Urban Squash League Inspires Students (NBCNews - - TopicsExpress



          

Urban Squash League Inspires Students (NBCNews - 1/23/15) #HarlemEd: Thurgood Marshall Academy, STREETSQUASH EXCERPT: Daequan Leslies mother didnt go to college. But from a young age, she made it clear to him that he would. It was always established, Leslie said. Though he knew higher education was on the horizon, there was no road map for how he would get there. He certainly didnt anticipate that squash - the sport, not the vegetable - would be part of the equation. Squash? Leslie said, at first I thought it was lacrosse. Squash, not unlike racquetball, is a contest between two players on a four-walled court with a small rubber ball. While a student at Thurgood Marshall Academy, a public school in Harlem, it was through StreetSquash that Leslies classmates introduced him to the game. They peer-pressured me into joining, and I liked it, Leslie said. Now 21-years-old, Leslie is an alumnus of the program. Founded in 1999, StreetSquash is one of 15 Urban Squash programs in 14 American cities. Each of these independent non-profit after-school programs provides academic tutoring and squash instruction to more than 1,500 students across the country. Another component of the programs is mentoring. StreetSquash is where Daequan was introduced to his mentor and now friend, Joe Kazemi. Its a great sport to enjoy at any level, really - whether youre a beginner, an intermediate or a pro, said Kazemi. Kazemi is a statistician at The City University of New York (CUNY), who got involved with StreetSquash not because he played the game himself, but by way of good old-fashioned advertising. Kazemi, a resident of Hamilton Heights noticed a StreetSquash poster while visiting Harlems African Market. I was very intrigued because I was looking into volunteer opportunities at that time, Kazemi said. Kazemi later googled StreetSquash and when he landed on the programs website he clicked, Volunteer. Though historically associated with the British Empire, New England Prep Schools and the Ivy League, the sport continues to grow, and is expanding rapidly to a new demographic. Urban squash around the country has taken root at colleges where a history of the game exists. Today, kids like Leslie who have participated in urban squash programs are almost all college bound and theyre prepared for it. They compete nationally in the sport from as young as 10-years-old and these student athletes grow up to play on elite varsity college rosters, from Bates to Cornell to Franklin and Marshall to Harvard.
Posted on: Sat, 24 Jan 2015 13:52:29 +0000

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