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Questlove & Joe Budden Among Nominees for 2025 iHeartPodcast Awards

How to Money SmartLess Something Was Wrong Trending on Billboard Keep It! Unf–king the Future Up First from NPR “Following our in-person return to SXSW last year, we’re thrilled to be bringing the iHeartPodcast Awards to an even bigger stage in 2025,” Conal Byrne, CEO of iHeartMedia’s Digital Audio Group, said in a statement. “Podcasting […]

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Questlove & Joe Budden Among Nominees for 2025 iHeartPodcast Awards

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“Following our in-person return to SXSW last year, we’re thrilled to be bringing the iHeartPodcast Awards to an even bigger stage in 2025,” Conal Byrne, CEO of iHeartMedia’s Digital Audio Group, said in a statement. “Podcasting is growing in both scale and influence every year, and SXSW brings a level of innovative spirit and excitement that makes it the perfect setting to celebrate the very best of our industry.”

The Good Whale

Podcast of the Year

We Can Do Hard Things

We Can Do Hard Things

Song Exploder, Questlove Supreme, Popcast, The Wonder of Stevie and The Joe Budden Podcast are vying for best music at the 2025 iHeartPodcast Awards, in partnership with South by Southwest (SXSW). The annual event will take place live on March 10 at 7 p.m. CT at ACL Live at The Moody Theater in Austin, Texas. In addition to the in-person show, the ceremony will also be live-broadcasted on select iHeartMedia Radio Stations, on the iHeartRadio app and on iHeartRadio’s YouTube Channel.

Call Her Daddy

The Dan Le Batard Show With Stugotz

Blank Check with Griffin & David

Best International

American History Tellers

Breaking Beauty Podcast

Koala Moon – Kids Bedtime Stories & Meditations

Alex Cooper (Call Her Daddy)

Wild Card With Rachel Martin

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Little Giants Holds First-Day Lead At 2025 NCAC Outdoor Track and Field Championships

Story Links GREENCASTLE, Indiana — Wabash captured three individual titles and posted six top-three finishes for all-conference honors on the first day of full competition at the 2025 North Coast Athletic Conference Outdoor Track and Field Championships, hosted by DePauw University. The Little Giants ended the first day in first […]

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GREENCASTLE, Indiana — Wabash captured three individual titles and posted six top-three finishes for all-conference honors on the first day of full competition at the 2025 North Coast Athletic Conference Outdoor Track and Field Championships, hosted by DePauw University. The Little Giants ended the first day in first place in the men’s team standings, scoring 74.5 points.
 
Wabash senior Will Morris won the pole vault to claim an NCAC individual title and all-conference honors. He cleared 4.70 meters (15 feet, 5 inches) for the 48th-best effort in Division III this season. Nate Joven finished in fourth place with a finishing height of 4.25 meters (13 feet, 11.25 inches). Hugh Ford added to the team scoring with a sixth-place finish at a height of 4.10 meters (13 feet, 5.25 inches).
 
Evan Furuness scored another individual championship for Wabash by winning the men’s shot put with a toss of 15.37 meters (50 feet, 5.25 inches). He edged out teammate Quinn Sholar, who earned all-conference honors with his second-place effort of 15.23 meters (49 feet, 11.75 inches). Jakob Van Pelt finished in fifth place with a throw of 13.97 meters (45 feet, 10 inches).
 
Senior Brayden Curnutt raced to an individual title in Friday’s first running event, the 10,000-meter run. He won the race with a new personal-best time of 30.38.75. Jacob Sitzman placed fifth overall with a personal-best time of 32:24.73.
 
The Little Giants picked up two all-conference performances and three top-four finishes in the men’s hammer throw. Lane Brockman turned in an All-NCAC effort by finishing in second place with a throw of 51.63 meters (169 feet, 4 inches). Furuness scored all-conference honors for the second time with his third-place throw of 49.43 meters (162 feet, 2 inches). Will Boas added a fourth-place finish with a personal-best mark of 48.97 meters (160 feet, 8 inches).
 
Wyatt Dorsey scored team points in the long jump by finishing in seventh place with a leap of 6.62 meters (21 feet, 8.75 inches).
 
Wabash holds a 26-point advantage over pre-meet favorite Wittenberg University. The Tigers scored 46.5 points on Friday. Denison sits in third place with 42 points, followed by Ohio Wesleyan in fourth place with 25.5 points. Oberlin (23.5 points), Wooster (22 points), DePauw (20 points), Kenyon (12 points), and Hiram (5 points) round out the team standings.
 
Saturday’s final day of competition begins at 10 a.m. at Blackstock Stadium.
 



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Hawaii water polo sweeps Big West awards

The Hawaii women’s water polo team swept the Big West Conference’s top honors Friday. Bernadette Doyle was named Player of the Year, James Robinson was voted Coach of the Year and Ema Vernoux was named the Freshman of the Year. Doyle, a senior from New Zealand, is second on the team with 91 points (53 […]

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Celtics reportedly expected to make notable roster changes this offseason – 98.5 The Sports Hub

The Celtics are entering the Eastern Conference Semifinals for their matchup with the Knicks, but the headlines are not all about their series. Rather, the buzz surrounding the team is about the bills coming due in the offseason, which could drastically change the 2025-26 roster. “Right now, Boston is fully focused on winning a championship. […]

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The Celtics are entering the Eastern Conference Semifinals for their matchup with the Knicks, but the headlines are not all about their series. Rather, the buzz surrounding the team is about the bills coming due in the offseason, which could drastically change the 2025-26 roster.

“Right now, Boston is fully focused on winning a championship. That is the number one focus, repeating, but – I can tell you – the rest of the league is bracing for some level of change to come to the Celtics from their roster this offseason,” said ESPN’s Shams Charania during an appearance on “The Pat McAfee Show”. “Sources have been telling me for weeks now that the Celtics will be exploring trade options in the offseason.

“This iteration just is not going to be sustainable for this team, and no one around the organization, from players to staffers, would be surprised if there are changes coming to this roster.”

As Charania noted, the Celtics have five players on track to make $28 million or more next season, along with a salary bill of $500 million, in addition to CBA restrictions related to trades and freezing of draft picks. The financials of the team have gotten out of hand, so in all likelihood, some players will need to be moved in order to return the payroll to some normalcy and to avoid penalties from the league.

The good news is that Jayson Tatum and Jaylen Brown are likely here to stay. But the supporting cast around them may look very different. The salaries of Kristaps Porziņģis, Jrue Holiday, and Derrick White have a combined worth of over $91 million (according to Spotrac). It would make sense if one or more of those guys are elsewhere next season.

“I think the Celtics knew when they traded for Jrue Holiday and they traded for Kristaps Porziņģis, they’d be staring at this in the face this summer,” said Charania. “So, these are good problems to have, but the league is bracing for some level of change to come to this Celtics roster in the offseason.”

This playoff run could mean the end of an era for Boston, and although they should still be a strong team regardless of the changes, they may not have the same level of depth they do now. With new ownership coming, the Celtics organization is going to look very different from the top down. The hope is the changes are merely a retooling, and not a teardown of the dominant team that fans have grown accustomed to in recent years.

Luke Graham is a digital sports content co-op for 98.5 the Sports Hub. He is currently a sophomore at Northeastern University studying communications and media studies. Read all his articles here, and follow him on X @LukeGraham05.



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Astros Minor League Recap

Today’s minor league starters: SL: Brandon Walter – 5:05 CT CC: Jackson Nezuh – 7:05 CT AV: Derek True – 5:45 CT FV: TBD – 6:05 CT Be sure to subscribe to receive weekly updates on the Astros minor league system. Also be sure to follow on X, @Astros. 4

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Astros Minor League Recap

Today’s minor league starters:

SL: Brandon Walter – 5:05 CT

CC: Jackson Nezuh – 7:05 CT

AV: Derek True – 5:45 CT

FV: TBD – 6:05 CT

Be sure to subscribe to receive weekly updates on the Astros minor league system. Also be sure to follow on X, @Astros.

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Patriots to Host the A10 Outdoor Track and Field Championship This Weekend

Live Results: Click Here Schedule of Events: Click Here Atlantic 10 Official Website: Click Here Fairfax, Va.- The 2025 Outdoor Track and Field Championship is set for Saturday May 3 at 10:30 am and concludes on Sunday May 4 at 9 am at George Mason Stadium in Fairfax, Va.    The George Mason women’s team […]

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Live Results: Click Here

Schedule of Events: Click Here

Atlantic 10 Official Website: Click Here

Fairfax, Va.-

The 2025 Outdoor Track and Field Championship is set for Saturday May 3 at 10:30 am and concludes on Sunday May 4 at 9 am at George Mason Stadium in Fairfax, Va. 
 
The George Mason women’s team are the current champions of the Atlantic 10 Indoor Track and Field Championship, looking to achieve the double this season by winning the outdoor championship as well.
 
Rhode Island Men’s and the VCU Women’s programs are the previous winners from 2024 for the Outdoor Track and Field Championship.
 
Four gold medalists will be returning this year for the Patriots; Arsalan Yaqubi, Walt Bannerman, Geni Roberts, and Joziah Johnson. Joziah was named the Newcomer of the Year and Walt Bannerman went on to compete at the NCAA Championships and received the title of All-American. Wesley Bond is one to watch as well after breaking the school record multiple times in the 3000m steeple. 
 
Abby Weening will return back to action after being named the Field Performer of the A10 Championships back in February. Ellie Desmond was another crucial piece for the championship coming back to Fairfax after scorng points in four different events and medaling in two of them. 

The women’s team last won the outdoor title in 2023 meanwhile the men last won the championship in 2019 before COVID hit. Both squads look stronger this year with the women finishing first and the men in second at the Indoor Championships.

 





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Cy Rigler to be Inducted into the Massillon Wall of Champions

Cy Rigler to be Inducted into the Massillon Wall of Champions  The Massillon Football Booster Club is proud to announce that Charles Cyrus “Cy” Rigler will be inducted this year into the “Massillon Wall of Champions.”  The formal ceremony will be held in conjunction with the Club’s Reverse Raffle event, which is scheduled for July […]

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Cy Rigler to be Inducted into the Massillon Wall of Champions

Cy Rigler to be Inducted into the Massillon Wall of Champions

 The Massillon Football Booster Club is proud to announce that Charles Cyrus “Cy” Rigler will be inducted this year into the “Massillon Wall of Champions.”  The formal ceremony will be held in conjunction with the Club’s Reverse Raffle event, which is scheduled for July 17, 2025, at the Eagles 190.

The Wall of Champions is reserved for Massillon grads who played a varsity sport and then went on to accomplish something remarkable later in life.  And no one meets that criterion better than Cy Rigler, who found his calling in professional baseball’s National League, where he spent thirty years umpiring games.

Rigler was born on May 16, 1882, in Massillon, Ohio, as the son a German immigrant fireman.  In 1899, now as a high school senior, he had an opportunity to join the Massillon High football team, which was re-forming after a 2-year hiatus.  Since he was one of the larger players in the team, his position was better suited for the offensive and defensive lines.  Massillon finished 3-3-1 that year with a squad comprised of just fourteen players.

1899 Massillon Football Team.  Rigler is shown at the far right of the second row.

After graduation, Rigler made his way into semipro baseball.  However, in 1903 he returned to the gridiron, this time playing right tackle for the Massillon Tigers professional team.  But a knee injury shortly into it curtailed that phase of his career.  Only, that was not the end of sports for Cy.

Due to his enormous size, now standing 6-foot tall and weighing 270 pounds, Rigler was asked to umpire industrial league baseball games in order to quell the frequent fights.  He enjoyed umpiring so much that in 1904 he parlayed that experience into a similar position in the Central League of minor league baseball.  It was there that he invented the call sign for a strike that is used by all umpires today; i.e., raising his right arm following the pitch.  It came in 1905 during a game in Evansville, Indiana.

His stint in the minor leagues lasted just two years, before he was promoted to the majors as a National League umpire.  He worked his first game (Brooklyn Dodgers vs. Chicago Cubs) on September 27, 1906, at age 24, thereby becoming the youngest umpire in Major League history.  He remained there for thirty years (1906 thru 1935), umpiring 4,144 regular season games, a mark that was ranked fourth all-time when he retired.  He was also behind the plate for 2,468 of those games.  So well respected was Rigler, that he was also selected to umpire in ten different World Series, involving 65 games.  He also umpired in the first All-Star Game, in 1933.  Rigler’s last outing was on September 29, 1935.  Following the season. he was placed on the supervisory staff of the National League and named Chief of Umpires.  But unfortunately, he passed away before he could assume the role.

As an umpire, Rigler is remembered for calling a controversial catch in the 1925 World Series.  Earl Smith had hit a fly ball to the right field corner and Sam Rice caught the ball, but fell into the bleachers on the play.  Nevertheless, Rigler ruled that Rice had secured the ball and thus called Smith out.  But the debate of whether or not he really did catch the ball continued for the next fifty years, until Rice, upon his death bed, confirmed that he had in fact caught the ball.  So, Rigler had made the right call after all.

He was considered as a very fair umpire and rarely needed to argue with either a coach or a player.  But there was one particular exception in 1915 when he overruled another umpire’s call involving Reds’ Tommie Leach, who was caught off second base as the victim of a hidden-ball trick.  The field umpire called Leach safe.  Only Rigler, who from behind home plate had a better view of the play, called him out.  Reds’ manager Buck Herzog quickly left the bench and approached Rigler to argue, shoving Cy in his chest protector and spiking his foot.  So Rigler responded by putting Herzog on the ground with a single punch to the left eye.  That set off a riot involving both players and fans, necessitating a dozen policemen to restore order.  At the end of the day, both combatants found themselves in St. Louis Police Court and were fined $5.00 each.

In a few unusual feats:

  • He was once wired to the stadium microphones so that fans could hear his calls of balls and strikes.
  • In the initial days of major league baseball, the league commonly employed just a single umpire.
  • Rigler was behind the plate when Chicago beat Philadelphia 26-23, the highest-scoring game in major league history.
  • He was the umpire when the opposing pitchers in a Cincinnati vs. Chicago game pitched nine innings of no-hit baseball.

In the offseason Rigler would return home to North East, Pennsylvania, where he remained quite active.  Some of his gigs included the following:

  • Policeman
  • Fireman
  • Golf course maintenance worker
  • Machinist
  • Supervisor in the gas and oil fields for a subsidiary of Standard Oil Co.
  • Ballpark designer (including Cuba, Latin America and the one at the University of Virginia)
  • Assistant baseball coach at the University of Virginia
  • Athletic advisor to several colleges and universities

He also found time to work on a law degree and dabble in his vineyard.

Rigler died on December 21, 1935, in Philadelphia at age 53, two weeks after surgery for a brain tumor, leaving his wife Nellie and two stepchildren from Nellie’s previous marriage.  But his body was subsequently returned to his roots to be buried in Massillon Cemetery.

Congratulations to Charles “Cy” Rigler and his later descendants.

Special thanks to Frank Cicchinelli for discovering Cy Rigler.

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