Thomas J. Krum, known to his listeners as ‘John Thomas’ passed away suddenly on Saturday, December 6, 2025 at this home in Johnstown, NY. Born in Kingston, NY on December 15, 1946 he was the son of the late Thomas and Winifred Grube Krum. A graduate of SUNY Ulster, Tom obtained his degree in Business Administration. He also had certifications from the Radio Advertising Bureau and the Career Academy of Broadcasting. Tom had a true love for the game and worked for various local companies including WGY Radio, The Albany- Colonie Yankees, The Albany- Colonie Diamond Dogs, GE/ Empire Broadcasting and The Leader Herald. Tom had extensive experience in sports management and broadcasting. He developed lasting relationships with players, coaches, celebrities and anyone who would talk about the game. Tom served as a Master of Ceremonies and guest speaker at many events. He was inducted into the Glove City Colonials as the first and only broadcaster and was awarded Broadcaster of the Year by The Hearst Newspaper. He had well over 3000 play by play broadcasts and interviews spanning a 40 year career. He is survived by his wife of 51 years, Marilyn L. LaPorte Krum; his brother, Robert Krum and his wife Elaine; his stepson, James Reed and his wife Kara; his step-grandson, Jacob Reed and his fiance Sarah Cuscino; and several nephews. Services are private. Cremation arrangements have been entrusted to the care of Rose & Hughes Funeral Home, 200 Church Street, Amsterdam, NY. Please visit the online memorial at www.roseandhughesfh.com In lieu of flowers, and in memory of Tom’s love for the game, consider donating to your favorite local youth sports program or volunteer your time as a coach.
Langdon Paul “Wally” Walper, age 74, born in Ponca City, Oklahoma, passed away peacefully on December 8, 2025, surrounded by his loving family, after a brief but courageous battle with cancer.
Born on May 7, 1951, to Elizabeth Frances Walper and Donald Wayne Walper, Langdon – known affectionately throughout his life as “Walking Wally” or simply “Wally” – lived a life defined by service, generosity, faith, and unwavering devotion to the people around him.
Following his graduation from high school, Wally proudly served his country in the United States Army. After completing his military service, he made Hull his home for more than four decades. Here, he built a long and respected career in the carpenters’ union and became a true cornerstone of the Hull community.
A dedicated member of St. Ann’s Church, Wally’s faith guided him throughout his life. Whether he was coaching youth sports or serving on the Parks and Recreation Commission for more than 20 years, Wally poured his heart into every effort. A lifelong sports enthusiast, he rarely missed the chance to cheer on his favorite teams and nothing brought him more joy than watching his grandson take the ice for hockey games. His dedication, warmth, and natural ability to bring people together made him a beloved figure to generations of families.
Above all, Wally cherished his family. He was a devoted husband, father, brother, and grandfather. His love for his wife, Rosemary, was steadfast and deep; together they shared 44 years of partnership, laughter, and unwavering support. Their bond was the foundation of his life, and he often spoke of how fortunate he felt to walk through the world with her by his side. After retiring, Wally and Rose embraced a new chapter in New Bern, North Carolina, enjoying the warmth and a snow-free life together.
He is survived by his loving wife, Rosemary; his two children, Katie Walper and Langdon Walper III; his daughter-in-law, Marie Walper; his cherished grandson, Langdon Paul Walper IV; his sisters Donalee Davie, Laurey Walper, Mary Bass, and Linda Walper; and many extended family members and friends. He was preceded in death by his brother, Richard Walper.
A celebration Mass of Wally’s life will be held at a later date in Massachusetts. In lieu of flowers, donations may be made in the form of a check to the Jason Mazzeo Scholarship Foundation, 11 Roosevelt Ave, Hull, MA 02045, Attn: Bill Mazzeo – a foundation to which Wally dedicated many years of support and fundraising effort.
Wally leaves behind a legacy of kindness, dedication, and love a life.
Cotten Funeral Home & Crematory is honored to serve the Walper family.
GENEVA (AP) — The IOC took a big step toward reintegrating Russia and Belarus into world sports Thursday by advising governing bodies to let the countries’ teams and athletes compete in international youth events with their full identity of national flag and anthem.
Athletes have “a fundamental right to access sport across the world, and to compete free from political interference or pressure from governmental organizations,” the International Olympic Committee said in a statement.
The updated Olympic strategy gave Russia significant progress in sports politics at a time when Moscow appears to be making no political or military concessions to Ukraine.
The IOC move is separate to the upcoming Milan Cortina Winter Games where a small group of Russian and Belarusian athletes will compete as neutral individuals who pass vetting for not having publicly supported the war.
The decision came at an Olympic Summit — an annual meeting chaired by IOC president Kirsty Coventry that invites key stakeholders from the Olympic family.
“It was recognized that implementation by the stakeholders will take time,” the IOC said in a statement, adding that each sport’s governing body should decide how to define youth events.
Some sports bodies likely will face resistance from their national member federations, especially in Europe, to the updated IOC advice which repeats that Russia should still not be picked to host international events.
The IOC’s latest move to ease the sporting isolation of Russia can apply to its own Youth Olympic Games which are held next year in Dakar, Senegal, from Oct. 31 to Nov. 13. The Russian Olympic body is still formally suspended by the IOC and currently could not compete with its national identity.
“The above principles should apply to the Dakar 2026 Youth Olympic Games, and are recommended for adoption by all governing bodies and international sports event organizers for their own youth events,” the IOC said.
Banned from soccer, track and field
A small group of Russian and Belarusian athletes competed as neutrals without their national identity at the Paris Summer Games last year, where those countries were banned from team sports.
A previous attempt to enable Russia’s potential return to youth sports was met with strong pushback by European soccer federations including Ukraine in September 2023.
European soccer body UEFA moved to reintegrate Russian Under-17 teams into its competitions but dropped its policy within weeks amid boycott threats by at least 12 of the 55 member federations.
Though Russian soccer teams have been banned from World Cups and club competitions like the Champions League for four seasons, their national soccer body is not suspended by FIFA or UEFA and its officials have been eligible to stand for elections.
The IOC reminded Thursday that a block should remain on inviting or accrediting government officials from Russia and Belarus to international sports events or meetings.
“With its considerations today,” the IOC said, “the Olympic Summit recognized that athletes, and in particular youth athletes, should not be held accountable for the actions of their governments.”
Copyright 2025 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
Youth athletes from Russia and Belarus should be allowed to compete for their countries at international events again, says the International Olympic Committee.
The IOC’s executive board has recommended athletes from the two nations should compete at both individual and team youth events under their country’s flag and national anthem, with the proposal supported at its Olympic summit meeting in Switzerland.
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The next step involves international federations discussing the move with a view to it being in place by the 2026 Youth Olympic Games in Dakar.
Russia and Belarus were banned by the IOC following the former’s invasion of Ukraine in February 2022.
“The summit supported the IOC EB’s recommendation that youth athletes with a Russian or Belarusian passport should no longer be restricted in their access to international youth competitions, in both individual and team sports,” said an IOC statement issued about the summit meeting.
“The summit participants committed to take these discussions back to their organisations for their consideration. It was recognised that implementation by the stakeholders will take time.
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“In addition, the standard protocols of the international federation (IF) or the international sports event organiser regarding flags, anthems, uniforms and other elements should apply, provided that the national sports organisation concerned is in good standing.
“The above principles should apply to the Dakar 2026 Youth Olympic Games, and are recommended for adoption by all IFs and international sports event organisers for their own youth events.”
It added: “With its considerations today, the Olympic Summit recognised that athletes, and in particular youth athletes, should not be held accountable for the actions of their governments – sport is their access to hope, and a way to show that all athletes can respect the same rules and each another.”
The statement added that while Russia should still be barred from hosting international events, “this recommendation no longer applies to Belarus”.
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The move follows nine Russian and Belarusian athletes being granted permission to compete in qualifying events for next year’s Winter Olympics as neutral athletes following the Court of Arbitration for Sport overturned a ban.
• Hundreds of youth laxers across Long Island are without a team after the abrupt shutdown of Rebels Lacrosse, one of the region’s largest travel lacrosse organizations. • The collapse has left families out thousands of dollars and high school juniors scrambling to salvage their college recruitment prospects.
When Craig McElwee’s 15-year-old son Brady worked a 10-hour shift at a Rebels Lacrosse tournament at Stony Brook last year, the teenager earned $150.
When he tried to cash his pay check, it bounced, his dad said.
“A league that collected one and a half million dollars in freaking dues… bounced a $150 check,” said McElwee, a Bethpage attorney whose son plays on the Raiders ’27 team, a squad of high school juniors that was affiliated with Rebels Lacrosse until the organization’s shutdown last week.
That bad check, McElwee said he now realizes, was an early warning sign of what would become a devastating collapse affecting hundreds of Long Island youth lacrosse players and their families.
On Thursday, the owners of Rebels Lacrosse LLC and its parent company Blatant LLC, Mike Brennan and Joe Potenza, announced that the company after 15 years in the travel lacrosse business had filed for bankruptcy and ceased operations, leaving dozens of boys and girls teams — ranging from elementary school through high school — without an organization, and families out of thousands of dollars in paid fees.
The outfit additionally has training programs for kids as young as 3 years old.
“You stole some kid’s dream,” McElwee said, expressing his frustration with Brennan and the organization’s collapse.
Brennan, in a statement to Greater Long Island, said the shutdown was not planned and happened quickly — right after several teams dropped out of the organization.
“We never had any intention of shutting down our business after 15 years, as we were currently in the middle of our 8th season with Rebels Lacrosse,” Brennan wrote. “Once we had a few teams get poached, and all file disputes, we realized we could no longer operate and immediately made the decision to close and consult a bankruptcy attorney.”
He added: “We have received an outpouring of support from former athletes, parents, and those who truly know us best, for the last 15 years of our work.”
The business of youth sports
Photo by Jay Brand
Travel youth sports has evolved into a multi-billion-dollar industry nationwide, with club lacrosse representing one of its most expensive sectors.
On Long Island, where lacrosse is deeply embedded in suburban culture, families routinely invest $3,000 to $6,000 per child annually for the privilege of playing on elite travel teams — and to increase their chances of earning scholarship money to play in college.
The investment extends far beyond tuition. Families pay for specialized equipment, tournament travel, and — for high school-aged players — premium recruiting services designed to attract college coaches.
For many families, particularly those in middle- and lower-income brackets, these expenses represent significant financial sacrifice, justified by the promise of college scholarships and opportunities their children might not otherwise access.
“The unfortunate truth is nowadays, if you don’t play club, you don’t play school ball because everybody is so far ahead of you,” McElwee said.
The stakes are particularly high for high school juniors, who face their most critical recruitment window. This is when college coaches attend tournaments and exposure events — often paid by travel organizations to do so — to evaluate prospects, when highlight videos are assembled, and when recruiting relationships are cultivated.
Losing a season — or even part of one — while in 11th grade can effectively end college athletic aspirations, parents said.
For the Raiders ’27 team, composed entirely of juniors from communities across Nassau and Suffolk counties, the Rebels collapse came at the worst possible moment.
But the team over the weekend received a lifeline of sorts from Team 91 lacrosse. The parents voted to stay together as a team, keep the same coaches and play under the Team 91 banner, albeit with renewed costs for things they had already paid for with Rebels, parents said.
Years of warning signs
The signs of trouble at Rebels Lacrosse had been accumulating for years, parents told Greater Long Island.
Parents said equipment promised never arrived and that tournaments were sometimes canceled at the last minute. Additionally, coaches went unpaid for months, according to multiple families.
But families tolerated the dysfunction, clinging to the relationships their children had built with teammates and coaches, hoping the organization would stabilize — or in the Raiders ’27 case — at least make it through next summer’s key recruitment period.
Kim Libertini, whose son Matthew, a junior at Locust Valley High School, plays defense for the Raiders ’27 team, paid for a Rebels helmet and equipment package when he joined the team as an eighth grader in 2022.
The helmet took a year and a half to arrive, she said. The gloves, bag, and sweats never came, she added.
“That tells you something was wrong,” said Libertini, an assistant superintendent with Cold Spring Harbor Central School District. “So, Matthew ended up playing with his Locust Valley helmet.”
Parents said that this past March — eight months before the shutdown — Brennan began pressing families for early payment for the following season, despite families having already paid in full for the current year.
“He reaches out in March saying, ‘We’re just trying to gather up and solidify next year.’ And I said, ‘You’re looking for payment in March?’” Libertini said. “At that point, I had already paid in full for the whole year.”
Parents said the demand for advance payment signaled cash flow problems.
The pattern extended to tournament operations. Parents said a scheduled tournament at Stony Brook in early November was canceled with Rebels telling parents that teams had dropped out.
Parents said they later learned from people familiar with the situation that unpaid officiating fees were the cause.
When Rebels attempted to place teams in a tournament operated by Team 91, a competing lacrosse organization, the teams weren’t added to the tournament registration app, said John Peragine, a Patchogue restaurateur whose son played on a seventh-grade Rebels team.
When some of the moms with Peragine’s son’s team called to complain, Peragine said, a Team 91 staff member delivered a blunt message: “Instead of you calling me and yelling at me, why don’t you call your directors and tell them to pay the bill?”
“That was the first time somebody actually spoke about what we’re all feeling,” Peragine said.
GENEVA (AP) — The IOC took a big step toward reintegrating Russia and Belarus into world sports Thursday by advising governing bodies to let the countries’ teams and athletes compete in international youth events with their full identity of national flag and anthem.
Athletes have “a fundamental right to access sport across the world, and to compete free from political interference or pressure from governmental organizations,” the International Olympic Committee said in a statement.
That message in support of athletes will be welcomed in Russia and Israel, whose athletes have faced recent discrimination, and comes less than three years out from the 2028 Los Angeles Summer Games that risks facing political crosswinds in the United States.
The updated Olympic strategy gave Russia significant progress in sports politics at a time when Moscow appears to be making no political or military concessions to Ukraine.
The IOC move is separate to the upcoming Milan Cortina Winter Games where a small group of Russian and Belarusian athletes will compete as neutral individuals who pass vetting for not having publicly supported the war.
Summit decision
The decision came at an Olympic Summit — an annual meeting chaired by IOC president Kirsty Coventry that invites key stakeholders from the Olympic family.
“It was recognized that implementation by the stakeholders will take time,” the IOC said in a statement, adding that each sport’s governing body should decide how to define youth events.
Some sports bodies likely will face resistance from their national member federations, especially in Europe, to the updated IOC advice which repeats that Russia should still not be picked to host international events.
The IOC’s latest move to ease the sporting isolation of Russia can apply to its own Youth Olympic Games which are held next year in Dakar, Senegal, from Oct. 31 to Nov. 13. The Russian Olympic body is still formally suspended by the IOC and currently could not compete with its national identity.
“The above principles should apply to the Dakar 2026 Youth Olympic Games, and are recommended for adoption by all governing bodies and international sports event organizers for their own youth events,” the IOC said.
Banned from soccer, track and field
Russian teams have been fully excluded from international soccer, track and field and other sports since the full military invasion of Ukraine in February 2022, while Russian and Belarusian athletes in winter sports are now starting to return with neutral status ahead of the Milan Cortina Olympics in February.
A small group of Russian and Belarusian athletes competed as neutrals without their national identity at the Paris Summer Games last year, where those countries were banned from team sports.
A previous attempt to enable Russia’s potential return to youth sports was met with strong pushback by European soccer federations including Ukraine in September 2023.
European soccer body UEFA moved to reintegrate Russian Under-17 teams into its competitions but dropped its policy within weeks amid boycott threats by at least 12 of the 55 member federations.
Though Russian soccer teams have been banned from World Cups and club competitions like the Champions League for four seasons, their national soccer body is not suspended by FIFA or UEFA and its officials have been eligible to stand for elections.
The IOC reminded Thursday that a block should remain on inviting or accrediting government officials from Russia and Belarus to international sports events or meetings.
“With its considerations today,” the IOC said, “the Olympic Summit recognized that athletes, and in particular youth athletes, should not be held accountable for the actions of their governments.”
___
AP Winter Olympics at https://apnews.com/hub/milan-cortina-2026-winter-olympics
Springfield, IL (CAPITOL CITY NOW) – The highly anticipated Scheels Sports Park is giving the public another chance to experience its state-of-the-art facilities this weekend with a special soft opening event inside its newly completed dome.
Brandon Doherty, General Manager of Scheels Sports Park, says the event will feature the Midwest Archery competition along with more than 80 local vendors. “We thought it would be a great idea to do something that would draw the community in,” Doherty explained. “This is a free event for everybody, so if you’ve been wanting a sneak peek of the dome, this is the weekend.”
The dome now boasts two turf fields, a sport court area, banners, and a food court, creating what Doherty calls “the complete picture” of the indoor space. While minor construction details remain, visitors will see a polished facility ready to impress.
The excitement surrounding Scheels Sports Park has been building for months.
Doherty revealed that the complex is already booked solid for events through fiscal years 2026 and 2027, with more than 100 events annually. “From April through August, we’ll often have two or three different youth or adult activities happening at once,” he said. Springfield’s new sports hub isn’t just about athletics.
Doherty says the venue is designed for versatility, hosting everything from car shows to banquets, all aimed at boosting the local economy. “We’re not limiting ourselves to sports,” he noted. “This development was built with diversification in mind.”
As for safety during the archery event, Doherty reassures visitors that the dome’s durable design can handle anything from heavy snow to stray arrows. “These domes today are built to withstand these types of things,” he said with a laugh.
The free event runs this weekend at Scheels Sports Park, offering residents a chance to explore a facility that’s already putting Springfield on the map for major youth sports and community events.