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Sports Tourism
Clermont Is on the Fast Track
Communities around Florida are vying for the millions spent by amateur athletes who travel to train and compete. Tiny Clermont -- pop. 23,000 -- has made itself the epicenter of the state's sports tourism industry.
A home run
Though Clermont remains a Mecca for triathletes, women’s softball has emerged in recent years as perhaps the National Training Center’s hottest athletic niche. Dot Richardson, an orthopedic surgeon and two-time Olympic softball gold medalist, took the helm of the center in 2002, believing that Clermont should get a slice of the business that other Florida cities generated by hosting spring training camps for college softball teams from northern states. “They’re in Cocoa. They’re in Clearwater. They’re in Fort Myers. They’re also in Osceola,” says Richardson. “So I thought, why don’t we make sure we build this facility focused on fast-pitch softball, and we can multipurpose use it for Little League overflow, for example.”
» Pay to Play Becky Norris, coach of the Indiana Tech women’s softball program, says she spent $20,000 on travel, lodging and tournament fees for two squads (40 players) she brought to Clermont’s National Training Center in March. Teams also can buy training packages. A $1,000 softball package, for example, provides the team with three one-hour “sports performance training” sessions and use of the center five days a week. Dot Richardson, who provides motivational talks with teams for $300, is an equally big draw: “Our athletes get to meet an Olympic gold medalist. What a motivator,” gushes Norris. Food is also key to the financial success of the softball complex. Sales of “famous angus burgers” and refreshments to players and fans provide the extra revenue needed to keep the center in the black. “That’s where you make most of your money with tournaments — the concession stand,” says Richardson. [Photo: Kelly LaDuke] |
The Human Performance Lab offers an array of sports science testing to help athletes maximize their potential. The maximal oxygen uptake analysis (V02 max test) seen here measures how efficiently one’s body uses oxygen. The test costs $150. |
Leslie Longacre, CEO and executive director of South Lake Hospital, says business from the softball events is contributing to the overall success of the facility. “We knew from the beginning that we had to grow this business to be a financially solvent, independent piece of South Lake Hospital, and we knew it was going to take some time. We are seeing tremendous strides toward our goal of being financial solvent across the board in all areas.”