Wednesday’s storms absolutely torched the UFCU Disch-Falk Field centerfield fence.@jsala123 sent this @fox7austin 📹around 9:30pm.
Statement from UT:
“We are aware of the situation and are working toward a solution. As of this moment, the Austin Regional is scheduled to begin… pic.twitter.com/nvmSc5RUEh
— Dennis de la Pena (@dennisonfox7) May 29, 2025
Sports
Morning Buzz

Start your morning with Buzzcast with Abe Madkour: Big week in Oklahoma City as Populous lands OKC stadium development bid and Thunder make NBA Finals; Breaking down the viewership of Prime Video’s NASCAR debut and the Broncos’ ticket sales strategy paying off

Commissioner Rob Manfred said MLB considered starting its own professional softball league before ultimately deciding to make a significant financial investment and partnering with the Athletes Unlimited Softball League.
Manfred said MLB put together a cross-disciplinary group featuring staffers in youth participation, development, business and investment in determining how to proceed. Manfred initially teased the investment at SBJ’s World Congress of Sports, generating significant buzz.
“We went into the process kind of with two tracks in mind: Are we going to start up and run a league or are we going to make an investment and partner with somebody?” Manfred told SBJ. “That group did an exhaustive review of the options that were out there. And pretty early in the process we settled on AUSL as a real opportunity for us that we thought by partnering with them could move faster than starting from the ground up.”
RELATED: SBJ Women’s Sports: Athletes Unlimited softball enters the circle

The U.S. Justice Department “has been investigating” whether Oak View Group and Legends “colluded over bidding to develop a large arena in Texas,” according to sources. The criminal antitrust probe is “focused on whether the companies illegally coordinated on the bidding to develop and operate” the Univ. of Texas’ Moody Center. OVG “ultimately won the contract in 2018 and the venue opened in 2022,” while Legends “isn’t involved in the project.” The sources said that the investigation “began during the Biden administration,” and the Justice Department under President Trump is “advancing it, with agency lawyers conducting interviews and reviewing documents over the last couple of months.” Neither OVG nor Legends has been “accused of wrongdoing” and “antitrust investigations may not lead to enforcement actions.” Sources said that UT “isn’t under scrutiny in the probe” (BLOOMBERG NEWS, 5/28).

M&T Bank will become a founding partner for the Bills’ new Highmark Stadium, set to open in 2026, as part of a multiyear, long-term extension with the team. M&T Bank, which entered its first sponsorship deal with the Bills in 1985, will remain the official bank of the team (M&T Bank). M&T Bank joins Verizon and Ticketmaster as founding partners, a “key element for the Bills as they look for ways to generate revenue” at the $2.2B stadium. Bills EVP & COO Pete Guelli said that the team “will be looking for eight to 10 founding partners,” and founding partners “will all be integrated into the stadium ‘in a meaningful way.’” Sponsorships are “important for the team as it foots the bill for stadium cost overruns and looks to create new ways to make money as it tries to keep up with the league’s larger markets.” The Bills will spend around $1.35B on the stadium after $850M is “funded by public dollars.” Guelli said that the “response from suitors looking to partner with the team at the new stadium has been ‘incredible’” and the team is “being strategic with whom it aligns with as the Bills get closer to moving into the stadium” (BUFFALO NEWS, 5/28).

The Mystics’ 83-77 win against the Fever drew an announced attendance of 11,183 at CFG Bank Arena in Baltimore “that reflected tickets sold,” while the actual number of occupied seats “was far fewer” with Fever G Caitlin Clark sidelined to injury. Clark “emerged shortly after her teammates for pregame warmups,” and she “signed autographs and took selfies with fans behind the Fever’s bench for a solid 10 to 12 minutes.” The secondary market for tickets ”crashed once Clark’s status was announced Monday.” The cheapest tickets, which carried a list price of $41 when they first went on sale, were down to $6 “within an hour of tip-off” (WASHINGTON POST, 5/28). Clark “posed for many pictures” and signed autographs “well beyond both baselines.” Even without Clark, there were “still Fever fans — and more specifically, Clark fans — braving the misty May weather.” There were Mystics fans “who made the short drive for this game, too.” There might have been more “had this not been on a weeknight (the rematch is a Sunday afternoon)” (BALTIMORE SUN, 5/28).

In the wake of Dick’s Sporting Goods’ acquisition of Foot Locker earlier this month, Dick’s Exec Chair Ed Stack used a Wednesday conference call with investors to “defend the move and push back against criticism.” Stack: “With the Foot Locker transaction, we see several opportunities. It really gives us a unique opportunity to strengthen our brand relationships through a global presence.” Dick’s shares “rose after the call and were up about” 2% as of 2:30pm ET Wednesday. Stack said Foot Locker and Dick’s “would continue to operate as separate companies,” with Dick’s previous growth plan “remaining intact and Foot Locker continuing its more recent efforts in remodeling stores, boosting online sales and cementing stronger partnerships with big sneaker brands.” When the deal closes, the combined company is “expected to have up to half of its total sales come from sneakers.” Dick’s President & CEO Lauren Hobart said on the call that the company’s finances “remain strong, despite ongoing uncertainty over tariffs and trade wars” (PITTSBURGH POST-GAZETTE, 5/28).
For 2025, Dick’s “continues to expect sales between” $13.6B and $13.9B “with comparable sales rising 1% to 3%.” Its outlook “accounts for the expected impact from all tariffs currently in effect.” Dick’s CFO Navdeep Gupta said the company “didn’t have any tariff-related impacts in the first quarter.” The company recorded net income of $264.3M for the first quarter ended May 3, compared to $275.3M in the prior-year period (WALL STREET JOURNAL, 5/28).

Tylenol will be the official pain reliever of the NWSL under a new multiyear sponsorship agreement between the brand’s parent company, Kenvue, and the league. The deal will see Tylenol’s logo featured on the bags used by NWSL trainers, which will also be stocked with Tylenol products. In addition, Tylenol will receive prominent exposure during the league’s inaugural Rivalry Weekend, which is scheduled for Aug. 8-10.
Tylenol will also sponsor a dedicated content series, the details of which have yet to be announced. Terms of the agreement, which the NWSL negotiated directly with Kenvue, were not disclosed. The brand becomes the NWSL’s 14th active sponsor at the league level.

International Money Express (Intermex), a money remittance provider to Latin America and the Caribbean, has signed its first-ever sports sponsorship deal with the Galaxy and Dignity Health Sports Park. The multiyear agreement, which will run through the 2028 Olympic Games in L.A., makes Intermex the official international remittance partner of the Galaxy and a founding partner of DHSP.
The deal is also the Galaxy and DHSP’s first agreement in the international remittance category, which involves the transfer of money between individuals in different countries. AEG Global Partnerships represented the AEG-owned club and venue in direct negotiations with Intermex.
Intermex will receive exposure around and inside DHSP, including prominent freeway marquee signage, scoreboard integrations, concourse placements, plaza wall signage, and various digital menu boards across the property. The company will also serve as the title sponsor of the Galaxy’s 2025 Mexican Heritage Night match and the presenting sponsor of the LA Galaxy Soccer Center, a 73,000-square-foot recreational facility in nearby Torrance, Calif.
Miami-based Intermex largely serves Latinos throughout the U.S., making L.A. a priority market for the company. The company primarily provides money remittance services to Mexico, Guatemala, El Salvador, Honduras and the Dominican Republic.

A “severe thunderstorm that rolled through Austin” on Wednesday evening “caused damage to UFCU Disch-Falk Field,” the home of the Univ. of Texas baseball team. The venue is scheduled to host the NCAA Tournament’s Austin Regional beginning on Friday. As of Wednesday evening, a spokesperson for the Texas athletic department said the schedule for the “regional remained the same.” Wind “blew green panels off the batter’s eye and into the outfield.” Work “had already begun on the damaged wall late Wednesday night,” and Texas AD Chris Del Conte said on social media that the stadium “would be ready for regional play on Friday” (AUSTIN AMERICAN-STATESMAN, 5/28).

The PWHL’s Minnesota Frost “celebrated their second straight championship Wednesday night with a parade in downtown St. Paul and a party at Xcel Energy Center.” The victory parade, which went “from the Tria Rink to Rice Park in drizzling rain,” drew a crowd of “about 150 dedicated Frost fans.” Their cheers “echoed as Frost players in black T-shirts climbed the statue of legendary U.S. Olympics coach Herb Brooks and hoisted the Walter Cup.” Some fans said they “wished the celebration would have been … bigger.” During the party portion, fans “trickled onto the arena floor in the Xcel Energy Center” and “dozens lined up to take photos with the Walter Cup and pose for selfies with players” (MINNESOTA STAR TRIBUNE, 5/28).
The Frost “do indeed stand apart from the rest,” and St. Paul Mayor Melvin Carter “reiterated the point as he spoke to the crowd on what he proclaimed to be Minnesota Frost Day.” Wednesday’s event “ended with the players sticking around to sign autographs, and not one of them offered any hint that they were in a hurry to leave” (St. Paul PIONEER PRESS, 5/28).
On the pod this week, coming off a memorable Memorial Day weekend, SBJ’s Austin Karp catches up with motorsports writer Adam Stern to talk about his time at the Indy 500 and his first impressions of Prime Video’s NASCAR debut. Karp then chats with longtime NFLPA senior exec George Atallah about his time with the union and how players are thinking about media issues. Finally, Big3 co-founders Jeff Kwatinetz and Ice Cube stop by to talk about what to expect in the league’s upcoming season.
Speed Reads…
The Warriors announced plans to “bring in” the Lakers, Heat and Spurs for the seventh annual California Classic, which will be held at Chase Center — leaving Golden 1 Center and the Kings, who founded the event in 2018. A source said that the event will “return to Sacramento next summer” (SACRAMENTO BEE, 5/28).
Corpay, Inc.’s Cross-Border business has entered into a multiyear agreement with MLS to become the league’s Official Foreign Exchange Provider. MLS will have access to Corpay Cross Border’s solutions to help mitigate foreign exchange exposure from day-to-day business needs. Additionally, the platform will enable the league to manage global payments from a single point of access (MLS).
New Balance and Men in Blazers Media Network have signed a multiyear sponsorship aimed at elevating soccer fandom across North America, with the brand highlighted as MIB’s sole category sponsor (Men in Blazers).
Under Armour will become the exclusive jersey and socks and exclusive training footwear and apparel partner of the Canadian Hockey League and its Member Leagues beginning with the 2025-26 season, while Bauer will serve as the official equipment supplier. Both deals will run through the 2030-31 season (CHL).
The National Lacrosse League hit its highest-ever linear viewership this past Saturday with Game 3 of the NLL Finals, drawing 300,000 viewers in North America on ESPN/TSN with a median viewership age of 43 (NLL).
Quick Hits…
“I can say very clearly that this organization does not need a cultural reset” — Nuggets President Josh Kroenke, on the decision to hire a head coach before a GM (DENVER POST, 5/28).
“If she said she heard it, then we believe her. I believe her. I’ve heard a lot of things from the fans. It’s about basketball and I think people have taken it too far” — Mercury F Alyssa Thomas, on siding with Sky F Angel Reese — who claimed there was racist fan behavior in the Sky’s season-opening loss to the Fever (ARIZONA REPUBLIC, 5/28).
Morning Hot Reads: Risk of Cuts
CNBC.com went with the header, “High school sports at PBS stations could be at risk with potential federal funding cuts.” High school sports games and related coverage have become “some of the most popular local programs on PBS stations across the U.S., especially in states without professional sports” like South Dakota, Arkansas and Nebraska. Those states have “spent years bulking up on high school sports programming — mainly championship coverage — in a bid to broaden their local offerings.” But that programming “is at risk if the federal government cuts its funding to PBS.”
Also:
Social Scoop…
“Every wrestler that we have signed at Clemson, has become a great football player. … That translates.”
Watch Dabo Swinney and Bill Belichick talk about identifying and expanding athletes’ opportunities in the ACC Huddle Special premiering tonight at 7PM on ACCN 👏 pic.twitter.com/J51Kh1NkF0
— ACC Network (@accnetwork) May 28, 2025
“If you’re Boston, this is one of those times it’s gonna have to come in internally… who’s in?”
Officer @KMillar15 SOUNDS OFF after the Red Sox got walked off and swept at the hands of the Brewers ⬇️ pic.twitter.com/FyBzJR4IYa
— Intentional Talk (@IntentionalTalk) May 28, 2025
A longtime AL evaluator on the Roman Anthony situation: “Makes zero sense to me.”
— Chris Cotillo (@ChrisCotillo) May 29, 2025
.@PrimeVideo got 800,000 viewers in the P18-49 demographic for Sunday’s Coke 600, which beats all NASCAR races that have been on cable (but not broadcast TV) since at least 2022, per @Nielsen.
➡️ The post-race show, which lasted over an hour, averaged 1.04 million viewers. pic.twitter.com/pL7Aiot8ti
— Adam Stern (@A_S12) May 28, 2025
1. Actually, a lot of people care.
2. It’s the first doc Jr’s been involved in.
3. I worked on the other 2 big ones, CMT & ESPN, and he only did interviews and did them for free.
4. It’s about making sure his Dad’s story stays alive and is told right.
5. Kick rocks. https://t.co/zLc16r8wIP— Ryan McGee (@ESPNMcGee) May 28, 2025
“A fake speedometer was used in this make of car from a 1980s movie since the actual car’s speedometer didn’t go high enough.”
Off the presses…
The Morning Buzz offers today’s back pages and sports covers from some of North America’s major metropolitan newspapers:
Final Jeopardy…
“What is a DeLorean?”
Sports
Fantin’s Late Goal Lifts No. 4 Nittany Lions over No. 10 Cornell – Penn State
Sports
2025 All Mountain Volleyball | Sports
The Appalachian Newspapers’ 2025 All Mountain Volleyball Team is comprised of players from the 15th Region, Jenkins, Buckhorn, Knott Central, Perry Central, Hazard and Letcher Central.
The 2025 All-Mountain Volleyball Team was voted upon by the Appalachian Newspapers’ Randy White, Steve LeMaster and Adam Mahan.
All Mountain
Volleyball Player of the Year nominees:
Kylie Kinner — Paintsville
Miley Riddle — Shelby Valley
Lindy Gearheart — Pikeville
Taylor Baker — Knott Central
All Mountain Volleyball
Player of the Year
Miley Riddle — Shelby Valley: Riddle had an outstanding junior season. She led the state in kills with 838 (Paintsville’s Kylie Kinner finished second with 828). Riddle helped Shelby Valley to its most successful season in school history as the Lady Wildcats finished the season with a 34-6 record. Shelby Valley won the 15th Region All “A” Classic and advanced to the state All “A” Classic Bronze Division finals, the 59th District Tournament, their first-ever 15th Region Tournament championship, a win over Knott Central in the opening round of the KHSAA Volleyball State Tournament and an appearance in the state volleyball quarterfinals.
All Mountain Coach of
the Year nominees:
Misty Riddle — Shelby Valley
Dawn Kinner — Paintsville
Shae Cornett — Knott Central
All Mountain Coach
of the Year:
Misty Riddle — Shelby Valley: Riddle helped Shelby Valley to its most successful season in school history as the Lady Wildcats finished the season with a 34-6 record. Shelby Valley won the 15th Region All “A” Classic and advanced to the state All “A” Classic Bronze Division finals, the 59th District Tournament, their first-ever 15th Region Tournament championship, a win over Knott Central in the opening round of the KHSAA Volleyball State Tournament and an appearance in the state volleyball quarterfinals.
All-Mountain
Volleyball Team
Shelby Valley
Sahnia Linton
Talynn Johnson
Ryleigh Perry
Makaya Price
Lindsay Baldwin
Paintsville
Kylie Kinner
Mallory May
Ella Wells
Addison Helton
Annabelle Blankenship
Pikeville
Lindy Gearheart
Carly May
Sophie Woods
Catharine Walters
Kyla Lee
East Ridge
Savannah Baldridge
Lily Stacy
Savannah Wallace
Olivia Stanley
Pike Central
Layla Johnson
Sadie Vaughn
Alyssa Hess
Molly Reed
Claire Stacy
Belfry
Baylor Hall
Makaylin Meade
Abrielle Swain
Phelps
Aerionna Pigman
Charity Mounts
Cloey Bevins
Johnson Central
Chloe Reed
Macie Clark
Mia Estep
Madi Conn
Leah Hall
Martin County
No stats listed on the KHSAA website
Magoffin County
Karlee Wallen
Kellen Simpkins
Jaylee Reed
Abby Barnett
Betsy Layne
Jayden Jarrell
Jania Isom
Harlyn Slone
Aubrey Williams
Miley Burchett
Prestonsburg
Addison Wright
Ally Hamilton
Katie Slone
Kennedy Dixon
Floyd Central
Chloe Howard
Lydia Wallace
Caidence Lafferty
Rylee Daniels
Miley Thornsberry
Lawrence County
Brylee Stafford
Aryn Huffman
Kailyn Stacy
Hazard
Savannah Combs
Mallory Mitchell
Rachel Allen
Adyson Jent
Perry Central
Laney Davis
Lylah Sullivan
Meghan Asher
Kinley McGraner
Chloe Campbell
Knott Central
Taylor Baker
Zoe Miller
Samara Bailey
Ava Waddell
Avery Conley
Buckhorn
Ashlynn Adams
Chasity Turner
Haylee-Drew Blank
Jenkins
Abbigail Lilly
Peyton Wilder
Kassidy Bolling
Letcher Central
Evany Pack
Kelsi Holbrook
Calissa Lowe
Hanna Eldridge
Sports
KU signee Stanley set for All-America Game
Under Armour Next
Taylor Stanley
The new year will begin with a significant showcase for a player who could mean a lot to the Kansas volleyball team down the line.
Right-side hitter Taylor Stanley, a 2026 signee, will take part in the Under Armour All-America Game, an all-star match that purports to feature “the 28 best high school volleyball players in the country, hands down.” The event will take place at The Venue at UCF in Orlando, Florida, on Thursday and is set for livestreams on ESPN+ and the SportsCenter Next YouTube channel beginning at 3 p.m. Central Time.
Stanley will wear No. 23 for Team Roses, which is led by longtime Texas, USC and United States national team coach Mick Haley, as one of seven pin hitters on its roster. She is the only Kansan or KU pledge taking part in the event.
Stanley stands 6-foot-3 and has played for Blue Valley Southwest High School in Overland Park and the KC Power club team.
“Taylor definitely represents the best player in the area, and she’s choosing to be at her home school, and she wants to be a Jayhawk, KU coach Matt Ulmer said in a VBAdrenaline livestream for signing day, “and again hopefully people will want to follow that.”
She signed with KU in November and, according to her school newspaper, is set to enroll early, meaning she will join the Jayhawks not long after taking part in the All-America Game. VBAdrenaline.com ranks Stanley as the No. 12 overall player in the class and the No. 1 opposite.
“I don’t know what you don’t like about her,” Ulmer said on the livestream. “I really think there’s everything that you would want in an opposite. She can absolutely bring that. She can also score from the left, she can score from the back row, I mean, she’s going to be a six-rotation point scorer, and we know the names of the people that can do that at a high level, and I think that’s what she can bring.”
She has spent time representing the U.S. at the youth level, as she played with the under-19 national team, which competed above its age group at the 2025 FIVB Women’s U21 World Championship in Surabaya, Indonesia, in August. The U.S. went 7-2 with a ninth-place finish.
At KU, Stanley will be part of a six-player class that also includes pin hitters Tessa Dodd, Avery Poulton and Ryan Sadler and middle blockers Cydnee Bryant and Jaeli Rutledge. She may see significant action right away on the right side, in part because of the qualities Ulmer described and in part because of the offseason departure of all-conference opposite Jovana Zelenović.
PREV POST
26 Jayhawk athletes to know in ’26
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KU signee Stanley set for All-America Game
Sports
St. Cloud State Athletics Names Wolters Kluwer Athletes of the Month for December
Luke Winkel’s December Highlights
- Averaged 22.0 points, 4.5 rebounds, 4.8 assists, and 1.5 assists.
- Shot 44.7% from the field, 43.6% from three, and 74.2% from the free throw line.
- Tallied his first career double-double with 27 points and 11 assists against Wayne State.
- Scored a then career-high 29 points against Concordia-St. Paul to go with six assists.
- Totaled a new career-high of 30 points with seven rebounds and five steals against Sioux Falls.
- Helped lead the Huskies to a 5-0 start in the NSIC for the first time since 2008-09.
- SCSU went 4-2 in December and are tied for third in the NSIC with a 5-2 conference record.
- Currently fourth in the NSIC in scoring and assists.
Shelby Kimm’s December Highlights
- 3 MP: 3.38 digs/set, 2.69 points/set, 2.38 kills/set, 0.46 blocks/set, one double-double
- Produced 19 digs and seven kills in the Huskies 3-1 win over No. 17 Missouri Western in the NCAA Round of 64/Central Region Quarterfinals. Her 19 digs were tied for the second most in a single match this season and it was her sixth straight match with double digit digs.
- Recorded 11 kills and eight digs in SCSU’s 3-1 win over No. 2 and Central Region Host, Nebraska Kearney in the NCAA Round of 32/Central Region Semifinals. It was her 21st match with 10+ kills.
- Notched an 18-dig, 13-kill double-double with three block assists in the Huskies five-set loss to No. 6 Concordia-St. Paul in the NCAA Sweet 16/Central Region Championship. It was her 17th double-double of the season. It was also her fifth match with 18+ digs and her 13th match with 13+ kills.
- Named to the AVCA All-America Second Team, AVCA All-Central Region Second Team, D2CCA All-Central Region First Team and NCAA Central Region All-Tournament Team.
- Named to CSC Academic All-District® Team, NSIC All-Academic Team of Excellence and NSIC All-Academic Team.
- Helped the Huskies earn a No. 5 ranking in the final AVCA/TARAFLEX Division II Poll for the second consecutive season and third time in program history.
- Helped SCSU tie its program record for NCAA Tournament wins in a season with two and advance to the NCAA Round of 16/Central Region Championship for the second consecutive season and third time in the past four seasons.
2025-2026 Wolters Kluwer Athletes of the Month
September
October
- Austin Burnevik (Men’s Hockey)
- Ellie Primerano (Women’s Soccer)
November
- Dominic Ducato (Wrestling)
- Jaylee Strickland (Women’s Soccer)
December
For all the latest on St. Cloud State Athletics, stay tuned to SCSUHuskies.com and follow the Huskies on Twitter, Instagram and Facebook.
Sports
Three Husker Newcomers Set for Under Armour Next All-America Match – University of Nebraska
Sports
2025 All-Westbank Volleyball Team – Crescent City Sports
| Name | School | Position | Class |
|---|---|---|---|
| Adelynn Creath | Academy of Our Lady | MB | Senior |
| Lillian Daviss | Academy of Our Lady | OH | Senior |
| Zhoey Johnson | Academy of Our Lady | MB | Sophomore |
| Kaitlynn Riley | Academy of Our Lady | OH | Sophomore |
| Raya Dickinson | Belle Chasse | S | Junior |
| Brelan Fremin | Belle Chasse | L | Junior |
| Illeana Austin | Edna Karr | L | Senior |
| Morgan Ellis | Edna Karr | S | Senior |
| Laikyn Sabio | Fisher | OH | Senior |
| Sophia Briscoe | John Ehret | L/DS | Senior |
| Kiley Davis | John Ehret | OH | Sophomore |
| Jes’Unique Murdock | John Ehret | MB | Freshman |
| Dakota Sylve | L.B. Landry | MB | Senior |
| Addison McGuire | South Plaquemines | MB | Junior |
| Ny’Jae Barnes | Thomas Jefferson | MB | Senior |
| Devin Hubbard | Thomas Jefferson | MB | Junior |
| Kyra Harriet | Young Audiences | MB | Senior |
Individual Honors
Offensive MVP:
Lillian Daviss, Senior — Academy of Our Lady
Defensive MVP:
Brelan Fremin, Junior — Belle Chasse
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