Jim Tressel visits local schools, touting fitness challenge

At right, Lt. Gov. Jim Tressel talks to Crestview Elementary School third and fourth graders about their guidance counselor Stephanie Demeter’s perfect balance as she stands on one leg during Friday morning’s Team Tressel Fitness Challenge assembly. (Photo by Stephanie Ujhelyi)
- At right, Lt. Gov. Jim Tressel talks to Crestview Elementary School third and fourth graders about their guidance counselor Stephanie Demeter’s perfect balance as she stands on one leg during Friday morning’s Team Tressel Fitness Challenge assembly. (Photo by Stephanie Ujhelyi)
- Volunteers show off their balance skills to Crestview Elementary School’s third- and fourth-grade students Friday morning during a visit by Lt. Gov. Jim Tressel, at right, to discuss his Team Tressel Fitness Challenge. (Photo by Stephanie Ujhelyi)
- Lt. Gov. Jim Tressel poses for a quick photo with State Rep. Monica Robb Blasdel and Monique Cox-Moore, who is the Northeast Ohio Regional Liaison for the Ohio governor’s office. Tressel was visiting Crestview Elementary School Friday morning to share information about the state’s Team Tressel Fitness Challenge. (Photo by Stephanie Ujhelyi)
- From left, State Rep. Monica Robb Blasdel, Crestview Elementary School fourth-grade student Titus Griffith and Lt. Gov. Jim Tressel show off some stretching techniques Friday morning during a Team Tressel Fitness Challenge assembly. (Photo by Stephanie Ujhelyi)
- Lt. Gov. Jim Tressel addresses third- and fourth-grade students at Crestview Elementary School Friday morning about the state’s Team Tressel Fitness Challenge program. (Photo by Stephanie Ujhelyi)
Tressel, who had coached at Youngstown State University and then The Ohio State University, was more than up for the task.
On Friday, he stopped by both Crestview Elementary School and Columbiana Middle School to advance the Team Tressel Fitness Challenge.
Per the state’s website, the Team Tressel Fitness Challenge is more than a school-based activity. “The challenge helps students build lifelong habits around fitness, healthy eating, and sleep and lays the foundation for a brighter future by improving students physical and mental health.”
During Friday morning’s assembly in the Crestview Elementary School gymnasium, Tressel explained how the student-led effort is designed to build self-discipline and confidence.

Volunteers show off their balance skills to Crestview Elementary School’s third- and fourth-grade students Friday morning during a visit by Lt. Gov. Jim Tressel, at right, to discuss his Team Tressel Fitness Challenge. (Photo by Stephanie Ujhelyi)
Activities are flexible and wide-ranging, working for every ability level.
Targeting third through eighth grade, nearly 180 third and fourth graders attended the presentation, which included their classmates, teachers and even community members performing the exercises.
Throughout the 90-minute presentation, Tressel encouraged students to not only get moving, whether it was sledding, having a family dance party or just doing simple stretches; building healthy sleep habits; practicing healthy eating as a family; and making quiet time a priority.
State Rep. Monica Robb Blasdel, herself a Crestview graduate and parents of two daughters who attend Crestview, too, was on hand as one of Tressel’s adult “pace cars,” as he dubbed his volunteers.
The program was introduced with a brief video that chronicled his history in coaching, drawing oohs and ahs from the appreciative audience.

Lt. Gov. Jim Tressel poses for a quick photo with State Rep. Monica Robb Blasdel and Monique Cox-Moore, who is the Northeast Ohio Regional Liaison for the Ohio governor’s office. Tressel was visiting Crestview Elementary School Friday morning to share information about the state’s Team Tressel Fitness Challenge. (Photo by Stephanie Ujhelyi)
The Team Tressel Fitness Challenge also has a YouTube channel, where aspiring junior fitness buffs can tune into demonstrations of the different exercises shown in the challenge’s book.
Student volunteers led demonstrations on jumping jacks, running in place, push-ups, how to do a plank and stretching.
The goal is to get your heart pumping, Tressel explained.
There also was activities that could be completed with people living with disabilities.
Tressel was most proud that the program also includes activities that allow disabled individuals to get active.

From left, State Rep. Monica Robb Blasdel, Crestview Elementary School fourth-grade student Titus Griffith and Lt. Gov. Jim Tressel show off some stretching techniques Friday morning during a Team Tressel Fitness Challenge assembly. (Photo by Stephanie Ujhelyi)
You choose what you want to do and meet those goals, he explained, urging kids to get their families involved too.
It was also a reunion of sorts with Casey Bogert, Crestview’s athletic director who had played tight end on Tressel’s championship team at Youngstown State University in the late 1990s.
Bogert was called upon to exhibit his best balance.
The visit was broadcast live on the program’s YouTube channel, where participants also could see demonstrations of some of the activities online.
Tressel estimated that he had visited 56 schools so far through the state of Ohio as part of the Team Tressel Fitness Challenge.

Lt. Gov. Jim Tressel addresses third- and fourth-grade students at Crestview Elementary School Friday morning about the state’s Team Tressel Fitness Challenge program. (Photo by Stephanie Ujhelyi)
He urged students to try and perfect that Fitness Focus Challenge, which none of the schools had mastered. After many attempts, they finally were successful, potentially creating an all-time record for focus per Tressel.
Next up was Columbiana Middle School, where Team Tressel presented the fitness challenge to grades five through eight.
With a packed day of visits to Columbiana County, Tressel also had planned to visit East Palestine High School, where he would showcase the district’s successful workforce development program and local partnership with HSH Home Builders. However, the planned visit to the high school’s building trades was postponed and will be scheduled to another date.









