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Creating Opportunities For The Next Generation

Detroit’s young people are full of potential – and three local organizations are making sure they’re supported in realizing it. Whether through leadership development, college and career preparation, or youth athletics, Teen HYPE, The Austin Foundation, and Detroit PAL are deeply committed to empowering youth with the tools, spaces, and relationships they need to thrive. […]

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Detroit’s young people are full of potential – and three local organizations are making sure they’re supported in realizing it. Whether through leadership development, college and career preparation, or youth athletics, Teen HYPE, The Austin Foundation, and Detroit PAL are deeply committed to empowering youth with the tools, spaces, and relationships they need to thrive.

Leading with Voice and Vision: Teen HYPE

For more than two decades, Teen HYPE has been helping young Detroiters develop leadership skills and understand their power – both individually and collectively.

“We’re a youth development and leadership organization that works alongside young people to help them build leadership skills,” said Ambra Redrick, Executive Director. “We help them explore who they are, recognize their power to make a difference in their communities, and imagine the changes they want to see.”

Success at Teen HYPE isn’t just about metrics—it’s also about meaningful moments and long-term engagement. “I look at indicators like how many of our alumni return to be more meaningfully engaged, or whether they’re civically involved,” Redrick said.

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TEEN HYPE PLAY

One alumnus stands out to her as a great example. “The member always knew she wanted to be a doctor,” said Redrick, “But she attributes Teen HYPE as the catalyst that made her realize she not only wanted to be a doctor, she wanted to be a leader in medicine.”

Redrick also emphasized the importance of seeing youth for who they are – not just who adults expect them to be. “Detroit youth care deeply about their communities,” she said. “They want to help shape schools, parks, services – the things that impact their neighborhoods. They believe they can make a difference, and that bravery is something adults often lose as we grow older.”

Creating Pathways Through Exposure: The Austin Foundation

Founded to provide students and young adults with resources for a brighter future, The Austin Foundation focuses on college, workforce, and skilled trades exposure – with an emphasis on building relationships and self-awareness.

“For us, success is about exposure,” said Cydney Hill, Program Director. “A lot of students don’t know what opportunities are out there. Maybe they thought college was the only path, but we show them all the different ways to succeed. It’s about helping them discover what success looks like for them.”

Hill – Detroit native and Austin Foundation alumnus – knows firsthand the resilience and strength local youth carry. “We don’t always realize it, but we’re incredibly resilient. That’s our superpower,” she said. “Once students get exposed to something and lock in, they push through.”

Building confidence and community voice is central to their work.

A lot of students don’t know their voice matters, Hill explained. Our biggest challenge and opportunity is showing them that we value what they have to say – and that their ideas are crucial in shaping our programs.

Greatness Through Sports: Detroit PAL

Detroit PAL has long used sports as a powerful entry point for youth development. But its mission goes beyond athletics – it’s about helping kids find greatness in every area of life.

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DPD Corporal Norwood, David Greenwood, PAL Mascot – Sparky

“Our work is holistic,” said David Greenwood, Director of Community Engagement and Facilities. “We use the acronym GREAT: Goal setting, Resilience, Embracing healthy lifestyles, Accountability, and Teamwork. These are life skills, not just sports skills.”

PAL serves youth from more than 90 communities, offering low-cost athletic programs alongside mentorship and support. Greenwood, a PAL alum himself, understands the power of being surrounded by caring adults. “I didn’t realize it at the time, but having my dad as a coach and mentor was incredibly impactful,” he said. “A lot of my friends growing up didn’t have that.”

He also pointed to the often-overlooked creativity and drive of Detroit youth. “They’re innovative, engaged, and eager to lead,” he said. “The challenge is that adults don’t always embrace their mindset. We need to make space for their ideas.”

While each organization approaches youth empowerment differently, they share common challenges. Among them: under-resourced communities, lack of access to opportunities, and mental health struggles.

We’re seeing devastating mental health issues among young people,” Redrick shared. “It’s unlike anything I’ve seen in my career.

Hill added that many students don’t realize the power they hold. “We’re constantly working to help them find and use their voice.”

Greenwood noted that financial and transportation barriers can prevent kids from participating in the programs they need. “That’s why we keep costs low and offer a sampling of opportunities,” he said. “We want every child to find what lights them up.”

All three organizations emphasized that community plays a crucial role in their work.

“There is no Teen HYPE without community,” said Redrick. “We engage them as thought partners to help us determine what’s relevant and where we’re needed.”

For The Austin Foundation, recent events have included basketball tournaments that double as resource fairs. “We bring in financial institutions and partners to meet the community where they are,” said Hill.

Greenwood praised Detroit’s corporate community for stepping up. “Programs like hockey are expensive, but with help from sponsors like Biggby Coffee and the NHL Players Association, we make it possible,” he said.

All three leaders also reflected on the unique role Detroit plays in shaping their work. From historic segregation to modern gentrification, the city’s evolution directly impacts youth and the space available to them.

We have heard that our young people sometimes feel pushed out of their own neighborhoods, or not listened to,” Redrick said. “That means we have to be more intentional about creating spaces where they feel they belong.

Hill added that Detroit’s culture teaches grit and resilience. “We’re grounded and always on the hustle,” she said. “And that shows in our youth.”

When asked what Detroit could do to better support its youth, each leader had a clear vision.

“A city-wide blueprint for youth,” said Redrick. “Many cities have one – New Orleans, Grand Rapids – but we don’t. We need clear, shared goals from birth through young adulthood.”

“Consistency,” said Hill. “And flexibility. We need to meet students where they are and stay committed to their growth.”

Greenwood called for an ambitious solution: a youth sports mega complex. “The PAL program produces more NFL talent than any other U.S. city. We need a facility that matches that legacy – something that supports not just PAL, but the entire region.”

Despite different approaches, Teen HYPE, The Austin Foundation, and Detroit PAL share a common mission: to invest in the city’s youth, amplify their voices, and help them build a future rooted in purpose and possibility.

“These are our kids,” Redrick said. “And we all have a responsibility to help them rise.”

 

As always, be sure to subscribe to our newsletter for regular updates on all things Detroit.


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Local fieldhouses look to capitalize on surge in basketball excitement

Pacers mania sweeps across Indiana adds fueling dreams of championship glory on courts big and small. The surge in basketball excitement is timely, as new and expanding local fieldhouses look to capitalize on the sporting fever. The Farmers Bank Fieldhouse in Lebanon is a new 200,000-square-foot sports complex isn’t just a testament to Indiana’s love […]

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Pacers mania sweeps across Indiana adds fueling dreams of championship glory on courts big and small.

The surge in basketball excitement is timely, as new and expanding local fieldhouses look to capitalize on the sporting fever.

The Farmers Bank Fieldhouse in Lebanon is a new 200,000-square-foot sports complex isn’t just a testament to Indiana’s love for the game; it’s a promise of economic growth and community engagement. Home to the Lebanon Leprechauns, a professional team in The Basketball League’s Midwest Division (TBL), the Fieldhouse is also designed as a center for youth athletics.

This massive facility isn’t an isolated project. It’s a just of an example of a statewide boom in sports tourism and infrastructure. From Westfield’s sprawling Grand Park to other ambitious developments across Indiana, communities are investing heavily in state-of-the-art complexes. The goal is clear: attract visitors, stimulate local economies, and provide top-tier venues for a growing youth sports scene. These facilities promise not only to host tournaments and draw teams from across the region but also to become integral parts of their local communities.

However, as these gleaming new facilities open their doors, a crucial conversation is emerging about the cost of participation. While the Pacers’ on-court heroics inspire a new generation, families are navigating an increasingly expensive landscape for youth sports. Nationally, the average cost for a child’s primary sport has soared to over $1,000 annually, a figure that can quickly multiply for families with multiple children or those involved in elite travel leagues.

This financial pressure raises a critical question for communities investing millions in these impressive arenas: Will they be accessible to all, or do they risk becoming exclusive domains for those who can afford the rising fees, equipment, and travel costs?

Local leaders across Indiana find themselves in a delicate balancing act. As the state cheers on the Pacers and celebrates, the conversation about affordability and accessibility in youth athletics will only become more vital to the long-term success and inclusivity of these community investments.



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Local youth invited to participate in Wrestling Interest Meetings | Sports

Henderson-Vance Recreation & Parks, in partnership with Warren County Parks & Recreation, will hold Wrestling Interest Meetings for ages 7-12 at Henderson and Warrenton locations in August. Attendance is free of charge. Meetings will be held from 8 a.m.-1 p.m. on the following dates: • Tuesday, Aug. 12 at the Aycock Recreation Center, located at […]

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Henderson-Vance Recreation & Parks, in partnership with Warren County Parks & Recreation, will hold Wrestling Interest Meetings for ages 7-12 at Henderson and Warrenton locations in August.

Attendance is free of charge. Meetings will be held from 8 a.m.-1 p.m. on the following dates:

• Tuesday, Aug. 12 at the Aycock Recreation Center, located at 207 Carey Chapel Rd., Henderson

• Thursday, Aug. 14, at the John Graham Gymnasium, located at 115 Wilcox St., Warrenton.

For more information, contact Joshua Jones at joshuajones@henderson.nc.gov or by calling 252-492-9400 or 252-431-4118.



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Tucson Summer Pro League aims to keep basketball fun

Because of the way Amari Morris changed speeds and threw in shots, darting all over the Gregory School gym for 32 points in a Tucson Summer Pro League game Saturday, it was no surprise he says he’s been playing the game for nine years now. What might be a surprise: His age. Amari Morris earns […]

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Because of the way Amari Morris changed speeds and threw in shots, darting all over the Gregory School gym for 32 points in a Tucson Summer Pro League game Saturday, it was no surprise he says he’s been playing the game for nine years now.

What might be a surprise: His age.






Amari Morris earns two points for Window Depot during the game against Jim Click in Tucson Summer Pro League for kids on June 7, 2025.




Ten years on Earth, nine as a hooper. That’s why Amari has already joined the California-based Paul George club program, the same one that produced projected first-round pick Carter Bryant of Arizona and dozens of other elite talents.

Overall, Amari is already in his fourth year in the club circuit, in which young prospects aim to develop and attract scholarships, NIL and, maybe someday, an NBA Draft selection.

But this summer, Amari is also blending into the less-competitive TSPL, a Tucson summer institution run by former UA standout and ESPN analyst Corey Williams that has morphed from a pro-am league to a youth-only league featuring pickup-style games nearly every weekend in June and July.

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There are referees and coaches — former UA football standout Kelvin Eafon was in fully animated mode while coaching Amari’s “Window Depot” team past Jim Click Holmes Tuttle 47-40 — but there’s a difference that Amari could sense.

“It’s more like just to play basketball,” Amari said of the TSPL. “In club ball, you’ve got to do plays.”

It’s hooping, only hooping. Instead of shoe-company banners plastered overhead at the Gregory School gym, and scouts lining the sidelines, there are banners for the league’s 12 sponsors around, with some families and friends in the stands.

No pressure, or at least not much pressure. They did put a gigantic “LEMME COOK” necklace on Amari for a chat with Williams at center court after his game But overall, it was mostly just fun.

That’s what Williams has been aiming for.






Corey Williams interviews Amari Morris, the MVP of the game for Window Depot, during Tucson Summer Pro League for Kids on June 7, 2025.




“It’s not an alternative to club, but I look at it as a release from the club scene, personal training and all that,” Williams said. “I think that’s a little too intense for young kids at that age. We’re the league where you can come grab a jersey, get out there with your friends, get up and down, use your instincts, use your reflexes.”

“Yeah, there’s coaching, but I believe in free play, especially when they’re ages 10 to 13. I think free play is how kids fall in love with the game. They figure out what they’re good at, they develop their signature moves, and all that good stuff happens.”

Free play also allows the chance to make new friends in a new environment. Gabin Mease-Toro, an 11-year-old from the Sells area, came over to play with mostly players he didn’t know on the Jim Click team Saturday and wound up the team MVP.

Gabin said his club team has stopped playing, though he intends to play in the Native Junior Nationals at Mesa later this month and says there are opportunities for pick-up ball around Sells.

“We have a lot of that,” Gabin said. “You invite your friends and go out and play.”

But that’s no longer the norm, the way Williams sees it. Growing up in suburban Chicago in the 1980s, Williams said he never played club ball but instead developed exclusively through pickup games and school leagues. He became a three-time all-state pick at Batavia High School before playing four seasons for Lute Olson at Arizona.

“It was how you got to the NBA in the ‘50s, ‘60s, ‘70s and even in the ‘80s,” Williams said. “Pickup basketball was just kids, young people in gyms all across the country, playing free and learning the game.

“It’s not what it used to be. Now, if you don’t have the finances, and you can’t afford a trainer, or you can’t afford to play club ball, there’s very few opportunities for you to actually develop in the sport. So that’s our motivation, right there.”






Brandon Granados charges to the net against Amari Morris during Tucson Summer Pro League for Kids at The Gregory School, 3231 N. Craycroft Road, on June 7, 2025.




The TSPL intentionally enrolls only youth ages 10-13, a time when many are either involved with or considering club play — or burning out from the sport entirely. Williams says about 20% of TSPL players are also on club teams, as Morris is.

It’s a critical junction, Williams says.

“That’s the age I think you can really impact kids with sports,” Williams said. “You’ve got a good mix of the serious hoopers, the kids that are just getting started, and the kids who like basketball and want to get better. You’ve got every kind of kid at that age group.”

Williams said he relies on sponsors to pay the “vast majority” of the TSPL expenses and help keep costs minimal for players. The league charges just $75 for the season, which includes five weekends of games on both Saturdays and Sundays, followed by playoffs over the July 19-20 weekend, and players keep their game jerseys.

About 20 players are receiving scholarships that allow them to play for free. All of the boys’ leagues are full, but Williams said about five or six girls’ spots remained as of Saturday.

“We had a number of donors sponsor (scholarships) and it was beautiful,” Williams said. “People hit me up on the side, and I got checks. So now it’s ‘Hey, man, you love basketball, but you live with your grandma and she’s on a fixed income? You can still come play, dude. Come on down.’

“You know what I mean? Like, that’s how I grew up. So I’m just trying to recreate my childhood for seven weeks a year. That’s all I’m trying to do.”

To learn more, visit tucsonspl.com.






Annisten Bosley gets fouled during Tucson Summer Pro League for Kids, June 7, 2025.




Contact sports reporter Bruce Pascoe at bpascoe@tucson.com. On X(Twitter): @brucepascoe



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Congress wanted a report on sex abuse in youth sports — then they buried it

The problem of sexual abuse in youth sports is more like a DNA marker than an acknowledged crisis. Consider the fate of the official player in this game with the tools to address it: last year’s report by the Commission on the Future of the U.S. Olympic & Paralympic Committee. In the dance of inaction […]

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The problem of sexual abuse in youth sports is more like a DNA marker than an acknowledged crisis. Consider the fate of the official player in this game with the tools to address it: last year’s report by the Commission on the Future of the U.S. Olympic & Paralympic Committee. In the dance of inaction that is our legislative branch these days, the recommendations of the commission have been benched by the very coaches who drafted them for their rosters. (In 2015, a Government Accountability Office audit of federal legislation governing sports abuse turned into a turgid book report that was universally ignored.)

The latest blip confirming long-proposed reforms held in a permanent holding pattern was the April sacking of Ju’Riese Colón, CEO of the U.S. Center for SafeSport. Colón was the second boss of the agency, which was set up in 2018 to adjudicate claims of abuse by coaches in Olympic sports national governing bodies. Her predecessor, Shellie Pfohl, quit in the middle of her three-year contract.

For Colón, the last straw was news that a SafeSport investigator, Jason Krasley, had been arrested twice at his previous job as a vice officer in Pennsylvania – once for stealing money from a drug bust and once for rape and sex trafficking.

During the ritual expressions of disappointment and outrage from congressional oversight figures, there wasn’t a peep of reference to the commission’s 277-page report, “Passing the Torch: Modernizing Olympic, Paralympic, & Grassroots Sports in America.”

Following years of study, interviews, solicitation of public comments and hearings, the commission, which included famous former Olympic stars female and male, proposed an overhaul of America’s youth sports system. Specifically, the commission urged Congress to gut the 1978 Ted Stevens Olympic and Amateur Sports Act to get the Olympic Committee out of the business of running youth sports programs at the grassroots level. Additionally, the commission recommended federal funding of the SafeSport center, which has been plagued by corruption and case backlogs, to get it out from under the malign financial support and influence of the Olympic bodies.

A few major newspapers gave the report a couple of polite paragraphs last winter. For its part, the New York Times didn’t even tell its readers that such a report had been published.

In January 2024, a group of senators, led by Maria Cantwell, a Washington state Democrat who then chaired the Senate Commerce, Science and Transportation Committee, upbraided Colón in a lengthy letter bemoaning the shortcomings of SafeSport. And on March 20, 2024, Sen. John Hickenlooper, D-Colo., who then chaired the Subcommittee on Consumer Protection, Product Safety and Data Security, held a hearing entitled “Promoting a Safe Environment in U.S. Athletics.” Colón testified. So did commission co-chair Dionne Koller, a sports law specialist at the University of Baltimore. However, notice of the hearing didn’t even mention the commission report, released two weeks earlier.

Reporting on all this congressional kabuki theater is the equivalent of what in swimming is called a trials and finals meet. It’s a two-stage process, at least. I started with Cantwell. After all, she had sponsored the commission’s enabling legislation and appointed some of its members, including co-chair Koller.

(Koller hasn’t spoken on the record about the commission’s failure to penetrate public consciousness. Sources close to commission members have told me that they hope their report will have an impact across time and guide eventual toothful reforms.)

Cantwell’s office punted my query to Tricia Enright, a Commerce Committee staffer. She said the “leads” on the youth sports safety issue were Sens. Richard Blumenthal, D-Conn., and Jerry Moran, R-Kan. In 2019, as chair and ranking member (respectively) of the consumer protection subcommittee, they introduced the legislation for the commission.

“Our consumer team was consistently in touch with stakeholders on the progress of this bill,” Enright said. Blumenthal and Moran “have been clear they are leading any legislation in the Senate for further reform –  that bill has yet to be introduced.”

I then went to Blumenthal, with the note that Cantwell was deferring to him on this issue. Blumenthal replied through communications director, Maria McElwain, who turned around these 150 words of insalata caprese:

Keeping athletes safe is a nonnegotiable priority — and meeting that challenge requires a commitment from all stakeholders, including the National Governing Bodies. SafeSport is tasked with an immense, difficult, and delicate responsibility — to adjudicate cases of abuse and help correct decades of imbalance in a system that protected predators instead of athletes. SafeSport hasn’t always gotten it right, and I have been critical when I felt the Center was not taking strong enough action in response to athlete concerns. A lack of communication, particularly with survivors, paired with slow response and resolution times have led athletes to lose trust in the Center — and that lack of trust has a material impact on the Center’s ability to do its job and keep abusers out of sport. That is why I am working with Congressional colleagues, athletes, survivors, and NGBs on reforms. I look forward to urgently proposing and enacting these changes.

To follow up, I asked whether Blumenthal specifically supported the two pertinent recommendations of the congressional commission. If a response ever arrives, I’ll let you know.

Blumenthal is well-versed in the two-step of grandstanding without follow-through. (To be fair, so are many politicians of all parties.) He got elected to the Senate in 2010 over Linda McMahon, erstwhile CEO of Connecticut-based WWE, the pro wrestling company. Blumenthal had been the state’s attorney general for years, and during the Senate race his office launched an investigation of WWE’s abuse of independent contractor categories, a tactic that both blocks full benefits for employees and robs government coffers at all levels of payroll taxes. But as soon as he won the election, the WWE audit was dropped. If he’s done anything about independent contractor abuse while serving in the Senate, I don’t know about it.

Start your day with essential news from Salon. Sign up for our free morning newsletter, Crash Course.

What I do know is that in 2017, when Donald Trump nominated McMahon as head of the Small Business Administration, Blumenthal made sure he was photographed smiling with her at her confirmation hearings. McMahon’s importance in 2010, it seems, had nothing to do with operating a scofflaw corporation; it was simply because she was a Republican opponent. McMahon has refused to go away; under Trump 2.0 she is what passes for secretary of education.

On the problem of youth sports sexual abuse, Cantwell, Blumenthal, et al., are just the latest reminder that when it comes to stemming crimes committed in the name of the flag-waving USOPC and its feelgood TV content-producing national sport governing bodies, reticence about taking on the Olympic brand is bipartisan. In 2014, Rep. George Miller of California, House Democrats’ self-appointed “lead” on the issue, sent a letter to the FBI that might read today as if ChatGPT had written it. The  bureau virtually laughed it off. After Miller retired, his successor, Rep. Jackie Speier, D-Calif., did exactly nothing before she, too, retired.

The stopwatch on lane 3 tells us that Republicans don’t appear to care at all about the existence of platforms for sexual predation on young people, fortified by the Olympic movement. In lane 4, Democrats are doing much better: At least they pretend they do.



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Barcelona youth product nears free transfer move to Ajax

According to a recent update from Voetbal International, Barcelona’s promising young midfielder Eloi Gomez is set to leave the club, with Dutch giants Ajax showing serious interest in signing him once his contract expires. Barcelona have been hard at work not just on the senior team but also on developing and restructuring their youth teams. […]

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According to a recent update from Voetbal International, Barcelona’s promising young midfielder Eloi Gomez is set to leave the club, with Dutch giants Ajax showing serious interest in signing him once his contract expires.

Barcelona have been hard at work not just on the senior team but also on developing and restructuring their youth teams.

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As part of that effort, the club has renewed several contracts of young talents who are seen as having a future at the club.

However, Eloi Gomez appears to be an exception. The outlet mentions that the young midfielder is expected to move on after hinting on social media that his time at La Masia is coming to a close.

Ajax want to replace Real Madrid-bound youngster

Reports from the Netherlands claim that Ajax are eager to bring Eloi into their youth system, particularly in the wake of Abdellah Ouazane’s move to Real Madrid.

The Amsterdam-based club has been tracking his development for some time and are now looking to finalise a deal that would see him continue his footballing education in the Eredivisie.

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Born in 2009, Gomez joined Barcelona in 2017 from Gimnastic Manresa and has steadily climbed the ranks within the club’s youth academy.

Known for his intelligence on the ball and maturity beyond his years, he has also represented Spain at the U-16 level, taking part in two friendly matches with the national youth team.

If the move to Ajax goes through, it would mark a significant step in Eloi Gomez’s young career. Ajax, renowned for their strong youth development, could provide him with the perfect platform to grow further and eventually break into top-level football.

For Barcelona, though, it would be yet another reminder of how difficult it can be to retain all of their top prospects in a highly competitive European market.



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Eagles’ Vic Fangio Speaks Out on Youth Movement

Eagles’ Vic Fangio Speaks Out on Youth Movement originally appeared on Athlon Sports. Philadelphia Eagles defensive coordinator Vic Fangio has been a part of many top defenses over his 40-year career as a coach in the NFL. Advertisement From coaching All-Pros like Khalil Mack and Von Miller to building up expansion team rosters in Carolina, […]

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Eagles’ Vic Fangio Speaks Out on Youth Movement originally appeared on Athlon Sports.

Philadelphia Eagles defensive coordinator Vic Fangio has been a part of many top defenses over his 40-year career as a coach in the NFL.

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From coaching All-Pros like Khalil Mack and Von Miller to building up expansion team rosters in Carolina, Fangio has been a key role player in NFL circles. Now as the Eagles Super Bowl-winning play-caller, his role has emphasized an important part of what makes him so special.

Teaching.

Philadelphia has one of the youngest defenses in the league going into the 2025 season. They were younger dating back to last season when Fangio had them as the top unit in the sport, but after saying goodbye to multiple aging veterans, Philadelphia’s youth movement has been reemphasized this offseason.

And that is perfectly fine for Fangio.

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“I look at this year very similar to last year,” Fangio said at a press conference on Tuesday. “In that this time last year, you know, we had a lot of turnover in personnel from the previous year… We had a lot of question marks at that time.

“I look at it like it’s basically the same one year to the next. The names have changed; hopefully we’ll get the same results from these new guys like we got from a lot of the new guys last year.”

Philadelphia’s youth movement worked to perfection last season. Many of their young stars are now considered important pieces to their hopes of repeating as Super Bowl champions.

It’s hard to envision seeing the team’s youth movement working again this season at that same level.

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But ….

If there’s a coaching staff that can get it done, though, it’s definitely Fangio’s group.

Related: Eagles Running Game Plan Takes New Shape In Roster Move

This story was originally reported by Athlon Sports on Jun 7, 2025, where it first appeared.



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