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Tag: Youth sports

  • Minnesota Police: Youth Softball Treasurer Stole $110K at Casinos

    Posted on: January 2, 2026, 04:26h. 

    Last updated on: January 2, 2026, 04:27h.

    • A former treasurer of a youth softball league allegedly stole money by using casino ATMs
    • A lawsuit claims the treasurer withdrew $110K in cash at tribal casinos

    Police in Minnesota say a former treasurer of a youth softball organization stole more than $110,000 over a nearly five-year span.

    Minnesota casinos theft crime softball
    A file photograph shows girls shaking hands following a youth softball game. Police in Minnesota say a former treasurer of a youth softball association stole over $110K, making cash withdrawals at two tribal casinos. (Image: Shutterstock)

    A lawsuit filed by the Hennepin County Attorney’s Office alleges that Kristin Allyenne Williams, 52, of Maple Grove, made unauthorized cash withdrawals from banking accounts belonging to the Plymouth Wayzata Youth Softball Association (PWYSA) over four and a half years. The crime ended in February 2025, when a probe into the tax-exempt group’s finances led to her dismissal.

    Association President Tim Lyons tipped off police last year that his treasurer had allegedly been making ATM withdrawals at tribal casinos and covered her illegal tracks by classifying the cash transactions as “clinic expenses” and “equipment” related to the youth softball organization’s operations.

    The volunteer and parent-run organization “promotes the game of fastpitch softball as a means to teach girls the value of teamwork and sportsmanship, to enhance self-esteem, and to develop softball skills, all in a positive environment.” The PWYSA runs travel leagues for 14U, 16U, and 18U levels.  

    Casino Charges 

    Hennepin County prosecutors allege that Williams made numerous unapproved ATM withdrawals at the Mystic Lake Casino and Little Six Casino, both in Prior Lake. The casinos are owned and operated by the Shakopee Mdewakanton Sioux Community.

    Williams was reportedly the lone staffer in the organization who had access to the online banking account held with U.S. Bank. PWYSA officials told law enforcement that there was no reason for Williams to be withdrawing cash.

    The legal complaint does not detail whether Williams gambled with the ill-gotten money. Casino ATMs typically carry hefty service fees, making them unattractive other than for a gambler in need of quick cash.

    The probe into the youth softball group’s finances was initiated after the IRS sent a letter saying its tax-exempt status had been rescinded after failing to file annual tax returns for three consecutive years.

    Williams has been charged with felony theft by swindle and is due in court on Jan. 21. A person found guilty of such theft faces up to 20 years in prison and fines of up to $15,000.

    Williams’ rap sheet is otherwise unremarkable, with a misdemeanor conviction in 2013 for failing to display license plates being her lone court record.

    Youth Sports Targeted

    Last May, the treasurer of a Little League Baseball chapter in Connecticut died suddenly at the age of 57. Months later, it was determined that Kenneth Grohs Jr., who had served as the treasurer of the Union City Little League for over 20 years, had been stealing from the organization to fund his online gambling addiction.

    An investigation made public in September 2025 concluded that Grohs had swindled over $165,000 from the Little League chapter to fund his FanDuel account. Legal online sports betting and casino gambling began in Connecticut in October 2021. FanDuel and DraftKings maintain the online gaming monopoly with their respective tribal partners, Mohegan Sun and Foxwoods.

    Devin O’Connor

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  • Caitlin Clark speaks to Long Island leaders at LIA event | Long Island Business News

    THE BLUEPRINT:

    • WNBA player Caitlin Clark spoke at the Long Island Association fall luncheon.

    • More than 700 community and business leaders attended the event.

    • Clark discussed focus, leadership, and challenges in professional sports.

    • She highlighted her foundation’s work supporting youth and communities.

    WNBA star Caitlin Clark made her first visit to Long Island on Wednesday, speaking before more than 700 local leaders at the Long Island Association’s annual fall luncheon at the Crest Hollow Country Club in Woodbury.

    They were there to glean insights from the 23-year-old Indiana Fever guard, who spoke about basketball, leadership, coaching and more.

    In a one-on-one conversation with Matt Cohen, president and CEO of the Long Island Association (LIA), Clark spoke about the benefits of focus and passion for the game.

    “I really love my craft, and I love getting better at it,” she said, adding that not everyone shares the same passion for putting in the hours at the gym to excel.

    Clark holds the distinction of being the youngest and first female professional athlete to address the LIA’s fall luncheon, an event typically featuring political leaders, authors or athletes.

    On Wednesday, LIA Chair Larry Waldman told the crowd that this year the organization is taking “a break from politics,” which won applause in the room.

    Cohen has described Clark as a “transformational figure” in sports who “has in many ways transcended the sport of women’s basketball, and she’s changed the economics of the league.”

    In Woodbury on Wednesday, Clark said that she considers New York a top place to play basketball, adding that the crowd and support here are “really fun.”

    Still, she said there are challenges that sports fans may never see. For example, injuries and setbacks bring disappointment, she said. But those experiences have helped her “become a better teammate,” she added.

    She emphasized the importance of showing up for teammates, saying, that often “those are the teams that win at the end of the day.”

    A businesswoman and philanthropist, Clark said earning her degree in marketing at the University of Iowa help her in these roles. Now with partnerships with such companies as Nike and Gatorade, Clark stressed the importance of collaborating with “brands that align with who I am.”

    Asked by Cohen if she had any advice for some of the university leaders at the luncheon about working with student athletes, Clark pointed out that the athletes are typically 22 years old and younger who are beginning to find their footing. Support from coaches and university leaders can help young athletes navigate their paths, she said.

    Philanthropy through the Caitlin Clark Foundation, Clark said, is a highlight for her. The nonprofit aims to “uplift and improve the lives of youth and their communities through education, nutrition and sport,” according to the foundation. The organization has installed athletic courts in Iowa and Indianapolis for kids to play sports, orchestrated backpack giveaways and more.

    Giving back, she said, was part of her upbringing.

    Clark often steered the conversation back to her family, who kept her grounded as a young athlete.

    She offered advice to young athletes today.

    “Just enjoy it,” she said.

    Pointing out that it wasn’t that long ago since she was a high school athlete, she reflected on those days, calling them “some of my best memories.”


    Adina Genn

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  • Kara Lawson named head coach of US women’s basketball team for the 2028 LA Olympics

    Kara Lawson helped the U.S. women’s basketball team win an Olympic gold medal as a player 17 years ago. Now she’ll have a chance to lead it to another as the coach in the 2028 Los Angeles Games.

    Lawson was announced as the head coach for the women’s team for the next four years by USA Basketball on Monday.

    “I mean it’s hard to put everything into words as it’s something I’ve been working towards. I have so much love for USA Basketball and have been so excited to serve in any capacity they ask me to,” Lawson said in a phone interview. “It’s the best job in the sport in our country. To lead the U.S. women’s national team is such an amazing feeling. I felt a great sense of excitement and pride and just am really grateful for the opportunity.”

    Naming Lawson coach was the first official move made by Sue Bird, who started as the U.S. national team director earlier this year. In the past, a committee would decide on the coach and roster.

    “I think her resume, her experience, it all kind of speaks for itself,” Bird said in a phone interview. “When you start to learn about Kara and what she’s been a part of from a USA Basketball standpoint, that experience specifically made it really clear she’s the right person to lead us into the next cycle.”

    Lawson’s first chance to coach the team in a major competition will be at the World Cup next September in Germany. The Americans will play next March in a qualifier for that tournament, but that’s right before the NCAA Tournament, which would make it difficult for Lawson to coach the U.S. because she also leads Duke’s women’s basketball team.

    “Assembling a great staff for the national team is of the utmost importance,” said the 44-year-old Lawson. “I’ll lean on that staff a lot through that cycle. … You have to have great coaches around you, have great players around you. We have the ability to do both and that will be our challenge. Find the right group that will fit.”

    In addition to the Olympic gold she won as a player at the Beijing Games, Lawson helped the U.S. win gold as an assistant coach at the 2022 World Cup and 2024 Paris Olympics and as head coach at the FIBA Women’s AmeriCup in July.

    “I know this from playing with her and know this from all the conversations I had with her: I’m hard-pressed to find someone who is as prepared as Kara is,” Bird said.

    Lawson also coached the USA Basketball 3-on-3 team to gold at the Tokyo Games, the first time that sport had been contested at an Olympics.

    “Kara has been involved with USA Basketball dating back to 1998 as a high school player in the World Youth Games,” USA Basketball CEO Jim Tooley said. “Her international basketball experience is extensive, including 13 gold medals. To say her journey with us has been impressive is an understatement. I’m excited to watch Kara and Sue work together to deliver success at the World Cup in Berlin next fall and at the Olympic Games in LA in 2028.”

    Lawson’s path to coaching wasn’t similar to the one many others have taken. She went from playing 13 years in the WNBA to becoming a broadcaster. From there, she spent time with the Boston Celtics as an assistant before getting the Duke job in 2020.

    She led Duke to its first ACC Tournament championship under her watch last March, and the Blue Devils made a run to the Elite Eight. The team has advanced further in the NCAA Tournament each of the past three seasons.

    Lawson was a point guard at Tennessee and credits her time learning under Hall of Fame coach Pat Summitt as a big reason for her recent success on the sideline. Summitt was the Olympic coach in 1984 when the U.S. won gold at home in Los Angeles.

    Lawson looks forward to the opportunity to coach the U.S. on its home soil in an Olympics for the first time since the 1996 Atlanta Games.

    “This appointment wherever the Olympics would be is an incredible honor,” she said. “The opportunity to lead the American side in Los Angeles in a home Olympics is more added icing on the cake. What an incredible opportunity not just for me as a coach, but the other coaches on the staff, the players that get to play in a home Olympics as well. It’s a very unique opportunity that your country doesn’t get very often.”

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    AP WNBA: https://apnews.com/hub/wnba-basketball

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  • Managers miffed at offshore sports betting on Little League World Series

    SOUTH WILLIAMSPORT, Pa. — This week, as usual, sports bettors can get action on MLB games from U.S.-based gambling sites. Meanwhile, at least a couple of offshore bookmakers are offering odds on games at the Little League World Series.

    Team managers, and Little League itself, are not pleased.

    “I’m not a fan,” said South Carolina’s manager Dave Bogan, noting he goes to Las Vegas twice a year. “It’s just not appropriate, it feels dirty, quite honestly.”

    In news conferences throughout the Little League World Series, U.S. team managers have voiced their displeasure with gambling on their games — players at the tournament top out at 12 years old. Little League International also released a statement last week denouncing sports betting on youth competition.

    “Little League is a trusted place where children are learning the fundamentals of the games and all the important life lessons that come with having fun, celebrating teamwork, and playing with integrity,” the statement said. “No one should be exploiting the success and failures of children playing the game they love for their own personal gain.”

    BetOnline and Bovada are among the offshore sites offering daily odds on LLWS matchups. They are both based outside the United States and are both illegal to use in the U.S. and not subject to its laws. BetOnline is located in Panama and has offered sports betting and gambling since 1991. Bovada, a Costa Rica-based company, joined the scene in 2011.

    BetOnline’s brand manager Dave Mason said in a post on X that BetOnline is making the moneylines itself and that it “ain’t easy.” He has posted odds on X throughout the tournament.

    Jon Solomon, the community impact director of Project Play, an initiative of the Aspen Institute’s Sports and Society program, said there are negative effects on young players whose games are the subject of betting. Such wagering, he says, is fairly common.

    In 2018, Project Play surveyed Mobile County, Alabama, and found that “26% of surveyed youth said they had played in a game where adults bet money on who won or the final score,” according to its State of Play report.

    The report said that tackle football, basketball and baseball were more likely to be gambled on by adults according to the children surveyed.

    “This is just, you know, bets that usually sort of happen, maybe at the field, or in the gym,” Solomon said in a phone interview. “Kids are already facing a lot of pressure in youth sports these days. It is a highly commercialized industry with a lot of people already making a lot of money.”

    When gambling is involved in the actual performance of the game, Solomon believes the pressure can be even higher. The report showed that gambling “was witnessed by both boys (33%) and girls (19%).” In professional and collegiate sports, Solomon noted instances of athletes getting harassed by gamblers — think any kicker who missed a last-second field goal.

    “Now imagine the stakes for a more impressionable child, right, or teenager?” Solomon said. “It’s so unhealthy and so unneeded, and I think if anyone is betting on youth sports, they should seriously seek help because you have a serious addiction most likely.”

    Hawaii Little League manager Gerald Oda is adamant that gambling on these games takes away from the “beauty” of Little League.

    “This is the only tournament where you’re representing your local community,” Oda said. “It’s that innocence, that pureness that these kids show on the field.”

    Oda believes the memories his 12-year-old players make are more important than the games won or lost.

    “It’s about them experiencing this whole moment here. They’re going to have memories saying that when I was 12, this is what we did,” Oda said. “Gambling is here to stay, but I am thankful that Little League is very protective of what they have, and they should be. You know that pure joy and emotion whether you win or you lose, that’s the greatest thing.”

    Solomon said youth sports is “all about the delivery of the sport” from leagues and coaches.

    “Sports, if not delivered properly, can be harmful to children and betting on sports would definitely fall into that category of it being harmful,” Solomon said. Pressure from parents and coaches, as well as early sports specialization, can also negatively impact youth sports.

    In 2018, the Supreme Court struck down the Professional and Amateur Sports Protection Act that made sports betting illegal across most of the U.S for over 25 years. Now, 39 states and Washington, D.C., have legalized sports betting but states don’t allow wagers to be made where those competing are under 18.

    In keeping with those laws, no online betting sites such as FanDuel, Draft Kings or ESPN Bet offer lines on the LLWS and Nevada’s manager TJ Fechser hopes that doesn’t change.

    “We’re in a big crazy world now and if we ever see publicized sports books throughout the world standardizing it, we have to really look into ourselves. Is this appropriate?” Fechser said. “I’m not the decider on this, but I don’t want to see it being standardized.”

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    Amanda Vogt is a student in the John Curley Center for Sports Journalism at Penn State.

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  • Ankored and Yardstik Partner to Revolutionize Youth Sports Safety and Compliance

    Youth sports organizations can now access Yardstik’s industry-leading background screening directly within Ankored’s comprehensive compliance platform, creating a seamless experience that automates the entire safety lifecycle.

    Ankored, the leading youth sports automation compliance platform, and Yardstik, the measurably better background screening company, have launched a strategic partnership. Together, the companies are partnering to help protect kids and mitigate risk for organizations.

    This integration brings Yardstik’s powerful background screening directly into the Ankored platform, allowing youth sports organizations to automatically assign and track the appropriate level of background check based on each individual’s role. Now organizations can leverage Yardstik’s industry-leading background checks alongside all other critical safety elements-including training, coach certifications, age/grade verification for players, and more-in one comprehensive system that automates the entire compliance lifecycle.

    “Youth sports organizations face growing complexity and risk in managing their compliance and running effective, timely background checks,” said Seth Lieberman, CEO of Ankored. “By partnering with Yardstik, we’re creating a seamless experience that ensures all safety requirements are met while drastically reducing administrative burden, allowing organizations to focus on what matters most-creating exceptional experiences for kids.”

    The integration enables youth sports organizations to:

    • Reduce administrative workload by 95% through intelligent automation

    • Centralize all compliance requirements including background checks, certifications, and training

    • Run a variety of levels of background checks

    • Automate the screening process with real-time tracking and reporting

    • Ensure 100% compliance for every coach, volunteer, and staff member

    “We are very excited about this partnership with Ankored and what it means for youth sports organizations across the nation,” said Andrew Johnson, CEO of Yardstik. “When we set out to build Yardstik, our API-first approach was created specifically for this use case. By providing a native experience for customers, compliance is made easier. Right off the bat, the Ankored team shared their vision for a unified compliance platform for youth sports, and we knew our technology would deliver that and more. We’re excited to provide measurably better screening to this audience.”

    Youth sports organizations face increasing scrutiny over safety protocols and adherence to those protocols. By combining verification technology and comprehensive safety operations, Yardstik and Ankored’s combined solution addresses the growing requests from parents, governments, insurance providers, and sports governing bodies for more rigorous protection measures.

    To learn more about how Ankored and Yardstik can transform your organization’s safety compliance, visit ankored.com/yardstik.

    About Ankored
    Ankored is the simplest and safest solution for automating your entire youth sports and recreation compliance process, safeguarding both children and your organization. Their all-in-one platform helps you quickly and efficiently achieve 100% compliance for every volunteer, coach, and staff member. Learn more at ankored.com.

    About Yardstik
    Yardstik is a technology company that helps high-volume hiring businesses run fewer background checks. Launched in Minneapolis in 2020, the company is reinventing risk technology for the modern era. Yardstik’s mix of screening, fraud, and compliance products helps organizations optimize worker vetting and expedite business growth. Today, thousands of customers trust Yardstik’s technology and team to manage their pre- and post-hire risk. For more information, visit https://yardstik.com.

    Source: Ankored

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  • Raising a Good Sport From the Sidelines

    We’re our kids’ most ardent cheerleaders. But when we’re so emotionally involved in our kids’ success, some of us can inadvertently grow overbearing.

    Imagine a parent constantly shouting out, “You’re a star, beat those guys!” Or, “Show ‘em what you’re made of!

    Too much public commentary can be embarrassing for kids. And we should always consider whether certain phrases may be disrespectful to other players. In kids’ sports, the focus shouldn’t be creaming the opposing team. It should be playing a decent, fair game.

    Also, this is not professional territory. The coaches and referees are probably volunteers. It can be easy to disagree with a referee’s or a coach’s decision, but showing respect to everyone involved—regardless of a terrible play or bad call—helps keep the atmosphere at a kid-friendly level.

    Don’t forget; your kids are constantly learning from your example. If you’re a hot-headed John McEnroe, they may follow your lead and believe that arguing—rather than determinedly moving past a disappointing result—is a more effective strategy.

    And if you have concerns or ideas you’d like to run by the coach, you can always schedule a private meeting. A one-on-one discussion can produce far more productivity than anything shouted haphazardly in the middle of a game.

    Amy McCready

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  • A redesigned app helps prevent and respond to concussions in youth sports – WTOP News

    A redesigned app helps prevent and respond to concussions in youth sports – WTOP News

    Being part of a youth sports league has a lot of benefits — but it also brings with it an increased risk for injuries, including concussions.

    Being part of a youth sports league has a lot of benefits — it boosts kids’ confidence and physical activity, and research shows it can help improve educational outcomes as well.

    But it also brings with it an increased risk for injuries, including concussions.

    “Everybody thinks of football,” Dr. Gerard Gioia — the director of the Safe Concussion Outcome, Recovery & Education (SCORE) Program at Children’s National Hospital — said. Other sports, he added, such as soccer, lacrosse, rugby and skateboarding, can be hazardous, too.

    But if we are talking football, “We need to teach kids that you do not use your head in any way to try to tackle or block or contact another person,” Gioia said, and that a helmet is meant as a protective device, not a weapon.

    The SCORE Program has a newly redesigned app that aims to do just that. Called SCORE 4 Brain Health, it helps parents, coaches and others identify, monitor and respond to concussions. The free app has educational resources, including a list of questions parents should be asking youth sports organizations.

    “There’s a set of three questions that relate to the league’s policy,” Gioia said. “Is there a concussion protocol and guideline? How are parents informed about a suspected concussion? And tell us about your return to play protocol, and what documentation do you require after a youngster is supposedly ready to return?”

    Other prompts focus on concussion training for coaches and whether children are being trained against using their heads to tackle.

    Gioia said if a child does suffer a blow to the head, a parent should get on the phone with the child’s doctor that day.

    The SCORE app has a list of 12 warning signs to know when to take a child to the emergency room, including loss of consciousness or difficulty moving an arm or a leg.

    He said concussion treatment has advanced in the 20 years he’s been in the field.

    “Right now, what we do is we activate kids. We used to say, ‘Rest, rest, rest.’ And no longer do we recommend rest, except maybe the first day or two,” Gioia said. “But we get kids up walking. We want them to return to school — with support, of course. We want them to start doing both physical activity and social activity.”

    There are also more targeted treatments for symptoms, whether the child is suffering from emotional adjustment issues or is having difficulties with balance.

    Currently, all 50 states and the District have passed legislation on children’s sports and safety. Gioia said all require high school coaches to go through CDC concussion safety training. He estimates about half include guidelines for youth coaches, as well, including in Virginia, Maryland and D.C.

    The SCORE 4 Brain Health App is available to download on the App Store and Google Play.

    Get breaking news and daily headlines delivered to your email inbox by signing up here.

    © 2024 WTOP. All Rights Reserved. This website is not intended for users located within the European Economic Area.

    Shayna Estulin

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  • Lake Mary, Florida, rallies to beat Taiwan 2-1 in 8 innings to win Little League World Series title

    Lake Mary, Florida, rallies to beat Taiwan 2-1 in 8 innings to win Little League World Series title

    SOUTH WILLIAMSPORT, Pa. (AP) — Lathan Norton was sick and didn’t play on Saturday at the Little League World Series. But on Sunday he scored the winning run in the championship.

    Lathan raced home from second base on an overthrow at first as Lake Mary, Florida, rallied to beat Taiwan 2-1 in eight innings and claim the title.

    “It was the greatest feeling ever,” said Lathan, who had a fever of 102 on Saturday but recovered before the championship. “I still haven’t had time to let it all sink in, but it feels like the most amazing thing ever.”

    Taiwan clung to a 1-0 lead from the first inning until Florida’s last at-bat. The Southeast region representatives outhit Taiwan and had a runner on third in three separate innings, but couldn’t get a run across.

    Then, in the bottom of the sixth, Florida got runners on first and second and DeMarcos Mieses, who struck out in his previous two at-bats, delivered. Hitting the gap in shallow left, he gave Chase Anderson enough time to sprint home and tie the game.

    In the eighth, Lathan was placed by rule on second base to start the inning. Hunter Alexander bunted and the throw to first went into the outfield. Florida players poured out of the dugout while the Taiwan players crumpled.

    “I was just thinking, ‘Stay fair, stay fair,’” Hunter said. “After that ball goes past me, I say, ‘Let’s go!’”

    Taiwan drew two straight walks to start the game. After a bunt moved the runners over and a pop out, Hu Yen-Chun hit a ball toward third, which ricocheted off James Feliciano. Chiu Wei-Che scored easily. But it was Taiwan’s only run.

    This is the first championship in nine tries for Florida, which also came from behind in its 10-7 semifinal win over Texas on Saturday, scoring five runs in its final at-bat.

    “We came here to do something. We came here to do a job, and today we accomplished that job,” Florida manager Jonathan Anderson said. “We took a loss to Texas, we battled all the way back and here we are to talk about how we won this whole thing.”

    Taiwan was a dominant team at the LLWS from 1969, when it won its first championship, to 1996, when it claimed its 17th. But it had only made the title game once since, in 2009, a loss to California, before Sunday. Lee Cheng-Ta managed both that team and this year’s club, Kuei-Shan Little League from Taoyuan, Taiwan. Last season, he led the same team — with a completely different roster — to a third-place finish.

    Coaches for Taiwan, representing the Asia-Pacific region, declined to attend the postgame news conference.

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    Amanda Vogt is a student in the John Curley Center for Sports Journalism at Penn State.

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    AP sports: https://apnews.com/sports

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  • Lake Mary, Florida, rallies to beat Taiwan 2-1 in 8 innings to win Little League World Series title

    Lake Mary, Florida, rallies to beat Taiwan 2-1 in 8 innings to win Little League World Series title

    SOUTH WILLIAMSPORT, Pa. — Lathan Norton was sick and didn’t play on Saturday at the Little League World Series. But on Sunday he scored the winning run in the championship.

    Lathan raced home from second base on an overthrow at first as Lake Mary, Florida, rallied to beat Taiwan 2-1 in eight innings and claim the title.

    “It was the greatest feeling ever,” said Lathan, who had a fever of 102 on Saturday but recovered before the championship. “I still haven’t had time to let it all sink in, but it feels like the most amazing thing ever.”

    Taiwan clung to a 1-0 lead from the first inning until Florida’s last at-bat. The Southeast region representatives outhit Taiwan and had a runner on third in three separate innings, but couldn’t get a run across.

    Then, in the bottom of the sixth, Florida got runners on first and second and DeMarcos Mieses, who struck out in his previous two at-bats, delivered. Hitting the gap in shallow left, he gave Chase Anderson enough time to sprint home and tie the game.

    In the eighth, Lathan was placed by rule on second base to start the inning. Hunter Alexander bunted and the throw to first went into the outfield. Florida players poured out of the dugout while the Taiwan players crumpled.

    “I was just thinking, ‘Stay fair, stay fair,’” Hunter said. “After that ball goes past me, I say, ‘Let’s go!’”

    Taiwan drew two straight walks to start the game. After a bunt moved the runners over and a pop out, Hu Yen-Chun hit a ball toward third, which ricocheted off James Feliciano. Chiu Wei-Che scored easily. But it was Taiwan’s only run.

    This is the first championship in nine tries for Florida, which also came from behind in its 10-7 semifinal win over Texas on Saturday, scoring five runs in its final at-bat.

    “We came here to do something. We came here to do a job, and today we accomplished that job,” Florida manager Jonathan Anderson said. “We took a loss to Texas, we battled all the way back and here we are to talk about how we won this whole thing.”

    Taiwan was a dominant team at the LLWS from 1969, when it won its first championship, to 1996, when it claimed its 17th. But it had only made the title game once since, in 2009, a loss to California, before Sunday. Lee Cheng-Ta managed both that team and this year’s club, Kuei-Shan Little League from Taoyuan, Taiwan. Last season, he led the same team — with a completely different roster — to a third-place finish.

    Coaches for Taiwan, representing the Asia-Pacific region, declined to attend the postgame news conference.

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    Amanda Vogt is a student in the John Curley Center for Sports Journalism at Penn State.

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    AP sports: https://apnews.com/sports

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  • Striking out 12, Taiwan defeats Venezuela 4-1 in the Little League World Series semifinal

    Striking out 12, Taiwan defeats Venezuela 4-1 in the Little League World Series semifinal

    SOUTH WILLIAMSPORT, Pa. — Taiwan starter Lai Cheng-Xi struck out 12 batters and allowed just three hits as the Asia-Pacific representative beat Venezuela 4-1 on Saturday to advance to the Little League World Series championship.

    Taiwan managed only three hits but didn’t need them, as it collected eight walks and scored twice on wild pitches.

    Taiwan will face the winner of the Florida-Texas matchup, to be played later Saturday, in the title game on Sunday. In its 32nd LLWS appearance, Taiwan has a chance to win it all for the first time since 1996 — though it has claimed the tournament title 17 times, more than any other international team, including a run of five straight from 1977-81.

    Kuei-Shan Little League from Taoyuan, Taiwan, made it to the semifinal on the international side of the bracket in 2023 but ultimately settled for third place. Manager Lee Cheng-Ta has brought the team back to South Williamsport but with an entirely different roster.

    José Perez took the mound for Venezuela with the bases loaded and one out in the top of the third. Yu Chia-Jai walked on five pitches and put his arms up in joy looking toward his dugout as Chen Bo-Wei walked home. The play only made the score 2-0, but it felt like a turning point with Lai in control.

    As Lai racked up strikeouts, Venezuela struggled to consistently find the strike zone. Wild pitches proved costly from the start. In the first inning, a pitch from starter Luis Yepez reached the backstop, allowing Chiu Wei-Che to safely slide home and put Taiwan on the board.

    Venezuela opened its first at-bat with a single to left by Luis, and a sacrifice bunt moved him to second. But Lai ended the Latin America threat by striking out the next two batters.

    In the fifth, Taiwan picked up another run when Luis and Samuel Carrasquel collided in shallow center trying to catch a fly ball for the inning’s final out. Chen, who singled to left in the previous at-bat, had plenty of time to run home and increase the lead to four.

    Venezuela finally mounted a threat in the sixth, putting runners on second and third when Abraham Lucena doubled to right. A groundout got one run home but Simon Vicheria grounded back to Chiu, who had moved to relief pitcher, to end the game.

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    Amanda Vogt is a student in the John Curley Center for Sports Journalism at Penn State.

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  • Yankees and Tigers are kids for a day, mingling among Little Leaguers

    Yankees and Tigers are kids for a day, mingling among Little Leaguers

    WILLIAMSPORT, Pa. — Aaron Judge heard steady cries of “Judge!” from kids who flocked to the New York Yankees slugger from the moment he stepped off the team plane to his appearance at the Little League World Series.

    One of the biggest stars in baseball, Judge was certainly the biggest attraction around Williamsport.

    Jazz Chisholm Jr. tossed souvenirs to pleading kids and captured the commotion on an old-school handheld video camera. Wearing his Yankees uniform top, Giancarlo Stanton showed Little Leaguers a proper grip of a baseball on a bus ride.

    Through it all, the best Little League baseball players in America were awestruck by the sight of real-life big leaguers.

    “They were blown away by how big G and Judge were on the bus,” Yankees shortstop Anthony Volpe said.

    Yankees and Detroit Tigers players grabbed their hunks of flattened cardboard and took flight for the traditional slide down the outfield hill outside the Little League World Series stadium. Judge handed out collectible pins to the players. Tigers played video games and table tennis with kids in the game room.

    It was hard to tell who had more fun.

    “Just to get a chance to share that moment with them, talk to them, sign a couple of autographs, I think if you ask both teams, we all enjoyed that experience,” Judge said.

    On a rainy Sunday afternoon that delayed Little League World Series games, the Yankees and Tigers acted like kids again as they mingled with elite 12-year-olds from around the globe at the site of the pinnacle of youth baseball.

    The Tigers then went out and rallied in the ninth and 10th innings to beat the Yankees 3-2.

    “I had dreams of playing in the Little League World Series,” New York manager Aaron Boone said.

    Boone had to settle for a role in the Major League Baseball Little League Classic on Sunday night at 2,366-seat Historic Bowman Field.

    The Yankees and Tigers played two games in Detroit over the weekend and took a quick flight to Williamsport to finish the series Sunday. They were mobbed in the morning at the airport by smiling Little Leaguers. Both teams rode the bus with the youth players to try and watch the Series at Lamade Stadium in South Williamsport, though rain thwarted those plans. New York and Detroit later made a short ride to Bowman Field, which opened in 1926.

    “I just couldn’t imagine at that age being able to hang out with big leaguers at that time,” Stanton said.

    Kids had questions for the major league stars. What is it like in The Show? Who is the hardest pitcher you’ve faced? How do you get to the majors?

    “They’re pointing at your muscles and asking how you get big and strong,” Judge said, laughing. “It’s pretty cool stuff.”

    Some of the kids were celebrities already to the Yankees and Tigers who followed along with the Little League World Series bracket.

    “The cool thing is I recognized some of the kids from watching them play this week,” Stanton said.

    The Little League Classic is one of MLB’s experiments to try and attract new fans — and re-ignite the passion of lapsed ones — through offbeat settings, such as games this year like the Phillies-Mets series in London. The St. Louis Cardinals played the Pittsburgh Pirates in 2017 in the first Little League Classic.

    Dillon Phelan of the Great Lakes region (out of Hinsdale, Illinois) mingled in full uniform with teammates near the Tigers dugout ahead of Sunday’s night’s game. Dillon catches for his baseball team, which lost both games it played in the World Series, but he found his mitt handy as he hoped to catch some baseballs from the Tigers. He already knew how to snag an autograph. Dillon removed his cap and flashed scores of autographs under the bill he already got earlier in the day from the Yankees and Tigers.

    Stanton and Volpe signed the hat. So did Yankees slugger Juan Soto. Detroit outfielders Kerry Carpenter and Riley Greene added their signatures to the souvenir to savor for Dillon.

    “It’s been cool,” Dillon said. “It’s been a good memory that I won’t forget for a long time.”

    Little Leaguers were treated like MLB All-Stars for most of their time in Williamsport. They were celebrated by thousands at a downtown parade. ESPN spent 2 1/2 hours interviewing kids and collecting fun facts from each one as part of its TV coverage.

    Great Lakes coach Damon Phelan, Dillon’s father, said the team spent eight days in town before it even played a game.

    “There’s so much prep that goes into the games, everything from the boys getting new uniforms, cleats, all new batting gear, catcher’s gear,” he said. “It’s like Christmas in August.”

    The best gift of them all just might have been making friends with the Yankees and Tigers.

    ___

    AP MLB: https://apnews.com/hub/mlb

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  • Prime Minister Tusk says Poland will strive to host Summer Olympics in 2040 or 2044

    Prime Minister Tusk says Poland will strive to host Summer Olympics in 2040 or 2044

    WARSAW, Poland (AP) — Poland’s Prime Minister Donald Tusk announced Friday that his country will strive to host the Summer Olympics for the first time, with a particular eye on the Games in 2040 and 2044.

    Tusk was speaking at a sports field in Karczew, a town south of Warsaw, where boys were doing soccer training behind him.

    “Poland will formally make efforts to host the Olympic Games. Life will show whether this will be a realistic goal, but we will take it seriously,” Tusk said.

    Tusk explained that 2040 and 2044 were the earliest realistic dates, given other hosting decisions made by the IOC.

    He said he dedicated the decision to today’s 10, 12, 15-year-olds as he also pledged investments to renovate and expand youth sports training facilities.

    “I probably won’t be running around the pitch when the Olympics are in Poland,” said the 67-year-old premier, himself an amateur but avid soccer player. “But I can do a lot over the next few years to make this dream a real project.”

    Tusk’s announcement comes after a poor display by Poland at the 2024 Olympics in Paris, where the country won only one gold.

    His allies in the centrist Civic Platform party welcomed the move, saying it would create opportunities to develop the nation’s sporting infrastructure.

    Tusk’s right-wing opponents criticized him, saying other projects deserved more attention.

    There was even criticism from the Left, which belongs to his governing coalition.

    “A country with one Olympic gold medal. I know that the prime minister likes to build stadiums, but really, maybe first let’s build a decent Olympic team and spend money (rationally) on it, instead of ridiculing ourselves at our own event,” a left-wing lawmaker, Anna Maria Zukowska, tweeted on the X platform.

    Poland won 10 medals altogether in Paris and took 42nd place in the overall standings, making it the country’s worst performance since 1956.

    Poland has also yet to stage a Winter Olympics, although it did co-host the 2012 European Soccer Championship along with Ukraine.

    Standing alongside Tusk, Sports Minister Slawomir Nitras said: “I saw the Games in Paris and I can say that from the organizational side we are able to organize such an event. I think Polish sport is waiting for it.”

    __

    AP Olympics: https://apnews.com/hub/2024-paris-olympic-games

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  • Changing the Game: Local Parents Launch New Scottsdale Recreational Soccer League

    Changing the Game: Local Parents Launch New Scottsdale Recreational Soccer League

    Addressing the Need for a Non-Coed, Competitive and Affordable Experience for Scottsdale Youth

    Nexus Youth Soccer League (NYSL), started by Scottsdale parents Kenna and RJ Watters, is thrilled to announce the launch of its new, non-coed, next-level recreational youth soccer league specifically designed for multi-sport girls and boys in grades 3-8. 

    Nexus Youth Soccer League aims to bridge the opportunity gap between recreational and club soccer programs, providing a competitive and enjoyable environment without the high costs and time commitments typically associated with club soccer. 

    League owners Kenna and RJ were inspired to start this league because of their experience with coaching multiple teams in another kids soccer league over the last couple years. “As our daughter approached the age of 10, we realized that there just weren’t many opportunities for her to continue playing soccer recreationally in our area, and almost nothing that is not co-ed. As coaches, we have seen how these co-ed teams with just one or two girls are such an intimidating environment for them. So they end up not playing to their full potential because they’re simply outnumbered. We wanted more for our daughter and we know there are so many more female athletes out there, too, who want to play and learn in a positive, encouraging environment, giving them the space to hone their skills, build relationships, and grow their love of the game,” says Kenna.

    The statistics back up their experience. According to a 2017 study by the Women’s Sports Foundation, girls drop out of sports at twice the rate of boys by age 14 and found that 38% of girls aged 7-17 who had left sports cited “I wasn’t having fun” as a key reason for quitting. The Watterses believe that their program will bring that fun back into youth soccer while also creating an environment that is competitive by encouraging the players to commit to learning the sport at a deeper level than traditional recreational soccer programs.

    With one practice per week and one game every Saturday, this Scottsdale youth soccer league ensures a balanced approach that fits into busy family schedules. “Kenna and I both were multi-sport athletes growing up. We know that every activity or sport a kid does throughout their childhood contributes to developing a multi-faceted character with all these different experiences and memories,” says RJ.

    Registration for the NYSL fall soccer league serving the Scottsdale, Arcadia, and Biltmore area is now open through Aug. 31, 2024. Parents and players interested in participating can visit www.nexusysl.com to register and get more information about Nexus Youth Soccer League.

    About Nexus Youth Soccer League:

    Nexus Youth Soccer League (NYSL) is a non-coed, competitive recreational soccer league in Scottsdale designed for boys and girls in grades 3-8 who are passionate about  playing soccer.

    Source: Nexus Youth Soccer League

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  • Focused amid the gunfire, an AP photographer captures another perspective of attack on Trump

    Focused amid the gunfire, an AP photographer captures another perspective of attack on Trump

    BUTLER, Pa. (AP) — Gene Puskar has been with The Associated Press for 45 years. Based in Pittsburgh, his career has spanned a wide range of events including the nuclear accident at Three Mile Island, the Sept. 11 attack that downed Flight 93, Stanley Cups and World Series, many presidential and campaign events and, his favorite, the Little League World Series. Here’s what he had to say about making this extraordinary photo.

    Why this photo

    It was a political rally assignment like hundreds before that I’ve covered over 45 years with The Associated Press – until it wasn’t.

    I arrived at the Butler Farm Show at 8 a.m. for hopefully – most don’t start on time – a 5:30 p.m. appearance by former President Donald Trump and the traffic was already backed up to get into the parking lot.

    A fairway of Trump merchandise tents were in place and business was boomin’. At 8 a.m.!

    The Secret Service designated 10:30 a.m. as the pre-set time for photographers to stake out their spot on the back riser camera stand. I was to be stationed right in the center, 100 feet from the podium. We marked our spots with a tripod or ladder, mine with a giant AP in bright green tape on it.

    By 11:30 the pre-set was over, and the Secret Service locked down the site for a security sweep. We were allowed to return, this time through security, at 1 p.m.

    A steady stream of local, state and federal politicians riled up the crowd from 1-6 p.m. as they waited for Trump. I stood shoulder to shoulder with three other photographers and cameramen, hot, dehydrated, hungry – waiting for the main attraction to appear at center stage.

    How I made this photo

    Finally – shortly after 6 p.m. – Trump made his entrance. He stopped every few feet to point to folks in the audience and pump his first and smile. This is often the time photographers have a chance to make a picture, with the candidate or president gesturing and interacting with supporters. The end of remarks is a good time, too, when the subject also works the crowd.

    I had my trusty Sony A1 attached to a Sony 400mm f2.8, with a 1.4x telextender on it, sitting on a carbon fiber mono-pod resting on my shoulder. I also had a Sony A9 III with a 28-200mm lens on it.

    After turning to supporters who lined the grandstand behind the podium, Trump began his comments.

    The microphone on the podium was too high. I was right in his face. So, unless he looked up or to the side, making a worthwhile photo was impossible. After an initial frenzy of shooting photos once he started speaking, I settled down to look for expressive gestures.

    These speeches can go on a long time, sometimes over an hour and a half.

    Relatively early into Trump’s remarks, he was explaining a graph that showed the number of illegal immigrants who have entered the U.S., he looked to his right, my left, at the giant screen projection when …

    a CRACK! CRACK! rang out. I knew it wasn’t a firecracker.

    I knelt down on the riser, which still left me about 5 feet in the air, and I looked to the Secret Service snipers on the roof to the right of the stage, my left, whom I had photographed taking their positions nearly four hours earlier.

    A few more reports of gunfire. Trump ducked out of frame, then there was a scramble of Secret Service. The agents swarmed the downed candidate, who was still hidden behind the podium.

    This image is one of the first I shot once the Secret Service deemed it safe to move Trump after being assured the shooter was down.

    It was a few frames later when Trump insisted that his Secret Security detail allow him to pump his fist and yell “fight!” to the crowd, captured by colleague Evan Vucci.

    I then followed Trump as he was assisted in a swarm of Secret Service to his SUV.

    Why this photo works

    The photo speaks for itself. The old saying goes; Question: What does it take to make a great picture? Answer: F11 and be there.

    I was there because the AP assigned me there. This is a great responsibility. To those who much is given, much is expected. I simply did what was expected of me as a AP photographer. What tells me I got the shot are the many people at the AP who tell me that I got it. And what makes me feel good/proud is that the AP feels good about the job I did that day.

    ___

    For more extraordinary AP photography, click here.

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  • Nazem Kadri scores twice in third period to rally Flames to 6-5 win over Coyotes

    Nazem Kadri scores twice in third period to rally Flames to 6-5 win over Coyotes

    CALGARY, Alberta — Nazem Kadri scored twice in the third period, and also had an assist, as the Calgary Flames rallied to beat the Arizona Coyotes 6-5 on Sunday.

    Andrei Kuzmenko, Matt Coronato, Connor Zary, and Yegor Sharangovich also scored for Calgary, which has won three of its last four games. Dustin Wolf finished with 30 saves to win his third straight start.

    “There’s not too many nights where (Kadri) hasn’t factored into a game,” Flames coach Ryan Huska said. “I’m happy for the way he’s approached his season this year, he’s done a lot of great things for us.”

    Kadri leads the club in scoring with 74 points, 15 points more than Yegor Sharangovich, who is second.

    “He’s a competitor, he always has been. When he finds himself in a situation where someone needs to step up or grab hold of things, I think he has a sense of obligation that that person is him,” Huska said.

    Dylan Guenther had two goals, and Alex Kerfoot, Matias Maccelli, and Josh Doan also scored for Arizona, which was swept in the three-game season series with the Flames. Clayton Keller had two assists.

    Connor Ingram stopped 25 saves before being replace by Karel Vejmelka with 2:40 left in the third period after taking an errant stick from Coronato in the mask. Vejmelka did not face any shots.

    “Too many breakdowns defensively,” Kerfoot said. “Little loose with the puck. They’re a good team in transition and they make plays off the rush.”

    It was likely the Coyotes’ final road game as an Arizona team. They are expected be sold to Utah Jazz owner Ryan Smith shortly after team’s season finale on Wednesday and moved to Salt Lake City.

    With the Flames trailing 5-4 after two periods, Kadri tied it at 1:14 of the third as he chased down a puck near the corner and sent a sharp-angle shot in between Ingram and the post.

    Kadri then gave Calgary its first lead of the night when he deflected MacKenzie Weegar’s point shot on the power play at 5:43 for his 29th goal of the season.

    “My entire life, even in youth hockey, I’ve always tried to take pride in making my linemates better,” said Kadri. “Just communicating and having chemistry because I understand that as a unit, that team success usually leads to individual success as well.”

    The latest to benefit on his line is Kuzmenko, who has nine goals and 16 points over the last nine games.

    “He’s not necessarily afraid of risk, which can be a good and bad thing,” said Kadri, when asked about his talented Russian linemate. “But once you start to manage the areas of the ice, time, and score kind of thing, which comes with experience, I think that can be a heck of a tool to use, just being fearless and not being afraid to make mistakes.”

    The Flames got their 10th win when trailing after 40 minutes, tied with Colorado and the New York Rangers for most in the league.

    Guenther’s second of the game gave the Coyotes a 4-3 lead with 4:46 left in the second period as he sent a one-timer off a cross-ice pass from Jan Jenik.

    Doan’s made it a two-goal game 1:03 later before Sharangovich followed another 33 seconds later to bring the Flames within one at 5-4.

    Doan, son of longtime Coyotes great Shane Doan, has made an immediate impact in his first month in the NHL. The 22-year-old second-round pick from 2021 has five goals and nine points in his first 10 games.

    The Coyotes had won four of their last five as they finish the season strong. They were 20 minutes away from going 4-1-0 on their five-game road trip.

    “Our guys have showed a lot of character in the last week. Our last three games, really tight games and we pulled through two really tough games. Really proud of them,” Coyotes coach André Tourigny said.

    Arizona got off to a quick start on goals 1:19 apart from Kerfoot and Maccelli for a 2-0 lead 3:55 into the game. The Coyotes held a 7-1 advantage on shots at the time.

    However, Kuzmenko and Coronato scored 2:20 apart to tie it at 9:42.

    Guenther’s first of the night on the power play with 2:06 left in the first gave Arizona a 3-2 lead headed to the first intermission.

    Calgary again tied it at 9:07 of the second when Zary buried a setup from Dryden Hunt.

    Kuzmenko, who came over from Vancouver as part of the trade return for Elias Lindholm, is up to 14 goals and 26 points in 29 games with the Flames. At the time he was acquired, he had eight goals and 21 points in 43 games with the Canucks.

    UP NEXT

    Coyotes: Host Edmonton on Wednesday night in their season finale.

    Flames: At Vancouver on Tuesday night before returning home to host San Jose on Thursday night in the season finale.

    ___

    AP NHL: https://www.apnews.com/hub/NHL

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  • From Uber Eats’ ‘Friends’ reunion to Bud’s Clydesdales, here are the buzziest Super Bowl ads so far

    From Uber Eats’ ‘Friends’ reunion to Bud’s Clydesdales, here are the buzziest Super Bowl ads so far


    NEW YORK — If you watch the Super Bowl for the commercials, you no longer have to wait until the big game to see what advertisers have in store for viewers.

    Many companies now release ads ahead of the game in the hope of capitalizing on the buzz that builds as the game approaches. They hope to recoup some of the reported $7 million that’s the going rate for a 30-second spot by capturing pre-game attention.

    It’s a big challenge to stand out among the 50-plus advertisers that will be vying for the eyes of the more than 100 million people expected to tune in this year to CBS (and Paramount+ and Nickelodeon) on Super Bowl Sunday (Feb. 11). Last year’s broadcast on Fox was watched by a record 115.1 million viewers, according to Nielsen.

    So advertisers pull out all the stops. In the ads released ahead of the game so far, Budweiser focuses on its iconic Clydesdales, Michelob Ultra capitalizes on the iconic star power of soccer legend Lionel Messi, and Uber Eats goes for laughs with an ad where Jennifer Aniston forgets she starred in “Friends” with David Schwimmer. Many more commercials are expected to be released ahead of the game.

    Of course, not all advertisers release their ads ahead of the game, so there will be surprises. Big advertisers like Amazon have stayed mum on ad plans so far. And while there have been no indications of such, it remains to be seen whether advertisers will capitalize on this year’s Taylor Swift buzz in some way.

    Here are some of the buzziest ads that have been released so far:

    Actress Tina Fey has so many choices on the online travel agency booking.com site she has to hire body doubles: an influencer type played by her 30 Rock co-star, Jane Krakowski, to stay at a fancy hotel, a bigfoot handled by another 30 Rock co-star, Jack McBrayer, to stay at a cabin, and even actress Glenn Close, who stays on a farm.

    The Bud Light genie grants wishes — like giving someone ’80s metal hair and someone else a giant bicep — to Bud Light drinkers. NFL legend Peyton Manning, rapper Post Malone and more also appear on screen.

    Budweiser is bringing back familiar characters to its gameday slot. In the beer brand’s nostalgic ad, a snowstorm threatens to derail a delivery to a small-town bar. But a team of Clydesdales and a Labrador retriever team up to help Budweiser make the delivery.

    Two grandmotherly women (“Dina” and “Mita”) chase after “Top Gun: Maverick” actor Danny Ramirez, who took the last bag of Doritos Dinamita from a store shelf, leaving actress Jenna Ortega behind.

    Dove’s ad begins seemingly whimsically showing young girls having mishaps playing sports to the tune of “It’s the Hard Knock Life.” But the ad cuts starkly to a girl looking self-consciously in the mirror. The message: low body-confidence leads to girls quitting sports, not the mishaps.

    Google’s heartstring-pulling ad follows a blind man as he uses “Guided Frame” — Google’s AI-powered accessibility feature for the Pixel camera that uses a combination of audio cues, high-contrast animations and tactile vibrations — to take pictures of the people and places in his life.

    In an ad for Hellmann’s, Kate McKinnon makes an unusual discovery: her cat can talk. Well, sort of. Her furry friend can say one word, “may-ow” — which skyrockets her to celebrity status and causes a mayonnaise-buying frenzy. The “Mayo Cat” becomes so famous that she even dates (and soon dumps) Pete Davidson.

    Lionel Messi’s Super Bowl debut shows off his soccer mastery and apparent loyalty to Michelob Ultra. In the ad, the soccer star also gets an assist from NFL legend Dan Marino and nod from “Ted Lasso’s” Jason Sudeikis.

    Aubrey Plaza is always having a blast, whether she is stuck in an elevator or being abducted by aliens — or reuniting with her “Parks and Rec” co-star Nick Offerman while riding dragons.

    Retired Miami Dolphins quarterback Dan Marino, Buffalo Bills’ Bruce Smith and wide receiver Terrell Owens never got a Super Bowl ring, but M&M’s and Scarlett Johansson present the “Almost Champions” ring to the almost winners.

    According to Oreo, the key to making life’s biggest decisions is to “twist on it.” An ad for the iconic sandwich cookie suggests that even Kris Jenner used the tactic before agreeing to start “Keeping Up With The Kardashians” back in 2007.

    After a gas station clerk points out Chris Pratt looks like the man in the Pringles logo, he goes viral and stars in a movie about “Mr. P.”

    PepsiCo’s year-old lemon-lime soda’s debut Super Bowl ad features rapper Ice Spice dealing with a breakup by spending time with the Starry lemon and lime spokescharacters — the message: “It’s time to see other sodas.”

    Jason Momoa shows off his singing chops in an ad that shows Scrubs duo Zach Braff and Donald Faison singing about T-Mobile home internet to the tune of “Flashdance … What a Feeling.” “Flashdance” star Jennifer Beals pops in to spray Momoa with water and ask him to sing it again — without his shirt.

    When someone tells Jennifer Aniston they didn’t know you could order a wide variety of products on Uber Eats, Aniston tells them, “In order to remember something, you’ve got to forget something else.” That prompts a wave of forgetting: David and Victoria Beckham forget Victoria Beckham used to be Posh Spice, and Jennifer Aniston forgets she starred in “Friends” with David Schwimmer.



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  • US women’s professional volleyball void is filled, and possibly overflowing, with 3 upstart leagues

    US women’s professional volleyball void is filled, and possibly overflowing, with 3 upstart leagues

    OMAHA, Neb. — Volleyball has been the No. 1 sport in girls participation in the United States for almost a decade.

    More than 90,000 fans showed up for an outdoor match in Nebraska’s football stadium last summer, and the NCAA semifinal and championship matches set attendance and television viewership records.

    The next sign of the sport’s evolution in this country was on display Wednesday night when the Atlanta Vibe played the Omaha Supernovas in the debut of the Pro Volleyball Federation.

    The PVF is one of three U.S. women’s professional leagues now operating or planned for players who previously had no choice but to go overseas to continue their careers. League One Volleyball is on track to launch in November. The five-week Athletes Unlimited league recently wrapped up its third season.

    Tori Dixon, the 31-year-old middle blocker for the Supernovas, has played in Azerbaijan, Japan, Italy and China over seven pro seasons. She said there’s international buzz about the PVF, and former teammates have asked her to help them get a contract.

    “Maybe it’s a little less money, but you get to stay home and be comfortable,” Dixon said. “Overseas is a grind. It’s really, really difficult. I think a lot of top players are choosing to stay home in the States.”

    Besides Atlanta and Omaha, the PVF has teams in Columbus, Las Vegas, Orlando, San Diego and Grand Rapids, Michigan.

    Opening night was everything PVF officials could have wanted. A crowd of 11,624 turned out at the CHI Health Center, and it was treated to a five-set thriller won by the Vibe. Fans were enthusiastic until the end with encouragement from an arena emcee, music between points and high-level play.

    “This was breaking ground for a professional volleyball league, and there could have been 800 people and a poorly played match,” Omaha coach Shelton Collier said. “It was an incredible match with an incredible crowd, an incredible atmosphere, incredible support staff. Whoever put on this production for the fans, it was amazing. It was epic.”

    Cincinnati Bengals quarterback Joe Burrow, Orlando Magic chairman Dan DeVos, three-time Olympic beach volleyball gold medalist Kerri Walsh Jennings and multi-platinum recording artist Jason Derulo are among PVF team owners.

    Big-name investors in League One Volleyball, known as LOVB, include basketball stars Candace Parker, Jayson Tatum and Kevin Durant, tennis icon Billie Jean King, skiing star Lindsey Vonn and entertainers Amy Schumer and Chelsea Handler.

    LOVB’s franchises are owned by the league and have been announced in Atlanta, Houston, Omaha, Salt Lake City and Madison, Wisconsin.

    The Athletes Unlimited league, co-founded by Jon Patricof and Jonathan Soros, plays a five-week season at one site with 44 players who rotate weekly among four teams and are paid a minimum of $10,000.

    PVF players are under contract for a 24-match regular season and playoffs running through May and are to be paid $60,000 with bonuses for individual and team performance. There also is revenue sharing. The league champion is promised $1 million to divide among players and staff. Housing is provided along with other benefits. Two players on each roster will live year-round in their market and be paid an additional $40,000 as ambassadors for their team.

    LOVB has not announced its pay structure or schedule.

    It’s possible to earn six figures overseas, with the very best players making into the millions. But many more get paid far less, and some don’t receive paychecks consistently.

    PVF co-founder Dave Whinham said of some 300 American women who played in other countries last year, at least 120 were in PVF training camps this winter.

    “That’s impactful,” Whinham said. “What else is so cool is so many of them have been pros for five, six, seven, eight years. So we’re not walking into the North American professional sports scene as a minor league. We’re rocking it at a very high level.”

    PVF held its college draft in December and league officials were pleased, if not a bit surprised, 30 of the 35 selected players signed contracts, including No. 1 overall pick Asjia O’Neal of Texas (Columbus). Including veterans, at least 35 players in the league have been members of national or Olympic teams.

    PVF officials said their league’s competitive level this season probably won’t match that of the top leagues in Europe and Asia, but they predict it will within five years.

    Whinham and PVF co-founder Stephen Evans have worked together on several sports and entertainment projects over 25 years and began planning for a women’s pro league as the volleyball boom started about 10 years ago.

    League administration is headed by CEO Jen Spicher, a longtime business executive and former college player and club coach. Former Florida State coach Cecile Reynaud is vice president of operations and former Texas A&M coach Laurie Corbelli is operations consultant. Four-time U.S. Olympian Logan Tom is director of international development and player strategy.

    The start is well-timed. The sport drew global attention in August when the largest documented crowd for a women’s sporting event (92,003) showed up to see perennial college power Nebraska play Omaha at Memorial Stadium in Lincoln. More than 19,000 attended each of the two nights of the NCAA final four in Tampa, Florida. The championship match was televised on ABC for the first time and attracted 1.7 million viewers.

    CBS Sports Network will televise at least 10 PVF regular-season matches in addition to the playoffs. The PVF also has streaming agreements with Bally Sports and Stadium.

    While the PVF has a more traditional structure, each LOVB team is associated with a junior volleyball club in its market where the pros train alongside club players and join them in other activities.

    “Most leagues start kind of top down, if you will,” CEO Katlyn Gao said. “They start with pro (team) and then do programs with local youth clubs. What we saw as an opportunity was how vibrant and expansive the network of youth volleyball there already is at the club level, so we’ve asked these clubs to join us.”

    The most significant previous attempt to establish a U.S. pro league was Major League Volleyball. MLV came about following a mini volleyball boom after the United States won the silver medal at the 1984 Olympics in Los Angeles. Most players earned $5,000 and had day jobs as coaches or in the 9-to-5 world. The league folded for financial reasons a month into its third season in 1989.

    The PVF’s Corbelli, one of the ‘84 Olympians who played in MLV, said she’s confident it’s the right time for a women’s pro league in this country. Athletes Unlimited is in a different orbit with its structure and short season. As for the PVF and LOVB, the questions are whether one or both can survive long-term even if they play different times of year or whether they will merge.

    “The hardest part for me is all these volleyball people are a family. We all know each other. There’s no animosity. It’s just hard because we’re going to go head-to-head for players and cities. It’s going to have to happen until one league …” Corbelli said, her voice trailing off.

    “As I look ahead,” she said, “I don’t know if it can sustain that way. It might. I’m no palm reader, but I just kind of think it would be nice to have one strong, great league. Both of these leagues really want to do it and make it work.”

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    AP sports: https://apnews.com/sports

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  • California lawmakers to consider a ban on tackle football for kids under 12

    California lawmakers to consider a ban on tackle football for kids under 12

    SACRAMENTO, Calif. — A California bill that aims to reduce the risk of brain injury by banning tackle for children under 12 cleared its first hurdle Wednesday after a legislative committee voted for the measure to be considered by the state Assembly.

    The bill is supported by advocates seeking to protect kids from brain damage but opposed by coaches who warn it would cut off youths from an important source of physical activity.

    A legislative committee voted 5 to 2 during a public hearing to advance the bill authored by Democratic Assemblymember Kevin McCarty. But the measure is still a long way from passing. It must clear the state Assembly by the end of January to have a chance of becoming law this year.

    “Football and organizational sports in general are clearly proven ways to keep kids out of trouble,” said Assemblymember Mike Gipson, chair of the state assembly’s committee in charge of regulating sports in the state. “This bill is not taking away that ability, it is simply saying that we’re going to move from tackle to flag and we can still have the same learning experiences.”

    If passed, the bill would not take effect until 2026. Proposed amendments would gradually phase in implementation through 2029. The bill comes as flag has been gaining popularity nationwide, especially for girls.

    Research has shown tackle football causes brain damage, and the risk increases the longer people play football, said Chris Nowinski, CEO of the Concussion Legacy Foundation and former Harvard football player and WWE professional wrestler. It can cause chronic traumatic encephalopathy, which causes the death of nerve cells in the brain.

    “I don’t have a problem with NFL players, who are adults and understand the risk and are compensated, risking CTE,” Nowinski said. “I can’t imagine a world in which we have children, who don’t understand the risk, doing this for fun (and) taking the same risk with their brain.”

    No state has banned tackle football for kids, but there have been attempts to do so. Similar bills that were introduced previously in California, New York and Illinois failed to pass.

    California law already bans full-contact practices for high school and youth football teams during the offseason and limits them to two practices per week during the preseason and regular season. A law that took effect in 2021 also requires youth football officials complete concussion and head injury education in addition to other safeguards.

    Steve Famiano, a former youth football coach who leads the Save Youth Football California coalition, said youth football leagues need more time to implement the 2021 law to see how effective it is. He said kids under 12 shouldn’t be forced to play only flag football, which he said is a completely different sport from tackle football.

    “Flag football is oriented toward leaner, faster kids, and some of the kids we see in tackle football may not have developed yet physically, they may be a little bit overweight or are larger in stature, maybe not the fastest kid on the team,” he said. “They fit so perfect on a youth football team. They get to play offensive line and defensive line. You take that away from those kids, where do they go?”

    Tackle football at the high school level has been declining in California. Participation dropped more than 18% from 2015 to 2022, falling from a high of 103,725 players to 84,626 players, according to the California Interscholastic Federation’s participation survey. Football participation increased by 5% in 2023, up to 89,178 players.

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  • 'The Boys in the Boat' gives the Hollywood treatment to rowing during an Olympic year

    'The Boys in the Boat' gives the Hollywood treatment to rowing during an Olympic year

    COLORADO SPRINGS, Colo. — The journey from nowhere to an Olympic gold medal is a tale as old as time.

    Just as well-worn, but far less explored, are the stories about great athletes who realize they can’t make it anywhere unless they have a way to bankroll the trip.

    “The Boys in the Boat” is Hollywood and director George Clooney’s way of stringing those plot lines together. That it opens Christmas Day, a mere seven months before the start of the Paris Olympics, is good fortune for the people who oversee rowing in the U.S. and know the general public mostly either a) doesn’t think about that sport or b) sees it as the exclusive playground for East Coast and Ivy League elites.

    USRowing worked with producers of the movie to sponsor dozens of screenings across the country with two purposes: raising funds for an organization that received about $3.5 million of its $15 million budget in 2023 from charitable donations, and building awareness across racial and socioeconomic lines. One jarring stat: In 2021, a study found that only 2% of women who competed in NCAA rowing were Black. (Men’s rowing isn’t sanctioned by the NCAA, and so, wasn’t part of the study.)

    “What we’re trying to do here, and what so many clubs are doing around the country, is trying to create programs and opportunities” for people to row, said USRowing CEO Amanda Kraus.

    “TBITB” is about a group of poor students at the University of Washington who try out for the junior varsity crew team. It’s 1936, and far from seeking Olympic glory, these guys are simply trying to find a way to make a buck.

    “All you gotta do is make the team,” one of them says. “How hard can that be?”

    Plenty hard, it turns out, and what ensues is the Miracle on Ice, except on water — and with one other notable difference: Most of those hockey kids always knew where their next meal was coming from.

    Certainly there are others out there in a country of 330 million looking for a fresh start, a taste of the great outdoors and a chance to try something new. Kraus believes her sport might be that thing — and that all those potential rowers don’t have to be daughters and sons of millionaires.

    Rowing is hoping to inspire more people like Arshay Cooper, who was a member of the first all-Black high school rowing team at Manley High School in Chicago. Cooper authored a book, “A Most Beautiful Thing,” that itself was made into a movie produced by basketball stars Grant Hill and Dwyane Wade.

    “In rowing, you move forward by looking in the opposite direction,” is a quote from Cooper on his website that describes his worldview. “I learned that it’s OK to look back, as long as you keep pushing forward.”

    The sport also hopes to build more programs, such as Learn to Row Day, when rowing clubs are urged to welcome newcomers and teach them about the sport.

    So much about rowing is a steep climb. Kraus says it costs around $50,000 a year to support a Team USA rower; that comes after the tens of thousands expended on their development at the grassroots and college levels. But, she said, building a pipeline is an investment worth making, and it doesn’t mean everyone has to end up at the Olympics.

    “We hope people can get inspired to really check the sport out for themselves,” Kraus said. “You can be 30 or 40 or 70 and go do a ‘Learn to Row’ course at your local club. That’s a real thing. You don’t have to row in college to be part of this sport.”

    USRowing has around 74,000 members (by comparison, the U.S. Tennis Association has 680,000) and, like all niche sports, the Olympics are its time to shine. That makes a rowing movie a Christmas present for this sport.

    The high point in the film — based on the 2013 book of the same name by Daniel James Brown that’s considered rowing’s bible — takes place during a particularly fraught time. At the 1936 Berlin Games, Nazi flags get better placement than the Olympic rings and Adolf Hitler is a constantly glowering presence.

    Nobody, however, poses a bigger threat to the boys from Washington than the leader of America’s Olympic committee, who appears unbothered as he tells their coach that, even though they won their era’s version of the Olympic trials, a team with a better pedigree and more money will take their place in Berlin unless they raise $5,000 in a week.

    It’s an absurd and unfair insult, and one that, sadly, isn’t that far removed from today’s realities: Politics rule. And even in a billon-dollar Olympics industry, so many athletes have to scratch for pennies, especially in America, where the government doesn’t pay for anything.

    They make it — getting over the hump with a bit of unexpected help — and soon find themselves rubbing elbows at the opening ceremony with Jesse Owens. The great sprinter assures the rowers he’s not there to prove anything to Hitler, but rather to his own country, which still treats Blacks like second-class citizens.

    We know how the Owens story ends. Now, we know how the rowers’ story ends, too.

    It’s a quintessential underdog sports drama, all the way to the short epilogue that’s intended to give moviegoers the feels about the mysticism of a sport very few understand. If only a few of them put down the popcorn and navigate to an online donations page — or maybe even a local crew club — then the small rowing community in the U.S. will have a hit on its hands.

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    AP Summer Olympics: https://apnews.com/hub/2024-paris-olympic-games

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  • Death of Adam Johnson from skate blade prompts new look at neck guard mandates in youth hockey

    Death of Adam Johnson from skate blade prompts new look at neck guard mandates in youth hockey

    SOUTH WINDSOR, Conn. — A day after professional hockey player Adam Johnson suffered a fatal cut to his throat during a game in England, Dan Sacco went out and ordered his 10-year-old twins new neck guards.

    Colton and Harper Sacco play together as squirts — 9- and 10-year-olds — for the youth hockey program in North Branford, Connecticut. They already had neck guards, which are required for youth hockey in the state, but Sacco said he took another look at them after Johnson’s death in October.

    “They were small,” he said. “So I got new ones that are made not to be sliced through and they’re bigger. It’s scary.”

    Harper, a center, was not a big fan.

    “At first I said it was a choking device, because it went up to here,” she said, pointing to her chin. “But I got used to it.”

    Johnson’s death has renewed a national debate over whether there needs to be uniform standards and mandates for neck guards and other safety equipment when it comes to youth hockey. USA Hockey, the nation’s national governing body for the sport, recommends neck guards, but does not mandate them, leading to different policies — even within states.

    Dan Larochelle, a manager of the pro shop at the South Windsor Arena in Connecticut, said the guards he sells range in price from about $15 for a standard, relatively thin wrap-around guard, to $110 for hockey shirts made of cut-resistant material that come with thicker guards built in. Price, he said, can be a factor for many parents.

    He said they have been selling a lot of neck guards since Johnson’s death, just as they did in 2022 when a Connecticut 16-year-old, Teddy Balkind, suffered a fatal cut to the throat. He was playing for a private prep school, St. Luke, in a league that did not require neck guards, even though the organization overseeing public youth hockey does.

    Courtney Anderson was at home in Edina, Minnesota, when she read of Balkind’s death. Her 14-year old son, Evan Smolik, was a goalie on a bantam team in a league that did not require neck guards. She persuaded him to wear one.

    A couple of weeks later, Evan was at practice when a teammate’s skate struck his throat. The cut hit his jugular vein, but the guard prevented it from cutting his carotid artery. Evan lost three pints of blood, but survived thanks to the guard and the quick work of a doctor at the rink and local paramedics, Anderson said.

    Now 16, Evan is still playing and has persuaded his team to mandate neck guards.

    “I feel like people mainly don’t wear neck guards because it’s not seen as cool or it looks dumb,” he said. “I never thought about it, until that kid got cut. But it made a huge difference for me. You wear it, and you won’t die.”

    Former NHL player Pierre-Luc Létourneau-Leblond now coaches his 9-year-old son, Luc, for the Clifton Park (N.Y.) Dynamos. He said wearing neck guards, whether mandated or not, needs to be normalized at every level, from the National Hockey League on down.

    “If they all wear it, they’re not going to be worried about what they look like,” he said.

    Any sort of mandate in the NHL would require an agreement between the league and players’ union, which have been discussing skate blade safety for years.

    Last month, USA Hockey’s board of directors voted to have its Safety and Protective Equipment Committee come up with wording for a mandate. Not long after, t he International Ice Hockey Federation announced that it is making neck guards mandatory for the tournaments it runs, including the Olympics and men’s and women’s world championships.

    In Canada, all boys and girls in hockey leagues and two top junior leagues are required to wear neck protection The English Ice Hockey Association, which governs the sport below the Elite League where Johnson played, will require all players in England to wear neck guards beginning in 2024.

    “The process will hopefully bring us closer to our ultimate goal, which has been my ultimate goal long before these tragedies, which is to develop high quality and affordable, cut resistant products, including neck laceration protectors, certify them, promote them, require them, make sure that you’re being manufactured, monitored, continuously evaluated and improved,” said Dr. Michael Stuart, the chief medical officer for USA Hockey and head of the protective equipment committee. “And I think that’s a challenge for the entire hockey community.”

    There are more than 387,000 youth hockey players in the U.S., according to USA Hockey data. Injury details can be hard to come by but by one estimate, more than 12,000 of them seek emergency room care every year for injuries in practices or games; 7% of them seek aid for lacerations of some kind.

    “The young kids is where a lot of this stuff happens because of the collisions that you see and some of the accidental falls,” said retired NHL defenseman Carlo Colaiacovo, whose 6-year-old son plays. “Every time he goes into a collision, I’m always watching those very closely because I’m thinking to myself: ‘OK, where are the skates? Where are the skates?’ It’s almost like a scar that has been created because I’ve seen it happen so much.”

    Stuart said there also needs to be updated and higher standards when it comes to the effectiveness of the equipment designed to prevent cuts. He said a USA Hockey survey showed that 27% of neck lacerations occurred to players who were already wearing guards.

    “Most are not actually tested or certified,” said Stuart, whose own son suffered a neck laceration in 1998. “Many do not even cover the most vulnerable anatomic areas.”

    USA Hockey is working with the Hockey Equipment Certification Council or HECC to adopt new standards, and not just for neck guards, but for cut-resistant socks, wrist guards and protection for other vulnerable areas.

    Some companies aren’t waiting for that.

    Teri Weiss started her company, Skate Armor, 13 years ago after her then 9-year-old son, Mason Lohrei, took a stick blade to the throat and suffered a relatively minor cut. She said she tested Lohrei’s neck guard and could cut through it easily with a kitchen knife. She saw a spike in orders after Balkind died and again after Johnson’s death.

    “It’s been an uphill battle a lot of times,” she said. “Parents say, ‘Well, if they’re not mandating it, my kid doesn’t want to wear it.’

    Her son is now 22 and has been up and down this season with the Boston Bruins in the NHL and the Providence Bruins in the AHL. He no longer wears a neck guard, much to his mom’s dismay. He said it just doesn’t fit well with his other equipment.

    “Definitely I have rethought it (since Johnson’s death),” he said. “I’ve actually been talking with her about it. I don’t wear a shirt under my stuff, so it’d be kind of weird to wear the shirt with that. So I’m trying to get her to make me something that, you know, looks like a shirt but isn’t necessarily. So maybe she’ll give me a custom piece because I’m her son.”

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    AP Hockey Writer Stephen Whyno and AP Sports Writer Jimmy Golen contributed to this report.

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    AP NHL: https://apnews.com/hub/nhl

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