Beach Bash Is Back: Fundraiser for Wilmette park improvements set for Saturday, Aug. 20

The Ouilmette Foundation will hit the beach at 6 p.m. this Saturday, Aug. 20, for its third annual summer fundraiser in the Gillson Beach parking lot.

Organizers Sue Averill and Cathy Pratt look forward to an evening of food, drinks and live music with local vendors, area bands and the big bonfire on the beach, where a lifeguard chair in need of replacement will burn for about three hours.

The bash is held in cooperation with the Wilmette Park District and money raised benefits the district’s scholarship fund, which enables lower-income families and individuals to participate in park district programming. Funds also support special projects, such as a planned restoration of the Wallace Bowl in Gillson Park.

Pratt is particularly excited about the Wallace Bowl improvements, because restoring the amphitheater was the foundation’s first project in 1973.

“The Wallace Bowl has held up very well, so not a lot needs to be done,” Averill said. “But anything like that needs some work after 40 years.”

According to Lindsay Thomas, the park district’s manager of operations, the inaugural Beach Bash in June 2019 was a celebration of the new beach house on Gillson Beach.

“The foundation stepped in to help,” with the event, which had the same format as this Saturday’s party, she said.

After a pause for COVID in 2020, the partners brought the Beach Bash back in September 2021.

For this year’s event, Wilmette band Antler Chandelier will lead off on a stage set up at the south end of the beach parking lot. Popular cover band Maggie Speaks will follow.

Among the food and drink vendors will be a truck from La Cocinita, run by a Wilmette family that also has a store in Evanston. Chicago Lunch Box, the Fat Shallot and Little Louie’s round out the returning vendors, and Chills Italian Ice is a new addition. Attendees can purchase beers from local breweries Double Clutch, Fortnight and Cruz Blanca. A separate tent will serve wine and mixed drinks.

As a new feature, the foundation is partnering with Go Green Wilmette to make the Beach Bash a low-waste event. Pratt said that the groups worked with the food vendors to offer food in compostable containers. The event will also use compostable cups and straws.

Go Green Wilmette board member Nicole Boomgarten said that Go Green Wilmette will pay for the difference in cost between plastic and compostable products such as cups, rice bowls, lids and utensils.

Two waste stations staffed by Go Green Wilmette volunteers and employees of composting company Collective Resource will be present. Volunteers will stack cups and food containers to reduce the volume of material collected and will help attendees put their trash in the right receptacle. Collective Resource will then compost the food and container waste.

Pratt noted that while reducing waste is not easy, the foundation fully supports the effort and plans to continue to keep the Beach Bash low waste in future years.

Tickets to the bash are $60 and are available at the gate or they can be purchased ahead of time at the event webpage. There is no rain date.

Pratt and Averill wish to thank the many local businesses and families that sponsor the Beach Bash. They encourage attendees to walk, cycle or Uber to the event, as the Gillson parking lot will be taken up for the party.


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Lyon a Wildcat — again. Local hoops star returns to alma mater as assistant coach

During her time on the basketball court, Maggie Lyon had great timing, whether it was the release of her highly regarded jump shot or her first step into a dribble drive.

That attribute has continued into Lyon’s post-playing career.

After Northwestern University’s associate head coach, Katie Popovec, was hired to lead Bradley University’s program, Lyon joined the Wildcats staff just a year into her coaching career.

“It has happened super fast, which I don’t take for granted,” said Lyon, a Wilmette native. “It was a fast trajectory. I wanted to eventually return to Northwestern in some capacity. I really, really wanted to work with coach (Joe) McKeown. It was great, great timing.”

Maggie Lyon played for New Trier High School from 2008-2012.

Lyon was dominant on the court during her years with New Trier High School (2008-2012). A 6-foot-1 combo guard, she was named All-State three times and led the Trevians to an elite eight appearance as a junior. After her senior season, she was named a McDonald’s All-American nominee.

A lifelong Wildcat fan, Lyon chose Northwestern from a slew of Division-I collegiate offers. She was a multi-year All-Big Ten player and captain for the Wildcats (2012-2016). Lyon got a shot in the WNBA and then played a year of professional basketball in Spain before beginning a career in sports marketing.

While working for Priority Sports, Lyon coached with her former AAU team, Midwest Elite, as well as players in the New Trier pipeline.

It was then that Lyon caught the coaching bug.

“I was working full time and doing coaching. I loved the coaching and also liked working for Priority, but it wasn’t something I wanted to do forever,” Lyon said.

Lyon spoke with her former coach, McKeown, about her desire to make a career of coaching and after telling her she was crazy, he helped her with his advice and connections, she said.

Lyon secured an entry-level spot as video coordinator with Loyola University at Chicago women’s basketball. Within three weeks, she was again the beneficiary of good timing, ascending to assistant coach after another coach moved on.

The Ramblers went 18-12 with Lyon on staff, and her love for coaching only grew.

“I love being gable to connect with athletes, to be on the basketball side of it but also on the relationship side of it,” she said. “I love being a part of a team and loved being a leader on the teams I played on. I can still be relatable to the kids but also affect them in a positive way with so many things that I learned as an athlete that my coaches instilled in me and taught to me.”

Maggie Lyon is Northwestern’s all-time leader in three-point field goals and seventh all-time in scoring.

When Popovec moved on this past offseason, Lyon was stoked to get a chance to join the Wildcats.

A multi-sport child in Wilmette, Lyon grew up going to Northwestern basketball, softball and soccer camps. She also used to ride her bike to football games at Wildcats’ Ryan Field in Evanston, and she would probably beat you in 2000s Wildcat football trivia.

And, of course, she is an alumna who took the court more than 100 times representing the purple and white and holds the program’s three-point record (238).

“Something I loved so much as a student-athlete is it feels like everybody goes about things the right way,” she said. ” … You can succeed in sports and academics at a high level. It felt really special that you don’t have to sacrifice one for the other.”

Lyon added, “I am someone who likes to have roots, and now to be back here coaching, it almost feels like it was meant to be.”

The Wildcats finished last season 17-12 with an 8-8 mark in the Big Ten, finishing the campaign with a second-round loss to Iowa in the Big Ten tournament. A year prior, 2020-21, Northwestern earned an NCAA Tournament berth and in 2019-20, the Wildcats were co-Big Ten champions.

Lyon likes what the Wildcats will bring to the floor starting in November with multiple seniors with championship experience and an “awesome freshman class.” She thinks she will add an analytical perspective to the program and push the Wildcats to reach their potential.

How far does Lyon want to take coaching? All the way, of course, but she’s not thinking of that yet. She will wait for the right time.

“Anyone who coaches at some point wants to be a head coach,” she said. “That’s my answer, but right now, it’s early, and I just want to be a really, really good assistant coach. Never say never to being a head coach but right now I’m focused on how to be a better assistant.”