“We re-created the program to exceed the expectations of the community with great coaches, a professionally structured administration and excellent facilities.”
Steve and I have been close friends and business associates for more than 15 years. My girls call him Uncle Steve, and to his sons I am Uncle Jim. I asked him this week to remind me why he got so involved.
It started three years ago when one of his sons was practicing in what Steve called the unlit drainage basin fields at the Farm Sports Complex just next to the soccer teams who were playing on the bright green fields under bright lights with a permanent concession stand.
When Steve asked another parent why they had the unlit fields in the drainage area, the response was that they were lucky to have a field at all.
Since its inception, the league has never had a home of its own. Year after year, it has been moved from one field to another. One year the league was moved to three different fields in a season. Soccer dominates the city politically, and that was the way it had always been.
Mensinger, a volunteer assistant coach at the time, immediately got on the phone with then-Mayor Allan Mansoor and asked what it would take for the team to get a permanent home.
Mansoor connected him with Recreation Manager Jana Ransom, and they started by looking at aerial views of the city. When they came upon a sorry-looking but underused field next to what is now the Waldorf School, Mensinger knew he had a diamond in the rough. Right next door and still under construction was Estancia High School’s new stadium with its year-round synthetic field.
The big question remained whether or not Pop Warner could use the stadium for their home games. Councilwoman Katrina Foley then set up a meeting with Mensinger and Estancia High School Principal Phil D’Agostino. Steve made his pitch, and Phil welcomed the league with open arms.