Tournament Raises $12K for Student Veterans and Campus Recreation Center

A man in dark shorts, a T-shirt and hat lunges for a shot during a game of pickleball. Image by Ed Brennen
Master of Education alum Andy Weijer '94 hits a backhand during the recent Homecoming Pickleball Slam, a tournament that drew 180 players and raised nearly $12,000 for student veterans and the Campus Recreation Center.

10/23/2024
By Ed Brennen

Despite living in nearby Dracut, Massachusetts, Diane Pitta 鈥82 had lost touch with her alma mater since earning a bachelor鈥檚 degree in health education from 51视频 more than 40 years ago.

That鈥檚 changed recently, thanks to pickleball.

鈥淧ickleball has drawn me back to the university,鈥 said Pitta, who started playing drop-in games at the Campus Recreation Center last year after getting an alumni membership.

During , Pitta was among 180 alumni, faculty, staff, students and community members to participate in UML鈥檚 second annual Pickleball Slam.聽

Two women in visors and sun glasses smile while holding pickleball paddles outside. Image by Ed Brennen
Alumni Pat McGuirk '84, left, and Diane Pitta '82 finished second in their women's division at the Homecoming Pickleball Slam.
The daylong tournament, held on the sun-splashed outdoor tennis courts, raised nearly $12,000 for student veterans and the Campus Rec Center.

鈥淚t鈥檚 a win-win for the university,鈥 said Pitta, who teamed up with alumna Pat McGuirk 鈥84 to take second place in their women鈥檚 division. 鈥淚t drew somebody like me who had been disconnected from the university for so long, and it raises money, which is fantastic.鈥

The tournament was organized by Registrar Mai Nguyen, UML鈥檚 unofficial pied piper of pickleball, in collaboration with Meghan Jordan, the rec center鈥檚 associate director of competitive sports.

The top three teams in each of the 11 divisions (four women鈥檚, three men鈥檚 and four mixed) received medals that were designed by sophomore engineering major Patrick Hartman and 3D-printed in the Lawrence Lin MakerSpace.

Five women celebrate near a pickleball court outdoors. Image by Ed Brennen
Tournament organizer Mai Nguyen, foreground, celebrates with fellow medal winners in their women's division of the tournament.
Tournament sponsors, meanwhile, donated nearly $3,000 worth of pickleball paddles, sports gear and gift certificates for medalists and raffle prizes.

The Pickleball Slam was part of a successful Homecoming weekend that saw the UML hockey team sweep Colgate University at the Tsongas Center 鈥 5-2 on Friday鈥檚 鈥淧ickleball Night鈥 and 2-1 on Saturday night. The tournament also coincided with the annual Jennifer鈥檚 Run/Walk 5K, which raises scholarship funds in memory of Jennifer D鈥橝mour 鈥98.

Chancellor Julie Chen is a regular at Sunday morning drop-in pickleball games at the rec center, but she was a spectator for the tournament.

Two women and a man look at pickleball paddles that are wrapped in plastic. Image by Ed Brennen
Alumna Shauna Salem '18, '19, right, looks over pickleball paddle prizes with her mom, Pat, after they won their women's division.
鈥淚t鈥檚 great to see so many people out here from both the university and the surrounding community,鈥 Chen said. 鈥淚t鈥檚 nice to have all this energy 鈥 and to have alumni come back and see the campus if they haven鈥檛 been back in a while.鈥

鈥18, 鈥19, a former distance runner for the River Hawks, teamed up with her mom, Pat, to win their women鈥檚 division.聽

鈥淚 haven鈥檛 been back for Homecoming before, but it鈥檚 great to have a tournament like this where I went to school. It makes it fun,鈥 said Salem, a Dracut native who earned a bachelor鈥檚 degree in chemistry and a master鈥檚 degree in pharmaceutical sciences and now works at Pfizer.

A closeup photo of a pickleball medal 3-D printed from plastic. Image by Ed Brennen
The Pickleball Slam medals were designed by sophomore engineering major Patrick Hartman and 3-D printed in the Lawrence Lin MakerSpace.
Her fianc茅, chemistry alum Mike Harris 鈥18, played in the men鈥檚 tournament later in the day.

Andy Weijer 鈥94, who earned a master鈥檚 degree in education from UML and now teaches math at Lawrence High School, played mixed doubles with his wife, Danielle DeTora. They picked up the sport last year at the Campus Rec Center.聽

鈥淲e鈥檝e made a lot of really good friends through pickleball, and it keeps me active,鈥 said Weijer, a veteran of the U.S. Air Force who appreciated that part of the tournament proceeds went to student veterans.

鈥淲e wanted to give back to the young men and women who serve our country,鈥 said Nguyen, who played in the tournament while also leading a team that managed the brackets, tabulated results and handed out medals.聽

A woman in white hat and red T-shirt hits a shot while her pickleball partner looks ahead. Image by Ed Brennen
Assoc. Director of Competitive Sports Meghan Jordan and her husband, physical therapy alum Sean Jordan '14, play in the mixed doubles tournament.
Pitta met her husband, business alum and retired Lowell Fire Chief Edward 鈥淪kip鈥 Pitta 鈥81, as a student at UML.聽

McGuirk, a retired teacher and administrator at Greater Lowell Technical High School, earned a master鈥檚 degree in educational administration from UML. She is married to 鈥69, a member of the UML Athletic Hall of Fame. While the couple plays together at the Campus Rec Center on Sunday mornings, Pat teamed up with Pitta for the Pickleball Slam.聽

鈥淲e鈥檙e here to support Mai and 51视频,鈥 McGuirk said. 鈥淚t鈥檚 a fabulous tournament.鈥