Westside Team Florida wins volleyball gold in 2026 Special Olympics USA Games

Westside Team Florida unified volleyball team won gold for the second consecutive year. At the core of the team’s talent is the bonds that began 12 years ago at Lakeview Middle.


Westside Team Florida unified volleyball team celebrated winning gold at the Special Olympics USA Games for the second consecutive time.
Westside Team Florida unified volleyball team celebrated winning gold at the Special Olympics USA Games for the second consecutive time.
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When Jacob Craft joined the unified volleyball team from West Orange as a sixth-grader, he had no idea the teammates surrounding him still would be by his side 12 years later. 

Craft, now 23, and many of the same players who met in middle school have grown into adults together. They have graduated high school, began careers and even taken on fatherhood.

But every year when the next season began, they have returned to the volleyball court because of their love for the sport and for one another. 

When they received the invitation last year to represent Team Florida at the 2026 Special Olympics USA Games, they agreed to commit an entire year — rather than the usual three-month commitment — to the sport. 

Every Sunday, they gathered in Hamlin Middle School’s gym for practice in preparation for their second Special Olympics appearance. 

That dedication paid off when Westside Team Florida captured the gold medal at the 2026 Special Olympics USA Games in Minnesota Thursday, June 25 — four years after winning the title at the 2022 games in Orlando. 

NERVE-WRACKING FINISH 

Being invited to compete in the 2026 Special Olympics turned Westside Team Florida’s head coach Wilma Wright’s eight-year dream of traveling as a team into a reality. 

“We did the trips where you go to Disney and you play at ESPN — and all that was awesome,” she said. “But I really wanted them to be able to showcase their talent on a big stage, which I knew they would do well. I just wanted them to be able to fly somewhere and play.” 

Her dream came true when the team boarded the plane to Minnesota and Craft boarded his first flight. He was the only one who hadn’t flown before. He said he wasn’t nervous and simply watched a movie to pass the time. 

Outside of the travel, this year’s Special Olympics showed the players just how much fight they have within them. 

The team first had to get through pool play before they were seeded for the final day of the Special Olympics and encountered its first hurdle there: Team Michigan. 

Before playing Team Michigan Wednesday, June 24, Team Florida held a 6-0 record. 

They were unstoppable. 

Wright said her team’s athletes — the players with intellectual disabilities — have exceptional skill. The partners, the players without intellectual disabilities, compete at a comparable level, perfectly reflecting the intended design of unified sports. The team also had the best hair of the Special Olympics, Team Michigan told them. 

But Team Michigan had more talented partners. 

The first set was a true nail-biter. Traditional indoor volleyball games are played to 25 points — Team Florida won 36-34 over Team Michigan. Craft said it was the highest scoring game he’d ever played. The team then dropped the second before winning the third and the next game later that day to take the highest seed in pool play. 

In the championship game, Team Florida once again met with Team Michigan. 

Nerves took over, and Florida dropped the first set. Wright remembered looking at the court and seeing players physically shaking from the nerves. But rather than continuing to panic, they trusted in the bonds they had crafted over 12 years. 

“The main thing was just calm down and play your game,” Wright said. “Our team passes, sets and spikes. They’re really controlled so don’t get nervous. Just play your game.” 

Trusting in one another carried them to their second Special Olympics gold medal. When Team Michigan failed to hit the ball over the net and the final point dropped, the celebration erupted instantly. 

“They just really lost their minds,” Wright said. “It was so close the entire time and then we finally got the last point. I was like, ‘That just happened.’” 

UNIFIED THROUGH LAKEVIEW

The two-time Special Olympics gold medalists’ journey began out of Lakeview Middle School, where Wright taught physical education and coached volleyball. After she learned about Special Olympics unified volleyball, she recruited students from her volleyball team as partners to play alongside Special Olympics athletes. 

Craft attended Ocoee Middle School but discovered the team through the Special Olympics community after meeting Wright. 

Nine of those original 12 players still are together. 

“It’s amazing they stayed together all the way through high school,” Wright said. “We’ve had a lot of different kids over the years, and high school kind of pulls you one way or the other. But those guys have stuck it out. They’re just such good friends and they love the sport of volleyball.” 

Over time the bond has strengthened. 

Craft said the biggest difference between the Olympic team now compared to in middle school is maturity. 

“We’re calmer,” he said. “Maybe we were more rambunctious back in middle school.” 

He’s played eight Special Olympics sports, including stand-up paddle-boarding, golf and flag football, but volleyball has had his heart the longest. It’s a sport he never wants to give up because of the players within it, which is why he agreed to the year of volleyball practices on top of working full time and other sports. 

The team is so united that setter Joshua Simard, who has a 6-month-old, gave up his first Father’s Day with his family to be with his team family. 

“That’s the dedication,” Wright said.

Being able to travel to Minnesota for this year’s Special Olympics united them even more. Some of their best moments were playing Uno, which Timothy Bracht won by far, seeing the Mall of America together, sharing team breakfasts every morning and enjoying one another’s company while they missed their families on the 10-day trip. 

For Wright, who retired from teaching six years ago but continues coaching the unified volleyball team, the relationships are what matters the most. 

“I’ve known them since they were little,” she said. “I always call them my sons.” 

Looking at side-by-side photographs from middle school and the recent Special Olympics USA Games, it’s shocking to see how far everyone has come and there aren’t any plans to let up. 

They are looking to compete in USA Volleyball tournaments next year for Memorial Day weekend and continue to play in a tournament each year to eventually earn another bid as Team Florida in the Special Olympics USA Games for 2030.

 

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Megan Bruinsma

Megan Bruinsma is a staff writer for the Observer. She recently graduated from Florida Atlantic University and discovered her passion for journalism there. In her free time, she loves watching sports, exploring outdoors and baking.

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