By now you probably know, the second-ever Camp SportsVision will be held at Carnegie Mellon University from Wednesday, August 6 through Saturday, August 9. The region’s visually impaired youth will enjoy training in swim racing, goalball, track and field, wrestling, beep baseball, soccer, and tandem cycling. There are still a few camper slots available for this unique and exciting sports opportunity. While first-year campers will be scheduled to try all sports, the schedule offers some flexibility for second-year athletes to concentrate in their favorites. The final date for camper applications has been extended to Tuesday, July 15. This year’s camp fee is only $35, but some scholarships are available for families with financial need. The camp includes training in all of the sports listed above, overnight accommodations in the college dormitory, as well as all meals and snacks. And remember, enrollment is not only limited to PA residents.
SportsVision also has many opportunities available for volunteer and sponsorship assistance. Volunteers are needed for mealtime help, activity partners, facility set-up, snack and water management, registration and information staff, first-aid personnel, and go-fors. We are also looking for groups or businesses to sponsor our meals and snack breaks. Our other specific donation needs include: fresh fruit, bottled water, healthy snacks, paper products, spandex shorts, aluminum bats, gym tape, clipboards, and office supplies. SportsVision has already received camp contributions from the National Federation of the Blind’s Greater Pittsburgh Chapter, the Beaver County Council of the Blind, and the Golden Triangle Council of the Blind. Please give the SportsVision office a call to let us know how you or your organization can help.
SportsVision congratulates Duane Steifel (14) and Annmarie Hamlin (14) for winning the Gordon & Laura Gund scholarships to attend the 2003 USABA National Sports Festival. As Camp SportsVision 2002’s top male and female athlete, they will be given free room and board as well as a transportation stipend to attend the July 25-29 multi-sport festival in Colorado Springs, Colorado. Annmarie’s best sports include soccer and track, while Duane excels in goalball, track and wrestling. The festival will allow these youth to hone their current skills and try some new activities. The festival will include competitions in track and field, swimming, wrestling, tandem cycling, judo, goalball, and power lifting. Clinics will be offered in judo, swimming, and tandem cycling. The festival will also include a training camp for five-a-side football. In addition to thanking USABA and the Gund’s for this opportunity, SportsVision also thanks the parents of Annmarie and Duane for encouraging their children to follow their sports visions. Congratulations & Thank You!!
More than 40 SportsVision supporters wagered the night away at our June 6 Monte Carlo Night fundraiser. Some pressed their luck at Black Jack while others tried their hand at Let It Ride Poker. Throughout the night it was standing room only for those taking chances at the Roulette wheel. A few actually caught the Craps fever and rolled the night away. Fun games, great food, and cool prizes made the entire evening a winning success. Many volunteers spent a lot of time on set-up, clean up, and planning for the event. Thank you to everyone who helped throughout the process. We owe special thanks to Giant Eagle, Kuntz Bakery, Panera Bread Café, and Prantl’s Bakery for donating the snacks and desserts. We also thank those who donated prizes to our Chinese Auction: Monte Cello’s, Chocolate Moose, Glassworks, Pittsburgh Hilton & Towers, Sherri Crum, Sue Lichtenfels, Lynn Vuocolo, Tony Evancic, Patricia Maloney, and Old Country Buffet. There were a number of individuals, who although unable to attend, made monetary contributions. SportsVision thanks everyone who supported this fundraiser in any way. We value your assistance.
The forecast of heavy rain for Saturday, May 31 did not dampen SportsVision’s play day with BOLD. Fifteen participants braved the drizzle for a unique game of “Keep It Up” using a huge, 4-foot inflatable cube. The sun finally shone during the group’s hour-long hike through Schenley Park. A few innings of beep baseball rounded out the day. Thank you to the volunteers who assisted, especially Ray Jablonowski for organizing the activity, donating pop and snacks, and paying for the use of the shelter.
Pittsburgh and the Golden Triangle Council of the Blind are fortunate enough to host the 2003 national convention of the American Council of the Blind. The week will offer a variety of sports and leisure related activities for you to enjoy. On Sunday, July 6, SportsVision founder Sue Lichtenfels will participate in a panel discussion of sports and leisure for the blind hosted by the CCLVI affiliate. The convention’s annual Sports Fanatics Luncheon will take place on Monday, July 7 at 12:30. This year blind Pittsburgh athlete Maggi Ostrowsky and a former Pittsburgh Pirate will speak. As part of the fun, SportsVision will offer convention attendees instruction in yoga on Monday from 4-5 PM and a demonstration of beep baseball on Tuesday from 4-5 PM. On Wednesday and Thursday, the convention will offer a perennial favorite, water aerobics. Sue Lichtenfels will also be featured at Wednesday morning’s Rolls & Role Models breakfast hosted by the Women’s Concerns Committee. Audio darts will also be available throughout the convention week. For additional information including the locations of these events, check the convention program, the daily convention newspaper, or the convention telephone posting.
What’s better than one great reason to join BOLD? Six! This summer BOLD has planned six awesome events for you to attend: two pool parties, a visit to Sand Castle waterpark, an evening canoe experience, a water-skiing day, and a weekend get-away at Camp Kon-o-kwee. As a member of BOLD you can attend these and many other events for either free or at a deeply discounted rate. If you attend only one event, your $10 annual membership will have more than paid for itself. Call the SportsVision office or visit ** ALL-STAR ACCOLADES **
In honor of the ACB’s national convention and the upcoming All-Star Game of America’s pastime, SportsVision shares this story of a nationally-renowned blind baseball color commentator who relentlessly pursued and realized his sports vision. This article is reprinted from the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette of Monday, June 25, 2001. The Big Picture: Announcers do on-air Miracle CHARLESTON, S.C. -- This is a tale of two baseball announcers, their patron saint and his daughter. It began 11 years ago next Sunday, the date when the owner of a minor-league club called the Miracle hired baseball's first blind color commentator to broadcast one game as a gimmick, the owner being a Veeck and gimmickry being in the genes. The story took a serious twist two years ago, when Mike Veeck, who was running a minor-league club called the Saints, asked the blind announcer and sighted play-by-play partner to relocate from St. Paul, Minn., to a sultry antebellum city for two reasons: To broadcast for his minor-league Charleston Riverdogs. To guide his 9-year-old daughter while retinitis pigmentosa claims the last of her eyesight. Every day is a new chapter for Don Wardlow, Noble the seeing-eye black Labrador retriever, Jim Lucas the seeing-eye play-by-play announcer, baseball Barnum Mike Veeck and little Rebecca Veeck the girl with the degenerative disease. "Maybe I'm spoiled, but I love to listen to them now," Mike Veeck said of his announcers last week. "Maybe it's just a nice story." This is one of the rare times we can accurately describe heroism in our games. To think, in this instance, the tale comes from the press box. To think, it can teach all of us vision through a diamond.
By Chuck FinderSeizing the moment
Wardlow was born without eyesight. He never knew baseball except for what Yankees announcers Phil Rizzuto and Bill White and Mets announcer Bob Murphy relayed through his transistor radio in the central New Jersey city of Metchuen. He grew up wanting to broadcast baseball, at least on the collegiate level.
Wardlow went to Glassboro State, now Rowan College, to learn radio. He sought sighted partners to work student station game broadcasts alongside him. Sixteen people declined.
One day at the station, Wardlow worked a scoreboard show, reading results he transcribed in braille, and Lucas was outside the studio door waiting to take over the microphone. Lucas congratulated him on a fine job, and Wardlow -- recognizing the voice -- seized the moment. Are you up for a challenge? Would you broadcast games with a blind man?
They sat in the stands with a tape recorder for a Glassboro State basketball game to convince their dubious station manager to give them a chance on the air. After graduating from student station gigs in 1984, seats in the stands and a tape-recorder microphone was the closest they came to radio for seven years. "The Basement Tapes," they called those mock broadcasts between 1984-90.
One such broadcast was made in Three Rivers Stadium. All Wardlow remembered was sampling Pittsburgh's famed pilsner and suffering the consequences for two innings. "Here comes the pitch -- hic. This damn Iron City -- hic."
Three Rivers, Fenway Park, wherever. Wardlow the audio-tape factory worker and Lucas the bill collector from Princeton, N.J., paid their way and went anywhere that accepted guide dogs. Fans sitting around them never seemed to complain, except for the fellow whose roast beef sandwich was gobbled by Gizmo, the black Lab that preceded Noble.
In March 1990, it was Lucas who seized the moment. Are you up for a challenge? Would you want to turn pro?
"We were lucky enough to get a couple of stories planted in USA Today and the New York Times, 'Blind man tries to become baseball announcer,'" recalled Lucas, 38. "From that we were on National Public Radio. And we sent that out in a letter to every team in baseball, 176 of them -- major, minor, every single one." Forty-three rejections came back. Then arrived the Miracle, in the form of Veeck, the son of the man who once sent Eddie Gaedel, a midget, to the plate.
He offered a July 1, 1990 game with his Class A Pompano Beach, Fla., team. He explained that he was exploiting them for publicity, but that they should exploit the moment just the same. They got a lesson in self-promotion from a master promoter -- the man who contrived Disco Demolition Night for his father's Chicago White Sox, then later a nun masseuse and a foul-retrieving dog and Vasectomy Night for the five minor-league teams he partly owns. (His ownership group is bidding for their sixth in our area, a Class A franchise in Washington County.)
"That was our one chance," Lucas said of the Miracle moment.
"We jumped on that like Giz on a roast beef sandwich," Wardlow added.
Their professional radio debut? They bombed."My God, were they awful," Veeck said. "But they had tremendous heart. I knew by the third inning that heart won out and I wanted to hire them."
"It was harder," said Lucas, who did 50 broadcasts in 1991 and 140 the next season for the Miracle. "Before, in the upper deck, we'd drink a beer and have fun, eat a hot dog occasionally. We had no idea."
After the 1992 season, Veeck called in his announcers. As long as I own a team, you've got a lifetime contract. The thing is, for now, you're fired. He wanted them to strike on their own. As Lucas put it, "He didn't want us simply to be known as a Veeck promotion."
The Wardlow-Lucas team hit the road, finding only a radio opening in New Britain, Conn. No advertiser was buying it in 1993 because the club was so rotten. Wardlow and Lucas struck upon a plan. They charged advertisers by the New Britain victory: $10 per triumph, with a maximum of $600 for the season. The problem was, New Britain, a Class AA club, started out 0-12. A couple of older fans slipped the broadcasters a case of macaroni and cheese. New Britain slugger Matt Stairs, now with the Chicago Cubs, would tease after infrequent victories, "Eating tonight, man."
"It would affect our broadcasts some," said Wardlow, 38. "If a closer blew the game in the ninth, we were hacked." One such New Britain closer was current Pirates starter Todd Ritchie, who Wardlow once publicly chastised -- he ought to think about his future -- after permitting a two-run, winning infield single to a .180 hitter.
They lived lush, in Lucas' words, on $7,000 apiece. "To this day, we still sell 'pay-per-win,'" added Lucas, 38, who is married to Lisa, a Riverdogs' game-program coordinator, and the father of 20-month-old Riley, which, coincidentally, is the name of the Charleston park where he and Wardlow now work.
After bouncing from New Britain (1993-96) back to Veeck's employ with the independent-league Saints in St. Paul, Minn. (1997-99), and now Charleston, the Wardlow-Lucas team has improved. The play-by-play announcer's descriptive, understated style is reminiscent of Jack Brickhouse and Ernie Harwell and old-time baseball broadcasts. The color commentator, after gleaning updated statistics from his audio-enhanced Internet connection and typing notes in braille, spins the pertinent numbers along with various analysis.
"It's terribly interesting to listen because Jim is so descriptive, right down to how many times a batter tugs on his batting glove, because he's not only telling Don but he's telling us," Veeck said. "Lucas is really the story. Why would the man hitch himself to a blind color commentator? The generosity of spirit of a man who answers that call -- 'OK, I'll hang with you' -- that's a remarkable thing.
"Wardlow is a heck of a story, too."
Because of Wardlow, game programs in St. Paul and Charleston carry pages in braille.
Because of Wardlow, Rebecca Veeck, 9, learns about making her way in an increasingly dark world. She is limited to peripheral vision by her disease. Most of America's 150,000 other sufferers of the disease don't lose sight until around age 40. This is a girl who would go to bed with lights on because she was afraid of awaking in complete blackness.
Wardlow downplayed his role. "I don't want to stick my nose in where it's not wanted. That's a big deal with us blind people. We don't like people to be pushy."
Mike Veeck demurred. "Three years ago, my daughter was diagnosed with RP and is losing her eyesight. The irony is not lost on me. I constantly draw on experiences with Don. He's the first one to introduce her to a braille typewriter, and she just brought her first one home. Don Wardlow has made the trip a lot less scary for my daughter."
Lucas and Wardlow ride the minor-league buses along with Noble, whom, Lucas teased, "is the best behaved on the bus." Sometimes, the announcers drive to road games and bring along their families. The seven years of "Basement Tapes" line the walls of the Charleston living room of Wardlow and his wife, Melanie. They all cling to hope of some day earning a major-league opportunity, one Veeck vows to get for them.
For now, with a black-and-white Gaedel photograph to his left and Noble under his press-box chair at Riley Park and his play-by-play partner at his right elbow, leading his friend for half a life and his audience, there seems to be a higher calling for Wardlow and Lucas.
"They probably told you all these nice stories about how I gave them their break and blah, blah, blah," Mike Veeck said last week. "But they're really helping me live. "It's a nice story, isn't it?"
Now you can help SportsVision and help yourself from the tranquility of home. No more fighting the crowds. No more cruising the parking lot for the last space. Jump on the fast track of the Internet and you’ll avoid the headaches of the one thing many of us dread the most, SHOPPING!! It’s easy, convenient, and benefits a great cause.
SportsVision is now registered with SchoolCash.com, an easy-to-use, reputable, on-line fundraising resource. The program works by having SportsVision’s volunteers, clients, and friends do all of their on-line shopping through the SchoolCash.com web site. SportsVision receives a percentage from every purchase made at the more than 250 national on-line merchants available through the SchoolCash.com web site. SchoolCash is not a spammer and will not send you unsolicited email. In fact, the only personal information they require in registering to support SportsVision is your name and city. You need not give them your address, telephone number, email address, credit card information, or any other personal details.
Think of the SchoolCash function as the main entrance to your on-line mall. Whenever you are ready to go on-line shopping, simply begin your journey at the SchoolCash.com door. Click on the “All Merchants” link and begin shopping at stores like JC Penney, Office Depot, Old Navy, Kmart, Wal-Mart, BestBuy, Barnes & Noble, Sears, Target, Tupperware, Avon, Gap, Dick’s Sporting Goods, L.L. Bean, Harry & David’s, KB Toys, Comp USA, and hundreds of others. The site’s access to hundreds of popular stores means you will never-again have to remember dozens of Internet addresses to shop at your favorite merchants. There are no added charges and no strings attached, simply serf through the SchoolCash.com door on the way to your on-line shopping excursions, and you’ll be raising money for SportsVision.
Some call the game soccer. Others refer to it as football. Regardless of what you call it, there is no debating that the game’s popularity in the U.S. has exploded within the last two decades. While other countries have had a love affair with the game for nearly a century, it took a while for it to catch on in our country. Similarly, the growing international popularity of five-a-side football for the blind has also been delayed in the U.S.
In fact, the first international competition in five-a-side football for the blind took place at the Spanish Championships in 1986. Only in 2002 did the U.S. Association of Blind Athletes begin promoting football to its members. USABA is currently recruiting and training players to field a national five-a-side team to compete internationally. As you can imagine, this indoor game of “soccer” is wildly popular in Europe, Latin America, and the Caribbean. Currently more than 30 countries sponsor teams. In September 2004, five-a-side football for the blind will become the newest event of the Paralympic Games in Athens, Greece.
The mainstream game has undergone some adaptations to make it more enjoyable and safe for blind and visually impaired players. Each team consists of only five players; a goalkeeper and four fielders. The halves are only 25 minutes long with very few stoppages of time. The ball is made of leather and is slightly smaller than the regular ball. It contains ball bearings to emit a constant sound for easier tracking. Unlike the massive, often unruly crowds at mainstream games, spectators of blind football must remain quiet so players can hear the ball, opponents, and coaching.
The playing area for five-a-side for the blind is also quite different. It is played on cement or a similarly hard surface. The field measures 40 meters by 20 meters with either fencing or walls acting as the sidelines. These walls are used to immediately bounce the ball back into play. The walls also serve as orientation markers. The smaller, walled court makes the game more dynamic, fluid, and safe. The smaller dimensions also aid communication between players, coaches, and guides.
Like mainstream football, the blind version is physically demanding. Good players require strong ball control skills, special awareness, field orientation, and body coordination. Each player must wear a blindfold, except for the goalkeeper who can be either visually impaired or sighted. Players go after the ball with one foot and kick it toward the other team’s goal. When fielding the ball, players must shout, “Mine” to notify their teammates to stand clear. The game is full of contact, but no more dangerous than the sighted game.
In five-a-side football, the players rely on verbal cues from two guides or coaches. The manager directs the player to the ball and helps him stay oriented. The other guide is positioned behind the goal that his team is attacking. He shouts to his players to assist the aim of their kick toward that goal. Verbal guidance also helps players when defending free kicks and penalty shots. Some typical penalties and infractions include: obstructing the goalkeeper, tripping, two-footed attacks, purposeful noise distractions, and tampering with eyeshades. You can learn more about adapting and playing five-a-side football by visiting www.IBSA.es on the web.
SportsVision is fortunate to have Greg Gontaryk, one of USABA’s five-a-side development volunteers leading the instruction at this year’s Camp SportsVision. Based on the level of interest, SportsVision may offer a demonstration and mini-session of this fun sport for blind adults during our camp weekend. If you are a blind adult who is interested in attending such a session, please call the SportsVision office to express that interest.
No finish line: my life as I see it
By Marla Runyan with Sally Jenkins.
Published: Watertown, MA: Perkins Braille & Talking Book Library, 2001.
Book Number: MWatP-BPH (RCM 665)
The first legally blind athlete to compete in the Olympic Games tells her story. Diagnosed with Stargardt's disease when she was nine, Marla Runyan proved to be a gifted athlete. In 2000, she placed eighth in the Olympics 1500 meters foot race. With humility and humor, she describes how it felt to grow up and compete at the world-class level "disabled."
No limits
By Harry C. Cordellos and Janet Wells.
Published: Washington, D.C.: NLS, 1994.
Book Number: RC 37752
Cordellos avoided sports in his youth because of failing sight and a heart murmur. His attitude changed when he was introduced to water skiing through an orientation center. Now considered the most highly conditioned blind athlete in the world by Dr. Kenneth Cooper, director of Cooper Aerobics Center, Dallas, fifty-three-year-old Cordellos holds a master's degree in physical education and lectures widely.
Breaking through
By Harry C. Cordellos.
Published: Washington, D.C.: NLS, 1984.
Book Number: RC 20843
The autobiography of a renowned blind athlete. Cordellos describes his transformation from a timid, fumbling youngster with glaucoma to the accomplished and confident athlete he is today. His accomplishments in sports are as diverse as water-skiing, gymnastics, distance running, and diving.
If you could see what I hear
By Tom Sullivan and Derek Gill.
Published: Washington, D.C.: DBPH.
Book Number: RD 08206 or RC 35991
Autobiography of a gifted young man who became blind shortly after birth. Refusing to accept the limits of his handicap, he developed his abilities and became a champion wrestler, a dean's-list student, and graduate of Harvard University. Suggested related title: "To catch an angel; adventures in a world I cannot see," by Russell.
Touch the top of the world: a blind man's journey to climb farther than the eye can see
By Erik Weihenmayer.
Published: Washington, D.C.: NLSBPH, Library of Congress, 2001.
Book Number: RC 51505
In this adventure-packed memoir, the author recalls rebelling against becoming blind by age fifteen. Relates acquiring a passion for mountaineering and developing the character traits that enabled him to succeed. Covers his climbing exploits and his wedding on top of Mount Kilimanjaro. Some strong language.
SportsVision is a 501(c3) organization. All contributions are tax-deductible.