- November 23, 2024
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A red and blue sand crab glared down upon the occupants of the new weight room at Seabreeze High School on Saturday, Aug. 6, signifying a new era of athletics for the school.
The newly redesigned workout room was a collaborative effort initiated by head football coach Pat Brown, spearheaded by Seabreeze Football Booster Club president Kia Glenn and athletic director Brad Montgomery who was instrumental in creating the Wall of Fame and Sandcrab wall covering with DME Visuals.
Montgomery poured over decades of yearbooks and met with many alumni groups from the 1950s to the current year.
“The weight room is a place of physical and mental development,” he said. “The names on the wall go back decades and represent the best that Seabreeze graduated to collegiate, professional and Olympic athletics. Many are individual state (champions) or were on championship teams and have been inducted into our Hall of Fame at Seabreeze.”
This is Glenn’s first year as the club’s president. Her son, B.J. Glenn, graduated in May.
“I stayed because I have a heart for here. I just want to continue to be a part of the legacy... Coach worked hard. He brought the team from 1-9 to be district champions. I want to see this program go to the next level.”
KIA GLENN, Seabreeze Football Booster Club president
“I stayed because I have a heart for here,” she said. “I just want to continue to be a part of the legacy. I’m showing up for them. Coach worked hard. He brought the team from 1-9 to be district champions. I want to see this program go to the next level.”
Brown began submitting emails to the school’s booster club the first year he was hired requesting various necessities to support his team. The first year was jerseys and equipment. The second year, funding was put into helmet safety. The third year was the weight room.
“When I first got here, the weight room was not conducive for a football team workout,” he said. “I thought about it from a college standpoint. How can we make it efficient for 35 to 40 kids at a time, be able to get the workout in without any downtime.”
Brown and his coaches had trained at college-level facilities and based Seabreeze’s weight room on those experiences. After meeting with a BSN Sports representative on multiple occasions, the decision was to have nine multi-functional weightlifting racks and an open area in the center for traffic, warm-ups and training.
After receiving Browns’s equipment list, booster club vice president Liz Sarno itemized everything, wrote a grant and submitted it to Carl Persis, chairman of the Daytona Beach Racing and Recreational Facilities District. It was approved for $97,000 of which between $70,000 to $75,000 was used for the weight room.
Persis, who is also the Volusia County School Board member for District 4, and his wife, Susan Persis, the deputy mayor of Ormond Beach, are graduates of Seabreeze High School and declared they were “all in on Seabreeze.”
“There is a lot of support for you,” Carl Persis said. “Old guys like me are out here cheering for you guys all the time. It’s my pleasure to serve as the chair of the Daytona Beach Racing and Recreational Facilities District.”
Fellow Seabreeze graduate and newly appointed principal Tucker Harris expressed his enthusiasm for the “positive movements that are already in place.”
“I’m excited about this,” he said. “I don’t consider myself a principal. I’m a number one servant — kind of a school dad. I’m here to do whatever I need to do to help all of (the students) cross the stage, first and foremost, and have an awesome athletic program where we can get some wins but also build good young men and young women — the whole child.”