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Special Olympics ski team enjoys productive season

Skiers

Drumheller Special Olympic had a productive season training locally and on the slopes.

Coach Martin McSween recounted the season where two Drumheller athletes Mitchell Pennington, and Jay Dekeyser, participated in dryland training weekly at the Drumheller Community Facility from November, 2015 to March 30, 2016. 

Quinn Delisle, joined with the athletes in February and March. The team completed two on snow training days at the Nakiska Ski Resort on Saturday January, 30 and Saturday, March 19, 2016. The team enjoyed positive weather and great snow conditions at the resort this year.

McSeween said Drumheller athletes and coaches were very grateful for the kind generosity of a sponsored van by Drumheller Western GM, for trips to and from Drumheller to Nakiska Ski Resort.

McSween said the  team was also supported by Pat Scattegood and Colleen Pennington were invaluable with their behind the scenes encouragement. He is also grateful for the staff at the Badlands Community Facility for their support during training. Jaffra Markotic also supported the team at the March 19 on snow training .


75 and still giving back to baseball

Lowry

A Drumheller man with 65 years of experience on the baseball field is sharing his wisdom with the next generation, and the generation after that.

  The name John Lowry and baseball are almost synonymous in Drumheller. This year he is coaching Rookie Ball with players ages 7-9, and passing on his extensive knowledge of the game. He fell back into coaching almost by accident.

“I went to watch my grandson practice and they were all standing around. I asked who was coaching, and they said ‘we don’t know yet.’ So I gave them a practice,” he explained. “All the parents called my son and told him to get me to coach.”

He is going on three years back coaching and he loves to work with the kids.

“To see the expression when they do something good, like making a hit or picking up the ball, I like seeing how they make friends and how their skills develop,” said Lowry.

Lowry himself played ball in the Valley as a youngster. In fact in 1952, he played in the very first Drumheller Little league, and continued  all the way up to junior, but stepped out of the Valley to play Senior A ball. 

“I played for Edson, Grande Prairie, the Calgary Cardinals,” he said. “I quit playing hardball when I was 33, and then began playing fastball for about 25 years.”

Back in Drumheller, he coached the men’s team for a few years until the league folded, and has also played some senior slow pitch.

His carrier spanned from playing in the first Little League at the Wye Diamond, where the courthouse currently sits, and the coached the last men’s that played at John Anderson Park.

He also umpired for at least 25 years and he played a role in the formation of the local Umpire association and spent time as president. 

“I have been involved in ball for 65 years and I have loved every minute of it,” he said, now 75. He adds that now he is in the position where he is coaching the children and grandchildren of former teammates.

The beauty of the game for Lowry is that the rules have hardly changed in 100 years. The skills he has acquired still apply to the next generation of ball players.

The basics are hit, run, catch, throw,” he said. “With kids if I can make them a three-tool player I am happy.”

“This is the only game, if you are batting, that you can fail 70 per cent of the time and be a star,” he laughs.

The lessons he teaches on the field go beyond the diamond.

“What I try to instill in the kids is respect, sportsmanship attitude and teamwork,” he said. “I don’t need the best players, I just need the best people.”

He adds that as he coaches the kids, he is also teaching the game to the parents volunteers so they can coach. He is grateful that they are also picking up the love of the game. 

  What he values the most of over his playing career are the friends he made.

“I still golf with four guys played ball with in Edson in the 1960’s. One is in Vancouver, one is in Mexico and one is in Drayton Valley, and we try to get together when we can. You often don’t have the same friends for 50 years.”

New lanes installed at Sandstone Lanes

lanes

Bowling has been a part of the fabric of Drumheller for generations, and after decades, the lanes at Sandstone Bowling Lanes are getting an upgrade.

Over the last couple of weeks, George Hofbauer of Peterbauer Bowling Supplies of Edmonton has been busy at the local bowling alley installing new synthetic lanes. While the lanes have been refurnished over its lifespan, this it the first major upgrade to the lanes in more than 50 years.

“This is going to be major. There are new pins going in, new backboards and a new glow system,” said Sandstone Lanes manager Shawn Langille. “The lanes glow now, it is going to be phenomenal.”

He explains that much of the major work take place before new floor is installed. This includes sanding, and leveling the exits wood floor before it is overlaid with the new modern materials.

 Sandstone lanes has remained opened as the installation takes place

Langille says the synthetic lanes are the most modern material for bowling alleys. They are more durable and have much less maintenance.

The bowling alley has enjoyed resurgence over the last season with league participation and recreational bowling up. The new lane marks a significant investment in the facility.

They are confident that the new lanes are being installed properly, as Hofbauer has 56 years experience in the bowling industry installing lanes and equipment. He said synthetics have developed into the product of choice over the last 20 years and he has installed them all over the province.

     The big question is whether the bowlers like the new alley.

“They can tell the difference,” laughs Hofbauer. “Yes they like them because their scores go up.”

Look for a grand opening of the new refurbished lanes in the near future.


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