Apr 28, 2009

Jodie Symington to receive Breathing Life Award

Fundraiser Jodie is an inspiration

Jodie Symington battles cystic fibrosis, which attacks the internal organs and the digestive system, clogging the body with a sticky mucus, while climbing Mt. Everest. She does this to raise money for CF Trust and on May 28th she will be honored in London.

An awards spokesman said: "Jodie is a true inspiration to the Cystic Fibrosis (CF) community.

Please submit your inspirational stories to - stories@trustedsports.com

Jodie Symington
Jodie Symington

Full article can be read at The Shields Gazette
By Terry Kelly

Jodie Symington, 24, from Hebburn, has been put forward for a prestigious Breathing Life Award, partly for conquering the world's highest marathon.

Despite her medical condition, Miss Symington last year completed a gruelling 10-day trek on Mount Everest, to raise cash for the Cystic Fibrosis Trust.

An awards spokesman said: "Jodie is a true inspiration to the Cystic Fibrosis (CF) community.

"Despite suffering all the usual symptoms of CF, as well as diabetes, reflux and gallstones, Jodie continues to push herself to the limit and raise funds for the CF Trust and prove that CF won't hold her back.

"In the past year alone, she has taken part in the gruelling Everest marathon, her sixth Great North Run, and the Great North Swim.

"With her family and friends, she has helped raise more than a phenomenal £100,000 for the CF Trust.

"As well as all this, she still finds time to study for her BSc in applied biology at Newcastle University."


Please submit your inspirational stories to - stories@trustedsports.com

Apr 27, 2009

Unsportsmanlike Conduct - Soccer Team's Parents Penalized 100yds

100-Yard Penalty on Players' Parents

Another Technical Foul Story reported by the Washington Post about a 7th grade girls soccer team's PARENTS who were kept 100yds away for two games. Sportsmanship is not dead with youth sports...but parents are not helping things much.

When I was a kid, my parents taught me that if I didn't have anything nice to say, then I shouldn't say anything at all. I'd like to hear youth sports participants teach their parents the same lesson.

100-Yard Penalty on Players' Parents
Fans of Md. Soccer Team Banned After a Few Berate the Referee

By Annie Gowen
Washington Post Staff Writer

As the 13-year-old girls chased the soccer ball around the verdant field Sunday, one set of parents watched from the sidelines in comfy collapsible chairs, sipping coffee. The others were banished to a nearby hill, straining to see the action with binoculars.

The parents rooting for Bethesda's Legacy travel team at the Maryland SoccerPlex in Boyds were being punished for behavior at the end of last season, when a referee was berated for a call. Saying their actions were "nothing less than egregious," the Washington Area Girls Soccer League took the unusual step of banning them from the sidelines for two games, and a referee made sure they stayed back.

The soccer league, home to many of the area's best soccer players with 600 teams and more than 15,000 participants, has a strict disciplinary system, in which players and coaches receive yellow or red cards for rough or unsportsmanlike conduct. Some have to explain themselves at disciplinary hearings. There are also sportsmanship liaisons on each team, who are supposed to keep fellow parents in check.

Aggressive or otherwise inappropriate behavior by individual parents at soccer games or other youth sporting events happens with regularity these days. But this case was unusual because the whole team's parents were punished.

Kathie Diapoulis, league president, said the parents had gone too far. The league's disciplinary board has had better luck barring individual parents from attending games in the past three years rather than fining them, because the parents would pay the money and continue the bad behavior.

"We have taken a strong stance," Diapoulis said. "It's important. This isn't the World Cup. . . . And for the parents to be shrieking on the sidelines and belittling people goes against everything we're trying to do. . . . It's not acceptable behavior."

At Sunday's game against the Montgomery Soccer Club's Xcel, a referee was assigned to make sure the Legacy parents did not come within 100 yards of the field. Managers were equipped with emergency cellphone numbers in case of another altercation.

Elisa Chetrit, 43, a Potomac resident and a Legacy parent, said that at the game last fall during which the unsportsmanlike conduct occurred, the parents were "all frustrated together" about what they perceived to be bad calls by the referees. "There are many reasons why [the incident happened], but the point is we've got to shut up and keep going. . . . You can't let those things get to you. You just have to sit on the sidelines and not say anything."

The trouble began when a parent from the Springfield Youth Club's Xplosion working as an assistant referee raised a flag in the air and called an offside violation on a Bethesda player, according to the minutes of the disciplinary hearing. After the game, a Bethesda parent approached the referee and accused him of making the wrong call, the report says. The parent "started to raise his voice," according to the report. More sniping occurred, and "the tone and behavior of the parents was aggressive." Then another Bethesda parent allegedly yelled at the referee's daughter, "Your father should be fired!"


The league's disciplinary committee ruled that the Bethesda parents had violated the league's code of conduct -- which asks parents to refrain from questioning referees' calls -- through "egregious" behavior that "has no place in youth sports." They ruled that the parents could not be on the sidelines for the first two games of this season.

"There was a game where our parents were a little bit vocal about the refereeing. . . . Things can get emotional, but you have to keep up the sportsmanlike spirit," said Legacy's manager, Mark Lauda, an Olney resident. "We're not a problem team at all. It was just one thing that happened."

As the cost and competitiveness of youth sports have increased over the years, so have incidents of parental misbehavior, experts say, despite efforts to institute codes of conduct and "Silent Sundays," when parents agree not to talk at all during games. According to a Sports Illustrated Kids poll, 74 percent of children have witnessed out-of-control parents at their games.

Amid the thump of soccer balls and shouts of encouragement Sunday, the Xcel parents kept an eye on the sanctioned parents, even saying later that they thought a reporter snapping photos on their sideline might have been a Bethesda parent violating the 100-yard setback.

"It's embarrassing," one of the parents said. "This is seventh-grade soccer."

Across the way, Potomac lawyer Philip Page watched his daughter Jacqueline play through binoculars, which was "very maddening." Especially because he wasn't even at the game where the unsportsmanlike conduct occurred.

"We accepted our punishment, and we're abiding by it," Page said. "One of the functions of sports is to teach sportsmanship. When we as parents violate that, the girls need to see there are consequences to those actions."

The Legacy team lost, 2-0. Their parents filed glumly off the hill, their timeout completed. They put their sweaty daughters in SUVs and minivans and quickly left the parking lot.

Many of the vehicles had stickers with the league's motto: "Lasting Friendships Through Soccer."

Please submit your Technical Foul Stories to - stories@trustedsports.com

Apr 24, 2009

Aaron Curry Will Bring 12 yr old St. Jude Patient to NFL Draft

NFL prospect Aaron Curry visits St. Jude; invites patient for once-in-a-lifetime experience




"Wake Forest University senior linebacker Aaron Curry will soon experience something about which many young men can only dream. On April 25, 2009, he will hear his name called by National Football League Commissioner Roger Goodell as one NFL team selects him as their top draft choice for 2009.

As the winner of the 2008 Butkus Award, Curry is the top college linebacker in the nation and enters the NFL Draft as one of the highest-rated players. As such, he will be one of a few select college players invited to Radio City Music Hall in New York City to walk across the stage and shake Goodell’s hand once his name is called. It is the culmination of a lifelong dream.

But on a day that so many kids dream of happening, where the discussion should be all about him and the work he has put in to reach this pinnacle of success, Curry wants to share the spotlight with another. He wants to give someone else the opportunity to enjoy the experience of a lifetime.

That someone is 12-year-old Bryson, a patient of St. Jude Children’s Research Hospital.

In an unprecedented gesture, Curry invited Bryson to join him in New York City and sit at his table in the green room for what is expected to be the short wait before Curry’s name is called."

Read the entire story HERE

Submit your stories to stories@trustedsports.com