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August 15, 2013 - Image 48

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 2013-08-15

Disclaimer: Computer generated plain text may have errors. Read more about this.

in

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48

August 15 • 2013

Macca
soccer gold
medalists
Evan
Flashner and
Ari Hollander

Detroit
Tans
* Thu
escue

Steve Stein
Contributing Writer

A

ri Hollander and Evan
Flashner were the lone
Detroit representatives on
a 10-player Detroit-Boston U16 boys
soccer team at the JCC Maccabi Games
in Austin, Texas.
But the West Bloomfield teenagers
sure made their presence felt.
"The coach [Terry McSweeney
from Boston] told my husband, Jeff,
the team wouldn't have won the gold
medal without Ari and Evan," said
Jennifer Hollander, Ari's mother.
Hollander was the team's playmaker
with seven assists in seven games.
Flashner, normally a midfielder, played
goalie after the team's first game, a 6-1
loss to Edmonton.
"The team didn't have an experi-
enced goalie, so Evan volunteered:'
Jennifer Hollander said.
Detroit-Boston won its final six
games, including a thrilling 4-3 pen-
ally-kick shootout victory Aug. 1 over
Boca Raton, Fla., in the gold-medal
game, played in temperatures that
reached 104 degrees.
The championship game was tied 2-2
after regulation and 3-3 after overtime.
Hollander scored on Detroit-
Boston's first penalty kick. Flashner
stopped Boca Raton's final PK, and the
Motown and Beantown boys started
celebrating.
Maccabi soccer is played in a 7-on-7
format on a smaller than normal field.
This was the fourth Maccabi
Games for Flashner, who attends West
Bloomfield High School. He had won
bronze and silver medals, but never gold.
It was the second Maccabi Games
and first gold medal for Hollander,
a Farmington Hills Harrison High
School student.
Each teen plays soccer for his high
school.
Detroit-Boston had a special fan
at the gold-medal game. Former
Bloomfield Hills resident Rita Rochlen,
who now lives in Austin, was there.
Rochlen and her husband, Ken, are
friends with John and Judy Marx of
West Bloomfield, Jennifer Hollander's
parents and Ari's grandparents.

delroit

/74°4

Ari Hollander with family friend
Rita Rochlen at the Austin games

Pure Heart

It came a day late, but Bruce Weberman
received a special birthday gift this year.
He was presented the Michael
Yendick Pure Heart Award on Aug. 4 at
Drake Sports Park in West Bloomfield
after the final regular-season games in
the B'nai B'rith softball league.
The next day, Weberman turned 49.
The annual award is given to a
league player who embraces camara-
derie, competition and sportsmanship
and is a mentsch, just like Yendick,
who died of cancer in 2000 at age 36
after playing basketball, softball and
volleyball in local B'nai B'rith leagues
for more than 20 years.
Each softball manager selects a
nominee for the award. This year, for
the first time in the award's 13 - year
history, all players and not just manag-
ers could vote.
Gary Klinger, B'nai B'rith Great
Lakes Region athletic chairman, said
14 of 16 previous Pure Heart Award
winners attended the award ceremony.
The award was presented by Klinger
and Al Yendick, Michael Yendick's father.
Weberman has been playing B'nai
B'rith softball since 1981, but his
involvement began in 1973 as a batboy
for his brother Marc Weberman.
He said he feels he shares the award
with his brother, who no longer is
playing. He also thanked Rick Sherline,
a teammate for 30 of his 32 years in
the league, and the Yendick family.
"I'm honored to win the award, but
I don't plan to retire anytime soon:' he
said.



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