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Sign kids up to play in the new Southborough Flag Football league

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Above: Organizers of a new youth sports program in town are promoting the opportunity. (images contributed and from Facebook)

Southborough parents are working with Southborough Recreation and an NFL youth program to launch a co-ed, no-contact Flag Football league for local kids in grades 3–8.

Earlier this summer, I wrote about the upcoming opportunity (and the difference between it and the Northborough/Southborough Youth Football and Cheer Association’s “Flex Football” program.

At the time, the details were still TBA. Since then, information was posted to Rec’s website, and registration opened last Friday. Rec’s website promotes:

We are SUPER excited to partnering with the NFL for our new Flag Football League and present our version of Sunday Football! . . .

All abilities and boys/girls are welcome! This will be a low commitment & fun way to play football this fall.

The first 30 minutes of each block will be skills & drills followed by a 30-minute game!

Organizers reached out, asking me to help promote the new offering. (Scroll down for their announcement.)

The program will be run at Choate Field (in front of Woodward School) on Sundays starting September 14th. It will continue until at least November 2nd (except for October 12th), followed by Playoffs on Sunday, November 9th and a Championship game on Friday, November 14th.

The cost is $90 per Southborough resident, but also open to kids from other towns. (The cost is the same for grades 5-8, but $10 more for ages 3-4.)

Program times are a based on age groups:

  • 12:00 –1:00 PM Grades 3-4
  • 1:00-2:00 PM Grades 5-6
  • 2:00-3:00PM Grades 7-8

Space is limited, so register here soon. Rec is also advertising the need for volunteer coaches. (Learn more by emailing recreation@southboroughma.com.)

The below announcement from organizers Sean Connelly & Brian Lowe explains why they are launching this opportunity:

New NFL Flag Football League Launches in Southborough for Grades 3-8

We are excited to announce the launch of a new NFL Flag Football league for boys and girls in grades 3-8. This partnership with the NFL brings official flag football programming to our community and is open to neighboring communities as well!

A Growing Sport for All

Flag football has emerged as one of the fastest-growing youth sports in America, with participation increasing by 38% since 2015. For younger girls ages 6-12, participation has surged by an astounding 222% over the past decade.

“Flag football affords boys and girls of all ages, body types, and athletic skills the opportunity to enjoy the values, fun and competitive environment that only football offers,” notes Troy Vincent Sr., NFL executive vice president of football operations.

Why Flag Football?

The no-contact nature of flag football makes it an appealing option for parents concerned about safety while still allowing children to develop fundamental football skills. NFL FLAG, the official flag football program of the NFL, serves over 765,000 youth athletes across all 50 states, making it the largest youth flag football organization in the country.

The sport has gained such momentum that it’s now being adopted at higher levels of competition. While high school boys flag programs are growing, there has been explosive growth among the girls’ programs with thirteen high school state associations having sanctioned girls flag football as a varsity sport and another nineteen states developing pilot programs. The sport will even make its Olympic debut in the coming years.

Join the Southborough League

Registration for the Southborough NFL Flag Football league is now open through the Southborough Recreation Department. The program welcomes both boys and girls in grades 3-8 who want to learn the game, develop skills, and have fun in an inclusive environment.

For more information or to register, visit the Southborough Recreation Department website at https://southboroughma.myrec.com/info/activities/program_details.aspx?ProgramID=30618 or contact Sean Connelly at sean.connelly@gmail.com.

Don’t miss this opportunity to be part of the exciting world of flag football right here in Southborough!



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Youth basketball season postponed a week due to delays in team jersey shipping –

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The City of Arkadelphia’s Parks and Recreation Department has adjusted the start of its winter youth basketball season by one week.

The season will now begin on January 17 instead of January 10 and will conclude on March 7.

This adjustment is due to team jerseys not yet arriving because of shipping delays related to the holiday season.

Parks and Recreation expects the season to begin as scheduled on Saturday, January 17. Any changes will be communicated through the City’s social media channels at @arkadelphiaar.


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Golden State Sports Academy, Powered By Rakuten, Announces 2026 Spring Camp Schedule

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Golden State Sports Academy, powered by Rakuten, has announced its 2026 Golden State Basketball Camp spring camp schedule, which includes camp sessions at 13 Bay Area locations for youth ages seven and up. Registration is now open for all spring camp sessions at gssportsacademy.com. 

The spring schedule will run from March 7 through April 19, highlighted by clinics at Chase Center in San Francisco and the Sephora Performance Center in Oakland. The spring schedule will include various skills clinics focusing on specific elements of the game.

Early Registration and sibling discounts are available. All sessions are for youth, ages seven and up, unless noted otherwise. For complete details on Golden State Basketball Camp and to register online, visit gssportsacademy.com or call (510) 986-5310. 

The 2026 Golden State Basketball Camp spring schedule includes: 

About Golden State Sports Academy
Golden State Sports Academy, formerly known as Warriors Basketball Academy, which encompasses the organization’s youth basketball efforts across the Bay Area, has hosted over 90,000 participants since its inception in 2000. A member of the Jr. NBA’s Flagship Network, Golden State Sports Academy has been deemed one of 18 best-in-class youth basketball organizations that share the Jr. NBA’s vision for how the game should be taught. For more information, follow Golden State Sports Academy on Instagram, Facebook, TikTok, and X at @gssportsacademy. 



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Kutztown Field Hockey to host youth and middle school summer camp

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KUTZTOWN, Pa. – Kutztown field hockey is set to host a youth and middle school camp this summer from June 8th through the 10th at Andre Reed Stadium.
 
The camp is designed for grades K-8th. Each day the session will run from 5:30 p.m. to 8:00 p.m. The cost to attend is $150 pre-registration, which can be done prior to June 1.
 
Athletes should bring a stick, mouth guard, shin guards, turf shoes or sneakers and a water bottle. Goalies must bring their own equipment.
 
For additional information, contact camp director and KU head coach Marci Scheuing at scheuing@kutztown.edu, or by phone at 610-683-4378.
 
The Youth and Middle School Field Hockey Camp is designed to give athletes an opportunity to train with the National Champion Kutztown coaching staff and KU players. Our camp is open to any and all entrants, and will include learning both technical and tactical skills during multiple stations. We will separate groups by age and level of experience. You will also have the opportunity to compete in a series of games and fun competitions.

 



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Elmira area business owner, youth sports coach fondly remembered

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Updated Jan. 9, 2026, 7:44 a.m. ET





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Black Sports Moms is equipping, empowering parents and athletes

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Andrea Odom doesn’t hesitate when asked what sparked the idea she now hopes becomes a movement.

The moment arrived just before the 2023 Major League Baseball draft, as agents began recruiting her son, Dylan Campbell of the University of Texas, and it came with a hard lesson her family didn’t expect to learn.

“We had to fire an agent who didn’t deliver on what he promised,” said Odom, a mother of three, who manages public relations for The Odom Consulting Group in Houston. “But the beautiful part is that my son grew on a business level. He learned how to hold people accountable.”

That moment reshaped how Odom viewed the role of parents in sports, particularly Black mothers, who often find themselves navigating high-stakes decisions without access to the same information, networks, or protection afforded to others.

“And that’s what we want for Black Sports Moms,” Odom said. “Empowering ourselves and our children.”

Founded in March 2025, Black Sports Moms was created to equip Black mothers with the knowledge, resources, and confidence to navigate an often opaque and unforgiving sports industry on behalf of their children.

From youth sports to the professional level, the organization addresses issues ranging from Name, Image and Likeness (NIL) and contract negotiations to mental health, branding, and long-term financial planning — areas where families are increasingly expected to be savvy but are rarely taught how.

Odom sat with the idea until a phone conversation changed everything.

Unbeknown to her, attorney Lachauna Edwards was doing parallel work in Atlanta, educating “momagers” (mothers who serve as the business managers for their children). Edwards had spent years advising families in NIL, contracts, and athlete branding, and during Black History Month, she launched a Momager Series on Instagram, spotlighting Black mothers managing their children’s athletic careers behind the scenes.

“Andrea’s name was brought up as someone to feature,” said Edwards, 40, also a mother of three. “We talked about her background, and she saw what I was doing. She reached out again about doing an event, and she came up with the name Black Sports Moms.”

Black Sports Moms members Tammie Parker and Andrea Odom, Kim Stroud, mother of Houston Texans quarterback CJ Stroud; CJ Stroud and Chris Hollins, Houston City Controller, at a volunteer event.
From left to right: Black Sports Moms members Tammie Parker, Andrea Odom and Kim Stroud (mother of Houston Texans quarterback CJ Stroud) join CJ Stroud and Houston City Controller Chris Hollins at a volunteer event.

Andrea Odom

What started as a conversation quickly became a partnership. Edwards and Odom formed an LLC in March 2025 and moved fast, organizing their first conference in Houston in July 2025. They expected a local crowd. Instead, the event sold out with 175 attendees, many of whom traveled from across the country.

“In such a short amount of time, we were blown away by the response,” Odom said. “That’s when we realized this was bigger than we thought.”

The momentum continued in November 2025 with another sold-out conference in Atlanta, drawing 170 attendees. Mothers traveled from Florida, Texas, Georgia, and beyond — including a group of University of Florida Gator moms — underscoring a hunger for education and community that Edwards says has long gone unmet.

“Black women birth the greatest athletes in the world,” Edwards said. “For a long time, different entities in sports have been able to profit off our children’s talent while families are left trying to figure out how to support their kids and make informed decisions.”

Edwards, who has a civil rights background, sees Black Sports Moms as both education and protection. In many households, she notes, mothers are already doing the work by researching agents, negotiating schedules, managing finances, and supporting their children emotionally.

“That’s why athletes say, ‘My mom is the real MVP,’ ” Edwards said. “We nurture everything off the field and off the court. It made sense to empower the women who are already doing the work.”

The organization’s flagship offering, The Playbook, is a one-day educational summit designed specifically for mothers managing their child’s athletic journey. The conferences feature expert-led panels and interactive workshops covering NIL, contracts, branding, mental health, and financial literacy. Each attendee leaves with a personalized strategic plan and access to ongoing coaching and consultation.

“We’re intentional about making sure our moms are not only prepared, but confident enough to walk into any room on behalf of their child,” Edwards said.

That confidence will be on display again this month, when Black Sports Moms hosts a smaller, advanced “Mini Camp” in New Orleans. Limited to 50 attendees, the event is designed to go deeper, with mothers encouraged to bring real contracts they are negotiating.

“We’re breaking everything down clause by clause,” Edwards said. “Brand partnerships, tax strategies, investing, forming LLCs and nonprofits — this is advanced, hands-on work.”

The New Orleans gathering marks the next step in a rapidly expanding national footprint. In addition to regional panels tied to major sporting events, including Super Bowl week, the CIAA tournament, and the McDonald’s All-America Games, the organization plans its largest signature conference yet in Houston in July.

Despite its rapid growth, Edwards and Odom say the most powerful outcome hasn’t been business — it’s been community.

“Moms are forming group chats, supporting each other, showing up to games, baby showers,” Edwards said. “One mom helped another mom’s child land a marketing opportunity. That’s real.”

Odom agrees.

“We created this for empowerment and education, but the sisterhood has been the biggest surprise,” she said. “These women are forming lifelong bonds.”

Dylan Campbell rounds the bases
Dylan Campbell’s MLB draft experience reshaped how his mother Andrea Odom viewed the role of parents in sports.

Samuel Lewis/Icon Sportswire

The stakes, they say, are real. Odom points to moments when parents are intentionally sidelined during recruiting and negotiations — and how education changes those dynamics.

“One mom told us her son had 32 football offers,” Odom said. “After attending our conference, an assistant coach tried to separate her from her son and made a disrespectful comment. The family declined the offer and told the head coach exactly why.”

Another mother, whose son is preparing for the 2026 NBA draft, was told by an agency that starting a nonprofit was “too expensive.” At the upcoming conference, Black Sports Moms will walk families through how to set one up themselves — a process that costs less than $150.

“We’re teaching families who need to be in their ecosystem and how to protect their kids,” Odom said.

For Edwards, the urgency is only increasing as athletes are getting paid younger and younger, often before families are prepared for the attention and financial complexity that comes with it.

“If Black mothers don’t step into these roles,” Edwards said, “everybody else is making money off the success of these athletes. Universities, agencies, financial advisors. We want families to have a unified front so they aren’t taken advantage of.”

Chicago Bulls guard Coby White said his mother, Bonita, played a central role in guiding him through the recruiting process before he chose to attend North Carolina. He added that navigating today’s NIL landscape without that same level of parental support, and education, would be almost unthinkable.

“What they’re doing is needed,” White told Andscape about the co-founders of Black Sports Moms. “It can help a lot of families and a lot of mothers guide their kids through this, especially with the amount of money and attention involved now. It sounds like a dope organization.”

Odom said success will be measured not just by conferences, but by long-term impact – from chapters in cities across the country to a voice in conversations around NIL legislation and athlete rights.

“This is called Black Sports Moms,” she said. “But it’s a movement that’s touching families and communities.”

Branson Wright is a filmmaker and freelance multimedia sports reporter.





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Total bet on sports in North Carolina exceeds $7B in 2025 :: WRAL.com

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Bettors in North Carolina wagered more than $7 billion through legal online sportsbooks in 2025, the first complete calendar year since sports betting launched in the state.

In December, the state had more than $651 million in paid wagers, the fourth consecutive month that wagering activity in the state exceeded $650 million, according to information released by the North Carolina State Lottery Commission.

The state collected more than $14.6 million in taxes from the licensed operators, who pay an 18% tax on their gross wagering revenue as calculated by the commission. In 2025, North Carolina collected more than $132 million in taxes from the operators.

Some of the tax revenue goes to the state health department for gambling addiction education and treatment programs, two statewide youth sports organizations which distribute grants, a major events funds and the athletics departments at UNC System schools, though not NC State or UNC-Chapel Hill. The rest goes to the state’s general fund.

Paid wagers in December were up more than 6% over December 2024, continuing a trend. The commission doesn’t release more detailed data on betting, such as which sport attracts the most wagers or which operator has the most customers or bets each month.

Lawmakers approved legal sports betting in North Carolina in 2023 and it went live in mid-March 2024. The state now has seven legal operators.



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