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SPORTS WRAP

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Owatonna junior anglers Max Klecker and Liam Lewis pose with some of their catch after winning the state junior championship. The two anglers edged out teammates Quinn Mohs and Mason Ortega for first, and qualified for the 2025 Junior Bass National Championship. Photo from Facebook
Diving into new realms
By
Roy Koenig, Sports Analyst
Roy Koenig, sports wrap, steele county times

There might not be any shipwrecks in southern Minnesota, but Owatonna has an active diving club that trains people to go elsewhere and explore underwater treasures. The club is the largest of its kind in the state.

Don Matejcek helped start the club in 1963 and is still involved.

“In the 60s, 70s, and even early 80s, the lakes around here were great for diving. We did a lot of diving just locally. But then as the years went on the lakes turned green and the vegetation took over,” said Matejcek.

That led to trips to bigger bodies of water. Now the club hosts trips to the Great Lakes as well as points south. They also dive in old iron ore pits in Northern Minnesota, where enthusiasts will sink platforms or objects to dive around. One diver adds plastic skeletons to spice it up.

His grandson Eric continues the tradition.

“They had a pool growing up and we would actually use the equipment while we were younger in the pool. My dad now has a pool, and my kids are doing it in his pool. My son actually just took the class and will do open water here in June,” said Eric Matejcek.

“The main thing in Lake Superior is shipwrecks up and down the North Shore. Some date back to the 1800s. Along the South Shore we go to Bayfield, Wisconsin around the Apostle Islands. There are at least 20 wrecks around there. Lake Michigan – right out of Milwaukee – there are 10-12 wrecks,” said Don Matejcek.

He also travels south.

“The ocean diving is beautiful. The fish and coral and everything. But I still love shipwrecks and the history of it all,” said Don Matejcek.

Eric has done some warm water diving in Aruba, “which was great and fantastic but there’s just something about shipwrecks especially when you can find one that’s pretty intact and you can go inside them.”

Don told the Owatonna Live Coaches Show that sharks aren’t any real concern.

“They don’t bother you. They’re curious. They look at you. They have no reason to mess with you.”

Eric said snapping turtles are the critters to watch out for.

The club has about 70-80 families across the region as members. Don says 12 or 13 years old is a good age to start. They recently taught a doctor in his 70s the skills of scuba diving as a hobby for his retirement. Family membership is a mere $30 annually. Training dives are held at the Owatonna Middle School. The club owns a building to store equipment and for classroom space.

Eric says they are exposing the sport to a new generation.

“We also provide a little class for the middle school too. That’s been two years of doing actual diving in the water with them. Three years total,” said Eric Matejcek.

His dad started the class. Eric works with students who can put on the gear and try in out underwater.

“So, you’ve got seventh and eighth graders doing it and kind of getting interested in it. And so hopefully we can start broadening not just the kids, but families in general. That’s really what this is: a family thing.”

His own son is excited for the chance to go scuba diving with his great-grandfather (Don) this summer.

The club started the New Year’s Eve diving tradition in Owatonna years ago while Don attended a holiday party.

“Some of the guys said, ‘Why don’t you go jump in a lake?’ So, the next morning we went out to Kohlmier and cut a hole and went ice diving.”

They provided support and safety services for the Special Olympics Polar Plunge when it was hosted here.

 

Fishing champs

The Owatonna High School fishing team took three of the top four positions in the junior state championships. The team of Liam Lewis and Max Klecker earned the title with 13.34 pounds. Quinn Mohs and Mason Ortega finished less than an ounce behind. Kason Wiste and Marlo Marks finished fourth.

Lewis and Klecker qualified for the 2025 Junior Bass National Championship with their win.

Owatonna had five teams in the varsity Tournament of Champions on Big Stone. Quinn Gare and Tanner Milewski, Caleb and Braxton Ringhofer, Marcus and Graham Wiste, Ethan Ward and Morgan Hansen, and Finn Buckley and Brian Andresen competed. A season-ending team tournament is scheduled for Aug. 18 on Pelican Lake in Orr, Minnesota.

 

Eat and run

After a week of chowing down at the Steele County Free Fair you may want to burn a few calories at the second annual Chatty 5K. The event is set for Saturday, Aug. 17 at the new Owatonna High School and benefits the cross-country programs. The run is named in honor of Dave Chatelaine who served as Owatonna’s cross-country head coach for 35 years.

Check-in starts at 7 a.m. on Saturday. A free kids’ fun run is at 8 a.m. The 5K begins at 8:15 a.m. After the run, I’ll be taking another trip to the fairgrounds for more food.

The 10th annual Daikin Dash for Cancer is on Saturday, Sept. 21. The 5K event begins and ends at Fair Square Park and is held in conjunction with the Steele County Relay for Life.

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