The Saratogian (Saratoga, NY)

Journalist gets much-needed sports gear to low-income kids

- BY TERESA M. WALKER AP Sports Writer

KNOXVILLE, TENN. (AP) >> Assistant Principal Sharif Ford knew just who to call when an athlete at East St. Louis High School in Illinois needed a new pair of shoes. The same woman helped a high school junior outside Chicago secure a sparkling new kit as she chases a scholarshi­p to play college soccer.

Rhiannon Potkey also sent equipment to high school tennis coach Jarrett Walls in North Carolina, given that the cost of a new racket, even an inexpensiv­e one, can keep wouldbe players from ever stepping on a court.

When Olympic catcher Aubree Munro cleared out her worn softball gear, Potkey’s Goods4Grea­tness connected Munro with someone who could use it.

A nonprofit started by the sports writer, Goods4Grea­tness works to land key equipment with low-income children and teens to make sure the high cost of sporting goods doesn’t derail their athletic dreams.

“The kids that have been blessed through Rhiannon’s foundation need help like yesterday,” Ford said. “When I jump on the phone with her and I explain to her the need, her past responses have been immediate attention, and that’s what we need.”

Those are the people Potkey has wanted to help since she grew up in California playing tennis, softball, soccer and basketball. Potkey’s father would drive some of her teammates home, and she often gifted them her gear knowing her family could afford to buy it new.

As a sports writer, Potkey saw the inequities covering high schools where wealthy parents showered their athletes with brandnew gear while only a few miles away parents stopped work in the strawberry fields to watch their children play games while sharing old equipment.

Potkey knows other organizati­ons are doing similar donation efforts.

“It’s not enough,” Potkey said of her plan that she first wrote down in a threering binder in high school. “There’s always more, like we need an ecosystem. We need everyone. And so, I mean, I can fill gaps where other places don’t get to. So that was kind of the genesis of it was just my own experience­s and seeing it.”

Potkey finally decided it was time when she was in her late 30s. She quit her job covering Tennessee football for a newspaper and began freelancin­g to free up time. The pro-bono clinic at the University of Tennessee law school helped her with the paperwork creating Goods4Grea­tness as a nonprofit.

She then started working the phones and emailing people to create a network.

Donations started coming in from college programs, all NCAA-compliant, like University of Tennessee, Lipscomb, Duke and Campbell in softball; Georgia, UCLA, Colorado, Southern California, North Carolina State and Washington State in tennis; Lipscomb baseball; and the Tennessee Lady Vols in both basketball and volleyball.

Pittsburgh Steelers quarterbac­k Josh Dobbs, who played at Tennessee, made a donation earlier this month.

As a one-woman foundation, Potkey saves resources by making sure donations go to nearby low-income athletes. That’s why soccer balls recently donated by the Julie Foudy Leadership Academy have been distribute­d to about 100 kids in Southern California.

Munro remembered Potkey’s foundation while cleaning her apartment during the pandemic when she needed help with all the spare gear she had collected. Munro sent photos to Potkey of five sets of catching gear, shoes and new items she wasn’t going to use, asking her what to do next. Potkey connected Munro with people in southwest Florida where she lives.

One set of catching gear, including new shoes, went to a girl being raised by a single mom.

“That one was particular­ly special. I just kind of see a little bit of myself in that role,” said Munro, who also was raised by a single mom. “And I had a lot of people do really great things for me when I was growing up. So it felt kind of good to kind of pay that forward.”

His tennis program that coach Walls tweeted about was playing a team that had been very helpful to his girls new to the sport. He coaches at South Garner High outside Raleigh, a school where more than half the students get free or reduced lunches. Potkey saw the tweet and within a couple of weeks, Walls had rackets and balls — lightly used but still great for the students at South Garner.

“They were like brandnew, really awesome,” Walls said. “So the good things that she’s done for us ... have definitely helped our program. And I would definitely credit her with helping me grow my program here. Last year, we had seven girls, and this year, as I go into my women’s season, we have about 30 girls that are interested in tennis.”

Walls uses the same gear for his boys’ program.

 ?? TERESA WALKER - THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Rhiannon Potkey displays sports equipment Jan. 30, 2021, in Knoxville, Tenn. Goods4Grea­tness, the nonprofit started by Potkey, works to get much-needed gear to low-income children and teens to make sure the high cost of equipment doesn’t stop their athletic dreams.
TERESA WALKER - THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Rhiannon Potkey displays sports equipment Jan. 30, 2021, in Knoxville, Tenn. Goods4Grea­tness, the nonprofit started by Potkey, works to get much-needed gear to low-income children and teens to make sure the high cost of equipment doesn’t stop their athletic dreams.

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