Ft. Monroe's Adaptive Sports Day Draws Inspiration and Olympic Gold

Gold medalist in the Rio Paralympic
Games, Nicky Nieves played
middle blocker for the US team.
In the spirit of promoting adaptive sport and physical activity awareness, the Hampton Athletics Division sponsored an Adaptive Sports Day on Saturday at the Fort Monroe Community Center.

Co-sponsored by the Community Center and the Sitting Volleyball Warriors, Adaptive Sports Day served as a free event that allowed participants to enhance their own experiences with sports such as power soccer, sitting volleyball and wheelchair basketball.

Linda Gomez, who along with Andy Pai, coach the Sitting Volleyball team and Special Operations Wounded Warrior teams, has been instrumental in bringing the movement to Hampton Roads. Gomez brings 28 years of volleyball coaching experience from youth to the college levels in her native Florida. Last year, she came to visit Ft. Monroe as a tourist and came to a life changing decision.

“I was teaching at a university (in Florida) and coaching men’s volleyball, I had been a coach with USA Volleyball for a while, and with the University I was traveling to the Warrior Games and I happened to come to this area last fall. (Fort Monroe) looked like a great place to bring our program. It’s now a national park. So I resigned in April as a professor and volleyball coach and started this program here.”

While the program has its foundations with the military, through research, she found ways to expand the program.

“Our objective was to bring awareness to the military, to the adaptive community as to what is available. It’s branching out to special populations and people with unique abilities.” Through her own efforts, she has merged with programs such as Power Soccer and Virginia Beach Adapted Water Sports, among others.

There is a constant, added Gomez.

“They start out in a team, and then got wounded, and then they weren’t part of the team, they felt.” Her service, she feels is “my way to serve my country in a different way.”

There were many shining personal examples of the program’s success in attendance on Saturday. Nicky Nieves, a gold medal athlete with the US Paralympic Volleyball team, was on hand to give demonstrations of sitting volleyball to the dozens of youths and adults on hand for the five-hour program. Her own introduction to the sport was unusual.

“I was playing (volleyball) at Queens College in New York, and there was a recruiter who came and talked to our (athletic director) and said I should try it. At first I was a little hesitant because I was scared, and it was completely brand new to me, but I stuck at it, and I’m glad I did.”

Nieves had her gold medal from Rio on display, and she spoke of her experience at the Games.
“We were there for 16 days, and played from the 7th through 17th.” The team’s schedule was rugged, with six games, starting with Iran, followed by Rwanda, Brazil and China before reaching the semifinals, and then the gold medal round. Nieves as thrilled that the Games were covered on a world stage through NBC Sports.

“It’s the world’s biggest stage; it’s where it really matters, and everybody gets to see all of the hard work you put in,” said Nieves, who played middle blocker for the gold medal squad.

Army Staff Sergeant Carlton Duncan and SFC Michael D. Smith were also representing the Warrior Care and Transition Command, which is headquartered in Arlington, VA. Duncan was wounded in Iraq and sees his new position as part of the transitional role for affected veterans.

“We work with active duty and veterans, and newly retired vets. I use adaptive sports, such as cycling, BMX bikes, which helped me when I was recovering at Ft. Bragg. That’s what led me to the job where I’m at now.” Duncan sees his role as a way that the military is able to connect with the community.

Smith’s injury was non-combat related. In 2011, he was involved in a gruesome motorcycle accident.

“I had come back from deployment, and I was riding my motorcycle. A driver that was texting and driving ran into me from behind. (The impact) threw me over the guardrail and a car ran over my arm and severed it right there on the spot. I was conscious for the whole thing.”

Smith holds the distinction of being the only Army soldier ever to remain on active duty after losing a limb above the elbow. “I’m the first and only “above the elbow” amputee in the history of the military.”

Speaking of his injury, Smith feels it was a blessing in disguise.

“I truly believe that God put this on me for a reason. It’s the best thing that ever happened to me in my entire life.” Smith has excelled as a Paralympic athlete and keeps busy between his own training and the requirements of his position. But he never hesitates to attend an event like Saturday’s.

“I come as often as the Army lets us,” adding that sometimes he has to hold his twice-a-day workouts at 5:30 AM and 10 PM.

As he watched the guests try out the different adaptive sports with varying degrees of success, Smith shared the philosophy that he tells his new clients.

“You have been knocked down, but you’re not out.”










Virginia Peninsula Game of Week #6 - Travis Williams' Late Interception Seals Warwick's 21-14 Win Over Menchville


As shown on UltimateRecruit.com

Warwick’s Travis Williams keys a Raider stand that secures the win
by Jim McGrath, recruit757

NEWPORT NEWS — A final minute goal line stand by Warwick secured a squeaker of a victory, as
the Raiders held on to defeat Menchville 21-14.

A 28-yard punt return by Shemar Butts, coupled with a personal foul penalty against Warwick gave the Monarchs the ball with first-and-goal on the Raider 9. Three negative runs wrapped around another Raider penalty (they had 18 in the game) set up a final play with fourth down and goal from the 16.

Butts thought that he had Luke Wells open in the corner of the end zone, but at the last second, Warwick’s Travis Williams reached in and broke up the pass.

Williams, who is also among the Peninsula District leaders in interceptions with five this season, summed up his thoughts about the final play.

“I was guarding Luke Wells on the short side of the field, and the quarterback was sacked (on the previous play). Luke transferred to the wide side of the field, and I noticed it as soon as they broke the huddle. I ran to his side of the field and told our other defensive back to go to the other side, so I could guard Luke. He ran the wheel route, and it was a great pass. He had the ball in his hands. I made a play on the ball before he could get his feet down.”

With the win, Warwick, a team that has finished 2-8 for the past two seasons, is now 3-3, with a game against 2-4 Denbigh next weekend. A win against the Patriots would give the Raiders four wins and almost surely secure a playoff spot in the 5A mix.

But Warwick Coach Corey Hairston is not ready to talk about the potential post-season games, and broke into his best Jim Mora Sr. mode when asked about it.

“Right now, we’ve got to focus on Denbigh. I appreciate the fact that (we are mentioned) with playoff aspirations; however, there’s some things we must tighten up on before we can talk about playoffs.”

Without specifically mentioning it, Hairston could have a cause for concern with the unusually high number of penalties caused by the Raiders. Warwick was flagged 18 times for 161 yards, with the final penalty, a personal foul on Butts’ punt return, moving the ball all the way from the 32 to the 9, as the penalty moved the ball 15 yards from the point of the infraction.

Warwick was the first team to put points on the board as Dayvon Meade, who entered the game with 57 yards on 27 carries, broke away on the first play of the Raiders’ second drive for a 71-yard scamper down the left sideline. Meade finished the game with 89 rushing yards on seven carries.

As the second quarter got underway, a Menchville fumble was recovered by Warwick at the Patriot 30. After an offsides penalty by Warwick moved the ball back to the 35, quarterback Tzion Lucas found Deandre Livingston open 20 yards downfield and lofted a floater that caught Livingston in stride. The senior receiver did the rest of the work, galloping the final 15 yards for a 35-yard score to give the “visitors” a 14-0 edge after Connor Murphy’s extra point.

Menchville (0-6) found the end zone midway through the second quarter as Butts found speedy receiver Marquis Rhodes open down the left sideline for a 32-yard touchdown. The extra point was blocked and Warwick held on to a 14-6 lead.

Kicking was a problem for Menchville all game, as all three of their kicks (the other two were 41 and 42-yard field goal attempts) were blocked when they failed to clear the height of the offensive and defensive lines.

On the ensuing possession after Rhodes touchdown, the Lucas-to-Livingston combination struck again, and this time Livingston caught a short pass in the left flat, caught a block, sidestepped another defender, and outsprinted the Monarch defense to the end zone for an 81-yard touchdown. Another Murphy conversion kick made the score 21-6, which held up until halftime.

Menchville made another charge on their first possession of the second half, taking advantage of a fumble recovery by Chanz Dixon at the Warwick 23 to set up a second-and-goal at the 14. Butts connected again with Rhodes, with the result being a 14-yard score. Corey Hairston’s conversion run closed the gap to 21-14.

The fourth quarter was quiet as the teams punted back to each other on five straight possessions, with the fifth setting up Butts’ punt return to initiate the game’s final drive.

On the passing side, both Lucas and Butts threw for a pair of scores to a single receiver. Lucas’ final numbers were interesting, as the two TD passes were his only completions of the game, and the senior finished with a line of 2 for 11 for 116 yards and 2 TD’s, as well as Dixon’s interception. Lucas now has eight touchdown passes on the year, pushing him toward the top of the Peninsula District passing leaders.

Menchville also suffered some penalty problems of their own, drawing 10 flags for 50 yards. Next week, the Monarchs will host Gloucester, who started the season with a 3-1 spurt, but has since lost their last two games to even their record at 3-3.

– Jim McGrath

MENCHVILLE 0, 6, 8, 0 — 14
WARWICK 7, 14, 0, 0 — 21

1st Quarter
W – Meade 71 run (Murphy kick)

2nd Quarter
W – Livingston 35 pass from Lucas (Murphy kick)
M – Rhodes 32 pass from Butts (kick blocked)
W – Livingston 81 pass from Lucas (Murphy kick)

3rd Quarter
M – Rhodes 14 pass (Hairston run)

Mench War
First downs; 12, 7
Rushes-yards; 53-97, 22-137
Passing yards; 52, 116
Comp-att-int; 3-7-0, 2-11-1
Penalties-yards; 10-50, 18-161
Punts-avg.; 4-27, 4-30
Fumbles-lost; 2-1, 1-1

Individual statistics:

RUSHING: Menchville: Corey Hairston 23-65, Shemar Butts 20-17, Muzik Towns 4-9, Korrelle Brown 1-5, Chanz Dixon 5-1. Team 53 for 97. Warwick: Dayvon Meade 7-89, TD, Travis Williams 3-18, Deandre Livingston 2-16, Elijah Anderson 2-10, Tzion Lucas 6-3, Isaiah Cotton 2-1. Team 22 for 137.

PASSING: Menchville: Butts 3-7, 52 yds., 2 TD, Lucas 2-11, 116 yds., 2 TD, INT

RECEIVING: Menchville: Marquis Rhodes 2-46, 2 TD, Towns 1-6. Warwick: Livingston 2-116, 2 TD.

TOTAL YARDS: Menchville: 213,Warwick: 253.

INTERCEPTIONS: Menchville: S. Butts

Virginia Peninsula Game of Week #5 (Part 2 & 3) - Bethel Upsets Heritage 28-27; Denbigh Squeaks By Menchville 26-24

Bethel's Jeremiah Owusu (#9) with Bruins defensive
coordinator Isaac Fulwood
From Saturday's high school football doubleheader at John B. Todd Stadium

BETHEL 28, HERITAGE 27

NEWPORT NEWS – Bethel overcame a 13-point deficit in the fourth quarter to upend previously undefeated Heritage 28-27 in the second game of a doubleheader at Todd Stadium on Saturday. The win puts Bethel ‘s record at 3-2 (2-2 Peninsula) and back into serious 5A playoff contention.

With 3:10 remaining in the third quarter of Saturday’s Bethel-Heritage game, the Hurricanes’ Shedrick Washington ran around the left side and out of bounds at the 6. While heading for the tackle, Bethel cornerback Kimonte White went airborne and landed awkwardly on his leg, breaking it upon impact.

When play resumed, Heritage quarterback Jeremiah Boyd scampered around the left side and dove at the left pylon to score on a six-yard touchdown. After Nevada Jones recovered a Bruin fumble on the next possession, Boyd found Amonyae Watson just behind the Bethel secondary for a run-and-catch 42-yard score. The extra point missed, but the Canes enjoyed a 27-14 lead and had all the momentum.

But the Bruins were not ready to quit.

“We already had Dwayne Hudson down,” said quarterback Navarro Price. “We knew that we all had to come together.”

“We focus on getting everybody reps,” added star receiver Jeremiah Owusu. “We told our guys that Monte was there for us and now it’s up to us to win this game for him.”

After Watson’s score, the Bruin offense immediately found its bearings, driving 50 yards on six plays, with Price’s touchdown pass to Owusu covering 24 yards and putting Bethel back in the game at 27-21.

After Heritage was forced to punt, the Bruins recharged with their best drive of the night, a nine-play, 68-yard series, which ended with two stellar runs by 250-pound fullback Janaz Jordan. The first, a 30-yard rumble through the Hurricane defense, put the ball on the Heritage 5, and set up the key play, another 5-yard grind by Jordan for the score.

John Vassilakopoulos added the extra point, and Bethel enjoyed its first lead of the night at 28-27.

From there, the Bruin defense bent, but refused to break, allowing several double-digit gains from Heritage, but not a score. And when Boyd’s last attempt to pass resulted in a swarm of Bruins players swarming over him for a sack, the visitors realized that they had the game won and the celebration began.

But it won’t be for too long.

“We’re not celebrating too much,” said Owusu. “I’m sure that we’ll be back at it tomorrow.”

Heritage opened up the scoring, sealing an 11-play, 56-yard drive with a counter handoff to Washington, who busted through the middle for an eight-yard touchdown.

After Bethel failed to convert a first down, the Hurricanes went to work again. A Boyd pass deflected off a Bruin defender and into the hands of Timothy Payne for a 21-yard gain to the Bruin 39. Four runs brought the ball to the 20. From there, Boyd called his own number and weaved through the porous Bethel defense for a touchdown, giving the home team a 14-0 lead.

Bethel fumbled on their next possession and Heritage was in a position to put the game out of reach. However, Boyd fumbled on his first drop back, giving the ball right back to the Bruins. On their second play, Bethel struck back with Navarro Price finding Owusu wide open down the right sideline for a 27-yard TD. The extra point missed, keeping Heritage ahead 14-6.

After a stalled Cane drive, Bethel put together its best drive of the first half, moving 50 yards on seven plays. A 26-yard run by Ki’sean Storm brought the ball to the 11, and was followed by another Storm run, for nine yards. After a trio of failed attempts to break the plane of the goal line, the Bruins turned to their battering ram, Jordan, who ran through the line for a two-yard score. Down by two, Bethel opted for the conversion, and went right back to Jordan, who broke through a second time for the two-pointer, knotting the score at 14.


BETHEL       0, 14, 0, 14 -- 28
HERITAGE   7, 7, 13, 0 -- 27

1st Quarter
H – Washington 8 run (Greene kick)

2nd Quarter
H – Boyd 20 run (Greene kick)
B – Owusu 27 pass from Price (kick failed)
B – Jordan 2 run (Jordan run)

3rd Quarter
H – Boyd 6 run (Greene kick)
H – Watson 42 pass from Boyd (kick failed)

4th Quarter
B – Owusu 24 pass from Price (Vassilakopoulos kick)
B – Jordan 5 run (Vassilakopoulos kick)

           Beth    Her 
First downs;     12, 15
Rushes-yards;  32-112, 40-136
Passing yards;  125, 145
Comp-att-int;   9-17-0, 8-23-0
Penalties-yards; 4-30, 7-41
Punts-avg.;      5-32, 4-24
Fumbles-lost;   4-2, 0-0

 
DENBIGH 26, MENCHVILLE 24

In the opening game, Daquan Benton’s two key interceptions in the fourth quarter sealed the win for the Patriots in a seesaw battle with an exciting finish.

Trailing 26-24 with 5:03 remaining, the Monarchs gained possession just over midfield and managed to gain two first downs on six rushes. With first-and-10 at the 22, Menchville’s K.J. Sarvis threw toward the end zone, where the diminutive senior defensive back picked it off.

The Patriots failed to convert a first down and were forced to punt with just under 40 seconds left. However, on the first play from scrimmage, Benton intercepted Sarvis’ pass again, and the Patriots ran out the clock.

Menchville (0-5) gained their first lead of the season midway through the first quarter. Nick Webster converted a fake punt on fourth-and-seven from the Denbigh 27, gaining the needed seven yards. Later, a pass interference call on the Monarchs put the ball at 10, and set up Corey Hairston, who busted through the middle of his offensive line and scooted in for the score.

Jameer Lukerson, making his first start for Denbigh, evened the score just before halftime. The Patriots benefitted from great field position as Menchville’s punt snap went over Nick Webster’s head, and he was tackled at the Monarch 17. After an eight-yard pass to Shaquan Jones, Lukerson called his own number three straight times. He reached the end zone on the first carry, but his knee hit at the one-foot line. Two plays later, Lukerson snuck through for the game-tying touchdown.

The third quarter was explosive offensively for both teams and keyed by two passing touchdowns of 43 and 37 yards from Lukerson to Keyshawn Chisholm. The Monarchs held tight, buoyed by an 80-yard interception return by senior cornerback Marquis Rhodes.

MENCHVILLE  6, 0, 10, 8 -- 24
DENBIGH          0, 6, 12, 8 -- 26

1st Quarter
M – Hairston 10 run (kick failed)

2nd Quarter
D – Lukerson 1 run (pass failed)

3rd Quarter
M – Warner 31 FG
M – Rhodes 80 int return (Warner kick)
D – Chisholm 43 pass from Lukerson (pass failed)
D – Chisholm 37 pass from Lukerson (pass failed)

4th Quarter
M – Butts 15 run (Dixon run)
D – Banks 71 pass from Lukerson (Lukerson run)


           Mench   Den  
First downs;     12, 9
Rushes-yards;  48-211, 23-4
Passing yards;  0, 208
Comp-att-int;   0-6-3, 11-23-0
Penalties-yards; 6-57, 15-110
Punts-avg.;      5-28, 5-33

Fumbles-lost;   2-1, 1-1

Virginia Peninsula Game of Week #5 (Part One) - Poquoson Slams York 28-7

Last weekend was busy. I covered a game on Friday night - this one, and then watched on Saturday as they "played TWO" at Todd Stadium. Here's a recap from Friday, in its original form. One must understand that the paper is pressed for space, so segments of what I write don't make the final cut. Therefore, remember to check the "Wall" if you see me at your game.

POQUOSON 28, YORK 7

POQUOSON – Cole Jackson ran for a pair of touchdowns and Donovan Edwards returned an interception 22 yards for a score, catapulting Poquoson to a 28-7 win over rival York at home.

Although neither team gained much traction offensively in the first half, it was Poquoson who scored the first two touchdowns, mostly because of their beneficial field position, which was attributed to a sturdy Islander defense that held York to 100 total yards. The opening Poquoson drive started at the Falcon 39, and a pedestrian ten-play drive was capped by junior running back Robert Henesey, who bulled his way into the end zone from the 3.

A fumble recovery by Poquoson’s Gunnar Ogburn gave the Islanders the ball at the York 33. Jackson’s 18-yard run helped to set up a first-and-goal from the 7. On second down, the senior back scored from the 4, as Poquoson opened up a 14-0 lead.

However, York (0-4) opened the second quarter with its own scoring drive. Sophomore quarterback Ramsay Hayyat found Adam Lytle for a 23-yard gain that pushed the ball to the Islander 36. After a trio of runs by Cole Lytle gained 18 yards, Hayyat found Adam Lytle again, this time for an 18-yard score. Adam Meade’s extra point cut the lead to 14-7, which was the halftime score.

Jackson broke the game open on Poquoson’s second drive of the second half. With third-and-five, he took a handoff on a sweep to the right, deked a defender, cut toward the middle of the field, and ran untouched for a 39-yard score. For the game, Jackson finished with 93 yards on ten carries.

Edwards’ interception off a Hayyat pass completed the scoring for the Islanders, who raised their record to 3-1 (2-1 Bay Rivers).


YORK              0, 7, 0, 0 -- 7
POQUOSON  14, 0, 14, 0 -- 28

1st Quarter
P – Henesey 3 run (Andersen kick)
P – C. Jackson 4 run (Palmer kick)

2nd Quarter
Y – A. Lytle 18 pass from Hayyat (Meade kick)

3rd Quarter
P – C. Jackson 39 run (Andersen kick)
P – D. Edwards 22 int return (Palmer kick)

         
 York   Poq
First downs;     5, 11
Rushes-yards;  27-45, 44-160
Passing yards;  55, 15
Comp-att-int;   4-15-1, 3-7-0
Penalties-yards; 8-35, 8-75
Punts-avg.;      7-32, 6-35
Fumbles-lost;   1-1, 2-1