.org or Jacob Hiatt at jhiatt@ymca-snoco.org.
Rec Sports
How the Clippers, who keep getting deeper, better and older, are zagging in youth-focused NBA
Chris Paul is reuniting with the Los Angeles Clippers at 40 years old, and he’s just the latest veteran free agent to arrive at their throwback party. The Clippers successfully recruited 32-year-old guard Bradley Beal last week, fresh off his buyout with the Phoenix Suns, and they began the offseason by picking up 37-year-old center […]

Chris Paul is reuniting with the Los Angeles Clippers at 40 years old, and he’s just the latest veteran free agent to arrive at their throwback party. The Clippers successfully recruited 32-year-old guard Bradley Beal last week, fresh off his buyout with the Phoenix Suns, and they began the offseason by picking up 37-year-old center Brook Lopez.
For most of NBA history, a series of signings like this would be business as usual for a win-now team built around a 34-year-old wing (Kawhi Leonard) and a primary playmaker who will turn 36 before the season starts (James Harden). Twenty-two years ago, the Los Angeles Lakers held a press conference to introduce Karl Malone and Gary Payton a week before the Hall of Famers turned 40 and 35, respectively. Four years ago, Harden played for a Brooklyn Nets team that started the season with a 36-year-old LaMarcus Aldridge, a 36-year-old Paul Millsap and a 32-year-old Blake Griffin on the roster. (Aldridge and Griffin’s previous teams had bought them out.)
The 2025 Oklahoma City Thunder had no ring chasers on the roster, though, and 33-year-old Indiana Pacers guard T.J. McConnell was the oldest player in either conference champion’s rotation. Between the style-of-play and officiating changes that the league has seen in recent years, the NBA has never demanded more of its players in terms of movement and physicality.
“We’re playing almost like two games compared to 10 years ago and how involved the bodies are,” Thunder GM Sam Presti said at his end-of-season press conference.
In recent months, both Philadelphia 76ers general manager Daryl Morey and Golden State Warriors coach Steve Kerr have said that younger players are more likely to hold up over the course of a season. In this context, the Clippers’ decision to double down on experience can be seen as a zag. The whole league is trying to catch up to Oklahoma City; can a team made up mostly of 30-somethings even stay in the race?
On Saturday, Clippers president Lawrence Frank told reporters that the front office had tried to “add the best people possible” and they just happened to be vets. “What’s age?” Frank said. “It’s just a number, right?” Big man John Collins, whom they acquired in the Norman Powell trade, is entering his ninth season, will be 28 when it begins and is the youngest player in Los Angeles’ projected rotation. Frank pointed out that Beal is “technically” younger than the 2 guard he is more or less replacing — he was born 34 days after Powell — and described Lopez as “ageless.”
“Thirty-seven is like 17,” Frank said. “Because I need Brook to be younger because that makes me younger, since I coached him when he was a rookie.”
NBA front office rankings: OKC on top, Lakers and Mavericks low on list, new team falls behind Bulls at No. 30
Sam Quinn

Maybe there’s some irony in the fact that, a year after letting Paul George walk because they didn’t want to offer the 34-year-old star a four-year contract, the Clippers have four players older than him: Harden, Lopez, Paul and forward Nicolas Batum, who turns 37 in December. Young players are important is not the only lesson to learn from the 2024-25 season, though. In a league that is increasingly valuing depth, size and optionality, the Clippers’ offseason is, with the exception of the age of their acquisitions, on trend.
It could not have been easy to see George leave, but the front office never saw it as letting him go for nothing. What Los Angeles got in exchange was flexibility. By getting under the second apron, the Clippers were able to add Batum (using the bi-annual exception), Derrick Jones Jr. (using the midlevel exception) and Kris Dunn (in a sign-and-trade) last summer, then trade for Bogdan Bogdanovic midseason. In a way, trading Powell for Collins (which wouldn’t have been possible had they been over the second apron) rather than offering Powell a hefty extension mirrors their decision with George: They effectively turned him into multiple players and preserved their future cap space.
This is not to say that the Clippers planned in 2024 to split their 2025 MLE between Beal and Lopez. “We never thought Brad Beal would be bought out,” Frank said, but they put themselves in position to offer free agents more than the minimum, which has allowed them to build a dangerous, versatile and extremely deep team. Before the Paul signing, Frank said, accurately, that they had 10 “proven NBA rotation players” on the roster. Heading into the offseason, they wanted to give coach Tyronn Lue “different tools and different personnel to experiment with,” Frank said. They wanted to diversify the frontcourt, get bigger and add playmaking and shooting. They have done all of that.
In recent years, the Clippers have always had the personnel to play small when needed. Now, with Collins and Lopez in the mix, they can also go the other way. Between Zubac and Lopez, they have 48 minutes of rim protection, and Lue could even play them together, like the Houston Rockets did with Alperen Sengun and Steven Adams (but with better spacing). Collins can set screens, initiate dribble-handoffs, operate in the dunker spot and space the floor. Lopez is the stretch 5 this team has forever been searching for.
According to Frank, Lue wants more movement in the halfcourt, so Beal’s ability to shoot and make plays off screens will come in handy. Between him, Paul and, ideally, a healthier Leonard, there will be less of a burden on Harden in 2025-26. Because Dunn, Jones and Batum are still around, Los Angeles can continue to limit the amount of time Leonard has to spend guarding opposing stars in the regular season, too.
Clippers continue to ace offseason as Chris Paul’s homecoming rounds out roster
Brad Botkin

All things equal, the Clippers would love to be younger — Frank said as much in the aftermath of their Game 7 loss against the Denver Nuggets. Their priority in the offseason, though, was to get better. On paper at least, they’ve done that. And while there’s always risk in betting on a player in his mid-to-late 30s staying healthy, they might have mitigated it by making several such bets simultaneously. Lopez played 2,456 minutes last season, his highest total since 2011, but, unless something goes horribly wrong, they won’t need anywhere near that number from him next season. Paul played 2,292 minutes, his highest total since 2016 — same deal.
Los Angeles fared better than anybody expected throughout Leonard’s extended absence last season, and, with the talent it has added, it is even better equipped to withstand injuries now. “We’ve addressed our needs,” Frank said. If that means they’re ancient compared to the defending champs, so be it.
Rec Sports
Park City youth soccer tournament to take over Wasatch Back
Starting July 24, youth soccer teams from Arizona, California, Colorado, Idaho, Montana, Nevada, Wyoming and Utah will begin round-robin play in Summit and Wasatch counties. Tournament director Cora Reddan said 41 fields at 13 venues will host games in Park City, Oakley and Heber. Those include local parks and fields at schools in the Park […]

Starting July 24, youth soccer teams from Arizona, California, Colorado, Idaho, Montana, Nevada, Wyoming and Utah will begin round-robin play in Summit and Wasatch counties.
Tournament director Cora Reddan said 41 fields at 13 venues will host games in Park City, Oakley and Heber. Those include local parks and fields at schools in the Park City and Wasatch County school districts. Reddan said this year teams will also play at Park City’s City Park.
Park City Soccer Executive Director Shelly Gillwald said a quarter of the games will be played within Park City limits.
“Kimball Junction, the I-80 / [U.S.] 40 and I-80 / [state Route] 224 exits are impacted, grocery stores, fast food, so the local community should probably plan ahead with their trips to the grocery store, maybe the gas station,” she said on KPCW’s “Local News Hour” July 21. “But in terms of the traffic, Cora has it really, really well spread out around the Wasatch Back, so it’s not as scary as it sounds.”
FULL INTERVIEW: Park City Soccer Club Executive Director Shelley Gillwald and tournament director Cora Reddan on KPCW’s Local News Hour
Gillwald said the round-robin part of the tournament will be played over two days starting with 64 brackets.
“The different age groups are divided into these different brackets,” she said. “Within that, they’ll have three games that they’ll play, and then that will determine their ranking, and whether they go on to semifinals or finals.”
The semifinals and finals games are Saturday. All games are free to watch.
Park City Soccer Club’s Extreme Cup Tournament has raised almost $1.2 million through team entry fees since its inception in 2005.
Gillwald said the funds go to the club’s financial aid scholarships.
“This past year, we gave away over $170,000 in need-based financial aid to kids, enabling them to play,” she said. “That covered 117 players last year.”
The Park City Soccer Club has about 600 players spread across 38 teams from ages eight to 18. This year, Gillwald said 126 of those need financial aid.
Rec Sports
Cloverdale 4-H youth show who’s boss
July 16 was a big night for members of the Cloverdale Livestock Club as they gathered at the Moss Ranch for showmanship trials. This is essentially a dress rehearsal for the event for all the marbles — the Deschutes County Fair & Rodeo, July 30-August 3. At the fair some hundreds of 4-H youth will […]

July 16 was a big night for members of the Cloverdale Livestock Club as they gathered at the Moss Ranch for showmanship trials. This is essentially a dress rehearsal for the event for all the marbles — the Deschutes County Fair & Rodeo, July 30-August 3. At the fair some hundreds of 4-H youth will compete in five categories – beef, sheep, goat, swine, and poultry.
4-H has been around for 123 years, and for 77 of those, 4-H has thrived in Sisters Country as Cloverdale Livestock Club. 4-H is the nation’s largest youth development organization surpassing Scouting. The 4‑H idea is simple: help young people and their families gain the skills needed to be proactive forces in their communities and develop ideas for a more innovative economy.
Today, 4‑H serves youth in rural, urban, and suburban communities in all 50 states. 4‑H participants are tackling the nation’s top issues, from global food security, climate change, and sustainable energy to childhood obesity and food safety.

Photo by Bill Bartlett
Yesenia Ortiz’ steer is about 15 times her size – but she shows that steer who’s boss.
4‑H out-of-school programming, in-school enrichment programs, clubs and camps also offer a wide variety of STEM opportunities — from agricultural and animal sciences to rocketry, robotics, environmental protection, and computer science — to improve the nation’s ability to compete in key scientific fields and take on the leading challenges of the 21st century.
Dressed in their show attire, with their animals groomed to perfection, each of the 55 members aged 9 to 18 patiently waited their turn to enter the pen and be judged under the same rules and conditions as would be typical at the Fair. The Cloverdale club boasts eight “Cloverbuds.” They are under age 9, the starting age for 4-H.
Their animals, on the other hand, were not always so nonchalant, eyeing the lush green grass abundant at the Moss family property or otherwise eager to get the show over.
Five managed their chickens, a relatively easy task. Three were showing their goats, a still relatively manageable chore. Twenty-seven handling sheep had to use some muscle as in many cases the animal weighed twice as much as the kid. The five showing swine used brain over brawn to out-clever and wrangle them.
The 11 kids keeping their cows in line were a master class in leverage. Yesenia Ortiz let her 1,500 pound steer — about 15 times her size — know who the boss is.
Show day at the Fair is the “moment of truth.” What youth and teens have learned, how they have managed their animal, and how well they control their animal are all tested.
Showmanship contests are evaluated based on preparation of animals for show, the apparent training, and the appearance and behavior of the exhibitor. An animal’s conformation should not be considered except as it may affect the way an animal should have been fitted or shown. Basic skills and both grooming and showing should not be confused with current fads and trends.
Show rings come in many different sizes. Regardless of the shape or the size of the ring, a good showman will utilize all the space available. Animals on the move should be held towards the outer edge of the ring to provide adequate room for evaluation.
A big percentage of showmanship is how well an animal handles, cleanliness, and cooperation between the animal and the handler.
Exhibitors must pay attention to the straightness of lines when bringing their animal to a stop in side-by-side or head-to-tail alignments.
The Nugget asked Issac Vanaken (12), showing for his second year, what he valued most about the Club.
“Seeing how other people work and handle, what I can learn from them,” he answered.
In typical modest fashion, a characteristic of 4-H kids, Vanaken said “he hoped to do well at the fair, improve on last year.”
His steer Rex weighed in at 1,530 pounds. However, he was like a poodle under Vanaken’s deft steering.
Evelyn Webb (11) is a third year Club member. She let her steer Colt, also 1,530 pounds, know who was in charge as we asked her to change positions for photos when he preferred to stay right where he was.
“What’s best about 4-H is working on your project. It keeps you really busy and it’s challenging,” she said. She hopes to do well at the Fair where last year she won a blue ribbon.
The last day of the fair can be bittersweet, and for some downright heart-wrenching. Auction day is when many 4-H kids must say goodbye after a year of training, feeding, and caring for an animal.
But their parents and Club leaders have prepared them well for the eventual good-bye, and living with the outcome. 4-H kids, many from farming and ranching families, beyond demonstrating showmanship, display a sound understanding of “the circle of life.”
Rec Sports
4 Insights from Destinations International’s 2025 Convention
News and Insights July 22, 2025 Summer is arguably the most important season for the travel industry. Full stop. But here’s a hot take: it’s not because of school breaks, longer days, market seasonality, or a consumer expectation of higher spend. For tourism industry professionals, summer is the season of trendcasting, budgeting, data analysis, and […]

News and Insights
July 22, 2025
Summer is arguably the most important season for the travel industry. Full stop.
But here’s a hot take: it’s not because of school breaks, longer days, market seasonality, or a consumer expectation of higher spend.
For tourism industry professionals, summer is the season of trendcasting, budgeting, data analysis, and most importantly, of idea sharing.
More than 2,000 – including an international delegation from FINN – gathered this year at the Destinations International Annual Convention to: dig into the current challenges facing destination marketers; celebrate the most strategic, innovative forward-looking solutions; and explore the complex interplay between tourism organizations, private sector partners, and consumers’ travel booking behaviors.
Four themes permeated the conversation:
1. Advocacy drives investment.
This topic is one of the core themes in the Destinations International landmark research DestinationNEXT Futures Study, an initiative funded by the Destination Foundation which aims to serve as essential guidance for leaders to strategically adapt and thrive.
It comes as no surprise that during times of uncertainty and unrest, investment sources are a hot topic, and according to the Futures Study, 42% of destination organizations foresee funding risks within three years.
The most consistent discussion across sessions reiterated the importance of destination organizations diversifying their funding sources to ensure if one source disappears, there are still others available. The Convention saw many themes within this overarching theme:
- Bolster community engagement. The input of the local community is critical, and worth the time and resources to recruit and compile. Community voices –
spanning private sector businesses to residents – can be powerful advocates when it comes to policy-making. - Curate relationships with local officials. They’re the ones making the policy decisions.
- Develop sustainably (in all senses of the word). Protect your land, and the culture of the people who live there. Level out visitation peaks and valleys with robust offerings in what is typically considered off-season to avoid overcrowding. Engage the community around decisions around environmental impact, keeping in mind that the majority of travelers are thinking about their environmental footprint. Build and market for a sustainable visitor economy that delivers long-term positive impact on the community.
- Paint a complete picture. Champion the tourism industry by showcasing economic impact and growth potential, along with community support.
2. Events matter, and Sports Tourism is here to stay.
In-market activations and events engage local communities (see #1!), and also drive overnight bookings in a big way.
According to Sports Events Tourism Association, spectator sports generated $47.1 billion in direct spending last year. This number does not include spending around amateur or youth sports, which in 2023 generated another $52.2 billion in direct spending. Meanwhile, according to the American Express 2025 Global Travel Trends Report, 60% of respondents planned to travel for events or sporting events this year.
The economic impact of sports tourism is significant. In September, the NFL will play its first-ever game in Dublin. Ireland anticipates the arrival of approximately 30,000 international visitors, generating over €60 million for the Irish economy, and an additional €20 million for the treasury.
Similarly, Expedia shared data around YoY search trends for the cities that hosted Club World Cup matches this summer. For the group play round which ran in June, host cities saw a 3.3x increase in QoQ search. There was similar lift around the quarter and semi final rounds, and a 4.3x increase for the final rounds in the NY area.
3. There is growing awareness around the importance of elevating Indigenous tourism, equitably.
An increasing number of destinations are cultivating relationships with inclusive engagement at the forefront. Meet Minneapolis’ Native American Tourism Strategy and Explore Edmonton’s mâmawokamâtowin (Walking Forward Together) initiative were exceptional case studies. There was conversation around storytelling, land-based programs, land acknowledgments with true meaning, and Indigenous art. Most significantly, multiple sessions addressed the importance of authentic partnerships rooted in learning, amplifying (not editing), and collaborative product development rooted in Indigenous values.
4. Generative AI meets authenticity.
Travel is driven by curiosity and emotional connection – to places and people. Tourism is at the crossroads here, with the potential to leverage data to create customized digital experiences that bring people closer to the places they’re passionate about. For development, management or marketing organizations without their own direct booking mechanism, it is increasingly important to deliver sophisticated interactive digital experiences that celebrate travelers’ reliance on AI in the planning process while opening the door for authentic local connections.
So, what is the red thread?
This industry brings people together all over the world, through exploration, education, and emotion, and this connection is precious.
We’ve got our work cut out for us.
Rec Sports
Registration Open for 2025 Fall Youth Pickleball in Atascadero • Atascadero News
ATASCADERO — Atascadero Recreation is inviting young athletes to join the 2025 Fall Youth Pickleball program, offering kids the chance to learn one of the fastest-growing sports in the country. Pickleball blends elements of tennis, badminton, and table tennis, making it accessible, fun, and a great way to stay active. Students will learn fundamental skills, […]

ATASCADERO — Atascadero Recreation is inviting young athletes to join the 2025 Fall Youth Pickleball program, offering kids the chance to learn one of the fastest-growing sports in the country.
Pickleball blends elements of tennis, badminton, and table tennis, making it accessible, fun, and a great way to stay active. Students will learn fundamental skills, strategies, and game knowledge in a supportive environment.
Class Details:
advertisement
- Grades: 5th/6th & 7th/8th
- Location: Colony Park Community Center Gym, 5599 Traffic Way
- Schedule: Mondays & Wednesdays, Oct. 6 – Oct. 29
• 7th/8th grade: 5 to 6 p.m.
• 5th/6th grade: 6 to 7 p.m. - Cost: $64 (Residents) / $75 (Non-Residents)
Paddles are provided, but players may bring their own. Participants should wear comfortable athletic attire.
Registration closes September 26. Don’t miss out on the fun — sign up today!
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