McDowell County Kids Get Soccer Back

What happens to a community as coal jobs go away? Here are some things you might expect: many people leave, schools empty, local businesses struggle to keep their lights on. But here’s something that may not come to mind: extra curricular sports go away.

That’s what happened to children in McDowell County over 25 years ago. They lost their local soccer league. And while the thousands of lost coal jobs may not come back, thanks to a 4-H project, and about a dozen volunteers, soccer is making a comeback in McDowell County.

It’s a windy fall day. Two teams of children hurdle towards a green ball. Parents are cheering, and shivering.

9-yr-old Andrew Curry playing goalie at a match in Welch, W.Va.

9-year-old Andrew Curry is watching, waiting for his turn to get back into the game.

“I like that you get to run a lot because I used to play baseball and you didn’t get to do a lot of activity,” says Andrew. He likes to play defense the best. He’s one of 156 elementary students playing soccer this year in McDowell County. 

The games are held once a week at Mt. View High School.

Parents and other volunteers coach for free, people like Tom Morsi, a retired coal miner.

“We started a soccer program up here in Welch 26 years ago,” says Morsi. “Jobs started going down, people started leaving, going to other states…and they disbanded. Now a lot of kids that played soccer have kids that play in this soccer league. It’s come full circle.”

Morsi says they want to keep the cost low to make soccer available to any child who wants to play. Parents pay $10, local businesses and funding from West Virginia University’s 4-H program pays for the rest.

Although there is no breakdown of childhood obesity rates by county, here in McDowell, 45% of adults are obese. That’s almost twice the national average, of 28%.

According to the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation, one of the reasons many low income children are obese is because they often don’t have access to safe places to be physically active.

Take McDowell County, where traveling 30 miles through rugged mountains means an hour’s worth of driving. To help parents have an easier time getting their children to soccer practice, the teams mostly practice in makeshift fields in neighborhoods throughout the county.

Places like “church parking lots or old baseball fields that you could turn them into a practice soccer field,” says Nathaniel Smith, another volunteer who’s helped get this soccer league up and running.

Smith says this soccer league is just one example of what’s possible in McDowell, even though times are hard.

“And my hope is…turn some things around, make some things better, and work together.”

Smith says they’d like to see at least two hundred families sign up to play next year. The economy here may be spinning out of control, but he’s not giving up. He hopes they can start middle and high school teams in the next few years. Smith gestures toward the children at play and says, “these kids are the future of McDowell County.”

Professors Looks at What Type of Excercise Benefits Academics

A West Virginia University professor has been researching which types of exercise are effective in improving academic performance.

The university said in a news release that Assistant Dean James C. Hannon of the College of Physical Activity and Sport Sciences says resistance exercise such as weight lifting and using resistance bands seems to help improve work in the classroom.

Hannon says most studies of young people have looked at aerobic exercise. But he says by researching other activities, the range of exercise that teachers could use to help in the classroom may grow.

The report examines differences in learning between 30 minutes of various levels of exercise in comparison to non-exercise with high school-age students. It suggests that both acute resistance and aerobic exercise increased measures of learning compared to non-exercising students.

The study was published in the Research Quarterly for Exercise and Sport.

He’ll Make You Want to Lace Up Those Running Shoes

Last fall Bill Warner of Beckley was running through the woods of Thurmond when suddenly he noticed “a big ole black bear” just 10-12 feet away.

“I set a new age group record that day,” he laughs.

Bill is 60 years old and an ultra – marathoner – running up to 50-mile races – and winning!

Just this year he won first place in his age group against 118 runners at the USA 25k Championships in Grand Rapids, Michigan.

Then there was the Chicago Marathon where Bill placed first in his age group of 510 runners, and 769th out of the total 38, 871 runners.

He’s also repeatedly placed first in his age group in the Charleston Distance Run.

“I have this thing that I will allow no one with gray hair to beat me,” Bill explained with a smile.

But those are road races and Bill prefers to run on trails, saying the trail runner must constantly be thinking about his next step or else he’ll end up “eating dirt.”

One of the things that’s so remarkable about this extreme athlete is that he’s only been running for 6 years – after a 33 year hiatus.

Bill is a recovering alcoholic, sober now for about 10 years.

“I got tired of that life and quite honestly I got on my knees and I turned it over,” he said.

“Life is too precious to waste.”

So Bill runs almost every day now, even in the snow, by himself or with family members and his dogs.

He battled a lung infection that required major surgery 2 years ago, but came back stronger and remarkably, even faster!  

“God gave me a gift, and I’m simply using that gift to his glory.”

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