Games on Thursday, July 29, 2010 Print
No games scheduled. Please call for the latest information.
 

68's First "TRI" WINNERS
Sunday, March 28, 2010 7:28:04 PM

I would like to thank you all for the great morning.
And the winners are...........
Overall Male Winner - Josh Wolf - Time 41 minutes and 30 seconds
Male Age Group 18-30 Winner - Josh Wolf - Time 41 minutes and 30 seconds
Male Age Group 31-40 Winner - Tom Knox - Time 44 minutes and 28 seconds
Male Age Group 41-50 Winner - Peter Frankel - Time 51 minutes and 56 seconds
Male Age Group 51 and over Winner - Kevin Kenney - Time 54 minutes and 42 seconds
Overall Female Winner - Tricia Vogel - Time 52 minutes and 8 seconds
Female Age Group 18-30 Winner - Kelsey Arrighi - Time 54 minutes and 38 seconds
Female Age Group 31-40 Winner - Tricia Vogel - Time 52 minutes and 8 seconds
Female Age Group 41-50 Winner - DeAnna Basler - Time 54 minutes and 43 seconds
Female Age Group 51 and over Winner - Wendy Clay - Time 1 hour and 5 seconds
Female Winner using the Alter G to run with - Angela Meyers - Time 1 hour and 18 minutes.
Congratulations to the winners and everyone competing! Great Job!
LETA LORENZEN.
 
 
Oklahoma Native, Legendary Husker Recruit.
Wednesday, December 30, 2009 7:34:17 PM

Oklahoma Native, Legendary Husker Recruit Will Shields Clears the Way


spacer  Article Audio/Videospacer
spacer
  Play Video  Watch
Will Shields Feature
Randy York's N-sider 

To "Respond to Randy" click on the link below and choose "Randy York's N-Sider" under "Area of Interest" on the new screen. Please include your name and make sure you type in your town/city/state after you share your thoughts on legendary football recruit Will Shields. Your ideas may be published at the bottom of this column.

We know this weekend is a unique tribute to the Nebraska-Oklahoma football rivalry, but please, even if you bleed Husker red, stand up right now and give it up for Lawton, Oklahoma, High School.

That's right ... Lawton, Oklahoma.

Yes, the state's third largest city ... the one that sent Will Shields to Lincoln to become an All-American, an Outland Trophy winner, an All-Pro, the NFL Man of the Year and one of the most motivated human beings this side of Mike Minter, another ex-Husker from Lawton.

Lawton, you see, helped Shields learn about and understand the power of Hanta Yo, a Lakota Sioux Indian term that means "Clear the Way".

"That was the mantra I lived by playing high school football in Lawton, and the word I still try to live by today," Shields said, explaining how his high school coaches preached it almost every day, so players would focus their energy on everything positive.

Fortunately, Hanta Yo - an infinite source of creative potential - led Shields to Nebraska, where he honed that almost mystical power and pushed himself beyond almost every challenge imaginable.

Wisdom, Trust, Inner Peace and Illumination

Even today, at 38, long after the accolades have faded, Will Shields, who has never enjoyed the spotlight anyway, is a living testimonial to the Native American medicine wheel that symbolizes wisdom, trust, inner peace and illumination.

Why? Because he was wise enough to put academics and life skills on the same plateau as athletics, and he was smart enough to put his trust in Nebraska. Plus, he continues to seek inner peace and illumination through the Will to Succeed Foundation that he co-founded with his wife, Senia.

Launched when he was an all-pro fixture in the Kansas City Chiefs' offensive line, the foundation is organized to guide, inspire and improve the lives of abused and neglected women and children.

Who knows? Hanta Yo just may have been the power that allowed Shields to become the second offensive lineman in modern-day Nebraska football history to play as a true freshman. By his sophomore season, he was doing what only Dave Rimington had done before him - earning first-team all-conference honors while "clearing the way" for the Huskers to lead the Big Eight in scoring, rushing and total offense.

Shields started the last 36 games of his Nebraska career, and trivia buffs find it interesting that he carried the ball on the final Fumblerooski play in Husker history - a 16-yard gain against Colorado in 1992. A three-time All-Big Eight player, he made the Nebraska Football Hall of Fame a year after he graduated.

No wonder the Kansas City Chiefs latched on to Shields. The somewhat unheralded third-round draft choice became the cornerstone of their offensive line for 15 seasons. He played in a franchise-record 224 consecutive regular-season games at right guard and made a franchise-record 12 consecutive Pro Bowls.

Considering all of that, perhaps it's appropriate that for every Husker fan inclined to stand up and give Shields a sincere Hanta Yo, every Chiefs' fan should stand and offer at least two or three.

Successful Businesses and an Important Foundation

This weekend, Shields is joining a sizable group of former Nebraska and Oklahoma major football award winners for a special banquet and game-day ceremonies in Lincoln - a three-hour getaway from Kansas City, where he owns two successful businesses and directs an important foundation.

Not surprisingly, Shields also still contributes to another worthy charitable cause called "I"ve Got Heart" - a program where students write letters to inspire and motivate hospital patients.

Once Shields became a part of that program at Nebraska, he just couldn't give it up, even after retiring from football to run his businesses, serve the community and support a wife and three children.

"The important thing is not only to clear the way for what you want to do, but to clear the way for others who need your help," Shields said.

That principle is inherently built into the foundation of Hanta Yo. "It's not a philosophy. It's a way of life - a  way of working together and getting things done," Shields said, acknowledging that he was never comfortable being named the NFL Man of the Year.

"The people around me were the NFL Men and Women of the Year," he said. "They wrote the programs for the foundation. They did the fund-raising. They were the ones who made it all happen. I was just a catalyst. All I did was clear the way."

True, of course, to the very root of who he is and all he stands for.

Respond to Randy 

To "Respond to Randy" click on the link above and follow the directions at the top of this column.

Will Shields Profile

Name: Will H. Shields III

Age: 38

Residence: Overland Park, Kansas

Family: Wife, Senia; Daughter, Sanayika, 17; Sons Shavon, 15, and Solomon, 12.

Why I chose Nebraska: There were five Division I seniors on my high school football team. I wasn't one of those blue-chip, star-studded guys. I was someone who needed development and knew it. I went to Nebraska's Summer Football Camp my junior year in high school and went to Oklahoma's football camp two weeks later, so I had a good chance to compare programs. Oklahoma State, Arkansas and Tulsa also offered me scholarships, but I was a strong lean to Nebraska from the start. For me, Nebraska had three distinct advantages. First, they had a strong tradition of developing offensive linemen. Second, they had an academic support system that was way beyond anyone else's, and third, OU was getting ready to go on (NCAA) probation, so I wasn't really interested in that kind of transition or environment. The biggest key for me was probably the strong emphasis on academics. I knew I needed rigor and structure and knew that Nebraska had a system in place that would help me grow as a student, an athlete and a man.

Why Nebraska was a good decision: It was everything I thought it would be and more. Nebraska just treats people the way you want to be treated. The minute you get here, you feel that love that people have for you. You feel that atmosphere that champions have, and you embrace everything you know it will take for you to get there yourself. I always felt I had to maximize every little bit of talent I had, athletically and academically. I really didn't have enough time for anything else until later when I became an original mentor of the TeamMates program. That opened my eyes. I still stay in touch with my mentee, who has a full-time job and is doing well. Maybe now I can go back and rekindle some of those relationships I missed when I was too busy before. I met my wife at Nebraska. She was a Rotary exchange student from Denmark and lived for a year in Curtis, Nebraska. Then she came back on a work visa and was a project manager for the Gallup organization. Choosing Nebraska was one of the decisions I've ever made.

What I'm doing now: I own two businesses. One is called 68 Inside Sports Health and Wellness, and the other is called 68 Inside Sports Indoor Training Facility. Together they are a gym/fitness center/health and wellness/sports and recreation training center. One building is 70,000 square feet. The other is 50,000 square feet. We even have our own in-house, state certified chiropractor. We have batting cages, a big indoor football field and a giant weight room. We have more than 2,000 members, and we're a combination of a lot of different things I believe in. At Nebraska, I loved to train and to grow, and I enjoy helping young kids learn how to train and grow. I enjoy watching them find their strengths and then develop them. I would love to add vocal music and the theatrical arts to what we have and maybe even an academic center, so we can teach kids how to study. Nebraska was my model for all-inclusive growth. They go way beyond sports, and that's what I'd like to do here. I love it when kids open their eyes to different things they can do. I also spend a lot of time on my Will to Succeed Foundation.

Most memorable moment as a Husker: There are so many that I couldn't possibly single one out, but I'll never forget Senior Day when Kenny Walker was introduced. The crowd gave him an ovation in sign language . . . the roar of silence. Kenny was an inspirational role model for so many, including me. It's amazing what someone who was deaf from the age of two can accomplish - from becoming an All-American at Nebraska to playing for the Denver Broncos. Even though he couldn't hear, he had special abilities. That was a rare day and a unique experience . . . something that we'll probably never see again.

 

 
 
Foundation honors former Chiefs
Thursday, December 10, 2009 4:26:38 PM

Foundation honors former Chiefs player

PDF Print E-mail
Community
Written by Linda Friedel   
Wednesday, 09 December 2009 00:00
WillSheilds1

BEN MCCALL/SUN PHOTO FORMER KANSAS CITY CHIEFS player and 68’s Inside Sports owner Will Shields, Overland Park, will be honored Thursday, Dec. 10, with the Southtown Foundation Celebration of the American Citizen Award.

Kathy Hofer
likes her job, but more than that she appreciates the benevolent nature of her employer, who she sums up in one word.

 

“Phenomenal,” said Hofer, Olathe, manager of 68’s Inside Sports gym and sports facility. “There is no other word to really describe him.”

Hofer said her employer and owner of 68’s Inside Sports, former Kansas City Chief’s player Will Shields, elevates the fitness center’s impact by encouraging employees and members to reach out and help people in need.

“To have someone who encourages that – I love it. That’s why I come to work,” she said.

Hofer can list the drives and awareness activities Shields, encouraged at his Overland Park fitness center this year. There was “Groovability,” a dance-a-thon for people in wheel chairs on Halloween day.

Shields provided space for the Muscular Dystrophy Association to hold a “Lock-up,” using “bail” money to fund the program. “Sock it to Me” provided 675 pairs of socks for Operation Breakthrough, an agency that helps children. Safehome, which helps abused women, held a soccer tournament at the facility.

“He encourages us to think outside the box how to help the community,” she said.

Philanthropic events held at Shield’s 68’s Inside Sports reflect the spirit of his Will to Succeed Foundation, which has helped more than 100,000 individuals since its inception.

Shields’ philanthropic efforts will be recognized Thursday, Dec. 10, when the Southtown Foundation honors him at their 14th annual Celebration of the American Citizen Award luncheon at the Muehlebach Hotel Tower at the Downtown Marriott.

Proceeds from the luncheon will benefit the Will to Succeed Foundation and  Southtown Foundation.

“I can’t think of any better person to be honored in something like that,” said

Anthony Phillips, Shawnee, chiropractic sports physician at 68’s Inside Sports.Philips, a minority partner at health center, has served on Shields’ foundation for seven years.

“I think it’s only fitting,” he said. “We’ve gone from friends to business partners because of his ethics and the way he lives his life.”

Shields will not point to one single moment that sparked his interest in philanthropy, saying it was a chain of events and influences in his life beginning with his parents.

His college football coach at the University of Nebraska, Tom Osborne, encouraged players to participate in Team Mates, an agency similar to Big Brothers Big Sisters of Kansas City.

“I had good mentors growing up,” Shields said. “They raise you to think the right way.”

Shields said when he joined the Chiefs in 1993 the players had formed 17 other foundations.

“It made it easy as a rooky to be a part of the group,” he said. “Those were my influences.”

Shields’ agent encouraged him to start a foundation, then helped him form Will to Succeed 16 years ago. The foundation assists 40 agencies in the Kansas City area that serve abused and neglected women and children, literacy and scholarships initiatives, and improving creativity.

Shields said he appreciates the American Citizen award, but credits others for the honor.

“It’s not me,” he said. “It’s the people that helped me. It’s for everyone that’s influenced your life.”

Shields said being able to give and seeing what it does for a group is the most significant part of helping others.

“I’m just a vehicle,” he said. “I pull people together to accomplish something for the greater good.”

Leta Lorenzen, Olathe, group fitness director and kinesis coordinator at 68’s Inside Sports, said Shields remains good-natured in spite of managing a business and foundation, and raising three children.

“He’s involved in so many different things, and he gives his heart and soul to everything from family to business to charity,” she said. “He’s very down-to-earth.”

 
More News >>
 
looking on
looking on
  
Quick Stats
  League Leaders
No data at this time.
  Top Offenses
No data at this time.
  Top Defenses
No data at this time.
Quick Stats
Powered by EZFacility.com