Sanford High School welcomed student-athletes and athletic administrators from the Southern Maine Activities Association for the SMAA Leadership Summit on Tuesday, December 9. The event, themed "Be the ONE: on the courts, fields, mats and life!," challenged students from all SMAA schools to rethink success, prioritize mental health, and develop authentic leadership skills. This marks the sixth consecutive year Sanford High School has hosted the summit.
Reese Beaudoin, Miranda Payeur, Gabe Phillips, Austin Kittredge, Colin Demers, Claire Pordon, Andrew Boissonneault, Lyla Fiandaca, Mattea Peters, Jaslinn Johnson, and Isaac Pelletier represented Sanford High School. For Pelletier, the summit offered a chance to develop skills he's still working to understand.
"I was just super excited to learn," Pelletier said. "I mean, I'm a leader, but I'm still really young, and I don't really know too much about it, so I was just excited to be able to learn what it actually means to lead and go after goals."
Pelletier found keynote speaker Andrew Marotta's presentation particularly impactful. "He had a lot of energy, and I liked that," Pelletier said. "I had a lot of fun with that too. He was interacting with everyone."
Marotta, an educator and former basketball referee from Port Jervis, New York, emphasized that success isn't about natural talent – it's about strategy and persistence. "It's not a talent game, kids. It's a strategy game," Marotta told the assembled student-athletes. "Winners have found out the right strategy."
He offered practical advice on goal-setting and time management, recommending students use timers and schedule specific tasks in time slots rather than creating vague to-do lists. "Don't wait for the motivation to start, just start doing it and you're going to get the motivation," Marotta said.
Mental performance coach Emma Burke addressed mental health challenges in competitive sports, defining mental health as "a state of well-being that enables people to cope with the stresses of life and realize their abilities."
In interactive sessions, students identified struggles specific to athletes, including performance anxiety, fear of disappointing teammates and coaches, and identity issues. Burke, who works with athletes throughout Maine, also addressed why many hesitate to seek help.
"Fear of judgment, that's like number one, right?" Burke explained. Other barriers include not wanting to show weakness, fear of burdening others, and concerns about being treated differently by coaches and parents.
Throughout the day, speakers emphasized that leadership extends beyond athletic performance. Marotta encouraged students to consider how they treat everyone around them, from teammates to custodians and cafeteria staff. "It doesn't take anything to be kind to other people," he said.
The summit featured breakout sessions with Marotta, Burke, and Meghan Hamilton of Stride Mental Performance LLC. Ten student-athletes from each SMAA school attended the day-long session, which included breakfast and lunch.

