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Michael Murillo

Former pro preaches passion for soccer in Wesley Chapel

October 14, 2015 By Michael Murillo

Growing up in Communist Albania, Altin Ndrita didn’t have the freedoms and luxuries that many of us enjoy.

But, he did have one thing that always put a smile on his face: Soccer.

Ndrita would play whenever he had the chance, even if he didn’t have the best equipment.

“We didn’t have a real ball. It wasn’t a soccer ball. It was something between a balloon and a leather ball,” Ndrita recalled. “What we had, we thought it was the best. Because we didn’t know different. As soon as I had some friends to play with, that’s all I needed.”

Like scores of European children, Ndrita grew up watching soccer, playing soccer, and dreaming of one day being a professional soccer player. Unlike his childhood peers, he fulfilled that dream.

Ndrita played for Albanian and Greek professional teams.

Altin Ndrita played soccer professionally in Europe. Now he's coaching on a different level for the Wesley Chapel Soccer Club. (Michael Murillo/Staff Photos)
Altin Ndrita played soccer professionally in Europe. Now he’s coaching on a different level for the Wesley Chapel Soccer Club.
(Michael Murillo/Staff Photo)

Now, he’s the Director of Coaching for the Wesley Chapel Soccer Club, and teaches children the fundamentals and aesthetics of the game he loves.

The most important thing about playing soccer isn’t a skill or a talent, Ndrita said.

“The first thing is passion,” Ndrita said. “If you don’t have the passion, nobody can help you.”

While passion doesn’t create natural talent, it allows a player to be the best they can be. Controlling a ball with your feet doesn’t come naturally, Ndrita explained. A good lesson can teach fundamentals, and a skilled student can pick it up quickly.

But, the passionate student will find friends and play when they have free time, or just kick a ball by themselves for hours on end, Ndrita said. Controlling a ball will become second nature, and there’s no way that raw skill alone can compensate for the extra time and effort a passionate athlete will invest in soccer.

In fact, when asked if he would prefer to coach a superior talent with some interest in the game, or an average player who is devoted to the sport, it was an easy decision for Ndrita. He wants as many passionate players on the field as possible.

“When you have that kid with passion, with desire, with culture, with love of the game, you know after your training — or the next day you don’t have training with him — he will do something on his own. He will build on that training,” Ndrita said.

Seeing that passion as a coach, the same kind he had playing on fields near his family’s apartment in Albania, is inspiring to Ndrita.

While he played professionally, he also coached younger teams. He found their enthusiasm also included something he lost when he turned pro: A lack of pressure and a desire to simply have fun.

Being a professional soccer player meant achieving a lifelong dream. It also meant that the game Nditra loved became a results-oriented job. Expectations were high, and there was a lot of pressure to win matches. Practices were serious, games were serious, and coaching young players allowed him to tap into that original sense of carefree enjoyment that he enjoyed as a child.

“You lose that freedom, you lose that other purpose, that you play for fun. And you miss that,” Ndrita said of his time as a professional. “As a coach, you see those kids who don’t care about the result. They just love to play. You love to be a part of that.”

His time playing at high levels of the sport also influences the method of play he teaches. As a boy, Ndrita played midfielder, and was usually part of the action. But as he grew taller he took on the shape of a defender, and that was his position on his professional teams.

He knows that a defender doesn’t get a lot of glory, and can go long periods of time without touching the ball. He teaches a style of play that considers all players to be on offense when their team has possession. Instead of simply kicking it out of the zone, he wants players on defense to use their skills and control the ball, employing a possession style of play that’s reaped rewards for top international teams such as Spain and the Netherlands.

It’s also a style of play that’s a lot more fun for young players. He also turns drills into games to keep their interest level high. As a coach, he wants them to enjoy their time on the pitch, and maintain a level of fun as they try to win games.

Ndrita also wants to enjoy his time as coach since he’s now in his early 40s, and his playing days are over.

When he moved to the area more than a decade ago, he was actually negotiating a contract to keep playing in Europe.

It was only by winning an immigration lottery to come to the United States that his plans were changed.

He wasn’t expecting to be selected. In fact, he didn’t even know he had applied. His wife, Mirela, told him she applied for them, and they had an opportunity to come over. So in the interests of creating a better life for his family, they moved.

After Major League Soccer folded the Tampa Bay Mutiny, and he had his appendix removed, Ndrita took it as a sign that it was time to move on from playing soccer. He took a position at Bausch & Lomb, and he started teaching soccer to young players.

That includes his sons, Devi and Jori. They’ve inherited their father’s passion for the game, though Ndrita admits they didn’t have much say in the matter.

“I didn’t give them any choice, ” he said with a laugh.

But, the students he teaches in Wesley Chapel do have a choice, and he appreciates helping them find that passion, and encouraging it to grow.

“It’s fun when you make people get better and love the game. That’s really the most important thing,” Ndrita said. “If you feel like somebody loves the game because of you, then that’s really the best reward you can get.”

Published October 14, 2015

Frights on 41 start Oct. 22

October 14, 2015 By Michael Murillo

It doesn’t look like much right now: Wooden frames, piles of masks and some painted signs.

But, when it’s finished, the characters there will try to scare your socks off.

“This is chainsaws, blood and guts,” said Mike Walcott, recreation supervisor for Pasco County Parks, Recreation and Natural Resources. “This is not kids with sheets going ‘Boo!'”

Mike Walcott oversees construction for The Mall, while Katherine Gomez takes notes on what frights go where. Everything will be ready when it opens Oct. 22. (Michael Murillo/Staff Photos)
Mike Walcott oversees construction for The Mall, while Katherine Gomez takes notes on what frights go where. Everything will be ready when it opens Oct. 22.
(Michael Murillo/Staff Photos)

The Haunted House on 41, an annual tradition in Land O’ Lakes — except last year, when center improvements forced its cancellation — will be back in business Oct. 22 through Oct. 24 at the Land O’ Lakes Community Park, 5401 Land O’ Lakes Blvd. Thursday night is a “sneak preview,” which will be free to patrons and will give the cast a chance to get a feel for the concept, which is “The Mall.”

On Friday and Saturday nights, the house will open at 7:30 p.m., and the line will be cut off at 10 p.m. The suggested donation is $1, and nearly 1,000 visitors are expected to check out the attraction during the course of the event.

Those visitors will be transported to “The Mall,” a room at the center that will become a maze of scary shops and characters, complete with props and costumes that aren’t for the faint of heart.

“They’re really bloody, and they’re really scary,” said Katherine Gomez, a junior at Land O’ Lakes High School. She’s one of around 30 people working on the haunted house, coordinating sections and making sure that everything has a general theme but different frights throughout the 2 ½-minute journey.

Benjamin Martin, another junior at Land O’ Lakes High, also has been involved in the construction.

Martin has seen larger, more elaborate haunted houses, like Howl O’ Scream at Busch Gardens, and Halloween Horror Nights at Universal Studios in Orlando.

But, after working on The Mall, he has a new admiration for the efforts expended to create a scary event from scratch.

And, he’ll remember his own work when he goes back this year.

“Now that I know how much work it takes to set up something like this, I’ll be very appreciative,” Martin said.

The Mall will feature plenty of props and masks, set up for maximum effect.
The Mall will feature plenty of props and masks, set up for maximum effect.

While the Haunted House on 41 is a popular annual tradition that gives residents a few scares, it’s not the actual purpose of the event.

Walcott has been involved in the past 14 haunted houses, and while the end result is Halloween-themed fun, it’s really just a by-product of a simpler goal.

“We want the kids to have a hands-on experience with it,” Walcott said. “I want people who have never used a drill to use a drill. I want people who have never swung a hammer to swing a hammer. And a lot of these kids, they’ve never done that. And, this gives them an opportunity to actually build something.”

What they are building is more complicated than a couple of well-placed scares.

The maze has to lead visitors through the room, but in a way that gives them enough time to experience each separate store in the “mall.” Separate sections are built, so performers can move in and out of their scenes, and each person has to be able to perform their particular role over and over, to scare new visitors as they enter the maze.

The idea is to differentiate each segment, so those making their way through the maze have a variety of experiences.

“This is a huge project where a lot of people are involved. We’re trying to coordinate everything,” Gomez said.

And, when everything has been coordinated, residents will visit the Haunted House on 41 just as they have for years.

It has become a local tradition, Walcott said.

People who used to help put it on now come back from college to take a walk through the house.

The attraction is also a good reason to visit the park, which has undergone nearly $2.5 million in renovations since the last haunted house.

Walcott welcomes the visitors and looks forward to the completion of the haunted house each year, but don’t expect him to go through when it’s done.

Despite seeing it built from nothing, the finished creation is a bit too scary for his tastes.

“I wouldn’t go into it,” Walcott admitted. “I help build this thing, but I wouldn’t go into it. These things freak me out.”

Published October 14, 2015

New Wiregrass Ranch coach builds up the Bulls

October 14, 2015 By Michael Murillo

Wiregrass Ranch is on its fourth head football coach in as many years, and hasn’t had any real success in several seasons.

It sounds like a big rebuilding job.

Good thing the team’s new coach specializes in that kind of project.

“It’s almost as if that’s what my calling card is, to take challenges like this, and try and fix them,” said Mark Kantor, the Bulls’ head coach.

He’s done it before.

Mark Kantor has been assigned the task of rebuilding the Wiregrass Ranch football program, and he's tackling it with plenty of effort and a good amount of patience. (Michael Murillo/Staff Photos)
Mark Kantor has been assigned the task of rebuilding the Wiregrass Ranch football program, and he’s tackling it with plenty of effort and a good amount of patience.
(Michael Murillo/Staff Photos)

He coached at Gaither High School for nine years, also coming in as that team’s fourth head coach in four seasons, and he took the team to the playoffs three years in a row. They even won a district title.

Things were even more dire at Hudson High School.

When he walked into that program, it had a 0-24 record.

The team won three games his first season, and accomplished winning records the next two years, adding a playoff berth as district runner-up in his second season.

Coming to Wiregrass Ranch, Kantor had to evaluate what he had on the field.

The young players had a lot of energy and enthusiasm, he said.

But, there was a numbers problem.

With less than 40 players on the varsity team last year, and around 75 in the program over all, it fell far short of the 120 it should have had.

Kantor knew that was an issue as the team headed into the season.

But, he had no idea how many he’d lose to injury.

“In 23 years of coaching, 13 as a head coach, I’ve never seen it this bad,” he said of the injuries to his team. “I go to church every week, so I don’t know what it is.”

The Bulls have lost their starting quarterback and running back, as well as linemen, defensive ends and cornerbacks. But, the schedule won’t wait, and they’ve managed a 2-5 record so far, including a 1-3 mark in Class 7A District 8.

The Bulls have suffered injuries on both sides of the ball. While it might impact their record, it hasn't hurt the effort they give on the field.
The Bulls have suffered injuries on both sides of the ball. While it might impact their record, it hasn’t hurt the effort they give on the field.

It’s been a challenging year so far, but starting receiver Taylor Bleistein already sees a difference with Kantor at the helm.

“It’s been the best year that I’ve ever had. He’s put in a system that is completely different than what we’ve ever seen,” said Bleistein, a senior who’s been with the program all four years. “This is the best step I think the program has (taken) in a long time.”

It started in the off-season, according to Bleistein. Weight room work was more intense and serious, and the team has grown closer and more focused, despite dealing with injuries on both sides of the ball.

The receiver plans to continue playing after high school, with scholarship opportunities looking likely. However things turn out this year, he sees a bright future for Wiregrass Ranch football.

“I really like the direction that we’re going in as a program. He’s a great guy, he’s a great coach, he knows what he’s doing,” Bleistein said.

A good amount of that knowledge comes from another local coach. Kantor credits Sunlake coach Bill Browning as being a mentor, both when he played for him at Springstead High School, and later coached on his staff.

“He was a motivator. He was as tough as they come,” Kantor recalled from his days working with Browning. “It was a great learning experience, not only to play for him, but to also have an opportunity to coach for him.”

Browning’s Seahawks had little trouble with the Bulls when they faced off on Sept. 11, winning 31-7. But Browning saw Wiregrass Ranch give a lot of effort in the loss, and expects that trait to be a characteristic of Kantor’s team going forward.

“He was a hard-working, 100-percent type player, and he’s coaching the same way,” Browning said of Kantor. “I think he’s doing a great job over at Wiregrass.”

Browning knows a little bit about turning around programs himself. When he took the job at Springstead back in 1987, the Eagles had a cumulative record of 20-70 and had never had a winning season, he said. They would not only earn their first winning record, but also win a bowl game and a district title. And, he’s built Sunlake from the ground up into a perennial contender.

He believes that Wiregrass Ranch is on the right track with Kantor, and they’ll just have to be patient as he creates a winning atmosphere.

Kantor knows that might take some time, and he’s ready to put the work in to make it happen. If he can build on the talent he has, and if they can stay healthy, he believes he has the start of a successful program.

“I truly want to build something here,” he said. “We’re young, but we’ve got a lot more growing to do. There are parts there, absolutely.”

Wiregrass Bulls’ remaining schedule
Oct. 16 at Mitchell
Oct. 23 vs. Gaither
Oct. 30 at Plant

Published October 14, 2015

Prep Sports Board

October 14, 2015 By Michael Murillo

Oct. 5
Volleyball
Wiregrass Ranch 3, River Ridge 0

Oct. 6
Volleyball
Mitchell 3, Sunlake 2
Steinbrenner 3, Wiregrass Ranch 2
River Ridge 3, Wesley Chapel 1
Springstead 3, Land O’ Lakes 1
Plant 3, Freedom 0
Wharton 3, Leto 0

Oct. 7
Volleyball
Ridgewood 3, Zephyrhills 0

Oct. 8
Volleyball
Steinbrenner 3, Freedom 1
Wiregrass Ranch 3, Sickles 2
Fivay 3, Pasco 0
Wharton 3, Gaither 0

Oct. 9
Football
Zephyrhills 63, Ridgewood 19
Tampa Catholic 47, Land O’ lakes 7
Steinbrenner 14, Newsome 7
Wharton 44, Wiregrass Ranch 0
Hudson 26, Wesley Chapel 21
Freedom 31, Gaither 22
Volleyball
Wharton 2, Freedom 0 (tournament)
Riverview 2, Sunlake 1 (tournament)

Oct. 10
Volleyball
Wharton 2, Brandon 0 (tournament)
Durant 2, Wharton 1 (tournament)

Oct. 14
Volleyball
Sunlake at River Ridge, 6 p.m.
Academy at the Lakes at Wesley Chapel, 7 p.m.

Oct. 15
Volleyball
Gulf at Sunlake, 6 p.m.
Wiregrass Ranch at Pasco, 7 p.m.
East Bay at Freedom, 7 p.m.
Armwood at Wharton, 7 p.m.
Land O’ Lakes at Fivay, 7 p.m.

Oct. 16
Football
Pasco at Sunlake, 7:30 p.m.
River Ridge at Zephyrhills, 7:30 p.m.
Land O’ Lakes at Springstead, 7:30 p.m.
Pasco at Sunlake, 7:30 p.m.
Palm Harbor University at Steinbrenner, 7:30 p.m.
Wiregrass Ranch at Mitchell, 7:30 p.m.
Wesley Chapel at Anclote, 7:30 p.m.
Leto at Freedom, 7:30 p.m.
Sickles at Wharton, 7:30 p.m.
Volleyball
Wharton at Sealy (Texas)

Oct. 20 to Oct. 22
Volleyball
6A-8 District Tournament (Sunlake, Land O’ Lakes)

Sources: MaxPreps, various

Sunlake’s Browning tops his old school in district matchup

October 14, 2015 By Michael Murillo

Back in 1987, Bill Browning took over a beleaguered Springstead football program and turned it into a winner. Eventually, he made his way to Sunlake High School when that program started back in 2007, and he’s built it into a winner as well.

When those two teams met Oct. 2, the one Browning is currently leading came out on top.

The Seahawks defeated the Eagles, 38-20, to run their record to 6-0 on the season. And being a Class 6A-6 game, the win made Sunlake a perfect 2-0 in district play. It was also Sunlake’s first win against Springstead since 2011.

Browning was happy to get the win, and also to see some old friends on the road.

“Going back to Springstead (Oct. 2) I saw some people I haven’t seen in a long time, so it was really nice to talk to them,” he said. “It’s always good to see some of the people I worked with and coached.”

One of the people he coached is Springstead’s current head coach, Mike Garofano. And Browning also recognized some players’ names on the field. But, the Springstead athletes didn’t play for him. They weren’t even around when he was there.

“I coached their fathers,” Browning admitted. “Time marches on.”

Following their bye week, undefeated Sunlake will continue their schedule Oct. 16 with a home game against Pasco High School.

Disabled, but not discouraged

October 7, 2015 By Michael Murillo

When Monica Quimby was in college in 2006, she wanted to get a degree in molecular biology and to become a successful athlete.

Then a skiing accident left her paralyzed from the waist down. She was in the hospital for nearly five months as she recovered and tried to adjust to a newer, more difficult way of life.

After her skiing accident, Monica Quimby got a bachelor's in biology, a master's in teaching, and now teaches an online course for Southern Maine Community College. (Photos courtesy of Monica Quimby)
After her skiing accident, Monica Quimby got a bachelor’s in biology, a master’s in teaching, and now teaches an online course for Southern Maine Community College.
(Photos courtesy of Monica Quimby)

Many people would have adjusted their goals lower. Some might have given up altogether. Instead, Quimby got a degree in molecular biology and became a successful athlete.

“I think the biggest thing is that even though my physical form changed, my personality didn’t,” said Quimby, now 29.

The degree came first.

After the accident, she missed only one semester at the University of New Hampshire, and she was published for discovering maternal ancestors of the strawberry. Quimby received a Bachelor’s of Science in Molecular, Cellular and Developmental Biology and a Master’s Degree in Higher Education.

Now, she lives in Wesley Chapel, and she teaches an online Anatomy and Physiology course for Southern Maine Community College.

Those things, in themselves, make for an impressive resume.

But, there’s much more to Quimby’s story.

She competed in her home state’s wheelchair pageant and became Ms. Wheelchair Maine in 2011. She went on to finish third runner-up for Ms. Wheelchair USA.

Still, something was missing.

A natural athlete, she didn’t want her disability to prevent her from playing sports. She tried kayaking and cycling (using hand pedals), but eventually found sledge hockey.

Sledge hockey — also known as sled hockey — is hockey played on a sled, and requires incredible balance and upper body strength. She tried it, and fell. And fell again, more than a dozen times in all. But, she loved it. Soon, Quimby became a talented defender.

And the former Ms. Wheelchair Maine, who once wore a tiara and a sash, discovered that she really liked hitting people while defending the ice.

“It feels so awesome. It’s incredible,” she said. “I’m the one that’s smiling after I hit you.”

Quimby is an adjunct professor, an athlete for the USA Women's Sledge Hockey Team and was Ms. Wheelchair Maine in 2011.
Quimby is an adjunct professor, an athlete for the USA Women’s Sledge Hockey Team and was Ms. Wheelchair Maine in 2011.

In just 18 months, Quimby has immersed herself in the game. She plays in local recreational leagues, as well as the Florida Sled Bandits, the state’s elite sledge hockey team.

And if that was the extent of her athletic accomplishments, it would be an admirable body of work.

But it isn’t.

Quimby also is an integral part of the USA Women’s Sledge Hockey Team, defending champions of both the World Cup and, with Quimby’s help, the World Championships. They’ll also compete at the 2018 Winter Paralympics in 2018.

In just a short time, she’s become a member of the world’s top women’s sledge hockey team, and was part of the championship team that beat Canada earlier this year.

Being part of the USA team and participating in their success has been a highlight for Quimby.

“When you’re on that ice, and they’re playing the national anthem, you’re like ‘Oh my goodness, I’m representing my country. My country.’ That is such an incredible moment. I will never forget that,” she said.

There are also other things she’ll never forget. Like spending 20 minutes trying to get into a pair of jeans after her accident. Like losing a close friend because they couldn’t handle the extra attention and challenges that become commonplace for people with disabilities. And, like battling moments of depression and anger as her life took a path she never expected.

“There was a real dark time that I had that, even though all of these amazing things were going on, it was hard for me to get out of bed in the morning. It was hard for me to get to the gym,” Quimby said. “Being in a wheelchair is not for the weak. It’s definitely for the strong.”

Others with disabilities can show that strength, Quimby said, if they find something they enjoy and put their energies toward it.

“I really think the big thing that pulls me out of (negative moods) is to find something that you love. Find something that you can get excited about,” she said.

If she's not teaching or on the ice representing her country, Monica Quimby might be enjoying a cappuccino in Wesley Chapel. (Michael Murillo/Staff Photo)
If she’s not teaching or on the ice representing her country, Monica Quimby might be enjoying a cappuccino in Wesley Chapel.
(Michael Murillo/Staff Photo)

For Quimby, it’s athletics. But, it could be photography, making bracelets or anything that interests someone. Regardless of their challenge or disability, if they can find something and throw themselves into it with interest and passion, it can enhance the enjoyment they get out of life.

Quimby has found more paths that interest her, and more goals she wants to pursue. She’s in the process of writing a book and has begun motivational speaking as well.

But, sledge hockey takes up a lot of her time, and that includes fundraising. Her sport is still growing (the USA team donates equipment to teams in other countries to help them get going) and they have to raise a lot of money for ice time, travel and other expenses that aren’t covered. Quimby sells license plates and accepts donations on her website.

She also makes time to appreciate the positive things she has in her life. She has a supportive family and boyfriend, and tries to be grateful for the simple pleasures in life. One day it might be the Florida sunshine, and another it might be the cappuccino at one of her favorite spots, Le Macaron at The Shops at Wiregrass.

And, although her days are still filled with challenges, she meets them with the same outlook that helped her after her accident, helped her obtain her degrees, helped her earn a pageant title and helps her on the ice in international competition.

“I feel like I’ve had some bumps and bruises, and some easy times and some hard times. But, I feel like things fall into place if you let them,” Quimby said. “If you put in the work, if you put in the action, your path will be in front of you. And you just have to accept it and be open to it.”

For more information about the USA Women’s Sledge Hockey Team, visit MonicaQuimby.com.

Published October 7, 2015

Local groups benefit from Guv’na cash grab

October 7, 2015 By Michael Murillo

The candidates running for Lutz Guv’na spent months with their hands out.

The person who raised the most money was declared the winner of the ceremonial title, so they were all focused on filling their coffers throughout their campaigns.

Over the Fourth of July weekend, Jennifer Rankin was declared the winner and earned the Lutz Guv’na sash. But, the real winners were announced Oct. 1 at Learning Gate Community School, 16215 Hanna Road in Lutz.

After raising more than $18,000 over the course of the campaign, it was time to hand that money out to nearly 20 worthy organizations.

As candidates, KarenSue Molis, left, and Guv'na Jennifer Rankin helped raise more than $18,000 for area groups. (Michael Murillo/Staff Photo)
As candidates, KarenSue Molis, left, and Guv’na Jennifer Rankin helped raise more than $18,000 for area groups.
(Michael Murillo/Staff Photo)

The funds raised went to local groups, and last week’s event allowed each of them to pick up a check to help them with their goals.

For the Lutz Patriots and Support the Troops, that means more care packages going to soldiers overseas.

For the Old Lutz School, it means continuing improvements, which include remodeled bathrooms and a new, lighted flagpole.

And, for the Lutz/Land O’ Lakes Woman’s Club, it means taking all of their money and helping out other local groups.

“We always give it away,” said Kay Taylor, president of the GFWC Lutz/Land O’ Lakes Woman’s Club. This year the club’s Guv’na money went to Boy Scout Troop 12 and the Old Lutz School. The club spends much of the year raising its own funds to help others.

Being part of the Lutz Guv’na race is special for the group and for Taylor, who was a previous candidate herself.

“It’s a feeling of community. It’s a wonderful thing. You’re just thankful to be part of it,” she said.

The club runs its own Guv’na candidate each year, and even though KarenSue Molis didn’t win the title, she was all smiles at the distribution ceremony and happy to have been involved in the fundraising process.

“It was really fun,” she said. “The camaraderie was great.”

A portion of her funds will go to groups such as the Lutz Branch Library, the Old Lutz School, and Canine Companions, which provides assistance dogs to people in need.

Attendees such as Bruce Hockensmith of the Lutz Patriots appreciate the funds they received.

“It’s been phenomenal, the support that we continue to get,” he said.

The Lutz Patriots works with Support the Troops, and the money will go toward postage costs to send the care packages across the globe, which can run around $55 each. It’s a lot of money, but Hockensmith said the feeling soldiers get when they see a package — and know they haven’t been forgotten — is worth every penny.

And, they remember where it came from, too.

“There are troops all around the globe that have heard the Lutz name,” he said.

For Rankin, winning the title meant handing out the money, shaking hands and taking photos with grateful recipients. It also meant, like all candidates, designating 10 percent of what she raised to the cause of her choice.

Rankin picked the Steinbrenner High School cheerleaders, noting her stepdaughter was a part of the group when she attended the school.

This was Rankin’s way of giving back to them, and helping them fund a trip to their national competition if they qualify.

The third candidate, Cheryl Lynn Ayres, wasn’t at the event, but it was announced that Boy Scout and Cub Scout Troop 212 would be the recipient of her designated funds.

Now that the money has been distributed, the reigning Guv’na will go about her ceremonial duties, which includes attending events, cutting ribbons and spreading Guv’na good cheer when she gets an invite from a local group.

And, Rankin hopes it will be a busy year.

“I am so excited. I hope that people ask me to come to stuff. I hope they invite me to be there to represent what we all worked hard to achieve by raising money,” she said.

Published October 7, 2015

Academy at the Lakes reaches new highs in volleyball

October 7, 2015 By Michael Murillo

When Academy at the Lakes volleyball coach Brian Gonzales came to the school four years ago, he had never suffered a losing season coaching at any school or club level.

The Wildcats, on the other hand, never had much success on the court.

Something had to give.

Unfortunately, it was the coach’s winning streak.

“I don’t like having losing seasons,” Gonzales said, recalling the taste of defeat.

It took a few seasons, but varsity volleyball coach Brian Gonzales has built a winner at Academy at the Lakes. (Courtesy of Academy at the Lakes)
It took a few seasons, but varsity volleyball coach Brian Gonzales has built a winner at Academy at the Lakes.
(Courtesy of Academy at the Lakes)

But that’s exactly what happened for the first few years of his tenure.

Still, he tends to take a longer view.

Gonzales knew he had a rebuilding project on his hands, so he put in younger players and let them grow into their roles.

Eighth-graders were facing high school seniors, and they lost matches.

Athletes who didn’t fully understand the game faced off against experienced teams with plenty of club-level experience, and they lost more matches.

But Gonzales knew that over time, the effort would yield good results.

In 2015, it’s paying off in a big way.

Academy at the Lakes won its first seven matches this season — without dropping a single set — and compiled a 16-3 record through September.

Now, the team is winding up its winning season (and best in school history) and will enter the 2A-8 district tournament later this month with the regionals in its sights.

The Wildcats are heavy favorites to reach the district final, which means the team would advance to the regional playoffs as either the top or second seed.

For Gonzales, it’s been a long road since those first matches with players who barely knew their roles on the court.

“I got here, and I was talking volleyball with my girls, and it’s like I was speaking Chinese to them. They didn’t have a clue what I was saying. So we had to go back to step one and build it from there,” he said.

Over time, his players learned both a passion for, and intelligence about, the game, and those characteristics are showing up in their play.

Seven of the team’s 10 girls now play club volleyball, meaning they’re immersed in the game nearly year-round. And with Gonzales’ aggressive style, they’re not afraid to take chances and make mistakes.

Gonzales wants them to be aggressive and to play with intensity, and to learn from their mistakes.

“I don’t dwell on mistakes,” Gonzales said. “An aggressive error, in my mind, is fine as long as they don’t keep making the same one over and over.”

Aside from Tampa Bay HEAT, a team comprised of home-schooled athletes, Academy at the Lakes has torn through their district opponents, often limiting them to less than 10 points in each set.

The HEAT has defeated the Wildcats and is the team’s main competition in the district right now.

Gonzales has gone out of his way to schedule challenging competition for the independent private school, such as matches against traditional public schools like Wesley Chapel High School and Pasco High School.

The academy won both of those matches.

The improvement is gaining attention.

When Gonzales first started, they might have 15 people in the stands for their games, and those were mostly parents. Now that the team is winning, word is getting around the academy, and students want to see them play. Their Sept. 24 match against the HEAT drew nearly 200 fans, Gonzales said.

Since nobody outside the HEAT in their district has captured a set against them, much less a match, a trip to the playoffs looks very probable. But this isn’t a one-year payoff for the coach’s hard work. He’s already building for the future in a way that makes future losing seasons seem unlikely. The core of his team are just sophomores, which means they’ll be even more experienced and seasoned players in the coming years. The school now has a junior varsity volleyball program as well, and many of those players also participate in club volleyball.

However things turn out this season (Gonzales sees the potential to make some noise in the regional tournament if they get there), he’s happy to see the program blossom from a struggling team to a successful group of motivated, talented players.

“They’re still young kids, but they don’t play like it,” Gonzales said. “They play like seasoned veteran players, and that’s exactly what I was hoping for.”

Wildcats’ remaining 2015 schedule
Oct. 8 vs. Brooks Debartolo Collegiate, 7:30 p.m.
Oct. 13 at Gulf, 7 p.m.
Oct. 14 at Wesley Chapel, 7 p.m.
Oct. 19-23 2A-8 District Tournament

Published October 7, 2015

Prep Sports Board

October 7, 2015 By Michael Murillo

Sept. 24
Volleyball
Plant 3, Steinbrenner 0
Wiregrass Ranch 3, Gaither 0
Wesley Chapel 3, Hudson 1
Ridgewood 3, Zephyrhills 0
Gulf 3, Pasco 1
Wharton 3, Freedom 1

Sept. 25
Football
Sunlake 34, Lakewood Ranch 14
Zephyrhills 69, Fivay 25
Jesuit 17, Pasco 0
Steinbrenner 37, Riverview 20
Wiregrass Ranch 29, Leto 20
Wharton 44, Freedom 20
Wesley Chapel 16, Gulf 6

Sept. 26
Volleyball
Ridgewood 2, Land O’ Lakes 0 (tournament)
Land O’ Lakes 2, Springstead 0 (tournament)

Sept. 28
Volleyball
Steinbrenner 3, Leto 0
Plant 3, Wiregrass Ranch 0
Freedom 3, Gaither 0

Sept. 29
Volleyball
Sunlake 3, Springstead 2
Wesley Chapel 3, Pasco 0
Mitchell 3, Land O’ Lakes 0
Wharton 3, Sickles 0

Sept. 30
Volleyball
Mitchell 3, Wesley Chapel 0
Wiregrass Ranch 3, Freedom 1

Oct. 1
Volleyball
Wharton 3, Steinbrenner 2
Ridgewood 3, Wesley Chapel 0
Anclote 3, Pasco 0

Oct. 2
Football
Sunlake 38, Springstead 20
Zephyrhills 52, Hudson 37
Lakeland Christian 27, Land O’ Lakes 14
Mitchell 42, Pasco 27
Manatee 52, Steinbrenner 17
Freedom 17, Wiregrass Ranch 6
Fivay 20, Wesley Chapel 15
Plant 40, Wharton 17
Volleyball
Father Lopez 2, Zephyrhills 0 (tournament)
Montverde Academy 2, Pasco 0 (tournament)

Oct. 7
Volleyball
Ridgewood at Zephyrhills, 7:30 p.m.

Oct. 8
Volleyball
Steinbrenner at Freedom, 7:30 p.m.
Wiregrass Ranch at Sickles, 7:30 p.m.
Wesley Chapel at Gulf, 7 p.m.
Zephyrhills at Anclote, 7:30 p.m.
Pasco at Fivay, 7 p.m.
Gaither at Wharton, 7:30 p.m.

Oct. 9
Football
Zephyrhills at Ridgewood, 7:30 p.m.
Land O’ Lakes at Tampa Catholic, 7:30 p.m.
Steinbrenner at Newsome, 7:30 p.m.
Wharton at Wiregrass Ranch, 7:30 p.m.
Wesley Chapel at Hudson, 7:30 p.m.
Freedom at Gaither, 7:30 p.m.
Volleyball
Wharton vs. Freedom, 6:30 p.m. (tournament)

Oct. 10
Volleyball
Wharton vs. Brandon, 8 a.m. (tournament)
Wharton vs. Durant, 12:30 p.m. (tournament)

Oct. 12
Volleyball
Zephyrhills at Wiregrass Ranch, 7:30 p.m.

Oct. 13
Volleyball
Anclote at Sunlake, 6 p.m.
Durant at Steinbrenner, 7 p.m.
Pasco at Land O’ Lakes, 7:30 p.m.
Nature Coast Tech at Zephyrhills, 7:30 p.m.
Freedom at Blake, 7 p.m.
Wharton at Newsome, 7 p.m.
Wiregrass Ranch at Carrollwood Day School, 7 p.m.

Sources: MaxPreps, various

$22,000 raised at Gulfside Hospice’s golf tournament 

October 7, 2015 By Michael Murillo

Gulfside Hospice’s Second Annual Charity Golf Tournament on Aug. 29 at Cypress Run Golf Club in Tarpon Springs met its fundraising goal with $22,000 raised for the organization.

But, the fundraiser almost fell short.

After 80 golfers hit the links, event chair Linda Fox mentioned at dinner that they were still about $1,500 short of their fundraising goal. Howard Millian of Millian-Aire Heating and Air Conditioning stepped up and made a donation to help the organization to not only meet, but surpass, its goal.

The funds will help Gulfside Hospice provide care to patients and bereavement services to their loved ones.

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