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Windsor St. Clair a jewel on the local court

Shannon Kennedy was a record breaking player at St. Clair College scoring 1,401 points between 2013-2018. She is now a head coach for the Windsor St. Clair Juel team and is helping young players score a post-secondary basketball opportunity. "I love it," Kennedy told Powerplay sports following a league game at the University of Windsor Saturday. "They do really take it seriously (the players), take losses like this personally."



Kennedy's team lost to a team from London in the opener of their three-game weekend in Windsor. The team travels out of town but once a year gets to host a weekend of games at the University of Windsor.


"It's a privilidge to play in a gym like this and in front of our friends and family is always a cool thing." said Kennedy who is joined on the bench by former Lancer Andrea Kiss.



Windsor St. Clair finished the weekend 2-1 thanks to wins over Brampton and Niagara and now have a 10-8 record overall. The team is comprised of primarily grade 11-12 high school students with a few grade 10's sprinkled in.


Yasmine Kadri is a standout from Holy Names playing in her first season of travel with the Juel team and has enjoyed squaring up against top level players from across the province. "London, I notice five girls from different schools we played at Holy Names but now they're all on one team." said Kadri who scored the game winning bucket during last year WECSSAA final against St. Joe's.



She is glad Kennedy reached out to her to try out as Kadri prepares for her final high school year this fall. "All these great defenders have challenged me and I think I've gotten better.


Kennedy says Juel was in its infancy when she played in high school. With one of her four seniors committed to playing post secondary, her hope is to give young players the same opportunities to succeed as she had going through her basketball career.


"We have one that signed for track. It's more than basketball. If we can get you to the next level helping you academically, we try to teach them more lessons off the court then that translate on the court. At the end of the day it is just a game and it's important to learn other lessons along with it."

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Powerplay Windsor was born during a trip to Italy in the summer of 2018. Walking through a charming pedestrian underpass sparked a memory—being in the tunnel at the University of Michigan early in my career. That moment brought to mind the upcoming Windsor Lancers football camp and the many fall sports that would go uncovered due to cuts in legacy media sports coverage.

Recognizing this gap, and with the support of my loving wife and family, I launched Powerplay Sports as a passion project.

Founded locally and operated locally, we blend traditional sports reporting with modern digital storytelling.

From high school athletics and post secondary programs to junior hockey and grassroots clubs, we shine the spotlight on the people who make our sports community vibrant.

Our video channel brings you highlights, interviews and behind the scenes access. We are courtside, rinkside and on the field capturing moments that matter. See you soon.

"We celebrate all of the athletes within Windsor-Essex and their achievements reflected on Powerplay Sports." 

John Fairley, St. Clair College

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"Another great resource for local sports produced by a person that has been invested in local sports for decades."

Frank Graziano

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