Tag Archives: Danilo Sierra-Giraldo

Unsung Heroes #398

Another beach season — Memorial Day to Labor Day — ended Monday.

The lifeguards stowed their boards and buoys for the last time. They locked the shack. They left the last motivational quote on the temperature-and-tide sign; the next one will posted 9 months from now.

It was a quiet final day.

That’s the way the lifeguards like it.

We did not hear, this summer, about any catastrophes. Not even a close call.

We did not hear a panicked cry for help, or the wails of ambulances.

That’s because the lifeguards did their job — every day, 7 days a week, from Memorial Day to Labor Day — so that they wouldn’t have to do that job.

Compo lifeguards on Monday: the last hour of the last day. (Photo/Dan Woog)

So: What did they do?

They performed first aid, for everything from heatstroke to splinters.

They found missing kids.

They helped people use the special wheelchairs that enable less abled beachgoers to enjoy the shore.

They trained, and practiced — just in case.

And every day, they posted a different motivational quote on the whiteboard in their shack.

That’s the way they roll. And all summer, they rocked it.

One morning — before the beach opened — Parks & Rec sponsored the Lifeguard Olympics.

This week’s Unsung Heroes are our superb lifeguards — at Compo, Longshore and Burying Hill.

Let’s hear it for their boss, Danilo Sierra-Girlado too, plus senior foreman Mike Giunta, and our new Parks & Recreation Department director, Erik Barbieri.

They didn’t make any headlines this year. Which is exactly how they like it.

So this story will have to suffice.

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Here’s A Rare Headline For Staples’ Niche Sports

There are 40 varsity sports at Staples High School. That may be the most in the state.

Twenty are girls teams. Eighteen are boys. Two are coed: sailing and fencing.

The latter is the newest Wrecker squad. Their first varsity season will be this winter.

Staples athletic director VJ Sarullo says that it takes at least 3 years as a club before a sport can attain varsity status. That’s to show that a program can sustain itself, in the years ahead.

The Staples club was founded 3 years ago, by PJ Loranger, Gleb Syomichev, Max Pieterbarg and Anna Pan ’22. (Syomichev was then recruited to fence at Division I Sacred Heart University.)

The squad won the state championship in 2022 and ’23, then finished second last winter. Pieterbarg capture the 2024 individual title.

The Staples fencing team hopes to continue its club success, now as a varsity sport. From left: Alessandro Alderucci, coach Delphine de Vore, Gleb Syomichev, PJ Loranger, Eric Wilson, and Max Piterbarg.

Fencing is not an expensive sport. Most funds will go to coaches, equipment and transportation. Fencers will be recognized at the Scholar-Athlete banquet in June.

Yet varsity status is important to the students attracted to it.

“Fencing is not like basketball, soccer or baseball, which you can pick up when you’re 4 and always find people to play with and against,” Sarullo notes.

“You really have to work at fencing to learn it, and find competition. These kids put so much time and energy into it. They deserve the recognition.”

As a club sport, fencers have practiced in areas like the cafeteria. Now, Sarullo will make sure they have a dedicated space to train.

En garde!

Only a few public high schools, like Guilford, have a fencing team. Staples will compete primarily against private schools and clubs. “We’ll take on anyone,” Sarullo says.

The Wrecker fencers will be well coached. Delphine de Vore — who, as club coach, helped the team earn varsity recognition — is a former world champion with the US junior women’s team. She has competed in over 30 countries.

She finished this past season as the national champion, and was an alternate for the 2024 Olympic Games. (The women’s foil squad — the weapon she fences — won gold.)

De Vore started fencing 16 years ago, at age 7. She was recruited by Columbia University, where she become an All-America second team selection.

Fencing appeals to athletes looking for a niche sport, de Vore says, and who appreciate its strong community spirit.

It attracts a wide range: musicians, artists, people into robotics, board game enthusiasts, and of course athletes from other sports.

Fencing demands “a mix of creativity, technique and tempo,” de Vore says.

She is excited that now, as a varsity sport, fencing will get more publicity, and Staples fencers will gain a bit more recognition.

Even if it’s not yet what football, soccer, basketball and lacrosse athletes enjoy.

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Meanwhile, Staples High School fall sports are in full swing.

Football and field hockey hope to repeat as state champions. Girls and boys soccer and cross country, girls volleyball and swimming, and boys golf are all — as always — very competitive.

Another fall sport gets virtually no recognition. But the athletes work as hard as any others, away from the spotlight, in a far corner of the campus.

Boys water polo has been around for a decade or so. Still, it’s one of the most unheralded teams at Staples. (There’s a girls water polo team too; they play in spring.)

Danilo Sierra-Giraldo — who coaches both boys and girls — has slowly built a program. He’s developed a pipeline, through Parks & Recreation Department programs at Longshore and Staples.

Since the pandemic, he’s offered water polo in the summer on Long Island Sound, off Schlaet’s Point.

Water polo in the Sound.

Water polo is not an official Connecticut high school sport. The Wreckers compete against private schools like Hopkins, Horace Mann and Greenwich Country Day.

The Staples squad includes players from Weston, Norwalk and New Canaan. Like the rest of the team, they’re attracted to so many elements: the skill and stamina required, the physicality (athletes fight both the water, and opponents who can push and kick under the surface). the quirky uniqueness of the sport.

The Staples water polo players are very committed. Several travel to the West Coast — where the sport is very popular — to play in club tournaments in February, and the summer.

Staples’ new assistant coach, Kade Ramirez, has coached many players  on his Connecticut Premier team in competitions out West.

A number of former Wreckers have gone on to play club water polo in college. Two — Quinn Wagner and Kai Ross — are playing in NCAA Division I.

Senior captain Leo Skatoff.

The photos here tell part of the story.

You can see the sport for yourself, at the Staples pool. The first home game of the season is today (Wednesday, September 25, 4:30 p.m.), vs. Horace Mann.

(Photos and hat tip/Ashley Skatoff)

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Compo Lifeguards: Another Day At The Beach

As record heat settles in, a national lifeguard shortage has closed beaches and pools across America.

But not in Westport.

Compo Beach is a hot place to work — as in, very popular. A full crew of 75 young men and women watch the water (and the sand), administer first aid, find lost kids, dispose of horseshoe crabs, and do all the other things that are part of what has traditionally been a well-respected, in-demand, social and fun outdoor job.

Recruitment, lack of training and low pay — 3 problems contributing to the current crisis — appear not to be issues here.

Danilo Sierra-Giraldo is in his 8th summer directing the Compo guards. He also oversees much of the staff at Longshore.

He and his staff are employed by the Parks & Recreation Department. Guards earn $17.50 an hour.

A few of the 2023 Compo Beach lifeguard crew (from left): Lauranne De Vos, Sarah Allen, Jake Peterson, Molly Whittle Jack Whittle, director Danilo Sierra-Giraldo.

Part of the reason he’s got a full, dedicated and well-trained staff stems from his other jobs. An avid water polo player in his native Colombia, he is now the boys and girls varsity water polo coach at Staples High School. He is also a pool assistant for phys. ed. classes there — and a lifeguard instructor.

Much of his crew comes from Staples. They start working while in high school — lifeguarding is often their first job — and many return during college.

“It’s fun. It’s convenient. It helps the community. And who doesn’t want to be at the beach in the summer?” Danilo says.

Of course, guards must be in good shape. Danile organizes workouts — long runs, pushups, lunges, swims) — that are both competitive and fun.

Danilo also reintroduced the Lifeguard Olympics. This year’s event was held Sunday morning, at 8 a.m. It was strictly local. Next year, he hopes to invite other towns.

Lifeguards work a full day, from 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. They spend an hour in the chair, then have an hour off. That’s filled with other tasks and drills, plus a break (and — very popular this summer — spikeball).

On break …

The Compo Beach regulars are almost all friendly to the guards, Danilo says. They appreciate all that the young men and women do — including updating the information board at the shack, with tides, the UV index, and an always-interesting Quote of the Day.

Though there are few true emergencies in the usually calm Long Island Sound waters, lifeguards must always be alert.

Anything can happen anywhere. Swimmers can head too far from shore. Kiteboarders head too close to shore. Kids cut their feet on shells and the jetty. 

Lifeguarding is “a great opportunity for kids to get a wider understanding of responsibility,” Danilo says.

“They see how life works. They develop a good work ethic.”

That’s the way it’s always been for Compo Beach lifeguards. Little has changed over the years.

Except now they wear hats and sunscreen.

… and on guard. (Photos/Dan Woog)

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