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Snyder’s Soapbox: We, sports fans, are the smart ones, even with all the heartbreak

Welcome to Snyder’s Soapbox! Here, I pontificate about matters related to Major League Baseball on a weekly basis. Some of the topics will be pressing matters, some might seem insignificant in the grand scheme of things, and most will be somewhere in between. The good thing about this website is that it’s free, and you […]

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Welcome to Snyder’s Soapbox! Here, I pontificate about matters related to Major League Baseball on a weekly basis. Some of the topics will be pressing matters, some might seem insignificant in the grand scheme of things, and most will be somewhere in between. The good thing about this website is that it’s free, and you are allowed to click away. If you stay, you’ll get smarter, though. That’s a money-back guarantee. Let’s get to it.

I wrote this before Game 7 of the NBA Finals. I wanted the message of gratitude to resonate through in case my favorite team ends up losing (editor’s note: sorry, Matt, they did). And if they won, I didn’t need to be writing this column instead of just enjoying it. 

I just wanted to say thank you for existing, sports. 

The amount of fun and joy sports teams can provide us is truly remarkable and it goes beyond just rooting for a team. I’ve watched all but one NBA playoff game with my wife and we’ve had tons of fun in doing it. I went to Game 6 of the Eastern Conference Finals with my dad to see the Pacers clinch the East at home for the first time ever. He started taking me to games in Market Square Arena when I was 7 years old and the big names were Steve Stipanovich and Herb Williams. 

I had a similarly spiritual sports experience in 2016 with my beloved Cubs. 

And I just want every single sports fan out there to experience similar things. So many of us have. Most of us have. 

You know who doesn’t get to feel like this? People who don’t like sports. I’m grateful that I’m not on that list. 

Look, I’m a huge to each his/her/their own guy. That is to say, if you don’t like something that I like or vice versa, that’s perfectly fine with me. People have their own tastes and that’s a good thing. Diversity in taste and opinions, to me, is something that’s important in society. There is, of course, a segment of the population that doesn’t care about sports. That’s fine. There’s also a small segment of that group who actively mock those of us who do care about sports. 

Not only does this not bother me, but I actually feel sorry for those people. Man, they are missing out in such a major way. 

Being a sports fan is so much more than any negative label the naysayers want to throw on it. There are relationships enhanced by the common love of certain teams. We’ve all had so many experiences with friends and family members tied to sports. How many conversations have revolved around your favorite team’s success and heartbreak? 

One of my favorite things about my job is being able to witness the joy that sports brings to so many people. 

I will never forget walking around the concourse in Chase Field immediately after the Rangers won the 2023 World Series. Remember, this was the first Rangers championship ever. They lost back-to-back World Series in 2010-11. I walked by a Rangers fan who had tears running down his face. That’s the good stuff. I’ll never tire of seeing moments like that. 

I remember the raucous Phillies crowd in 2022, especially after Bryce Harper’s first-inning home run in Game 3. This was a wild-card team that was nearly dead in the first round and now on the cusp of taking a 2-1 World Series lead. Of course, later that series the Astros won it all at home. Finally. I had seen seven straight champions clinch the World Series on the road and it was nice to finally see a home crowd get to experience it in person. 

I still look back in joy at the 2018 NLCS in Milwaukee. I sometimes walk around the concourse during the middle innings of games just to get a feel for the crowd (again, I’m a sucker for seeing sports fans experiencing joy). It was Game 2 and Travis Shaw hit a home run to give the Brewers a 3-0 lead. I saw a guy running back toward what appeared to be his group of friends, yelling “this is so much f—ing fun!” 

Yes, gimme all of that

The Nationals run in 2019 was particularly absurd. We all remember the record, right? They were — repeat it with me — 19-31 at one point. They were nearly done in the wild-card game, but staged a late comeback. They then trailed in Game 7, but Howie Kendrick hit a home run off the foul pole. Generations of Nationals fans are going to talk about that team and that home run. 

We could even dive deeper. There are always stories from the runs of great teams passed down from older generations to their kids and grandkids. If you’re reading this right now, the goal is for you to be thinking back at some of your fondest memories of sports fandom. What was that team? What was that run? Who did you enjoy watching with? Who did you talk to about all the games and plays? 

Aren’t you smiling right now, almost giddy? 

That’s what sports does for us. 

It doesn’t even have to be the big championship. I mentioned the Brewers. Rockies fans have the miracle 2007 run to the World Series. The Rays have had several huge moments and runs. How about the Edgar Martinez double for the Mariners? The Padres have been very fun this decade and what about the 1984 NLCS (I can talk about that now even though my 6-year-old self was devastated)? 

We could run through every team and a list of all the amazing runs of success that brought family and friends together to elaborate on “how about those [insert any team in any sport]?!?!” I know that every time IU basketball wins a big game, I’m going get a text full of excitement from my mom and it just makes the joy that much better. How about all the group text chains about sports and how much more frantic those get during amazing team runs?  

Look, sports don’t replace great family relationships or social interactions or professional successes or anything else that is real in life, but it’s an enhancer. Being a sports fan is an escape from real-life responsibilities. No other “escape from reality” entertainment can give us what sports do. My family and I love roller coasters. I took my son to see Metallica twice for his 18th birthday and it was an amazing weekend. Books, TV shows and movies are excellent escapes. 

I just don’t think any of this stuff can give you the highs of sports and that’s because they don’t break you with the lows. And, really, the X-factor here is that of the unknown. When I went into Game 7 of the 2016 World Series, there was a chance the Cubs were still never going to win the World Series in my lifetime. You don’t get that elsewhere. I knew Metallica was gonna show up and kick ass when my son and I were there. But the Cubs could’ve lost Game 7.

It isn’t just sports fandom, either. Sports employ people. So many people. Not just athletes and executives, but the chefs and the trainers and the ticket salesmen and the concession stand attendants. How about going all the way down to youth sports? Sports can do wonders in helping kids build self-esteem while also teaching them to to deal with failure at a young age. Some of the moments I’ve been most proud of my kids happened in sports and it wasn’t due to performance, but instead good sportsmanship. I don’t think anything better equipped me for being a good teammate as an adult than playing high school football and baseball. 

Don’t ever let anyone tell you sports are anything but great. 

It was after Game 1 of the NBA Finals when my brother texted me and said something along the lines of, “stuff like this is why we feel sorry for people who aren’t sports fans.” He’s right. You just can’t get this stuff elsewhere. 

Here’s to you, sports. I salute you. You are so awesome. Thank you for existing. I’m so very, eternally grateful for you, even when you break my heart.





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Tale of 3 A’s cities: Oakland left behind, Sacramento a temporary stop, Las Vegas awaits | National Sports

WEST SACRAMENTO, Calif. (AP) — Those chants of “sell the team” that rang from every corner of the Coliseum during the Athletics’ final seasons in Oakland are noticeably less obvious these days as the club plays the first of three scheduled years at a Triple-A ballpark in California’s capital region. Not that all the negative […]

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WEST SACRAMENTO, Calif. (AP) — Those chants of “sell the team” that rang from every corner of the Coliseum during the Athletics’ final seasons in Oakland are noticeably less obvious these days as the club plays the first of three scheduled years at a Triple-A ballpark in California’s capital region.

Not that all the negative feelings have been cast aside. There is still plenty of ill will toward the team that moved some 90 miles north.

During a recent Braves-A’s series, two supporters showed up in “Forever Oakland” T-shirts, while another fan from Fresno arrived at Sutter Health Park wearing a “Rooted in Oakland” shirt.

It’s a drastically different scene from the A’s old Oakland home.

Fans staged “reverse boycott” protests where they packed the Coliseum, brought homemade signs begging the team to stay and loudly called for owner John Fisher to “SELL!” In Sacramento, there’s a pervading sense the A’s are a rental, not a long-term investment. As soon as 2028, they plan to move into a what has been valued as a $1.75 billion ballpark on the Las Vegas Strip. Construction began last month.

While many A’s fans moved on and want nothing to do with the team, some still drive long distances to games in Sacramento and try to make the best of the situation — a big league team in a small-time stadium.

“It’s a big difference walking (through the ballpark) in about five minutes instead of walking the Coliseum in like 20, 30 minutes,” said Francisco Almazan from Modesto.

It’s not a wholly comfortable setup for players and coaches. The A’s built a two-story clubhouse beyond left field that on the top floor includes a lounge, kitchen and offices for manager Mark Kotsay and his coaches. The players’ lockers are on the first level.

“Everybody is trying to make the best of it,” outfielder Lawrence Butler said. “I’m just thankful for them trying to make it up to big-league standard.”

Major League Baseball Commissioner Rob Manfred acknowledged while speaking at the All-Star Game that playing in a 10,000-seat ballpark isn’t perfect. He said the circumstances would be different if the A’s moved directly into a 33,000-capacity facility like the one underway in Las Vegas.

Union chief Tony Clark was less diplomatic, insisting players prefer to work in an actual big league ballpark.

“There’s still a little bit of hope that something may come to fruition before 2028 and what’s being described as the time where the new ballpark will be in place,” Clark said. “But we’ll have to see.”

A’s players know the situation: The plan is to play in America’s party capital less than three years from now, but that seemingly far-off timeline doesn’t consume their day-to-day baseball lives.

“I think this group is focused on what they need to be focused on,” Kotsay said. “They come to prepare every day. You walk through our locker room, there’s a consistent routine and consistent work ethic that goes on prior to them playing the game.”

Still, as much as they try to stay in the moment, the A’s are very much tied to their past, present and future with three far different cities.

Oakland is embracing the B’s, and the Coliseum has a new tenant

Some baseball fans in the A’s old market have shifted their interest to the Oakland Ballers. The “B’s” have been a huge hit at intimate Raimondi Park — capacity around 4,000 — complete with mascot Scrappy the Rally Possum and nostalgic nods to Oakland at every turn.

The B’s have provided a big lift for a city that watched the NBA’s Golden State Warriors move to San Francisco in 2019 and the NFL’s Raiders leave for Las Vegas the next year.

Last month, the Ballers unveiled a mural honoring late Hall of Famer Rickey Henderson, who died in December at age 65.

The Oakland Roots soccer team now plays its home games at the Coliseum, where cricket has also become a popular choice given the dual-sport facility’s size.

Some longtime employees now work Roots games but many moved on or retired, unwilling to make the trek to Sacramento — though most weren’t invited.

Las Vegas prepares to welcome an MLB franchise

A formal groundbreaking on the new ballpark occurred June 23, with Fisher, Manfred and Nevada Gov. Joe Lombardo among those speaking at the festivities. There is a tight window for the venue to be ready by opening day in 2028.

The A’s hope to complete the project in 2027. They launched a construction cam so fans can track the progress, and without a doubt, the team will be under a microscope trying to meet its ambitious deadline.

Then the question becomes: Will Las Vegas embrace the A’s?

Las Vegas’ strong support for its first major professional team, the NHL’s Golden Knights, helped pave the way for what has become an explosion of sports in a city once shunned because of legalized sports betting. The Raiders draw large crowds, but many game days feel like neutral sites with opposing fans showing up by the thousands. The Aces became the first WNBA team to sell out an entire season — and did so twice.

Longtime A’s radio play-by-play man Ken Korach has a unique perspective on it. In his 30th season calling A’s games, Korach moved to the Henderson, Nevada, suburb in 1992 and has stayed put. He figured MLB might explore the market, either through relocation or expansion.

“There are a lot of conflicting emotions there,” Korach said. “I’ve always felt the Bay Area is a two-team market, and I’ve always felt that Vegas could support a major-league team.”

Rookie infielder Max Muncy, too, can already weigh in on the A’s current home and their future one. He has played 81 games in Las Vegas over the past two seasons, but began this season in Sacramento and returned to the big club before going on the 10-day injured list Tuesday after taking a pitch to his right hand.

“I had a great time in Las Vegas,” Muncy said. “Those fans are great. The atmosphere is great. It’s a great city. I enjoyed living there. I think it’s going to be a special place to play, as it is here. I really enjoyed my time there, and I think a lot of guys that played there will say the same thing.”

Being on the Strip would allow the A’s to attract tourists given the ballpark is walking distance for many visitors. That could be especially important for non-marquee, weeknight matchups in contrast to in-demand weekend series against big-market teams like the Yankees or Dodgers.

The club has begun trying to establish a foothold in the community. The A’s said they have contributed $1.5 million since 2023, including more than $400,000 this year, to nonprofits and other similar organizations that include every youth baseball and softball team. They have been involved in more than 30 events this year from youth sports to festivals to public watch parties with more planned through the end of 2025.

Sacramento is trying to enjoy the A’s while they’re still around

Robert Greenberg, an A’s fan who lives in Fresno, isn’t sure he will keep rooting for the green and gold if and when they move for good even if it’s an easier drive to Sacramento than to Oakland. He believes Fisher cut payroll and undermined the team to suppress attendance and facilitate its move.

“I guess he got what he wanted,” Greenberg said.

Ayad Bunni of San Mateo said he was a fan before hosting the “Locked on A’s” podcast. He considered not following the A’s and understands why many others no longer cheer them on, but said he didn’t fault the club for taking these steps.

“As an A’s fan and being from here, would I love for them to be in Oakland?” he said. “Absolutely, 100%.”

The A’s average 9,782 fans, and they and Tampa Bay — also playing in a Triple-A ballpark this season after Tropicana Field was damaged by a hurricane — are the only teams were fewer than 10,000 per game. The Athletics averaged 11,386 fans last season in the Coliseum, lowest in MLB.

Meanwhile, the players play on, and whether the process turns out to be one big sinking ship remains to be seen. It also could become a move that puts the organization on the trajectory to future success in the box office and on the field.

But the here and now gives the A’s plenty to think about, and All-Star designated hitter Brent Rooker acknowledged he and his teammates have faced adversity most other clubs haven’t encountered.

“Every challenge you face in this game or outside this game is going to mold you and build you into the person you’re going to ultimately become,” Rooker said. “So anything you can use to your advantage, whether it’s adversity, a challenge, a success, a failure, all those things can be made into positives.”


AP Baseball Writer Janie McCauley in Oakland contributed to this report.


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



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There’s a link between sports and lower teen suicide risk

Share this Article You are free to share this article under the Attribution 4.0 International license. A new US analysis spanning more than 800,000 students finds that middle and high school students who participate in sports are significantly less likely to report suicidal thoughts or behaviors—even as youth suicide rates have climbed nationwide. Yet sports […]

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A new US analysis spanning more than 800,000 students finds that middle and high school students who participate in sports are significantly less likely to report suicidal thoughts or behaviors—even as youth suicide rates have climbed nationwide.

Yet sports participation has declined for a number of reasons, potentially limiting access to this important protective factor.

The analysis appears in the Annals of Epidemiology.

Massy Mutumba, an assistant professor at the School of Public Health at Washington University in St. Louis, led the study.

“Historically, organized sports have been an important protective factor against suicidal thoughts and behaviors, and they still are,” Mutumba says.

“But fewer students are participating, especially in middle school, and we need to find new ways to expand access and integrate mental health into sports settings.”

Suicide is rising at an alarming rate among children and teens in the US, creating a serious public health crisis. It is the second-leading cause of death for kids ages 10-14 and the third for youth ages 15-24.

In this study, researchers analyzed Youth Risk Behavior Survey data from 2007 to 2023 drawing on responses from 326,085 middle schoolers and 508,737 high schoolers across 41 states. Among middle school students, 20.5% had seriously considered suicide, 13.5% had made a plan and 8.6% had attempted it. Among high school students, 16.6% reported suicidal thoughts in the past year, 13.5% had made a plan and 9.2% had attempted suicide.

As part of the analysis, researchers explored the link between suicide risk and past-year participation in organized sports—a protective factor that could be leveraged more broadly.

Key findings

  • Suicide risk (rates of suicide ideation, planning and attempts) increased sharply among youth between 2007 and 2023.
  • Sports participation dropped from 57.4% of high school students in 2019 to 49.1% in 2021 and has remained consistently lower than before the pandemic.
  • This decline was exacerbated by increasing costs (which disproportionately affect students from low-income households), the COVID-19 pandemic and growing psychosocial challenges. These challenges—including depression, generalized and social anxiety, and body image issues—often emerge around puberty and may prevent students from participating in organized sports.
  • For high schoolers, the protective link between sports and mental health remained strong both before and after the pandemic.
  • Among middle schoolers, the link between sports participation and reduced suicide risk was slightly weaker in 2023 than before the pandemic—a pattern that may reflect developmental differences. Psychosocial challenges tend to intensify with age, which could explain why this association is stronger in high school students, Mutumba notes.

The study is among the first to track these trends before, during and after the pandemic across nationally representative samples. Additionally, the study gives careful focus to middle schoolers. Despite rising suicide rates among younger kids, most large-scale studies have focused on older teens, leaving a major gap in research and prevention efforts, Mutumba says. Suicide is still widely viewed as a concern primarily for older teens.

Sports participation has numerous physical and mental health benefits, such as reduced depressive and anxiety symptoms, lower stress, enhanced general well-being and improved self-esteem, the researchers assert.

The findings underscore sports as an accessible, scalable, and sustainable public health strategy for suicide prevention, but indicate that taking full advantage of the power of sports may require new approaches.

The authors call for greater investment in equitable access to sports opportunities—especially in communities where risk is highest. Adolescents in marginalized communities particularly have elevated odds of suicidal behavior and reduced access to mental health services. To help close these gaps, the report outlines concrete strategies such as subsidizing or fully covering fees for school and community-based programs, investing in local facilities (green spaces, basketball courts, and baseball fields) and implementing sliding-scale fee models. These efforts are particularly important in middle school, when early engagement in sports can build lasting habits and offer critical mental health protection.

The authors also advocate for incorporating evidence-based mental health programs into organized sports programs. This aligns with Mutumba’s ongoing efforts to develop scalable, community-embedded strategies that integrate mental health support into systems that serve adolescents.

“Sports offer more than physical activity,” Mutumba says. “They create structure, social connection, and a sense of belonging that can help buffer the intense pressures that adolescents face today.”

Mutumba completed the research while at the University of Michigan. Additional coauthors are from the University of Michigan.

Source: Washington University in St. Louis



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Talkin’ Basketball: Exercise Turns to Therapy for Homeless Youth

Newswise — At 9:45 a.m. on a rapidly warming June day in East Hollywood, Dr. Mo is on the blacktop courts of Lemon Grove Recreation Center cooking these young fellas good. Why this 45-year-old clinical psychologist is playing basketball on a Wednesday morning with five other guys who have yet to cross 30 is some […]

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Newswise — At 9:45 a.m. on a rapidly warming June day in East Hollywood, Dr. Mo is on the blacktop courts of Lemon Grove Recreation Center cooking these young fellas good. Why this 45-year-old clinical psychologist is playing basketball on a Wednesday morning with five other guys who have yet to cross 30 is some kind of story, but it will have to wait till the doctor has finished the lesson he’s supplying out here free of charge.

One-on-one at the edge of the free throw line, he gives his defender a herky-jerky move that’s as old school as a paper check, bursts by him with a tight right-hand dribble, and then scoops in a shot off the backboard that has both sides whooping. “Doc is in his bag!” a teammate exclaims.

That he is. This is where Dr. Mo does some of his best work. Each week at this park and three others like it across East and South L.A., Moises “Dr. Mo” Rodriguez, PhD, runs the therapeutic exercise program he created in his role as Mental Health Director of the Children’s Hospital Los Angeles Homeless Adolescent Wellness Clinic, a support group for young people who are experiencing some level of homelessness or housing insecurity.


The Homeless Adolescent Wellness Clinic is a component of Adolescent and Young Adult Medicine at Children’s Hospital Los Angeles.


Consider the basketball court an outdoor wing of Dr. Mo’s practice. It’s suited for the population he is serving, which he says is more easily reached through a looser, informal approach that doesn’t start with a lengthy set of intake questions or heavy explorations of past traumas. Since the program began in 2008, hundreds of young men—and many women, too—have participated. A game of pickup basketball offers Dr. Mo a side entrance into their personal histories.

“I’m not probing,” Dr. Mo says, noting how that might be resisted. “They’d look at me like, ‘This person’s going to ask about all my intimate moments and whether I’ve been abused or whether I’ve been assaulted, or whether I’ve seen stuff happen with my parents.’ You have to be receptive to that kind of conversation, and not everybody’s there. It’s just too much. This helps people come around on their own terms.”

Putting their nervous system at ease

Dr. Mo began seeing the benefits of a less structured style of therapy in the course of his training at the NYU Child Study Center. While performing home visits, he would take his young patients on walks around the neighborhood. He repeated the practice during his internship at a facility in Santa Monica.

“I saw that their comfort level increased and they became more balanced, grounded, and open and warm,” he says.

 

Though it may seem unsystematic, his approach was rooted in scientific theory and neurobiology—though he didn’t find that out until after he was already applying it.

“I didn’t go theory first,” Dr. Mo says. “It was more of, ‘This seems like a cool outlet for connecting with people.’  backed into finding all kinds of stuff that was evidentiary in nature about why it’s so beneficial.”

He discovered the Neurosequential Model, which broke down the science behind what he had arrived at intuitively. The model explains that the brains of individuals who have experienced trauma and are focused entirely on finding their next meal or a safe place to stay are often operating in the limbic system—survival mode—and don’t have the luxury of using the brain’s frontal lobe, which performs our more advanced executive functioning.

By providing a physical outlet to these patients—he also brings boxing gloves and pads, a jump rope, a deck of cards, a chess board, and other activities—Dr. Mo lightens their immediate struggle and frees them to use their higher faculties.

“I put their nervous system a bit more at ease,” he says. “Then you can access the other parts of the brain, and then you might open up. You might just start sharing. Giving that person an outlet helps us build a relationship.”

A bond between doctor and patient

Two of the four recreation centers where Dr. Mo and his group gather are located across from homeless shelters, so those who wish to join just have to walk on over. At the other two sites, they’re driven in.

Albert comes by bus. He goes by AMoney—big A, big M, no space, per his instructions. A longtime patient of Dr. Mo’s, he’s a regular at Lemon Grove. “I’ll always keep coming,” he says.

AMoney became homeless when he was 18, the same age he met Dr. Mo. He turns 26 in July. He’s cheerful and optimistic, against expectations. He takes a bus from Carson to join Dr. Mo twice a week for basketball, bearing witness to the effects of therapeutic exercise.

“It has really impacted me mentally,” AMoney says. “I don’t think about anything but basketball, and it makes me feel good. A couple of hours. That’s all I need.”

He says Dr. Mo helped turn his life around, giving him resources and leads that have led to employment, educational, and housing opportunities. He’s now out of the shelter and in a transitional housing facility, which hopefully will next lead to a fixed residence. This is a place of peace. As long as you can find that, you can get whatever you need to get done. You can manifest your life.

In September, he starts at West Los Angeles College, again with a boost from Dr. Mo, who clued him into a local work-study program called Angeleno Corps.

“It’s all due to Doc,” AMoney says. “I got my student ID and I’m in the student portal.”

He’s enrolled in a course in game design. “So pray for me,” he says with a small laugh. “That’s always been my goal—to be a video game programmer. I’m good at computers.”

As AMoney looks on, Dr. Mo sinks another shot. “Doc’s still got it, surprisingly. He has it. He’s cookin’ everybody, man. He can’t be stopped!” He considers what Dr. Mo has meant to him. “Without Doc, I don’t know where I’d be right now. Me and him got a bond. He made that bond. I never had a person who’s so consistent.”

The word seems to have revealed something to him. It is perfectly chosen. “That’s what I’m saying—consistency. I don’t have a lot of people like that. He gives you a toothbrush, toothpaste. He helps me out with hygiene! Nobody does that.”

He explains the effect of the basketball outings in a way that bears out the neurological benefit Dr. Mo described. They free up a part of his brain that the daily striving to survive cuts him off from.

“I got a lot on my plate,” he says. “This is a place of peace. As long as you can find that, you can get whatever you need to get done. You can manifest your life.”

‘Micro-moments’ that lead to breakthroughs

For all of his 17 years at CHLA, Dr. Mo has run the therapeutic exercise program. Patients cycle through. Some come once, others repeatedly. He gains their trust because they share “a similar flavor dynamic,” he says.

“I’m not pretending to be something. I’m a psychologist providing a service, but I’m also just another dude who likes to play basketball. That’s where that shorthand, that cultural connection, comes in. These are mostly young Black and Latino men. We get along a certain way that builds community and camaraderie. What it provides is a respect for accessing more privileged information.”

Just as these sessions don’t begin with a traditional intake, they don’t end with a dramatic self-awakening or an emotional outpouring. Advances are made in smaller, practical sizes.

“I’ll have these little micro-moments with someone who got to the park before anybody else showed up,” Dr. Mo says. “We have time to shoot around and chat, and life stuff comes out. ‘How’s work going?’ ‘Do you know a place where I can get a job interview?’ ‘Yeah, I know a place.’ ‘Can you help me with housing?’ ‘Yeah, I can help you with that.’ We might chat for seven minutes, but it’s a valuable seven minutes.”

Occasionally those conversations are followed up in private for those who wish to share something away from basketball.

“It’s a starting point. ‘Do you have some time afterward? I wanted to ask you something. Maybe we can have a phone call later.’ But some people are very straightforward. ‘No, no, I don’t need all that. I just want to play ball.’ And some take what they need and then you’re just someone along their way, someone who contributed along their path, hopefully something positive to their life.”





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Pete Buttigieg weighs in on ‘fairness’ of transgender kids playing girls’ sports

Former Transportation Secretary Pete Buttigieg offered one of the most carefully worded responses yet to the debate over transgender youth participation in sports on Monday morning in an NPR interview. “The approach starts with compassion,” Buttigieg, who is gay, told Morning Edition host Steve Inskeep. “Compassion for transgender people, compassion for families, especially of young […]

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Former Transportation Secretary Pete Buttigieg offered one of the most carefully worded responses yet to the debate over transgender youth participation in sports on Monday morning in an NPR interview.

“The approach starts with compassion,” Buttigieg, who is gay, told Morning Edition host Steve Inskeep. “Compassion for transgender people, compassion for families, especially of young people who are going through this, and also empathy for people who are not sure what all of this means for them.”

Asked whether a parent concerned about their child facing a trans kid in girls’ sports “has a case,” Buttigieg said, “Sure.” But he rejected blanket policies like the federal bans being enacted by the Trump administration, saying, “These decisions should be in the hands of sports leagues and school boards and not politicians, least of all politicians in Washington trying to use this as a political pawn.”

Buttigieg’s remarks came days after Rahm Emanuel, former President Joe Biden’s ambassador to Japan, former mayor of Chicago, and a potential 2028 presidential candidate, told Megyn Kelly that “a man can’t become a woman,” a comment that directly contradicted party orthodoxy and sparked fresh divisions over how Democrats should approach transgender rights.

“I think most reasonable people would recognize that there are serious fairness issues if you just treat this as not mattering when a trans athlete wants to compete in women’s sports,” Buttigieg told NPR.

The political stakes are high. A June 2025 Gallup poll found that 69 percent of U.S. adults believe trans athletes should only be allowed to play on teams matching their gender assigned at birth, including 91 percent of Republicans, 66 percent of independents, and 45 percent of Democrats. Support for transgender athletes’ inclusion has declined steadily since Gallup first asked the question in 2021.

Since returning to the Oval Office in January, President Donald Trump has signed executive orders eliminating federal recognition of gender identity, banning trans military service, restricting access to gender-affirming care, and prohibiting transgender girls and women from playing on female sports teams.

The United States Supreme Court will weigh in on the legalities of banning transgender people from sports by next summer. The court has agreed to hear two cases involving transgender athletes next term, which begins in October.

LGBTQ+ rights groups have warned that such bans are not only discriminatory but also dangerous. A July 2025 fact sheet from GLAAD noted that fewer than 10 transgender student-athletes are competing among the NCAA’s 510,000 athletes. It also pointed to documented cases of cisgender girls being falsely accused of being trans, harassed, or subjected to invasive screening, consequences not limited to trans youth.

In March, California Gov. Gavin Newsom, a fellow Democrat, received harsh backlash for telling far-right operative Charlie Kirk that trans kids’ participation in sports is “deeply unfair.”

Pressed on Trump’s repeated slogan, “No boys in girls’ sports,” Buttigieg declined to echo the rhetoric. “I think that chess is different from weightlifting, and weightlifting is different from volleyball, and middle school is different from the Olympics,” he said. “So that’s exactly why I think that we shouldn’t be grandstanding on this as politicians. We should be empowering communities, organizations, and schools to make the right decisions.”

Watch Pete Buttigieg discuss trans athletes on NPR’s Morning Edition below.

– YouTube youtu.be

This article originally appeared on Advocate: Pete Buttigieg weighs in on ‘fairness’ of transgender kids playing girls’ sports

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Engler Foundation $2M donation unlocks Rockrose Sports Park funding

A $2 million gift from the Paul F. and Virginia J. Engler Foundation has propelled Kids, Incorporated’s Rockrose Sports Park campaign across a critical fundraising threshold — unlocking a $1.5 million challenge grant from the High Plains Christian Ministries Foundation and bringing the project closer to breaking ground. The donation, announced Monday, July 28, will […]

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A $2 million gift from the Paul F. and Virginia J. Engler Foundation has propelled Kids, Incorporated’s Rockrose Sports Park campaign across a critical fundraising threshold — unlocking a $1.5 million challenge grant from the High Plains Christian Ministries Foundation and bringing the project closer to breaking ground.

The donation, announced Monday, July 28, will support the park’s multi-purpose venue, which will now bear the Engler Foundation’s name. The facility will serve thousands of young athletes across the Texas Panhandle and is expected to transform Amarillo into a destination for regional sports competitions.

“This gift is transformative — not just professionally, but personally,” said Jimmy R. Lackey, president and CEO of Kids, Inc. “Mr. Engler and my father were friends in Dumas. To see his family invest in the next generation through this project — and in this community — means the world to me.”

The Engler Foundation’s donation pushed the campaign total to over $26.2 million, surpassing the $24 million benchmark needed to activate a $1.5 million grant from the High Plains Christian Ministries Foundation. The combined $3.5 million boost marks the largest single leap in fundraising since the campaign launched.

Angela Lust, executive director of the Engler Foundation, said the decision to support the project was rooted in its broad and lasting community impact.

“This was an easy decision,” Lust said. “This complex isn’t just for Amarillo — it will serve the greater Panhandle. It aligns perfectly with our mission to support education, entrepreneurship, and basic human needs.”

A legacy fulfilled

For Sara Cady, a board member of the Engler Foundation and a daughter of Paul Engler, the gift represents a deeply personal moment.

“The Texas Panhandle was very important to my father,” Cady said. “To make this donation so soon after his passing — and to invest in something that will benefit generations of children and families — is incredibly meaningful to our family.”

She recalled that her father often said his greatest legacy wouldn’t be found in business holdings or markets, but “in the lives of young people empowered to lead, create, and serve.”

“This gift honors that legacy,” she said. “It honors him.”

From vision to reality

Construction plans for Rockrose Sports Park are quickly taking shape. The Amarillo City Council approved the final annexation of the property on June 25. The site plan has been submitted for review, and SW General Contractors is preparing to open the bidding process in early August. If all goes to plan, dirt could begin moving by late September or early October.

“When people actually see equipment on the ground, the perception changes,” Lackey said. “It’s not just a concept anymore — it’s real.”

The complex will span 36 acres and include sports turf fields for soccer, football, baseball and softball. Plans also call for concessions, restrooms, shade structures and more than 1,600 parking spaces.

“It’s about accessibility,” Lackey said. “Parents won’t have to shuttle between three different locations. This is a facility built for families — for the kids who can’t afford club sports, who just want to find out if they even like soccer or football.”

A proven model

Kids, Inc. has already seen the impact of similar facilities in towns like Hereford and Dalhart in Texas, and Elk City, Oklahoma, where the organization manages youth sports complexes.

Hereford Mayor Cathy Bunch said the city’s new baseball and softball complex, which opened earlier this year, has already boosted local tax revenue and filled hotels during tournaments.

“We saw a $25,000 spike in sales tax after just one tournament,” Bunch said. “Our hotels were full. Our restaurants were packed. We had out-of-town visitors everywhere you looked.”

Bunch said the momentum is growing, and she believes Amarillo will experience a similar impact.

“This kind of investment transforms communities,” she said. “Hereford deserved it. So does Amarillo.”

Looking ahead

While about $4 million remains to be raised, the latest gifts have dramatically shifted momentum. Lackey said the organization is now confident it can close the gap and begin construction.

“This gift was the spark we needed,” he said. “It’s a message to our donors, to our city and to our kids: This is happening. And it’s happening because people believe in the power of community.”

To learn more or contribute to the campaign, visit www.kidsinc.org.



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Indigenous excellence and hoops culture take center stage at NABI in Phoenix

Hannah Quintera shoots a 3-pointer during the opening round of pool play against the Lady Akichita at Alhambra High School during the Native American Basketball Invitational. (Photo by Travis Bradley/Cronkite News) PHOENIX — One thing is for certain, when the Native American Basketball Invitational (NABI) comes to town, there are no shortages of fascinating storylines […]

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Hannah Quintera shoots a 3-pointer during the opening round of pool play against the Lady Akichita at Alhambra High School during the Native American Basketball Invitational. (Photo by Travis Bradley/Cronkite News)

PHOENIX — One thing is for certain, when the Native American Basketball Invitational (NABI) comes to town, there are no shortages of fascinating storylines and compelling narratives to explore.

The 22nd annual all-native basketball tournament — the largest of its kind in North America — brought more than 200 teams from across the United States to several Valley arenas last week. The tournament is not simply about basketball; it is also about celebrating cultural diversity, Native identities and heritage.

With over 160 tribal nations represented across both the girls and boys divisions, high school and soon-to-be college athletes took to the courts to hopefully distinguish themselves as the best Native basketball teams in the country.

From the Athabascan tribes of Alaska to the Otoe-Missouria of Oklahoma, basketball reigns as one of the premier sports for Native youth.

New faces, same expectations

More than 80 of the teams in the 2025 NABI tournament were representatives of the 22 federally recognized tribes in Arizona.

The Spartans, a boys division team composed of young Navajo and Mohave players from Northern Arizona, were led into the tournament by Farin Nez, who recently took over the coaching position.

Nez said the Spartans were united under the cause of making their former coach Samuel David proud. David, a “lifelong friend” to Nez, died in July.

“Coach Sam really put a good foundation underneath them, such as rebounding and trust moving the ball,” said Nez, tears welling in his eyes as he reminisced about his now-deceased mentor. “This is our first tournament since his passing, and I’m just trying to continue what he started.”

Two players going up for the basketball at the Native American Basketball Invitational.

The Spartans defeated War Paint at the Phoenix College gymnasium, 61-18, in the Native American Basketball Invitational. (Photo by Travis Bradley/Cronkite News)

The Spartans were led offensively by Jacoby Che, a 14-year-old point guard. Che is Navajo from Winslow, Arizona, and he’s heading into ninth grade in the fall.

Despite his stature and youth, Che’s offensive output led the Spartans to the second round of tournament play before eventually falling to the Snowbirds of the Native Village of Scammon Bay in Alaska.

“We learned to play more physically because we’re always playing against bigger, older guys.” Che said.

Che will team up with several of the Spartan players this winter once the high school basketball season begins.

Age-old rivalries are renewed

With basketball as prevalent as it is throughout the Native tribes in Arizona, it can be difficult to isolate just one roster of talented players per tribe.

The White Mountain Apache Tribe had five teams representing their community in the girls division, and another nine teams in the boys division.

After a last-second victory over the Lady Akichita from North Dakota last Wednesday, WMA Squad coach Tyrell Clawson said that one motivating factor for the players was the opportunity to compete against teammates and high school rivals from other White Mountain teams at a national level.

“They support each other, the communities are always behind them, and there’s some really big crowds here to watch,” Clawson said.

Clawson is only 25, and this is his first season as a head basketball coach. With the way his team responded to his direction, it was impossible to tell that he was one of the least-experienced coaches in the tournament.

Clawson attributed the sisterhood between teammates as an essential part of the team’s success in the early stages of pool play. Though they lost in the first round of the tournament 41-37, the female athletes remained united by their common love for the game.

“They always encourage each other,” Clawson said. “Before, they came as teammates, now they’re basically a family.”

A dynasty is forged

No team has had nearly the same success in the recent years of the tournament as the Rezbombers in the girls division.

Represented by athletes from the Navajo Nation, Samoan, Laguna Pueblo, Hualapai, Paiute and Oglala Sioux tribes, the players barrelled through much of their competition last week, posting scores as lopsided as 110-20 throughout pool and tournament play.

Coach Brian Kaye addresses his team on the bench.

Rezbombers coach Brian Kaye addresses his team during halftime of a pool play game at Central High School on Thursday, July 24, 2025. (Photo by Travis Bradley/Cronkite News)

Rezbombers coach Brian Kaye brings a level of intensity to the game that is often unmatched by his opponents. Having won the tournament in 2024, he knew there was a very narrow margin of error for the players if they wanted to become repeat champions.

“This is by far the biggest tournament we’ll play in this year, and we take extreme pride in playing in this tournament,” Kaye said. “It’s one way for us to represent our culture, and we just want outsiders to know that Native Americans can play basketball.”

Kaye said that the main ingredient for the team’s success is discipline, especially on the defensive side of the ball. And when you’re beating a team 75-5 in pool play, it goes without saying that the players maintained that discipline throughout the tournament.

Led mainly by the Benally sisters, Sydney and Kaiyah, the Rezbombers surged their way to the championship on Saturday evening, claiming their third NABI title since 2022.

Kaiyah, the younger of the two sisters, is a 5-foot-6 point guard and one of the most talented female basketball players in New Mexico. Her older sister, Sydney, is a two-time New Mexico Gatorade Player of the Year, and she’s heading to BYU in the fall to join the Cougars’ women’s basketball team.

“It means a lot (to play in this tournament),” Sydney said. “Not only am I playing with such great players, but I’m playing with my sister one last time before I head off to college.”

When the trio of Kaye and the two Benally sisters were asked what it meant to them to play together one last time, their answers were all the same:

“It’s been a blessing” they said, echoing the theme that was prevalent throughout Valley arenas.





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