So, now that weâre officially part of the Google News Initiative â one of only 23 U.S. companies to receive financial support for their news operations from the worldâs largest tech company â a lot of people have been asking me what to expect in terms of our promised new formats and new online programming.
Some of what weâll be doing with Googleâs funding â in addition to making major changes to all of our online content (more on this below) â will be business as usual, there will just be more frequent releases.
We will still have News Desks with yours truly and former Bay News 9 reporter Susanna Martinez. I also will continue to provide Neighborhood Dining News and Entertainment segments. Weâll also have more North Tampa Bay Chamber (NTBC) Featured Business segments with our Featured Business host Mollyana Ward (see top right photo), as well as occasional news updates from the Chamber itself. For example, Mollyana recently interviewed Chamber president & CEO Hope Allen (photo below) and those segments have been getting a lot of views, both on YouTube and on Facebook.
But, weâre also working on a lot of new stuff, too, like the recently posted fun new segment featuring Jennifer Ames, the administrator of the Wesley Chapel Community Facebook page, which has more than 16,000 members. This is our first effort to tap into the power of local online resources outside of our own website (NTNeighborhoodNews.com), âNeighborhood Newsâ Facebook page and our WCNT-tv YouTube channel.
Jenniferâs first segments have just been released and I think youâll really enjoy them. Her personality is a big part of why the Wesley Chapel Community Facebook page is so popular and it definitely shines through in her first interview with me in front of the camera. Jenâs âChappie Chatterâ segments will be a light-hearted look at whatâs been âblowing upâ her Facebook page and Iâll be really surprised if Neighborhood News readers and Wesley Chapel & New Tampa Television viewers alike donât love the âChatter.âÂ
Our senior video producer Gavin Olsen and I also have released the full video of each of our recent interviews on our WCNT-tv YouTube channel and then cut the videos into individual segments for release on Facebook, Instagram and our current website.Â
One thing we really want you to do is subscribe to our YouTube channel and start watching the full-length videos there.
As for our other programming ideas, weâre keeping them under wraps for now, but you can expect several more announcements about those new video/online segments in these pages very soon.
25 Years, Eh?
Yes, on February 25, 2019, yours truly will celebrate 25 years as the owner, publisher and editor of the Neighborhood News. Milestone or no milestone, I recognize that the state of the print business is changing and (even though ânicheâ publications like ours are the ones people will still read today), the fact is that if we donât change some of the ways we do things, we could go the way of not only the dinosaur, but also of daily newspapers and general interest magazines around the country.
 As I touched on in my last page 3 editorial, a big part of the changes to come this year is that all of our videos, âNeighborhood Newsâ Facebook posts and our news magazineâs website will soon fall under one new umbrella â NeighborhoodNewsOnline.net, the âOnline Network Serving New Tampa & Wesley Chapel.â
The new website currently only has a basic landing page, but we hope to roll it out in full to coincide with my 25th anniversary at the helm of Neighborhood News next month.
Tennis players Kanishkh Ramesh and Destiny Okungbowa (left) and soccer players Jake Bierhorst and Malcom Lewis (right) flank their coach, Dave Wilson (center).
Tampa Bay is littered with high school coaches who have built sports dynasties, at places like Plant and Armwood for football, Tampa Jesuit for baseball and St. Petersburg Lakewood for basketball.
Rare, however, is the coach who not only builds one dynasty, but simultaneously builds two.
In fact, the only boys soccer and tennis coach Wiregrass Ranch High (WRH) has ever known, Dave Wilson, may be in a class by himself, especially in Pasco County.
Wilson, who also is the schoolâs athletic director, has guided the boys soccer team to the state playoffs this season and the Bulls havenât dropped a regular season game to a Pasco County opponent since January of 2013, a streak of 50 games. That run includes five trips to the Regional playoffs, including a State semifinal appearance in 2015.
Last month, Wilsonâs Bulls beat Steinbrenner 2-0 for the 200th win of his career.
Meanwhile, the tennis team, which opened its season Feb. 12 against Cypress Creek, has been even better. The Bulls are currently on a 125-match regular-season winning streak, including 96 straight wins against Pasco County competition since a loss to Land OâLakes in 2010. That run includes State championships in 2014 and 2015, as well as a runner-up finish in 2017.
Kanishkh Ramesh (and his brother) have been a part of the Bulls long winning streak.
When it comes to playing its local competition, the taste of defeat is an unfamiliar one for Wilson.
âI think about it, but I donât think our guys think about it all that much,â Wilson says with a chuckle, adding, âexcept for the fact that I donât think they want to be the team that has that first loss to a Pasco opponent.â
An Athletic Background
Wilson is a Falls State, NY, native, who grew up as a multi-sport athlete and attended the State University of New York (SUNY) College at Cortland (aka Cortland State) in Cortland, NY, where he was a regional All-American soccer player, played basketball and competed for the track team in the triple jump.
Competition has always been a part of Coach Wilsonâs life. But coaching? He says that is, and always has been, where his true passion has burned.
âI never wanted to do anything other than coaching,â Wilson says. âMy brothers both took great jobs and make lots of money, but that was never a draw for me.â
He adds, with a chuckle: âDonât get me wrong, Iâd love to be rich and everything. But, I enjoy every day of my life, coming to practice and going to the games. When youâve been an athlete all your life, and you still get to wake up in the morning and say, âAlright, itâs game day,â there is nothing better than that.â
Wilson, 54, got his first coaching experience as a senior in college, when he joined the Tompkins Cortland Community College (in Tompkins, NY) basketball staff as an assistant, he moved from there to SUNY Binghamton (in Binghamton, NY) where he was the head womenâs basketball and soccer coach for 10 years, before moving to Florida to serve as the head womenâs basketball coach at Saint Leo University outside of Dade City beginning in 1999.
However, after a few years at Saint Leo, with a wife and young children, the travel for games, long hours and recruiting trips started to wear on Wilson.
He knew he wanted to make a change, so he stepped down from coaching at Saint Leo in 2002 and spent four years as an elementary school physical education teacher. The itch to coach competitively, though, never went away, and when WRH opened in 2006, he jumped at the chance to get back into coaching.
For someone who sees coaching as a calling, there can be no bigger challenge than launching a program, building a tradition and finding success. Wilson got that chance when he took the job as both the boys soccer and boys tennis coach at the new school.
And success? That has not been a problem for Wilson and his team at WRH. He says that winning never gets old.
In the Bullsâ dramatic 3-2 District 5A-7 semifinal win Jan. 30 against second-seeded Plant, Wilson got caught up in the celebration after Justin Amis scored the winning goal with roughly 30 seconds remaining.
âI think I hurt my ribs,â he said, laughing. âIâm getting old.â
The next night, the Bulls gave Wilson his first district title since 2015 with a 1-0 overtime win over No. 1-seed Steinbrenner. The Bulls eventually bowed out of the state playoffs this season in the second round.
Off The Field Success, Too
Success for Wilson isnât just what happens on the field â it comes in the legacy of a program, its growth, its traditions. The biggest point of pride, according to Wilson, is seeing those early players return to give back to their former programs, while his current players buy into the athletic culture they are helping to shape.
âThe continuity of our program and the consistency started with the first group, that group being around for four years, set the bar,â Wilson says. âThey started coming back after they graduated for summer stuff and supported the guys they left behind.â
âThatâs so important having those players come back and let the younger guys know what this time here meant to them. Letting them know that the memories they had of high school (athletics) was the most fun they had and thatâs trickled down. Every group after them has tried to raise the bar another level.â
(l.-r.) Devi Ndrita, Jori Ndrita, Malcom Lewis, Maurice Lewis, Camilo Torres and JP Torres pose with the District Championship trophy the Bulls won on Jan. 31. It was the schoolâs first district title since 2015, a team Devi, Maurice and JP all played on. (Photo courtesy of The Wiregrass Ranch Stampede school newspaper.)
Chris Madden, a member of Wilsonâs first soccer team at WRH in 2006 and the current Competition & Development Director for the United Soccer League, remembers the first year of soccer at the school, playing without a senior class, and the struggles that squad had to overcome. Even then, Madden noted, the players knew Wilson was preparing them for successes ahead.
âWe had a rough go that first year, but Coach Wilson, in all the years I played for him, always instilled a desire to be our best,â Madden says. âI think that is rare these days. I think he really understood the desires of young players and how to make them want to play and become better players.â
Four years later, the Bulls soccer team won 18 games, finished as the District runner-up and made the programâs first state series appearance.
For Madden, it was Wilsonâs dedication to the kind of people his players would become, that shines over their successes on the field or courts. That, he says, is what has brought him back to his alma mater for the last 10 years to help out as an assistant coach for the Bulls.
âGetting to coach with him for about the last 10 years has been really important to me, because if I were to give credit to someone for helping me in my career in soccer today, Iâd credit Coach Wilson, for sure,â Madden says. âYou can tell he cares about you off the field, and when you are looking for someone to be that mentor, thatâs very important. He made us want to play for him.â
Wilsonâs third âcoachingâ job at Wiregrass Ranch comes as the schoolâs athletic director, and he approaches that position the same way he does his role as leader to his student-athletes.
âMy belief, and what I preach to all of our other coaches here at Wiregrass Ranch, is that the experience has to outweigh the outcome,â Wilson says. âYou can win a state title, but if you are being screamed at and made miserable the whole time, then itâs really not worth doing. We really focus on things so when these kids look back on their high school athletics in 10 years, this really was the best time of their lives.â
FROM THE FIRST TIME I tried the true New York-style pizza at my friend Willie Lopezâs La Prima Pizza (it was called by another name at that time), I felt it was the closest thing to the pizza places I grew up with in Long Island and Manhattan, NY.
Since then, in addition to a few first-place finishes in our annual Reader Dining Survey & Contest, La Prima has been named my Favorite Pizza Place in New Tampa & Wesley Chapel all 16 years it has been in business. It also has been one of my favorite restaurants in Wesley Chapel and one of my favorite Italian restaurants in either of our distribution areas.
It therefore isnât easy for me to say â or even think â that Willie would even consider selling his place, but the former executive at Salomon Bros. and his wife Lucretia say they are tired and want to be able to retire, so Willie can concentrate on his thriving baseball memorabilia business. The lifelong New York Mets fan has adopted the Tampa Bay Rays as his American League team and he has had Rays season tickets for as long as Iâve known him.
Hereâs The Skinny
Established in 2003, La Prima Pizza has been family owned and operated and a staple in the Wesley Chapel and New Tampa communities for the past 16 years.
Willie and Lucretia also say they are prepared to provide an âopportunity of a lifetimeâ to any individual/family dreaming of owning and operating their own business. This turn-key establishment offers a huge existing customer base and tremendous future growth opportunities for the appropriate fit.
And, just because there are really so many very good pizza places in our area, I felt I owed it to myself and my staff to order the amazing meat lovers pizza (left) before writing this story. Senior video producer Gavin Olsen also raved about his pepperoni calzone and sales/office assistant Janet Levins loved her cheesesteak.
In other words, if youâre not going to buy La Prima Pizza (1211 BBD Blvd., next to Super Target), you should stop in, call (813) 907-2878 or visit ThatsGoodPizza.com and place an order today. But, Willie says if you are interested, you should call him at the restaurant â whether or not you have any prior restaurant experience. Willie says he will help in the transition of the business and transfer all of his knowledge to any qualified party. But, do it soon so Willie and Lucretia can retire and I can continue to enjoy the pizza I love!