Developed in 2013, our AFH University program helps college athletes explore leadership, life skill development, advocacy, their role in the community, and how to discover their philanthropic passions.
Our AFH University student-athletes are falling in love with community service this September! This past month, student-athletes went above and beyond the call of service as they made a positive impact in their communities.
Athletes from SouthernUniversity and LSU visited children’s hospitals, engaged in community events, and more!
LSU
Our Lady of the Lake Children’s Hospital
On September 6, LSU Cheer visited OLOL Children’s Hospital and did what they do best! They brought cheer and great energy to patients.
The cheerleaders visited rooms, showed off their moves, and led an exciting game of trivia in the activity room.
Southern University
St. Vincent de Paul
On Thursday, September 7, Southern men’s basketball supported individuals facing food insecurity in Baton Rouge by packing over 100 “Bags of Hope” for guests at St.Vincent de Paul.
Our Lady of the Lake Children’s Hospital
Before Southern softball could kick off their season, they wanted a special touch from the artists at OLOL Children’s Hospital.
Patients and student-athletes spent the afternoon painting cleats that the Southern Lady Jags will be wearing during their 2024 season.
Healthier Families, Better Communities Expo
On September 23, Southern baseball volunteered at the Healthier Families, Better Communities Expo hosted by the City of Baker and The Bridge Agency. The expo had various organizations on site sharing valuable resources including a kids zone.
Student-athletes assisted with the children’s activities as well as event logistics such as set up and registration.
Our Lady of the Lake Children’s Hospital
To close out the month of service, on the 27th Harold Rhodes III of Southern football visited OLOL Children’s Hospital to facilitate activity time and visit rooms to cheer up patients.
As the fall semester kicks off our student-athletes couldn’t be more excited for another great semester of service! We couldn’t be more proud of their continued dedication to serving their communities and are excited to see all of the good they accomplish together this semester.
Athletes for Hope 9/11 Day of Service Grant Projects
Since April, Athletes for Hope has engaged 150+ community members in more than 500 hours of service thanks to a 9/11 Day of Service grant period provided to them by The Arc and AmeriCorps.
This year, Athletes for Hope’s 9/11 activities focused on emergency preparedness, developing and implementing solutions that ensure that children and adults with disabilities are able to receive the help they need should calamity strike.
As we pause to reflect on the 22 years since the 9/11 attacks, we remember those whom we have lost and the heroes who selflessly risked their lives for the safety of others. To honor them, we are proud to share the three major community service projects AFH Athletes and other members of the Baton Rouge community have engaged in over the past 6 months.
Progress Elementary
On April 21, 2023, Athletes for Hope’s Southern Sports Philanthropy Certificate Program (SPCP) engaged over 100 students at Progress Elementary in Baton Rouge at an inclusive field day that promoted physical activity, provided fire safety, and encouraged fun learning ahead of Louisiana Leap testing.
Progress Elementary Field Day balloon relay activity.Trinyty Turner of Southern University Tennis helps demonstrate a fire safety drill.Progress Elementary Field Day football activity.
With over 25 volunteers from Southern University Athletics, the Baton Rouge Fire Department, ASL On The Bluff, and the Alpha Sigma Chapter of Kappa Alpha Psi Fraternity, Athletes for Hope was able to increase community safety, preparedness, and resilience in case of a disaster.
LA Key Academy
On Thursday, May 25, 2023, Athletes for Hope facilitated its second inclusive 9/11 emergency preparedness event at Louisiana Key Academy. Our annual field day brought out over 30 volunteers consisting of student-athletes from Southern University, SU Volunteers, Southern University chapter of The NAACP, and The Arc of Baton Rouge.
Members of the Baton Rouge Fire Department sit on the front of the fire truck.Participants pose for a photo at the LA Key Academy field day.A member of the Baton Rouge Fire Department teaches kids about emergency preparedness.
Volunteers assisted with inflatables, various sports stations, and fire safety activities. Students were excited to tour a fire truck, honk the truck horn, and learn about the firefighter uniform and tools with the Baton Rouge Fire Department and the Mayor’s Office of Homeland Security and Emergency team shared tips on how to prepare and evacuate in the case of an emergency. After learning about emergency preparedness, students were able to participate in various sports stations, play on inflatables, and practice fire safety.
Community Day
On September 11, 2023, Athletes for Hope commemorated the 22nd anniversary of 9/11 with a community day of arts and unity. The Arc of Baton Rouge, the Baton Rouge Fire Department, student-athletes from LSU and Southern University, and other community leaders participated in various stations including canvas painting, letter writing to all who serve through Operation Gratitude, and created handmade beaded jewelry.
A community day Volunteer thanks a hero for their service.Volunteers at the 9/11 community day smile for a photo.Community Day participants smile for a photo during a craft activity.
The St. George Fire Department led a tour of the fire truck and shared important emergency preparedness tips with all community day participants. After learning new safety tools, activity books and hats donated by the fire department were distributed along with collateral from the Red Cross.
At the end of the community day, local heroes from the Baton Rouge community were honored for their commitment to service in the community. Athletes for Hope gives a special thank you to the following community heroes who are making a positive impact in their community; The Arc Baton Rouge Board of Directors President, Al Thibodaux, Sheriff Timothy Johnson, Nurse Anastasia Montgomery, Deborah Lee, Captain Todd Perez, St. George Fire Department, Firefighter Brian Roussel, and Firefighter Brent Bravata.
Developed in 2013, our AFH University program helps college athletes explore leadership, life skill development, advocacy, their role in the community, and how to discover their philanthropic passions.
Over the summer AFH student-athletes went above and beyond the call of service as they made a positive impact in their hometowns and university neighborhoods.
Athletes from Howard,Georgetown, Davidson, Southern,Clark Atlanta, and LSU visited children’s hospitals, engaged in community events, and more!
May 2023
Children’s Wisconsin
Howard University football player, Gerone Hamilton Jr. participated in a virtual hospital visit with Children’s Wisconsin Hospital. In honor of Mental Health Awareness Month, the activity included BINGO with coping skills.
Gerone was very personable and caring in his interaction with the kids and shared his own experiences as well as asked the kids great questions.
LA Key Academy & Arc of Baton Rouge
On Thursday, May 25th Athletes for Hope facilitated our second inclusive 9/11 emergency preparedness event at Louisiana Key Academy. Our annual field day brought out over 30 volunteers consisting of student-athletes, SU Volunteers, the Southern University chapter of The NAACP, and The Arc of Baton Rouge.
Volunteers assisted with inflatables, various sports stations, and fire safety activities. Students were excited to tour a fire truck, honk the truck horn, and learn about the firefighter uniform and tools with the Baton Rouge Fire Department.
The Mayor’s Office of Homeland Security and Emergency team shared tips on how to prepare and evacuate in the case of an emergency. The MOHSE team brought a firehouse simulation which prompted students to put their new skills to use.
June 2023
Boys and Girls Club of Arizona
Clark Atlanta women’s basketball player Zion Walters accompanied all of the Boys and Girls Clubs in the West Valley on a field trip to Main Event in Avondale for the day.
“When we arrived, I began helping with lunch. Me and other volunteers served pizza to all of the kids from 9:45 until 12:45. We served over 240 slices of pizza, and still had more for seconds and thirds. I met some amazing people and made great memories.”
-Zion Walters, Clark Atlanta Women’s Basketball
Our Lady of the Lake Children’s Hospital
Southern University football players made a visit to Our Lady of the Lake Children’s Hospital and facilitated a spin-the-wheel trivia game for hospital patients.
“It was an amazing and fun experience. I was able to learn some new things while having a great day of trivia with the kids. I can’t wait to come back.”
-Robens Beauplan, Southern Football Punter
July 2023
Voice in Sports Foundation
Student-athletes from Georgetown University, along with other female student-athletes and administrators from across the country, met at Capitol Hill and partnered with the Voice in Sport Foundation to receive educational Title IX training, learn about the Fair Play Act, and meet with the sponsor of the bill, Senator Chris Murphy.
Women were able to hear from the senator and ask him questions on how we can better advocate and make change as female athletes.
Boys & Girls Club of Greater Charlotte
Davidson college football put on a two-hour football clinic with the kids of the Boys and Girls Club of Greater Charlotte. They spent their time teaching the kids new skills and the importance of teamwork and leadership.
Geaux Day
Teams from Southern and LSU volunteered at Geaux Day on Wednesday, July 26th. This annual collaborative field day attracted over 200 kids for a day of modified sports on LSU’s campus.
The youth had the opportunity to visit sports stations, learn more about LSU and Southern Athletics, and observe a football practice followed by a meet & greet.
“I served today because I really enjoy being around the kids as a college athlete. I feel like it gives them the idea that they also can do the same thing. Seeing their faces light up when they accomplish something makes me happy”.
– Paris Washington, Southern Tennis
Photos by Dylan Boral and Sean Cripple.
Boys & Girls Club of Greater Phoenix
Zion Walters from Clark Atlanta Women’s Basketball spent a week running a dance clinic at the Boys & Girls Club.
At the end of the clinic, the children performed the dance they learned for the faculty and other kids at the club.
As the summer months come to an end and our student-athletes gear up for another great semester, we couldn’t be more proud of their continued dedication to serving their communities and are excited to see all of the good they accomplish together this fall.
Beyond the Game: Lori and Skip Bertman’s Father-Daughter Connection
When Lori Bertman was a high school junior in 1986, she needed a parent to sign enrollment papers at the bursar’s office to start night classes at LSU. She asked her dad, Skip Bertman, to stop by and meet her on campus.
Skip, whose popularity was already booming as LSU’s baseball coach, met his daughter while wearing his full uniform, from hat to shoes. Lori still remembers hearing his cleats clicking on the pavement as they walked across the quad; the students staring and pointing.
“I was ecstatic that all of these boys were looking over,” Lori says now.
But it wasn’t Lori who captured their interest. It was the sight of the new coach striding through the quad. That was the moment Lori realized her dad goes to work in a uniform.
Skip was living out his passion each day, wearing the uniform that represented the game he had coached since he was just 14. Lori saw that her dad, unlike others who wore stiff suits to office jobs, had pursued his passion head-on.
That moment has become a guiding principle in her life and wisdom she shares now:
“Do what you love and do it well. Be who you are, and make sure to surround yourself with people who will leap out of the dugout should you ever charge the mound.”
Lori Bertman, a board member at Athletes for Hope, and her three older sisters learned kindness and generosity from both of their parents.
Lori grew up during the pinnacle of her father’s career. He won five College World Series as head coach at LSU. She would leave school with her mom, Sandy, ride with her to the baseball field, and finish her homework in the dugout.
The Bertman family is tight, wound like the strings of a baseball. They traveled to the Olympics in Seoul and Atlanta and worked the concession stands together at summer baseball camp. The sisters rushed the field to embrace their father after LSU’s Tiger Warren Morris hit a last-chance home run to win the 1996 College World Series.
Baseball bound them together in spirit but separated them too. The sport’s tight schedules kept Skip from attending important events. He didn’t make it to some graduations, but Lori saw those missed memories as a chance to find her own path while knowing he would stand by her when she needed him the most.
Her mom, Sandy, was always the family’s utility player, and Lori says her mother deserves half the trophies for her dad’s success. She could teach a masterclass on how to be the perfect coach’s wife.
Sandy, along with her four girls, provided Skip with a support system that helped him thrive at work while also balancing a complete home life.
“To be as successful as he was, he really needed us to support him and be our own people,” Lori added.
Lori’s sister, Lisa, died of cancer at the age of 44. In a moment that was devastating for the family, Skip’s accomplishments and honors began to hold a different meaning.
“We all see him now as a human and care about his health,” she says.
As sports brought together Lori’s family, it paved the way for her to wake up every morning and do what she loves as well. She started working at the age of 14 and forming nonprofits by the time she graduated college.
“I love taking nothing and turning it into something by using community assets to fill gaps,” Lori said.
She serves as CEO of Louisiana’s largest private family foundation, the Irene W. and C.B. Pennington Foundation, while also serving as a disaster philanthropy and community leader.
She continues to strengthen her bond with her father through different avenues, and her nonprofit work is an example of that.
Lori considers herself more like Skip than any of her siblings, sharing his entrepreneurial spirit.
“I learned from my father how to be a mentor and seek out mentorship.”
Lori Bertman
Skip began coaching baseball in his early teens, so it’s no wonder Lori was starting nonprofits by 21. Father and daughter worked together at Athletes for Hope and have partnered on community-based sports philanthropy.
Whether it be through youth sports, Miracle League, the Hockey Hall of Fame, the NHL or You Can Play, Lori believes wholeheartedly in the collaboration of sports and community. Most recently, she selected the Aspen Institute to study sports in the Baton Rouge region, a step toward leveling the playing field in sports and beyond.
“Anyone who wants to be a part of sports should have that opportunity.”
Lori Bertman
Lori ran marathons but didn’t really consider herself to be an athlete, not like the people who play organized sports and win championships. But working with Billie Jean King taught her that all people can be athletes, and Lori had a revelation: sports provide a chance for social change.
“Athletes for Hope has been my best partner in taking that on,” Lori said.
She brought her dad on board to help them organize and launch Athletes for Hope University, which remains an important part of their work together. Athletes for Hope is a tremendous organization, notes Skip.
Says Skip, “I’ve told her she would never have a statue in her honor, but that what she does is more important than anything that will be done on the sports field.”
The admiration is mutual. Lori Bertman appreciates her father for all he has done. Her experience growing up on the baseball field and the generational love for her father by fans worldwide has taught her that she can use sports as a platform for good.
And their relationship, both inside and outside the realm of sports, brings a special meaning to each Father’s Day. But the celebration this year was a bit different.
Skip was at the College World Series to accept the honor of All-Star Coach, and his daughters stayed home to rally around their mother, who is suffering from pancreatic cancer.
He made it back just in time to enjoy the end of Father’s Day with his wife and girls. They ate their favorite, Doberge cake, and feasted on endless platters of food while gathering around the TV to watch the College World Series.
And so, Lori says, her dad’s biggest success is his original team – his wife, four girls, and grandchildren.
Each month we ask our AFH University campus liaisons for nominations of student-athletes and teams who excelled in service. Through our monthly nominations, we are able to acknowledge all of the good our student-athletes and teams are doing in their communities.
“I’d just like to put it out there that I just witnessed the most amazing bowling tournament ever. Every person I worked with could beat me in a bowling game if I tried to play them. It was a fun and heartwarming experience and I’d love to do it again.” – Joshua Griffin, Southern Football
Joshua Griffin, Southern Football
Student-Athlete of the Month
Our March Student-Athlete of the Month is Joshua Griffin from Southern University. Joshua is a leader in service on his team and in the community. He is always eager to be involved in service projects in any capacity he can, often being one of the first to volunteer when an opportunity arises.
“Joshua Griffin is a sports philanthropy certificate program participant that hit the ground running with service. In our first session, he was engaged and excited to share his passion for youth and the community.
Just this month, he read books to classes for Read Across America Day and volunteered for the Special Olympics State Bowling Tournament.”
Team of the Month
The March Team of the Month was none other than the LSU volleyball team. Together the team is making a positive impact in their community through service projects with local organizations.
“LSU Volleyball volunteered at St. Vincent de Paul Thrift Store sorting through and organizing donated items which enhanced the processing and ultimate sale of donated items.
St. Vincent de Paul thrift store is a place where customers can purchase items at bargain prices and all revenues generated are put back into programs supporting those in need.”
We are so proud of all of our student-athletes and teams who continue to go above and beyond the call of service in their communities.
Developed in 2013, our AFH University program helps college athletes explore leadership, life skill development, advocacy, their role in the community, and how to discover their philanthropic passions.
Each month our AFH University student-athletes are able to make a positive impact in their communities as our campus liasions dilligently pair athletes and teams to causes they care about.
During March, AFH Athletes from Georgetown, Davidson, Southern, and LSU visited schools and children’s hospitals, engaged in community events, and more!
Georgetown University
Georgetown Qatar
Georgetown women’s rowing spent 2 hours answering questions and talking about female leadership in athletics and talking about what it means to be a female student-athlete on campus with women visiting from Georgetown Qatar.
Night To Shine
Georgetown Athletics attended the Night to Shine, a prom night experience for those with special needs. During the event, each student-athlete was paired with a buddy for the duration of the evening. Everyone had a fantastic time spreading kindness all evening!
Davidson University
Ada Jenkins Center
Members of the Davidson football team attended an open gym at the newly remodeled Ada Jenkins Center basketball court. During their visit they were able to play a pickup game with a few kids. Everyone had fun learning new skills together!
Southern University
Our Lady of the Lake Children’s Hospital
Southern Football student-athletes facilitated a game of bingo in the activity room and visited the rooms of game-winners. During this visit, new friendships were made, secret handshakes were shared, and there were lots of smiles all around!
Ryan Elementary
This month, Southern University track & field kicked off Southern Athletics’ biweekly school visits to Ryan Elementary! Student-athletes plan to read books to classes, assist with physical education classes, and support school events at each of their visits.
Today was a great day! Changing lives one book at a time!
Karanay Alexander, Southern Track & Field
Read Across America Day
Student-athletes from Southern football, soccer and baseball visited Buchanan Elementary School for Read Across America Day. They visited multiple classes to read their favorite children’s books to students and received Dr. Suess-inspired certificates of participation on behalf of the school.
Louisiana State University (LSU)
Our Lady of the Lake Children’s Hospital
LSU track & field and beach volleyball continued our biweekly visits to Our Lady of the Lake Children’s Hospital. The student-athletes were able to visit patients’ rooms and shared insight into their student-athlete experience. During their visit they made new friends, shared a lot of laughs, and raised the spirits of patients.
Read Across America Day
Student-athletes from LSU track & field visited Wildwood Elementary for Read Across America Day. During their visit, they were able to read their favorite children’s books to 2nd and 4th grade classrooms and asked kids how they can use reading as their superpower.
Baton Rouge
Special Olympics
LSU Gymnastics, Southern Volleyball, Southern Soccer, and Southern Football volunteered at The Special Olympics State Bowling Tournament. Student-athletes checked in participants, led stretches before the games, served as lane volunteers, and assisted with the awards ceremony.
I’d just like to put it out there that I just witnessed the most amazing bowling tournament ever. It was a fun and heartwarming experience and I’d love to do it again.
Joshua Griffin, Southern Football
Bettering their communities is something all of our AFH Athletes are passionate about. While the month of March is coming to an end, we cannot wait to see the impact they make in April!