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USA Football named national governing body with flag football on tap for '28 Olympics

GREEN BAY – The U.S. Olympic & Paralympic Committee has announced that USA Football is the official national governing body for the sport of American football. USA Football is the sport’s first NGB, and the designation from the USOPC is significant with flag football set to make its Olympic debut in Los Angeles in 2028. […]

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USA Football named national governing body with flag football on tap for '28 Olympics

GREEN BAY – The U.S. Olympic & Paralympic Committee has announced that USA Football is the official national governing body for the sport of American football.

USA Football is the sport’s first NGB, and the designation from the USOPC is significant with flag football set to make its Olympic debut in Los Angeles in 2028. USA Football will select, train and lead both the men’s and women’s national teams in their Olympic flag football pursuits.

The International Olympic Committee voted in October 2023 to add flag football, among other sports, to the 2028 Olympic slate in Los Angeles. Some prominent NFL players have expressed interest in playing for Team USA, though none of those particulars have been sorted out yet.

USA Football has been the governing body for tackle and flag football, and the USOPC has now certified it has the financial capability to support Team USA athletes and meet training and safety standards.

Packers President/CEO Mark Murphy serves on USA Football’s volunteer board of directors.

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Santa Maria youth softball team qualifies for state games | Youth Sports

The Santa Maria Lady Saints 8U All-Stars softball team has qualified for the California State Games that will take place in San Diego in July. The Lady Saints went 5-0 at the Morro Bay Coastal Summer Slam and won the 8U Division tournament championship. The Santa Maria squad won an age division title at the […]

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The Santa Maria Lady Saints 8U All-Stars softball team has qualified for the California State Games that will take place in San Diego in July.



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University of Tennessee at Martin Athletics

MARTIN, Tenn. – Second-year University of Tennessee at Martin head men’s basketball coach Jeremy Shulman has announced the signing of freshman Matas Deniusas from Vilnius, Lithuania.                “We are thrilled to welcome Matas to the Skyhawk family,” Shulman said. “Matas is a tall, long, skilled, versatile forward who follows in a long line of productive […]

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MARTIN, Tenn. – Second-year University of Tennessee at Martin head men’s basketball coach Jeremy Shulman has announced the signing of freshman Matas Deniusas from Vilnius, Lithuania.
              
“We are thrilled to welcome Matas to the Skyhawk family,” Shulman said. “Matas is a tall, long, skilled, versatile forward who follows in a long line of productive forwards I’ve coached over the last few years. His skill and versatility make him a perfect fit in our system.”
              
Deniusas competed in the 2024 FIBA U17 Basketball World Cup event held in Turkey, averaging 6.7 points and 4.0 rebounds over the course of the seven-game tournament. He saved his best performance for last with 16 points on a perfect 5-for-5 shooting in the fifth-place game against Puerto Rico, helping Lithuania to victory. He previously added nine points and a tournament-best seven rebounds in the group phase against the same Puerto Rico squad while swatting away a pair of blocks to go with seven points and five rebounds in the tournament opener against the Philippines.
              
During the 2024-25 season, Deniusas suited up for the BC Rytas Vilnius II organization in the NKL National Basketball League and the Youth Basketball Champions League. Overall, he saw playing time in 41 contests, helping the team to a postseason berth after averaging 7.0 points per game. He scored in double figures eight times, tossing in a season-best 21 points against Alytaus Alytus on March 1. He also had 19 points and a season-high nine rebounds on Jan. 4 against Delikatesas while producing 17 points in his playoff finale at Suduva on March 10. For the season, he shot 36.8 percent (21-of-57) from three-point land and swished 84.6 percent (44-for-52) of his free throw tries.
              
Deniusas especially thrived in the Youth Basketball Champions play, averaging 19.8 points, 10.0 rebounds, 3.0 assists, 1.6 steals and 2.2 blocks per game in the U18 league.              
              
A 6-8, 220-pound forward, Deniusas spent the 2023-24 season with the same BC Rytas Vilnius II squad, averaging 9.2 points and 4.6 rebounds while shooting 54.5 percent from the floor over five games at the age of 16.
              
Deniusas also boasts extensive experience at the club level, averaging 10.5 points, 7.0 rebounds and 2.5 assists in a pair of outings in the inaugural FIBA Next Gen Hoops Invitational earlier this month. He helped his team to a first-place finish, defeating The Grind Session program out of the United States over the two-day tournament held in Lithuania. He also played in the Youth Basketball Champions League event in each of the past two seasons, posting 10.5 points and 8.3 rebounds over four games in the 2025 event. He helped his squad to a first-place finish in April after securing a double-double (14 points, 10 rebounds) in the finals against BC Telenet Oostende. He tallied 9.2 points and 4.6 rebounds in five games at the 2024 tournament.
              
Deniusas is the eighth newcomer to the 2025-26 UT Martin roster, joining a class that includes freshman Ama Sow (Dakar, Senegal), freshman James Bass (Banjul, Gambia), freshman Ty Price (Morgantown, Ky.), freshman Damien King (Anderson, Ind.), redshirt sophomore Dragos Lungu (Cluj-Napoca, Romania), senior Luca Colceag (Bucharest, Romania) and freshman Filip Petkovski (Kranj, Slovenia).
 



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Umpire Dies After Collapsing During Youth Softball Tournament amid Heatwave

NEED TO KNOW A youth sports umpire died while officiating a game in South Carolina Mitchell Huggins, 61, was a beloved official who was affectionately known as “Uncle Mitch” Huggins collapsed on the field after complaining of the heat A community in South Carolina is mourning the loss of a longtime youth sports umpire who […]

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NEED TO KNOW

  • A youth sports umpire died while officiating a game in South Carolina
  • Mitchell Huggins, 61, was a beloved official who was affectionately known as “Uncle Mitch”
  • Huggins collapsed on the field after complaining of the heat

A community in South Carolina is mourning the loss of a longtime youth sports umpire who died amid a record-setting heatwave.

Mitchell Huggins, 61, died on Saturday, June 21 after collapsing on the field while he was officiating a softball tournament at a park in Sumter County, S.C., according to NBC affiliates WIS-TV and KARE-TV and Fox affiliate WACH-TV.

Huggins was pronounced dead at Prisma Health Tuomey Hospital in Sumter at approximately 6 p.m.

The Sumter County Coroner’s Office told WACH-TV that Huggins’ cause of death was due to heat stroke and that an underlying heart condition played a role. The coroner’s office did not immediately respond to PEOPLE’s request for additional comment.

On Saturday afternoon, Huggins passed out while he was working a game, his sister Pamela Rufus told WIS-TV. Onlookers tried to resuscitate him before first responders arrived and transported him to the hospital, she said.

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“He said he was hot,” Christy Pittman, who was at the game with her husband, told KARE-TV. “They tried to cool him down and got him some water. They finally called the ambulance, put him in a wheelchair, and rolled him down to the entrance of the ball field. He just slumped over.”

Temperatures at the time were in the 90s, but in photos taken by Pittman’s husband, a thermometer on the artificial turf field registered 182.5 degrees.

Known as “Mr. Mitch” and “Uncle Mitch,” the family man spent much of his time with youth sports. But according to a GoFundMe for Huggins, he was more than an official.

“Mitch was not just an umpire; he was a prominent figure in our community, recognized for his contagious smile and unwavering commitment,” organizer Wendy Walsh wrote. “His passion for the game of softball and the people involved was always evident.”



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Q&A: Chuck Todd says youth sports could help save local news

This article was originally published by Northwestern University’s Medill Local News Initiative and is republished here with permission. Few people have as much experience in political media as Chuck Todd, who hosted NBC’s public affairs program “Meet the Press” for nine years and worked at the network for almost two decades. He stepped down as anchor of […]

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This article was originally published by Northwestern University’s Medill Local News Initiative and is republished here with permission.

Few people have as much experience in political media as Chuck Todd, who hosted NBC’s public affairs program “Meet the Press” for nine years and worked at the network for almost two decades.

He stepped down as anchor of “Meet the Press” in 2023 following a change in management at NBC News and left the network earlier this year. In 2024, he’d criticized NBC on the air for hiring former Republican National Committee Chair Ronna McDaniel as a contributor. The network soon backtracked on the hire.

He’s now the host of “The Chuck ToddCast,” and he’s turned much of his energy toward addressing America’s local news crisis and the collapse of its business model.

His idea: Local youth and high school sports could help resurrect the local news ecosystem.

Medill’s Local News Initiative spoke with Todd last week about why he’s made this a priority of his and how he’s seen the landscape shift through his time covering politics.

Answers have been edited and condensed for clarity and brevity.

Eric Rynston-Lobel: When you first started in politics and media, what do you remember the local news ecosystem looking like?

Chuck Todd: I started professionally in the world of media in 1992. Started working for a publication called The Hotline. What it was was a compendium, or an aggregation — we weren’t using that word then. We were locally sourced political information written for a professional audience here in Washington. I was probably as big of a consumer of local news as anybody in D.C. We tried to get our hands on every Sunday paper we could get, even if it was a day late.

Fast forward to today, if you’re trying to figure out who’s running in a swing congressional seat in Kansas, you might be better off subscribing to Cook Political Report or one of the insider publications in D.C. because there’s nobody who’s a beat reporter for the third congressional district in Kansas anymore. There was a time where there were probably 50 people I would’ve rattled off and said, “Oh, that guy’s the expert in politics in Iowa, in South Carolina.”

Rynston-Lobel: As you’ve seen this infrastructure crumble, what impact have you seen it have on the way politics gets covered as well as the issues people care about and how they’re interacting with their government?

Todd: If the conversation is, “Do you feel like you know what’s going on in your community?” or when you ask people, “How do you find out?” What you end up finding out is, “Well, I got a Facebook group,” or, “There’s a listserv.” “I follow this.” If you want to know what’s happening in your community, we’ve made it where people have to find out on their own. We don’t work the other way. It doesn’t get pushed to them.

The first three hires I would make starting a local news organization would be a lead high school sports reporter, a micro weather forecaster and a consumer/food reporter, somebody who every day lets you know where stuff was cheaper — groceries, restaurants to take your kids. The newspaper was such an elegant delivery system. It had news for news junkies; that’s nice. But it was also the place where you went for commerce, to buy and sell stuff, to find a job, to follow your favorite sports team, maybe to do some puzzles, maybe to entertain yourself. So how do you recreate that experience in this more modern, digital era?

Rynston-Lobel: I want to dive more into this local sports idea. From what I’m understanding, your argument is basically that you see local high school and youth sports as the way to get people to build up that trust, and through that, then you can start delivering other types of information that’s going on beyond sports?

Todd: I view it as the most sustainable stream. I think the nonprofit model has a lot of limitations to it, including the fact that to some people, “nonprofit” is code for “leans left” if you’re not careful. With the whole NIL thing that’s happening in college sports, you have the expansion of opportunities in sports to pay for college, so what’s that going to mean? We’re about to see an explosion in youth sports participation. I have a friend of mine whose kid is getting NIL money for beach volleyball. These universities are all expanding their bandwidth of what sports they want to specialize in. Look at softball: Texas Tech spent $1 million to get the best pitcher (NiJaree Canady), and it allowed them to get to the Women’s College World Series, and they ended up having their best attendance they’ve ever had for softball in Lubbock, Texas. That is going to trickle down.

Think about the demographic of the parents of a kid in youth sports. They’re all under the age of 45, which is a demographic that nobody in the news business has right now. That’s why I think it’s a lucrative base to start from. Too many local news start-ups start with trying to get the news junkies to pay for subscriptions to pay for it, but I think you’re a closed audience there. That instead, you start with the widest-possible pool of people to begin with and also are desirable for advertisers so you can have an ad-based system.

Rynston-Lobel: So what are you envisioning?

Todd: I don’t want news behind a paywall. I think a paywall is for tiers, but the basics should be available to everybody. And then if you want more of something, you pay a little bit extra for that.

My vision is that the local news organization, they hold all the rights for all the youth sports. So if you can’t make it to your kid’s game, you’re watching the livestream on the local news site. They are your conduit.

One of the things I’ve learned as I’ve been doing my own fact-finding to see what publishers are needing, what’s missing out there and all that stuff is a lot of local businesses hate the Google ad network, but there’s really no other alternative. I think if you can build a locally-sourced ad network that doesn’t feel like you’re just having some algorithms decide where your ad shows up, that there’s also opportunity there. But the basic premise is that local sports and youth sports, if you could get that audience, that’s the better audience. It’s a better glue for a community. The red families and the blue families all want to see their kids play. It’s a safe space for advertisers.

Rynston-Lobel: What else have you found as you’ve done more research into this idea?

Todd: If you can find a way to fund journalism indirectly, then maybe you will also do what’s missing in local news right now, which is, the coverage that accidentally informs people who are not looking to be informed. That’s been the missing piece.

There’s a great study that a couple of academics did about 20 years ago. There’s always been this correlation between newspaper delivery to your house and voting. So these academics wanted to see if being forced to have a paper delivered to your house, would that increase the likelihood you would vote in the next local election? And sure enough, it did. Just the act of someone taking that paper off their doorstep and throwing it away, putting it in the recycle bin at least informed them when the election was. There were always members of the community that never intended to read the top stories in the paper, but because they went to the paper looking for something else, they accidentally got informed.

We’ve lost that, and I think the reason why there’s this complete disconnect sometimes between what people know or don’t know is that we’ve lost that one thing that we all looked at; we were all looking at the same headline. The people that didn’t want to be informed got informed of something, too. Now, if you don’t want to be informed, it’s a lot easier to stay away. To me, it’s on the local news organization to provide enough potential ways to get that person to consume something you produce.

If I were The Texas Tribune, I’d hire the best hunting columnist in America and only have them do reviews of new hunting rifles, how to build a better duck blind. What’re you going to do? You’re going to attract that audience that normally doesn’t interact with your news, and maybe over time, that audience, they trust that, “Oh, they hired this person, I trust this person, I really like their advice on what to purchase to make my hunting experience better. Maybe I’ll read their news stories too.” That’s the whole thesis on why local sports is a tentpole.”



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Thornton Hosts Free Youth Basketball Camp After Record-Breaking Season

Story Links THE HILL | The D. Thornton Hoopz Camps and Clinic will host its fourth Annual 2.0 Experience girls and boys basketball camp on Aug. 3 from 9 a.m. to 2 p.m. at the AAMU Event Center, women’s basketball head coach Dawn Thornton announced. The camp is free and open to all […]

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THE HILL | The D. Thornton Hoopz Camps and Clinic will host its fourth Annual 2.0 Experience girls and boys basketball camp on Aug. 3 from 9 a.m. to 2 p.m. at the AAMU Event Center, women’s basketball head coach Dawn Thornton announced. The camp is free and open to all ages, and lunch will be provided.

The camp welcomes players of all levels to develop their basketball skills and knowledge of the game.

“We just made history with the most wins in program history, and that momentum comes straight from the support of this community”, Thornton said. “I’m excited to pour that same energy into the kids- giving them a fun, safe space to learn, grow and fall in love with the game,” she continued. “When I was young, opportunities like this did not always exist, so it means everything to me to be able to create that for them now.”

Participants will receive hands-on coaching, work through fundamental drills, and engage in team-building activities. The camp emphasizes skill development and basketball IQ and will include individual drill work, small sided competitions, as well as high quality instruction and skill development. 
 

“Through my foundation, we are making this camp open to everyone,” Coach Thornton said. “We will focus on skills, teamwork, and building confidence. Campers will also go home with a t-shirt, back-to-school supplies, giveaways, lunch, and a commemorative photo.”

Registration and more information can be found here.  

For complete coverage of Alabama A&M Athletics – Huntsville’s only Division I program – check out the official homepage at www.aamusports.com. Follow the women’s basketball team on Instagram and X.





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Niagara Falls Police seek info on woman attacked with stick

The incident began as an argument between a 55-year-old woman and a man at 19th Street and Walnut Avenue, then ended at 19th and Pine Avenue. NIAGARA FALLS, N.Y. — Niagara Falls Police are asking for help after a woman was beaten with a stick on Wednesday. The incident began as an argument between a […]

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The incident began as an argument between a 55-year-old woman and a man at 19th Street and Walnut Avenue, then ended at 19th and Pine Avenue.

NIAGARA FALLS, N.Y. — Niagara Falls Police are asking for help after a woman was beaten with a stick on Wednesday.

The incident began as an argument between a 55-year-old woman and a man at 19th Street and Walnut Avenue, then ended at 19th and Pine Avenue, according to police, who responded around 10:40 a.m. Wednesday.

The man used a stick to assault the woman, who was responsive at the scene. She was taken by ambulance to Erie County Medical Center to receive treatment for her injuries. Her condition was not immediately listed.

“Detectives in the Criminal Investigation Division are actively investigating this incident and are asking anyone with information to contact the Criminal Investigation Division at 716-286-4553,” police said.

The investigation is ongoing. Neither the victim, nor the suspect’s name will be released at this time.



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