“I’ve done some cool stuff in the last 22 years, but I don’t think anything comes close to this. They are eating this up things like ice cream."
“I grew up in Southington,” Sal Conti said. “I feel there are good people that take their time for the youth in town. I benefited from that. I just want to give back. I want to give back to people.
“At least half of these kids have never played on any team before. After talking to some of their parents, most describe their children as spectrum kids with autism or Asperger’s. You don’t really notice it.”
Conti added that a handful of his players are home-schooled.
“I like using my sport to accomplish big things,” he added. “I want to get the word out that this type of program exists. They are getting the same benefit than other team sports. It’s not where you start, it’s where you finish. They are starting to realize that. The only person holding you back is you.”
Sal Conti owns Shooters Billards in Southington and has played among the best players in his years on the felt. But the Southington resident has found as nearly as much satisfation coaching APA Junior Academy over the last 12 weeks and bringing a team mentality to billiards.
Conti and his long-time friend, Bruce Barthelette, started the Academy, a collection of 20 players that features a one-hour lesson each week followed by league play. At the end of the season, one of Conti’s students will be sent, all expenses paid, to the APA Junior Nationals.
This is a real feel-good read: It's a whole new generation of shooters.
“I grew up in Southington,” Sal Conti said. “I feel there are good people that take their time for the youth in town. I benefited from that. I just want to give back. I want to give back to people.
“At least half of these kids have never played on any team before. After talking to some of their parents, most describe their children as spectrum kids with autism or Asperger’s. You don’t really notice it.”
Conti added that a handful of his players are home-schooled.
“I like using my sport to accomplish big things,” he added. “I want to get the word out that this type of program exists. They are getting the same benefit than other team sports. It’s not where you start, it’s where you finish. They are starting to realize that. The only person holding you back is you.”
Sal Conti owns Shooters Billards in Southington and has played among the best players in his years on the felt. But the Southington resident has found as nearly as much satisfation coaching APA Junior Academy over the last 12 weeks and bringing a team mentality to billiards.
Conti and his long-time friend, Bruce Barthelette, started the Academy, a collection of 20 players that features a one-hour lesson each week followed by league play. At the end of the season, one of Conti’s students will be sent, all expenses paid, to the APA Junior Nationals.
This is a real feel-good read: It's a whole new generation of shooters.