Lululemon has long been a dominant force in the world of athleisure. But a series of headwinds, including a recent blunder over see-through leggings, is threatening the company’s path forward.
The Vancouver-based business, founded in 1998, has thrived over the last decade because of its innovative designs, quality materials and comfort. But lately, it has struggled to find its footing in an increasingly saturated market, where competitors like Vuori and Alo are gaining traction with customers, according to Neil Saunders, a retail analyst and managing director at GlobalData Retail.
The company hasn’t done enough to stay relevant and keep its customers coming back, Saunders told CBS News.
“If the competitive environment tightens and your organic growth is not quite as good, you should really be doubling down on things like innovation, keeping your customers loyal, looking for opportunities as to how to expand the share of wallet, even if that’s challenging,” he said. “But Lululemon actually did the opposite. It really took its foot off the gas.”
To be sure, Lululemon still boasts solid financials: The company reported $11.07 billion in revenue in the 12 months ended Nov. 2, 2025, up nearly 9% from the year prior.
Sales, however, have plateaued in recent quarters. International revenue is growing, but the company is struggling to woo buyers in North America, with its most recent quarterly report showing same-store sales in the U.S., Canada and Mexico fell 5%.
At the same time, some investors are souring on the company. Over the last year, Lululemon’s stock price has plunged nearly 53%, while the S&P 500 gained about 12% over the same period.
Lululemon did not respond to a request for comment on its recent performance or its plans to revitalize U.S. sales.
During the most recent earnings call in December 2025, former Lululemon CEO Calvin McDonald touted a new performance fabric the company designed for weight training, and promised Lululemon would continue to innovate across its performance wear portfolio, which includes running, yoga, golf and tennis apparel.
McDonald stepped down as Lululemon CEO at the end of January. The company has yet to announce a permanent replacement.
See-through leggings
Lululemon has faced complaints in recent weeks that one of the fabrics for one of its pairs of leggings — called “Get Low” — is see-through.
Lululemon founder Chip Wilson, who parted ways with the company over a decade ago, called the situation a “total operational failure” on LinkedIn. He also blamed the company’s board for “destroying the brand and the stock price,” alleging that its board members are uninterested in product development.
After temporarily pulling the leggings from its website, Lululemon returned them. They now bear new guidance for customers: size up and pair the product with “skin-tone, seamless underwear,” according to Bloomberg. The publication last week reported a second snafu over a separate line of leggings in the company’s “heart scatter” pattern, which customers said were see-through when bending and squatting.
While the leggings blunder certainly hasn’t helped the company, it’s not the root cause of Lululemon’s problems, Saunders told CBS News.
“The woes set in a long time before this latest legging problem had reared its head,” he said. “But the leggings problem, it encapsulates some of the issues at Lulu.”
For a company charging somewhere in the range of $88 to $198 for a pair of leggings at full retail price, customers expect top-notch quality, Saunders said.
“What it suggests is that there’s kind of a lack of quality control, there’s a lack of care, there’s a lack of attention to detail,” he said.
Saunders said he believes the company’s products have become “junkified,” with Lululemon straying from its trademarks of technical innovation and high quality to heavily branded attire that holds less appeal for its customer base.
Another headwind is heightened competition from rivals such as Vuori, which some customers may feel offers slightly edgier and more interesting designs, according to Saunders. Other competitors include Athleta, owned by Gap, and Alo.
Lululemon is seeking to maintain its foothold in a more crowded athleisure market. In July 2025, the company sued Costco, accusing the retailer of selling “confusingly similar” replicas of its jackets, sweatshirts and pants.
With the former CEO stepping down at the end of January, there’s room for a new leader to take stock and rejuvenate the brand, but the company will have to pull multiple levers to level up, according to Saunders.
“They need to get the product mix right. They need to get the brand presentation right,” he said. “They need to come back to where they were before, being innovative, because they used to be the leader.”
The U.S. Trademark Office is rejecting the A’s request to trademark the “Sacramento Athletics” name. The team was also denied “Las Vegas Athletics” and “Vegas Athletics,” making their bid to sell their new identities a little more difficult.
Newly revealed documents show the U.S. Trademark Office rejected their request to trademark the name “Sacramento Athletics,” with an examining attorney ruling the request has “unacceptable wording” and is “generic for some goods.”
In a separate filing, the shortened “Sacramento A’s” trademark was approved.
“I was thinking this examiner was an Oakland Athletics fan,” trademark attorney Craig Simmermon said.
Simmermon is a trademark attorney who calls the trademark loss a bad break.
“Yeah, it seems like the examiner is being extra harsh, and I don’t know why that is,” Simmermon said.
“Because of this, you may have more options in the form of non-MLB sellers, people selling ‘Sacramento Athletics’ clothing without any affiliation with the MLB or the Athletics organization. So you would see more counterfeits in a way,” Simmermon said.
The A’s announced at the end of last season that they will roll out jerseys with the name Sacramento on them for the first time next year, after no mention of their temporary home on their uniforms last year.
Now, with this ruling, Simmorton says the team can’t stop other people from selling their “Sacramento Athletics” clothing until they are federally registered.
“In the trademark game, the federal registration is everything in court, you can’t even get into federal court without it,” Simmermon said.
Left fielder Tyler Soderstrom and the Athletics have agreed to an $86 million, seven-year contract, according to a person with knowledge of the negotiations.The deal includes a club option for an eighth season, the person told The Associated Press on Thursday, speaking on condition of anonymity because the agreement has not been finalized.Soderstrom’s agreement, which is subject to a successful physical, contains bonus provisions that could raise its value to $131 million, the person said.Soderstrom started 145 of the 158 games he played this year — 100 of those starts in left field — his first full major league season after making his debut in 2023 and playing 45 games before 61 last year. He batted .276 with 25 home runs and 93 RBIs with 141 strikeouts and 55 walks this past season.Drafted 26th overall by the A’s in 2020, the 24-year-old Soderstrom has locked in a long-term contract to stay close to where he grew up in Turlock, California. He was on track to become eligible for arbitration after the 2026 season and for free agency after the 2029 season.Planning to move to Las Vegas for 2028, the A’s last offseason agreed to a $60 million, five-year contract with designated hitter/outfielder Brent Rooker and a $65.5 million, seven-year deal with outfielder Lawrence Butler. The team is entering the second of three planned seasons at a Triple-A ballpark in West Sacramento. See more coverage of top California stories here | Download our app | Subscribe to our morning newsletter | Find us on YouTube here and subscribe to our channel
Left fielder Tyler Soderstrom and the Athletics have agreed to an $86 million, seven-year contract, according to a person with knowledge of the negotiations.
The deal includes a club option for an eighth season, the person told The Associated Press on Thursday, speaking on condition of anonymity because the agreement has not been finalized.
Soderstrom’s agreement, which is subject to a successful physical, contains bonus provisions that could raise its value to $131 million, the person said.
Soderstrom started 145 of the 158 games he played this year — 100 of those starts in left field — his first full major league season after making his debut in 2023 and playing 45 games before 61 last year. He batted .276 with 25 home runs and 93 RBIs with 141 strikeouts and 55 walks this past season.
Drafted 26th overall by the A’s in 2020, the 24-year-old Soderstrom has locked in a long-term contract to stay close to where he grew up in Turlock, California. He was on track to become eligible for arbitration after the 2026 season and for free agency after the 2029 season.
Two University of Alabama at Birmingham (UAB) football players are recovering after being stabbed by another player on campus Saturday morning.It happened shortly after 10 a.m. at the Football Operations Center.Two people were stabbed, according to Birmingham Fire and Rescue, which responded to the scene. Their injuries did not appear to be life-threatening.Both victims were taken to UAB Hospital for treatment.UAB issued the following statement: “We’re grateful to report that two players injured in an incident this morning at the Football Operations Building are in stable condition. Our thoughts are with them and their families as they recover. The suspect – another player – remains in custody, and an investigation is taking place. The team elected to play today’s game. UAB’s top priority remains the safety and well-being of all of our students. Given patient privacy and the ongoing investigation, we have no further comment at this time.”The team elected to play the afternoon game at Protective Stadium in Birmingham, where 29 players were being honored on Senior Day.UAB player Daniel Israel Mincey was booked into the Jefferson County Jail on Saturday afternoon on charges of aggravated assault and attempted murder. It has not been confirmed if his arrest is connected to the stabbings.UAB Police and Public Safety are handling the investigation.This is a developing story and will be updated as information becomes available. ____The Associated Press contributed to this report.
BIRMINGHAM, Ala. —
Two University of Alabama at Birmingham (UAB) football players are recovering after being stabbed by another player on campus Saturday morning.
It happened shortly after 10 a.m. at the Football Operations Center.
Two people were stabbed, according to Birmingham Fire and Rescue, which responded to the scene. Their injuries did not appear to be life-threatening.
Both victims were taken to UAB Hospital for treatment.
UAB issued the following statement:
“We’re grateful to report that two players injured in an incident this morning at the Football Operations Building are in stable condition. Our thoughts are with them and their families as they recover. The suspect – another player – remains in custody, and an investigation is taking place. The team elected to play today’s game. UAB’s top priority remains the safety and well-being of all of our students. Given patient privacy and the ongoing investigation, we have no further comment at this time.”
The team elected to play the afternoon game at Protective Stadium in Birmingham, where 29 players were being honored on Senior Day.
UAB player Daniel Israel Mincey was booked into the Jefferson County Jail on Saturday afternoon on charges of aggravated assault and attempted murder. It has not been confirmed if his arrest is connected to the stabbings.
UAB Police and Public Safety are handling the investigation.
This is a developing story and will be updated as information becomes available.
Thousands of runners and walkers celebrate as they finish the 36th Annual Feaster Five Thanksgiving Day Road Race in Andover.
TIM JEAN/Staff photo
ANDOVER – The Feaster Five Road Race, a Thanksgiving Day tradition featuring family, fun, fitness and apple pie, takes over downtown Andover next week expecting more than 7,000 runners and walkers of all ages to join this special event.
When runners line up at the starting line this year, they will be chasing two well known targets: Bruins legend and Hall of Famer Zdeno Chara and World Marathon Champion Becca Pizzi for the brand new Can You Catch Them Challenge.
There is a new challenge in the 2025 Feaster Five Road Race. Beat former Bruins great Zdeno Chara, on right, or long-distance running star Becca Pizzi, on left, and you will help the MVS Scholarship Fund presented by Schneider Electric. Long-time Feaster Five race director Dave McGillivray, who is close to both Chara and Pizzi, is in center.
Sidney Olson is shown here in 2021 before her Kids K race. She had run two years, including 2022, and now the event is named in her honor, the “Sidney Mae Olson Rainbow Run.”
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Mary Beth Ellis, who lost her daughter Sidney Olson to a traffic accident in 2023, leads a 1K cross country race during Sidney’s Rainbow kids fun run before last year’s Feaster Five road race.
The Athletics are in the process of moving to Las Vegas, and their new state-of-the-art stadium is under construction for the start of the 2028 season.
The A’s are playing in Sacramento for the time being, though it is a temporary move until the new ballpark is ready for its debut.
The Las Vegas ballpark will be built on the Strip, where the Tropicana Las Vegas resort once stood. It is planned to accommodate 33,000 people and will feature an enormous glass window that allows views of the Strip in the background, an 18,000-square-foot jumbotron, and a futuristic five-layer roofing system.
Earlier this month, an expansion of the stadium’s surrounding amenities was announced.
Bally’s Corp., which operates casinos and sportsbooks across America, announced a plan to build a massive mixed-use hotel that will allow visitors to the park to experience different parts of the Las Vegas experience.
“Of that, 1.7 million square feet is tied to hotel rooms, 822,000 square feet in parking garages, 476,000 square feet in retail, dining and entertainment spaces, a 216,000-square-foot theater, 100,000 square feet of casino floor and 50,000 square feet of pools, according to the project’s entitlement package submitted to Clark County on Oct. 8.
“Phase 2 will start work on the integrated resort, including an 1,800-room hotel tower with a casino and sportsbook. Additional retail, dining and entertainment spaces are also planned during this phase, with spaces ranging in size from 1,000 square feet to 59,800 square feet and including some rooftop spaces.
“Phase 3 includes the construction of a 3,000-seat theater on the southwest corner of the site. The theater’s maximum height is planned to be 130 feet tall.
“Phase 4 would be the final portion of the project and would see a second hotel tower built, this time on the northeast corner of the site, featuring 1,200 rooms.”
Clearly, local casinos and resorts are hoping to capitalize on the new traffic and offer easy access to Las Vegas’ amenities.
The park is still set to be completed by early 2028, despite these additions, as Bally’s plan and the stadium itself are on different timetables.
Australian middle distance runner Jess Hull described her foray into the 800m at the Tokyo World Championships as a “fun little side quest”.
Two-time Olympic gold medallist Femke Bol merely calls it “the next challenge”.
Dutch 400m hurdles superstar Bol announced in a social media video that she would make the step up to the 800m next season, adding another dimension to one of the sport’s most thrilling events.
“It’s time for a new chapter,” Bol said in the video.
“It’s going to be an extra lap. I’m moving to the 800m.”
Bol is a two-time 400m hurdles world champion, defending her title in Tokyo last month.
Sydney McLaughlin-Levrone (centre) and Femke Bol (right) have both shifted away from the 400m hurdles. (Getty Images: BSR Agency/Andy Astfalck)
She also won bronze in the event at the 2021 and 2024 Olympic Games.
In both finals, she finished behind American superstar Sydney McLaughlin-Levrone, who won consecutive gold medals to underline her supremacy over her European rival.
The pair have dominated the women’s 400m hurdles, running the nine fastest times in the history of the event between them.
However, McLaughlin-Levrone has since turned her attention to the 400m flat. She won world championship gold in Tokyo and threatened one of athletics longest-standing world records at the same time.
“I’ve learned so much from hurdling and really loved it, it will always have a special place in my heart,” Bol said.
“But I’m ready for the next challenge, a new stimulus, a completely different kind of race.
“It’s different from what I’m used to … and I’m really excited to explore that.”
Bol has won each of the past five Diamond League annual titles in the 400m hurdles, as well as spectacularly anchoring the Dutch mixed 4x400m relay to gold in Paris.
Rivals rejoice at Bol’s step up
Keely Hodgkinson (left) and Georgia Hunter-Bell were quick to praise Bol’s decision. (Getty Images: NurPhoto/Pat Isaacs)
Olympic 800m champion Keely Hodgkinson wrote a reply to the video saying, “Can’t wait to share the startline” with two heart emojis.
World championships silver medallist Georgia Hunter-Bell has dropped down to the 800m from the 1,500m where she won bronze in Tokyo.
She wrote, “So exciting Femke! Some serious global finals pending”.
Hodgkinson and Hunter-Bell underlined their status as among the top two runners over two laps by coming first and second at the Athlos event in New York City on Friday (local time).
Keely Hodgkinson did not win world championship gold, but she’s still the two-lap queen. (Getty Images: Athlos/Emilee Chinn)
World 100m and 200m champion Melissa Jefferson-Wooden said she was shocked to read the news but said she “loved it”.
“I love it because it’s her challenging herself. It’s not like the 800m isn’t already a very, very stacked event,” she told Reuters.
“She’s like ‘I’m going to move up to the 800m, I’m going to see if I got what it takes to run with these girls.’“
Kudos came from across the track spectrum, with New Zealand sprinter Zoe Hobbs writing, “Love this! So excited for you!” under the Instagram post, while Poland’s Pia Skrzyszowska just wrote “You craaaaazy”.
Aussies to comment on the post included pole vaulter Kurtis Marschall, who wrote “let’s go Fem!”, marathon runner Genevieve Gregson, who wrote “so exciting!” and sprint hurdler Liz Clay, who posted several emojis.
“I’ve always loved this quote, ‘If your dreams don’t scare you, they’re not big enough’,” Bol said.
“And I think that’s definitely the case here.”
Jess Hull is the Australian record holder and reached the world championship final in both the 800m and 1,500m. (Getty Images: Patrick Smith)
Bol’s decision potentially puts her on a collision course with a number of rising Australian middle-distance runners.
However, she described the 800m as “an extra bit of fun” to help her top-end speed for the 1,500m, which remains her focus.
Australia had three runners alongside Hull line up in the 800m in Tokyo: Sarah Billings, Abbey Caldwell and former record holder Claudia Hollingsworth.
No modern historical precedent
Jarmila Kratochvílová (number 411) won the 400m/800m double at the 1983 world championships. (Getty Images: Allsport/Tony Duffy)
Although switching between the 1,500m and 800m is relatively common throughout history, there have been far fewer instances of athletes having success changing between one and two lap events, outside of relays.
Alberto Juantorena of Cuba is the only man to claim the 400m/800m double at the same Olympics, doing so in 1976.
Jamaica’s Arthur Wint claimed gold in the 400m and silver in the 800m at consecutive Games in 1948 and 1952. South African Bevil Rudd won the 400 and finished third in the 800m in 1920.
No woman has won both events at the Olympics. The women’s 400m was run for the first time only in 1964 and the 800m regularly appeared from 1960.
However, British runner Ann Packer won silver in the 400m, behind Australia’s Betty Cuthbert in 1964, while also winning gold in the 800m.
Czech athlete Jarmila Kratochvílová, won both events in the 1983 World Championships and still holds the 800m world record set at that competition.
Bol and McLaughlin-Levrone are not the only athletes to have made the successful transition from the hurdles to the flat, with Australian Jana Pittman, British runner Sally Gunnell and American Edwin Moses among several to have done so.
The women’s 800m provided one of the most intriguing finals at last month’s World Athletics Championships in Tokyo.
Kenyan Lilian Odira claimed gold ahead of Olympic 1,500m bronze medallist Hunter-Bell, with Olympic champion and favourite Hodgkinson third after an injury-interrupted year post-Paris.
The Athletics (76-86) played their final game of the 2025 season on Sunday against the Kansas City Royals, but they gave Sacramento fans something to look forward to for next year.The team teased gold jerseys to be worn in 2026 with “Sacramento” displayed on the front in green font. Although their 2025 uniforms have a Tower Bridge sleeve patch on them, this is the first jersey since the A’s moved to Sutter Health Park to say Sacramento on it. Each Saturday home game next season will be part of “Sacramento Saturdays,” according to a release from the Athletics. Players will wear the new gold jerseys every Saturday, while also having the option wear them for other home games and on the road.The A’s are not expected to relocate to Las Vegas until 2028 as stadium construction is still underway. See more coverage of top California stories here | Download our app | Subscribe to our morning newsletter | Find us on YouTube here and subscribe to our channel
The Athletics (76-86) played their final game of the 2025 season on Sunday against the Kansas City Royals, but they gave Sacramento fans something to look forward to for next year.
The team teased gold jerseys to be worn in 2026 with “Sacramento” displayed on the front in green font. Although their 2025 uniforms have a Tower Bridge sleeve patch on them, this is the first jersey since the A’s moved to Sutter Health Park to say Sacramento on it.
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Each Saturday home game next season will be part of “Sacramento Saturdays,” according to a release from the Athletics. Players will wear the new gold jerseys every Saturday, while also having the option wear them for other home games and on the road.
The A’s are not expected to relocate to Las Vegas until 2028 as stadium construction is still underway.
Dual Olympic walking medallist Jemima Montag has made the heartbreaking decision to undergo hamstring surgery, ruling her out of a red-hot tilt for gold at next month’s World Athletics Championships in Tokyo.
Gold was very much on the agenda in Tokyo for the 27-year-old until she suffered a recurrence of a distal hamstring injury at an altitude camp in St Moritz earlier this month.
“Knowing at that point we would only have five or six weeks until Tokyo and that this hamstring tendon injury has the propensity to recur, ultimately the medical team decided it was best to fly home, get it operated on and prioritise the longer-term vision,” Montag told AAP on Tuesday.
“It’s such a heart-sinking moment because I’d felt it before [at a training camp in June].
“You’ve been hoping and praying throughout the rehab that you’ve got enough time, that you’re simultaneously taking things slowly enough but also progressing quickly enough that you’ll be good for the world championships when it matters.
“So feeling that sharp pain in the hammy for the second time was fairly heartbreaking.”
It is a similar injury to that suffered by reigning Olympic pole vault champ Nina Kennedy earlier this year.
Montag’s hamstring injury is considered to be similar to the one that has sidelined Olympic gold medallist Nina Kennedy. (Reuters: Kai Pfaffenbach)
Kennedy has made good progress in her recovery, which has been a huge source of encouragement for Montag, who until this year has been mostly injury-free since bursting onto the scene with the first of two Commonwealth gold medals on the Gold Coast in 2018.
“It’s been really helpful to watch Nina’s progression over the last four months and even have a few messages with her yesterday,” said Montag.
“She really reassured me that it is a 12-to-16-week rehab process and that her hamstring is now feeling better than ever.
“Like me, she felt nervous about the decision of whether or not to get the surgery.
“But she said it’s definitely the right call and you’ll feel even stronger than before you hurt it.”
Although Montag’s withdrawal is a big blow, there are still high hopes Australia will collect a swag of medals at the September 13–21 world titles, with the squad to be finalised early next week.
The other six medallists from the Paris Olympics will headline a team also including a host of young guns such as sprint sensation Gout Gout and middle-distance tyros Cameron Myers and Claudia Hollingsworth.
And after going under the knife on Tuesday, Montag has plenty of other things to occupy her mind for the remainder of the year.
She is midway through a post-graduate medical degree and is getting married in December.
Shea Langeliers hit a tiebreaking double with two outs in the 10th inning and the Athletics held off the Seattle Mariners 2-1 on Saturday night.
The Athletics, who mustered five hits, also scored in the fourth when Darell Hernaiz drove in Jacob Wilson with a single.
Randy Arozarena tied it for the Mariners in the sixth with his career-best 24th home run. His previous high was 23 in 2023 with Tampa Bay.
Seattle fell three games behind first-place Houston in the AL West but holds a three-game advantage over Kansas City for the final American League wild card.
Tyler Ferguson (3-2) pitched 1 1/3 hitless innings for the win. Hogan Harris entered with two runners aboard in the 10th and got two outs for his second save.
Hogan Harris #36 of the Athletics reacts to beating the Seattle Mariners at T-Mobile Park on August 23, 2025 in Seattle.
Olivia Vanni/Getty Images
Harris got J.P. Crawford to ground into a fielder’s choice, then walked Cole Young to load the bases before Arozarena grounded into a game-ending force play.
A total of five A’s pitchers combined to allow just three hits.
Wilson had two hits for the Athletics. He returned Friday from a 23-game stay on the injured list and leads major league rookies with 118 hits.
Victor Robles, activated from the 60-day injured list by the Mariners on Saturday and eligible to play while he appeals a 10-game suspension for throwing his bat at a pitcher in a minor league game last Sunday, got the start in right field. He went 1 for 4.
Key moment
Colby Thomas was the automatic runner at second base to start the 10th. He went to third on a sacrifice bunt by pinch-hitter Brett Harris, but remained there when Nick Kurtz grounded out. Langeliers then looped a double toward right field that dropped fair, scoring Thomas.
Key stat
The game-time temperature of 84 degrees was the hottest at T-Mobile Park since July 15, 2023, when it also was 84 at the start of a Tigers-Mariners game.
Up next
The Athletics send LHP Jacob Lopez (7-6, 3.28 ERA) to the mound Sunday against RHP Logan Gilbert (3-5, 3.83) to wrap up the season series between the teams.
During the summer of 2023 — John Fisher and the Oakland Athletics applied for relocation by the MLB to a larger market.
The Oakland Coliseum was in disrepair, and Fisher felt that he needed a larger market for his team to flourish, pay contracts, and attract top talent.
In 1954, a campaign began in Philly. This wasn’t a campaign of political significance or civic improvements. This campaign was to “Save the A’s.” Philadelphia’s once celebrated five-time World Champion Athletics had fallen on hard financial times. In the pursuit of attracting top players, the team was facing bankruptcy, and the once state-of-the-art Shibe Park was in shambles.
Last Sunday was the Athletics’ last game at the Coliseum in Oakland. After 64 seasons in Oakland in 1968, the team will move to Sacramento for three seasons before finally going to Las Vegas in 2028.
PHOTO: WikiCommons
Philadelphia’s Athletics were born out of fiery competition. When Major League Baseball expanded into a western league in 1900, Philadelphia was given a franchise to compete with the Phillies. That American League Team was the Philadelphia Athletics. The opportunity to manage the new club fell to former Milwaukee Brewers Manager and occasional backup catcher Connie Mack, who was joined by investors like Ben Shibe. Mack’s fifty years as a professional manager will likely never be broken in American sports as a record.
By 1902 — the Athletics had won the AL Pennant. By the mid-1930s, the Athletics had formed essentially two dynasties — from 1911–1913 and 1929–1930. In 1927, they fielded a team that may be one of the best teams ever to play MLB baseball. For nearly thirty years, the Athletics pushed the Phillies — in existence since 1883 into a secondary position in Philly baseball.
If you came to Philadelphia to see quality baseball — you came to see the Athletics. My grandpop grew up in Connie Mack Stadium — conveniently ducking into the restroom when the stands cleared out between a double-header to catch the second game.
The 1954 campaign to save the A’s in Philadelphia was unsuccessful. Against Connie Mack’s wishes, the team was finally sold and relocated to Kansas City that year.
After standing for nearly centuries hosting entertainment, the Roman Colosseum was finally closed by Emporer Honorius around 404 A.D. Finally, an earthquake in 1349 collapsed its outer walls. Many Athletics fans — keenly aware of the end of this chapter in Athletics history attempted to take seats from the stands and dirt from the Oakland Coliseum field.
Years after the Athletics relocation, they would rise to relevance once again, winning AL Pennants in 1972, 1973, 1974, 1988, 1989, and 1990 and the World Series in 1972, 1973, 1974, and 1989. But the magic that was captured by forming a dynasty in the midst of five World Series Championships in Philadelphia will always remain among the MLB’s greatest.
That honor doesn’t belong to Kansas City or Oakland. It belongs to Philly.
A day Oakland sports fans have long dreaded has arrived — the last major professional franchise in the East Bay is leaving town.
Fans are planning a wake for the Athletics in the downtown Jack London Square neighborhood following Thursday’s home finale at the Coliseum against the Texas Rangers.
Here’s a look at each organization to leave Oakland, in order of departure and with details on each move:
California Golden Seals
An NHL team from 1966-76, the California Golden Seals left in 1976 to become the Cleveland Barons after struggling to deliver a winning product in Oakland.
The Barons were a short-lived franchise, merging two years later with the Minnesota North Stars, who eventually relocated to become the Dallas Stars.
Golden State Warriors
Many players expressed mixed emotions after leaving Oracle Arena, an intimate venue nicknamed “Roaracle” next door to the Coliseum, for the move to Chase Center in San Francisco ahead of the 2019-20 season.
Golden State played at Oracle for 47 seasons, winning NBA championships 40 years apart in 1975 and 2015.
Despite all the new amenities and modern practice facility at Chase, it took time for the arena to truly feel like home. Coach Steve Kerr said it, Stephen Curry and Draymond Green, too.
Curry, the two-time NBA MVP and all-time 3-point leader, had to adapt his signature tunnel shot with the change of venue. Depending on the side where his team warms up, he now opts to either try a full-court heave or a shot from an entry way well above one corner of the court.
Oakland Raiders
Raiders owner Mark Davis wanted a football-only stadium and he got one in Las Vegas in Allegiant Stadium, which opened in 2020 and hosted the Super Bowl earlier this year.
The team has now left Oakland twice, having departed in 1982 for Los Angeles only to return in 1995 and then making the latest move to Nevada.
At the Coliseum, the Raiders built “Mount Davis,” as it became known in reference to late owner Al Davis, a section of third-deck outfield seats that largely disappointed baseball fans who lost their picturesque views of the Oakland Hills and the intimacy of a smaller stadium.
Oakland Athletics
Major League Baseball Commissioner Rob Manfred insisted for years that the A’s needed a new ballpark to be a sustainable organization.
They have tried to build in multiple spots throughout the Bay Area, most recently at the Howard Terminal site along the water not far from Jack London Square. But there were public transportation and parking challenges, so owner John Fisher pushed on with exploring options in Las Vegas.
Last November, fellow baseball owners unanimously approved Fisher’s relocation plan. The A’s plan to play in the state capital of Sacramento for at least the next three campaigns and hope to move to Las Vegas for the 2028 season.
A large fan group sent “Stay In Oakland” boxes to 15 select owners in hopes of swaying the vote to no avail.
On Monday, Fisher released a letter that outraged fans once more because many have made it clear they just don’t believe him and don’t consider his words genuine.
“I know there is great disappointment, even bitterness,” Fisher wrote. “Though I wish I could speak to each one of you individually, I can tell you this from the heart: we tried. Staying in Oakland was our goal, it was our mission, and we failed to achieve it. And for that I am genuinely sorry.
“Looking ahead, I hope you will join our beloved A’s as we move forward on this amazing journey. I hope I will see you again sporting the Green and Gold. And I hope we will make you proud.”
As the Athletics arrival in West Sacramento gets closer, small businesses are coming up with a game plan. Ernesto Delgado’s restaurant, Sal’s Tacos, is just a few blocks from Sutter Health Park and is hoping to welcome new customers when the A’s season starts. “What ideas can we bring and do to really prepare and make our businesses thrive and really take advantage of the opportunity?” Delgado said.However, some owners are concerned they won’t be ready to meet the demand. “There’s so many needs that small businesses have,” said Delgado.At a meeting Friday night, West Sacramento Mayor Martha Guerrero and other city leaders gathered with local business owners to address their needs. Among the main concerns were the lack of money to expand and possible delays with licenses and permits. “We are going to be able to provide capital to some of those businesses,” said Guerrero. She told KCRA 3 that the city council will soon have a meeting to discuss details about how much money will be available and who will benefit. “It’s an opportunity for all of us,” said Guerrero. The A’s will arrive in West Sacramento in 2025 and are expected to play at Sutter Health Park for at least three seasons.See more coverage of top California stories here | Download our app | Subscribe to our morning newsletter
Ernesto Delgado’s restaurant, Sal’s Tacos, is just a few blocks from Sutter Health Park and is hoping to welcome new customers when the A’s season starts.
“What ideas can we bring and do to really prepare and make our businesses thrive and really take advantage of the opportunity?” Delgado said.
However, some owners are concerned they won’t be ready to meet the demand.
“There’s so many needs that small businesses have,” said Delgado.
At a meeting Friday night, West Sacramento Mayor Martha Guerrero and other city leaders gathered with local business owners to address their needs.
Among the main concerns were the lack of money to expand and possible delays with licenses and permits.
“We are going to be able to provide capital to some of those businesses,” said Guerrero.
She told KCRA 3 that the city council will soon have a meeting to discuss details about how much money will be available and who will benefit.
“It’s an opportunity for all of us,” said Guerrero.
The A’s will arrive in West Sacramento in 2025 and are expected to play at Sutter Health Park for at least three seasons.
On Tuesday, America lost a baseball trailblazer when Willie Mays passed away from heart failure at his home in Palo Alto, California, at the age of 93. Mays was perhaps the best American baseball player of all time. He was a 12x Gold Glover and a 24x All-Star, and in 1961, he hit four home runs in a single game. His career would feature 661 home runs.
The New York Giants of baseball were playing the Phillies right here at Shibe Park on May 25, 1951. The Center Fielder had been called up to the Majors, batting .477.
The 1951 Phillies were just one year removed from the “Whiz Kids” season, where the 1950 Philadelphia team, with an average age of 26.4, won the NL Championship. In 1951, the New York Giants and Willie Mays won the division.
The Phillies had already been in existence for 62 years by 1951. The oldest, continuous sports franchise in America came into Major League Baseball in 1882 as the Philadelphia Quakers. The “Phillies” were crowned the name in April of 1883, which still resonates today.
One of the most historically significant players in MLB history actually started his historic run again against one of the most historical teams in MLB history. Where better for a legendary player to begin a storied career than right here?
We aren’t really sure when baseballs started flying around Recreation Park’s 331-centimeter outfield in North Philly. It was in use in June 1860, when Equity defeated Pennsylvania 65–52.
PHOTO: WikiCommons
The original Philadelphia Athletics (also known as Athletic Base Ball Club of Philadelphia) used Recreation Park as home beginning in 1860 up to their removal from the National League in 1876.
The Phillies played their first-ever game in April 1883 and defeated the Manayunk Ashlands 11–0 at Recreation Park. In 1886, the team moved to Philadelphia Baseball Park.
Mays would never play for Philadelphia or against them in the NL Playoffs. He would, however, play them in 363 regular-season games, hitting 61 home runs, 196 RBIs, and 53 stolen bases. That May Day in 1951 would mark the beginning of his incredible career, which started at Shibe Park and ended with a brief hitless streak.
Like many great American stories —one of the best baseball careers ever by one of the MLB’s best ever began right here in Philadelphia — at Shibe Park— in the heart of Center City.
The Giants would win the game that day in May of 1951 by a score of 8–5.
OAKLAND, Calif. (KGO) — An another reminder that the Athletics’ days in Oakland seem to be numbered. On Monday, the team had the “Rooted in Oakland since ’68” sign removed from the Coliseum.
It’s worth noting that the removal comes two days after the successful Fans’ Fest hosted by The Oakland 68’s and Last Dive Bar at Jack London Square.
The A’s are still seeking a temporary home as they await their move to Las Vegas. There are discussions of the possibility of extending their lease at the Oakland Coliseum for three seasons beginning in 2025.
OAKLAND, Calif. (KGO) — Preparations were underway Friday for the Oakland Fan Fest, an event designed to celebrate the Oakland sports team who proudly call the city home. It is being organized by the Oakland 68’s and Last Dive Bar — two groups who support Oakland sports — especially after the Athletics announced their intention to leave for Las Vegas.
“Somebody’s got to do something for the fans,” said Bryan Johansen, the event organizer and founder of the Last Dive Bar, “Somebody’s got to do something for the culture, and somebody has to give back and that is what we are doing.”
However, the event on Saturday will be without one of the top breweries in the Bay Area. Drake’s Brewing Company, which is based in the East Bay, backed out a few days ago. They told the organizers they canceled due to “unforeseen circumstances” and they haven’t been in contact with them since. Some of the organizers believe the A’s might be involved with the cancellation. The A’s told ABC7 News they had nothing to do with it. Drakes has not returned our request for a comment.
“They say the A’s weren’t involved or anything like that,” Johansen said, “But we had another sponsor approached by the A’s and they denied the request from the A’s to not be involved and they are still coming and they are still going to be here.”
It has since turned out to be a blessing in disguise. The organizers posted that Drake’s canceled and other breweries quickly volunteered to be part of the event.
“The response was just unbelievable,” Johansen said, “We had six beer vendors sign on and other vendors that weren’t beer vendors ask – but we didn’t have room.”
That type of support is why these organizers believe this will be the largest fan fast in years. There will be live music, raffle prizes and autograph signings. They want to make Oakland a place where fans get excited about the teams who call it home.
“This is demonstrating the resilience that is the Oakland fan base,” said Paul Freedman, the co-founder of the Oakland Ballers, “It is demonstrating the resilience that is Oakland, and it is going to be incredible.”
Jamaican sprinter Shelly-Ann Fraser-Pryce was the first 100m sprinter to win individual medals in four consecutive Olympic Games; Fraser-Pryce is the oldest woman to win the 100m world title after taking gold in Eugene in 2022 at the age of 35
Last Updated: 09/02/24 11:19am
Shelly-Ann Fraser-Pryce has revealed her plans to retire after the Olympics
Three-time Olympic champion sprinter Shelly-Ann Fraser-Pryce will retire after the 2024 Paris Olympics, saying she owes it to her family.
Fraser-Pryce was the first 100m sprinter to win individual medals in four consecutive Olympic Games. The Jamaican began her journey in Beijing 2008, which saw her become the first Caribbean woman to win gold in the women’s 100m.
She held on to her 100m title in London 2012, joining a select few to have done so. Despite battling a toe injury, she won bronze in 2016 Rio Olympics and a silver in relay.
After giving birth in 2017, she won another Olympic silver and a relay gold in Tokyo 2020.
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“My son needs me, my husband and I have been together since before I won in 2008. He has sacrificed for me,” 37-year-old Fraser-Pryce told Essence.com.
“We’re a partnership, a team, and it’s because of that support that I’m able to do the things that I have been doing for all these years,” she added. “I think I now owe it to them to do something else.”
Currently, she is focused on preparing for Paris, which takes place from July 26 to August 11 and something she views as an opportunity to push boundaries.
Shelly-Ann Fraser-Pryce will feature in the Paris Olympics this summer
It is about “showing people that you stop when you decide. I want to finish on my own terms,” she said.
In 2019, she became the oldest woman to claim the 100m World Championship title in Doha. She further solidified this achievement by winning the title again at the age of 35 in Eugene in 2022, 14 years after her initial Olympic gold triumph.
“It’s not enough that we step on a track and we win medals. You have to think about the next generation that’s coming after you, and give them the opportunity to also dream – and dream big,” Fraser-Pryce added.
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The home of the 2025 NCAA DII Indoor Track & Field Championship welcomes its first competition.
HUNT VALLEY, Md., January 25, 2024 (Newswire.com)
– The recent installation of a custom-built, 200-meter portable banked running track from Beynon Sports at the Indiana State Fairgrounds’ new Indiana Farm Bureau Fall Creek Pavilion represents the latest chapter in the location’s rich history. Constructed in 1923 as the Indiana State Fair’s Swine Barn, the pavilion is now poised to become a magnet for elite track and field competition, having already been awarded the 2025 NCAA Division II Indoor Track & Field Championships.
Beynon’s innovative system, which uses its BSS 4000 track surface with Hobart Texture, is part of an extensive $50 million renovation that began over two years ago. The project encompassed the demolition of the old swine barn and its restoration as a 196,000-sq.-ft. best-in-class livestock facility, which was opened in time for the 166th Indiana State Fair in July 2023.
A NEW HOME FOR ELITE TRACK & FIELD
Six months later, the pavilion is home to a portable banked track from Beynon that will be installed annually to host local, regional, national, and international events. The first of those events includes the 2024 editions of the below meets, with the track and field schedule running until the spring and ending with the Hoosier State Relays on March 23.
Butler Invitational (Jan. 20)
Indiana University–Purdue University Indianapolis Track & Field Meet (Jan. 26-27)
USA Track & Field Indoor Combined Events Championships (Jan. 27-28)
While last weekend’s Butler Invitational marked the pavilion’s inaugural track and field event, it represents a continuation of a strong sports presence at the Indiana State Fairgrounds that has endured for the better part of 90 years.
“We’ve got a good track record here. We have a coliseum on our grounds that’s almost continually hosted professional hockey since 1937, so we have two ice rinks on the campus. We do a lot of volleyball, basketball, and gymnastics. We have a DI men’s basketball program that plays in our coliseum,” said Ray Allison, Chief Development & Strategy Officer, Indiana State Fairgrounds & Event Center. “Taking on track and field is something that, while it’s new, is in our wheelhouse of being able to change over buildings and setup for a variety of different types of events.”
CUTTING-EDGE TRACK DESIGN
To accommodate the Fall Creek Pavilion’s wide variety of events, the track would need to allow for quick and easy removal and efficient storage. For Beynon Sports, meeting the venue’s specific needs demanded a forward-thinking solution, which was developed alongside the team from Weems Engineering LLC, a full-service mechanical contractor based in Dalton, GA.
“We knew that Beynon was going to be able to deliver an elite, championship-level track surface for us that was going to be fast, which in the track space, that’s all that matters,” said Allison about the decision to entrust Beynon with the project. “To the credit of Beynon and Weems Engineering, they sat down, they put their heads together, and they re-engineered the way they build and install these portable tracks, and they came up with something that was really clever and unique and was exactly what we were looking for.”
Beynon’s involvement in this latest renovation, one of several that the Indiana State Fairgrounds has undertaken over the last 25 years, makes it part of a concerted effort to help the campus evolve while safeguarding the historic character of its facilities. In the case of the Fall Creek Pavilion, that included restoring the iconic brick façade from the original swine barn and integrating it into the new venue.
“We’ve been at this location since 1892, and it’s important for us that we maintain our history and the traditions that come with the Indiana State Fair,” said Allison. “We want our fairgoers to have the experience that they’re accustomed to but also provide modern facilities that meet the needs of 21st-century events, whether they’re showing livestock or we’re hosting indoor track and field.”