Pickleball Magazine 5-2 WD | Page 18

dinks NEW USAPA BOARD MEMBERS T he USAPA recently added four new Board Members to the organization—Bob Franceschelli, Suzanne Guerin, Joe Santoro and Ernie Medina Jr. All four will be profiled in upcoming issues. We first welcome Ernie Medina, Jr. Ernie Medina, Jr. Biography As a kid, Ernie Medina, Jr., was always involved with racquet sports. Maxing out at a lofty height of 5 ft. 6 in., he was always shorter than most of his peers, so popular sports like basketball and volleyball didn’t suit him, but with parents who were tennis players, he started playing tennis at an early age, and table tennis even earlier. In the mid-1980s while in college, he worked as a teacher’s assistant for Laura Fenton Kovanda, and added racquetball to his list of racquet sports he loved to play. When his mom, Loida, introduced him to pickleball in April 2016, it was love at first dink. Pickleball fits in nicely with Ernie’s professional career as well. He studied health science, health promotion, and lifestyle behavior change at Andrews University (undergrad) and Loma Linda University (LLU) where he earned his master’s and doctorate degrees in health promotion and preventive care. After graduating in 1993, Ernie worked for 21 years at Beaver Medical Group working with patients who, because of certain lifestyle-related diseases, needed to change their habits, especially in physical activity, nutrition, stress management, and smoking cessation. Ernie was always organizing various physical activity events for his patients, such as hiking, bicycle riding and yearly physical activity challenges. In 2015, Ernie went back to LLU and joined the faculty of the School of Public Health, where he now helps to train and educate the next generation of public health specialists. His research interest is physical activity and is currently part of the first dissertation on pickleball. Ernie is also known as the “Pickleball Evangelist” and is using pickleball to impact health. With his position at Loma Linda University, he teaches pickleball as part of a summer day camp for overweight kids called “Operation Fit.” Ernie does take time to play pickleball, and now that he has aged up into the 55+ category, he’s looking to 16 TO SUBSCRIBE, CALL 888.308.3720 OR GO TO THEPICKLEBALLMAG.COM play more senior tournaments such as the Huntsman Games and SSIPA tournaments. This tireless dynamo also organizes and runs several tournaments, including the Halo Halo Cup, LLU Homecoming Pickleball Tournament, and Loma Linda Pickleball Club’s winter and spring tournaments. While he enjoys coordinating tournaments, his first love is playing with and teaching newbies and creating more “pickleball addicts.” Plus, Ernie has been a USAPA Ambassador since 2016 for his Loma Linda community. When he looks back on the last four years, he’s amazed to see how pickleball has impacted both his personal and professional lives. And while his wife and daughter don’t play (they stick with running and mountain biking), his three siblings play, as well as a growing number of extended family members. One of his goals for 2020 is to get his 82-year- old mom qualified and entered into the National Championships. And, while his late dad Ernesto Sr., who taught him tennis and table tennis, never had a chance to play pickleball due to a stroke 15 years before his mom was introduced to the game, Ernie looks forward to the day he will meet his dad again and challenge him to a game of pickleball. Look for Suzanne’s, Joe’s and Bob’s biographies in future issues of Pickleball Magazine. •