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Former exchange student plays pro football in native country Finland

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Every year American high schools and communities welcome foreign exchange students from all over the world. They spend a year soaking up both American culture and education with a host family before heading back home.
Henri Väänänen, was a 16-year-old from Finland when he first came to small town Bowie for the 2011-12 school year.
Today, at age 24 he is back home in Texas during February visiting his host mom Lynetta Slaton and his adopted hometown. Things have changed for the young man as he has been playing professional football in Europe and sharing his passion for the sport. However, when he returns home he expects to begin studying to become a sports trainer.
He does not recall exactly what attracted him to visit America, but it was something Väänänen had been thinking about when a presenter came to his school and started talking about the program.
“I went in and heard him out and then actually my dad talked to me about it too,” Väänänen said. “He asked me if I’d ever thought about it, and I told him that I had, and he kind of encouraged me to do it. Said he would help me pay for it and all that kind of stuff.”
Picking America as his preferred destination, Slaton ended up picking him. Attending Bowie High School, Väänänen said the experience was more about personal growth than anything.
“I didn’t know anyone here when I came over here,” Väänänen said. “I was going to be living with a stranger basically for a year. I’d have to make all new friends to go to a new school. My English was good by Finish standards, but I still had an accident when I came over here.”
One American custom Väänänen was familiar with is the attraction to football. Väänänen played soccer for 10 years before around the age of 13 or 14 when he and his two other friends discovered American football.
“I remember in gym class we were playing flag football and me and a couple of my friends thought it was boring,” Väänänen said. “We wanted to hit some people. So we looked it up online and saw there was a local club team in the city where I’m from and showed up at the next practice.”
Väänänen played football at Bowie, and while he had a few years of experience playing on youth teams and even the men’s team, practices were usually once a week and not everyone took it as serious.
“The preparation and all the stuff that goes into playing football over here,” Väänänen said. “It’s much more intense than over in Finland.”
With quality coaching easily available here at most levels and a daily presence in the lives of its participants because it’s a school sport all combined to a show Väänänen a level of football he had not seen in Finland.
The popular sports in Finland people follow are ice hockey and Formula One racing among others. Everywhere else in the world, football is just the name for soccer. People have to clarify that it is American football.
When Väänänen got back to Finland, he kept playing the game. Even with everyone in his friend group eventually walking away from the game, Väänänen stuck with the sport he loved.
He kept working his way up to the top men’s team at his club and found himself in an enviable position. There are five divisions to Finland’s football league, with the top league, Vaahteraliiga, usually consisting of six to eight of the best club teams in the country.
If a club under performs, they can be sent down a division.
Väänänen’s local club he had been playing in, the Helsinki Roosters, is the most successful club in Sweden’s history. Having never dropped down from the Vaahteraliiga league, the Roosters have won 20 league titles, including every year from 2012-2017 along with a Eurobowl and Champions League title.
At this high level, the organization and preparation starts to resemble what is expected in the U.S. as teams import American players in order to keep a leg up. In most cases, the quarterbacks on these teams are American as well.
Väänänen is a quarterback, but knows at the highest levels clubs prefer having American quarterbacks. They are the players who get paid to come over while most local players, even those in the highest league, cannot make a living just playing football.
Still, winning several league titles and playing for his country on the national team are just some of the cool things Väänänen has done since he returned to Europe.
Väänänen experienced what it was like to live off of playing football alone this past season. He played professionally in the Czech Republic for the Ostrava Steelers until they let him go when he suffered a neck injury. He was then picked up by the Brno Sigrs to finish out the season.
“I didn’t have to do anything else,” Väänänen said. “Just workout, practice, play, enjoy the country, meet new people. It was a great experience.”

To read the full story, pick up a copy of the weekend edition of the Bowie News.

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District awards for 1A released

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Bellevue’s Bryce Ramsey was named his district’s newcomer of the year.

With the baseball and softball seasons over for the area 1A schools, district awards have been released.
Listed below are those earned honors on the field and in the classroom for Saint Jo and Bellevue.

Softball
Saint Jo
Honorable mention

Utility player: Taylor Patrick; Catcher: Jordyn O’Neal

Baseball
Superlatives
Offensive MVP: Devin Stewart, Saint Jo
Newcomer of the Year: Bryce Ramsey, Bellevue

Pitcher: Trent Gaston, Saint Jo
Outfielder: Jayden Curry, Saint Jo

Second team
Pitcher: Charlie Barclay, Saint Jo
Infielder: Brycen Bancroft, Bellevue; Sam Martin, Saint Jo
Outfielder: Rylan Forrester, Saint Jo
Catcher: Charlie Evans, Saint Jo
Utility: Logan Hoover, Saint Jo
DH: Amzy Barclay, Saint Jo

Honorable mention
Cody Gaston, Saint Jo; Xander Joyner, Saint Jo

To see academic awards from Saint Jo players, pick up a copy of the weekend edition of the Bowie News.

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Forestburg coach retiring

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Forestburg boys basketball coach Eldon Van Hooser helped lead the program to its first playoff win in nine years in his last year coaching.

Eldon Van Hooser is leaving Forestburg better than he found it.
The head boy’s basketball coach is retiring after more than 30 years, spending the last five at Forestburg.
Van Hooser did not come to this decision because of a lack of fire or feeling tired after decades in the profession. He had to for family reasons.
“My wife has MS (multiple sclerosis) and it’s a disease where you have trouble standing and walking and she needs help,” Van Hooser said. “I am able to so I am going to step away from teaching and coaching to be there for her.”
Van Hooser was hired in 2019. Along with being the boy’s basketball coach, he also was the football team’s defensive coordinator.
There were some lean years for Forestburg on the boy’s athletic side, with numbers being low and the available athletes being mostly underclassmen.
For two years, the Longhorns’ boy’s basketball team won few games and one of those seasons saw the team field five players on the high school team.
“One of those years we had COVID-19 and the other we had five kids,” Van Hooser said. “It was very rough. After that we worked with the kids and we had a good freshman group coming up. Next year they are going to be seniors.”
That group has helped to turn the program around. Last year the young Longhorns team contested for a playoff spot and just barely missed it finishing fifth in the district.
This season, that same group took a leap and finished second in district with a record of 7-5.
Despite losing its last two regular season games in dramatic fashion heading into the playoffs, the team stepped up in the bi-district game.
Playing against an athletic Newcastle team, Forestburg led for most of the game.
Unfortunately, the previous game against Bellevue saw the Longhorn team blow the lead late in the fourth quarter against a hard pressing style team and they were suffering the same fate against the Bobcats down the stretch.
Fortunately, Forestburg held on just enough to win 53-46. It was the first boy’s basketball playoff win in nine years for Forestburg.
“It was huge for our program,” Van Hooser said. “This new year we will have new goals. The new coach will have some goals of his own, but I set some for the team and think that we have come a long way.”

To read the full story, pick up a copy of the weekend edition of the Bowie News.

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Bowie Sports Banquet

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The Bowie sports banquets was on Monday night. Olivia Gill and Tucker Jones were named Jackrabbit and Lady Rabbit of the year. Pick up the mid-week paper for all of the sports team awards and pictures.

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