Pickleball Magazine 3-6 | Page 80

Pickleball Canada The latest news, tournaments and upcoming clinics Helen Proctor and Garry Morehouse were inducted into the Midland Hall of Fame on Sept. 29 in the builder category, for their work in developing the Midland Area Pickleball Club and four public outdoor courts. Photo by Gisele Winton Sarvis/ Metroland. Midland the First in Canada to Induct Pickleball into its Sports Hall of Fame Pickleball builders Helen Proctor and Garry Morehouse are the newest inductees into Midland Sports Hall of Fame. Pickleball has been inducted into a Canadian Sports Hall of Fame for the first time in history. On Sept. 29, the 2018 Midland Sports Hall of Fame inducted Garry Morehouse and Helen Proctor for their work in founding the Midland Area Pickleball Club and getting four outdoor courts built at Tiffin Park on a former tennis court. “The reason we’re excited about getting inducted into the Hall of Fame is it’s giving pickleball recognition,” Morehouse says. Morehouse, who is associated with Pickleball Canada, researched the topic and found no other inductions. In the U.S., a Pickleball Hall of Fame has been set up. “It’s the fastest growing sport in North America,” he says from Tiffin Park on a bright, sunny day where 16 people were playing on the four blue-topped courts. There was no one playing on the adjacent tennis court. “Every morning you see this many people and the tennis court is barely used,” notes Proctor, who is the founder 78 of the Midland Area Pickleball Club; Morehouse is a founding director. Proctor started the club in 2014 with 14 people. By the end of the first summer, she had 35 paid members. The club now has 120 members. Morehouse says pickleball is typically played by older adults, but he wanted to develop the club for everyone. “We wanted a club for all ages, all builds and all abilities,” he explains. Prior to starting the Midland club, Proctor and Morehouse were conveners at the Askennonia Senior Centre Pickleball Club. “I thought my daughter would like to play, but she couldn’t because she wasn’t a senior,” says Proctor. “So we decided to start the club and make it available for younger people.” Morehouse also started pickleball at the Midland YMCA, where it’s now offered three times a week. But building the four badminton-sized courts on a single, underused tennis court is a solid accomplishment of the duo. “I got the money, Helen did the design and Mayor Gord McKay convinced the council it was the right way to do it,” Morehouse explains. The Tiffin courts are public. No membership is required to use them but the club promotes them. “We negotiated so it would be free for everybody,” Proctor notes. Proctor and Morehouse also started pickleball at Waypoint Centre for Mental Health for staff and patients. “Pickleball is popular because a lot of people are transitioning from tennis. The court is a quarter of the size and it’s a low-impact sport. It’s a much faster game than tennis so it’s more fun,” adds Proctor, a former tennis player. In the winter, the club uses the North Simcoe Sports and Recreation Centre’s gym one night a week and the Tay Shores Public School gym four nights a week. The club membership fee is $90 a year. For more information on the club, visit midlandareapickleballclub.ca. This story was written by Gisele Winton Sarvis and first appeared in the Midland Mirror. TO SUBSCRIBE CALL 888.308.3720 OR GO TO THEPICKLEBALLMAG.COM