Natalie Williams is still running the show
By Lee Benson | Deseret News |
Published: Aug. 1, 2017 5:55 p.m.
Updated: Aug. 2, 2017 10:15 a.m.
DRAPER â Itâs been 12 years now since she last laced up her basketball shoes and, yes, Natalie Williams has pretty much stayed true to her retirement day vow.
âI donât plan on running again, unless something big and scary is chasing me,â she said in 2005 after sheâd shot her last basket and pulled down her final rebound for the Indiana Fever, the WNBA team sheâd joined after the Utah Starzz folded in 2002.
She was 34 years old â not exactly ancient, even by pro athlete standards. But itâs not the years, itâs the miles. And few athletes, male or female, had gone the distance quite like she had.
At Taylorsville High School, she led her teams to state championships in volleyball and basketball. At UCLA, she became the first woman in history to be named All-American in both volleyball and basketball the same season. After college she won gold medals playing basketball in two world championships and the 2000 Olympics. In nine seasons as a professional she was an All-Star seven times and was once league MVP.
And now? Whatâs the woman the state of Utah named Female Athlete of the Century and who is enshrined in the Womenâs Basketball Hall of Fame doing now?
Watching everybody else lace up their sneakers and run.
After more than a decade of coaching club and high school basketball â helping Skyline High School to two state championships as an assistant and compiling a 55-11 record and two region championships as head coach for three seasons at Juan Diego High School â Williams has ramped up her game, establishing the Natalie Williams Basketball Academy at Sport City, the 80,000-square-foot mega-gym in Draper.
She has 14 youth teams and five elite high school club teams under her direction, in addition to scheduling camps and organizing tournaments. Itâs a full-time job and then some, which is fine with Williams, who never had a problem staying overtime in the gym.
She looks at the beautiful, air-conditioned courts and dozens of girls shooting baskets at Sport City, and even if it wasnât all that long ago, canât help but compare todayâs world for female athletes to the one she grew up in not that many miles â and years â down the road in Taylorsville.
âMy first sport was softball at 8 years old; I didnât start playing basketball until seventh grade,â she said.
She didnât even know such a thing as summer camps existed until she was well into her teens.
When she got serious about volleyball during her high school years, she used to take the Amtrak redeye to Las Vegas on Fridays to join a club team there that would travel to Los Angeles for the weekend in order to play against elite level competition. On Sunday night sheâd ride the train back from Vegas to Salt Lake City.
âMy mom let me do that!â Williams exclaims.
Musing on all that, she gestures toward Ayla and Nation, her two youngest daughters. Theyâre 10 and 7. Theyâve been playing basketball since they could walk.
Her hopes for her girls? The same as for everyone else at the Natalie Williams Basketball Academy: teach them how to win and how to lose, how to build confidence, how to be part of a team, how to have fun. And, oh yeah, how to play basketball the right way. If all goes really well, theyâll wind up with a scholarship that pays for their college education.
Williams has been there and done that. UCLA paid her way through college, getting a bargain in the process. Not only did their Utah recruit star on the basketball team, she led the Bruins to those two national championships in volleyball. On one memorable night, Natalie suited up for the basketball team early in the evening and later that night led the volleyball team to a win over USC.
Twenty-five years later, she says her only regret about college â and weâre not making this up â is not playing more.
âUCLA wanted me to play softball one year and I said no because I needed a break,â she said. âI wish I would have played.â
Her love for sports, and where sports takes you, is effervescent.
âYou learn how to handle conflict, you learn how to handle pressure. Those are life skills sports teaches you,â she said. âYou learn how to be gracious even in defeat, you learn how to communicate â with your coaches, with your peers â you learn about confidence and how to believe in yourself.â
She saw the world because of sports.
âIâve been to Cuba, Argentina, Taiwan, Australia, Russia, China, Japan, Canada, Italy, Switzerland, Germany, the Netherlands, Hungary, Slovakia, Siberia,â she said, ticking off the country names off the top of her head.
Playing in the WNBA â where her 8.3 rebounds-per-game career average still ranks eighth best all time â gave her a graduate course in Americana. âItâs remarkable where sports took me, the things I saw, the things I learned.â
The only drawback is that 38-inch vertical leap she used to have is more like .38 now.
âThe worst thing is getting old and you can put that down,â she said, smiling, sort of.
âWhen you jump so high for so long youâve eventually gotta come down. Who knows how many times I landed, but I have zero cartilage in both ankles and both knees. Iâve had two surgeries on my right ankle and itâs still not good at all. I do have dreams of running once in a while. I miss it. But the best I can do is quick walk. The girls know it. They know mom canât chase them fast up the stairs.â
Still, she said she wouldnât change a minute, or a second, and thatâs the big draw for her to keep coming to the gym every day, even if she canât run the floor like she once did.
Showing the way for others never gets tiring.
âI just enjoy teaching and coaching young kids and I really want to make a name for the Utah kids,â she said. âUtah as a whole is not known for having good quality recruits and Iâm trying to change that.â
Nate Williams, the dad she didnât meet until she was a teenager, is a regular presence in her life now. Her mother, Robyn, and Nate met at Utah State but did not marry. Shortly after Natalie was born in 1970, Nate finished his final season playing at USU and then embarked on his own pro basketball career. He spent eight years in the NBA, while Robyn moved to Taylorsville to raise Natalie alone.
It wasnât until she was 16 that Natalie met her father in person. Their relationship has developed since then. Nate Williams was in Utah recently for a golf fundraiser for his daughterâs academy. He was there front and center last summer in Knoxville, Tennessee, when his daughter was inducted into the Womenâs Basketball Hall of Fame. So was Robyn, who lives in South Jordan with her husband, just around the corner from Natalie and the grandkids, and is a constant presence taking care of Ayla and Nation and the two older children, Sydney and Turasi.
âYou know, it takes a village; that saying is true,â said Williams.
The same is true of her academy (nataliewilliamsbasketballacademy.com), where she has surrounded herself with a staff of coaches who will help her emphasize all the positives and sheer joys of the great game of basketball â while also joining her in enforcing her one hard and fast rule: No one is allowed to say âcanât.â
If youâre heard saying that four-letter word around Williams, thatâs five pushups, for the entire gym.
âYou can say you are not able, but not the âcâ word,â she said. âBecause if you say it, youâre right.â
She sees such a bright future for the youngsters sheâs coaching. The places they can go, the things they can do. If you make it to the big leagues these days, she marvels, âYour family can watch you play on their phone! That would have been fun for my family to do that!â
Beyond teaching basketball skills, she wants the girls who play for her to learn to enjoy the journey.
âAppreciate every opportunity youâre given; make sure youâre not just going through the motions,â she tells them. âThere are amazing opportunities coming and you donât want to miss any of them.â
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97.1zht at SPORT CITY!
What a fun day! Frankie and Jess with co-hosts with Kylie and Wayne from 97.1zht spent the morning on June 23rd at SPORT CITY for a Bubble Soccer Bonanza Tournament! Teams scrambled for the win with prizes consisting of concert tickets, a Sport City gift certificate, and Slide the City Pass! A big thanks to 97.1zht for the great time!
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THE JFA JUNIOR OLYMPICS ARE COMING TO UTAH AUGUST 2017
The NAFF is proud to announce the first annual Junior Olympic Futsal Championships. This event is open for any teams in North America and affiliated International Continents. Sanctioned by the NAFF and AMF, it is expected that teams from around the world will participate.
Additionally the Major League Futsal USA Finals and the NAFF Open Futsal Championships will also take place.
For the competition year of 2017, the JOs will be populated in the following manner.
· The National Division will be filled first, then the American and so on. As this event grows we will add the additional divisions and begin to separate the divisions by skill or qualified bids. The future plan is to have all four divisions activated, with the first three filled by qualified bids, and the remaining Patriot division to be the non-qualified division open to any team.
· Current JFA State Associations can invite any team/s from their regions to attend the championships.
· Current MLF Academies can send any team from their pool of academy teams to participate in the championships.
· Any junior or youth teams wishing to participate in the JFA Junior Nations that are not members of the JFA, must register in order to attend the championships.
Opening Ceremony Info:
Opening Ceremonies will take place on August 4th 2017 from 6-9pm, at the main venue Sports City. Opening Ceremonies will be conducted in the spirit of Olympic Sport with all the pageantry you come to expect from a Junior Olympic competition. Closing Ceremonies will take place on August 6th after the last match.
This years essay contest winner will win $100 in cash.
· DJ
· Team Banner Contest
· Essay Contest
This years theme (What Futsal Means to Me)
Essays must be turned into our office no later than July 1st to be accepted, essays can include photos for displays. Please mail to: JOs Essays 442 W Harmont Drive Phoenix Arizona, 85021. (Please mail in a protective package)
Everyone is welcome.
We will have several divisions available, suitable for any level and category.
Fee: $550 per team
When: August 5th & 6th 2017
Team Check in on August 4th 6-10pm
Venue:
Sport City
757 W 11400 S Draper
Utah, 84020. (Facility info at 801-553-0096)
Divisions:
· National (This division will be filled first then the American & USA)
· American
· USA
· Patriot (If your team futsal experience is low then pick this division)
· High Performance
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AAU Grand Nationals Hosted at Sport City in Draper
Draper, UT â AAU Wrestling Utah will host the AAU Grand Nationals three-style wrestling championships June 15-17, 2017, at Sport City in Draper. The agreement was happily arrived at after AAU Wrestling Board members toured the 80,000 square foot, state-of-the-art facility.
“I have wanted to bring AAU Grand Nationals to Utah for years,” said AAU Wrestling Utah Director Bill Kilpack. “To find a facility like Sport City for the first outing is really great. AAU Wrestling Utah and Sport City can use this opportunity help each other build for the future. I see this as a great relationship to help wrestling in Utah continue to grow and improve.”
Kilpack actually first heard of Sport City while in Texas and, as soon as returning home, started on the path toward working together. The venue’s central sport court will sport the tournament wrestling mats, with bleacher seating in either side, and security methods to prevent overcrowding matside, so spectators will have no trouble seeing their athletes compete.
Sport City COO Amy Olsen said, “We look forward to hosting a first-class event at our beautiful facility built specifically for our sports community. This will be the first time we have had wrestling in our building and we couldn’t be more excited!”
This will be the first year of AAU Grand Nationals, the oldest wrestling national championship in the country, being hosted in Utah. In addition to including freestyle, Greco-Roman and folkstyle tournaments, some changes to the tournament will include adding a Women’s Division, Outstanding Wrestler awards in each of the seven youth categories in all three styles. A Fastest Pin award will be offered for each style. Champions in all three styles will receive a Triple Crown Award. The tournament is also part of the AAU Wrestling National Championship Belt Series.
After attending AAU Grand Nationals previously, former Mt. Crest High School Wrestling Coach Davie Swenson said, “I’m grateful that we [went] to Grand Nationals. One of my wrestlers had 24 matches … that’s a whole season’s worth of mat time. What a great deal!”
For more information, go to www.AAUGrandsUtah.com, www.AAUWrestlingUtah.com or www.MountainTopWrestling.com. For more information about Sport City, go to www.SportCityUtah.com.
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