Salute to Special Olympics at the Big E

The last day of The Big E for 2018 was filled with 400 smiling faces on Salute to Special Olympics Day. Salute to Special Olympics Day is traditionally the last day of the 17-day fair and includes the awarding of the Don Dowd Award, bocce and cheerleading demonstrations and the daily parade.

Salute to Special Olympics Day 2018 on September 30 began with the opening ceremony emceed by Miss of Massachusetts, Alyssa Hammond, with remarks from Greg Chiecko of The Big E.

Board Member Frank Quigley announced this year's recipient of the Don Dowd Award, longtime coach John Ford from the Greater Springfield Program. Coach Mary Beth O'Neil and athlete Carl accepted the award on John's behalf. John is a veteran Special Olympics coach for soccer and volleyball, and was inducted into the Special Olympics Hall of Fame in 2006. He also attended the 2006 USA Games in Iowa as a volleyball coach.

Athletes from Greater Springfield, Hampshire Heat, MASS, South High, Berkshires, HCS, West Side, Westfield and Whitney Academy spent the day at the fair, eating the food and seeing the exhibits. At 1 p.m., athletes gathered at the Storrowtown Village Green to play Unified Bocce, and the West Springfield Cheerleading team demonstrated a cheer and dance for fair-goers.

At 5 p.m. the hundreds athletes, coaches, family members and volunteers marched in the parade, waving and smiling to the crowd, and being great representatives of Special Olympics Massachusetts!

The last day of The Big E for 2018 was filled with 400 smiling faces on Salute to Special Olympics Day. Salute to Special Olympics Day is traditionally the last day of the 17-day fair and includes the awarding of the Don Dowd Award, bocce and cheerleading demonstrations and the daily parade.

Salute to Special Olympics Day 2018 on September 30 began with the opening ceremony emceed by Miss of Massachusetts, Alyssa Hammond, with remarks from Greg Chiecko of The Big E.

Board Member Frank Quigley announced this year's recipient of the Don Dowd Award, longtime coach John Ford from the Greater Springfield Program. Coach Mary Beth O'Neil and athlete Carl accepted the award on John's behalf. John is a veteran Special Olympics coach for soccer and volleyball, and was inducted into the Special Olympics Hall of Fame in 2006. He also attended the 2006 USA Games in Iowa as a volleyball coach.

Athletes from Greater Springfield, Hampshire Heat, MASS, South High, Berkshires, HCS, West Side, Westfield and Whitney Academy spent the day at the fair, eating the food and seeing the exhibits. At 1 p.m., athletes gathered at the Storrowtown Village Green to play Unified Bocce, and the West Springfield Cheerleading team demonstrated a cheer and dance for fair-goers.

At 5 p.m. the hundreds athletes, coaches, family members and volunteers marched in the parade, waving and smiling to the crowd, and being great representatives of Special Olympics Massachusetts!

label

Articles related

Text Link
Three reasons why you should run the Boston Marathon for Special Olympics Massachusetts

Corinne Genova is a health and physical education teacher at Somerville High School, who had always dreamt of running the Boston Marathon.

Text Link
How to run the Boston Marathon as a college student

For lifelong athletes, running the Boston Marathon can be seen as a ''bucket list" item. But how can someone run the Marathon if they aren't selected as a Boston Marathon qualifier?

Text Link
TikTok running challenge helped two high schoolers earn seven times their fundraising goal

First inspired by a trend they saw on TikTok, high schoolers Emma Gavin and Rhiya Fisher decided not only to attempt the challenge, but they turned it into a fundraising opportunity for Special Olympics Massachusetts.