Grown-ups Screw Up School Sports Again. And Again!

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WPCNR VIEW FROM THE UPPER DECK. By Fast Johnny. February 27, 2007: The latest high school sports fiasco was committed over the past weekend when five schools showed up for the Sectional Championships at West Point without registering for the event is more evidence that high school athletics is badly in need of more intelligence, compassion and creativity at the top. Two years ago it was failure to let the girls play in the County Center as part of the basketball championship due to county scheduling, this year it was the continuing deterioration of football officiating, and vicious unsportsmanlike play and spectator thug behavior in ice hockey. Now add to that lazy, negligent, inflexible management of a bookkeeping crisis. 



White Plains “K.K.” Gilmartin-Donahue after finishing first in November, 2006,  in the County Cross Country Championship.  K.K. i s one of the potential state champions denied a chance to run in this past weekends Section I State Qualifier meet at West Point because her coaches did not register her team in the meet.


 


To refresh your memory, White Plains, Mamaroneck, Nyack, Peekskill and Pelham arrived at the West Point Sectional qualifier meet over the weekend to compete for a berth in the state championships and found they were not registered. Meet officials said their athletes could not compete. Well, that’s not how to handle it, guys.


  


 Now we can see that no one at the Sectional level bothers to check registration lists before the Section I State Qualifier to see who is coming and who is not. If they did, 40 athletes would not be heartbroken this morning.


 


 This year, the geniuses running the track Championships did not check to see why five top schools with possible state champs have not registered for the event. This inability to manage a crisis on the fly compounded the irresponsibility of the coaches of five schools did not register for the event and just showed up with the kids in uniform who were denied by the meet officials the opportunities to run.


 


More glaring is the apparent inability of the Sectional Meet organizers to adjust on the fly and register the “walk-ons” on the spot. I do not want to hear that it is logistically impossible to do that “on the fly.” You register them on the spot and add more heats. There is so much wasted time at the West Point Qualifier anyway, that officials should have been able to adjust. The fact that they could not is absurd.


 


Let’s face facts: meet officials did not feel like it. They were too lazy and chose to tell kids you can’t run because you did not register. How easy for them to do that. How self-indulgent for the meet officials to do that. How utterly sanctimonious.


 


That’s not Championship in any way. 


 


How can you deny possible state champions like Kaylin Gilmartin-Donohue of White Plains the chance because their coaches did not do their job.


 


Coaches forgot to register. Others said they got confirmation, and the confirmation was apparently not sent.


 


You always register for meets. How come they did not?


 


But why did not some organizer of the meet note that five of the biggest schools with possible state champions on their track teams had not registered and called the schools to see what the problem was. A little thinking please? How about a phone call? One, maybe?


The excuse that they could not allow the surprise 40 athletes showing  to run is lame.


 I’ll tell you why.


 


Sending out a reminder to register as the Section I Girls Coordinator did the day before the meet is when you send out a reminder. How about a week before?


 


And if a team did register the day before the meet, the officials would have had to accommodate extra competitors anyway on 24 hours notice. The excuse that they could not allow the surprise 40 athletes shows they simply would not make the effort for the kids.


 


And what are high school sports about anyway. We are always told it is for the kids. Except when it is too much effort to accommodate the kids.


 


I think the Sectional Officials should be changed.


 


Why, because nobody used their brains at the Sectional management level and White Plains coaches were negligent, students went up to West Point and could not run. They staged a protest and now today it is reported the Section 1 Committee are going to look into “what led to the controversial protest” where a number of White Plains competitors blocked the track and delayed the meet.


 


Well, what lead to it was your bad management, Section 1 Committee. And no followup when you were using online registration for the first time? The White Plains Little League runs online registration but we always check and send persons reminders.


 


 


As far as registering online. This was the first time coaches had to do this. Shouldn’t you have double-checked everybody? Of course you should have.


 


How hard was it to register the athletes on the spot? Rework the heats? Apparently that takes more brains and logistics than the guys standing around with the starting pistols and the hand-held computers have.


 


Forget about the asinine quotes saying it would not be fair. It was not fair to deny the children a chance to run, jump, and compete. Though the Section reminded coaches at every meet this season to register for the Sectional, when you notice your registrations do not contain five schools with possible state contenders on their teams, why don’t you check?  


 


Five little phone calls was all it would take, but nobody thought to do that. What kind of due diligence is that?


 


And why in the world is a reminder sent by e-mail the day before the meet? How about two weeks before? How do you know how to staff the meet otherwise? It sounds like this whole meet is just winged by the sectional. This is a Sectional Management problem and a coaches problem that both sets of managers (Sectional and School District) dismissed and simply hung the kids out to dry.


 


 


WPCNR asked  White Plains Superintendent of Schools Timothy Connors if the school district was contemplating relieving the track coaches from their coaching positions,  for their negligence in failing to register the teams and costing seniors their chance for who knows what honors.


 


Connors said he was not fully familiar with the circumstances surrounding the White Plains coaches’ failure to register, and he would be looking into it.


 


WPCNR PIES-IN-THE FACE  go to the Sectional management team, the meet officials on the scene, and the lame coaches and their athletic directors who did not follow procedures and double check their own coaches.


 


I do not care if computer programming of devices to monitor the results could not accommodate changes in entries at the last minute. You had to make the adjustment this one time. The athletic spirit cannot be held hostage to inflexible technology and lazy meet officials.


 


I say give the athletes who were denied the chance to compete,  a pass to the State Championships if they wish. It is the only fair thing to do because the grown-ups screwed up.

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Post Road School Previewed. On Sked. On Budget: KG & D. Stadia Unveiled

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WPCNR SCHOOL DAYS. By John F. Bailey. February 27, 2007: The new  Post Road School design, finetuned by meetings with teachers, administration and parents of Post Road School with the architect, Kaeyer, Garment & Davidson was unveiled last night before the Board of Education by architect and 22 of his helpers and associates at Education House.  The architects,  accompanied by associated staffers, designers, estimators, landscape architects, mechanical engineers, estimators and other professionals also introduced the finished designs  of the two new football stadia, Parker and Loucks Field,  promising construction would begin this summer. 


They said designs for Post Road are anticipated to be sent to the State Education Department for approval in September, with construction  expected to take 18 months. They expect to begin construction one year from now, with occupancy of the new building anticipated for fall 2009, and project completion, including demolition of the old Post Road School and preparation of the playing fields complete by the end of 2009-10.



The $38.5 Million Post Road School ( rendering design shown last night) from the Sterling Avenue main entrance  is dazzling in its modern design, limestone exterior, exotic interior courtyard, and environmentally correct green roof. The main entrance features a school bus drop-off on Sterling Avenue and parking for 72 cars on the Soundview Avenue side. Note school bus rendered in photo. Photos WPCNR News


 



The detailed Post Road School Plan includes building a three floor school in the Northeast corner of the present Post Road School site, with one floor below grade, containing cafeteria and new auditorium; kindergarten, first and second grade on the second floor, and third, fourth and fifth grades on the third floor. A new library is located on the second floor.  The circle in the middle of the school represents a two story courtyard.



Computerized aerial view of the new Post Road School superimposed on a Google satellite photo of surrounding vicinity.  Post Road is the street on the left of the picture. Soundview Avenue is the crossing street. You are viewing the Soundview Avenue side.



The New Post Road School design, shown from the Soundview Avenue side of the site. Parking for 72 spaces is provided on the site on the Soundview Ave entrance. Architects said dropoff and pickup would be on this side of the building, with school bus staging on the Sterling Avenue side.



Direct Overhead view looking Southeast, showing how the New Post Road School fits between Soundview Avenue on the south and Sterling Avenue on the North. The new playing fields run along Post Road.  Entrance to the new school is on the Sterling Avenue side.


 



A closer view: Sterling Avenue is on the left. Soundview is on the right. Note the six school buses in the staging area in front of the entrance to the new school, the two story open air courtyard in the center of the structure, and the green roof on the top of the gymnasium.



Russell Davidson, left, Principal of Kaeyer, Garment & Davidson, presenting his progress report on the Capital Projects last night. Eric Kaeyer, the architect of the school design is standing at the right. An entourage of KG & D professionals involved in the project looks on. 


Davidson noted that the new Post Road School delivers an additional classroom for each grade level, provides classrooms meeting or exceeding State Education Department requirements, in-room bathrooms for grades K, 1,& 2, a new 2 story auditorium seating 340 on the first floor, and a new library, self-contained on the second floor that is twice the size of the present school.


 



$3 Million Parker Stadium Redesign.


The two stadium projects were presented and have changed significantly. Parker Stadium which was originally planned to gut the “Roman Colisseum” concrete grandstand will now have the new 1,300 seat bleachers built atop the concrete storage catacombs below the present concrete stands. The concrete stands will be removed, the catacombs repaired and renovated and new stands with a press box built on top. Grasy knolls will be created from the 20s to the endzones, replacing the present delipidated stands.



The new $6 Million (approximate) Loucks Field viewed Looking North from the White Plains High School. There would be no stands built on the  northern side in this new design. Stands for 3,500 are included on the south side, nearest the high school (bottom of view). Davidson justified the jumping pits, by noting that by eliminating the bleachers on the north side of the field, and putting the pits there, that the field could be made wider.


 The new Loucks would feature with a press box and stadium lights for night events.  Davidson said the field house will remain as is. There will be no concession stands. He said temporary bleachers could be erected over the jumping pits to add to the capacity.


Davidson reported that design for both stadia have been sent to the State Education Department for review. Cost estimates are being updated by the architect and construction manager, Triton Construction. Construction for both stadiums is expected to begin this summer with Parker ready for Turkey Day kickoff next fall and Loucks complete by the end of the year, perhaps in time for Loucks Games next year.


Asked if the project was still on budget, the cost estimator for Triton said “the numbers were holding.”  Mr. Davidson also said that design consulting with staff and parents at Mamaroneck Avenue School — the other major renovation part of the $69.6 Million capital project — would begin next month. 


 


 

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District: All Students to Achieve Standard of Literacy by 2012

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WPCNR SCHOOL DAYS. February 26, 2007: The Mission Statement, Core Values and Strategic Objectives of the White Plains City School District, as created by the Core Strategic Planning Committee February 7, 8 and 9 at a three-day, closed-to-the-public-and-media meeting have been reported in the new issue of White Plains Public Schools for February, out today.


The Number 1 Strategic Objective is that all students will achieve challenging district standards of literacy across all disciplines by 2012 (4 years). To put this objective in perspective:


 

 


 In 2005, 75% of all 4th grade White Plains students passed the 4th Grade ELA test, and that  percentage dropped to 70% in 2006. In 2005, 82% of 4th graders passed the Math, and in 2006, 75% of 4th graders passed the Math.


At the eighth grade level, in the  ELA Assessments in 2005, 53% passed the ELA Assessments and 63% passed the Mathematics. In September, the state reported that in the 2006 ELA Assessments White Plains 8th graders passed at a 58% rate, up 5%  while  in the Math Assesssment scores the 58.5 % of WP eighth graders passed, down 5%.


An action committee or committees will be assigned to determine how this number 1 objective – district standards of literacy across all disciplines (however the district chooses to define it) will be achieved.


Strategic Objective 2 seeks that All students will continually choose to explore and enrich communities, and Objective 3 is All students will choose to apply their knowledge and skills to solve problems meaningful to them.  No details of what the Core Committee means by these statements were reported.


The newsletter identifies  the following Strategies, reporting that the Core Committee has decided that the district should:



  1. Gain the understanding and commitment of all employees to achieve our strategic objectives;

  2. Align new and existing resources, both internal and external, to accomplish our strategic objectives and mission. 

  3. Align and develop curriculum to achieve our strategic objectives and missions.

  4. Continue to develop and capitalize on leadership capacity within the system at all levels to sustain commitment to the strategic objectives and mission.

5. Develop an open and ongoing communication process that results in all stakeholders believing in the value of a White Plains City School District education and actively participating in reaching our strategic objectives and mission.


 The Mission, Stragic Objectives and Strategies were defined by the Core Planning Committee, consisting of  Peter Bassano (Board of Education member), Lenora Boehlert (Superintendent Cabinet member), Sheryl Brady (parent), Victor Brady (student), Kerry Broderick , LaShiela Brown, Bill Carter, Vicki Cignarella, Benny Cipriano, Leonard Coleman, Timothy Connors (Superintendent of Schools), Leslie Davis, Leroy Dixon (WPHS Assistant Principal), Margaret Dwyer (Superintendent Cabinet member), Malula Gonzalez, Terri Klemm (Principal, George Washington School), Suzanne Laser (WPHS ), Melissa Lopez (Mayor’s Office), Mary Marquis, Marianna McCormack, Donna McLaughlin (Board of Education member), Jorge Mejia, Alberto Minotta (WPHS), Ana Montoya, Charlie Norris (Parent), Randy Patterson, Jerry Rosen, Dorothy Schere (former Board of Education member), Lesley Tompkins (WPHS), George Tsuji.


The Mission seeks to educate and inspire all students, while nurturing their dreams, so they learn continually, think critically, pursue their aspirations and contribute to a diverse and dynamic world.


The Core Committee found the district Core Values to be that:


All people have intrinsic value; celebrating and embracing diversity enriches live; all people can learn, grow and contribute; every choice matters, and people are responsible for their choices; respect, honesty and trust empower; when people serve the community, both the individuals and the community benefit; and high expectations promote high achievement.


Rosemarie Eller, a Board of Education member writes in the newsletter that now that these long range goals have been set by the Core Committee, Action and Management Teams will be formed to implement and measure progress towards the goals agreed upon.


No timetable as to when these Action Committees will begin to meet was announced.

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School Budget VoteMay 15. 2 Board Seats Up for Election. Petition Now

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 WPCNR SCHOOL DAYS. From Michele Schoenfeld, Clerk to the Board of Education, February 26, 2007, EDITED: The Annual White Plains Board of Education Budget Vote and Election will take place on Tuesday, May 15th, 2007, Noon to 9 P.M., at six voting districts.  Two Board seats — will be up for election, each with a three-year term of office, beginning July 1, 2007.


Candidates must be United States citizens, 18 years of age or more and residents of White Plains for at least one year.  Petitions are available from Michele Schoenfeld, District Clerk, at 5 Homeside Lane.  They must be signed by 100 qualified voters and returned by April 25th.



Registration, for qualified voters new to the City, or those who are not registered to vote in general elections, will take place on Saturday, April 28th, Noon to 5 P.M., at Mamaroneck Avenue School, Nosband Avenue.  A resident who has moved within White Plains during the last year may also change his/her voting address at that time.



Absentee ballots are available by application to the District Clerk, for any voter who will not be in White Plains during the time of the election.


 For further information, please call 422-2071.

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Skyliners Skate Sleek, Fast and Powerful Take 1st in Nationals Short

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WPCNR RINKSIDE. February 23, 2007:  The Skyliners Juniors, the tri-state synchronized skating team carded a season’s best 56.54 in their  PROUD MARY short program to take first by .07 over the Colonials of Massachussetts, the Hockettes of Ann ARbor Michigan, in third and Chicago Jazz in fourth and Team Braemar of Minnesota , fifth  of 13 teams in  the 2 minute 50 second short performance. The Chicago Jazz was fifth. Going into tonight’s long program The Skyliners will skate POSEIDEN for the last time with an opportunity for a great showing in the United States Figure Skating 2007 Synchronized Skating Team Championships in Colorado Springs.


For the USFSA story on the skate go to http://www.usfsa.org/Story.asp?id=37710



EASTERN CHAMPS THROW UP THEIR FIRST GREAT SKATE. NOW THEY NEED ANOTHER: After a slow start, the Junior Skyliners commanded the ice, skating their lines and blocks fast, and showcasing their edges for a technical score of 36 and a solid 56.54 overall. It was their best performance of the short program all year long. They have one great skate under their belt. Now they need the skate of a lifetime. The Skyliners are shown here after winning the Eastern Synchro Championship in January. The Skyliner Juvenile teams skate today the Novice team skates tomorrow, the Juniors attempt to break a virtual 3-way tie for first after the short program tonight in a spirited, closely matched Junior division.

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Council oks Greico Contract, Police OT, Boot Ordinance, Cappelli Maps AF Plan

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WPCNR COMMON COUNCIL CHRONICLE-EXAMINER. Written by John F. Bailel, Special to WPCNR from Don Hughes. February 23, 2007: The Common Council, despite Rita Malmud’s objections that they had not gotten the paperwork on the agreements in time, voted to purchase the Greico property Thursday evening in the third Special meeting of the Council called in the last two months.


The Mayor bluntly informed the Council  in a shouting barrage, when Council President Malmud complained about the short notice given the Council to review the arrangements with Greico and that there was no exact purchase price established, or how the city was going to pay for it, that the council responsibility was representative, and the Mayor’s office was “administrative” and he wasn’t going to change that and they would just have to deal with it.


The Mayor pointed out that the 45 day agreement the Trust for Public Land had negotiated with the Greico family in which the city would have the opportunity to purchase the proberty was due to expire in 15 days and that was why the urgency of acting last night was required. The Mayor did not explain why it has taken the city approximately a month to draw up the paperwork.


The Super Developer Explains it All


The Council received a visit from the Louis Cappelli who presented his analysis of his announcement last week that he wanted to build 23 units of apartments on the existing retail floor of the City Center Garage. Cappelli said it was unlikely that the affordable housing at the Pinnacle would be built at this time and that he (Cappelli) was protecting himself by moving to build the 23 units now. He said he could build them within 9 months.


The Super Developer said that if The Pinnacle should go ahead and build the affordables they plan for 260 Main, that he would sell the new City Center Garage units at market rates. Should the Pinnacle be unable to build the affordables at 260 Main, Cappelli would turn the new 23 City Center Garage units into affordable housing, enabling him to meet the affordable housing quota he is required to build as part of his approval for the Ritz Carlton project. Cappelli added that since he was approved for 600 units at the city center, and has only built 500, that he did not need Common Council approval to build the 23 units in the City Center Garage, because he already had that right. Our reporter, advised the Council was in agreement with Mr. Cappelli’s analysis.


The County Planning Department it was learned from remarks by Susan Habel, White Plains Commissioner of Planning, is checking into Ginsburg Development (builders of The Pinnacle) request for $2 Million towards their $17 Million it would take to build the 42 units of affordable housing, and according to Habel, found that the County Attorney has said this is not legal.


Cappelli added that to meet the requirement he build the other 19 units, he would build those at the buildings he as acquired on Main Street across Court Street and across from Macy’s.


Police OT


The council also approved $50,000 in additional Police overtime for patrol of The Galleria garage, and approximately $200,000 in other police overtime, which our reporter says is included in the budget.


Boot for Scofflaws Parked OT


The council also approved a new ordinance allowing the city to immobolize (or boot) scofflaw cars found to be parking overtime. Previously the law only allowed scofflaw cars to be booted if they were illegally parked.


The subject matter of the executive session was not revealed. 

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White Plains Sectional Doubleheader at County Center March 2

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WPCNR COURTSIDE. February 22, 2007: The White Plains High Boys and Girls basketball teams will commence finals play in the Sectionals next Friday March 2. The boys, after taking out New Rochelle Wednesday, 77-56, will meet Number 3 Poughkeepsie at 3:00  and the White Plains Girls, after knocking off John Jay East Fishkill yesterday will play Scarsdale at 4:45 PM.

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Common Council Takes Up Greico Prop/ Garage Aff Housing/ Park Issues 2Nite

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WPNC CITY HALL CIRCUIT. February 22, 2007: The Common Council will hold a special meeting tonight at 6 at City Hall to discuss Police Overtime, the puchase of the Greico Property on Silver Lake, the Louis Cappelli affordable housing project atop the City Center Garage, and new parking ordinance — plus hold an executive session on the possible acquisition or sale of land. The agenda:


COMMON COUNCIL AGENDA


SPECIAL MEETING


FEBRUARY 22, 2007


6:00 P.M.




RESOLUTION:


 


1.       Communication from Commissioner of Planning in relation to the purchase of 4.5 acres of property near Silver Lake Park and known as the Grieco Property from the New York Trust for Public Land.


 


2.                 Resolution of the Common Council of the City of White Plains expressing the Common Council’s support for the acquisition of open space within the City pursuant to the Open Space and Natural Resource Policy of the City of White Plains and authorizing the Corporation Counsel to prepare a contract for the acquisition of the open space parcel known as the Grieco Property from the New York Trust for Public Land.



DISCUSSION:


 


3.       Application submitted by LC White Plains LLC for an amendment to a previously approved site plan of the “Development Site” known as the Air Rights Building.


 


4.       Proposed amendment to Compensation and Leave Plan.


 


5.       Community Development Rehabilitation – YWCA.


 


6.       Parking: Advertising; proposed Towing Scofflaw Ordinance; proposed change to Traffic Ordinance.


 


7.       Budget Transfer – Police Overtime.


 


8.       Entertainment of a motion to enter into Executive Session for the purpose of discussing the proposed sale or acquisition of real property.


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BOARD OF ED REPORTS ON STRATEGIC PLANNNING.

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WPCNR SCHOOL DAYS. From Michele Schoenfeld, Clerk to the Board of Education. February 22, 2007:  Superintendent of Schools Mr. Connors thanked the 30 people who participated in the three-day Core Committee session last week (Jan. 25-27), to develop a blueprint for the long-range future of the district. Details will be shared in an upcoming districtwide newsletter and on the website.  The community will have an opportunity to provide feedback and to serve on committees which will develop action plans and the processes to evaluate them.  The result will be a comprehensive plan to be submitted to the Board for approval in November.  Mr. Connors thanked Teresa Niss and Jennifer Gray for coordinating the effort. 


              


A number of Core Committee members were present at the meeting and expressed great

     excitement about the session.  Some excerpts:


              I was so proud of the student participants, who were remarkably articulate, thoughtful leaders. 


  There were many different opinions but everyone worked together for what is best for our kids.


              It was a powerful experience and I applaud the Board for making it happen. 


  It made me proud to be part of the White Plains community.    


               lt was time to give something back to the community and now I feel part of it. 


  The community needs to be patient — we won’t have answers tomorrow.  Work with us…. 


 

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Skyliners–Eastern Junior Champions & Team Image Skate at the Synchro Nationals

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WPCNR RINKSIDE. By  “Edge” Bailey. February 22, 2007: Some 70 young ladies from Westchester, Connecticut and New Jersey’s Skyliners Synchronized Skating team and Team Image from the Yonkers Figure Skating club begin competition for the National Championships in Colorado Springs today. After spending the first four days on the “front range,” adjusting to the altitude and putting together practices on the World Ice Hall, the area’s elite most team-like teams are ready to try for that one great skate at the 2007 United States Figure Skating Synchronized Skating National Championships.



2007 Eastern Synchronized Skating Champions — The Skyliners Junior team..working on their “Wheel” at Playland Ice Casino in preparation for taking the ice at the Nationals Tonight in Colorado Springs for their Technical Program. The Juniors, 1st in the Providence Eastern Championships, will be skating with 14 of synchronized skatings elite teams Thursday and Friday. Photo, WPCNR Sports


 



The Juniors are Champs of the East on the ice after their great skate in Providence Rhode Island at the end of January in the Eastern Championships, nosing out the amost equally excellent Icemates by a blade.



Skyliners Working their double line over and over at Playland Ice Casino last week.


The Skyliners Coach and Choreographer Josh Babb has been working the Junior team hard to fine tune their Technical and Free Skate programs to get closer to the top four teams they skated against at the Dr. Porter Classic in December in Ann Arbor, the International Qualifier in Lowell, Massachussetts and of course The Colonials. They have had extra  practices and longer practices each week for the last three weeks, finishing off with 9 hours of practice last Friday and Saturday before winging to Denver and on to Colorado Springs Monday.


 



Skyliners Skating to Poseiden to Win in Their Last At Bat in Providence.


 



Executing the Spread Eagle Intersection



Waiting for the Results of their Free Skate in Providence on the SynchroTron



Skyliner Juniors kiss the Providence Ice after their Eastern win.


 


The Skyliners ecstatic about their first ever Gold Medal in the Junior Division, have refocused themselves in hopes they can execute two great confident skates tonight and tomorrow. There is such a fine line between a great skate and a disaster in synchronized skating where everyone has to pull together and one ice nick or a soft patch can wreck an element.


The teams are graded by the judges who have the benefit of instant replay to seewhether all skaters in a line were performing the footwork in synch, or whether one was not putting her edge down or getting that twizzle or mohawk (footwork moves) precisely right. Synchronized skating is the truest team sport there is. All skaters have to execute the same, and when they do not the deductions come and whole elements circles, intersections, lines can fail to get “called” lowering their score. 


The girls traveled to “The Garden of Gods”  Tuesday afternoon and enjoyed the breathtaking views of Pike’s Peak. And spent their time enjoying each other’s company and of course, practicing.



Skyliners Enjoying Brunch in Providence before their winning skate.



Celebrating their win late Saturday night in Providence. What a feeling! Those smiles say all the work is worth it.



Parents celebrate too — simply pleased that their daughters were able through their daughters’ own hard work and effort achieved the feeling of winning a prestigious championship or achievement. It does not get any better if you’re a parent — seeing your children succed on their own and achieve happiness — well it might!


 


Tonight the Juniors take the ice for their Technical Skate to Proud Mary — and a season of growth, achievement and pride and learning — not matter what the result will continue. Two great skates, back-to-back are their goal that they will always remember. 

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