Westporter Arrested For January 6 Capitol Assault

A Westport man was arrested early this morning, in connection with an assault on US Capitol police officers during the January 6, 2021 insurrection.

Authorities set up a staging area at Coleytown Elementary School and surrounded the Bayberry Ridge home of Benjamin Cohen, around 6 a.m. “It was a classic ‘come out with your hands up!’ scenario,” a source told “06880.”

A press release from the US Department of Justice Attorney’s Office in Washington says:

A Connecticut man has been arrested on felony and misdemeanor charges, including assaulting law enforcement, related to his actions during the breach of the U.S. Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021. His actions and the actions of others disrupted a joint session of the U.S. Congress convened to ascertain and count the electoral votes related to the presidential election.

Benjamin Cohen, 21, of Westport, Connecticut, is charged in a criminal complaint filed in the District of Columbia with civil disorder and assaulting, resisting, or impeding certain officers, both felony offenses. In addition to the felonies, Cohen is charged with several misdemeanor offenses, including entering and remaining in a restricted building or grounds, disorderly and disruptive conduct in a restricted building or grounds, engaging in physical violence in a restricted building or grounds, and engaging in an act of physical violence on Capitol grounds or buildings.

Cohen was arrested today in Westport and made his initial appearance in the District of Connecticut.

Benjamin Cohen, at the US Capitol. (Photo courtesy of US Department of Justice)

According to court documents, Cohen was identified by law enforcement authorities among the crowd of rioters gathered along a police line on the West Plaza of the Capitol grounds on Jan. 6, 2021. Just before 2:29 p.m., open-source video and body-worn camera footage show Cohen joining rioters in breaching the police line and moving toward a group of officers. Cohen is then seen making physical contact with the group of officers by pushing and shoving them with his hands as the crowd surges forward. Seconds later, Cohen rushes toward the officers again, shoving and striking officers with his hands. At some point shortly thereafter, video footage shows Cohen standing in the crowd of rioters, where he can be heard shouting, “Our House!”

Later, at approximately 2:48 p.m., Cohen is seen entering the Lower West Terrace tunnel, joining other rioters assembling against a police line. Cohen then makes his way deeper into the mob and begins to push against a rioter in front of him as additional rioters join the effort around him. Together, the mob pushed in a concerted “heave-ho” effort against the police line in the tunnel.

After the first “heave-ho,” Cohen participated in subsequent efforts in the tunnel against the police line. At approximately 2:56 p.m., a rush of additional rioters entered the tunnel, and those rioters, including Cohen, engaged in another “heave-ho” effort by moving their bodies in unison back and forth, pushing with coordinated force against the police.

By approximately 3:05 p.m., Cohen made his way back to the tunnel entrance and began rinsing his eyes after having apparently been sprayed by officers. Cohen remained with the mob just outside the tunnel until at least approximately 4:01 p.m., where he continued to assist combined efforts by the mob to push back into the tunnel.

Court documents say that at some point thereafter, Cohen was photographed inside an office inside the Capitol building situated with a window, which had been broken, just to the left of the tunnel entrance. Cohen is then seen in open-source video departing this office through the broken window.

This case is being prosecuted by the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the District of Columbia and the Department of Justice National Security Division’s Counterterrorism Section. Valuable assistance was provided by the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the District of Connecticut.

This case is being investigated by the FBI’s New Haven and Washington Field Offices, which identified Cohen as BOLO (“Be On the Look Out”) #379 on its seeking information photos.

Valuable assistance was provided by the U.S. Capitol Police and the Metropolitan Police Department.

In the 31 months since Jan. 6, 2021, more than 1,106 individuals have been arrested in nearly all 50 states for crimes related to the breach of the U.S. Capitol, including more than 350 individuals charged with assaulting or impeding law enforcement.

Unsung Hero #297

Richard Epstein is a longtime Westporter (and dentist, Norwalk Symphony and chamber group musician, and classical music host on WPKN-FM.)

But today he writes about animals. Richard says:

Thirty years ago, when I had my dental office in my Red Coat Road house and the patients had a view of the backyard, one of them looked at me and asked, “Is that your pig?”

It wasn’t.

But the Westport News reported on the incident. Here’s that story:

The other day, he had another excellent encounter with Animal Control.

he and his wife Ina recently put down their beloved dog Pippa, due to kidney disease.

Pippa

During the last 6 months of her life, the Epsteins got her a companion.

Winter — a fluffy little 3-year-old miniature schnauzer mix — kept Pippa happy.

Winter

After Pippa was gone, Richard learned of Gypsy: a 3-year-old spayed Pomeranian/husky mix at PAWS (the Pet Animal Welfare Society).

Richard, Ina and Winter all loved her. They adopted Gypsy on the spot, and brought her home.

Gypsy

Yet within half a second of entering the house, she turned tail — leash and all — and raced down the driveway.

She took a left into traffic on Wilton Road, zipped under the bridge and onto the entrance road to the Merritt Parkway and Westport Weston Family YMCA.

Richard ran after her, “at a pace I have not maintained in years.”

Suddenly, he says, several drivers stopped their cars. They barricaded the ramp, and ran out to help catch Gypsy.

One man — who Richard later learned is a Y lifeguard — followed the dog on his electric bike.

Winter reversed course, running across a neighbor’s yard. Richard and others leaped stone walls, trying to follow on foot.

Gypsy was faster than them all.

Animal Control and the Westport Police were called. Richard thought of the pig, 30 years ago.

Dog Gone Recovery” was also called. They sent members from both nearby and far away.

But by the time Richard returned home at 11 p.m., his dog was still gone.

He and Ina went to bed sad and worried. Their concern was magnified at 4 a.m., when thunderstorms woke them. They thought of the poor lost animal, in the rain.

Finally, 20 hours later, Recovery volunteers — who had driven from Canton, near Hartford, to help — used rotisserie chicken to lure Gypsy into a crate.

They returned her to PAWS.

Gypsy, recovered.

“I grew up in Westport, in the days when we knew all our neighbors,” Richard says.

“But this experience makes us grateful that after 40 years on Red Coat Road, we can still count on people nearby to help out when it is needed.”

The Epsteins will wait a while before getting a companion for Winter. They’ll make sure it’s not a “runner.”

In the meantime, Richard says, “we are so grateful to the many unsung heroes who joined in the search: PAWS, Dog Gone Recovery, Damian McCallum from the YMCA, Lisa from Weston and her Mini Cooper convertible, Kate down the street, Westport’s Police and Animal Control, and the many neighbors who watched vigilantly and helped us finally recover Gypsy.”

They returned the adoption fee back to PAWS. They’re making a donation to the Dog Gone Recovery Network.

Meanwhile — if you have a fenced-in yard — Gypsy is still available.

(Do you know an Unsung Hero? Email 06880blog@gmail.com)

(Unsung Heroes runs every Wednesday on “06880.” Please click here to help us continue this, and many features.)

Roundup: Long Lots Meeting, Elm Tree Down, Earthplace Bash …

The next meeting of the Long Lots School Building Committee is tomorrow (Thursday, August 10, 6 p.m., Town Hall Room 201).

The first 15 minutes are open for public comment and/or questions about the project.

A work session with the design team follows, for project status updates and review. The public may attend the work session, but not participate.

Long Lots Elementary School is 70 years old. It began as a junior high school.

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Westport has one less elm tree.

The large one in front of Stop & Shop — among the last survivors in Westport — was taken down a few days ago.

The removal was part of the Post Road improvement project.

We all know the gorgeous specimen on Long Lots Road. Where else in town can we see a majestic elm? Click “Comments,” with your favorite. (Hat tip: Nate Gibbons)

(Photo/Nate Gibbons)

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Sixteen members of the Connecticut Interstate Fire Crew left yesterday to fight wildfires in Montana. They flew from Bradley International Airport, on a multi-week deployment.

Among them: 2 former Westport Fire Department chiefs, Michael Kronick and Andrew Kingsbury.

Connecticut firefighters, at Bradley Airport.

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Yesterday’s Westport Rotary meeting highlighted the Connecticut Institute for Refugees and Immigrants. President/CEO Susan Schnitzer and associate director Deo Byakisaka discussed their 105-year-old organization, which offers services, advocacy, and social, educational and life skills programming for refugees, immigrants, survivors of human trafficking and torture, and unaccompanied minors.

Deo described his own journey as a refugee, and his successful integration into the local community.

He left the Democratic Republic of Congo in 2003 because of war, persecution and violence. He and his family spent 11 years in a resettlement camp in Uganda before arriving in Bridgeport in 2014.

CIRI helped him establish a productive life for himself and his children. He now gives back, working in refugee services at CIRI.

Deo Byakisaka, at yesterday’s Westport Rotary Club meeting.

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Fishermen are known for telling tall tales.

If these guys tell you they can walk on water: Don’t believe them.

(Photo/Jim Hood)

They were actually at the end of the Schlaet’s Point jetty, at Hillspoint Road and Soundview Drive, during high tide yesterday.

But it sure is a very cool photo.

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The best weekend on the Earthplace calendar returns soon.

It kicks off Saturday, September 30  (7 to 10 p.m.), with the “Woodside Bash.” There’s an open bar, fire pit, music by Pimpinella, and a mechanical bull. Click here for tickets.

The next day is for families. The Fall Festival (Sunday, October 1, 10 a.m. to 3 p.m.) includes a climbing wall, apple slingshot, donut on a string, pumpkin bowling, hayrides, a corn pool and more. Click here for tickets.

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It’s been a while since the Westport Country Playhouse Script in Hand play reading series offered a good, old-fashioned romantic comedy.

But that’s next. “Maytag Virgin” takes the stage on August 21 (7 p.m.).

Script in Hand curator Mark Shanahan says, “I know our audience will fall in love with these wonderful characters as Jack and Lizzy meditate on life, love, and joys of folding laundry.”

For more information, including tickets, click here.

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The Abraham Accords, Iran appeasement, food inflation, security concerns, immigration, New York real estate — that’s a lot to cover.

But Avi Kaner did, in a wide-ranging interview with WABC radio’s Suzanne Miller.

Westporters know Avi as a former Board of Finance chair, and 2nd Selectman.

He was on the air though as co-owner of New York’s Morton Williams supermarket chain.

Click here to listen.

Avi Kaner

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An Eastern tiger swallowtail poses handsomely, for today’s “Westport … Naturally” feature:

(Photo/Daniel Maya)

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And finally … Happy National Polka Day!

(Please click here to “prosím darujte“ — or, as polka fans everywhere know, “please donate” — to “06880.” Thank you!)

[OPINION] Save Westport Now Says: Save Gardens Now!

Yesterday, Save Westport Now — which describes itself as a 43-year-old grassroots organization dedicated to protecting residential neighborhoods, preserving Westport’s small-town New England appeal, ensuring smart growth, preventing over-commercialization, and preserving open space — e-mailed every member of the Board of Selectwomen, Board of Education, Long Lots School Building Committee, Board of Finance and Representative Town Meeting.

The subject: the possible relocation of the Westport Community Gardens, as part of the Long Lots renovation or rebuilding plan. Save Westport Now says:

As the Town mulls its options regarding the Westport Community Gardens and Long Lots Preserve, we offer the following observations:

First, we believe that the Long Lots School Building Committee, appointed by First Selectwoman Jen Tooker, has inadvertently overstepped its authority in thinking that they have the unfettered right to determine the future of this cherished municipal asset.

We have reviewed the RTM minutes concerning the acquisition of this property and note that, although 2.2 acres were earmarked for additional school parking, the remaining 4.5 acres were acquired for other municipal purposes.

The Westport Community Gardens and Long Lots Preserve are just south of parking for Long Lots Elementary School (green), which is just south of the current building (yellow).

Indeed, in 2001 when the RTM was debating the acquisition, then-School Superintendent Elliot Landon assured the RTM that they would “work cooperatively and collaboratively” with the town to develop the parking in such a way that “it enhanced municipal uses as well.”

Thus, while it is true that playing fields (as well as affordable housing) were mentioned during the debate, the future use of that extra acreage was specifically left open.

Since then, of course, the property has been designated as a community garden and preserve and, for the last 20 or so years, the property has been under the supervision of Parks & Rec — 2 indisputable facts that buttress the argument that a school building committee does not have the unilateral authority to deal with this property.

Second, we note that removing these Gardens and the Preserve in favor of other uses runs counter to the Town’s Net Zero promise, as well as its most recent Plan of Conservation and Development, which explicitly calls for the preservation and enhancement of open space.

As the Plan recognizes: “Open space helps protect natural resources; provide flood storage, wildlife habitat, and tree canopy; enhance overall community appearance; and enhance the quality of life of residents and visitors.”

In fact, the town has long been concerned with this issue since Westport has
very little open space, especially compared to other towns in Fairfield County. If anything, we need to be creating more gardens, preserves, and open space — not less.

And third, we believe that equity and fairness dictate preservation of the Gardens and Preserve in their current locations.

Aerial view of the Westport Community Gardens, with 100-plus plots. The Long Lots Preserve is located on its perimeter.

While adding additional playing fields to our town’s inventory may be
desirable, the town currently has approximately 20 playing fields that can conceivably be made available during the 18- or 24-month construction period contemplated for the new school facility.

Alternatively, other temporary sites can be identified and used for sports during the construction period.

Once construction is complete, the town could then build new field(s) on the site of old building. There is, however, only one town garden, and it simply cannot be moved or replicated within that time frame — if at all.

Ditto for the Preserve.

In sum, the long-term pain for gardeners and the negative environmental ramifications for residents if the Gardens and Preserve are forced to vacate far outweigh the temporary sacrifice that sports teams may suffer if the Gardens and
Preserve are allowed to remain in place.

Finally, it is important to note that when the Long Lots School Building Committee was first proposed by the First Selectwoman, we and others voiced concern that the list of appointees did not include someone from Sustainable Westport.

Indeed, a number of RTM members objected to the formation of the Committee specifically on those grounds. They were adamant that SW needed to have a seat at the table — that SW needed to be involved at all stages of the project.

But the administration assured the RTM that the Committee had the necessary expertise to handle the project.

Recent events, however, have validated those concerns. The fact is that the Gardens and Preserve play a critical role in helping to sequester carbon and protect our pollinators.

Relaxing in the Westport Community Gardens.

Based on what we believe are a set of faulty assumptions and priorities, we are concerned that the Committee may make well-intended but misguided recommendations that result in the squandering of these important and critical assets.

And the idea that this will be “only” a temporary measure strikes us as short-sighted and failing to properly understand the value of what has been created here.

It took 20 years and almost 10,000 hours of volunteer labor to get the Gardens and Preserve to this point. They cannot be rebuilt overnight or easily replicated.

Please listen to the more than 1,800 people and organizations who have already signed petitions and letters, and act now to make the preservation of the Gardens and Preserve our highest priority when planning for the creation of what is sure to be a superb building where Westport’s children can continue to grow and learn.

Respectfully,
Ian Warburg
Co-chair, Save Westport Now

Voting Machine Found In Westport Home

Long-time Westporters Jeff Mayer and Nancy Diamond are downsizing.

Like many residents, they see a smaller home as an opportunity to “Marie Kondo”-ize their lives.

It’s one thing to get rid of the tchotchkes.

But move the voting machine? That’s a different story.

And one they’re sharing with “06880.”

It begins to 2011, when Westport changed from traditional voting booths to electronic cards.

For 50 years voters had stepped into a private booth, pulled a giant lever to close the curtain, slid down tiny levers for candidates or penciled in write-ins, then pulled the big lever again to hide the votes and open the curtain.

Jeffrey Mayer and Nancy Diamond’s voting booth.

The voting machines were made by Sequoia. They were bought by now-famous Dominion Voting Systems in 2010.

In 2011, most of Westport’s voting machines were hauled to the dump.

Except one.

Jeff had been snoozing a few years earlier, when the Westport Library tossed its card catalogues.

He was not about to miss out on another piece of local history.

Kids! Ask your parents how to use this.

Jeff had served on the Board of Finance for 12 years, the last 4 as chairman. For him, voting was personal.

He called the Town Clerk. With the help of Jim Ezzes, chair of the Zoning Board of Appeals, and Jim’s brother Steve, also a former BOF member, one machine found a new home.

A dozen years later, Jeff and Nancy’s new Westport home is not big enough for the voting machine.

They contacted the Connecticut Museum of Culture & History in Hartford. They don’t have enough space.

A Westport friend has offered to store the machine while it awaits a new owner.  Jeff and Nancy hope a passionate history buff will step forward.

“At a time when our country is focused on voting rights,” Jeff says, “we can’t bear the thought of the booth ending up in a dump.”

“It would be too ironic,” Nancy adds.

(Interested in Jeff and Nancy’s voting booth? Email jamayer01@gmail.com)

(Here’s a bipartisan cause: supporting “06880.” Please click here to donate. Thank you!)

Today’s machines look much less cool.

Pics Of The Day #2303

Compo Beach sunrise through the pavilion … (Photo/Jimmy Izzo)

… and over the jetty (Photo/Chuck Davis)

“06880” Podcast: Carleigh Welsh

From Willie Nelson, Cyndi Lauper and Tina Turner to Twiddle, DNR and the Hall Family children’s shows, the Levitt Pavilion entertains, energizes and inspires audiences.

It all happens underneath the stars, on the banks of the Saugatuck River.

And — except for those mega-stars — it’s all free.

Carleigh Welsh is the Levitt’s longtime director of marketing and communications. The other day, she strolled a few feet from the Pavilion to the Westport Library to chat about the summer-long series: its history, its impact on audiences, and how it all happens.

Click below for our conversation. It’s quite, um, entertaining.

(“06880” is your hyper-local blog — and a non-profit. Please click here to support our work. Thank you!)

Roundup: Linda Blair, Hubert Humphrey, Appletree Oak …

Yesterday’s “06880” Roundup noted the imminent destruction of a large white oak tree on Appletree Trail. A new home and swimming pool will be built on the property.

It did not happen as scheduled. Neighbor Cathy Morrison reports, “We may have temporarily halted the tree removal. The tree people needed access to remove it from our private street, and the residents won’t let the large trucks and equipment have access from our street. We pay to pave and plow it; the town doesn’t.”

White oak tree on Appletree Trail. (Photo/Cathy Morrison)

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Westport Volunteer Emergency Medical Services always needs help. Here’s your chance.

EMT (Emergency Medical Technician) and EMR (Emergency Medical Responder) classes begin August 31. They run through December.

Classes are generally held Tuesdays and Thursdays, with some Saturdays.

They’re thorough. They’re intense. They’re also very important.

Click here for details. And thanks to all who enroll.

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The death of director William Friedkin yesterday brought renewed attention to one of his most notable films.

Describing “The Exorcist,” William Grimes writes: “it was a suspenseful, often gruesome, cinematic study of evil at work in the modern world — evil conceived in almost medieval terms.”

Linda Blair, as the possessed girl, gave a terrifying performance enhanced by eye-popping special effects. In a cinematic moment that entered into legend, she spewed a jet of green vomit — actually a blend of oatmeal and pea soup — straight into the face of a priest played by Jason Miller. Even more startling, during the exorcism later in the film, her head spun full circle on her shoulders, grinning maniacally.

Westporters of a certain age remember Linda Blair well. She was a 14-year-old Staples High School student in 1973 — and had been working as a model and actress for years — when she was chosen from 600 others for the role of Regan.

She earned a Golden Globe Award, was nominated for an Oscar — and received death threats for her “blasphemy.”

Linda Blair in “The Exorcist.” (Photo courtesy of Warner Bros., via the New York Times)

The Times obituary notes:

The film, released in late December 1973, became a phenomenal hit, one of Hollywood’s top-grossing movies to date, with ticket sales of more than $200 million (the equivalent of about $1.3 billion today). It was also the first horror film to be nominated for a best picture Oscar. (It lost to “The Sting.”)

In New York, audiences lined up for hours in the freezing cold, while scalpers sold tickets for three times their face value. Vincent Canby, in The New York Times, dismissed the film as “claptrap” but pronounced it “the biggest thing to hit the industry since Mary Pickford, popcorn, pornography and ‘The Godfather.”

Click here for the full obituary. Click here for more on Linda Blair.

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In the long, convoluted history of civil rights in America, the 1948 Democcratic Party’s plank — which led President Truman to desegregate the armed forces — is often forgotten.

But it — and the role played by Minneapolis mayor (and US Senate candidate) Hubert Humphrey were crucial moments.

New York Times journalist, award-winning author and Columbia University professor Samuel Freedman explores those days in his new book, “Into the Bright Sunshine: Young Hubert Humphrey and the Fight for Civil Rights,” at the Westport Library on August 23 (7 p.m.). Books will be available for sale and signing.

There are 2 Westport connections.

Freedman will be interviewed on the Trefz Forum stage by journalist/author/editor Daniel Gross, who lives here.

And last year Freedman’s son Aaron married Carly Machlis. She grew up here, and graduated from Staples High School in 2009.

Click here for more information on Freedman’s appearance.

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The Weston History & Culture Center offers 2 free summer program, for children ages 6-10.

“1940s Fun & Games Kids Camp” runs Thursday, August 17. Children will play with toys and games from the ’40s, and create crafts and art work from the era.

“Weston Illustrated Art Camp” follows on Wednesday, August 23. Both are 10 to 11:30 a.m. Youngsters will learn about artists who lived and worked in Weston. They’ll go on a scavenger hunt through the “Weston Illustrated” exhibit; create a cartoon strip, sculpt with clay, and create a toy.

Both programs will be taught by WHCC executive director Samantha Fargione, assisted by college and high school interns majoring in history. Click here to register, and for more information.

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Abstract art?

(Photo/Mark Mathias)

No.

A tree at Winslow Park — and today’s “Westport … Naturally” featured photo.

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And finally … back to Linda Blair (story above). In the 1980s — a decade after starring in “The Exorcist” — she dated singer Rick James for 2 years.

He wrote “Cold Blooded” about her, after she had an abortion without his knowledge.

(Where else but “06880” will you find Linda Blair and Hubert Humphrey together? That’s why this blog is “Where Westport Meets the World.” Please click here to help us continue our work. Thank you!)

E-Sports: Weston High Prepares For Another Varsity Season

It’s early August. Soon, high school sports teams start pre-season practice. The fall season is just a few weeks away.

At Weston High, that means cross country, field hockey, football, soccer, swim and dive, and volleyball.

Plus e-sports.

Don’t laugh. Don’t make snide remarks about “sitting in front of a computer playing video games.” Don’t show your ignorance.

E-sports is a billion-dollar business. Nearly 200 colleges offer $10 million in scholarships to players.

Weston — which includes e-sports as a varsity sport — is a leader in Connecticut. And Connecticut is a leading state, nationally.

Dan Ungar is the Trojans’ coach. It’s one of his many jobs in Weston — he’s also a special education paraprofessional, and runs an after-school fitness program — and his passion for it is clear.

Dan Ungar was featured on the PlayVS e-sports website.

He’s quick to note that e-sports — aka “online gaming competition” — really is a sport.

It involves teamwork. It demands communication, collaboration, critical thinking, creativity, problem-solving and leadership.

The action moves fast. Situations change rapidly. Teammates must be laser-focused.

And they’re in it to win it.

The Connecticut Interscholastic Athletic Conference (CIAC) oversees all high school sports in the state. They were the first state organization in the US to sanction e-sports, back in 2018.

Five years later, the National Federation of High School Associations — the official US oversight body — has e-sports partnerships with nearly 2 dozen states.

Games include League of Legends, Rocket League and Super Smash Bros. Ultimate. One season runs from fall through December. A second one is January through the end of April.

Weston High School Trojans

Ungar is a full varsity coach. He goes to the same meetings, and is held to the same standards, as any basketball or lacrosse coach. He has “the full backing” of school administrators.

Athletic director Mark Berkowitz often asks, “What do you need?” Ungar says.

(Other resources come from PlayVS, the official CIAC and NFHS e-sports platform partner.)

E-sports players are, in many ways, treated equally too. Flyers show upcoming matches; results are announced on the morning TV show; the team has a dinner, and gives awards.

There are differences, of course. Instead of crowded bleachers at fields or the gym, only a few spectators fit in the computer lab, where competitions are held.

Though meets are virtual, the state championship is live, at Quinnipiac University’s modern e-sports arena.

“That was like playing with the pros,” Ungar says. “It was so exciting. The kids deserved that atmosphere. They represent our school, and are proud of it. They work hard.”

Their hard work pays off. Both captains who graduated this June earned e-sports scholarships — one to Clark University, the other to Clarkson.

Ungar — who was one of the first 8 e-sports coaches in the country, when he started 6 years ago — has a roster of about 20 players. (Some schools in the state have up to 60.)

They represent “every type of kid imaginable,” the coach says.

“We’ve got both genders, and non-binary. They’re difference races. But they’ve become a team, and a family.”

Like any varsity coach, Ungar balances the demands of the present with the need to build for the future. This year, he’s excited to welcome a talented crop of incoming 9th graders.

“The sky’s the limit,” he says — referring both to the Weston team, and the future of e-sports.

ESPN airs competitions. They sell out Madison Square Garden.

Ungar’s e-sports players dream of being engineers, computer and software programmers and game designers.

One may even become a professional e-sports player.

Hey, any varsity athlete can dream…

Pic Of The Day #2302

Old Mill tidal current (Photo/June Rose Whittaker)