Rec Sports
LOS ANGELES 2028: Wasserman says LA28 has 72% of budget committed so far; IOC has advanced $251+ million to LA28 through 2024
★ The Sports Examiner: Chronicling the key competitive, economic and political forces shaping elite sport and the Olympic Movement.★ ★ To get the daily Sports Examiner Recap by e-mail: sign up here! ★ ≡ LA28 REVENUES $5.1B SO FAR ≡ The New York Times posted a lengthy update story on the 2028 Olympic and Paralympic […]

★ The Sports Examiner: Chronicling the key competitive, economic and political forces shaping elite sport and the Olympic Movement.★
★ To get the daily Sports Examiner Recap by e-mail: sign up here! ★
≡ LA28 REVENUES $5.1B SO FAR ≡
The New York Times posted a lengthy update story on the 2028 Olympic and Paralympic Games organizing effort on Wednesday (28th) titled “L.A. Made Big Promises for the Olympics. Can it Deliver by 2028?,” which included the usual recitation of positive and negative views of progress, from most of the usual suspects.
Of note was a financial update from LA28 Chair Casey Wasserman, as the story noted:
“Mr. Wasserman said he had obtained commitments of $5.1 billion from benefactors and corporate sponsors and was confident that the rest of the $7.1 billion [budget] would come in ticket sales.”
This is 72% of the budget and $500 million more than the $4.6 million confirmed at the news conference following last November’s International Olympic Committee Coordination Commission meeting in Los Angeles.
Wasserman said at that time these funds came from the IOC’s contribution of television rights and sponsorship fees, LA28’s own sponsorships and licensing and merchandising sales (and guarantees) and hospitality sales guarantees. Actual ticket sales are still to come.
¶
The eight-year anniversary date of the 2017 award of the Games of the XXXIV Olympiad to Los Angeles is coming up on 13 September, and a quick look at the LA28 finances shows that it has spent – across its first six years – less than 10% of its planned $7.1 billion budget.
The International Olympic Committee has been a significant funder so far, with more coming.
Looking at the LA28 financial statements included in its annual report to the City of Los Angeles, spending as the organizing committee – not as the bid committee – began in 2018:
● 2018: $16.464 million in expenditures
● 2019: $23.413 million
● 2020: $36.493 million
● 2021: $93.243 million
● 2022: $142.592 million
● 2023: $156.647 million
That’s $468.852 million across the first six years of existence, and forecasting a $180 million cost for 2024, the seven-year total was likely about $648 million, or 9.1% of its latest $7.149.4 billion lifetime budget through 2028. (This is not all cash, as there are some modest amounts of non-cash expenditures, such as depreciation.)
In the spending are two large (really large) amounts which are not directly related to the work of organizing the Games. Those are the payments to the City of Los Angeles Recreation and Parks Department for the Youth Sports Partnership program that subsidizes participation in programs, and revenue-sharing payments to the United States Olympic & Paralympic Committee as part of its United States Olympic & Paralympic Properties revenue-generating joint venture.
At the end of 2023:
● $120.076 million to the USOPC
● $34.836 million to the Youth Sports Partnership
The USOPC payments kicked in in 2021 and account for the huge jump in spending in that year from 2020, and LA28 will pay a total of $430 million to the USOPC by the end of the program in 2028, at $58 or $64 million per year.
The Youth Sports Partnership payments are also increasing, with $25.088 million advanced in 2024 and more than $33 million requested for 2025 and into 2026.
In the meantime, the IOC will pay the LA28 organizers $898 million in television rights fees sharing and an estimated $437 million for a share of its TOP sponsorship program, totaling a projected $1.335 billion. Some of that has been paid already, including $160 million in advance for the Youth Sports Partnership funding, per the IOC’s financial statements:
● 2018: $36.0 million
● 2019: $36.0 million
● 2020: $36.0 million
● 2021: $36.0 million
● 2022: $36.0 million
● 2023: $36.262 million
● 2024: $34.900 million
That’s $251.162 million advanced by the IOC, against a $1.335 billion total, or about 18.8%. Of this, $167.895 million has come from advances against the $898 million for television rights sales, and just $14.817 million so far as a share of the TOP sponsorships.
So, there’s a lot more money coming from the IOC on the road to 2028, and LA28 has spent relatively little so far. But while more money is still to come in, the expenditures will leap, especially in the final 18 months from the start of 2027 through the 2028 Games.
But having 72% of its lifetime budget accounted for more than three years out is comforting, at least for now.
¶
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Rec Sports
12th Annual Athletic Youth Camp Returns to Eight Mile
MOBILE, Ala. (WALA) – The Palmer Williams Group is proud to host its 12th Annual Athletic Youth Camp on Saturday, June 28th, 2025, from 9:00 a.m. to 1:00 p.m. at Highpoint Park in Eight Mile, Alabama. This FREE event is open to children ages 4–13 and promises a dynamic day of football skills & drills, […]

MOBILE, Ala. (WALA) – The Palmer Williams Group is proud to host its 12th Annual Athletic Youth Camp on Saturday, June 28th, 2025, from 9:00 a.m. to 1:00 p.m. at Highpoint Park in Eight Mile, Alabama. This FREE event is open to children ages 4–13 and promises a dynamic day of football skills & drills, cheer, games, giveaways, lunch, and family fun.
Founded by former NFL and University of Alabama athletes Sherman Williams and David Palmer, the Palmer Williams Group has spent over a decade using the power of sports and mentorship to uplift youth across the Gulf Coast. This year’s camp is made possible through generous sponsorship from Coca-Cola United, NFL Foundation, Greer’s, and Publix.
Attendees will be coached by a lineup of former NFL players, local college athletes, and cheerleaders who will guide participants through energetic drills and motivational talks. The goal: instill values of teamwork, discipline, and confidence—on and off the field.
“This is more than just football—it’s about changing lives,” said Sherman Williams. “We’re giving these young people positive role models, life skills, and an unforgettable experience.”
Registration is free and now open at www.palmerwilliamsgroup.org.
Copyright 2025 WALA. All rights reserved.
Rec Sports
Class is in session: Onset resident spreads love of sports through youth program
“Kids are getting lazier as we speak and I didn’t want my daughter being on the television at all,” Elizabeth Wilson of Onset said. “She needs to be out and about and I want to make a positive impact not just on her life but on more kids’ lives.” So Wilson decided to take action […]

“Kids are getting lazier as we speak and I didn’t want my daughter being on the television at all,” Elizabeth Wilson of Onset said. “She needs to be out and about and I want to make a positive impact not just on her life but on more kids’ lives.”
So Wilson decided to take action and started her own chapter of Playball, an international organization dedicated to helping kids develop through sports.
“Our mission is to promote physical, emotional, social and cognitive development in kids,” Wilson said.
Wilson’s chapter of the program is based in Falmouth and serves three age groups, 18 to 24-months-old, 2 to 6-years-old and 7 to 10-years-old. Each program has a 30 session curriculum broken up into beginner, intermediate and advanced sections which have a 10 session curriculum each.
She explained the program is set-up almost like a classroom, where kids can be active and get their energy out.
“We have our spots as if we’re representing desks in a classroom but we’re outside,” she said. “We show them a skill and then the kids do it and then we move on to the next one.”
The skills range from sport specific movements like free-throw shooting in basketball or an overhead soccer throw-in, to refining fine motor skills. Each activity is done in a way that is fun for the kids, Wilson said.
“We do a lot of planks but we turn it into a game,” she said. “We’ll say we’re little alligators and then alligator walk bit by bit. It looks like we’re playing, but we’re playing with structure.”
Wilson participated in the program as a student in South Africa and she credits it for her lifelong love of sports. She came to the U.S. with hopes of travelling the world and after settling down with her husband in Onset, she felt a call to get kids up and moving when her now 3-year-old daughter was born.
Thinking back on her own time in Playball, she decided to bring it to the South Coast for the first time in the program’s history.
Prior to officially establishing her own Playball chapter, Wilson said she tested the program out on her own three-year-old daughter and her friend’s kids over a period of six months.
“I saw growth in my kid and my friend’s kids so I immediately said I’m just going to continue by buying my franchise,” she said.
Wilson officially began her classes five months ago and has already been successful. So much so that she recently signed a five year contract with Playball to help keep her chapter running.
So far, Wilson has seen over 100 kids come through her program with each showing signs of growth in a short period of time.
“One kid started when he was two and he’s three now and Playball took him from being unsure about a whole bunch of skills to talking to the friend next to him saying ‘hey could I help you,’” she said. “When he started he wanted nothing to do with the other kids and wanted to be by himself but now he’s very contained, sits still, listens, waits for instructions and follows through.”
She added the program is still young but continues to grow as word of Playball continues to spread. She said the next step for Playball is to get it into area schools and incorporate her program as a part of the school’s physical education program.
Despite hearing repeated no’s from various school districts, she got her first yes and is beginning classes at the Discovery Pre-School in Buzzards Bay.
“It’s the ultimate program and it makes me giddy on the inside,” she said. “It makes me want to continue this everyday.”
Rec Sports
A “Full Count Conversation” with Maria Pepe Little League Baseball® Legacy Series Umpire Gabrielle Potts
From playing on the field to now standing behind the plate, Gabrielle Potts has always found herself at a Little League® diamond. At just 13 years old, while most were still dreaming of playing at the next level, Potts took a different route — stepping onto the field with an indicator in her hand instead […]


From playing on the field to now standing behind the plate, Gabrielle Potts has always found herself at a Little League® diamond. At just 13 years old, while most were still dreaming of playing at the next level, Potts took a different route — stepping onto the field with an indicator in her hand instead of a glove. What started as just a way to stay involved in the game quickly turned into a platform to give back to the community.
Now, a seasoned volunteer who umpires about 50 games a year is not only calling balls and strikes — she is shaping the next generation of Little Leaguers® and building a connection with the community.
“Little League umpires are more than just rule followers; we end up being coaches, cheerleaders, and even shoe tiers,” said Potts. “I think we all step into informative roles naturally, but during the regular season, it’s knowing you play a key role in the foundation and being someone who the players remember. It’s a community where kids have one more person in their lives giving them support.”
Potts is one of the few female umpires in the Danville, Vermont area, empowering young girls to dream bigger. She never would have imagined her adult self to still be involved with sports, but her dreams have been renewed, and her life is bigger than before.
This year, Potts was selected as one of the female umpires to participate in the second Maria Pepe Little League Baseball® Legacy Series, a weekend dedicated to showcasing girls in baseball.
To learn more about her experience as a female umpire, Little League sat down for a “Full-Count Conversation” with Potts during the 2025 Maria Pepe Little League Baseball Legacy Series.
1-0 Count: As a former player yourself, how, as an umpire, do you like to connect with the players?
I like to start every game by introducing myself to the catcher. I definitely like to read my catchers, but I normally start off with a joke because I feel like it just lightens everything. They have one of the hardest jobs on the field, so I want to start off by making things light, introducing myself to them, and welcoming them to the plate. I also like to make sure they are okay; we both get hit by wild pitches. So, a lot of the time, if they just got hit with a foul ball, I am going to look at them and say, ‘I am going to go get the ball, you stand up and stretch.’
1-1 Count: What advice would you give to a young umpire who is just getting started?
Find a mentor. I think the hardest thing in the world is trying to do any of this stuff alone. Just from when I went down to the East Region and started the umpire clinics there, the mentorship that I have received is huge. I had mentors back home, but they were not pushing for this caliber of game and experience. So, find yourself a mentor because you are going to have tough games. Find somebody that you can release all of that to. Find somebody who can help you through, show you the cool equipment versus the chunky equipment. Find somebody to help you and guide you, someone who is there for the good games and supports you. One of my mentors just umpired a state championship game last year, and I went down with him; it is just one of those things that you can support each other through, and that’s important.
2-1 Count: In what ways do you like to prepare for a game?
There are two different ways I like to prepare, and it depends on whether I am in the field or at the plate. At the plate, I typically like to be alone and do my thing to get in the zone. I am a person who believes that I am a student of the game, and the game is always teaching me something new. I like to go over the hard plays I’ve had, and if this situation happens again, how am I going to handle it? Mentally, I go through a checklist. Do I know these two teams? What did you see the last time they played? I think the more that you can prepare for the normal means that when the abnormal comes, you’re already ready, you’ve discussed the basics. So, now, it’s something different, and you’re not trying to catch up to yourself.
2-2 Count: What inspires you to continue volunteering with Little League and giving back to the community?
I think we all need to step back and look at the experiences we had as kids and think about how we can get back involved with our community. I think as adults, we all have this nostalgia. As an adult who has no children, I have 11 nieces and nephews, so I am always at the ball field. All of them play youth sports, and it was a big part of my life, so it propels me to keep going out there, and it makes a difference. It is one of those things that we all have hard games where we don’t know what our strike zone was, or had a coach going at us the whole game. But, for every game that is like that, there’s a game where the player gets up to the plate and says, ‘you’re my favorite umpire’ or a catcher says, ‘I love when you’re behind me because you’re going to call a fair game.’ So, every time you have a rough game, there are those games that just make up for it, and you know that you’re making a difference. It makes a difference for a lot of people to see women on the field. When you get stopped by a grandma who never had the opportunity to play, and she says, ‘When I see you, it makes me happy because I went through so much, and seeing you out there makes it all worth it.’
3-2 Count: How do you incorporate your full-time job as a graphic designer into your role with Little League?
I started working for myself a few years ago. Before, I was making a few shirts here and there, but now it is more of a full-time business. I have made a couple of the local Little League uniforms or had sponsorships on their uniforms, which has been really cool. I am working on building up a store with my designs that are based around sports. It is one of those things that I try to design based on the local atmosphere and what people are looking for, and it has been really fun for me. This year, being an umpire at the Maria Pepe Legacy Series, I brought an umpire gift for everyone. Everybody got a t-shirt that I designed that has a female umpire on it, which is something that, as females, we don’t get a lot of swag that has a female on it in general. So, everybody is walking home with a ‘Don’t be a lady, be a legend’ shirt.
Interested in becoming a Little League umpire? Visit LittleLeague.org/Umpires to learn more.
Rec Sports
Youth sports help beat the heat
Grimes County Youth Football Association board members distributed fruit cups and cold water to children at Magnolia Plaza, Allen White and Northwood Apartments (formerly Laredo Heights), June 22, to help children beat the heat and stay fueled up. GCYFA teams also distributed fruit cups and water to Golden Creek Nursing Home. … PLEASE LOG IN FOR PREMIUM […]

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Local graduates help coach Columbia College youth basketball camp
Columbia — Columbia College is the place to be this week as the Cougars are hosting their annual youth camp at Southwell Complex. Roughly 100 kids signed up for the camp. Local graduates on both men’s and women’s Columbia teams are helping coach the camp. Some notable standouts include Hickman’s Langston Stroupe and Ashtyn Klusmeyer, […]

Columbia — Columbia College is the place to be this week as the Cougars are hosting their annual youth camp at Southwell Complex.
Roughly 100 kids signed up for the camp.
Local graduates on both men’s and women’s Columbia teams are helping coach the camp.
Some notable standouts include Hickman’s Langston Stroupe and Ashtyn Klusmeyer, Rock Bridge’s Reese Minnix, and Jefferson City’s Bri Avey.
Check out the video above to learn more!
Rec Sports
Youth Sports Scores | Cibola Citizen
Body Acoma Warriors. 4-0 Gators 2-1 Pirates 2-1 Mariners. 2-2 Tigers. 2-2 Dream Slayers. 1-3 Wildcats. 1-3 Yankees. 1-3 9-12 Girls Softball Standings 6/20/25 Laguna Tigers I. 4-0 Bad Company. 4-1 Pink Venom. 2-1 Dragonflies. 1-3 Laguna Tigers II. 1-3 Lady Sluggers. 0-4 ‘ 7-9 Youth Baseball Standings 6/20/25 Bees. 3-0 Braves. 3-1 Hawks. 3-1 […]

Body
Acoma Warriors. 4-0 Gators 2-1 Pirates 2-1 Mariners. 2-2 Tigers. 2-2 Dream Slayers. 1-3 Wildcats. 1-3 Yankees. 1-3
9-12 Girls Softball Standings 6/20/25 Laguna Tigers I. 4-0 Bad Company. 4-1 Pink Venom. 2-1 Dragonflies. 1-3 Laguna Tigers II. 1-3 Lady Sluggers. 0-4 ‘
7-9 Youth Baseball Standings 6/20/25 Bees. 3-0 Braves. 3-1 Hawks. 3-1 Eagles. 2-1-1 Wildcats. 4-2 Raptors. 2-2 Cardinals. 1-1 Dbacks. 1-2 Red Sox. 1-3 Gators. 0-3-1 Tigers. 0-4
5-6 Coach Pitch Baseball Standings 6/20/25 Lil Rascals. 2-0-1 Skeeters. 2-1 Chicken Jockees. 2-1-1 Hurricanes 1-1 Gators. 0-4
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