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Kickoff to summer

Local soccer fans considering making the trip to New York or Los Angeles for the 2026 World Cup or 2028 Olympics needn’t go that far for a fix.  

In fact, they’ll only have to travel as far as St. Anne’s-Belfield, where Charlottesville Blues FC is looking to seize on the growing popularity of American soccer by introducing United Soccer League-affiliated amateur men’s and women’s teams to Charlottesville.

“We will never see this level of injection into U.S. soccer history ever again,” co-owner Brian Krow says. “This is an unprecedented five years. That’s what really motivated us. Let’s get in, let’s start to build a fan base, build a community, build the sponsors, because our vision is to go full-time pro.”

The men’s club competes in the USL2, which expanded to a league-record 128 teams for the 2024 season, while the women’s team is taking on the 80-team USLW division.

The Blues’ inaugural season, which began in May and will conclude in July, pits the brand-new Charlottesville team, comprising college-age players and aspiring pros, against well-established pre-professional clubs with a history of sending players to the USL or international professional leagues.

The men’s team took on one of those pre-professional powerhouses on May 26 when they traveled to Newport News to face Lionsbridge FC, a club with 20 professional alumni that went to the USL League Two Championship game last season.

Fans watched at St. Anne’s-Belfield as both the men’s and women’s teams of the Charlottes­ville Blues FC faced opponents on Saturday, June 1. The men crushed the Shenandoah Marauders FC 5-0. Photo by Tristan Williams.

The Blues entered the game as consensus underdogs. Lionsbridge had not lost at home since 2019, marking 41 straight victories on their home field, and Charlottesville had yet to win a match.

But a goal from Princeton midfielder Samuel Vigilante and penalty kick from Mary Washington forward Josh Kirkland, combined with a strong Blues defense that limited Lionsbridge to two shots on goal, allowed Charlottesville to pull off a 2-0 shutout win.

“For us to secure this win at the start of our inaugural season truly sets the tone for what Charlottesville has to offer,” Krow says.

The Lionsbridge upset is the kind of result Krow was hoping for when he joined local co-owner Brian Kuk, as well as fellow co-owners John J. Kuk and Jim Kupec, in purchasing the rights to the teams in August, two years after beginning the process of bringing USL affiliates to Charlottesville.

The introduction involved consulting with other local clubs about how best to fit into the local sports landscape. The Charlottesville Tom Sox of the Valley Baseball League contributed advice about summer league business models and the logistics of hosting players with local families, while University of Virginia soccer provided local attendance analytics.

UVA soccer games are attended by an average of more than 1,800 fans on both the men’s and women’s sides, a statistic Krow says gave the Blues owners confidence the clubs could fill the 1,500-person stands at STAB.

The Charlottesville Blues FC mascot. Photo by Tristan Williams.

“This is a family-friendly, community-based sporting event,” Krow says. “It’s going to be a different business model than probably most have seen, but it’s all about the matchday experience. It’s really about a community.”  

The Blues logo—which features a Virginia Fox, the color of the Blue Ridge mountains, and a font inspired by the Paramount Theater—accordingly integrated the city. 

“It’s all about tying in the community of Charlottesville on that one little crest,” Krow says.

The Blues also stayed local in their leadership search. The clubs hired two Virginia-based coaches in Carolyn Warhaftig, a teacher at Tandem Friends School whose previous coaching roles include an administrative operations role with the UVA women’s soccer team, and Tommy DiNuzzo, head coach of men’s soccer at Hampden-Sydney College since 2017.

Warhaftig and DiNuzzo were tasked with building rosters that both followed league rules, which only allow five players to join from each NCAA program, while featuring players with the drive to succeed in a program the USL describes as “pre-professional.” 

“I have an understanding of the USL, and the level and soccer IQ of players playing at this level is tremendous,” Warhaftig says. “So, I knew we were not searching for just any player who wanted to play competitively. These are players who have aspirations to play in the National Women’s Soccer League, to play professionally in the States, or to play internationally at the pro level. It’s not your average player. It’s not just about your skill level and your athleticism anymore, but it’s about your tactical understanding and awareness and how well you can translate that onto the field.”

Fans watched at St. Anne’s-Belfield as both the men’s and women’s teams of the Charlottes­ville Blues FC faced opponents on Saturday, June 1. The women’s side lost 0-3 to the Northern Virginia FC. Photo by Tristan Williams.

Luckily for the two coaches, the Blues were able to draw on the UVA soccer program to fill out their summer rosters with precisely that kind of player.

“Charlottesville is such a great location. UVA is absolutely the starting point, because they’re probably the most historic men’s college soccer program in the country,” DiNuzzo says. “I know there’s such a great soccer following, and great players come out of Charlottesville constantly, so we have a really strong base of local Charlottesville guys.”

That local pull means the Blues are offering Virginia soccer fans a first look at two UVA transfer defenders who led their respective teams in playing time last season. Luc Mikula, who is joining the Cavaliers following three seasons with Coastal Carolina, and Moira Kelley, an incoming transfer after four years with Kansas, will each be starting out their Charlottesville careers with the Blues.

Some of Mikula and Kelley’s summer teammates will also come from in-state schools, including William & Mary, Liberty University, University of Mary Washington, Longwood, Washington and Lee, University of Richmond, VCU, and Christopher Newport; others have traveled to Charlottesville from places as far as Japan, New Zealand, and Saint Lucia.

In return for the trip to Charlottesville, players get the chance to work under coaches with experience coaching at the college level, as well as the opportunity to play against high-quality competition. 

An early-season men’s scrimmage pitted the Blues roster against a few DC United professionals, which is the kind of chance Charlottesville local and Longwood midfielder Joshua Yoder was hoping for when he signed up to play for DiNuzzo this summer.

“It’s just a good opportunity to see what’s at the next level, and not compare ourselves, but see the differences,” Yoder says.

Carolina Chao, a Charlottesville High School student and Blues defender, said playing for the Blues is the first time she has found a local opportunity to compete locally at a pre-professional level.

“To be honest, there’s not been a lot of soccer opportunities in Charlottesville that are the bridge between club and college,” Chao says. “There’s a lot of those opportunities in Richmond, and of course NOVA, D.C. … I’m super grateful that this has become a thing and I’m able to take advantage of the Charlottesville Blues because it’s so unique to have that right near me, only 15 minutes away.”

Blues players aren’t getting paid, so many are juggling the season between summer jobs in a bid to step up their games before the college season begins in the fall.

Some are also taking on the busy schedule because they want to be an inaugural member of the new club, DiNuzzo said.

“We have guys on the roster that are doing this to play at a great level, be a part of a first-year team, which I think is something special, and go and then really hit the ground running going into their college soccer season in the fall,” DiNuzzo said.

The Blues’ impact on these players could potentially last past college. After all, the USL designates these clubs as a potential pipeline into getting paid to play soccer.

Warhaftig, a former Colgate player who competed professionally in Iceland, wants her players to know a pro career is more possible than ever.

“Some of them may not have the belief in themselves yet that it really is a possibility,” Warhaftig says. “But my hope is that by surrounding themselves with players who are of that mentality, they will learn that they are very capable of playing professionally and gain knowledge that just because maybe they’re not going to play professionally in the U.S., doesn’t mean that there’s not a place for them to play abroad.”

Professional opportunities are now even greater for players on the women’s team thanks to the launch of the USL Super League, a professional women’s league kicking off their inaugural season in August.

“As a female soccer player, seeing this opportunity in Charlottesville has helped me,” Chao says. “And I think for the younger females playing the sport, it’ll be super helpful to see how there’s this opportunity, not just for soccer to go beyond college, but a different kind of thing that is available to them. It’s really been eye-opening to me about where the sport can go, especially on the female side.”

While players consider their own future careers, the Blues’ ownership is already looking at the next step in the rapid growth of the Charlottesville soccer landscape.

Krow said the team’s goal is ultimately to bring professional soccer to Charlottesville by launching a men’s USL League One club and women’s USL Super League team, which would hold games throughout the majority of the year rather than squeeze them in between college seasons.

Bringing these clubs to Charlottesville would require more than just renting out a high school field, however. League guidelines require that these teams play in stadiums capable of seating at least 5,000 fans, and even UVA’s Klöckner Stadium can only fit about 3,500 viewers in traditional seating.

Fans watched at St. Anne’s-Belfield as both the men’s and women’s teams of the Charlottes­ville Blues FC faced opponents on Saturday, June 1.
Photo by Tristan Williams.

But that lack of a suitable venue might not be an issue in a few years. Krow says the Blues’ owners are already looking at purchasing land where a stadium of that size could potentially be constructed.

For now, the possibility of professional soccer matches taking place in Charlottesville will have to wait, at least until the Blues prove they can succeed as a pre-professional summer league.

But Krow already believes the next step is possible, in part because of local sponsors like Three Notch’d Brewing, which created a beer collaboration with the teams, and the Boar’s Head Resort, the brand displayed on players’ sleeves. 

These companies started collaborating with the Blues even before the clubs’ season-openers kicked off, Krow said.

“The community support here is unbelievable, once you start to go around and meet everybody,” Krow says. “The amount of community sponsors that we have brought into the mix is crazy.”

Soccer fans can watch both Blues teams play in one of five doubleheaders taking place at St. Anne’s-Belfield. The teams’ full schedules, and live streams of every home game, can be found at charlottesvillebluesfc.com.

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Heat advisory: Former Monticello High student sues athletic director, one-time coach

A year and a half after 16-year-old Patrick Clancy was hospitalized following a soccer practice on a blistering July day, he filed a $2 million civil suit against the coach, Stuart Pierson, and Matthew Pearman, the Monticello High School athletic director.

“The rules were in place that day, and they were not followed,” says Emily Clancy, Patrick’s mother.

The 8am practice July 21, 2017, was on a National Weather Service heat advisory day. By the time Patrick finished practice at 10am on a synthetic turf field, which can up the heat index 35 to 55 degrees, according to the Virginia High School League, he had stopped sweating, had a headache, and could barely talk.

His brother Ryan, who also was at the practice and felt ill, drove Patrick home. His mother knew immediately that Patrick was in trouble because he couldn’t stand, he was throwing up, and his fingers turned blue. When a shower and cold bath failed to cool him down, she took him to the emergency room.

Emily Clancy is convinced that if she hadn’t been home, Patrick would have died.

And the response she says she got from Pierson, who no longer coaches, was to blame Patrick for not bringing enough water.

The suit alleges negligence and gross negligence, contending the defendants had a duty to Patrick to conduct the practice safely, and “they failed to do so.”

Pierson and Pearman did not respond to phone calls from C-VILLE.

Among the guidelines the suit claims the defendants violated were having no trainer present, no cold water, no shade, no rest breaks, and not taking into account how the synthetic turf would jack up the heat index.

Earlier this year, Albemarle County schools developed heat management guidelines for outdoor activities in hot weather, which include training for coaches, players, and parents, and measuring heat and humidity on playing surfaces during hot days.

However, Emily Clancy says Virginia High School League guidelines already were in place on July 21, but weren’t heeded.

Patrick and Ryan suffered permanent physical and mental scars from that day, exacerbated by the bullying they experienced at Monticello High, says their mother. “No one from the county ever apologized or even asked [Patrick] if he was okay.”

Ryan graduated and Patrick is now at a different school.

Both teens are “100 percent” behind the lawsuit, says Clancy. “Patrick said, ‘Mom, we have to do this because if we don’t, someone is going to die.’”

Deaths from the effects of heat are uncommon but they do occur. In June, University of Maryland offensive lineman Jordan McNair, 19, died of heatstroke.

And in 2005, Albemarle High graduate Kelly Watt, a cross country runner, suffered heatstroke after running on a sweltering July day, and died shortly afterward. A race is held every year in his memory. This year’s is Saturday, November 17, at Panorama Farms.

Says attorney Lloyd Snook, “We hope, through this lawsuit, to make everyone in the central Virginia athletic community understand what our athletic departments must do to prevent these deaths.”

 Correction October 30: The lawsuit is for $2 million total, not $1 million as earlier reported. 

Correction November 13: Jordan McNair died June 13.

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Living

Charlottesville’s semi-pro soccer team is a winning endeavor

The players were in their 20s and 30s. Some hailed from Croatia, Iran and France; others were born at Martha Jefferson Hospital. Some had played soccer in college or professionally, and now they had homes and families in Charlottesville.

They met weekly for casual pickup games to knock a ball around UVA’s Lambeth Field. In the summer of 2015, just for kicks, the group registered for Neptune’s, a regional tournament in Virginia Beach. They thought it would be a fun way to spend a weekend.

They ended up sweeping the competition.

“We realized that not only were we having fun, but we were winning and really successful,” says David Deaton, who was the squad’s captain.

The team decided to ride that success all the way to the Lamar Hunt U.S. Open Cup, the oldest ongoing national amateur soccer tournament in the U.S. There, a team can climb the ranks from playing other local groups to potentially competing against a Major League Soccer squad.

But before that, they needed uniforms. And a name. For both, Deaton turned to Aroma’s Café.

In the beginning

When David Deaton (left) was looking for somebody to sponsor his soccer team, his first call was to Hassan Kaisoum (right), owner of Aroma’s Café, and a former professional player from Morocco. Photo by Eze Amos

Hassan Kaisoum, owner of Aroma’s, is well-known not just in Charlottesville but in international soccer circles. A former professional player from Morocco, Kaisoum credits the sport for saving his life when he was orphaned at 11 years old, by providing him with an outlet and a support network of his teammates’ families.

“When I lost my mom and dad and the support of my parents, I had the support from others,” says Kaisoum. “Fathers and mothers of my friends making sure I wasn’t missing anything food-wise, and everything I needed—repairing my bike, helping me to continue and finish school.”

Kaisoum has spent his life paying that goodwill forward, from charity drives at Aroma’s to coaching soccer at Charlottesville High School. When Deaton approached him with the opportunity to fund the team, Kaisoum was thrilled.

“I never paid any coaches when I was in Morocco,” said Kaisoum. “They gave it to me for free, for love. When David approached me to build Aroma’s Café Club first, without hesitation I said, ‘Okay, what do you need?’”

So Aroma’s Café FC was born. Not only did it beat two different teams to make it past the amateur round of the U.S. Open Cup, but it also claimed a 2-1 victory over the Richmond Strikers, a semi-professional team in the National Premier Soccer League, before ultimately falling to a Division II team.

“I think that coming off of Neptune’s in the summer and Open Cup from the fall and spring, people realized that there was something big happening,” Deaton says.

And if the club could beat a semi-professional team, why couldn’t it be one itself? And that’s how, one year and one lengthy application process later, the team—newly named the Charlottesville Alliance after its goal of helping to create a unified community—joined the National Premier Soccer League in 2018.

Kaisoum recalls an Aroma’s customer asking how the club was faring after the Open Cup. “Wonderful,” Kaisoum told him. “Now we’ve become C’ville Alliance, we’re now semi-professional.” Two days later, Kaisoum received a $1,000 check from the customer for the team.

“This community supports you if you support them,” says Kaisoum. “I was stunned by the support of Charlottesville, for my business first, and also for the soccer.”

And that community support is apparent on nights like a Monday in early July. Even though an oppressive heat has baked the turf dry at Albemarle High School’s stadium, the seating area is filled with more than 100 people. They’re carrying flags and holding signs. Some of them are wearing Alliance red. Like the Charlottesville Tom Sox, the Alliance has become part of a growing local sports market in its first year in the NPSL.

For many of the original players from the pickup team, having that crowd cheer them on is something they haven’t experienced in years.

“My last soccer game in front of people was in a different country,” says Price Thomas, a longtime member of the group and a William & Mary alum whose professional playing career spanned from Turkey to Germany to Richmond, Virginia. “I haven’t felt that in a long time. Personally, it was very nostalgic to be up there.”

Price Thomas, a “senior” Alliance player who graduated from Albemarle High School and the College of William & Mary, says his hope for the team is that it is still “around when my kids are playing.” Photo by Eze Amos

The NPSL is geared toward current college players, but the Alliance roster has its own unique makeup: It’s split into two halves, with “senior” players comprising one part and college students making up the other. That allows the team to accommodate summer schedules, with senior players like Thomas filling in roster spots when jobs or vacations get in the way for their younger teammates.

Those college athletes often serve as the real draw for fans. The team pulls from a wide range of Virginia schools, and attracts both hometown players (Jake Gelnovatch, a Louisville player and son of longtime UVA men’s soccer coach George Gelnovatch) as well as international ones (Joe Bell, a rising Virginia soccer star is from New Zealand). The 2018 lineup consisted of three UVA, four James Madison University, two Virginia Commonwealth University and two Virginia Tech players, as well as others from a range of schools. Their names are the kind that kids in the crowd want autographed on jerseys they hold out to the players after games.

“Joe Bell starts for UVA,” says Thomas. “I’m sure some of these kids have his poster on their wall.”

Joe Bell, originally from New Zealand, is a rising second-year midfielder for UVA. UVA Media Relations

Jake Gelnovatch, son of longtime UVA Men’s Soccer Coach George Gelnovatch, is a goalie on Louisville’s team. Louisville Athletics

Creating a talent pipeline

Even before the Alliance became part of the NPSL, it was already shaping players’ college careers just by keeping them in touch with the game.

“Just playing pickup with them isn’t exactly the level that college soccer is or anything,” says Forrest White, a regular at pickup games while on summer break from playing at Virginia Tech. “But it was still kind of just to keep me in shape and keep me enjoying playing soccer, which a lot of people in college lose very quickly.”

But this summer, the NPSL team provides something that Charlottesville lacked prior to 2018: a place to train over the summer. Local college players, for the first time in their career, don’t have to drive hours out of town to condition with a competitive squad.

Jon Atkinson. Photo by Eze Amos

NCAA regulations restrict athletes from playing with their college coaches during break, which means the Alliance holds a powerful draw. This is one of the only teams in the NPSL to be led by a Division I coach, with Jon Atkinson of Longwood University at the helm, which gives players a chance to receive college-level instruction when school’s not in session.

Many of the senior players on the team also serve as mentors, and several of them have their own coaching careers. Thomas is the founder of Gradum Academy, a training program for kids who want to take their soccer careers to the next level. His academy serves as a pipeline to the Alliance; some of his students include Abibi Osman (University of Lynchburg), Barun Tamang (Randolph College) and Blake Wheaton (Emory University), all on the Alliance’s 2018 roster. The NPSL team provides Thomas’ trainees with a place to play full games, an invaluable addition to their college preparation.

As someone who had to mail CD recordings of his Albemarle High playing highlights in order to get the attention of college teams, Thomas hopes Alliance games not only draw soccer fans but scouts as well.

“Can we make this a place where people want to come watch, from a fan standpoint but also from a legitimate talent standpoint?” asks Thomas. “The boys are good. They’re absolutely good enough.”

Community connections

Soccer is a lot of things to the members of the Alliance. It’s a passion. It’s a way to make a living. But, above all, it has made strangers all across the world into teammates and friends.

“Your connective tissue is the game, so you don’t have time to worry about the fact that you don’t agree on politics,” says Thomas. “Maybe we don’t, and maybe we argue about that later, but at the end of the day, the foundational part of our relationship is our love of the game.”

Sports can do more than just ease political differences; they can smooth cultural and linguistic ones as well. Because soccer is an easily accessible street sport intrinsic to areas all over the world, playing it helps introduce kids to international communities at an early age.

“If you’re of American background and playing soccer, then you’re going to be immediately drawn into where it’s a hotbed of popularity, and all these other international groups that are playing the sport,” Deaton says.

Some Alliance members have played in the local Liga Latina, even if they don’t speak Spanish. For others on the team, English is a second or third language. On the pitch, that’s usually a bigger joke than it is an issue. Deaton himself has played everywhere from the slums of India to snowy Korea, where you don’t need to share a language to point someone in a certain direction or high-five after a goal.

“When growing up in my teens and through my 20s, soccer was fun because it was a sport,” Deaton says. “And then when I moved to Asia and I was able to travel the world, I started to realize that soccer was amazing because it put me in contact with people that I never would have known otherwise.” In Charlottesville, soccer introduced Deaton and the team to kids at the Blue Ridge Juvenile Detention Center, where the Alliance plays a soccer game with residents on the first Friday of every offseason month.

“We can come [to the detention center], kick a ball around, have a laugh, shake hands, even though the contexts of our lives have taken different paths,” Deaton says. “That doesn’t mean that, at our basic core, we’re not exactly the same people.”

For the kids at BRJDC, meeting visitors who consider themselves to be “exactly the same people” as detainees is a novelty. In Volume 5, Issue 4 of Sharing Our Progress, a detention center newsletter, a resident shared heartfelt thanks with the Alliance for its visits. “People think that we are criminals and bad people,” he wrote, “but it’s good to see that people come in and don’t see us like that.”

Visits to the detention center are just one example of underserved parts of the community that soccer has allowed the Alliance to reach. The team has purchased soccer goals for International Rescue Committee children as well as for Friendship Court. Members play with and offer free game tickets to kids at the Boys & Girls Clubs of Central Virginia. These efforts have culminated in a college scholarship program for local students.

Deaton has also been part of a campaign to improve area practice field infrastructure. The Alliance has a seat at the table as the county discusses creating new places to play, which the team sees as crucial in helping area kids grow up in a diverse community.

“If we can play together as kids, we can build together as adults,” says Deaton. “If we’re not cultivating a safe place to play at younger ages, then it leads to a lack of understanding at the adult level.”

On July 7, in Baltimore, Maryland, the Alliance’s first season as an NPSL team came to an end, with a record of 3-5-2. But more than its record, the team was successful in establishing a semi-professional summer team in Charlottesville that will continue working toward its goal of reshaping the sports landscape in town.

“It’s all about pushing this concept as far as it can go,” Deaton says. “How successful can Charlottesville be on the pitch? How much can it have an impact on the community?”

One answer to that is to create a women’s team. Next summer, the Alliance hopes to have a parallel female squad debuting alongside the airing of the FIFA Women’s World Cup. Meanwhile, both teams hope to be present in the community year-round, not just during the summer season.

“My goal, if you ask me what do I want to see this do long-term, is that I want it to be around,” says Thomas. “I want it to be around when my kids are playing.”

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Danger zone: Mom on a mission after soccer practice sends son to E.R.

Patrick Clancy, his brother Ryan and nine other teens went to an 8am soccer practice at Monticello High School on an artificial turf field July 21, the second day of a National Weather Service heat advisory.

The two-hour practice ended around 10am, when the heat advisory officially kicked in. By 11:30am, Patrick was in the emergency room at Sentara Martha Jefferson Hospital being treated for heat exhaustion. C-VILLE Weekly has spoken to the parents of three other boys who were affected by the heat that day.

The response from Monticello High: Conditions were not adverse, the practice met Virginia High School League guidelines and Patrick should have brought more water.

His mother, Emily Clancy, doesn’t buy that response. A soccer player herself and a former soccer coach, she’s convinced VHSL guidelines were not followed and she’s on a crusade to get the word out about the dangers of practices on heat advisory days.

Because she worries that if she hadn’t been home that day, Patrick could have died.

It’s happened before in Albemarle County. In 2005, 18-year-old Kelly Watt, a recent Albemarle High grad and cross country runner, was preparing to go that fall to the College of William & Mary, where he’d been recruited. He took a run on a scorching July day and died from heat stroke.

Patrick, 16, went to the out-of-season practice because he wanted a position on the starting team. “We felt like we needed to prove it to the coach by showing up,” he says.

He brought two 32-ounce bottles of water and says on the artificial turf field, “you could feel [the heat] through your cleats.”

About two-thirds of the way through the practice, “I stopped sweating,” Patrick says. He also says he stopped feeling hot, but didn’t feel cool, either. “I was in a weird state of feeling dizzy and sick.”

“I’ve been playing soccer all my life,” says Ryan Clancy, now 18. “That day was the worst I ever felt. I felt like throwing up. One kid had to sit out because of the heat. Others said to me, ‘It’s so hot I think I’m going to die.’”

After the practice and helping put away equipment, by 10:15am Patrick was having a hard time getting into the car and he could hardly talk, says Ryan. “I thought when he was in the car, the air conditioning would help. I had to carry him into the house. He was so pale and shaking.”

Emily Clancy knew Patrick was in trouble as soon as he came in the house. He was crawling up the stairs, had stopped perspiring and couldn’t talk. “I got him in the shower immediately,” she says. “He couldn’t stand. He had to sit on the shower floor. His fingers were turning blue and he threw up.”

When he didn’t seem to be cooling down in the shower, she moved him to the bathtub and tried to give him water, but he threw up again, she says. He was having trouble breathing, and his toes and fingers were blue. That’s when she took him to Martha Jefferson.

After many IVs and several hours later, Patrick walked out of the emergency room with a diagnosis of heat exhaustion.

“I was mad,” says Emily Clancy. “Those conditions should never have happened.”

The coach, Stuart Pierson, emailed Clancy July 23 to say he’d gotten the medical note that Ryan brought July 22, was happy to hear Patrick was feeling better and reminded her that each player was supposed to bring a 2-liter jug of water to each practice.

“He blamed it on my 16-year-old son for not bringing enough water,” says Clancy, who says she’s licensed by the U.S. Soccer Federation and has coached for 11 years. “I’m very familiar with what coaches are supposed to know.”

Pierson, who is no longer coaching at Monticello High, declined to comment.

Clancy doesn’t believe the practice should have taken place outdoors during a heat advisory on a day with no cloud cover, no shade breaks and with no extra water offered to the players.

Matthew Pearman, the athletic director at Monticello, says there was an adequate supply of bottled water available in the coach’s vehicle parked inside the stadium, a water fountain available next to the stadium restrooms and water and ice available in the concession stand that students and coaches can access.

That water was never offered to the students and the concession stand was locked, says Clancy.

According to the National Weather Service, the heat index factors in both the temperature and relative humidity to measure how hot it really feels. And on days with full sun, the heat index can increase up to 15 degrees.

The artificial turf field exacerbated the problem, says Clancy, and VHSL guidelines say to add 35 to 55 degrees to the heat index if not playing on grass.

By 8am she calculates the heat index on the turf field in full sun was 108 degrees and by 10am it was at least 127 degrees—all in violation of VHSL guidelines, which says the maximum heat index should be 105 degrees for an outdoor practice.

That was not the conclusion athletic director Pearman reached.

He writes in an email that when the practice began at 8am, “the air temperature was 80 degrees with a heat index of 83.” When practice ended at 10am, “The air temperature was 88 degrees with a heat index of 92,” conditions “well within the VHSL Heat Guidelines, which recommend no outside activities when the heat index/humiture is 105 or higher.”

The discrepancy, believes Clancy, is that Pearman does not add 15 degrees for the full sun, nor did he include the artificial turf factor. Pearman says VHSL guidelines were followed that day.

He conducted his own investigation on a day in which he says the weather conditions were the same as July 21. Clancy scoffs that such a comparison is possible. “How in the world can you duplicate heat advisory conditions?”

In an email to Clancy, he says when he measured the turf with a psychrometer, it was 4 degrees warmer than grass. “Our determination remained, after this comparative reading, that the conditions on the morning of July 21 were not adverse,” he writes.

Not satisfied, Clancy appealed to the school’s principal and then filed a complaint with the Albemarle County schools administration.

And her sons began to experience bullying from other students and from the school administration, she says.

“Last year a lot of players were harassing me, saying, ‘What’s your mom doing? We’re trying to win,’” says Ryan Clancy. “I said, ‘My brother almost died.’ They said, ‘I don’t care.’”

And then Ryan found he was blocked on Pearman’s @MonticelloAD Twitter account. “I already felt bullied,” says Ryan.

Says Pearman, “@MonticelloAD is my personal, not school, Twitter account.” He’s says it’s not unusual to block “when a person responds to one of these posts with negative or inaccurate information,” a situation Ryan denies happened—and is unhappy that Pearman would make that allegation.

B.J. Morris’ son was also at the July 21 practice. “I found my son sprawled out under a tree,” she says. “He felt bad with a headache and nausea.”

Not all parents think conditions July 21 were that bad.

“My son was at the same practice,” says Gregg Scheibel. He says the coach told him his son was “huffing and puffing” and sat him down and gave him some water.

Scheibel says the practices were voluntary and the temperature was in the low 80s. “When you play in the heat, you take on certain risks,” he says. That’s why the athletes have physicals, he adds.

Scheibel started a petition to bring Pierson back, and he says the coach resigned because of Clancy’s complaints. The school has had four soccer coaches in the past few years.

“We’ve got an unhinged woman who has a vendetta against coaches at Monticello High,” he asserts.

“If I’ve seen a coach harming a child, I’ve spoken up,” says Clancy. “If that means I’m unhinged…”

Clancy says she’s been asked to meet with the county’s Student Health Advisory Board. And she appeared before the Albemarle County School Board February 8, and says she gave them information on what can be done to avoid such situations as the weather warms up, including posting signs warning about the extreme heat on artificial turf fields in hot weather.

“I didn’t just complain,” she says. “I have a deep fear of this happening again and I came up with solutions.”

She says she’s had parents blame her for allowing her sons to practice that day. And she says she’s blamed herself for trusting that the coach would not have them playing outdoors in full sun on a heat advisory day.

She’s also been reminded that her sons could have sat out if they were too hot, but both Patrick and Ryan say they wouldn’t have done that.

“Boys don’t do that,” Clancy agrees. “You think as an athlete you have to get to the next level. You push through.” And boys don’t think their coach would put them in harm’s way, she adds.

Because of the heat exhaustion, Patrick will be susceptible to heat in the future, she says.

Patrick, who was on the varsity team as a freshman last year, will not be playing soccer this spring, and he opted for the swim team over the winter. “Ryan and I really do like soccer, but with the coaching staff and what’s going on,” he says, they decided to forego the season.

He doesn’t want what happened to him to happen to anyone else. “I felt lucky,” says Patrick. “It could have been much worse.”

While denying that conditions were dangerous July 21, Pearman says the school will take additional precautions in the future. Certified athletic trainers will be present at summer practices and the school division’s Student Health Advisory Board will be reviewing the VHSL heat guidelines “to determine if we need to make the guidelines we follow more restrictive,” he says.

“Our primary focus is on providing our student-athletes a safe environment in which to represent Monticello High School while participating in the sports/activities they love,” he says. “Any team’s chances of winning are immaterial to that focus.”

That’s one thing about which he and Clancy can agree.

“I still have nightmares that I can’t wake my son,” she says, haunted by the thought, “What if I wasn’t home?”

Emily Clancy coached her sons’ SOCA team, which won the Virginia Soccer Festival tournament in Richmond in June 2014. Ryan is in the back row, second player from the left. Patrick is in the first row, third player from the left. Submitted photo

 


Urgent cool down

John MacKnight, medical director for sports medicine at UVA, says the symptoms of heat exhaustion—fatigue, lethargy, headache, nausea, cramping—can “absolutely” turn to heat stroke if the victim has stopped sweating, is “grossly disoriented” and loses consciousness.

If a person is no longer cognitively present—”if they can’t give facts—they’re in the heat stroke range,” he says. A rectal temperature of 104 degrees is the “catastrophic” range when one loses function because he’s too hot.

“Once you’ve lost the ability to dissipate core temperature, then the wheels really fall off the cart,” he says.

With heat exhaustion, cooling with cold towels, shade, air conditioning, shower and drinking water or Gatorade “usually perks them up,” he says. If that doesn’t turn the person around, it’s time for more aggressive treatment, he says, and that’s why cold tubs are at sporting events.

“Time is brain, time is muscle, time is heart,” says MacKnight. And while the practice used to be to call an ambulance, MacKnight says every minute counts, and cooling should start immediately because “every minute that your body is subjected to markedly high temps has a potential for damage. The longer the time, the more the damage. Try to bring the temperature down immediately.”

He also says that people who’ve been ill are more likely to be dehydrated from medications they’ve taken, which can “push you over the edge.” And for people with attention deficit disorder who are taking stimulants, that’s not good for training in heat and makes it harder for their bodies to get rid of heat.

“I don’t think there’s any question” that playing on artificial turf makes for hotter conditions, MacKnight says. “If the ambient temperature is 95 degrees, the field could be 125 degrees.”

Where he’s most likely to see heat exhaustion is at cross country and distance events. “Temperature doesn’t play as much a role as humidity,” he says. “With no cloud cover, kids are going to struggle.” And when it’s hot, humid and sunny, “the stars align.”

Says MacKnight, “Most of the time when people have an issue, it’s almost always a perfect storm condition.”

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Goal in sight: Local soccer team hopes to kick up support

It may not be the FIFA World Cup, but an amateur adult soccer team in Charlottesville is gearing up for a major competition on a national level. Aromas Café FC, a team comprised of players who hail from all over the globe, hopes to bring soccer to the forefront in Charlottesville through its participation in the Lamar Hunt U.S. Open Cup.

The Lamar Hunt Cup is the oldest ongoing national soccer competition in the United States, which pits professional, semi-professional and amateur soccer teams against each other, with only 14 slots for amateur teams. Aromas Café FC qualified about a month ago, the first Virginia team to do so in more than two decades, and will be playing its first cup game May 11.

Aromas manager David Deaton hopes to show through his team’s qualification the potential that Charlottesville has as a soccer town, and he cites the large international community as one of its benefits.

“What’s unique about Charlottesville is that we’re one of the few places that’s actually a university town as well as a refugee center,” Deaton says. “So, driven by the university, we have this huge international community, but then thanks to the refugee center we have even more.”

Aromas Café FC is evidence of this diversity, with players from countries such as Colombia, Kenya, Iran and the United States. Aromas’ owner Hassan Kaisoum was orphaned in Morocco at age of 11. He says soccer “saved” him as a child, and he wants to pass on the power of the sport.

“I took out all of my frustration in soccer,” Kaisoum says. “In my country, when it came to 5 o’clock, there was no difference between rich or poor. We’d have people playing from every background. The only thing I used to look at was the shoes.”

Kaisoum played soccer professionally in France and Canada, and when Deaton approached him to be the team’s sponsor, his answer was easy.

“They needed my help, so I did it,” Kaisoum says.

“We told Hassan that we needed a sponsor and he just said, ‘What do you need?’” Deaton adds. He says Kaisoum is a constant reminder of the community spirit that soccer builds.

In addition to the wide range of nationalities on the team, Aromas Café FC also is made up of players who have highly diverse soccer careers. While the majority of the team played soccer at the collegiate level, three are retired professional soccer players.

Despite a local concentration of elite soccer players, Deaton laments that the infrastructure in Charlottesville is not up to par.

“It really needs a very serious look from our community leaders,” he says. “The state average for youth participation in soccer leagues is 10 percent, and we have 20 percent in Charlottesville [according to Soccer Organization Charlottesville Area]. Yet there’s not a single lit, publicly accessible field to play soccer on. There are over eight publicly funded tennis courts here. There’s not a single soccer facility in the community that does that.”

Although the team struggles with field space (games and practices are held at Charlottesville High School), Kaisoum stresses the ability that soccer has to unify the Charlottesville community. When he’s not at Barracks Road Shopping Center running Aromas Café, which he opened 19 years ago, he’s attending the soccer team’s games and practices.

“Soccer is always a way to bring people together, and it’s amazing to have that integration and have people from every background or religion and every ethnicity playing,” Kaisoum says. “When they go to the field, they all become unified and it’s fantastic to see that.”

Deaton adds that although the team is looking forward to the Lamar Hunt U.S. Open Cup, where it could play against a Major League Soccer team such as D.C. United, the team’s sights remain focused on spreading community spirit in Charlottesville.

“We’re trying to impart a passion of camaraderie—that’s what’s driving this, all of this,” Deaton says. “We’re trying to demonstrate, even to ourselves as much as anyone else, that we can do a lot as a team. But in the end it’s actually the camaraderie of the sport that pushes us toward that level of excellence.”