A Classic Recipe for Success
February 2025 Team of the Month
By Del Moon, NSGA Storyteller

Left to right: Regina Trimboli, Hilda Reedom, Clare O’Neill, Lori Powers, June Walton, Jody Rajcula, Karen Smith and Laurie Bliss. Photo courtesy Regina Trimboli.
Legendary UCLA Men’s Basketball Coach John Wooden once famously said, “If you want to watch pure basketball, watch the women play.” If you want to watch women play Basketball in the National Senior Games, look no further than the Connecticut Classics 2.
Team sports present special challenges for groups to be consistently competitive in the National Senior Games. Teams often need to attract players from different states to fill a roster. People come and go due to injury or changing age divisions. And, perhaps most importantly, there has to be passion for the game and a strong team leader to hold it all together.
The Connecticut Classics 2 team found the right elements to not only win, but also grow and stay closely knitted since 2012. Also known as “Big Red,” the Classics have an incredible record of 65 gold medals and one silver, including five National Senior Games titles. At the 2023 National Senior Games presented by Humana, the Classics dominated the 65+ division with a 7-0 tournament record and an average margin of victory of 29 points. In 2024, the team was inducted into the Connecticut Women’s Basketball Hall of Fame.
The roster is extraordinary with many players touting college and professional experience. Four ladies played in the Women’s Basketball League (WBL), the first U.S. women’s professional basketball league that existed in the late ‘70s, including Lynn Chiavaro, Karen Aulenbacher Heintz, Jody Rajcula and Karen Smith. Heintz helped her Houston Angels team win a championship in 1977, and Smith was on the 1980 New York Stars title champions. Another Classic, June Walton, played professionally in England and Venezuela. That’s some firepower.
“We started with a core of five players in 2012, and the additions have been a unanimous team decision to bring in the right player at the right time. Often it was a player inviting a friend they knew or played with before,” Team Captain Jean Trimboli says. “I kinda found senior basketball on my own. After following the kids through college, I felt that desire to play again.”
Talent, Chemistry and Leadership
Jean is the glue that keeps things organized for this high-powered group of athletes. “I love organizing,” she says. “I had five kids, and I once single-handedly ran a basketball program that had 700 kids in it, so it was second nature to take on the reins.”

Lori Powers takes a shot during the 2023 National Senior Games presented by Humana in Pittsburgh, PA.
In addition to managing this team of several elite players, there are also no less than eight who have coached basketball – five at the college level. Yet, Jean says there are no issues with egos, a common source of division for a team.
The team talks in unison about how they see themselves. “We’ve all been trailblazers for our whole life fighting for Title IX. We were sophomores when it came about,” says Karen Smith. “At first we had uniforms that were T-shirts with athletic tape for the numbers. It’s come a long way since then.”
Jean gives two main reasons why the team has been stable for so long. “Well, bottom line, the best part is winning,” she says with a laugh. “But there’s more to it. Our team is like an extended family of sisters that have the same passion and the competitiveness to keep going as long as we can.”
Jody Rajcula is thankful after a long career as a coach and player to continue to enjoy the team dynamic. “Our bodies are allowing us to do this, and we try to take care of ourselves,” she notes. “The other thing is there’s something about team sport, that it builds camaraderie and allows us to be successful in life because you have to work together to achieve a higher goal. It’s all the things that we like to instill in young people as coaches and now we’re able to participate again at a different level.”
Pioneers Cheer the Growth of Women’s Sports
The ladies emphasize that there was always talent but not many paths for females to advance during their developmental years, and all are excited to see the rise in women’s basketball and sports in general. “When I played at Montclair State my teammate Carol Blazejowski scored 40 points every game,” Karen Smith observes. “So when they talk about Caitlin Clark getting 40 points here and there I smile. I’m happy there’s a lot more opportunities for young girls to compete and improve their skills, and when that happens the entire product improves all the way up.”

The Classics are proud of the roles they have played and to see that women’s basketball has retained its style. “The game has changed a little bit, but not all that much,” Karen Aulenbacher Heintz opines. “I think they still share the ball for the most part. I think that’s been consistent about the women’s game.”
John Wooden would be pleased.
- Published in Athlete of the Month
WesleyLife Joins as Sponsor for 2025 National Senior Games Presented by Humana
The National Senior Games Association is proud to welcome WesleyLife as a sponsor of the 2025 National Senior Games presented by Humana.
WesleyLife is the Midwest’s largest and most comprehensive non-profit provider of health and well-being services for older adults since 1947. They believe everyone should have the opportunity to live a life of continued growth, experience, engagement, and meaning — and to pursue joy, regardless of physical, social, or economic circumstances.
WesleyLife’s comprehensive network of communities for healthy living and broad array of home services is designed to fulfill the wishes of older adults to remain independent and active wherever they choose to live. WesleyLife is excited to welcome you to Des Moines! To learn more, visit www.wesleylife.org.
- Published in News and Events
Celebrating the Heart and Soul of The Games
By Andrew Walker, MPH; NSGA Director of Health & Well-Being

Athletes represent their state during the Celebration of Athletes at the 2023 National Senior Games presented by Humana.
Athletes, volunteers, vendors and officials were the heart of the many awe-inspiring moments in Senior Games sports nationwide this past year. Having witnessed the amazing display of talent at Stade de France in Paris during the athletics competition at the last Olympic Games, it is fair to say that the National Senior Games are second only to the Olympics in breathtaking moments.
Those of us who pay close attention to Senior Games athletes are always inspired by their performances. Athletes often underestimate their real impact on others, thinking their performances are commonplace. However, there is nothing ordinary about the impact of Senior Games sports.
How Participants Contribute a Positive Impact
- Social capital is generated from volunteerism, friendly competition, storytelling and socialization. Senior Games build community, which is crucial as recent research shows that social isolation is as harmful to our health as smoking.
- Significant economic impact is generated from thousands of individuals visiting new cities to participate in the Senior Games.
- Like the Olympics, the Senior Games leverages the idea of sports for the better good, showcasing the vitality and wonder of aging well while challenging ageism and age bias.
The National Senior Games Association deeply appreciates what volunteers, officials and spectators bring. Senior athletes are the reason the Games exist, making your support essential to the sustainability of the Senior Games movement.
We’ll celebrate you and active aging through sports this year during National Senior Games Week, March 17 – 23. We invite you to join us on March 19 at 7:30 p.m. ET for a virtual pep rally celebrating the value of Senior Games, your participation and how we can help more people experience the joy of The Games. A registration link for the event, All Together Now: Share the Senior Games Movement, will be available later this month!
With your support of National Senior Games Week, we can collectively galvanize the Senior Games movement so that it is no longer the best-kept secret. How? By encouraging others to participate in an Open Sport or as a volunteer at the 2025 National Senior Games presented by Humana, or get involved at the state level. You can find help with engaging in an Open Sport in the article, “Keys to Choosing an Open Sport for the 2025 Games.”
- Published in Health & Well-Being
