Training Camp Five Maccabi delegations got a pre-games workout at Camp Maas. LONNY GOLDSMITH Staff Writer E yen though it was the weekend after summer sessions ended at Camp Maas, there was no shortage of activity there on Aug. 14 and 15. The 330 teens from the Los Angeles, Orange County, San Francisco, Mexico and Hartford delega- tions used the Ortonville camp as a training center prior to this week's Maccabi Games. Paul Delson of San Francisco addresses the girls' soccer team during practice. The team is made up of athletes For Los Angeles, the early trip wasn't an unusual from Har t ford and San Francisco. one. "We've done this since 1989 to get acclimatized," said Gary Hansen, the LA girls' basketball coach as he watched his team scrim- mage against Mexico's 13- 14-year-old boys' team. "It's easier than taking a red-eye flight on the day it starts." Ordinarily, the LA ath- letes stay with their host families when they arrive early, but because the event is a full week this year instead of five days, arrange- ments with Camp Maas were made. Hansen was pleased with his team's preparation, but wasn't too happy with the four-and-a-half hour drive from Detroit Metro Airport to Maas — the bus driver got lost and then the bus broke down. LA began its tradition of arriving early after several of its athletes missed the open- ing ceremonies in Chicago in 1988. 15-year-old Jason Gruenbaum of LA practices the shot Los Angeles' Matt Bendik goes in for a shot as team- Not everything was par- put. mate Adam Allegro guar 3. 8/21 1998 24 Detroit Jewish News adise at Camp Maas for some of the LA delegation: 6-foot-4 basketball player Adam Allegro thought the mattresses were too short, and baseball player David Wurth wasn't pleased with the food or the 8:30 a.m. departure time last Sunday morning. However, "it's fun because we got to hang out and bond before the games started," said Wurth. Eight girls and one coach from the Hartford delegation came to the pre-games camp to meet the eight girls from San Francisco they would be teammates with in-- soccer. Neither delega- tion had enough ath- letes to form teams on their own. "Things are OK so far, except we only get one practice together," said Sarah Wolfe of the "San Hartford" squad. Hartford's Alan Goodman, who's coaching the com- bined team, thought the girls bonded well. "It's a good mix of kids," Goodman said. "They're certainly frat- ernizing well together." In addition to the athletes using the fields and courts for practice, there were Saturday morning Shabbat ser- vices and a dance that evening following Havdalah.