Love at first flight
Nicholas Marotta and his grandmother, Judy Patrizzi, went on a skydiving adventure after he returned from his two-year mission to Madagascar. STORY ON PAGE 4A.
2024 YEAR IN PICTURES
David Ogden releases 100-day devotional
SAM ALBUQUERQUE
SPORTS EDITOR
David Ogden has spent most of his life serving as a first responder. Specifically, he’s dedicated more than 38 years as a law-enforcement officer, spending the last decade and change serving as the chief of police for the town of Windermere. Still, nearly four decades since beginning his journey in law enforcement, he vividly recalls his first day on patrol as part of the Orange County Sheriff’s Office. However, Ogden doesn’t remember this day because of a photographic memory or a traumatic experience. Rather, he remembers that first day because his sergeant told him he wasn’t going to make it as a cop. “I started my law-enforcement career in corrections, but about a year and a half later, I went on to be put on patrol — which is all I ever wanted to do,” Ogden said. “My first patrol was on a really cold January day. I got in the patrol vehicle, and back in that day, they didn’t have computers, so you actually had a three-ring binder with all your policies in it. So I sat in the car with this guy, Cpl. Hoyt Stough. He was a great guy, just very knowledge -
GET THE BOOK
“Seeds of Leadership: Sowing the Foundations of Excellence in First Responders” To read more about the book or purchase a copy visit davidogdenbook.com.
boy, do you smoke?’ I go, ‘No, sir, I don’t.’ Then he takes a big drag from his cigarette. I think he was really trying to make this moment stand out. So he asks me, ‘Do you drink?’ I respond, ‘No, sir.’ And then he asks, ‘Well, do you cuss a lot?’ I go, ‘No sir. I try not to.’ Again, he takes a moment before pulling another drag from his cigarette, blowing it out and saying, ‘Well, hell, boy, you ain’t gonna make it.’”
Looking back, Ogden doesn’t resent this moment. Upon reflection, he now understands what his sergeant was trying to tell him.
“I’m sure he was trying to scare me a little bit, trying to tell me that this is real,” Ogden said. “But this happened in like 1988, and at the time, these types of guys didn’t know how to articulate what it is that we were going to go through in
this job is not easy. You’re going to see the worst of people … and at the end of the day, it’s really easy to believe that everybody you run into is the worst version of society. If you don’t have the tools or support system that helps you take a step back and understand how to manage your overall wellness — mental, physical, spiritual and relational — this job can have a really negative impact on your life.”
IT TAKES ITS TOLL
According to Ogden, the divorce rate for couples within the law enforcement field is 72-74%, significantly higher than the average rate of 51% in the United States.
Statistics like this and experiences like Stough, sadly, are the norm in law enforcement.
“When I look at data like that and ask myself, ‘Well, why is that the case?’” Ogden said. “My experience tells me it’s because leaders in our profession, as soon as someone says they’re getting a divorce or something bad has happened at home, they just turn the other way and go, ‘That’s your problem. That’s your issue.’
“The fact of the matter is, if you’re having a bad day at home and you
you lip, there’s no doubt in my mind that your home life is going to affect how you respond to the situation and vice-versa,” he said.
SEEDS OF LEADERSHIP
Knowing the overwhelming impact a first responder’s overall wellness has not only on their ability to do the job but also how that affects the community they are serving, Ogden saw an opportunity to help.
So he got to work.
The result was a 100-day devotional book called “Seeds of Leadership: Sowing the Foundations of Excellence in First Responders.”
The book was written and designed specifically to help bridge the spiritual wellness gap of first responders by combining lessons from the Christian faith, lessons focused on leadership Ogden has learned throughout his professional career and the lessons he’s learned throughout his personal experiences into 100 easily digestible sections.
“I have a passion for these guys and ladies,” Ogden said. “I think they do God’s work, and I think police work is intrinsically spiritual, in that we’re trying to do good in the community. … So, my
to develop the relational tools, discipline and resilience to not let being a first responder have the negative impact we’ve all traditionally seen it have on our personal, emotional and spiritual life. There are some great leadership lessons in here. There are a lot of lessons in there that helped me develop discipline and determination. There’s a lot of lessons about how I handled different situations, some I handled well and some I didn’t handle well as a younger leader, and even as a leader to this day.”
Ultimately, Ogden’s desire when crafting this book was to make something that would connect with first responders and hopefully plant a seed of positivity.
“I want to put this book in the hands of every West Orange County officer that’s out there, and then eventually every officer across the country,” he said. “I know how first responders think. Most of them won’t pick up this little book and read it from cover to cover, but maybe they’ll stick it in the visor of their car — which is why I made sure to design it to be this size — and one day something happens and decide to open it up and take a look. The hope is that something inthing positive in that moment. That’s all I want to do — just
2024YEAR IN PICTURES
SEE PHOTOS BY MONTH ON PAGES 6A-15A
Peace Corps volunteer keeps promise to Nannie
AMY QUESINBERRY PRICE COMMUNITY EDITOR
Two years after making a pact to go skydiving together, Nicholas Marotta and his grandmother, 85-year-old Judy Patrizzi, fulfilled their promise last month.
Marotta, of Ocoee, and Summerport resident Patrizzi made plans to jump out of an airplane to celebrate his return from his 24-month stint as a volunteer with the Peace Corps in Madagascar. They jokingly discussed the adventure before he left for the east African country.
“Before I got back, we had some phone calls where it was mentioned jokingly,” Marotta said. “When I got back, we had a powwow, and we decided it was the real deal and we’re doing it.”
Patrizzi agreed to go through with it.
“When he got back, I said, ‘I have to do this, even though it wasn’t my heart’s desire,’” she said. For their first-time adventure, they went to Skydive Space Center in Titusville. They chose Friday, Dec. 13, as their jumping day.
Marotta said the 18,000-foot jump is the world’s highest tandem skydive jump. The whole experience took fewer than 15 minutes, and about two-thirds of it was soaring in
Two years ago, Nicholas Marotta was preparing for his Peace Corps assignment, and he wasn’t sure what to expect.
He ended up in the Highlands, the central mountainous region of the country, teaching English to middleschoolers. He lived in a tiny rural town — which was a brutal six-hour taxi ride to the nearest town with a bank, he said — where he fetched his own water from a 25-meter-deep well, hand-washed his laundry and cooked from scratch all of his meals.
“Without all of those tools for efficiency, life slowed way down and … other than chores and staying alive and my work as a teacher, I was also, of course, so focused on trying to communicate with people,” Marotta said. “One of the biggest joys of the Peace Corps service was learning Malagasy. It was such a wonderful experience. Basically, I would carry this little notebook and ask people questions constantly.”
He gained a pretty solid proficiency in the Malagasy language, and it was a rewarding process, he said. The school at which he worked had limited resources, no electricity and bare-bones furniture.
Aside from his teaching assignment, Marotta’s other big project was writing a grant request and receiving funding for the installation of windows at the school. He and his students made a video, and the children explained the problem.
slow motion underneath the opened parachute.
“If you’re going to skydive for the first time at the world’s highest jump, you might as well do it on Friday the 13th,” Marotta said.
“I was surprisingly calm for the weeks leading up to it,” Patrizzi said.
“The only time I started to feel real fear was when we were in the plane and it was almost time to jump … my heart started to pound a little bit. I had confidence in the instructor.”
Patrizzi was the first one to jump out of the plane with her instructor.
“He turned me upside-down a couple times; I wasn’t expecting that,” she said. “The wind was cold, it was loud. Once we got out of the plane, I wasn’t scared. And then when the parachute opened up, it was nice and slow, and he let me hold the handles and steer to the left and to the right, and then I let him take over.
“When you’re coming down for the landing, it feels like you’re going really fast,” Patrizzi said. “When we landed, he landed on his feet, and I didn’t have to.”
Marotta said it was surreal watching his grandmother jump first.
“It looked like she was just swept away in the wind like nothing,” he said. “It was incredible how quickly she disappeared.”
For Marotta’s jump, the experience was “incredible, truly unbelievable and fabulous,” he said.
“I also felt surprisingly calm,” Marotta said. “I told my friends … I’m going to jump out of an airplane, and every time I wasn’t scared. … I was so excited to do it with my Nannie.”
His instructor has jumped more than 14,000 times, Marotta said, so he had confidence in the experience.
“We got onto the airplane and … I watched out the window as we
“This problem became clear in the time I was teaching there,” he said. “In the mountains it was cold, and the kids were shivering in the winter. And in the summer,
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climbed higher and higher, and I stayed calm,” he said. “And then I started wondering, ‘Will I put my arms and legs in the right place?’ He never told me anything about landing. … We were about to jump, and we were at elevation. My instructor told me, ‘I’ll tell you how to land after the parachute comes out, because if it doesn’t come out, we don’t have to worry about that.’”
At about 3,000 feet, as he was freefalling through the clouds, he felt the wind rushing and the cold stinging his face. He likened it to being shot out of a cannon.
“And then we came out the other side, and our parachutes opened,” he said. “The instructor … was very relaxed and focused on getting me to do these cool hand signals for the cameras.”
The landing happened without a hitch, he said.
“When we landed, we still had our harnesses on, and Nannie said, ‘What’s our next adventure?’” Marotta said.
ADVENTUROUS NANNIE
Patrizzi is known for her adventurous spirit. She and Gene, her husband of 62 years, participate in an exercise program three times per week, and she frequently goes on excursions with her six grandchildren.
When the Patrizzis lived in Connecticut, the grandchildren visited twice each year, and when they were tucked into their sleeping bags, Nannie told them stories of grand adventures. As they grew older, she took them on their own adventures.
She has gone zip-lining with all six of them at the Sanford Zoo and has gone rock climbing with them, too.
Patrizzi’s next experience is taking four of her grandchildren to New York City.
“We usually have a big celebration at Christmas; we don’t have just one day during the holiday,” she said. “We have pie-making day, preparation day, a scavenger hunt, we have Christmas Day and then leftover day. At least four days.”
Will she ever go skydiving again?
“I think both of us would,” Patrizzi and Marotta agreed.
The West Orange Times meets the legal requirements to publish legal and public notices in Orange County per F.S. 50.011 USPS Periodicals Permit (USPS# 687-120)
WEST ORANGE
First Baptist Church @ Horizon West 15304 Tilden Road, Winter Garden
Sundays: 9:45 AM All Ages www.FBCWG.org
Starke Lake Baptist Church
Pastor Jeff Pritchard PO Box 520 611 W Ave., Ocoee (407) 656-2351 www.StarkeLakeBaptist.org
Victory Baptist Church & Christian Academy
1601 A.D. Mims Rd, Ocoee FL 34761 (407) 656-3097 www.VBCOCOEE.com
Sunday: 11AM & 6 PM Wednesday: 7 PM
EPISCOPAL
Church of the Messiah
241 N. Main St., Winter Garden
Sunday: 8, 9:30, & 11 AM., 4PM (French & Creole), 7 PM www.ChurchoftheMessiah.com
METHODIST
First United Methodist www.fumcwg.org 125 N. Lakeview Ave., Winter Garden (407) 656-1135
Services: 9 AM Traditional 10:45 AM Contemporary Also viewable on YouTube
JANUARY
MARCH
Left: Addison’s Park was dedicated in the Summerport community on Easter weekend in memory of Addison Sinclair, a resident who died of cancer in 2020 at age 8. Her family lives next door to the park. Published April 11, 2024.
Right: Following a long battle filled with legal definitions, the city charter and court rulings, George Oliver III officially returned to the Ocoee City Commission. Published April 11, 2024.
High School student Kayden Avera, 14, died after a tree fell onto the car in which she was riding on Reams Road in Horizon West. Published June 20, 2024.
Windermere High School alum Jacob Goldberg became the first Wolverine to complete the United States Military Academy at West Point. Published June 13, 2024.
Matthew’s Hope celebrates success stories
You don’t have to look far to see evidence of Matthew’s Hope Ministries’ impact on the West Orange community.
In fact, two shining examples are among the staff at the Winter Garden campus.
In April 2024, founder Scott Billue named Shannon Diaz as the new campus director for the Orange County operation. Not only was the move a great hire, but also it is proof positive that Matthew’s Hope works.
“I love this girl so much,” Billue said of Diaz when he announced her promotion. “She came through our program. She was a rock star in the program. ... This girl was a heroin addict four years ago.”
“When Shannon was getting ready to graduate from our program, I said to her, ‘What do you want to do?’” Billue said. “She said, ‘Scott, I really want to do this.’ And I looked at her, and I said, ‘With your felony, nobody’s going to hire you. ... But I don’t play by those rules.’ So, she went to work for us, and she worked her way up the ranks, and she is now officially the director of this campus, and we’re so proud of her.”
And she’s not the only one.
Gage, 25, is winning his battle with an impossible situation. His mother died of an overdose, and his father remains an addict and homeless. In six months with Matthew’s Hope, Gage has earned his GED and has ambition to turn his life around.
“He told me he wants to go to Orange Technical College,” Billue said. “He wanted to get into the electrical contractor program, and then I learned he actually spent the night there so he could be first in line to sign up. And he got in.”
In all, five Matthew’s Hope employees have come through its program.
And this giving season, you can ensure Matthew’s Hope continues to have success stories well into the future.
Thanks to an anonymous angel, every dollar - up to $1 milliondonated to Matthew’s Hope Ministries before the end of the year will be matched.
And furthermore, the donor also has pledged to match any recurring donations.
Translation: Your generosity this holiday season will make twice the impact to Winter Garden’s local homeless ministry, which celebrates its 15th anniversary this year.
Even better, Matthew’s Hope founder Scott Billue invites everyone who donates to come see their dollars in action. In fact, he considers them not donors but rather investors.
“Matthew’s Hope is designed to move people forward to a life of independence and self-sustainability,” Billue says. “We are looking to get people on the right side of life - so they’re not dependent on places like Matthew’s Hope and your tax dollars for the rest of their lives.”
MATTHEW’S HOPE YEAR END FUNDRAISER
Thanks to an anonymous donor, every Matthew’s Hope donation through the end of the year will be matched — up to $1 million. To donate, scan the QR code above.
FOR MATTHEW’S HOPE SUCCESS STORIES, READ THE FULL STORY HERE
Windermere Prep’s theater program is raising the stakes on the drama program and giving other troupes a run for their money when it comes to competition. Published May 2, 2024.
As a child, Shelby Combs and her horse, Cinderella, captured many awards in the horse-riding circuit. Now, she uses her skills to help people with physical, emotional and cognitive disabilities. Published July 18, 2024.
Left: Renaut Van Der Riet took two of his boys on a mission trip to the African country where they lived for the first part of their lives before being taken to an orphanage and, ultimately, meeting Van Der Riet and his wife, Brooke. Published July 25, 2024.
AUGUST
SEPTEMBER
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2024YEAR IN SPORTS
Three-peat state champions, individual national crowns and even a world title … It’s safe to say that 2024 was the year of the champion in West Orange and Southwest Orange.
The word that best captures the year that was 2024 in West Orange and Southwest Orange County sports is easy: championships.
This year saw teams and individuals bring home state, national and even world championships back home, along with other historic or noteworthy feats.
Here’s a look back at the accomplishments, stories and people that made 2024 such a special year in the area’s sports community.
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DP THREE-PEAT
Longtime Dr. Phillips High girls basketball coach Anthony Jones said completing a threepeat is the hardest accomplishment in team sports.
On, March 9, at the RP Funding Center, his Panthers (27-4) accomplished that near-impossible feat for the second time in program history — both of which came under Jones — by topping Colonial High (27-4) in the all-Orlando FHSAA Class 7A state championship game, 53-46.
“It’s satisfying to … know that all the hard work we put in, it came (to) fruition,” Jones said. “It’s a lot of ups and downs; it’s very difficult to three-peat. We had some challenges, some injuries at the beginning of the season. … All the stuff that we went through … I’m just proud of our program and my coaching staff and my players.”
This is the seventh state championship in program history and Jones’ sixth.
SWIMMING STARS
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The Windermere High boys and girls swimming and diving teams both had impressive showings at the Class 4A state championship meet. Both teams finished as state championship runners-up and brought home
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a total of seven individual or relay state championships.
In the girls meet, the Wolverines finished with 311 total points across the meet’s 12 events and fell to state champions Riverview Sarasota High; the Rams finished with 378 points. West Orange High finished fourth overall with 117 points. Windermere’s 311 points came on the back of four first-place finishes, two silvers and one bronze.
The Wolverine boys finished second with 227 points to G. Holmes Braddock Senior High’s 306 points. The boys brought home three gold medals, four silvers and two bronzes in total across the events.
Individually, girls sophomore swimmer Rylee Erisman had the most impressive outing of the area’s swimmers by not only winning three golds and a silver in her four events but by setting two state records in the 50-meter (21.61 seconds) and 100-meter (47.14 seconds) freestyle. 3
KARATE KIDS
A general idea from the book “Outliers” by Malcolm Gladwell is that to become great at something, humans need to spend around 10,000 hours of their lives concentrating on that thing.
That seems to be the principle siblings Jennifer and Zaine Jeffres are taking when it comes to karate.
“They’re both so dedicated to
their training, which is incredible, considering they started less than a year ago,” said Stoneybrook Karate Sensei Gian Paul Rivera. “The even crazier thing was that within a month of starting the sport, they committed to six days a week of practice, if not more.”
This hyper-dedicated, 10,000hour approach the two oldest Jeffres children have taken to their training and competing has seemed to work pretty well. Jennifer won the three gold medals in the three disciplines offered at the AAU National Championships — Kobudo, Kata and Kumite — winning in the beginner, U10 category for each, making her a Grand National Champion, while Zaine won a national title in the beginner, U8 category for Kata and finished third in Kobudo.
“It feels great to win these medals because of all the practice and work Sensei GP had us do,” Jennifer said. “When you win something that you actually worked for, it’s cool. It feels like I actually got something like a reward for something that I actually did. Like, when you practice every single day and every single week and every single month for two hours straight, fighting or doing Kata, doing Kobudo, and you win something like nationals, it feels like I’m getting a reward for the work and things we learned from the senseis.”
4PROGRESS OVER PERFECTION
When it was all said and done, the Foundation Academy cheer team finished the 2023-24 season in historic fashion, winning a fifth consecutive regional championship, third consecutive FHSAA state championship, the NHSCC national championship and the WSC world championship.
Despite the dream finish to the season, the road there was full of twists and turns that left everyone involved in awe of its success.
“It doesn’t seem real,” Foundation co-coach Rachel Carey said of the team’s accomplishments. “We obviously wanted our girls to do well. We worked hard and we had goals in mind, but both (Kristin and I) never anticipated any of this. We both keep saying this feels like a dream. We can’t believe it happened. But I guess it makes sense with all the hard work that the girls put in.”
Even though the Lions swept each of those competitions and established itself as one of the best cheerleading teams in the world, one of the reasons it may feel like a dream to the Lions coaches is this season wasn’t perfect. Far from it, actually.
“This season in general has probably been the most tumultuous season of both of our coaching careers,” co-coach Kristin Johnson said. “We started the season not sure what avenue we were going down — thinking we were going to be in one division. And then (we ended) up in a totally different division with not all the same athletes. Then to have this much success … it’s just incredible. … We literally went from thinking we had 26 girls to only having 19 to compete with at states.”
The Lions went from expecting to compete in the extra-large, nontumbling division but ended up with a roster of 19 and competing in the large group.
This transition sounds simple, but it isn’t. The changing number of athletes on the team means routines developed in the offseason had to be altered, if not completely scratched, to fit not only the number of athletes but also their skill levels.
“These girls ... have had so much faith in me as a coach and just the overall support from these families and even the school to have trusted me and Kristin to build the program into what it is now, has been amazing,” Carey said. “We’ve had our hard days, and we’ve haven’t always liked each other. But at the end of the day, we’ve just had faith in each other, and I think that’s why we’ve gotten so far.”
5LITTLE LEAGUE, BIG CHAMPS
At the end of every Little League season, each age group in baseball and softball put together a collection of that area’s best players to form an All-Star team to compete in various postseason tournaments — such as districts, sectionals and states. In the nine games across those three postseason tournaments, the Windermere Little League 8- to 10-year-old Softball All-Stars nev-
er lost and claimed all three titles.
But this group of elementaryschool softball players didn’t just win these games, they dominated them. In four of the nine games, the Windermere All-Stars didn’t allow a single run. In six of the nine games, the team scored more than 10 runs. In all nine of the games, Windermere won by three runs or more. In total, the group of All-Stars outscored its postseason opponents by a whopping 109 combined runs (120-11).
One of the biggest reasons for the All-Star team’s success is the dedication and time each player has given to improving their individual skills as softball players.
“All of these girls started playing in our Little League years ago,” All-Star team coach Andre Visser said. “Ever since an even younger age than now, every one of them has come out to put in extra work to improve their throws (and) their hitting. A lot of them come here to take pitching lessons.”
Because of that extra preparation, Visser and his assistant coaches — Brian Goldberg and Jared Czachorowski — were able to choose to spend the summer-long postseason focusing not only hitting and pitching but also on teaching their young players the basics of the game.
“My assistant coaches — Brian and Jared — and I decided to take this group of girls and really help them learn the game of softball,” Visser said. “We wanted to help them develop their IQ for the game, help them learn the mental side of playing defense — things like where to move, where to back up, what to do in what situation. We also wanted to teach them the basics of baserunning and when to be aggressive on the bases. I feel like that focus has made us a very well-rounded team. When we’re on defense, these girls have an understanding of what to do when the batter hits the ball to them or near them. This growth in the mental side of the game has overall made us a very solid team and the girls have grown as players these past two months.”
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LEGACY-DEFINING
MOMENT
Throughout Zachary Fox’s three-year tenure as Legacy Charter’s football coach, the Eagles’ identity on offense has been a pass-first, pro-style spread scheme. But going into this season, he had a problem: He didn’t have the type of quarterback who could run this offense.
Fox had two options: Stick to the program’s developed identity or try something new.
“We had talked a lot about the offense in the spring,” Fox said. “We tried out the single-wing offense a little bit, but it just wasn’t clicking the way that we thought it would. So, we decided to go back to our old offense — but with a simplistic approach that we tried make fit the guys that we have on the roster. At the time, that seemed like the best call, because they were understanding the concepts a little bit better.”
But when the season started, it was painfully clear it wasn’t working. Legacy lost four consecutive games to open the season and scored just 14 points. At the Eagles’ lowest point, they fell to a 1-6 record and averaged just 5.71 points per game.
That’s when a blessing in disguise came: The Eagles starting quarterback got hurt, and Fox got the chance to reshape the identity of his offense.
“We decided to make the shift to the single-wing and put the ball in the hands of three or four different guys who are able to equally share the carries and responsibility of making sure our offense works. That’s made all the difference for us.”
That decision led to a four-game winning streak and a win in the SSAA Class 1A championship game.
“I can’t say enough about the willingness and poise these boys played with,” Fox said. “They never broke … to go from being 0-4 to finishing the season 4-0 with a championship, you can’t write this. All glory to the man above.”
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WELCOME HOME, WOLVERINES
To say Windermere football’s 2024 season was special doesn’t capture how massive it really was. Not only did the Wolverines christen their new on-campus stadium, win the Orange County Independent League championship but Windermere also beat rivals Horizon High for the first time in program history — off a QB sneak in overtime — to cap off its first-ever undefeated season (10-0).
You couldn’t write a better story.
Beyond winning the most games in school history, Windermere’s individual players made major alterations to the program’s history books as well.
Senior athlete Bryce Speed now holds the Wolverines’ single-season records for most receiving yards, receiving touchdowns and all-purpose yards.
Senior quarterback Jack Reilly is the school’s career passing TD record holder and the single-season passing yards record holder.
Senior lineman Daniel Bradley holds the program’s single-season sack record, while junior defensive back C.J. Bronaugh has the most interceptions in a season as well as the most interceptions returned for a TD.
“We are all excited, humbled and thankful that God’s grace has been with us both through the wins and the losses these past few years,” Windermere coach Riki Smith said. “Our community and administrators have been supportive throughout the years I have been head coach here at Windermere. Our fan base of parents, students and faculty have followed their leadership and have been there to cheer us on no matter the outcome, and for that, I am grateful.”
8BREAKTHROUGH ON THE INTERNATIONAL STAGE
With two batters still to go and 12 overs left to play out in the second of its five-match T20i series against the West Indies in Trinidad and Tobago, to say the United States U19 women’s cricket team was in a difficult situation would be an understatement. But as Suresh Vallabhaneni cheered on his adopted country, a sinking feeling weighed down his chest when he saw who was coming up to bat for the U.S. His 17-year-old daughter, Sasha, was about to make her national team debut.
“With the whole national organization watching and the team in a very, very bad state in the match,
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that’s when she walked into the match,” he said. “I’m like, ‘This can’t be how she makes her debut.’ … It felt like she was getting thrown to the wolves.”
He wasn’t the only one who was nervous. Sasha, a Windermere Prep senior, felt as if her heart was going to end up outside her chest.
“It was a very high-pressure situation,” she said. “When I first walked onto that field, I thought I could hear my own heartbeat. … I could feel my hands tighten up.”
At that moment, though, she just kept telling herself it didn’t matter that she never had played on this stage. All that mattered was that her team needed her.
“Someone had to step up,” Sasha said. “And at that moment, I had to. We didn’t have a choice; it had to be me.”
match as the top scorer for the United States but also making an impression on those watching.
“She proved herself that day to the entire team,” Suresh Vallabhaneni said. “Looking back … I think it’s going to be a defining moment in her cricketing career.”
9FLORIDA’S BEST Windermere High graduate Jose Moyetones was named the 2023-24 Gatorade Florida Boys Soccer Player of the Year. Moyetones is the first Gatorade Florida Boys Soccer Player of the Year to be chosen from Windermere High.
The award — which celebrates the nation’s top high school athletes for excellence on the field, in the classroom and in the community — distinguishes Moyetones as Florida’s best high school boys soccer player.
The Windermere winger scored 26 goals and dished out 20 assists, leading the Wolverines (16-2-1) to the FHSAA Class 7A state semifinals. This award caps off an incredible campaign that also saw him bring home the Class 7A Player of the Year.
“Jose’s impact on the pitch is more than just scoring goals,” said Olympia soccer coach Ray Bornacelli. “His calmness, maturity, confidence and class dictate outcomes, unlike any player I’ve faced in high school.”
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LAST TEAM STANDING, ONCE AGAIN
For the second consecutive year, the Dr. Phillips High football team finished the season as the last area FHSAA team standing — winning the 7A, Region 3 championship and reaching the state semis.
“I’m extremely proud of this group,” coach Rodney Wells said. “These guys have fought since they were freshmen; they’ve been playing since they were sophomores. So to get here, to get to the Final Four … it’s a great feat.” 9 8 10 7
And she did, by not only finishing
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Observer
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Notice:
CITY OF OCOEE
NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING TO CONSIDER THE OCOEE REGIONAL SPORTS COMPLEX
REZONING FROM CITY PUD (PLANNED UNIT DEVELOPMENT DISTRICT), CITY R-1AA (SINGLE FAMILY DWELLING DISTRICT), & COUNTY A-1 (CITRUS RURAL DISTRICT) TO CITY PUD (PLANNED UNIT DEVELOPMENT DISTRICT) CASE NUMBER: RZ-24-09-07
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN, pursuant to Article I, Sections 1-8 and 1-10, and Article V, Section 5-9, of the City of Ocoee Land Development Code that on TUESDAY, JANUARY 14, 2025, AT 6:30 P.M. or as soon thereafter as practical, the OCOEE PLANNING & ZONING COMMISSION will hold a PUBLIC HEARING at the City of Ocoee Commission Chambers located at 1 North Bluford Avenue, Ocoee, Florida, to consider a Rezoning to change approximately 95.1 acres of City PUD (Planned Unit Development District), 37.1 acres of City R-1AA (Single Family Dwelling District) and 18.7 acres of County A-1 (Citrus Rural District) lands to approximately 150.9 acres of City PUD (Planned Unit Development District) for the Ocoee Regional Sports Complex Project. The subject property is comprised of 9 parcels, assigned parcel ID numbers 07-22-28-0000-00-001, 07-22-28-0000-00023, 07-22-28-0000-00-057, 07-22-28-0000-00-041, 07-22-28-0000-00039, 07-22-28-0000-00-043, 07-22-28-0000-00-105, 07-22-28-0000-00060, and 07-22-28-0000-00-074. The subject property is generally located within the southeast corner of the intersection of Fullers Cross Road and Ocoee Apopka Road.
Ocoee Regio
n
al Sports Complex Rezoning Location Map
Interested parties may appear at the public hearing and be heard with respect to the proposed action. The complete case file may be inspected at the Ocoee Development Services Department, located at 1 North Bluford Avenue, Ocoee, Florida, between the hours of 8:00 a.m. and 5:00 p.m., Monday through Friday, except for legal holidays. The Planning and Zoning Commission may continue the public hearing to other dates and times as it deems necessary. Any interested party shall be advised that the dates, times, and places of any continuation of these or continued public hearings shall be announced during the hearings and that no further notices regarding these matters will be published. You are advised that any person who desires to appeal any decision made during the public hearings will need a record of the proceedings and, for this purpose, may need to ensure that a verbatim record of the proceedings is made, which includes the testimony and evidence upon which the appeal is based. Persons with disabilities needing assistance to participate in any of the proceedings should contact the City Clerk’s Office 48 hours in advance of the meeting at (407) 905-3105.
Melanie Sibbitt, City Clerk Publish Date: January 2, 2025
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