General Competition Schedule Released for 2023 National Senior Games in Pittsburgh
Softball Tournament to be held in Columbus, Ohio
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Sept. 15, 2022
CLEARWATER, FL- The National Senior Games Association (NSGA) has released the General Competition Schedule for the 21 sports that will make up the 2023 National Senior Games presented by Humana. The massive multi-sport event for adults ages 50+, will host 20 of the 21 events in the Pittsburgh region, July 7-18, 2023. View the schedule here.
NSGA and the Pittsburgh Local Organizing Committee also announced they will partner with the city of Columbus, Ohio, to host the National Senior Games’ Softball competition at Lou Berliner Sports Park in Columbus from May 3-8, 2023.
Pittsburgh’s David L. Lawrence Convention Center, located downtown, will serve as the main hub of activity in July. This flexible, multi-use venue is located near event-specific hotels and in close proximity to other competition venues. Athletes and the public will gather for several sports and to relax in The Village expo area in the convention center.
Medal sports that will be contested in Pittsburgh in July include: Archery, Badminton, Basketball, Bowling, Cornhole, Cycling, Golf, Pickleball, Power Walk, Race Walk, Racquetball, Road Race, Shuffleboard, Soccer, Swimming, Table Tennis, Tennis, Track & Field, Triathlon and Volleyball.
NSGA CEO Marc T. Riker said the decision to move Softball came from several factors. “The National Senior Games hosts one of the largest senior softball tournaments in the country,” he explained. “When Columbus presented the opportunity to host our event at the nation’s largest ball diamond complex, and within such a short proximity, we had to consider the option. Fortunately, the Pittsburgh LOC fully agreed the experience at Lou Berliner Sports Park would be the best for the softball participants. In return, our Pittsburgh host can redistribute focus and resources on the 20 sports headlining the National Senior Games in Pittsburgh in July.”
“Softball is a unique situation within the National Senior Games. It’s the largest single-sport competition hosted during the Games – large enough to spin-off into its own event,” SportsPITTSBURGH Executive Director Jennifer Hawkins said. “Our reality is that mountain ranges and rivers surround Pittsburgh and the surrounding region. While they make for a beautiful topography and challenging endurance races, they limit our abilities to consolidate uniform, competition-quality ball fields.”
While Pittsburgh successfully hosted the Softball competition in 2005, the last time the National Senior Games were held in the City of Champions, participation growth has necessitated the move in city and venue for the 2023 Games. “Our goal is to provide iconic Pittsburgh sports experiences to our clients, their athletes, staff and fans,” Hawkins noted. “The Pittsburgh Local Organizing Committee and NSGA Staff agreed that the move to Columbus was the best way to provide that experience. We have a long history of competing against and partnering with Columbus and know they will be great Softball hosts. Pittsburgh will exceed expectations and provide iconic experience to all the attendees in July. We look forward to crowning many deserving champions in the City of Champions.”
Riker noted the 2022 National Senior Games in Greater Fort Lauderdale was the second largest in its 35-year history with more than 12,000 athletes and generating an estimated $30 million in economic impact. “The 2019 Games were our largest, so the event is clearly growing,” he said. “We had a great experience in Pittsburgh in 2005 and are excited to return in 2023 to enjoy all of the great offerings to be found in the City of Champions.”
Competition is for athletes 50 and older and organized in five-year age divisions with medals awarded for each level. Traditionally held on odd-numbered years, the National Senior Games also requires athletes to first qualify at one of 52 Member Games spread across the country in the previous year.
Following this General Competition Schedule, NSGA will release an Age Specific Schedule later this year. Specific details are added to each of the Sport pages when information becomes available. Visit NSGA.com to learn more.
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About NSGA
The National Senior Games Association (NSGA) is a nonprofit Florida corporation that promotes health and well-being for adults 50 and over through education, fitness and sport. NSGA is an Affiliate Organization Council Member of the United States Olympic Paralympic Committee and governs the biennial National Senior Games, the largest qualified multi-sport event in the world. The Association is comprised of 52 independent Member Games that conduct qualifying competition events. For more information, please visit NSGA.com.
About SportsPITTSBURGH
SportsPITTSBURGH, a division of VisitPITTSBURGH, attracts and hosts a wide variety of sporting events
that directly impact the Pittsburgh region’s economy while also creating Iconic Sports Experiences
for all those involved with the event. To learn more, visit sportspittsburgh.com.
NSGA Media Contact:
Del Moon
678.549.4444
- Published in News and Events, Press Releases
An Olympian “Pinging” it Forward – September 2022 Athlete of the Month
Lily Yip, 59
Dunellen, New Jersey
There was a buzz in the hall when Lily Yip stepped up to play table tennis at the 2022 National Senior Games presented by Humana. After all, it’s not every day you can watch an Olympian play.
The Chinese born ace always excelled at table tennis and started playing professionally in China at age 12. Lily came to the U.S. in 1987 and became a citizen in 1991. What followed was a Hall of Fame career as player, coach and tournament promoter with high points of competing on Team USA in the 1992 and 1996 Olympic Games, winning four medals in three Pan American Games, and earning many U.S. National Table Tennis championships.
Two of those doubles wins were special because she was partnered with her son and her daughter for them. Lily is proud to have coached them to each become national champions before they were 17 years old. “Judy has since taken over managing my Lily Yip Table Tennis Center in New Jersey and I still coach with her,” she says. “Adam became a financial manager on Wall Street for a few years and then opened a ping pong club in Hoboken. You don’t make a lot of money with that, so he’s doing it for the passion. They are both happy and the exercise is good for them. That’s what counts.”
Helping others to learn and enjoy a game and gaining fitness is what motivates Lily now. “I kinda retired from playing since working with the U.S. Olympic team in 2016 so I could do more coaching. Then when I got past 50 my students started telling me I should go to Senior Games. My senior players wanted to go compete and urged me to come along.
“I had to help my students because it would motivate them to do better, and they might not go if I didn’t,” she recalls. Six of Lily’s students from New Jersey came to compete at The Games, and Lily was also able to visit her mother-in-law who lives in Boynton Beach near Fort Lauderdale.
Lily knew she would not meet as much competition as in the major internationals and USA Table Tennis events, but she was greatly impressed by the spirit and love of the game she witnessed. “Most of the athletes are amateurs and they don’t care as much about winning or losing. Everyone wants to win of course, but they are more relaxed and having fun.”
“For me, I’m getting older so it’s different,” she continues. “When you’re young you go to tournaments and really want to win something. Now for me it’s about health. It’s a good goal for me to continue to play a sport I have loved since I was a kid. And winning does make you feel good, right?”
The experience was so positive Lily is planning to return with her crew for the National Senior Games in Pittsburgh next summer. “It’s an inspiration for my students to see me go,” she adds. “I have been promoting the sport for the past 30 years. 99% of my friends play table tennis. It was good to go to see old friends and make new friends. When people come up to say hello it just makes you feel good.”
“Even though I’m getting older, my heart still feels young,” she concludes. “The 60-64 group better look out!”
- Published in Athlete of the Month

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Lily knew she would not meet as much competition as in the major internationals and USA Table Tennis events, but she was greatly impressed by the spirit and love of the game she witnessed. “Most of the athletes are amateurs and they don’t care as much about winning or losing. Everyone wants to win of course, but they are more relaxed and having fun.”
SENIOR HEALTH & WELL-BEING



