From the category archives:

Sports

By Ray Marcham, KOMO (RVP news partner)

The title picture in the Metro League got a little clearer this week, with Franklin clinching the Sound Division title and O’Dea and Seattle Prep winning to set up their showdown for the Mountain Division crown next week.

The Quakers beat Cleveland to clinch a spot in the Metro title game. Since Franklin has already beaten both Ingraham and West Seattle, they have the Sound’s top seed even if they lose next week. In other division games, Nathan Hale beat Chief Sealth on Friday, while Ingraham and West Seattle face off for second place on Saturday at West Seattle Stadium.

The big game in the Mountain Division had O’Dea winning at Bainbridge to stay unbeaten. That sets up a showdown for the division title with Seattle Prep next week, as the Panthers also stayed undefeated after winning at Rainier Beach. Eastside Catholic got their first division win of the season by beating Bishop Blanchet, while Lakeside visits Highline on Saturday night.

Next week’s games have four being played on Thursday, including the O’Dea-Seattle Prep matchup at West Seattle Stadium. Nathan Hale plays at Ingraham, Eastside Catholic heads to Bainbridge and Franklin plays Rainier Beach at Memorial Stadium. On Friday, it’s the battle for West Seattle as the Wildcats play Chief Sealth at West Seattle Stadium. Then on Saturday, Bishop Blanchet hosts Cleveland, while Lakeside hosts Mission, BC.

Here are this week’s scores from around the Metro League:

  • Eastside Catholic 28, Bishop Blanchet 14
  • Franklin 35, Cleveland 14
  • Nathan Hale 37, Chief Sealth 20
  • O’Dea 35, Bainbridge 14
  • Seattle Prep 48, Rainier Beach 20
  • Ingraham vs West Seattle at West Seattle Stadium, Saturday, 5 pm
  • Lakeside vs Highline at Highline Stadium, Saturday, 7 pm

By Ray Marcham, KOMO Communities (RVP news partner)

The halfway point of the Metro League football season has been reached, with some big games happening on Friday night.

In the Sound Division, Franklin celebrated its 100th homecoming by handing Ingraham its first loss of the season, leaving the Quakers alone on top of the division. West Seattle moved into third place, a half-game behind the Rams, after shutting out Cleveland. Nathan Hale got its first league win of the season by knocking off Rainier Beach.

In the Mountain Division, Seattle Prep stayed unbeaten by coming from behind to win at Bainbridge. O’Dea also stayed undefeated by cruising past Bishop Blanchet. Eastside Catholic shut out Chief Sealth in a cross-divisional game, while Lakeside lost to Hockinson in a non-league game.

Next week’s games include Franklin traveling to Chief Sealth, Ingraham hosts Lakeside, West Seattle heads to Rainier Beach, Cleveland plays Nathan Hale at Memorial Stadium, O’Dea travels to Sammamish to play Eastside Catholic and Seattle Prep hosts Bishop Blanchet at West Seattle Stadium. Bainbridge plays a non-league game at home against 2A powerhouse North Thurston.

Here are this week’s scores from around the Metro League:

  • Eastside Catholic 46, Chief Sealth 0
  • Franklin 21, Ingraham 12
  • Nathan Hale 42, Rainier Beach 14
  • O’Dea 35, Bishop Blanchet 3
  • Seattle Prep 24, Bainbridge 21
  • West Seattle 35, Cleveland 0
  • Hockinson 49, Lakeside 14 (non-league)

Rainier Valley kids ages 8 to 14 are invited to participate in a free Gatorade Junior Training Camp hosted by the Seattle Seahawks at Rainier Beach High School in the south Rainier Valley:

These two-hour clinics combine first-rate football instruction and life skills messages that focus on self-improvement and a motivational life-skills session with a Seahawks player, coach or alumni.

This non-contact football training camp is scheduled for Tues., July 19, from 10 am to 12 pm, and is limited to 200 participants. Go here for more information or to register. Photo/Seattle Seahawks

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Parents and kids – here’s an opportunity to join one of the most successful youth track and field programs in our region, while learning from an experienced and dedicated coaching staff.

Rainier Beach Track Club is actively recruiting boys and girls, ages 5 to 14, to participate in the 2011 spring track season. Whether you’ve run track before or are just beginning, you’ll reap the benefits of this versatile sport and have fun doing it.

Track is great compliment to other sports, such as football, soccer and basketball. Our focus at Rainier Beach Track Club is on speed development, improved athleticism and agility, increased coordination, strength and endurance and maintaining a healthy weight for all kids.

We offer a full range of events and training, including sprints, middle and long distances, jumps and throws. Learn from the best and sign-up now! The cost is only $35 per athlete.

To register, stop by Rainier Community Center (4600 38th Ave. S.) or register online at www.seattle.gov/parks/centers. When registering, be sure to specify that you are signing up for Rainier Beach Track Club.

Practices take place at Rainier Beach High School on Mondays and Wednesdays, from 6 pm to 7:30 pm (for all ages), and Saturdays, from 9 am to 11 am (for ages 9 and up). The first practice is on Mon., March 7.

For more information, Contact Coach Vic at jvroberson@aol.com or (206) 331-5529. You can also find us on Facebook by searching for “RainierBeachTrackClub.”

On-line registration for the 2011 Rainier District Little League (RDLL) season is now underway, and south-end youth from 4 to 18-years-old are invited to participate.

Players must reside within RDLL boundaries:  I-90 south to the city limits;  I-5 to Lake Washington, plus the communities of Georgetown, Skyway, Bryn Mawr, Lakeridge, and extending down to Grady Way between Monster Rd. and Rainier Ave. More.

Dates to Remember:

  • 2/5-6: Parent Meeting and Walk-in Registration (Rainier Community Center)
  • 2/12: Skills Day #1 (Rainier Playfield)
  • 2/13: Skills Day #2 (Rainier Playfield)
  • 2/15: Skills Day #3 (Rainier Playfield)
  • 3/15: Teams Formed For All Pitch Divisions
  • 4/2: Jamboree – Season Kick-off (Rainier Playfield)

Photo/RDLL

Seattle Times (RVP news partner):

Hayley Lucotch stood in line at the Creston Point Apartments in south Seattle with her young son, Tatum, to receive a free Thanksgiving basket, but it wasn’t the first free food she’d received this Thanksgiving week.

Lucotch said she also received food from the Salvation Army but gave it away to a family who she believed needed the food more than she did.

And besides, she laughed, the Salvation Army basket had a chicken, not a turkey like the one at Creston Point.

“This is a big deal,” she said of the food giveaway at her apartment building. “It’s so nice they do this for people and we’re totally alone.”

She plans to cook a meal for about a half-dozen people who otherwise wouldn’t have a Thanksgiving. “This makes us thankful for what we do have,” she said.

Dozens of people lined up at Creston Point on Wednesday to receive food baskets stuffed by members of the Rainier Beach High School basketball team. Read more.

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Seattle Times (RVP news partner):

Joe Leota isn’t just happy about being hired as the new Rainier Beach girls basketball coach.

“I’m ecstatic,” he said. “It’s my dream job. I grew up in the community. I’m looking forward to the opportunity to get the program headed in the right direction.” Read more.

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Rainier Valley resident Cathy Guy brought home a gold medal in golf from the National Kidney Foundation U.S. Transplant Games in Madison, Wis. earlier this month.

Winning the 40- to 49-year-old women’s division was sweet for this former college athlete who had a kidney transplant 12 years ago. But it was only part of the reward Guy received at the games.

“The whole games were a fantastic experience, so positive and so inspiring,” said Guy, who received kidney dialysis at Northwest Kidney Centers in Seattle before receiving her transplant.

She was joined by the brother who donated his kidney to her. He drove 800 miles from South Dakota to be there. Guy was part of an 18-member Team Northwest, which included athletes from Alaska, Oregon and Washington. The teammates had an immediate connection.

“It was great to meet other people in this area who have gone through transplants too,” she said. “After having my transplant for 12 years, it was a great way to celebrate and it was inspiring to listen to people who’ve had their transplants longer than that and how to manage that.”

The next games will be in 2012. Cathy looks forward to participating in those games too.

Golfer and Rainier Valley neighbor Cathy Guy was diagnosed with lupus in college and received a kidney transplant in 1998. Here she is at the Maplewood Golf Course in Renton, where she practices. Photo/Mike Penney

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By Gestin Suttle

After being diagnosed with lupus and undergoing a kidney transplant, Cathy Guy thought her days as a competitive athlete were well behind her.

Then came a phone call nearly two years ago. It was a college friend who also had undergone a kidney transplant.

“He called and said, ‘Why the heck weren’t you at the Transplant Games in 2008? I expected you to be there and you weren’t,’” recalled Cathy, 46, from her Rainier Valley home.

Although her friend was mostly teasing, the call got Cathy thinking.

“I was a competitive (track) athlete in college, but then after being diagnosed with lupus and subsequently undergoing a kidney transplant, my life took a different path,” she said. “The idea of a friendly competition was enticing and exciting to me,” she explained.

Cathy did more than just think about competing. She signed up to participate in the 2010 National Kidney Foundation U.S. Transplant Games in Madison, Wis. The Games, which will be held July 30–Aug. 4, are an Olympic–style event for athletes who have received life–saving organ transplants of every type – kidney, liver, heart, lung, pancreas and bone marrow.

Transplant athletes will compete for gold, silver and bronze medals in a dozen sports, including golf, track and field, swimming, tennis, basketball and cycling. Since 1990, the biennial U.S. Transplant Games have attracted participants from all over the country who are organized into 50 state teams.

Cathy’s sport this time is golf. She has found a partner from Alaska, John Hanrath, and the pair will make up the Northwest golf team.

Cathy’s participation in the games is a source of pride for Northwest Kidney Centers, based in Seattle. Northwest Kidney Centers, a nonprofit, is the largest dialysis organization serving King County and educates the public about kidney health. Cathy first became involved with the organization when she underwent dialysis training as a patient there in 1995.

She has since become a Northwest Kidney Centers volunteer – driving patients to dialysis appointments, training individuals on computers, helping with fundraising, and staffing the organization’s information booth at festivals and health fairs.

“It was an easy decision to volunteer once I felt healthy enough,” Cathy said. “Northwest Kidney Centers was so great to me. I wanted to give back.”

To prepare for the games, Cathy is practicing at the Maplewood Golf Course in Renton at least once a week. But she already feels like a winner. “It’s great to just feel healthy enough to golf,” she said. “I feel good and I feel strong.”

It’s been a long road toward improved health. For many years, Cathy wasn’t strong enough to even think about sports, much less consider a friendly competition.

She grew up in the Black Hills of South Dakota and graduated from Eastern Montana College (now a part of Montana State University). After receiving her degree, Cathy headed overseas to student teach. When she returned to the states to begin her life as an elementary school teacher, things just weren’t quite right.

“I had returned from student teaching in Ireland and was completely exhausted. I couldn’t figure out why,” she said.

Soon the reason for her fatigue was made clear – she had lupus, a chronic, autoimmune disease that can damage any part of the body.

Cathy had just started a new teaching job and was trying her best to manage the effects of the disease.

“I would teach and I would feel so nauseous and sick from failing kidneys,” she said. With deteriorating kidneys, “You can’t get all of those toxins and poisons out of your system. I’d teach and then when the kids would go to recess I’d go to the bathroom and throw up.”

Cathy did her best to cope with her illness and live her life, and in 1989, she moved to Seattle. In 1995 her kidneys stopped functioning, Cathy started dialysis and began evaluations for the kidney transplant process. Each of Cathy’s five siblings was tested and her eldest brother, Dave Guy, turned out to be a match. In June 1998, Dave donated one of his kidneys to Cathy.

“He said I could call it my kidney now,” Cathy laughed.  “I had one little scare early on as far as rejection, but since then it’s been a matter of keeping my lupus under control so it doesn’t affect or attack the new kidney,” Cathy explained. “My biggest battles are staving off infection and fatigue.”

Cathy is now teaching again part-time at St. Anthony’s Elementary School in Renton. She is married to Tim Elfering, and the couple adopted son James from Korea in 2001.

The kidney transplant and her improved health “gave us the ability to now have a child,” Cathy said, adding that she does not think her brother realized the world of opportunities he was opening up at the time he offered his kidney.  “I think he was just thinking about me and my health,” she explained. “It was the most wonderful gift.”

The Transplant Games also celebrate the donors, and Dave Guy is looking into the possibility of going. Meanwhile, Cathy still is a bit surprised to find herself training for the games.

“Many, many times I had just resigned myself to this less active life, and then this crazy thing comes along,” she said. “It’s a goal to work toward, and I’m excited about it.”

Golfer and Rainier Valley neighbor Cathy Guy was diagnosed with lupus in college and received a kidney transplant in 1998. Here she is at the Maplewood Golf Course in Renton, where she practices. Photo/Mike Penney

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The Skanner:

Part of the Urban League’s mission is to partnership with community and businesses striving to help people, particularly to help African Americans become self-sufficient.

Thanks to a new partnership between the Urban League of Metropolitan Seattle and the Rainier Beach High School football team, student athletes are provided with nutritious meals, as well as tutorial academic help — for those needing it.

It all started with a little gossip. Last year, James Kelly, president of the Urban League of Metropolitan Seattle, heard stories about high school football coaches giving money out of their own pockets to student players who were hungry. Some of these students are living at or below poverty level. Read more.

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american-flagFinally, the long awaited World Cup match-up of USA vs. England starts at 11:30 am this morning, and there are a few places in the Rainier Valley to watch:

  • Island Soul Caribbean Cuisine (4869 Rainier Ave. S.), Columbia City
  • Empire Espresso (3629 S. Edmunds St.), Columbia City
  • Huarachitos Mexican Restaurant (5418 MLK Jr. Way), MLK
  • Kallaloo Caribbean Restaurant (3820 S. Ferdinand St.), Columbia City

flag-enWhat did we miss? Do you know of other places in the Rainier Valley to watch World Cup Soccer? Use the comment section below to share the information with your neighbors. Go USA!

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World Cup Fever Hits Empire Espresso in Columbia City

06.10.2010 Arts/Living
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As the world’s gaze turns toward South Africa tomorrow, so does that of Empire Espresso in Columbia City, and the proof is in its artfully designed coffee cup sign where owner Tino Ganacias recently placed a large globe. Surprisingly enough, the popular cafe is one of the only places in the valley hosting local fans [...]

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All-American Brandon Roy to Be Keynote Speaker at Rainier Vista Breakfast

06.03.2010 Sports
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From The Seattle Times (RVP news partner): “I was scared,” he said. “I was really insecure in class. But I got lucky and got hit with a rude awakening as a sophomore. But a lot of guys I know got hit after high school, when it was too late. Once I figured it out and [...]

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WED: Rainier Vista Boys & Girls Club to Celebrate 8th Annual All-Girls Sports Day

03.29.2010 Kids
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The Rainier Vista Boys & Girls Club (4520 Martin Luther King Jr. Way S.) will celebrate the 8th Annual All Girls Sports Day this Wed., March 31, from 10:30 am to 1 pm, with help from the Seattle Storm and Seattle Majestic’s. The event is open to girls ages 6-12.  The girls will be broken [...]

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Play Ball! Rainier District Little League Open for Registration

02.27.2010 Sports
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Rainier Valley Rowing Featured on ABC World News

10.22.2009 News
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Earlier this week, a dynamic new south-end organization was featured on ABC World News with Charles Gibson. Rainier Valley Rowing (RVR) is dedicated to helping local teens overcome barriers to accessing neighborhood swimming pools, boathouse and blue spaces. The segment aired nationwide at 5:30pm and is currently posted here.

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Countdown to Seafair: The Big Build Begins + Logboom Filling Fast

07.22.2009 News
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With a little more than a week before Seafair starts south-end style (think Hydroplane Race, Air Show & Fireworks at Stan Sayres and Genesee Park on Lake Washington), the big build has begun and a cadre of people are working diligently to secure the otherwise public parks from the unpaid. The Saturday Night Seafair Concert, [...]

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More Than 2,000 Participate in Annual Seafair Triathlon

07.20.2009 News
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The Seafair Machine says that close to 2,000 participants took part in the ninth annual Benaroya Research Institute Triathlon at Seafair on Sunday morning at Seward Park. The “sprint distance” triathlon includes a half-mile swim, 12-mile bike ride and 3.1-mile run. The Kids Triathlon attracted nearly 350 participants. Last month’s Rock ‘n Roll Marathon was [...]

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Registration Still Open for Saturday’s Seafair Triathlon

07.15.2009 News
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The Benaroya Research Institute Triathlon at Seafair – what some call the best triathlon in the Pacific Northwest – is expected to attract around two thousand participants this Sat., July 18. The “sprint distance” triathlon features a 1/2-mile swim, 12-mile bike and 3.1-mile run: The 1/2-mile Swim starts on the north shore of Seward Park [...]

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Rainier Valley Football Association to Hold Open Registration This Saturday

07.09.2009 Kids
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Rainier Valley Football Association (RVFA) will hold open registration for new and returning players and cheerleaders this Sat., July 11, at Rainier Community Center (4600 38th Ave. S.) from 10am – 2pm. Look for the RAVEN signs. From the RVFA web site: RVFA is an organization created to give inner city kids a chance to [...]

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