• Login
  • |
  • Sign Up
  • |
  • Email
  • Facebook
  • Instagram
  • Twitter
  • YouTube
Team Up 4 Community

Promoting Social Responsibility & Community Giveback through Athletics

  • Home
  • Community Map
  • Events
  • Activities
  • Resources
  • News
  • Get Involved!
  • About Us
  • Donate
  • Work With Us

Three cheers for the cheerleaders

January 3, 2017 By Team Up 4 Community

Locust Valley Middle School cheerleaders shared their holiday spirit and high energy with the residents of two Glen Cove rehabilitation centers. The team performed for the patients and brought them cards and gifts.
Residents at the Marquis Rehabilitation and Nursing Center and the Glen Cove Center for Nursing and Rehabilitation enjoyed the cheers, dancing and holiday sing-along. They were also grateful for the holiday surprises. The cheerleaders created handmade cards and brought eyeglass cases that were made by the sixth-grade Home and Careers class.

Cheerleading coach Doreen Kobus said the team loves to visit the rehabilitation centers to bring holiday happiness to those who can’t be home with their families.

Photo Caption: The Locust Valley Middle School cheerleaders spread cheer throughout the community this holiday season.

Photo courtesy of the LVCSD

Sports teams create holiday magic

December 30, 2016 By Team Up 4 Community

Photo Caption: The Westhampton Beach High School boys varsity lacrosse and girls varsity basketball teams made the holiday wishes of 30 children come true as part of the nonprofit Christmas Magic program. The student-athletes, with the assistance of coach Drew Peters, spent over 10 hours shopping, organizing and wrapping gifts for those in need. The student-athletes also helped Santa hand out the gifts during an annual party in Center Moriches.

Photos courtesy of the Westhampton Beach School District

Athletes’ toy drive benefits cancer center

December 29, 2016 By Team Up 4 Community

The East Rockaway School District’s boys and girls basketball teams sponsored a toy drive at their respective games to benefit Gregg’s Wings, a charity that supports the Cancer Center for Kids at Winthrop University Hospital.
The boys games were held on Dec. 17 against Mineola and the girls competed against Oyster Bay on Dec. 22. The competing high schools teams also participated in the fundraiser bringing toys to donate to this worthy cause.
Gregg’s Wings is a charity that was founded by the family of Gregg Kienke, whose life was taken by cancer only weeks after he was born. The family wanted to find a way to create an enduring legacy for him and help other children battling this life-threatening disease. They decided to form a foundation to honor the doctors and enrich the Cancer Center’s mission of hope and healing.

Photo Caption:
1. Members of East Rockaway’s girls basketball program are pictured with athletes from Oyster Bay High School.

Photos courtesy of the East Rockaway School District

Spreading Smiles, One Friday at a Time

December 27, 2016 By Team Up 4 Community

MADISON, Wis. — This past Friday, students across campus were spending the day preparing for final exams. Some student-athletes, however, took a break from their busy practice and study schedules to visit kids at the American Family Children’s Hospital.

This visit to the hospital was not a unique occurrence. Student-athletes from various teams have made a special trip to the hospital every Friday throughout the semester. While at the hospital, student-athletes go room to room, sharing smiles and gifts such as autographed posters, t-shirts, board games and teddy bears.

“The visits to the children’s hospital are a favorite among our student-athletes,” said Jackie Davenport, Director of Community Relations for UW Athletics. “It’s a great opportunity for student-athletes to promote our mission of enriching lives by encouraging, engaging and serving others.”

These visits — coined “Badger Fridays” — began as a tradition with the football team over 15 years ago, when UW Director of Athletics Barry Alvarez was still the head coach. Football players — like Olive Sagapolu, Chris Orr and Keelon Brookins (pictured above, 2016) — would make a special visit to the children’s hospital as part of their Friday pre-game ritual. While the football team’s tradition is still ongoing, it has expanded to involve all the sports teams at UW-Madison.

“The weekly Badger Friday visits from the student-athletes are really appreciated by the patients and families. Many patients look forward to meeting student-athletes from many different teams at UW-Madison,” said Julie Auenson, Child Life Services Manager for the American Family Children’s Hospital. “Some patients even get decked out in their Badger gear before the visit to make those photos with the student-athletes extra special to share with their families.”

While these Badger Friday visits are very meaningful to the patients and families who meet the student-athletes, the visits also have a huge impact on the student-athletes who visit.

“It’s priceless to see the massive grin on some of the kids’ faces when we walk into the room,” said Kelsey Grambeau, a junior on the women’s tennis team. “I am constantly inspired by their strength and positivity.”

Though the semester is soon to be over, Badger Friday visits will resume again in January, giving more opportunities for both student-athletes and patients to share smiles and brighten each other’s day.

Source: http://www.uwbadgers.com/news/2016/12/23/badgers-give-back-spreading-smiles-one-friday-at-a-time.aspx

Bearkats lend a helping hand

December 27, 2016 By Team Up 4 Community

Throughout the year, the Bearkats have been busy chasing conference regular-season championships and tournament titles.

As successful as they have been, the side many people don’t see of Sam Houston State’s student-athletes’ lives is their attention to community service.

Bearkat athletes from a variety of sports give back to the community throughout the year.

“Of all the 17 sports we have, every sport does this,” said Chris Thompson, Sam Houston State associate athletic director for student services. “That’s what cool to me. There are 425 athletes and one athlete from every sport that we have oversees our community service projects.

“Each team and coach does things monthly. There was a foundation that was set. The student-athletes are here in the Huntsville community. The people support those student-athletes in their athletic careers. In turn, the student-athletes like to give back. They’re representing the Huntsville community just as much as they’re representing Sam Houston State, their sport and their own family. There’s never a question. The athletes love to do this.”

For example, Bearkat student-athletes mentor at-risk schoolchildren or those in need of mentoring in the Bearkat Mentor program.

Another example is that the baseball team divides into groups and different groups will do community service in which they’ll go out and find their own projects.

The track and field team helps schools with antidrug programs.

The football team also works extensively with the Boys & Girls Club of Walker County.

The bowling team helps with a Special Olympics meet in Conroe.

“Every team does something that is just extremely special,” Thompson said. “What’s also neat is that the athletes will find community service projects and then just go do them. A lot of times, I don’t even know they’re doing them until after the fact.

“Over the years, it’s just kind of been built up and now they automatically do it. I don’t have to ask anybody to do this kind of stuff. That’s kind of cool to me.”

Additionally, the Houston Food Bank delivers food twice a year in Huntsville and Sam Houston State athletes help set up food stations and hand out the food.

Also, athletes from different sports play with the kids while families receive food.

An ongoing project that Sam Houston State athletes have been involved with is collecting pop tabs from soda cans. The money from those allows families to stay in the Houston Ronald McDonald House, which offers a home away from home to families with seriously ill children being treated in Texas Medical Center member institutions such as MD Anderson Cancer Center.

“Since 1997, we’ve collected pop tabs for the Ronald McDonald House and we average around 300 pounds a year,” Thompson said. “We go down to the Ronald McDonald House in Houston every year and bring that to them and meet the families and meet the kids and spend some time with them. The athletes will bring some jump rope or playground balls and jigsaw puzzles for the kids to play with. It’s neat because you’re helping those families who need some brightness in their lives. We’ve been doing that since 1997.”

The pop tab program was so successful and deemed so important that the Southland Conference adopted it as well and now all 12 institutions in the league participate in the program as part of one of the conference’s year-long drives. Central Arkansas’ collections benefit the Ronald McDonald House in Little Rock, Arkansas.

Last month, the Bearkats volleyball team completed a book drive with Huntsville Intermediate School and collected more than 300 books that were all donated to Huntsville Intermediate’s library.

“When we visited with (Sam Houston athletics promotions team member) Marissa Maas, who was on the volleyball team at LSU, we wanted to know what they did community service-wise,” head coach Brenda Gray said. “It was something we thought we could add. She offered to decorate the boxes and get the word out. My daughter, Tayler, was able to get her classes to get on board and our parents gave books as well. It was a great idea.”

The books were collected at home games throughout the season.

“I live in this town and my doctors are all in this town,” Gray said. “I have raised my family in this town. I think giving back to the community that has given me so much is huge. We help the animal shelter, the Good Shepherd Mission, and our list is endless. I think community service is huge.”

It isn’t just Huntsville kids who benefit from the Kats’ drive to serve.

Earlier in the summer, the Sam Houston men’s basketball team traveled to Costa Rica to play a few exhibition games before beginning their preseason workouts.

While the Kats were in Central America, they took the time to visit the Asociación obras del Espíritu Santo orphanage and spend time with orphans there.

While at the orphanage, the Bearkats would either play in nursing rooms with the kids or go out and try their hand at soccer.

“It made you really cherish what you have here because they really don’t have anything,” senior Dakarai Henderson said following the Bearkats’ first practice. “Just us being over there with them, you could tell that we brought a lot of happiness to them.”

“We didn’t even speak the same language as them, but we could see it on their faces,” Jamal Williams added.

“They’re not doing these things to be recognized. They’re doing it because it’s the right thing to do,” Thompson said. “It’s not about getting awards or taking pictures. It’s the right thing to do. They all agree. That’s what makes me the most proud because they know it’s just the right thing to do and they just do it.”

— — —

Follow The Huntsville Item Sports Team on Twitter @Item_Sports or on Facebook.

Source: http://www.itemonline.com/sports/bearkats-lend-a-helping-hand/article_ccb64825-2082-5aa9-9c99-e2fc0198e458.html

  • « Previous Page
  • 1
  • …
  • 128
  • 129
  • 130
  • 131
  • 132
  • …
  • 338
  • Next Page »

Recent News

  • Student-athlete Rangers ‘give back’ to local community
  • Lynbrook swimmers raise money for cancer research at Swim Across America event
  • Envirothon Club volunteers for Great Brookhaven Cleanup
  • Manetuck raises $2,900 for seal’s rehab and release
  • 4TH ANNUAL TEAM UP 4 COMMUNITY GOLF OUTING WITH SPONSOR KITCHEN KABARET
  • THIS YEAR IN GW ATHLETICS
  • East Islip’s Tri-M Honor Society raises $2,004 for food banks
  • More Than A Memory: Randolph High School 2017 Dig Pink
  • Levy Lakeside School honors students for service learning
  • Dutch Broadway donates thousands to help veterans

TU4C News Archives

Team Up 4 Community

Phone: (866) 206-9168
Fax: (631) 498-0886
Email: info@w20foundation.org

Powered By:

W20 Foundation

Interact

  • Home
  • Community Map
  • Events
  • Activities
  • Resources
  • News

Get Involved!

  • How It Works
  • Donate
  • Work With Us
  • Sign Up

About Us

  • About Us
  • From the Founder Steve Webb
  • The TU4C Ripple Effect
  • Research Supporting TU4C
  • Press and Media
  • Partners
  • FAQ
  • Contact Us
  • Privacy Policy & Terms of Service

WE ARE A RECOGNIZED 501(C)3 ORGANIZATION | © 2025 W20 FOUNDATION ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

  • Home
  • Community Map
  • Events
  • Activities
  • Resources
  • News
  • Get Involved!
  • About Us
  • Donate
  • Work With Us