Rec Sports
What kid athletes can learn from story of Don Mattingly
Sixteen-year-old Don Mattingly watched on television as the Philadelphia 76ers’ Darryl Dawkins and the Portland Trail Blazers’ Bob Gross clawed for a rebound during Game 2 of the 1977 NBA Finals.
The 6-foot-11, 250-pound Dawkins used his sizeable height and weight advantage to muscle the ball from Gross and fling him to the floor.
Gross bounced up, and Dawkins swung at him. He punched his Philadelphia teammate Doug Collins instead. Then, as Dawkins backpedaled away from the scrum, the Blazers’ Maurice Lucas clocked the center from behind.
“Somebody do something!” broadcaster Brent Musberger yelled.
Everyone on either side, as well as fans, appeared to be involved, until Mattingly saw TV cameras capture the Sixers’ Julius Erving. Dr. J was sitting on the floor, observing everything from afar, not getting involved.
His almost serene manner at that moment, which potentially could have been one of the most tense of his career, stuck with the boy from Evansville, Indiana.
“There’s times when the game’s going fast and things are going bad,” Mattingly said in a 2007 interview. “You gotta be able to keep your sense about you and just stay focused and calm down, get quiet. Instead of having to get all emotional about it, you can stay calm and it’s easier to get through things like that.”
The cool of “Donnie Baseball,” as he became known as the most beloved New York Yankee of a generation and widely respected along his journey that continues in Toronto, has been unmistakable.
You could see it when he first became a professional more than 45 years ago.
“I could tell he was raised right,” recalled Buck Showalter, an early minor league teammate who went on to manage Mattingly with the Yankees. “Many times you’re at the mercy of the mothers and fathers of the world because by the time you get somebody at this level, they’ve pretty much formulated the way they’re gonna treat people.
“You look at their ability, but you also would like to spend a little time with the mom and dad. He was always gonna keep a grip on reality. And I think that’s why New York liked him. It came across every time he opened his mouth.”

Here’s what young athletes can learn from Mattingly, 64, and his patience through the ups and downs of a standout yet gut-wrenching career that has finally landed him in the World Series as Blue Jays bench coach:
As we get better, we don’t have to change what makes us a good person, player or teammate
This year’s World Series began in Toronto, where 30 years ago this month, Mattingly went down to his knee near first base and pounded the turf. The Yankees had just beaten the Blue Jays on the final day of the 1995 regular season, securing the first postseason berth of his 14-year major league career.
“I still remember that like it was yesterday,” David Cone, the former All-Star pitcher and a Yankees teammate of Mattingly that year, would recall decades later, “that emotion on his face, how much that meant to him. …
“The way he prepared, the way he talked to the young players, the way he kind of led by example, he was sort of like the guy everybody looked to in the clubhouse. Every day, you’d look at his locker, watch him get ready for a game, and just the look in his eyes and how professional he was to me was just remarkable.”

Showalter, the Yankees manager from 1992-1995, has observed how jealousy often permeates players pitted against one another in their quest to make the team, or a better team or league. But even in competing with him for time at first base as a player, Showalter could only respect Mattingly. It was impossible to dislike him.
“People trusted talking to him because he just had a pure heart about everything,” Showalter says. “There wasn’t some agenda.
“Donnie didn’t change a bit. He didn’t need to. And I think players fed off that persona. He was just, ‘What’s best for the club?’ Well, our minor league team needs us to play this exhibition game, shut up and go play the game. It was, ‘Yep, we’re getting ready for a championship season. Get on the bus.’ ”
When you watched how his teammates congregated around Mattingly in 1995, you realized the moment wouldn’t have meant anything to him unless he could share it with them.
If you were a Yankees fan in 1995, you still remember the close of that season like it was yesterday. If you were a Yankee, you remember how Mattingly handled its crushing end.
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The picture of our lives is larger than what we accomplish on the field
Mattingly made his case as the top player in the game from the mid-to-late 1980s. He appeared at the top of the Elias Sports Bureau’s statistical rankings, while a New York Times player poll in 1986 rated him as the best among them.
That season, he hit .352 and led the American League with 238 hits, while the year before, at 24, he had 145 RBIs and won AL MVP.
There was a rare level of intensity about Mattingly as he worked between games. It didn’t matter if he had three hits the day before off a tough lefty. He’d still be out there the next day with a batting tee and a bucket of balls, by himself with sweat pouring off of him.
It was a scene Butch Wynegar, Mattingly’s Yankees teammate from 1983 to 1986, recalled years later, after Wynegar had become a coach and talent evaluator in the organization.
“‘You’re hitting .350,’ ” Wynegar recalls saying. “He goes, ‘Yeah, but if I can find just one little thing I’m trying to feel’ … Man, what an admiration I had just because of that.”
Mattingly’s back eventually began to wear down from the rigors of his routine. He couldn’t drive the ball with his left-handed swing as explosively by the early 1990s, and his stats suffered.
Finally, around 1995, he found a routine with his back where he could remain relatively healthy, he told Dan Patrick this week.
He batted .321 over the final month of the ’95 season, as the Yankees closed with a 22-6 record, then .417 with a .708 slugging percentage in his five career postseason games.
To Yankees fans, the series was an excruciating five-game loss to the Mariners after winning the first two in New York. To Mattingly, the end was, too, but being in the midst of it all was so much fun: the back-and-forth, the electric playoff atmosphere, the discovery that he belonged in it.
He flew home to New York sad, but walked the aisle of the plane to tell his teammates how appreciative he was.
“He thanked everybody when we all were down in the dumps,” Cone recalled. “He was so gracious and just a class act all the way.
“He waited so long to have that experience and he saw the extra intensity level in the postseason and came through. That shows you what kind of man he is: just that one little taste was enough.”
The players weren’t entirely sure he was about to stop playing but this seemed like the end. It was really just a beginning.
If you love a sport, it really never leaves you
Mattingly missed the start of the next Yankees dynasty, and four World Series titles, to step away and be with his three school-aged sons at his home in Evansville.
He wanted to be present, to have the face-to-face conversations with his kids, about sports or otherwise, we sometimes take for granted.
It was painful to miss out in New York but he says the decision wasn’t hard.
“A lot of people say, ‘Oh, your back …’ ” he told me in 2007. “It was all about my family. I wanted – and not needed – wanted to be there. And I could feel it the year before – when you’re on the road, the kids are getting old enough where they’re in Little League and you’re wanting to be at games and wonder what’s happening and it seems like they weren’t coming to New York as much ’cause they were playing in the summer.
“I look back and don’t have any regrets at all because, again, things you do for your family and kids are years I would never have gotten back.”
After about nine years, his son, Preston, was one of the ones who told him he needed to return to baseball. It’s a part of who he is.
YOUTH SPORTS SURVIVAL GUIDE: Pre-order Coach Steve’s upcoming book for young athletes and their parents
Our playing career can propel us – and other people – forward, long after it ends
I came upon Mattingly in the spring of 2007, in the batting cages at the Yankees’ spring training stadium in Tampa, Florida.
He was in his fourth season on Joe Torre’s coaching staff, and was placing a baseball on a tee for a young player.
“That’s it – that’s the spot,” Mattingly said as the player connected solidly.
Perhaps you could hear a little bit of the spirit of Bill and Mary Mattingly, Don’s parents, in his voice.
“I always get emotional when I talk about my dad because he just showed up,” Mattingly said, his voice getting choked up during a 2022 MLB Network documentary about his life. “My mom and dad (would) come to every game that I played, and my brothers played, and I don’t ever remember getting criticized by my dad for a game, for a bad play. But nothing on the other side, either. So it was never like, ‘Hey, you were really good today.’
“It was really more just they were there, and I had zero fear of screwing up because I never got criticized. Really, that lack of fear of screwing up allows you to just grow and get better, take chances, not be afraid to make a mistake. It doesn’t work, learn from it and move on.”
Preston, who played in the minor leagues and is now the Philadelphia Phillies general manager, says his dad never pushed him to do anything. He let his son carve his own path.
Torre compared Mattingly at work with players to a doctor with a good bedside manner.
“Sometimes a lot of superstars show up and say, ‘Well here I am,’ ” Torre recalled. “Not necessarily saying it, but you can see it. Donnie was a superstar but he didn’t know it. He’d just come in there and roll up his sleeves and did a lot of work.”
As a coach and parent, we can get better with time
Torre became Dodgers manager in 2008, and Mattingly joined his staff.
“The good thing as a coach is that you almost get better with time,” Mattingly told me that year. “You don’t get worse. As a player, you know your clock’s running, you’re gonna start deteriorating, your skills.
“The more things I deal with in life, the more things I see on the field, the more situations that come up, the more I watch Joe deal with this situation, that situation, the more I learn, the better I am prepared if I ever get a chance to make those kind of decisions and have that influence.”
When Torre retired, Mattingly took over managing the team from 2011 to 2015 and went 446-363 with three National League West titles.
He won NL Manager of the Year with the Marlins in 2020. He did an interview with MLB Network after he won with his fourth son, Louie, who is now 10, sitting on his lap.
As a coach, and a father, it’s all about your players.
“Your true success is guys are having success,” he said in the 2022 documentary as he managed Miami. “You want guys to develop, to be the best players they can be. That’s really what I’m after.”
As he did his round of interviews this week, Mattingly was asked by Patrick what was going through his mind when Toronto trailed Seattle in Game 7 of the ALCS.
“Trust,” he told Patrick.
The Blue Jays, he said, had fun being around one another all season and played well as a team. He knew they could win.
There was a quiet confidence in his words, kind of like what he once saw in Dr. J.
Steve Borelli, aka Coach Steve, has been an editor and writer with USA TODAY since 1999. He spent 10 years coaching his two sons’ baseball and basketball teams. He and his wife, Colleen, are now sports parents for two high schoolers. His column is posted weekly. For his past columns, click here.
Have a question for Coach Steve you want answered in a column? Email him at sborelli@usatoday.com
Rec Sports
Interim President: AAL Has No Plans To Change Mission

The Acreage Athletic League has been around for more than three decades and will continue its youth sports mission with or without the support of the Indian Trail Improvement District, AAL Interim President Tim Opfer told the Town-Crier.
“Whether we do it at Acreage parks, we’re going to do it anyway,” Opfer said recently. “We’ll find a place to play… [but] I hope it doesn’t come to that.”
The ITID Board of Supervisors oversees the local park system in the Acreage/Loxahatchee area, including Acreage Community Park North and South.
“I think [Opfer] has good intentions,” ITID Supervisor Richard Vassalotti said. “I hope there’s a change in direction, but there are a lot of people who are very, very unhappy.”
For a number of years, the AAL held a service provider agreement with ITID, giving it near exclusive use of the parks. However, after months of controversy, the supervisors voted in February to extend to the AAL a one-year “nonprofit athletic user agreement,” giving its teams first priority for field space while making room for other organizations, such as the Breakthru Athletic League.
“I’m glad we’re at a place where, for the most part, everyone is fairly comfortable,” ITID President Elizabeth Accomando said at the time. “Residents and parents will no longer be coming to us. This separates us from that.”
Behind the scenes, though, tension simmered between coaches, parents, players and the executive board, which often was accused of incompetence and a lack of transparency.
Now, at least one sport — Acreage Adult Softball — served notice to the supervisors at a Dec. 10 meeting that it intends to break away from the AAL.
Acreage Adult Softball President Elizabeth McGoldrick told the supervisors that there is a “lack of structure on the executive board” and that the AAL “provides no support” to her 18-and-older co-ed league, despite keeping control over the league’s bank account.
Her softball league has “a great board, and we have it down to a science,” McGoldrick said later. “We kept reaching out to the [AAL] board, and we kept getting crickets.”
The softball league’s decision to separate from the AAL is not a surprise, Opfer said. “They’ve been wanting to do it for a long time,” he said.
The time is now, McGoldrick said. “We’re in the process of making the change,” she said.
That includes starting a spring schedule that will begin play in late January or early February to go along with the league’s usual fall schedule.
The AAL began in 1993 with a group of parents wanting to bring organized sports into the unincorporated, semi-rural enclave. With the guidance of the Acreage Landowners’ Association, the first AAL Executive Board of Directors was formed to oversee activities for some 200 young players, and the league incorporated in 1995.
Today, the AAL web site says that there are 2,000 registered players participating in tackle football, co-ed flag football, Acreage Elite flag and girls flag, baseball, basketball soccer and softball.
However, instability and in-fighting have plagued the AAL’s executive board in recent years. When Carlos Castillo was pressured to resign as AAL president in November 2022, Wendy Tirado, a board member since 2016, was named acting president and later elected to the position by the board.
Tirado resigned over the summer, and Opfer, the league’s technology specialist, stepped in to fill the void. Three executive board positions remain open.
In November, Ruben Paulo Tirado, a former coach at Seminole Ridge High School and with the AAL, was arrested on charges of lewd and lascivious battery and soliciting sexual conduct by an authority figure. Ruben Tirado, allegedly Wendy Tirado’s son, has pleaded not guilty.
The AAL “has hit a lot of speed bumps… and they hit a pretty big speed bump in November,” said ITID Supervisor Patricia Farrell, adding that she believed the arrest has had an impact across the district. “Parents are concerned.”
So are players, McGoldrick said. “It shouldn’t affect our [softball] league, but sadly it is. People see us as connected to the AAL.”
Opfer is quick to point out that the enhanced sexual offender notification system used by the league worked as it is supposed to.
“We were notified right away,” said Opfer, adding there is no indication of an issue related to Ruben Tirado’s time with the AAL, and ITID officials said there is no evidence of improper conduct on district property.
Still, it’s another jab to an organization that has taken its share of punches over the last few years, and it has put the supervisors back in the uncomfortable position of dealing with more AAL issues.
“We’ve spent so much time and energy on all this sports stuff,” Accomando said recently. “I know it’s important to a lot of people, but it shouldn’t be the focus of so many of our meetings… Giving permits for field space is all [the district] should be doing.”
Opfer said he understands that the AAL needs to make systemic changes, such as seeking more representation on the executive board from sports such as basketball, and delivering more transparency about the inner workings of the board. Part of that is an overhaul of the league’s “infrastructure” — it’s web site and e-mail communications.
More than that, Opfer said he hopes to rebuild the strained and sometimes broken relationships created when an AAL flag football faction broke away to form Breakthru in 2022. Breakthru has since become the AAL’s biggest rival for flag football talent.
Opfer said he’d like to see cross-league play or perhaps tournaments between AAL and Breakthru teams.
“I know there are still hard feelings on both sides,” said Opfer, but he noted that his daughter plays in the Breakthru league. “Both leagues have some challenges. It’s time we put our egos aside and build those relationships back.”
Rec Sports
Williams leading Lakeview wrestling through first year | News, Sports, Jobs
Staff file photo / Preston Byers
Lakeview head wrestling coach Ryan Williams celebrates a pinfall victory during the Bulldogs’ home meet vs. Leetonia and Austintown Fitch’s B team in Cortland on Dec. 17.
When Ryan Williams stepped down as the Liberty head wrestling coach in 2024, he admitted that it was not for a lack of passion for the sport, but rather a time commitment he could no longer make while raising young children.
A year later, things had changed somewhat.
“My wife finally gave me the green light,” Williams said. “She made me take that year off because of the kids, and she saw that I was miserable.”
His wife’s only condition for Williams to return to the sport, he said, was that it had to be close to their home in Cortland. So he got to work.
Lakeview, like many schools in the area, did not have a wrestling program, which Williams suggested should change. He said that he initially met with the principal and athletic director, who warned him that the district would not provide any funding to a team if he created one.
Undeterred, Williams agreed and quickly decided that he did not want to wait around as things worked their way up the chain of command.
“They said, ‘Yeah, well, then we’ll meet with the superintendent, see what kind of progress you make over the next couple months.’ I was impatient. I didn’t let it go a couple months. So I secured a mat and uniforms the same day I talked to the AD and principal,” Williams.
By mid-April, a little over a month after receiving the go-ahead from his wife, Williams got the meeting that he wanted.
“I just kept telling them to get me in front of the superintendent,” Williams said. “She was very hesitant at first, but I don’t think she fully realized at the very beginning that I wasn’t asking for money for coaches’ contracts; we’d completely fund it. She’s like, ‘Well, yeah, go ahead.’”
With the wrestling club and its donors covering bussing, uniforms and just about everything else, what Lakeview provided was its approval and a place to practice; Williams said they are currently in the high school cafeteria. They had been looking at a specific classroom to move into, he said, but that plan might already be no good.
“Since our match against Liberty, I’ve had nine new kids show up. So it just keeps growing, and now I’m starting to wonder, I don’t think the room is going to be big enough. We might have to stay in the cafeteria,” Williams said.
These are definitely good problems to have for the nascent wrestling club, which is sanctioned by the Ohio High School Athletic Association (OHSAA) but technically not one of the school’s varsity sports.
Williams said that he had initially considered starting at the youth level to build the Lakeview wrestling program from the foundation, but the buzz around the community, he said, made him decide to pull the trigger on starting youth, middle school and high school boys and girls teams all at once.
“So far, it hasn’t backfired,” Williams said.
When he started out, Williams hoped he could get about 50 kids to join the programs. But four months since the first fundraiser, 90 have come aboard, he said, with many from nearby Scrapyard Wrestling Club.
Williams credited the reach of social media, particularly Facebook, and the support of Lakeview head football coach Ron DeJulio Jr. for the rapid growth of wrestling in the area.
“That goes a long way,” Williams said. “Anytime the head football coach backs a wrestling program, it benefits both programs. … He realizes we’re a smaller school district and we have to share athletes.”
On Dec. 17, the Bulldogs hosted their first home meet vs. Leetonia and Austintown Fitch’s B team, two very different squads.
Fitch, one of the largest and best wrestling programs in the area, dominated the competition despite bringing none of their best talent. Leetonia, on the other hand, had fewer than a half-dozen wrestlers to compete with the expansive Lakeview and Fitch rosters.
Still, Williams said then that the experience was a good one, and that his wrestlers could see up close what they could potentially become with time. The meet also served as a valuable experience for those not on the mat, such as the scoreboard operators and fans in attendance, many of whom are new to the sport entirely.
“I guess the biggest difference is nobody here knows anything about it as far as what to expect on match day or tournament day,” Williams said. “So it’s kind of like my phone rings off the hook answering questions leading up to events. But there’s a ton of parent involvement.”
Williams’ ambition has not only been supported by those in the community, but Fitch head wrestling coach John Burd also made it clear that he hopes to see the Bulldogs and his friend succeed.
“They’re doing an excellent job building it from the ground up,” Burd said. “… Hats off to Ryan, he’s getting a lot of good people around him, getting support from their administration. I know their athletic department, principal, staff, all of them have been behind him, helping him and supporting him along the way.”
While many of the Bulldogs are effectively pups when it comes to wrestling, Williams said two of his wrestlers have been standouts so far this season.
“Aurora Hall, I have full confidence that she’s going to make a run to the podium at state,” Williams said. “Dustin Corbett, he’s got some prior experience from where he lived prior – he came from Greenville – but he hasn’t wrestled in four years. But he’s wrestling lights out.”
Either Hall or Corbett having success this season, especially in February and March, could prove to be massive for the Lakeview program as Williams tries to keep interest in his club high through the inevitable growing pains.
“[I want to] get them hooked, maintain the numbers, keep them excited,” Williams said. “It’s been challenging, you know, because you go into most matches expecting to lose, right? Everybody has way more experience than us, but they go out there and battle, and they’re trying to win and not just cowering down.
“They show up the next day. They’re excited. They want to learn where they can improve. This group of kids, especially, has been awesome.”
Rec Sports
Young entrepreneur marks milestone with donation to Angels for Animals | News, Sports, Jobs
Ellie Kaley, 7, shares some of the supplies she donated to Angels For Animals from her Ellie’s Glitter Lab proceeds. Kaley also donated a $100 check that will be doubled as part of a current campaign by one of Angels’ volunteers towards facility upgrades. (Photo by Stephanie Ujhelyi)
The Mahoning County-based non-profit is in midst of a campaign to upgrade celebrated marking her first six months in business with plenty of kittens.
While Ellie didn’t walk away Monday afternoon with a kitten, she and her mother Renee came to Angels’ headquarters with a $100 check, which will be matched as part of a current campaign, as well as a variety of supplies, ranging from paper towels and window cleaner as well as Temptations’ cat treats and peanut butter to be inserted in the dogs’ Kong toys.
While most kids that are Ellie’s age are playing video games and with fashion dolls, she started her business Ellie’s Glitter Lab in July and has spent the last six months selling glitter hair and face gel through the area at cheerleading competitions and craft shows.
With her mom acting as her business adviser, Ellie shared some of the things that she has used so far in 2025 about business, including selling its not as much about making money as it is making people happy.

Clockwise from left, Ellie Kaley visits with kitties in the Cat Tree Room of Angels For Animals on Monday after making a donation on behalf of her business, Ellie’s Glitter Lab, as mom Renee Kaley and Sherry Bankey, Angels’ feline manager, accompany her. (Photo by Stephanie Ujhelyi)
Early on Ellie had struck a deal with her parents that after six months that she could spend some of her money on a cause that she was passionate about.
Ellie explained that is where Angels For Animals had came into the picture. Years ago, the Kaley family had come to Canfield in search of a new furry friend after one of their dogs had passed.
They pondered adopting a cat named Winston, who shared the same name as their dearly departed. However, they quickly discovered a cat allergy made that an impossibility.
In addition to her regular favorites in her product line, Ellie’s introduction of specially themed lines like for Halloween and Christmas have proved popular, resulting in a lot of return customers as well as copycats.
She also does custom combinations based on school colors.
In addition to her Angels’ donation, Ellie has been able to spend some money on herself. While kittens and puppies are some of her favorite things, her bedroom also got a facelift that would be Elle Woods approved.
After her parents bought her a new loft bed and vanity, they upcycled it.
The decor, which is all pink and Ellie — not Elle — approved is all courtesy of her money. She even included a reading corner and makeup spot in her room.
Her commitment to her business seems to holding strong, as mom says that Ellie’s Glitter Lab looks to reinvest in the company and possibly expand to include a new line of hair bows.
For information on Ellie’s Glitter Lab, visit her Facebook page or call 330-550-4741.
Rec Sports
‘Christmas tradition’ welcomes more than 170 area children | News, Sports, Jobs
PHOTO BY RUBY F. MCALLISTER —
Rev. Mark Keefer of Traer United Methodist Church, right, visits with a youngster during Kids Shopping Day on Saturday, Dec. 13, at Peace Church in Gladbrook.
GLADBROOK — For the second year running, Gladbrook’s beloved Kids Shopping Day took place amid a significant winter storm. But not even intense snowfall and cold temperatures could stop more than 170 children from attending (with their caregivers) the 13th annual event held on Saturday, Dec. 13, 2025, at Peace United Church of Christ in order to pick out gifts for their loved ones this Christmas season.
While attendance (171) this year was down slightly from years past, organizer Jeanne Paustian, who chairs Kids Shopping Day as a member of the Gladbrook American Legion Auxiliary Children & Youth Committee, said everything went well.
“I was happy so many (still) came. But I know if we have it, parents or grandparents are going to get them here.”
Kids Shopping Day has grown tremendously since it first began back in 2011 but still manages to remain true to the original intent – allowing children to more fully experience the joy that caring for others brings. The idea behind that very first Kids Shopping Day originated with now-retired Gladbrook kindergarten teacher Becky Fish, Paustian said.
“She came and asked me one day if I thought Gladbrook would support a Christmas store where kids could shop for their loved ones – no parent help and at no cost. And I said, well, I think we could do that. It was all Becky’s idea.”
In the early years, the event was held at the Gladbrook Memorial Building before quickly outgrowing the space. Today, Kids Shopping Day takes place over practically the entire two floors of Peace Church, including in the sanctuary where caregivers wait for their children as they “shop” downstairs. Without parental help, it requires an army of volunteers to orchestrate the event each year.
“We have a lot of different volunteers to help the children, including high school students – the little ones love going with them to shop. It takes about 82 people to make it all work,” Paustian said.
In addition to members of the Gladbrook Legion Auxiliary, Paustian receives volunteers and/or donations from almost all the area churches and organizations, including the Gladbrook Corn Carnival Corp., the Gladbrook Commercial Club, the Gladbrook Women’s Club, the Gladbrook Lions Club, the Legion, and many more.
“We wouldn’t stay afloat if we didn’t have all the organizations that supply volunteers and financial donations.”
It also takes roughly $3,500 a year to finance the massive endeavor despite about 75% of the items being donated outright. Cash donations are used to shore up tables.
“We always have to beef up toys and the men’s gifts. We [receive donations] all year long. As soon as Christmas is over, we’ll see stuff start coming in the door again.”
Following the shopping day, many of the leftover items are taken to Westbrook Acres for residents to shop for their own loved ones and for themselves, Paustian said.
“We’ll also take a few things that we know they like – such as puzzles – to Independent Living. We also make a donation to Trinkets & Togs [Thrift Store in Grundy Center].”
Trinket & Togs is part of the non-profit agency The Larrabee Center. All proceeds from Trinkets & Togs sales support services for persons with disabilities and the elderly.
Kids Shopping Day: 2025
Last Saturday, Dec. 13, as snow piled up on the sidewalk outside Peace Church’s south entrance, children were lined up down the street well ahead of Kids Shopping Day’s 9 a.m. start which kicked off with Paustian unlocking the church’s double doors. Once inside, attendees were greeted at the check-in table by volunteers Sherri Denbow and Becky Fevold who handed out gift lists and pencils.
After checking in, children proceeded upstairs to the sanctuary to deposit their coats (and their caregivers) before filling out their gift list with the names of family members for whom they would like to “shop.” Once their list was completed, they moved to the gift tag tables which were strewn with 100s of beautiful tags handmade by volunteers using discarded and/or past holiday cards.
From there, children ventured downstairs for the main event – shopping in the Christmas Store. At the entrance to the store’s large room, children were given a clipboard for their list plus a red or blue shopping basket. Preschoolers and kindergarteners received assistance from a volunteer as they perused the many tables. Once finished, children moved on to the wrapping stations – situated on the room’s periphery – where their selections were expertly prepared for gifting. They were then zoomed back upstairs (with their gifts) by elevator to a room located behind the chancel for a quick chat with the “People of Bethlehem.” This year’s cast featured Rev. Gideon Gallo of Gladbrook United Methodist Church, Rev. Mark Keefer of Traer United Methodist Church, Kay Lowry, Sue Storjohann, and Sierra Wiebensohn.
“Children can’t shop for themselves [at Kids Shopping Day], so they receive a nativity Christmas card and a nativity ornament (from the People of Bethlehem). They also tell them about the reason for the season,” Paustian explained.
Then it was time to find their caregivers in the sanctuary – or have a committee volunteer make a phone call – and head home with their bounty of carefully-curated gifts. This is the part Paustian said she loves the most as she hears about it later from parents and grandparents following the event.
“It’s really sweet – how they put them under their trees. They might rearrange them under the tree 100 times. They’re just so proud of their gifts. … It (really does) make you cry. I helped one little girl (on Saturday), she didn’t say one word to me. But she was so proud.”
And while the event takes place in the heart of Gladbrook, Paustian said children from far beyond the local community attend. On Saturday, there were children present from throughout Tama County as well as Reinbeck – including Gladbrook-Reinbeck Superintendent Caleb Bonjour’s children – and even Marshalltown.
But no matter how big it gets, Paustian said the committee has no plans to stop.
“It is a Gladbrook Christmas tradition that we plan to continue for years to come.”
Mark your calendars now – and hope for better weather! – Gladbrook’s 14th annual Kids Shopping Day is set for Saturday, Dec. 12, 2026.
M E R R Y C H R I S T M A S !
Rec Sports
Arrest made in Petaluma vandalism of former Harlem Globetrotter’s vehicle
A 20-year-old Petaluma man has been arrested in connection with the racist vandalism left on the vehicle belonging to a well-known local youth basketball coach and former Harlem Globetrotter, police said.
The suspect, Corey Newman, was linked to the vandalism through surveillance video, police said. He was arrested Wednesday during a traffic stop and taken into custody without incident.
He was booked into Sonoma County jail on suspicion of vandalism for defacing property and commission of a hate crime, police said.
The arrest marks a breakthrough in an incident that drew widespread condemnation after the coach, William Bullard, who is Black, posted on social media about the vandalism of his vehicle, which included racist slurs and swastikas scrawled in the dust on his SUV.
He also shared his account with The Press Democrat.
The vehicle was parked in a downtown Petaluma garage near Bullard’s apartment from Dec. 1 through Dec. 9, and was defaced at some point during that time.
Bullard, who noted the garage surveillance cameras in his social media posts about the incident, contacted police.
After reviewing more than a week of surveillance footage, officers identified Newman as the person believed responsible for the vandalism.
Bullard, who has lived in Petaluma for about five years, said the vandalism left him concerned about his safety.
“It is tough to deal with being a minority here in Sonoma County, where it is 1-2% Black,” Bullard previously told The Press Democrat. “With my impact within the community, to walk outside to your car and see that is really tough.”
Police, in their press release on the arrest, noted the media coverage and attention the attack had drawn through social media.
The department said it takes all hate-related incidents seriously and remains committed to thorough and impartial investigations, noting that crimes motivated by bias affect not only those directly targeted but the broader community.
You can reach Staff Writer Isabel Beer at isabel.beer@pressdemocrat.com. On Twitter @IsabelSongbeer
Rec Sports
Area basketball teams clash at Lewiston Auto Holiday Classic
WINONA, Minn. (KTTC) – In the wake of Christmas day, area basketball teams took their talents to Winona State University for the Lewiston Auto Holiday Basketball. The annual tournament features 27 games over four days of basketball. Day one was Friday.
Results from Day One:
- Chatfield beats Arcadia (WI), 59-57 (Girls Basketball)
- Chatfield beats Richland Center (WI), 58-41 (Boys Basketball) *
- Lake City beats Waseca, 60-24 (Girls Basketball) *
- Cotter beats Lake City, 81-74 (Boys Basketball) *
- Goodhue beats Winona, 88-72 (Boys Basketball)
All games are in McCown Gymnasium. The tournament continues tomorrow.
* = Watch highlights above
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