
CSR 13 Theresa Feaster

CSR 12 Neal Pionk

CSR 11 Len Clark

CSR 10 Pat McCaskey

CSR 9 Joe Mesi

CSR 8 Chris Ledyard

The Director of Hockey Operations at Providence College for the men’s hockey team, she is a lifelong Catholic, the oldest of five children. Theresa attended Catholic elementary, high school (valedictorian), and college. She talks about working at a Catholic institution, the concept of people working together as a team, and the influence of her father on her career.
Guest Quotes:
“The idea of God’s providence and the idea of providence affecting everything we do is something that I’ve really come to appreciate, maybe, especially now that I’m older.”
“All these little things happen that maybe at the time you don’t really fully understand but then you kind of look back and you go, ‘Wow, that was all part of a path that I’m on now.’ So, certainly the idea of divine providence is a huge part of (Providence College).”
“You get this general sense of community and that there’s something bigger than yourself going on here.”
“There is that overarching sense of faith and community that comes with being a Catholic institution.”
“(the Dominican friars)… have become such a huge part of my life… The relationships that I’ve been able to build with the Dominican friars, that’s something that I’m really grateful for… It certainly made my life more rich.”
“I’ve always… been drawn to the St. Francis, ‘Preach the gospel at all times, use words when necessary’.”
“We do have a team chaplain who travels with us. He’s with us all the time… He’s a big part of our team.”
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New York Rangers defenseman Neal Pionk cautions parents about putting too high of a priority on a child’s potential hockey career. Plus, he talks about being born into the Catholic faith and attending Catholic school (K-8), coming into the NHL, moving to and living in New York City, and what happened when he tried to attend Christmas Mass at St. Patrick’s Cathedral.
Guest Quotes:
“There’s a lot more to life than just a sport.”
“Your hockey career only lasts for so long, from the time you’re five or six years old until however long, 20, 30 years if you’re fortunate. There’s so much more to life after that.”
“Parents… think that this tryout or this game is the end-all, be-all. Well, it’s not. Of course it’s important and it’s fun and there’s a lot of good that can come out of it but at the end of the day hockey only lasts until you’re 30, until you’re 35 if you’re really lucky, so, that’s not even half your life really, and to put such a high value on it… it doesn’t last forever and there’s a lot more to it than just those years.”
“One of my favorite parts about New York City, I’m just the average citizen walking down the streets, no one knows who I am, which is the nice part. Go back home to… Minnesota it’s a little different, but in New York City I’m just the common citizen, which is nice.”
“The Rangers have a team chaplain and we usually, we try to meet up – it’s a little hard with our road schedule – but we try to meet up at least once a month… He works through an organization called Hockey Ministries. He visits us… or he’s available to talk all the time.”
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He covers University of Notre Dame Athletics for Irish 101 and Irish Illustrated, and is also the Notre Dame reporter for Fan Media. Len has also served as a reporter for ESPN Radio’s “College Gameday,” as a stringer for AP Sports. A lifelong Catholic, he is also heavily involved with the Knights of Columbus. He’s also involved with a project that, when supported, gives a portion of the proceeds to help support research into Niemann-Pick Type C Disease.
Guest Quotes:
“Faith, Notre Dame, and emerging media has really been my path for the past 35 years.”
“When you walk in the classroom and you see the crucifix on every wall it’s not cramming (Catholicism) into your face, it’s there as a subtle reminder just to serve as a foundation for the individuals that have the privilege of going to school (at Notre Dame).”
“We’re talking about the new evangelization that has been out since Vatican II and really came to prominence under Pope John Paul II who had a quote that I read constantly. He said, ‘Faith is strengthened when we give it to others’.”
“When I was teaching there… I did have some athletes in my class, and so, developing that rapport with them and then having the opportunity to learn a little bit more about them helped me to become a better journalist because I got a better glimpse into the life of a student-athlete, how they’re balancing their academics and their athletics and their spiritual life.”
“When I was at the University of Evansville we had a Catholic group called the Newman Center and the Newman Centers are located at college campuses all across the country… it gave me more of an insight into the students outside of the classroom.”
“I can remember one Easter Sunday that we were on the road… and it was not mandatory, but, there were a lot of Catholic students on the team that year, but, they used that opportunity to invite the non-Catholics to say, ‘Hey, we’re going to Mass’ – which was actually held at a gym – and it was a great experience.”
“I’m a cradle Catholic… the older I get the more appreciative I am of the faith.”
“Be who you are, share your story, and lead by example. And I think that’s how I define the evangelization.”
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A Chicago Bears’ Board Member and a Bears’ Vice President, he is the Chairman of Sports Faith International, which recognizes people who are successful in sports while leading exemplary lives. He is the author of six books (four about sports and faith) and participated in sports extensively as a student-athlete: basketball, baseball, football, track, and cross country, and currently runs Masters Track. His grandfather (and godfather) was George Halas, the founder of the Chicago Bears.
Guest Quotes:
“God gave me the gift of writing and public speaking. He has been very, very good to me with those gifts and many other things.”
“When I was seven months in my mother’s womb, she received the blessing for expectant mothers.”
“I am a lector at St. Mary’s church and St. Patrick church in Lake Forest.”
“After dinner, after I finish my chores, I like to shoot free throws until I make ten.”
“My grandfather was a man of faith and a man of prayer.”
“My grandfather lived the Ten Commandments of Football and I wrote them.”
“The (Chicago) Bears have Mass and chapel service before every game, home and away… We try to get the Pope, because we think our games are important. We offer 100 dollars and two tickets. Chuck Simpson said, ‘He probably doesn’t know who to bring’.”
“If we all tithe we can do a lot for the Kingdom of God.”
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Pat McCaskey’s books from the publisher
A former heavyweight boxer who finished with a 36-0 won-lost record (29 KOs), getting to No. 1 in the world where he would’ve fought for the heavyweight title but suffered a serious head injury (brain bleed). Last year he was inducted into both the New York State Boxing Hall of Fame and the Greater Buffalo Sports Hall of Fame. He had also been a 1996 U.S. Olympic alternate. Joe started a foundation called Champs Against Bullying and there is also the Baby Joe Mesi Fight for Organ Donors. Listen to the end to hear what his “holy box” is.
Guest Quotes:
“You want to say boxing in my life was an accident. It was almost like I stumbled upon it. But yet in life there are no accidents, right? It’s the path God bestowed upon me.”
“God gave me this path for a reason. And as I look back and now, I’m an adult and I have a family, I’m able to clearly see that boxing was just the tool that God gave me. The goal was to give back.”
“We know boxing is a dangerous sport and I’d say a prayer before every fight and I’d go into my opponent’s (locker) room too and try to say one with them.”
“I struggled with depression for a few years… I struggled with ‘Why me? Why God? Why this? Why now?’ But… it became clearer and clearer each day ‘Why me? Why now?’ … Through my church goings and talking to my priest… I was taught and I learned.”
“I was supposed to be heavyweight champion. But I once read, ‘If you want to make God laugh, tell him your plans.’ Because, this was His plan and I can’t argue that. Because He had a great plan and He protected me.”
“Here I am asking God for such silly little things in prayers and these people have lost their children.”
“And I’m thinking… did God put me here to box all my life just to receive this one letter because someone’s walking around now with a healthy organ? Because it all makes sense to me.”
Inducted into the Sports Faith Hall of Fame in 2015, the next year he became the Athletic Director at JSerra Catholic High School after more than 20 years at the helm of the athletic program at Franciscan University. Before that he was a Catholic high school vice principal. Married with six children, he was a college athlete (wrestler at Ithaca College) and has coached track and field, soccer, and wrestling.
Guest Quotes:
“I was at Franciscan University in Steubenville, Ohio, and I really felt the call from the Lord to go there after being a high school vice principal for six years.”
“I was the token Christian dude on the wrestling team. And I really didn’t know how to act. It was very difficult to stay in the faith, keep the faith, amongst people who thought my faith was silly and that it was kind of a joke.”
“I know that that was the Lord… preparing my heart for the reason that I wanted to begin talking to the administration at Franciscan about, ‘Hey, we should bring sports in, so when there’s a kid coming out of high school who really wants to be surrounded by people of like sports in the faith and still have a strong athletic experience in college, we should create a home for that person’.”
“(my brother) said, ‘If you don’t know your Creator, you don’t have anything’… A few days later I literally was in a room by myself and I started to seek Christ again.”
“I had a very deep personal experience at that particular point where it literally felt as if God was pouring water over my head. I didn’t know that I was dirty and I certainly didn’t know why I was crying. But, I knew that something cleansing was happening to me… God made Himself real to me.”
“The tough times were driven by the fact that I knew that God was real and that I needed to continue to move forward.”
“When you talk about… the integration of sports and faith… I can’t separate them.”
“When I hire new coaches, I literally say to those coaches, ‘I’m looking for coaches I can comfortably pray with’.”
“For 18 weeks I’ve been in a Bible study with coaches where we’re going through Acts together and we’re literally praying daily that the Holy Spirit guides us in our relationships with these athletes.”
Related link:
JSerra Catholic High School Athletics
He’s a cradle Catholic, having attended Catholic grammar and high schools, his kids are altar servers, and oh, he just happens to have pitched for the Milwaukee Brewers and San Diego Padres (drafted by the Atlanta Braves) and recently was a guest instructor at San Francisco Giants spring training. Listen to how he is teaching more than just baseball techniques to kids at his academy.
Guest Quotes:
“For younger kids that I deal with on a daily basis… there are options out there – to do what they want to do and be where they need to be.”
“You have to kind of find your path and make what works for you you.”
“At those times of adversity, that’s when you find out what your faith is really about.”
“I was very blessed with a family background of being grounded and keeping both feet firmly on the ground and working hard and understanding that your faith comes first. Without God, nothing else is possible. And, you know that your talents come from Him… Without (God) you don’t have anything.”
“The longer I do what I do, I think the more I am a teacher of becoming a man through hard work and dedication, for love of life and becoming a leader in the communities that these kids live (in).”
“I know a lot of people kind of shy away from wanting to be that role model. But, it goes beyond the game. It goes beyond baseball. I want kids… to know, to build that confidence… that they can get past a struggle.”
“You make mistakes and things happen, but it’s how you accept that and how you bounce back from that. God loves you unconditionally and those are the things that, we’re all human, we all make mistakes, we all battle through those mistakes. But at the end of the day when you lay your head on the pillow and you say your prayers, you have to know that (God) has unconditional love for you.”
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