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Rochester woman turns 110, celebrates major milestone

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ROCHESTER, Minn. (KTTC) – A Rochester woman is celebrating a major milestone, and one that most never get to experience. On Friday, Maxine Schultz turned 110, and a party was held in her honor Saturday afternoon.

Dozens of family members and friends lined up to greet Maxine Schultz as she celebrated her big day and achievement.

Schultz moved to Elgin, Minnesota from South Dakota in the 1940s, before coming to Rochester after her husband got a job with Marigold Dairy.

Throughout her life, Schultz worked at the downtown location of JCPenney Co., at her family’s hardware store, and as a cafeteria worker for Rochester Public Schools.

Schultz said her biggest piece of advice is to always keep yourself busy.

“It’s tremendous that this many people would show up,” she said. “Keep busy. Don’t sit around and do nothing and feel sorry for yourself. That was the one thing, I could always find something to do.”

Family and friends said she is sharp as a tack. Schultz also shared her refrigerator was always filled with ice cream when her husband worked for Marigold Dairy.

Those who stopped by on Saturday afternoon got cake and ice cream. In the past Schultz has taken a ride on a hot air balloon to celebrate previous birthdays.

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Cavs’ Max Strus holds 2nd annual Bowl the Land event for foundation

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NORTH OLMSTED — As a kid, Cavaliers small forward Max Strus used to be taken by his uncle to community events for the Chicago Bears, often involving bowling. He had such fond memories of those days that he hoped to be able to organize similar events as his career progressed.

And so the Max Strus Family Foundation Bowl the Land event was created in 2024. The second annual event was held Dec. 7 at RollHouse in North Olmsted, and it featured the entire Cavaliers team and coach Kenny Atkinson, who all showed up in support.

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“When I was I younger, I grew up going to events, and it was called Bowl with the Bears. My uncle was with Blue Cross Blue Shield and he’d buy a lane and bring us,” Strus said. “So to do that, have a bunch of kids here, hopefully they’ll remember this for the rest of their lives as well.”

Max Strus and Cavaliers teammates support the Max Strus Family Foundation Bowl the Land event at RollHouse on Dec. 7, 2025.

Max Strus and Cavaliers teammates support the Max Strus Family Foundation Bowl the Land event at RollHouse on Dec. 7, 2025.

Proceeds from the event will benefit local programs supporting education, youth sports, health care, cancer research and mental health resources. Families and organizations who want to be a part of the experience are teamed up with a Cavaliers player for a round of bowling.

“We have a pedestal that we’re put on when you’re in this environment,” Strus said. “How you use your platform is special to me, and this is how I want to do it, how I was raised to do it. So having this platform to be able to speak out, be a light in the community and create a sense of community for all is all I’m trying to do.”

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Strus has yet to make his season debut with the Cavs after offseason foot surgery, which also prevented him from bowling during his family foundation’s event, but he was able to meet everyone who came. Teammates took on the responsibility of bowling on his behalf.

“It just shows you about our team. We’re all in it for the right reasons,” Strus said. “We’re all doing it the right way and trying to help each other out with our endeavors.”

This article originally appeared on Akron Beacon Journal: Cleveland Cavs’ Max Strus hosts 2nd annual Bowl the Land event



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Phygital School Games engage thousands of students across Latin America

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Phygital School Games in Brazil

Phygital School Games in Guatemala

Phygital School Games in Colombia

WPC members in Guatemala, Colombia, and Brazil showcase successful rollout of youth sports program combining physical competition with digital gaming

BRAZIL, December 8, 2025 /EINPresswire.com/ — Following the landmark agreement signed earlier this year by four World Phygital Community (WPC) members in Latin America, the Phygital School Games initiative has successfully launched across Guatemala, Colombia, and Brazil, engaging thousands of young participants and demonstrating the growing appetite for phygital sports in the region.

The initiative, spearheaded by the Guatemalan Esports Association, is designed to empower young people through the combination of digital gaming and physical activity. Beyond competition, the program encourages healthy, active lifestyles while supporting educational goals and positive youth engagement through the values of sport, discipline, and teamwork.

In Guatemala, the Phygital School Games held on September 1, 2025, at the Swiss American School, organized by the National Electronic Sports Association of Guatemala (ADEG), brought together 30 schools and academies featuring competitions in Phygital Football, Phygital Basketball, and Phygital Dancing, along with a Phygital Inclusive category. Winners were crowned across all disciplines, with Nakahi Club winning Phygital Football, Futsal García taking Phygital Basketball, and Hada Cardona from Sinai School claiming the Phygital Dancing title.

In Colombia, the initiative is currently in the qualifying phase, organized in partnership with the District Institute of Recreation and Sports (IDRD) under the Bogotá Mayor’s Office. The program has already reached more than 15,000 students through Phygital Dancing sessions, with over 100 under 17-year-old dancers from public schools competing ahead of finals at the Phygital Rivals tournament in January 2026.

In Brazil, Phygital Brazil and FEDEESP (São Paulo State School Sports Federation) signed a Technical Cooperation Agreement to introduce phygital schools across São Paulo and later nationwide. The partnership debuted at COB EXPO 2025 in São Paulo, organized by the Brazilian Olympic Committee, where 12 schools competed in Phygital Basketball and Phygital Football, marking the launch of Brazil’s first Phygital School Circuit and celebrating FEDEESP’s 25th anniversary.

“These events across Latin America show what’s possible when we bring phygital sports into schools and communities,” said Dan Merkley, Chairperson and Managing Director of the World Phygital Community. “From Guatemala’s inclusive competition to Colombia’s reach into public education and Brazil’s agreement with FEDEESP, we’re seeing young people respond enthusiastically to a format that reflects how they naturally experience sport today. This is exactly the kind of grassroots momentum that will shape the future of phygital competition.”

With the implementation of the Phygital School Games across these three countries, the initiative is expected to engage more students, encourage the creation of additional regional tournaments, and establish a sustainable structure for the growth of phygital sports in Latin America. The WPC, which is now active in over 115 countries, sees these developments as crucial steps in expanding access, creativity, and participation in phygital sports globally.
As phygital sport continues to gain traction worldwide, the Phygital School Games serve as a powerful model for how the fusion of physical and digital competition can be integrated into education systems, inspire youth participation, and create lasting positive impact in communities.

ENDS

Notes to Editors:

About the World Phygital Community (WPC):

The World Phygital Community (WPC) is a non-profit, international organization that aims to promote phygital sport worldwide by uniting physical and digital members globally. It is responsible for providing guardianship of the rules and regulations of phygital sport and hosting ranking tournaments for the Games of the Future: https://worldphygital.org/

For further information please contact: press@worldphygital.org

Press Team
World Phygital Community
press@worldphygital.org

Legal Disclaimer:

EIN Presswire provides this news content “as is” without warranty of any kind. We do not accept any responsibility or liability
for the accuracy, content, images, videos, licenses, completeness, legality, or reliability of the information contained in this
article. If you have any complaints or copyright issues related to this article, kindly contact the author above.



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Building out of the break, Filipino Heritage Game and shot share

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SAN DIEGO – The San Diego State women’s basketball team survived a strong second half push from the University of the Pacific to notch a win on Sunday afternoon, earning their fifth win in non-conference play and closing out the home non-conference slate with a 4-1 mark at Viejas Arena.

With just one non-conference game remaining for the Scarlet and Black, here are some thoughts from the Aztecs’ (5-3) 70-68 win before one of their most-attended non-conference crowds of the season over the Tigers (4-5):

Toughness and Competitiveness

Though both games at the Battles 4 Atlantis showcase weren’t televised, one could hear from listening to SDSU play-by-play voice Chris Elo that the Aztecs faced a couple of tough games.

Head coach Stacie Terry-Hutson went so far as to say their first game against Maryland Eastern Shore was “ugly in a good way,” and then Naomi Panganiban said that the team was “rattled” in the second quarter against Penn State.

“I keep going back to the word ‘toughness,’” Terry Hutson said. “We really focused a lot of our time on competing… I was worried about the wind, getting tired—and they did, but I was impressed in the first half that we were able to fight through some of that.”

Coming back to play after nearly two weeks with a good Thanksgiving break included, the Aztecs hit 50% of their shots (14 of 28) for the field while making 9 of 16 from 3-point land. Then in the second half things changed, and that competitiveness needed to show.

After converting a 11-2 edge in points off turnovers with a 9-6 margin in the first half, the Tigers turned things around in the second half by generating nine SDSU giveaways and committing only four. Still, the Aztecs made the most of TOs for the game, a 16-9 point edge despite Pacific earning a plus-two edge (13-15) in turnover differential.

Terry-Hutson made sure to shout-out Nat Martinez, who scored 12 points with a team-best four helpers while also snaring five rebounds — she made a critical fourth quarter 3-pointer as part of her 5 points in the second half.

“She always gives it, I’m looking for more people to do that as well…I think we saw that in spurts from some of our other people,” Terry-Hutson said.

PI-LI-PI-NAS

Panganiban represented the Philippines in their successful FIBA tournament over the summer that booked their opportunity to earn Gilas Pilipinas Women’s chance to qualify for the FIBA World Cup for the first time.

So, before the game, an SDSU student sang the national anthem of the Philippines and the first 500 fans amongst the crowd of 2,365 received special Filipino Heritage Day shirts. 

“It was so awesome just to be able to represent my Filipino culture, my family, and just seeing everybody there,” Panganiban said. “Hearing the national anthem for the Philippines being (sung) made me a little emotional, just to be on that stage and represent. It’s awesome.”

Filipino Heritage Game t-shirts are ready to be handed about before San Diego State's game against University of the Pacific on Sunday, Dec. 7 at Viejas Arena.

Eric Evelhoch – The Sporting Tribune

Filipino Heritage Game t-shirts ready to be handed out before San Diego State’s game against University of the Pacific on Sunday, Dec. 7 at Viejas Arena.

The sophomore La Jolla Country Day high grad was part of a Philippines team that knocked off Lebanon after taking it on the chin from eventual finalists Australia and Japan in the group stage, then battled South Korea in the qualification semi-finals. Panganiban equaled recent Duke graduate Vanessa De Jesus, averaging 13.2 points per game, with both’s 66 points ranking seventh in the tournament and their per-game average slotting eighth.

“Filipinos, we stick together, no matter the sport (and) no matter the event,” Panganiban said. “The Filipino community, we’re together — I think growing up with having those values and the value of sacrifice too,” Panganiban said.

The graphic on the front of the Filipino Heritage Game t-shirts, which were a giveaway by San Diego State on Sunday, Dec. 7 at Viejas Arena

Eric Evelhoch – The Sporting Tribune

The graphic on the front of the Filipino Heritage Game t-shirts, which were a giveaway by San Diego State on Sunday, Dec. 7 at Viejas Arena

That similar kind of sacrifice has also been a big part of SDSU’s rise over recent seasons, going 25-2 when having three or more players score in double-figures.

“It’s special, I think we have a lot of great talent, we have a lot of great people that can show up at any night, so just to have that it’s a huge relief off of each other, and just to play together it’s a great help,” Panganiban said.

To 3 or not to 3

Over the first three games, San Diego State knocked down 10 or more from beyond the arc.

On Sunday, after hitting 9 of 16 from the beyond in the opening half, it seemed like SDSU couldn’t miss. Then in the second half, where the team made just 2 of 12 and finished the game knocking down a tremendous 39.3% that proved the difference in the ball game.

Still, after having just five games last season with nine or more makes from downtown, having made 10-plus in their non-conference slate means the secret is out about SDSU for this season.

“Everyone knows that’s what we want to do,” Terry-Hutson said.

So, what did that mean against Pacific?

“They are either switching or running us off the line, and I thought we made a great adjustment to them switching everything,’ Terry-Hutson said.

“We were able to go inside more than what you’ve probably seen in the past, and that was the piece that we’ve been missing, points in the paint,” Terry-Hutson said.

Bear in mind, across the four straight possessions to end the half, all four of the buckets were either scored in low or created off the dribble drive by SDSU guards.

Coming into the game, 42.8% of the Aztecs’ shot attempts had come from beyond the arc, where they had made 29.8% of their tries — which ranked seventh in the Mountain West Conference.

Perhaps for that day it was the allure of the 56.3% (9 of 16) 3-point percentage in the first half that led the Scarlet and Black to shoot 28 of their 58 attempts (48.3%) from downtown for the game.

But it shouldn’t be a surprise then that by at least stalemating the paint battle at 26-26, the 11-8 edge in 3-point makes made the crucial difference in the game. And we mustn’t forget that it was a cutting back-post find of Alyssa Jackson by Kennedy Lee, whose paint bucket proved the winner on the day.

“We’ve got kids, we’re really, really deep. I’ve got kids who didn’t play a minute who should plate more, so I’ve got to figure out how I can get all these kids in and use our depth to our advantage,” Terry-Hutson said.

As SDSU looks to get their hackles and toughness up going into conference play, beginning against Fresno State at 6:30 p.m. on Wednesday, Dec. 17, it’ll be a critical final non-conference test when they face Kansas State on Wednesday, Dec. 10 at 9 a.m. PT on the road, with the game to be streamed on ESPN+ and an audio only broadcast on the Aztec Radio Network.



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Adidas extends deal with Women’s National Football Conference

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Adidas’s early history is in international football, but in recent years, the brand has been throwing its weight behind American football—women’s tackle football, to be exact.

That is now set to continue. Adidas, which was one of the first sponsors of the Women’s National Football Conference (WNFC) during its inaugural season in 2019, is re-upping its deal with the league through 2028, WNFC founder and CEO Odessa Jenkins exclusively told Marketing Brew.

The relationship has been integral to the growth of the young league by aligning it with a recognizable sports brand, Jenkins said.

“Having the three stripes on your jersey and on your warm-ups puts you in a global conversation when it comes to pro sports that not many leagues get to be in,” she said. “Right away, from a legitimacy standpoint, it stamps you.”

Women’s football is on the rise in the US and is set to find an even bigger stage when flag football makes its Olympic debut at LA28. The expanded deal between Adidas and the WNFC signals the potential for sustainable brand interest in the sport as organizations like the NFL continue to push for the growth of the women’s game.

More than a jersey

As part of the deal, Adidas will remain the exclusive uniform and on-field apparel provider of the WNFC for the next three years, with the brand continuing to outfit athletes across the 16 teams in the league. In addition, the expansion includes collaborations between the two organizations to help grow the sport from the youth level.

The WNFC works with young athletes through its nonprofit organization Got Her Back; under the terms of the renewed deal, Adidas will supply apparel and gear to those players, too.

Adidas is set to provide custom uniforms and gear to the Varsity Top 100 Girls Flag Championship Tournament, and the brand will also continue to support Got Her Back clinics with products, according to the WNFC. Furthermore, Adidas and the WNFC will work together on creating content highlighting women’s football players from youth athletes to stars of the sport in an effort to continue boosting its popularity.

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The brand is also set to have a bigger presence at the WNFC’s championship and all-pro games, Jenkins said.

Players aren’t the only ones who can wear WNFC gear with the three stripes—fans of the league will have access to branded Adidas apparel, too, Jenkins added. That could serve the league well: Women’s sports fans across the board have been showing an increasing appetite for merch, including fans of the WNFC.

“We have a growing fan shop, we have a growing fanbase, and they want to buy more stuff,” she said. “The ability to have that be Adidas team branded stuff is a big part of the deal.”

Spiral effect

The presence of Adidas, a global, endemic sports brand partner, beginning in the WNFC’s first year has helped create a sense of legitimacy for the league with other potential sponsors, Jenkins said. While Adidas and sports equipment company Riddell were its first partners, brands including Dove and Dick’s Sporting Goods have formed relationships with the league in years since.

Heading into the 2026 season, sponsorship and ticket revenue remain integral, as are media rights; for now, WNFC games are available on Victory+, a free ad-supported streaming service, which Jenkins said is ideal for the league as it works to build a fanbase.

The 2025 IX Cup, the WNFC’s championship, aired on ESPN2 in June, marking the league’s first live TV match-up, according to Jenkins. An audience of about 150,000 tuned in, she told us, and it has since sparked “a lot of great conversations” about rights. In the meantime, social channels provide the league with another way to reach and engage “hundreds of millions of people a year,” she said.

Coupled with brand and broadcaster interest, Jenkins said she expects the rising hype around flag football to contribute to additional buy-in women’s tackle football.

“Women and girls are driving the growth of flag football when it comes to participation and popularity,” she said. “Because of that, it’s creating awareness, but acceptance as well for girls and women to play football, and that’s all tackle football needed.”



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Max Strus’ second annual Bowl the Land event passed memories forward — just like his uncle once did for him

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NORTH OLMSTED — Before the lanes filled and the signatures on glossy Cavs memorabilia began to pile up, Max Strus stepped aside to take a moment for himself before his second annual Bowl the Land event.

He stood in the middle of the RollHouse in North Olmsted on Sunday afternoon, reviewing the long list of sponsors before addressing the crowd, but more importantly, soaking in the realization that he had built something capable of changing someone’s life.

His event has grown in just one year, but the core hasn’t changed.

It’s still about family. It’s still about impact. And it’s still about the memory of an uncle who once took him and his cousins to something very similar, back home in Chicago.

“This event is very special to me, and it’s my second year doing it,” Strus told the gathering. “I lost my uncle about eight years ago … And his two sons are actually here tonight. He worked for Blue Cross Blue Shield, and when we were growing up, he would take us to the ‘Bowling with the Bears’ every year. That’s where this idea has come about.

“It was something I always remembered and something I always thought if I was ever in this position, this is an event that I would like to do because I think it’s a lot of fun and it’s truly a memorable night and things that I enjoyed. So I wanted to bring that here.”

Clark and Stone Brinkman are the cousins he grew up attending those events with. They volunteered all weekend. They watched their cousin take something their father gave them and turn it into a tradition of his own.

Cavs players pose with Max Strus at his second annual Bowl the Land event
From the front office to the players, the Cavs’ organization filled RollHouse of North Olmsted for Max Strus’ second annual Bowl the Land charity event.Cleveland.com

Strus’ second annual Bowl the Land event was led by the Max Strus Family Foundation. It brought together family members, Cavs staffers, sponsors, community partners and “even Moondog,” Strus joked. Nearly the entire roster was in attendance as the space approached capacity. To add to the backing, Donovan Mitchell’s SPIDACARES foundation sponsored a lane.

“Just having that kind of support, phenomenal,” Strus said about his teammates. “Just them alone being here is more than anything I can ask for. It shows you how close-knit we are as a team. And no matter what, they’re always going to support, we’re always going to support each other, no matter what.”

In January, the Max Strus Family Foundation was just launching. By Sunday, it had distributed more than $160,000 in grant funding.

The foundation supports organizations across youth sports, education, cancer outreach and mental health. Groups like Project NICU and Empower Sports have been guests at events with Strus; the 29-year-old has visited them on their own turf too.

“I think the most rewarding part is, yes, giving the money to those organizations that are doing powerful things in their communities,” Strus said. “But I think the most important thing is going to meet those people, going to be a part of those organizations.

“I went to watch Empower Sports play basketball and to see what they do and see how they’re affecting people’s lives is something that is truly special and near and dear to me. To be able to see that and see that the money that we raise and the money that we’ve given can help them in any way is just something that I’m very grateful to be a part of.”



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A track meet that pushes girls to greatness

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The crowd is electric. The starting gun goes off to begin a race, and you can hear and feel the passion of the crowd as they cheer. The announcer feeds the excitement, commentating every stride over the sound system, urging athletes to “pump those arms” and “keep moving.” It’s difficult not to get swept.

These are the Colgate Women’s Games, the largest amateur track and field series in the United States, which kick off its 50th iteration this year with preliminary meets 28 December. 

Watching the youngest athletes compete is witnessing sports in its purest form. There’s no pretense, calculated strategies or alternative agendas. It’s just grit, unbridled joy and the thrill of pushing their bodies to the limit. 

Some triumph and some falter, but they all cross the finish line giving it their all, and that authenticity is what makes the Games special.

The venue is packed wall-to-wall. Not an empty seat in sight. The athletes fill in every inch of space — so many that you can hardly see the floor beneath them. The girls wrap around what’s known at Colgate as “The Wall,” lining every side of the facility. 

More than just a track meet

The line of competitors is so long, it will snake around the entire facility in a sea of athletes waiting for their moment to shine.

The fierce competitive spirit of the competitors and the crowd’s near proximity to the action combine to generate an almost tangible atmosphere. The energy doesn’t just fuel the competition, it elevates it, pushing performances to another level.

The Colgate Women’s Games are more than just track meets. They are a gateway to opportunity that transforms lives, with more than 5,000 scholarships awarded, lifelong friendships cultivated and the start of Olympic and professional dreams, athletic and non-athletic.

“It was some of the best memories I had at that time,” said Dalilah Muhammad, Olympic gold medalist and former 400-meter hurdles world record holder. “Just being a kid, nervous and excited at the same time, while being able to do it with your friends. For me, that was the most important aspect of it. It made me feel like I had a place that I belonged to with friends, that all wanted to be there and do the same thing.”

The goal is to foster a robust sense of personal accomplishment and self-worth while supporting the coaches who serve as role models and mentors for the girls.

Ideas sketched out on a napkin

Alumni include 29 Olympians, countless national champions and current and former world and national record holders at the senior, junior and youth levels. Former competitors now work as teachers, judges, lawyers, executives and ESPN anchors. One of the most recognizable is ESPN SportsCenter anchor Amina Smith.

The Colgate Women’s Games were the brainchild of Fred Thompson, a New York attorney and founder of a Brooklyn girls’ track club who was frustrated with the state of women’s athletics in the mid-1970s.

Thompson was an ABC network sportscaster, and was invited to an event hosted by the Colgate-Palmolive Company — a corporate giant known for soap and toothpaste — for the unveiling of a video presentation titled “Colgate’s Women in Sports,” to air on ABC’s telecast of the newly-launched Dinah Shore golf tournament. 

The video included a segment on Thompson’s Atoms Track Club, where girl athletes trained. In the video they talked about training as well as school, why they enjoyed running and their aspirations on and off the track. It caught the eye of Colgate President David Foster. He saw that Thomson had found a way to instill in women a drive for excellence that would carry over to college and careers. 

Foster wanted his company to replicate in communities around the country what Thomson had done in his community. 

“[They were talking] for a long time, scribbling some stuff on a napkin and I’m sitting there wondering what is going on?” said Cheryl Toussaint, an alum of the Atoms Track Club. Toussaint had won a silver medal in the women’s 4 × 400 meters relay at the 1972 Olympics. She is now the Meet Director of the Colgate Women’s Games, having taken over the position from Thomson.

Getting girls to plan for their future

But back then, the Games were just rough ideas. Thompson and the Colgate execs wanted to bolster the sport for women, give them more opportunities and provide scholarships that could be applied to any level of education.

A pilot program at a local college gym drew a massive turnout. Colgate-Palmolive saw that with awards and scholarship opportunities, it could be something that would resonate.

Now, the Games consist of eight events — six track distances plus shot put and high jump — in six divisions for the women to compete in.

Competitors collect points for results in preliminary rounds, and those with the highest numbers move on to the semi-finals and the grand finale on 7 February 2026, which will be available livestream on ArmoryTrack.org

The top six finishers in each event will receive a trophy and the top three finishers will be rewarded an additional educational scholarship in denominations of $2,000, $1,000 and $500. Special awards are also given for most outstanding and improved performances as well as most promising performance from a newcomer.

From local to national

All girls and women from elementary school grades 1 and up are eligible to participate in the Colgate Women’s Games. No prior experience in track and field is necessary, but all girls of school-age must be enrolled and attending school in order to participate.

As the years continued, the Games began to grow from a local meet, to a regional meet and even a national meet where girls from states such as Georgia, Arizona and Texas would travel to New York to compete.

But it’s the finals that set the Games apart. The finals aren’t just the last series of races; it’s a celebration, a ceremony marking the culmination of the preliminary and semifinal rounds.

Muhammad and many other Olympians such as Nia Ali, Ajee Wilson, Natasha Hastings, Kim Thomas Barnes (Carter), Diane Dixon and Athing Mu got their start here. The Olympians produced by the Games would represent multiple nations, demonstrating their international reach.

The Games’ impact extends beyond the track; the skills and confidence built from competing has led to careers in education, medicine, business, law, media and beyond. Some Games alumni, like basketball star Lorin Dixon, went on to excel in other sports.

Scholarships get girls thinking about college.

Colgate Women’s Games gives the competitors the chance to earn scholarships to college as early as Grade 1, around the age of 6 or 7, which gets parents and guardians planning that early for a college path for their daughters. If they continue competing, the scholarships accumulate.  

If the scholarship earners opt out of college, they can apply that scholarship to career training.

For the women who would go on to run track at the high school and collegiate level, the Games introduced them to the scoring system. The girls learn at an early age how their performance affects their score and overall placement in the meet, along with race strategies to earn the maximum number of points possible. 

This knowledge helps when competing at the next level where point scoring is a crucial aspect to high school and collegiate track.

Empowering women through sports

Numerous alumni have embraced the Colgate Women’s Games’ mission of empowering young girls and women.

Consider Olicia Williams, Games’ alum and three-time All-American at Baylor University, who after years of mentoring youth and serving the community through The Armory Foundation, along with coaching her high school and college alma mater, created Lili’s Lionesses Track Club, a program focused on enabling young women to thrive in academics, sports and personal development.

Impact alone doesn’t ensure survival. The Games continue to thrive after 50 years because their model is built on values that extend beyond any single season or generation.

Foremost, it’s a developmental series. Because it’s not a one-off competition, girls with no experience can come to each competition and learn as they compete. They learn they don’t need expensive equipment to participate in the sport.

Toussaint pointed out that the series not only develops competitors from a physical standpoint; it develops them mentally. 

“When younger girls fall down, come in last or get bumped out of competition and feel dejected, we help them understand that it’s just one day,” Toussaint said. “We tell them and their parents, this is a place to learn what you’re made of, develop your skills and improve on what you did before.”

Eliminating barriers

The Games are free for the competitors. This makes it different from the many track meets and running events that are surprisingly expensive

Muhammad said that everyone is there for the right reasons. “No one’s there doing it for any type of money and that’s what makes Colgate so great,” she said. “You have great people doing it for a cause that’s bigger than themselves and it’s inspiring.”

Thompson died in 2019 from complications of Alzheimer’s disease. But his legacy lives on through all the lives he’s helped, and he would be thrilled to see the Games’ 50th anniversary, says Toussaint. “He would cry tears of joy,” she said. 

Women’s sports have finally surged into the mainstream. There’s WNBA stars A’ja Wilson and Sabrina Ionescu launching signature shoes that are high performing in sales, and women headlining Ultimate Fighting Championship events and selling out arenas. There’s Serena Williams transcending sport to become a global icon. But it’s important to remember that this success didn’t emerge spontaneously. It was built by pioneers who invested in women athletes long before it was profitable or popular.

The Colgate Women’s Games belong in that conversation as a cornerstone of women’s sports.


Questions to consider:

1. What is one thing about the Colgate Women’s Games that makes it different from other track and field competitions for women?

2. How can sports help girls off the field?

3. In what ways can competition be both good and bad?





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