Team USA Track and Fielders Already World Class Winners with Their Little Brothers

       By: Big Brothers Big Sisters
Posted: 2008-08-02 05:42:38
Ten-year-old Aryn and 9-year-old Clayton will tell you their Big Brothers, both Team USA Track & Fielders, are already winners -- even before they compete for medals in the 2008 Beijing Olympics.

Second-time Olympian 30-year-old Darvis "Doc" Patton is Aryn's Big Brother and Nick Symmonds is Big Brother to Clayton. Patton, of Grand Prairie, Texas, a 2004 Olympic Silver medalist, will represent the U.S. team in the men's 100m and the 4x100m relay team. Symmonds, a 24-year-old Olympic trials champion from Springfield, Oregon, will compete for his first Olympic medal in the 800m in Beijing.

"It gives me chills to think that as these athletes' stars are rising, they've made time in their busy lives to include kids who need Big Brothers," said Jude McKay, Program Director for Big Brothers Big Sisters in Eugene.

Big Brothers Big Sisters recently launched a national Campaign for Men to recruit more mentors for boys. More than 70 percent of the children waiting for a Big Brother are boys, but only three out of every 10 inquiries about volunteering come from men.

For Aryn and Clayton, meeting Patton and Symmonds ended months of anxious waiting. Still while both were excited and impressed to learn their Big Brothers were world-class athletes, that's not what mattered most.

"Nick was very nice to me," Clayton said. "The day we met, we played Guitar Hero(R). He told me jokes. He takes me to my favorite places to eat, plus once we went to this cool pizza place that I had never been to before and it was really good!"

"Having Darvis as a Big Brother is really amazing because I can share things with him, have fun with him, and have someone to make me feel special. I just love having a Big Brother," Aryn said.

Both boys love sports, video games and adventure. Like many boys served by Big Brothers Big Sisters, they also live in single parent homes with their mothers. Both moms say their kids' Big Brothers are making a difference in how their kids are growing up.

Aryn, who has a younger sister and brother, is more at peace, reads more, and has become a more patient older brother, his mom said. "He needed someone to be focused on 'just me,'" she added. Clayton's mother, who is delighted that he and Symmonds share so much in common, said her son has become a better student and is more competitive when he plays basketball.

Despite their busy schedules, the boys' mothers said Patton and Symmonds find time to visit their sons, and as their Olympic training has become more intense, they email, text and call the boys whenever they get a moment.

Some of the Little Brothers' most memorable times since being matched will likely also be some of the Olympian Big Brothers' most unforgettable. Aryn and Clayton watched their Big Brothers compete during the Olympic trials in Lane County, Oregon, when they qualified for the 2008 Beijing Olympics. Aryn saw the events on TV; Clayton watched in person.

"I just knew Nick was going to win every race and he did. I got to watch him race in all three qualifying meets," Clayton said. "After he finished the last race, he took a victory lap. He saw me in the crowd and high fived me in the air! I couldn't believe it!"

"He made it to the Olympics!" Aryn said after watching his Big Brother, Darvis, qualify. "He works so hard; he's a real man. I want to be a good man just like him, a great man, a guy who works hard, not just a guy who sits on the couch all day; a guy who'll go do something, a man like Darvis."
Trackback url: https://press.abc-directory.com/press/3390