During its five-year run, the skating contest raised more than $33,000 for local and national charities.
By Donald Wittkowski
Sunday would have been Brian Deutsch’s 38th
Michael Lamantia, the tournament organizer, said it has become too difficult for him to continue the East Coast event while he lives in California.
Deutsch, who used to skate with Lamantia in Sea Isle when they were growing up, died in 2013 from an opioid overdose after a long battle with drug addiction. Lamantia and other friends decided at Deutsch’s funeral that the best way to memorialize him was to hold a skating tournament benefiting a number of charities.
In five years, the nonprofit tournament has raised more than $33,000 for charities such as St. Jude’s Children’s Research Hospital and Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia. It has also benefited programs to fight drug abuse and homelessness, Lamantia said.
Locally, the tournament has benefited the Sea Isle City recreation department, the Polar Bear Walk-Run for Autism and Peyton’s Promise, a charity that raises money to help children born with a breathing disorder known as Congenital Diaphragmatic Hernia, or CDH, Lamantia added.
During its five-year run, the skating contest raised more than $33,000 for local and national charities.