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Opinion | America’s best sports city: nine compete for the crown

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The World Series begins Friday between the Los Angeles Dodgers and the Toronto Blue Jays. Oh, not a big baseball fan you say? No worries. The NBA tipped off its season this week, so you’ve got 12 games to pick from. Eight NHL teams face off, too. Saturday promises to be a huge day for college football (especially if you’re in Michigan, home of the annual grudge match between the Wolverines and Spartans). And on Sunday it’s week eight of the NFL season — we’re all wondering if the New York Jets can finally win a game.

The smorgasbord of sports and the passion it will incite among fans led us to wonder: What is America’s best sports city? We asked nine writers to make their case.

Seattle

It’s the most scenic sports city in America. From the open end of Husky Stadium, Lake Washington gleams and Mount Rainier towers. Some fans arrive for Washington Huskies home football games via boat — after, yes, sailgating, sometimes even on the Montlake Cut, where the University of Washington’s rowing crew trained to win Olympic gold in 1936, before their story became a book and a movie, “The Boys in the Boat.” Six miles away, in downtown Seattle, the green, tree-lined Railroad Way connects the city’s waterfront to its stadium district. Those who traverse it can settle into seats above left field at T-Mobile Park and take in Major League Baseball and Puget Sound simultaneously.

Start there to understand why Seattle is America’s best sports city. Add this: an emphasis on women’s sports and inclusivity no other metropolis can match. Seattle’s WNBA team, the Storm, is owned and operated by three local businesswomen. Women have held or hold high-level positions for the Storm, Seattle Reign FC (National Women’s Soccer League), the Sounders (MLS), the Mariners (MLB), UW and Seattle University. Fans here show up for women’s sports. The Storm always rank among league leaders in attendance.

If titles matter, Seattle has those, too. The Storm won four between 2004 and 2020. The Seahawks triumphed in the Super Bowl in 2014. The Sounders seized MLS Cups in ‘16 and ’19. We have an NBA championship (Supersonics, sigh, 1979). And the Seawolves, of Major League Rugby, snagged back-to-back shields in ’18 and ’19. UW, in 1991, claimed a share of college football’s national championship. The 2025 Mariners reached the American League Championship Series for only the fourth time in 49 years. Even losing Game 7 against Toronto felt like the beginning of much more — a golden age of sports here, perhaps.

In the Seattle sports scene, there’s variety: rugby, cricket, cheerleading, roller derby, ultimate Frisbee, Australian football and arena football. Just don’t mistake breadth for a lack of star power. Seattle sports was: Lenny Wilkens, Gus Williams, Shawn Kemp, Gary Payton, Ken Griffey Jr., Edgar Martinez, Ichiro, Felix Hernandez, Steve Largent, Cortez Kennedy, Walter Jones and Marshawn Lynch. Seattle sports is: Cal Raleigh, Julio Rodriguez and Nneka Ogwumike.

Our fans are loyal; our venues, sustainable. Climate Pledge Arena, home to the NHL’s Kraken and the Storm, is the world’s first zero-carbon certified sports space, complete with electric Zambonis and powered by 100 percent renewable energy.

We loved and supported soccer before the rest of America came around. We loved and supported the WNBA long before its widespread popularity ballooned. We register decibel-quakes in our football stadium just through our roars and stomping.

If “best” sports city in America is defined, simply, as most teams and most titles, then Seattle is not that. But if fans want to feel sports and experience sports and live sports, there’s simply no better, nor more distinct, place.

Greg Bishop is a senior writer for Sports Illustrated and lives in the Seattle area.

Los Angeles

Los Angeles is not the tinseltown caricature of superficiality. Those of us who call it home know better. L.A. is the Diaspora Capital of America, the Creative Capital of America, the Fitness Capital of America.

And yes, the Sports Capital of America, a rich mixture of excitement and longing, vulnerability and swagger.

It has 11 major professional sports teams and the most culturally and globally relevant teams anywhere. The Dodgers consistently have the highest regular season home attendance in Major League Baseball, averaging nearly 50,000 fans a game, with big followings in Mexico and Japan. The Los Angeles Clippers play in the new Intuit Dome, the most innovative fan-experience arena in professional sports. Powerhouse rivals UCLA and USC have won more NCAA Division I team championships combined, 239, than any other two universities in a single city. The owner of the Los Angeles Lakers agreed to sell a majority stake in the franchise in June; the agreement valued the Lakers at a record $10 billion.

L.A. is a sprawling, alluring destination that attracts every significant sporting event. The city will host the World Cup next year, followed by the 2028 Summer Olympics. Athletes flock to train here in the offseason, build their brands, buy or rent second homes. They all believe they can become great here.

On any given summer Sunday, you can go to Venice Beach and watch street ball sensation Ryan “Hezi god” Carter drop 39 points in the Veniceball League by the ocean. Professional beach volleyball took off in Manhattan Beach. L.A. is a youth sports mecca, where just two years ago Louis Lappe hit a walk-off homer that lifted El Segundo’s Little League All-Stars to Little League World Series champs. Sports Business Journal named L.A. the No. 1 soccer market — one that includes the upstart Angel City FC, one of the most valuable teams in women’s sports.

L.A. is not just the city where the greatest collection of superstar athletes performed — Koufax, Magic, Kareem, Kobe, Shaq, Serena, Leslie, Kershaw, Kwan, Valenzuela, Ohtani, LeBron, etc. It’s where Wayne Gretzky, playing for the Los Angeles Kings, popularized hockey in California. It’s where David Beckham transformed Major League Soccer. Venus and Serena Williams left the courts of Compton and dominated women’s tennis for a quarter century, winning a combined 48 titles.

A mural depicting NBA star Kobe Bryant, painted by Isaac Pelayo, is displayed on a building on Feb. 16, 2020 in Burbank, California. (Mario Tama/Getty Images)

Where else will you find LeBron James doing a cameo in Tyler the Creator’s latest music video, or see college hoops phenom JuJu Watkins on a billboard and then watch her L.A.-filmed documentary series? Many years ago, I ran into the great James Earl Jones (may he rest in peace) at a backyard cookout in L.A. I sat next to him at a picnic table while he ate his ribs, and we talked about “Field of Dreams,” the sports-movie classic about the spiritual power of baseball.

L.A. is that city.

Kevin Merida is the former executive editor of the Los Angeles Times, a former senior vice president of ESPN and a former managing editor of The Post.

Kansas City

It’s easy to argue for a major metropolis as America’s best sports city. New York, Los Angeles and Chicago have so many big-time franchises they can’t keep them straight. The Jets used to play in Queens and the Nets used to play in New Jersey, but now the Nets are in Brooklyn and the Jets are in Jersey.

Dizzying.

Good for them, I guess. I prefer a town where the folks share sporting passions unanimously, not neighborhood by neighborhood. Where new sports find a warm welcome, and sports history has a place of honor. I speak of Kansas City.

Start with this: The NFL rules the nation, and the Kansas City Chiefs rule the NFL. Kansas City — ranked No. 31 in metro-area population but punching way above its weight — has played in five of the last six Super Bowls. Won three. Finished second in the others.

Kansas City also has a baseball team with a couple of World Series trophies and history’s best third baseman: George Brett. He is one of only five players with 3,000 hits, 300 home runs and a .300 lifetime batting average.

As for stars of newer vintage: In Patrick Mahomes, a rare three-time Super Bowl MVP, and all-star shortstop Bobby Witt Jr., Kansas City boasts a dazzling still-in-their-prime sports duo.

Wanna ding K.C. for lacking an NBA franchise? The city has something better: University of Kansas basketball. KU is the cradle of the sport. An overtime game in the historic Phog Allen Fieldhouse is the best college athletic vibe in America.

Speaking of college athletics: Kansas City is rekindling one of the oldest and fiercest college rivalries in America. That stuff about harmonious neighborhoods does not apply to Kansas versus the University of Missouri, a tradition busted up by conference realignments but coming back to life.

Kansas City cherishes the Negro Leagues Baseball Museum. Nowhere is the role of athletes as engines of culture and social progress so delightfully explained and celebrated. As for the future of sport, Kansas City is the first place on the planet to build a stadium just for women’s professional soccer.

K.C. is Soccer City. Has been for decades: The same Lamar Hunt who conceived of what is now the American Football Conference and its dominant Chiefs was also the visionary behind European football in the U.S. Next year, the World Cup will pay homage to Kansas City’s long history at the forefront of North American soccer by staging multiple matches here.

The entire World Cup tournament will have Kansas City fingerprints. Games in Georgia, Massachusetts, Texas, Florida, New Jersey, California and Washington will all be played in stadiums designed by architects in Kansas City — the world capital of sports stadium design.

David Von Drehle is a former Washington Post columnist and editor.

Chicago

Before I was born, it was made clear to my brothers and hence me upon my birth that North Side, South Side, West Side or the suburbs, we could all agree on one thing in Chicago: You rooted for the Bears, the Bulls, the Blackhawks and whichever baseball team your family forced you to support because your grandfather did.

That is one of the many things that makes Chicago special. You would be hard-pressed to find a native who didn’t weep over the World Series titles of the 2016 Cubs or the 2005 White Sox; who couldn’t tick off multiple reasons Michael Jordan is the greatest of all time; and those of a certain age who can’t still close their eyes and envision the “Super Bowl Shuffle” without the slightest whiff of embarrassment.

I once almost made a friend of my then-7-year-old son cry when he got into our car wearing a Red Sox hat. “Brandon, what are you doing?” I chided him. “We have TWO baseball teams. Pick one.”

Wrigley Field in Chicago on Oct. 9, 2025. (Michael Reaves/Getty Images)

We didn’t see much of Brandon after that and my son Alec, now 27, still blames me. But I contend I saved his friend from much worse abuse had he worn the Red Sox hat in a less-charitable mother’s car.

To be defined by our blind loyalty, however, doesn’t fully capture our passion. We are a smart group. We can, for example, quickly calculate how many offensive coordinators helped doom Bears quarterback Jay Cutler in his eight seasons with the team (six).

We are also smart enough to know that his 251 sacks during that period, which vaulted him to first place on the list of most-sacked quarterbacks in franchise history, probably contributed to his general disposition.

Earlier this year, an actual study calculated the number of tweets, Google searches and Reddit posts containing “heartbroken language” made by each NFL fan base the previous season. The survey dubbed us No. 1 on its list of most heartbroken fans in the league.

I’m not sure that’s altogether fair. Makes us sound soft. But we’ll take a No. 1 ranking.

The truth is, we are a reasonable people. We know who we are and that means we do not adopt more successful teams from other cities, no matter how young and impressionable we may be. Rather, we stick by our own, root them on passionately and every 100 years or so, if we’re lucky, we are rewarded for our loyalty.

Melissa Isaacson is an assistant professor at Northwestern University’s Medill School of Journalism and was a longtime Chicago Tribune sportswriter.

Detroit

Sports fans across the country laughed when Detroit Lions coach Dan Campbell talked about kicking opponents in the teeth and biting kneecaps during his opening news conference in 2021. But most missed Campbell’s point in the seconds before he made that comment: his promise that the Lions would take on their city’s identity.

“This city has been down, and it found a way to get up. It’s found a way to overcome adversity,” Campbell said.

The Lions, who have never reached a Super Bowl and went 0-16 in 2008, resembled the city. Just seven years before Campbell’s arrival, Detroit emerged from a historic municipal bankruptcy.

Many Detroit fans have been knocked down and found a way to get back up. Lions hats emblazoned with “Grit” embody the hard work and dirty hands Detroiters display on auto factory lines. The ubiquitous “Bless you boys” catchphrase during the 1984 Tigers World Series championship season reflected an entire city’s underdog spirit and hope during that improbable year. We loved both the “Bad Boys” and the “Goin’ to Work” Pistons championship teams for their toughness and blue-collar swagger.

We’ve also watched Red Wings greats such as Gordie Howe retire at 52, and Chris Chelios play until he was 48. It reminded us of our fathers or uncles at the plant.

Former Detroit Red Wings player Gordie Howe waves to crowd during his 80th birthday celebration at Joe Louis Arena on March 30, 2008, in Detroit. (Jerry S. Mendoza/AP)

Now, Campbell has turned the Lions into championship contenders. The players found a way to pair their style of play with the city’s fierce work ethic. The Tigers and Pistons have also added to Detroit’s culture of resilience with their unexpected runs to the playoffs in 2024.

We’re not Los Angeles, New York or Chicago. We don’t try to be. We’re too busy surviving hard times and making things better.

That’s what makes Detroit’s bonds with our sports legends special.

Consider how Pistons great Dave Bing left his steel company to become mayor during the most difficult economic times. He tackled a roughly $300 million deficit when he entered office. Jalen Rose of the University of Michigan Fab 5 faithfully visits his Jalen Rose Leadership Academy to help our educational system. Roger Penske runs his billion dollar company here.

Then there’s Isiah Thomas, former Piston and NBA Hall of Famer, who spoke during a recent visit with the University of Detroit-Mercy basketball team.

“There’s two rules: How bad do you want it and how hard are you going to fight for it … . ” Thomas said. “Either you’re fighting to keep it or you’re fighting to get it.”

Darren A. Nichols is a freelance writer in Detroit.

Cleveland

Scott Entsminger was from Mansfield, Ohio, about 80 miles southwest of Cleveland. He worked for General Motors for 32 years before retiring; he loved to garden, and to fish and to play guitar in a band with friends called the Old Fogies Band. He had a wife, a teenage son and three dogs. And he died on July 4, 2013, at the far-too-young age of 55.

His obituary is a standard one. Except for two sentences:

A lifelong Cleveland Browns fan and season ticket holder, he also wrote a song each year and sent it to the Cleveland Browns as well as offering other advice on how to run the team. He respectfully requests six Cleveland Browns pallbearers so the Browns can let him down one last time.

On Legacy.com, you’re allowed to comment on obituaries in a separate Guest Book section. (Note to my children: Please do not attach a comment section to my obituary.) Entsminger’s page goes on and on, hundreds of entries, almost all of them Browns fans, laughing with this dead man they never met, sharing their own memories of this franchise that’s determined to follow and haunt them into the grave and beyond. You can kinda tell reading all the entries: This is how they think they’re gonna go, too. This is what it’s like to be a Browns fan. It’s what it was like to be a Browns fan when Entsminger died 12 years ago. It’s what it’s like to be a Browns fan now.

I’m not sure there would be a bigger story in sports than the Cleveland Browns winning the Super Bowl. Other teams and cities have known pain: the Bills, the Vikings, everything Detroit. But no one knows pain like Cleveland does, from The Fumble to The Drive to The Decision to The Shot to The Curse (take your pick from Game Seven World Series heartbreaks, 1997 or 2016). Even the one title the city did win, the LeBron title in 2016, ended with LeBron leaving two years later and the Cavaliers sinking into irrelevance immediately afterward. (Followed by their recent uptick to postseason face-planters.)

But the Browns — who have never reached a Super Bowl and haven’t been close in nearly 40 years — represent the pain most stoically and resolutely. They’re the sad sack losers who don’t deserve this city’s love — who once, in fact, abandoned this city — but will have it forever nonetheless. To love the Cleveland Browns — the team, after building a new stadium in suburban Brook Park in 2029, will be abandoning the city once more — is to give your soul to something that will cause you nothing but heartache and pain, willingly, happily, unreservedly, for the rest of your life. And even, as the late Scott Entsminger could tell you, after that. Nothing could be more futile. Nothing could be more noble.

Will Leitch is a Washington Post columnist.

Buffalo

Last year, a massive winter storm dumped four feet of snow on western New York, as massive winter storms are wont to do.

Thousands of Buffalo Bills fans, anticipating a home playoff showdown against the Pittsburgh Steelers, piloted their SUVs, ATVs and snowmobiles to roofless Highmark Stadium. And then, they began shoveling, with the team fueling them with food, coffee and a $20-an-hour wage.

Seats, aisles and playing field sufficiently cleared, quarterback Josh Allen threw two touchdowns and rushed for another as the capacity crowd heaved heaps of snow skyward celebrating a victory they personally labored into existence.

Fans take their seats in the snow before the game between the Buffalo Bills and the Pittsburgh Steelers at Highmark Stadium on Jan. 15, 2024 in Orchard Park, New York. (Sarah Stier/Getty Images)

Buffalo sports fandom is uniquely vocational. A skilled trade. Proud, often punishing work mastered through participation, repetition and solidarity.

Our fandom certainly isn’t great because of what our teams have accomplished. New York City boasts a combined 54 major sports championships. Our blue-collar brethren in Detroit enjoy 22 titles, Pittsburgh 16. Buffalo? Zero — our teams have gone zero-for-six in Super Bowls and Stanley Cup finals.

No, Buffalo fandom is great because of a lesson I learned in the late 1980s, as the Bills’ Super Bowl era dawned. Then 10 years old, I begged my parents for season tickets we couldn’t quite afford. My assembly-line worker father and church-musician mother, who wanted them as badly as me, agreed — if I paid for my own. Soon, I had a route’s worth of newspaper customers, a seat in Section 127, and each autumn and winter, 80,000 of the most outrageously wonderful friends a kid could ever want.

Rooting for Buffalo means backing a postindustrial, half-frozen metropolitan area with fewer people than Fresno, California; Birmingham, Alabama; or Richmond, Virginia. We buy in, show up and hitch our teams’ hard times to our own in pursuit of a better place together.

The “Bills Mafia” phenomenon has turned Bills fans into a Bills family in which the team itself is fully engrossed. This is a Bills family, worth noting, that does great good when its adherents aren’t, say, gleefully flinging themselves through folding tables during epic tailgating sessions, as has become madcap tradition.

So enjoy your championships and trophies, America. Even if Buffalo must wait another year or decade or century — please, God, no — we’ve built something from the collective ashes of “wide right” and “no goal” and “13 seconds” that is as unduplicated as it is priceless.

Dave Levinthal, a Buffalo native, is a journalist in Washington.

New York

New Yorkers are, to say the least, a complacent bunch. Our city is the best in the country, according to us, so it follows that it is certainly the best sports city in the country. With at least one team to root for across every league, fandom here is a Choose Your Own Adventure easily accessible via public transit. We deserve no less, considering all we pay in rent.

Say you want to root for a spendy clubhouse with a storied history of 27 World Series titles. The Yankees will be happy to have you. Do you prefer instead to suffer endlessly watching a charming band of misfits? The also spendy (post-Bernie Madoff) Mets have you covered. And right next door, you can annually drown your sorrows in honey deuces at the U.S. Open.

Meanwhile, the WNBA is the hottest it’s ever been, and no one in the league is hotter than Ellie, the Liberty’s prancing pachyderm. A chic icon fit for a fashion capital. On the NBA side, the surging Knicks are obviously your best bet, and you’ll be in good company at Madison Square Garden with the likes of Spike Lee, Jack Nicholson and Timothée Chalamet. But true sickos like myself can, for some reason, support the Nets. (It’s not my fault that I grew up in Jersey during the Jason Kidd era.)

Fans in New York are demanding, which means we have little patience for our problem children, currently including the Jets and Giants. As of the time of writing, they were sitting a combined 2-12 on the NFL season. Part of the beauty of the city, though, is that it’s constantly changing. People move in and out (bye, Aaron Rodgers!); storefronts turn over (hello, new women’s sports bar!). And it all happens faster than Carrie Bradshaw can type “I couldn’t help but wonder.” New York has moved on from players and even, in the case of the Dodgers and Giants, entire franchises. But the next big trade or championship run always seems close on the horizon.

Is your team not meeting your high standards? No sweat. Turn off the TV, lose yourself dancing like Elaine at the high-A Cyclones’ “Seinfeld Night” on Brooklyn’s Coney Island, and wait a year or two. Your squad will make a … brand-new start of it, which I recently heard bellowed from the water feature at the gorgeous, revamped LaGuardia Airport.

Julie Kliegman is a writer and editor in Queens.

Boston

I’ve been to Boston numerous times, but I was neither raised in nor live in the Northeast. I have been to Fenway Park once, but never the Boston Garden or Gillette Stadium.

But when I thought about the top sports town in America, Boston jumped out as the obvious answer. Russell. Bird. Clemens. Pedro. Manny. Big Papi. Brady. Pierce. Those are icons in basketball, football and baseball — full names aren’t necessary.

Boston is one of two cities whose teams have won a championship in all four major U.S. sports (baseball, basketball, football, hockey) since 2011. And Los Angeles, the other city that has won all four in the last 15 years, has a major advantage — it has eight teams in those major sports. Boston only has four.

David Ortiz of the Boston Red Sox speaks during a pregame ceremony to honor victims of the Boston Marathon bombing at Fenway Park on April 20, 2013. (Jim Rogash/Getty Images)

The Red Sox won perhaps the most memorable baseball playoff series ever — coming from 0-3 down to defeat the New York Yankees in 2004. The Patriots’ six titles between 2001 and 2018 add up to the rare dynasty that lasted for almost two decades. The Celtics have 18 titles — more than any other NBA franchise. The Lakers have 17, and several of them were won while the team was in Minnesota.

Fenway is probably the best stadium in baseball. The city also has Bill Simmons, who is one of the most influential sports journalists in America, particularly for a Gen X-er like myself. Simmons lives in the L.A. area, but grew up in Boston and is still a superfan of his hometown teams. I vacillate between loving and being annoyed by Simmons, but his articles and now podcasts have shaped my sports fandom and appreciation for the Boston sports scene.

I don’t want to be a complete Boston booster. Back in the 1970s, Bill Russell described the city as a “flea market of racism.” I assume things have improved since then, but Boston still has a reputation for not being tolerant of African Americans in sports and otherwise. For such a big city, its college sport teams aren’t making much impact. And it’s not known for major events in golf, tennis or other sports — other than the Boston Marathon.

The Boston area is the 11th largest metro in the country. Perhaps New York and Los Angeles, the two largest, are the most important for sports. But just as you couldn’t tell the story of America’s founding without talking about the Cradle of Liberty, you can’t tell the story of American sports without featuring Boston.

Perry Bacon is a staff writer at The New Republic and a former Washington Post columnist.

Post Opinions wants to know: What’s the best sports city in America? Convince us why.

Illustrations by Chiqui Esteban/The Washington Post; iStock





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Refugee-Focused Youth Sport Initiatives : Moving for Change

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Chinese sportswear manufacturer ANTA Group has announced the continuation of its three-year philanthropic alliance, known as the ‘Moving for Change’ partnership, with the United Nations Refugee Agency (UNHCR). This follows an initial phase in which the corporate entity contributed $1.5 million in financial aid and over 1.2 million units of apparel and sporting goods to displaced youth populations in several African nations.

The ‘Moving for Change’ corporate social responsibility initiative is designed to support UNHCR’s Sports for Protection programming and Primary Impact education initiative. The first focuses on utilizing structured sports activities for child protection and psychosocial support, while the second aims at sustaining primary education in refugee settings by funding teachers and essential learning materials.

ANTA Group reports that these combined efforts have reached an estimated 300,000 children and adolescents to-date.

Image Credit: UNHCR/Eric Bakuli



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California orders Tahoe Truckee schools to leave Nevada sports over transgender athlete dispute

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The California Department of Education is requiring the Tahoe Truckee Unified School District to follow state law in another clash over transgender athletes in youth sports in the state. 

Currently, student-athletes in Tahoe Truckee Unified play sports in Nevada because of how close they are. But Nevada now bans transgender athletes in girls’ sports, which is against California state law. 

So after decades of playing in Nevada, California’s Department of Education is requiring the Tahoe Truckee Unified School District to compete in California to comply with state laws that allow student athletes to compete based on their gender identity.

David Mack is the co-founder of Tahoe Pride and describes the new youth sports divide in the Tahoe region.

“So no one’s happy, it’s really sad, it’s quite tragic in that way,” Mack said. “People feel really upset that the school moved so fast on this. They feel blindsided, they feel not listened to, and then other people, like the trans kids, are getting steamrolled over like they’re not recognized in this argument.”

Nevada state lawmakers passed a law in April requiring a mandatory physical signed by a doctor to deem the athlete male or female based on their birth sex. 

“This is a politically manufactured issue to try to divide people,” Mack said. 

The Tahoe Truckee Unified School District is responding to the California Department of Education with a solution that the district legally join the California Interscholastic Federation in 2026, but continue to play in the Nevada Interscholastic Activities Association through 2028.

When asked if transgender athletes would be able to compete while operating in the NIAA, the district said it’s “still in the early stages of this transition, and many details are still being developed.”

In an October letter addressed to the California Department of Education, the school district’s attorney, Matthew Juhl-Darlington, said the Tahoe Truckee Unified is “not aware of any transgender youth who have expressed interest in participating in its 2025-2026 athletic programs.”

“While the NIAA recently updated its polices to define ‘male’ and ‘female’ based on sex assigned at birth and not as reflected in an individual’s gender identity, as required under California law, the District is interpreting and implementing this policy in a manner consistent with California’s legal requirements,” Juhl-Darlington said in the letter. 

California Republican Rep. Kevin Kiley is opposed to the state order, arguing the weather conditions in Tahoe need to be considered.

“So in order to compete in a California league, you have to deal with this snowy weather and the travel dangers and so forth,” Kiley said.

The school board was expected to explain its solution to both join California’s CIF while playing in the NIAA through 2028 to parents and students Wednesday night at a board meeting.

So far, the California Department of Education has not said if it will accept this as a solution.



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Quincy University on probation after allowing over 100 ineligible students to participate in sports

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QUINCY (WGEM) – Quincy University has to pay a $5,000 fine and spend two years on probation after the NCAA issued sanctions tied to more than 120 ineligible student-athletes who were allowed to play for the school.

The problem first surfaced in August 2024 when staff preparing the men’s and women’s soccer roster lists discovered three players had not received the required amateurism certification. That same day, another school alerted QU’s athletics office that a transfer student from Quincy also lacked the certification. The athletic office then launched a broader review.

What began as a handful of missing documents quickly grew. The department found potential eligibility problems for 95 student-athletes during the 2022-23 and 2023-24 school years. In November 2024, the department self-reported the findings to the NCAA and cooperated with an investigation.

The NCAA report names former Assistant Director of Athletics for Compliance Taylor Zerbe as central to the violations. Zerbe admitted to changing 74 student-athletes’ eligibility certifications and told investigators she felt overwhelmed by the workload. According to the report, she did not raise those concerns with her supervisor. Zerbe also admitted to knowing some athletes were ineligible when she altered their certification. She was not employed by QU when the problems were discovered.

QU’s internal review reached back to the 2021-22 school year, which coincided with Zerbe’s employment. That review uncovered additional violations. Overall, the NCAA says Zerbe falsified eligibility squad lists and that QU improperly certified 121 student-athletes across 17 sports.

The report details several consequences for those athletes: 93 practiced beyond the allowable 45-day period, 78 competed when they were not eligible, and 26 received financial aid while ineligible. The university also allowed 27 student-athletes to compete before their eligibility was formally reinstated, and two transfer student-athletes competed despite not meeting transfer eligibility rules.

QU and the NCAA agreed to a set of penalties intended to correct the system and increase transparency. In addition to the $5,000 fine and two-years probation, the school must tell prospective student-athletes in writing that the program is on probation and disclose the violations.

  • Vacate any wins, records or participation that involved ineligible student-athletes from the time those athletes became ineligible until they were reinstated.
  • Prevent head coaches from counting wins from games where ineligible athletes competed toward milestone totals (for example, a coach’s 100th win).
  • Allow individuals who were eligible to keep any personal records or awards they earned.
  • Undergo a comprehensive external review of certification and eligibility procedures during the probation period.

The NCAA report contains the full list of prescribed penalties.

Regarding Zerbe, the NCAA has barred her for two years from working at a member institution in any role that involves eligibility certification responsibilities.

QU declined on-camera interviews, but Athletic Director Josh Rabe told WGEM the university acted with integrity by self-reporting and taking steps to address the problem. Rabe said the department has tightened procedures and added what he called “a double-check to check the double-check.”

QU released the following statement:

Below is the full case summary:



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Rep. Kim Hicks – Rochester DFL Legislators to Take Action on Rochester Sports Complex

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PRESS RELEASE

Minnesota Legislature

Rochester Delegation

  

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

December 18, 2025  

HOUSE CONTACT:  Marlee Schlegel  

651-296-9873 or marlee.schlegel@house.mn.gov  

SENATE CONTACT: Jack Vinck

651-440-5056 or jack.vinck@mnsenate.gov 

  

Rochester DFL Legislators to Take Action on Rochester Sports Complex

Rochester, Minn – On Monday, Rochester Mayor Kim Norton vetoed the city council’s plan for a $65 million sports complex that is not reflective of the ballot initiative that funded the project in 2023. The city council is expected to overturn the Mayor’s veto at their December 22nd meeting. 

In response, the DFL Rochester delegation intends to introduce legislation to revoke authorization of the Local Option Sales Tax they previously passed into law to fund the project. The delegation released the following statement:

“Rochester residents deserve to get what they paid and voted for. The updated plan for the sports complex no longer serves the best interests of Rochester residents. Rather, it serves a narrow set of special interests and ignores the community’s need for indoor recreation space — the very reason voters approved the project in the first place.

“Both as legislators who passed the legislation that allows the complex to be funded by the Local Option Sales Tax, and as voters who were excited to support the community-oriented initiative, we feel deceived. The changes made to the project to eliminate the indoor portion of the complex also eliminates the reason that many Rochester residents supported the project.”

Not long after the ballot approval of the complex, a new cost assessment was completed. Updated estimates came back at $120 million, nearly twice the cost of the initial $65 million proposal approved by voters.

“It’s unclear to us how such an expensive oversight was made on cost — and it’s equally unclear why the city council has chosen to prioritize the outdoor complex over the part of the project that won community support in the first place. Whatever the reason, the city council should either find a way to deliver on what voters approved or bring these significant changes back to the ballot. 

“As legislators, we urge the Rochester council to change course and return to the original goal of meeting residents’ needs for indoor recreational space. After many conversations with stakeholders and community members, it is clear to us that as proposed, the project now falls outside of the parameters outlined in the original use of funds request. If the city council does not change course, we plan to introduce legislation to revoke authorization to use Local Option Sales Tax funds for the project. We remain committed to meeting the needs of our community and seeing that the residents of Rochester get what they’ve voted for, and we remain willing to work with the city council toward that goal.

“We want to see this project fully realized in a form that serves the entire community, as we were all assured it would.”

The DFL Rochester Delegation includes Senator Liz Boldon (DFL—Rochester), Representative Kim Hicks (DFL—Rochester), Representative Tina Liebling (DFL—Rochester) and Representative Andy Smith (DFL—Rochester).

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Rec Sports

Tree collapses onto 2 young children waiting for school bus

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TWIN FALLS, Idaho (KMVT/Gray News) – Two children in Idaho are critically injured after a tree fell on them while they were waiting for the school bus.

The Twin Falls County Sheriff’s Office said high winds caused rotten trees to fall on power lines before collapsing on the children.

The kids, both under the age of 10, and an older sibling were waiting outside for their bus when the tree collapsed. According to the sheriff’s office, the older sibling was not injured.

Aaron Hudson, the Twin Falls fire deputy chief, told KTVB first responders had to first get the kids out from the tree and downed power lines before they could prepare them for transport.

The sheriff’s office said one of the children was taken to the hospital by ambulance, while the other was airlifted.

According to Hudson, the weather conditions caused difficulties during transport. He said that it prevented the helicopter from going any further than the local hospital.

The family of the children has started a GoFundMe to help cover medical expenses.



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Huskers year-end report shows concession sales up 75%, shares volleyball reseating data

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LINCOLN, Neb. (KOLN) – Athletic Director Troy Dannen reflected on another year of Nebraska Athletics, sharing highlights and achievements of the men’s and women’s sports teams and hinting at what’s to come.

In competition, Huskers excelled in multiple sports:

  • Nebraska volleyball team just completed a remarkable 33-1 season
  • Wrestling finished as the national runner-up as a team and two Husker wrestlers won individual national championships
  • Softball made an NCAA Super Regional appearance
  • Football earned a second straight bowl berth
  • Both basketball teams are undefeated and ranked in the AP Top 25.

This year, student-athletes set a school record with a 3.464 GPA, led the Big Ten Conference with 117 fall Academic All-Conference selections and once again posted a Graduation Success Rate over 90%, among the best in the nation. Dannen said they also made a positive impact in Lincoln and surrounding communities through their volunteer work.

Alcohol and food sales at Husker venues

The start of alcohol sales at all on-campus venues and the addition of new food options resulted in an increase of 75% in total concession revenue compared to last year, Dannen said.

“More than 313,000 alcoholic beverages were served and new food options were added to the menu, resulting in an increase of 75% in total concession revenue compared to last year,” Dannen said.

The introduction of alcohol sales came with concerns about the impact on fan behavior, but Dannen said it remained consistent with the previous five years.

John Cook Arena reseating

The John Cook Arena reseating process planned for 2026 has drawn criticism from longtime season ticket holders.

Dannen said the athletic staff has developed a plan that ensures that season-ticket holders in 2025 will be guaranteed season-tickets next year.

Dannen said 10% of current season-ticket holders did not use their tickets this year but rather sold those tickets through secondary markets. Those tickets, originally purchased for a total of $600,000 by those ticket holders, were then resold for a total of $3.2 million on the secondary market. Ticket use for this purpose is strictly prohibited.

The accounts that resold the entirety of their tickets will be excluded from the ability to purchase season-tickets in 2026, Dannen said.

1890 Nebraska winding down operations

With the implementation of the House settlement, 1890 Nebraska, Husker Athletics’ NIL collective, has begun winding down its operations.

“Hundreds of Husker fans donated millions of dollars over the past 24 months to support NIL for our student-athletes, as the rules at the time permitted,” Dannen said the in the letter.

The House settlement now prohibits much of what 1890 Nebraska provided, but in turn allows the university to share $20.5 million directly with student-athletes as they pay to license their NIL rights.

The five sports primarily supported by the collective include the Nebraska wrestling team, football team, two basketball teams and the volleyball team.

Facility upgrades

Several Nebraska athletic facilities saw enhancements including the completion of the track and field complex, along with new facilities for golf, rifle, swimming and diving and bowling.

In 2026, the athletics department is planning to renovate the softball and baseball clubhouses. Dannen said they are also looking forward to expanding the Devaney Center.

Entertainment

Three shows have been scheduled to take place inside Memorial Stadium next year. Zach Bryan will perform on April 25, the Savannah Bananas on June 13 and The Boys from Oklahoma on Aug. 22.

“Our plan is to continue to utilize our facilities for outside events to bring new events to our spaces and to help drive entertainment options in Lincoln,” Dannen said.

Due to anticipated construction, Nebraska Athletics will hold off on booking events for Memorial Stadium in 2027.

The athletics department is expecting to make two “big announcements on the Husker women’s sports front” early next year that will have a tremendous impact on its female student-athletes.

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