![]() ![]() Lopes, for one, said he’s rooting for him to succeed. “I think there’s a good future in this, and I’m going to give it my best shot.” “I’m focusing on my fishing business,” said Kowalczyk, a 1999 Vero Beach High School graduate who went on to play tennis at the University of California after becoming the only player to win the national boys’ 18-and-under clay-court championship twice. He said “as of right now” he has no plans to return to teaching tennis. ![]() Kowalczyk said he already has sold “thousands of rods,” and now that he’s no longer working at The Moorings, the fishing business will be his full-time job. Reilly, meanwhile, specializes in charter-boat fishing outings on which he markets ManOwar rods by making them available to guests. He said he now runs the entire sales operation, which he hopes to expand to include reels, hooks, terminal tackle, hats and apparel. 1, just north of the Royal Palm Boulevard intersection. Kowalczyk, 36, said he’s now in the process of moving the full-service fishing store from the northwestern corner of Miracle Mile (next to Siam Orchid Thai & Sushi Restaurant) to a 10,000-square-foot building at 2360 U.S. He changed the business’ name from “Hooked Rods” to “ManOwar Fishing” in 2016 and, after teaming with Spencer Reilly – his Vero Isles neighbor and a local charter-boat captain – opened the fledgling company’s first store in Vero Beach last summer. Kowalczyk said he “spent a lot of money on technology” and, after a year of experimenting with different fibers and manufacturers, he found the right formula and began selling the new-age fishing rods at local tackle shops and through a website and social media. His goal was to find a blend of carbon fibers braided to create a lightweight, more responsive and more durable rod that he said “will revolutionize the fishing industry.” Having grown up in Vero Beach, where he was among the nation’s top junior tennis players and often enjoyed fishing in the Indian River Lagoon, Kowalczyk began exploring the possibility of applying the latest racket technology to inshore rod design. He said several local teaching pros have applied and, although he has no specific timetable, he plans to fill the position later this summer.Īs for Kowalczyk, who said he worked “60 to 70 hours” per week at The Moorings, he now plans to devote his time and energies to his budding fishing business – a venture he started four years ago, when he fused his livelihood with his lifelong hobby and pioneered a rackets-to-rods technology. Lopes said the club already had received many applications for the job, which has been posted on the United States Professional Tennis Association’s website, and they continue to come in from around the country. The source did not know the reason the club pushed him out. However, a club source speaking on the condition of anonymity said Kowalczyk was forced to resign but will continue to be paid at least through July. And Moorings President Catherine Rosato did not respond to a phone message left at her home last weekend. “We’re a private club, so I can’t discuss what happened,” Lopes said, adding that the club is owned by its members. In fact, when contacted last week, neither he nor Moorings General Manager Craig Lopes offered any details as to why Kowalczyk no longer works at the barrier island club near the south end of the county. “I’m not allowed to get into it,” said Kowalczyk, who spent two years as the club’s head tennis pro before being promoted to the director’s job in 2014. All Robert Kowalczyk would say about his sudden departure earlier this month from The Moorings, where he had spent the previous three years as the club’s tennis director, is that he wasn’t expecting it. ![]()
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |