Connect with us
https://yoursportsnation.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/07/call-to-1.png

Rec Sports

Bennett Named Recipient of 2025 Jerry Nason Award

Published

on



Football


Colleen Murphy




CAMBRIDGE, Mass. – Senior offensive lineman Michael Bennett of the Yale football team has been selected as the recipient of the 2025 Jerry Nason Award, presented by the New England Football Writers.

The award was established in 1958 and honors a senior student-athlete who has achieved success in football against all odds. Bennett is the second player in Yale history to receive the honor and the eleventh from the Ivy League.

Bennett arrived at Yale in 2022 under extraordinarily difficult circumstances. He began his college career shortly after the passing of his father. While supporting his family from afar and adjusting to the demands of Ivy League academics and Division I football, he quickly emerged as a model of perseverance and integrity.

After earning a starting role as a sophomore and receiving All-Ivy Honorable Mention, Bennett continued his rise as one of the league’s top linemen. He was named First Team All-Ivy and Phil Steele FCS Postseason Second Team All-League as a junior. He entered his senior year as a 2025 Stats Perform FCS Preseason First Team All-American and has started every game this fall while anchoring Yale’s offensive line with consistency, toughness, and poise.

Off the field, Bennett has demonstrated a longstanding commitment to service. In high school, he developed an award-winning social venture that expanded access to youth sports for underserved communities.

Defined by resilience, character, and purpose, Bennett’s story embodies the values that stand at the core of Yale football.



Link

Continue Reading
Click to comment

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Rec Sports

What Makes an Athlete Successful? Don’t Forget About Luck

Published

on


Chief among the burdens weighing upon the weary sports parent—worse than the endless commutes, the exorbitant fees, the obnoxious parents on the other team—is the sense that your every decision has the power to make or break your child’s future. Should your 11-year-old show up to her elementary-school holiday concert, even if it means missing a practice with the elite soccer team to which you’ve pledged 100 percent attendance? What if this turns out to be the fork in the road that consigns her to the athletic scrap heap?

These are heavy decisions—at least they are for me, a soccer dad who happens to have spent years writing about the science of athletic success. Making it to the pros, the conventional wisdom says, is a consequence of talent and hard work. Best-selling books have bickered over the precise ratio—whether, say, 10,000 hours of practice trumps having the so-called sports gene. But the bottom line is that you need a sufficient combination of both. If you’re talented enough and do the work, you’ll make it. If not—well, decisions (and holiday concerts) have consequences.

Rationally, stressing out over missing a single practice is ridiculous. Believing that it matters, though, can be strangely reassuring, because of the suggestion that the future is under your control. Forecasting athletic careers is an imperfect science: Not every top draft pick pans out; not every star was a top draft pick. Unexpected injuries aside, the imprecision of our predictions is usually seen as a measurement problem. If we could only figure out which factors mattered most—how to quantify talent, which types of practice best develop it—we would be able to plot athletic trajectories with confidence.

Unless, of course, this tidy relationship between cause and effect is an illusion. What if the real prerequisite for athletic stardom is that you have to get lucky?

Joseph Baker, a scientist at the University of Toronto’s Sport Insight Lab, thinks that the way talent development is usually framed leaves out this crucial ingredient. Baker is a prominent figure in the academic world of “optimal human development,” who moonlights as a consultant for organizations such as the Texas Rangers. He’s also a longtime skeptic of the usual stories we tell ourselves about athletic talent. The most prominent is that early performance is the best predictor of later performance. In reality,  many cases of early success just mean an athlete was born in the first months of the year, went through puberty at a young age, or had rich and highly enthusiastic parents.

This critique of talent is not entirely new. It’s been almost two decades since Malcolm Gladwell’s Outliers spurred a cohort of hyper-ambitious soon-to-be parents to begin plotting January birth dates (or at least to tell people they were considering it). Over time, the debate about what factors actually matter has devolved into a game of whack-a-mole. If physical development isn’t the best predictor of long-term success, then it must be reaction time, or visual acuity, or hours of deliberate practice. The default assumption is that there must be something that reveals the presence of future athletic greatness.

Baker’s perspective changed, he told me, when he read Success and Luck, a 2016 book by the former Cornell University economics professor Robert H. Frank. Frank describes a hypothetical sports tournament whose outcome depends 49 percent on talent, 49 percent on effort, and 2 percent on luck. In mathematical simulations where as many as 100,000 competitors are randomly assigned values for each of these traits, it turns out that the winner is rarely the person with the highest combination of talent and effort. Instead, it will be someone who ranks relatively highly on those measures and also gets lucky.

This turns out to be something like a law of nature: It has been replicated and extended by others since Frank’s book came out. Among the most influential models is “Talent Versus Luck,” created by the Italian theoretical physicist Andrea Rapisarda and his colleagues, which simulates career trajectories over dozens of years and reaches the same conclusion. This model earned a 2022 Ig Nobel Prize “for explaining, mathematically, why success most often goes not to the most talented people, but instead to the luckiest.”

To Baker, these models suggest that it’s not just hard to reliably predict athletic futures; it’s impossible. He cites examples including a youth-soccer player for Northampton Town who missed a text message from the team’s manager telling him that he’d been dropped from the roster for an upcoming game. He showed up for the bus, went along for the ride, subbed in when another player got injured, impressed the manager, earned a spot for the rest of the season, and went on to play in the Premier League. Luck takes many forms, such as genetics, family resources, and what sports happen to be popular at a given place at a given time. But sometimes, it’s simply random chance: a gust of wind or an errant bounce or a missed text.

It’s easy to see how luck shapes individual moments in sport—how it changes the course of a game, a series, even an entire season. But what’s harder to accept is that luck might also play a role in longer arcs—not just what happens in games but who appears on the court in the first place. The more you reckon with this, the more disorienting it can be, as things start to feel ever more arbitrary and unfair. As Michael Mauboussin, an investor who writes about luck in his 2012 book, The Success Equation, put it to me: “Talking about luck really quickly spills into the philosophical stuff.”

You might think that the growing professionalization of youth sports offers an escape from this randomness—that by driving to this many practices and paying for that many coaches, you’re ensuring the cream will rise to the top. But the opposite is actually true, according to Mauboussin. In The Success Equation, he describes what he calls the “paradox of skill.” Now that every soccer hopeful is exhaustively trained from a young age, an army of relatively homogeneous talent is vying for the same prizes. “Everyone’s so good that luck becomes more important in determining outcomes,” Mauboussin said.

Baker and one of his colleagues at the University of Toronto, Kathryn Johnston, recently published a paper on the role of luck in athletic development in the journal Sports Medicine–Open. I felt a curious sense of relief when I read it. My daughters, who are 9 and 11, both play competitive soccer on teams requiring a level of commitment that I had naively thought went out of style with the fall of the Soviet Union. Seeing the evidence that future athletic success is not entirely predictable felt like a license for parents to loosen up a bit—to choose the holiday concert over the soccer practice without worrying about the long-term ramifications.

Linda Flanagan, the author of the 2022 book Take Back the Game and a frequent critic of today’s youth-sports culture, doesn’t share my optimism. She has no trouble believing that luck is involved with athletic success, but she doesn’t think that acknowledging this fact will change parental behavior. “Hell, they might double down on the investment in time and money, thinking that they need to give their child more chances to get lucky and impress the right coach,” she told me.

But that sort of luck—getting a job on your hundredth interview because the interviewer went to the same high school as you did, say—arguably is more about hustle than it is about serendipity. So is showing up to every soccer practice. Mauboussin’s definition of luck is narrower: It’s the factors you can’t control. No matter how much luck you try to “create” for yourself or your kids, some irreducible randomness might still make or break you.

To Baker, the takeaways from recognizing the role of luck are less about individual parents and more about how sports are organized. His advice to teams and governing bodies: “If there’s any way possible for you to avoid a selection, don’t select.” Keep as many athletes as you can in the system for as long as you can, and don’t allocate all of your resources to a chosen (and presumably lucky) few. When real-world constraints eventually and inevitably do require you to select—when you’re anointing these lucky few as your future stars, and casting out those who perhaps sang in one too many holiday concerts—try to leave the door open for future decisions and revisions. After all, Baker says, no matter how carefully you’ve weighed your predictions, “you’re probably wrong.”





Link

Continue Reading

Rec Sports

PERFECT GAME AND FIRST COMMUNITY CREDIT UNION ANNOUNCE CHESTERFIELD ATHLETIC COMPLEX

Published

on


Landmark Partnership to Center on Community, Inclusion and Youth Sports

CHESTERFIELD, Mo., Jan. 7, 2026 /PRNewswire/ — Perfect Game, the world’s largest youth baseball and softball platform and scouting service, along with the City of Chesterfield, today announced an exclusive naming rights partnership with First Community Credit Union (FCCU) for the Chesterfield Valley Athletic Complex. Effective immediately, the venue will be known as the “Chesterfield First Community Athletic Complex.”

The partnership represents a landmark collaboration between three community-focused organizations committed to youth development, family engagement and inclusive opportunities. As part of the agreement, the newly established First Community Children & Family Foundation will also be formally introduced. The Foundation will serve as a major sponsor of the Miracle Field, an adaptive, fully accessible field located within the complex that provides athletes of all abilities the opportunity to participate and thrive in baseball and softball.

The First Community Children & Family Foundation’s sponsorship will directly support inclusive programming, facility enhancements and family-centered initiatives designed to benefit youth and families across the greater Chesterfield region.

“Perfect Game is honored to join forces with First Community Credit Union and the City of Chesterfield to elevate the impact of this remarkable facility,” said Rob Ponger, CEO of Perfect Game. “Together, we’re not only creating a home for elite youth baseball and softball competition but also strengthening the connection between sports, community, and opportunity. The Chesterfield First Community Athletic Complex will stand as a model for how public-private partnerships can shape meaningful legacies.”

Perfect Game operates the Chesterfield Valley Athletic Complex under a 10-year agreement with the City of Chesterfield. The facility has quickly become one of the premier youth sports destinations in the Midwest, hosting hundreds of Perfect Game events annually, including the PG BCS World Series, 2026 PG St. Louis Super Regional NIT, 2025 PG Softball World Series (Nationals) and many more.

“This partnership reflects our shared belief that investing in families and communities today builds a brighter tomorrow,” said Glenn D. Barks, President and CEO of First Community Credit Union. “We’re thrilled to help expand access to sports, recreation and support programs that bring people together and inspire the next generation.”

City officials also celebrated the partnership as a milestone for Chesterfield’s ongoing growth as a regional hub for youth sports and family recreation.

“We believe this partnership represents our shared commitment to creating first rate facilities that inspire performance and community,” said Wayne Dunker, Director of Parks, Recreation, and Arts. “We’re proud to partner with Perfect Game and First Community Credit Union to make this facility a place where athletes, families and neighbors can come together for years to come.”

The Chesterfield First Community Athletic Complex will feature updated signage, branding and community activation events over the coming months as part of the rebranding initiative.

Media contact:
Greg Casterioto / [email protected] / (267) 246-5709

About Perfect Game

Perfect Game is the world’s largest elite youth baseball and softball platform and scouting service, producing nearly 10,000 events, hundreds of thousands of games and showcases each year across the country. Perfect Game is dedicated to giving amateur players exposure to take their game to the next level, whether that be in college or in the professional ranks. At Perfect Game events, players perform with top-level competition in front of college recruiters and professional scouts from all over the country. Because of this, these events prove to be invaluable to college coaches as well as Major League Baseball, as they can scout a large population of talented ballplayers in one location. To date, more than 2,383 players that have played in a Perfect Game event have also played in Major League Baseball. Since 2003, 15,797 Perfect Game alumni have been selected in the MLB First-Year Amateur Player Draft. In the 2025 Draft, for example, 92 percent of all players selected had played in Perfect Game events, and every player selected on the Draft’s first day had previously attended Perfect Game events.

About First Community Credit Union

First Community Credit Union has been in business for over 90 years and serves over 410,000 members. It is the largest credit union headquartered in St. Louis. First Community’s mission is to provide quality products and affordable financial services. It serves all persons living and working in the communities of St. Louis County, St. Louis City, Franklin County, Jefferson County, St. Charles County, Warren County, and the Illinois counties of Madison, Monroe, and St. Clair.

SOURCE Perfect Game USA



Link

Continue Reading

Rec Sports

FORECAST 2026: 407Basketball built the training hub for young athletes

Published

on


Inside of 407Sports LLC’s walls, the sounds of basketballs bouncing on the freshly polished hardwood, echoes of volleyballs bouncing on state-of-the-art courts and the hum of strength training equipment fill the facility on any afternoon. 

As the youth sports organization prepares for its first full year of operation in 2026, founders Ryan Trimbee and Nik Winkleman are focused not only on opening doors but also redefining what athlete development can look like in Central Florida. 

The 71,000-square-foot facility already feels alive. The energy the facility creates represents the completion of a big picture that’s been years in the making.

After nearly two decades in education and eight years in a corporate leadership role, Trimbee walked away from stability to chase a vision that began in 2018 as Windermere Basketball Academy. What started as a part-time training program a few days per week has evolved into 407Basketball, a full-scale athlete development hub designed to serve basketball, volleyball and beyond.

“It was hard, but it feels like I’m fulfilling a purpose in my life,” he said. 

Looking back, it’s been incredible for him to see the evolution of their small basketball academy over the years and now, eight years later, start the new year with partnership with a volleyball club. Both are centered around the same goals. 

“Conditioning, strength training are all focused around (athletes’) goals,” Trimbee said. “The kids need to have something to strive for, something to do, something to work for and so the purpose is to challenge them, help them become the best version of themselves.”

That programming will begin with a holistic approach to development. Young athletes will train on the court, in the weight room and learn how to recover.

In the center of the facility, separating the volleyball and basketball courts, cold plunges, saunas and Hyperice recovery equipment are integrated into daily routines. It reflects the philosophy that athletes must recover as hard as they train. 

“When we train as hard as we do, we have to recover the same way,” Trimbee said. “That’s how athletes can do it again and again and again.” 

The result is a system designed to build what Trimbee calls the “total athlete.” They will be mentally, physically and emotionally prepared to compete at the highest level. Trimbee said the facility expects to host athletes for strength training from all sports, rather than only volleyball and basketball. 

“Athletes that want to train and compete at a high level,” he said. “We’re looking for 407Sports to become that hub.” 

Strength training is applicable to any sport. It’s a key element to grow athletes’ strength, which in turn translates to their on-court or on-field performance through higher verticals and faster reaction times. The application across the board is what will allow the youth sports facility to expand its arms to those sports that might not have a physical court inside of the building and even open its doors to professional athletes residing in the area.  

The training field encompasses brand new, top-of-the-line equipment ranging from squat racks to indoor rowing machines, free weights, stationary bikes and a turf area. All of the machinery is in place to develop the athletes into high level competitors and it is all kicking off in the 2026 year. 

NEW FORM OF STUDENT-ATHLETE 

One of the initiatives 407Basketball is launching a new daytime academic and basketball training program, approved by the Florida Department of Education as a Step Up scholarship provider. 

The program is designed for homeschool and Florida Virtual School students, and it will allow families to use state education funds to combine academics with structured athletic training during the day. Students grades six through 12 will arrive at 9 a.m. and remain at the facility until 3 p.m. Mondays through Thursdays.

During their school hours, they will rotate through coursework, strength training and basketball development. The program’s priority will focus on the “student” in student athlete first.

“Most of these kids are playing for the next level,” he said. “They’re playing for college opportunities, scholarships and whatnot, they will be in school,” he said. “So academics have to be there. Training is there but we’ve combined them both.”   

An on-site education administrator will help the student-athletes with their studies. A trainer also will take students through their strength training programs and basketball practices. 

The academy’s model reflects the changing landscape of education in Florida, where school choice and virtual learning are becoming increasingly common, Trimbee said. Rather than waiting for evening practices that typically stretch late into the night after a long school day, student-athletes can complete their training during traditional school hours and leave the evening free for family time and recovery. 

“Not only will they get a scholarship, but then they can enroll their child into homeschool, and then they can find a place for them to train,” Trimbee said. 

The 71,000-square-foot facility opened this week with the goal of developing the area’s next generation of top athletes.

The 71,000-square-foot facility opened this week with the goal of developing the area’s next generation of top athletes.

Photo by Megan Bruinsma

The facility already has created an entire curriculum built around the program. Students will come in and conduct their morning stretches, warm ups and a small lift. Then they will head to the desks and start their school work before closing the laptops and doing work on the court. 

To foster the ideal study area for the youth, 407Basketball  has built an area with tables and chairs to lay the groundwork for academic success. 

It’s expected to become a highly successful program for 407Sports, Trimbee said. 

Parents already have expressed their strong interest, and a waitlist has formed prior to the program’s Tuesday, Jan. 13, launch. Starting the program is a large growth area for the facility and they hope to have a successful first-year running it, which will foster the ability to sustain it for years to come and offer it throughout the West Orange community. 

With the Florida Virtual School platform, high school students already have begun to graduate at a higher rate than public schools, Trimbee said. The program will emphasize continuing the accelerated rates and prepare the athletes for the college level when they will have to balance constant training with the higher level of academics. 

It will be 407Basketball’s  biggest program the facility will offer to the community, but the “sports” aspect of their title won’t be forgotten. Following the morning programs, the facility will transition into its evening training groups. 

BASKETBALL EXPANSION

The evening will consist of group and individual training sessions for children at the middle school to high school levels, Trimbee said. Basketball remains at the core of 407Basketball’s identity for its future endeavors, and the programming planned for 2026 is extensive. 

The organization will offer training camps and college scouting camps in its first year of operation.

The organization will offer training camps and college scouting camps in its first year of operation.

Courtesy photo

Evening training sessions will serve more than 100 athletes across age groups and there are options for group skills training, private instruction and team-based development. The facility also will host holiday camps, a three-week summer camp for young children and adult men’s and women’s leagues. 

Outside of hosting training sessions, 407Basketball will focus on developing AAU basketball leagues. On the boys’ side, it will have teams from 10U through varsity age groups, and for the girls, the facility will start from the ground and build up, creating a 12U and 13U team. 

“As a girl dad, I feel this deeply,” Trimbee said. “There’s a gap in opportunities for female athletes and I want to help fill it.” 

It’s important to him to close the gap and become a place that fosters the growth of all youth athletes. The AAU leagues will begin in March and practice in the afternoons once the other programs clear the facility.

BRINGING THE NEXT LEVEL 

The ultimate goal is not only to compete but also prepare young athletes by granting them the training space and exposure they need to make middle school, high school and, down the road, college rosters. 

From a parent’s perspective, Trimbee understands the challenges with paving the way for their children to make it to the collegiate level. His daughter is a high level softball player at Windermere High and already has begun the recruitment process for the next level. It’s caused the family to travel across the country for exposure and showcases. 

The time, travel and cost that has gone into recruitment has been immense, but now he realizes even deeper how a college showcase facility can impact locals to Central Florida. For families, it means they will have to book fewer flights, fewer hotels and, overall, have easier access. 

Parents’ experiences with recruitment has shaped one of 407Basketball’s most important goals in its inaugural year: becoming a regional hub for college exposure camps. Trimbee said the camps will range in exposure to Division I, Division II, Division III and junior colleges, and any coaches are welcome. 

Trimbee envisions the showcases as full-day events that will bring college coaches and scouts directly to Central Florida. Athletes would be evaluated using measurable metrics — their vertical jump, speed, strength and shooting efficiency — while also participating in on-court drills and live play. 

“We have the space,” Trimbee said. “We have the equipment. We can give coaches a real look at these athletes.” 

NEW SENSE OF PURPOSE

The facility was built with the intention of shaping young athletes, meaning it will not serve as a large-scale host for national tournaments. Down the road, Trimbee said the organization might decide to host smaller tournaments, but it won’t be decided upon in the near future. 

The focus is to test the waters in their first year and develop the school program, AAU leagues and camps to a level with which they are happy. If those internal programs do well, then possibly they will open the facility to rental opportunities or tournaments, but for now, they are sticking with the plan of developing athletes. 

It’s a mission that has given Trimbee a new sense of life. 

“If I could help one kid at least feel good about it and just have that (college) chance, there’s a lot of pressure that comes with it,” Trimbee said. “You have to train, you have to perform. You have all these things that you have to do but if that’s the dream, let’s get the dream accomplished.” 

After a long three years in the making, the facility now is up and running. The process to get to the point where they are at now has been a psychological battle, requiring them to channel their deepest needs. But it’s an exciting step. 

“The perseverance me and Nik have gone through, it’s unmatched and we want everybody to experience what we’ve been able to experience,” he said.

 



Link

Continue Reading

Rec Sports

The Good Game connects young athletes with on-demand sports experts

Published

on


Editor’s note: Startland News editors selected 10 high-growth, scaling Kansas City companies to spotlight for its annual Startups to Watch project. Now in its 11th year, this feature recognizes founders and startups that editors believe will make some of the biggest, most compelling news in the coming 12 months. The following is one of 2026’s picks.

Click here to view the full list of Startups to Watch and see how the companies (including this one) were selected.

The Good Game grew out of a practical challenge many parents face, said Zarif Haque. The startup’s founder and CEO was navigating youth sports with his own children and found the process of finding and hiring sports experts inefficient. This is true for families and businesses.

“I have three kids. They all played youth sports,” said Haque. “As I worked through their development, I realized there was a gap in finding somebody for them to work with. Nothing felt trusted or easy.”

Haque saw an opportunity to simplify access to qualified trainers while also opening income opportunities for athletes. The Good Game operates as an on-demand marketplace where parents, businesses, and organizations can find and book sports experts in one mobile experience.

“With the emergence of NIL and student athletes earning money at universities, I said, why can’t we connect to a university student,” said Haque, a veteran startup founder whose company Draiver was named one of Startland News’ Kansas City Startups to Watch in 2020 before exiting in 2021. “We created an on-demand platform for sports experts so they can be accessed quickly and their services can be purchased.”

Elevator pitch: The Good Game is the universal, compliant sports marketplace—powered by a single verified passport that clears families, athletes, coaches, and communities to join, work, and fund youth sports on demand.

  • Founder: Zarif Haque
  • Headquarters: Lawrence, Kansas
  • Founding year: 2023

Parents have responded positively, he said, especially to the opportunity for their kids to learn directly from athletes they admire.

Ryan AufDerHeide, Chief Product Officer; Zarif Haque, Founder; and Nicole Burke, Chief Operating Officer at The Good Game; photo by Haines Eason

“We’ve seen a lot of excitement from parents who have done training or attended clinics,” said Nicole Burke, CSO and COO at The Good Game. “They talk about sitting in the stands watching these athletes. ‘My daughter looks up to this player.’ There’s excitement in having access to these heroes.”

The platform focuses on K-12 athlete users, with service providers that include current college athletes and former players. Interest has also come from businesses seeking athletes for camps, clinics, and events.

To navigate NIL rules, the company emphasizes employment based opportunities rather than endorsements, allowing transactions to occur within a compliant structure.

“The NCAA allows income for student athletes through name, image, and likeness or employment,” said Haque. “We doubled down on employment and leveraging their skills in a compliant and safe way.”

The parent experience guided every product decision, he emphasized, from scheduling to location to trainer selection.

“The real customer is the buyer, the parent,” said Haque. “We wanted everything centralized in one app so parents can find what fits their lifestyle and schedule.”

The company has gained traction through several high profile partnerships and multi-year contracts.

“The Good Game is the exclusive lessons, camps, and clinics provider for the University of Kansas, the official on-demand sports experts platform for the NAIA, and will be the platform powering ProCamps.com,” said Haque.

As the platform continues to roll out pilots and partnerships, Haque said the focus remains on growth and execution.

“It’s going very well,” said Haque. “There’s strong momentum and good product market fit.”

10 Kansas City Startups to Watch in 2026

  • Authentiya puts ethical AI to the test as students embrace controversial classroom tech
  • CarePilot prescribes more patient time, fewer clicks for doctors as product line grows
  • Cyphra Autonomy pairs robotics with heavy labor (and a light lift for job site users)
  • dScribe tracks early momentum with West Coast-Midwest funding combinator
  • LAN Party gains steam with nostalgia as a hook, gaming enterprise potential as the real play
  • LODAS Markets unlocks liquidity as timing pays off for founder’s investment
  • Resonus wants local government to hear you — not just the loudest voices
  • Roz uncovers dynamic momentum amid audit of its own shifting opportunities
  • Sova Dating builds emotional matches with vibes, logistics and an unexpected viral moment

 





Link

Continue Reading

Rec Sports

Catch up with Trevor Johnson, AISD Press Conference and Iron Plains Youth Football League

Published

on


AMARILLO, Texas (KFDA) – If you missed today’s interviews with Trevor Johnson, AISD Press Conference and Iron Plains Youth Football League on the Sports Drive, you can watch it all here.

Trevor Johnson, Randall Boys Basketball Head Coach:

Randall Raiders Boys Basketball Head Coach Trevor Johnson walks us through the emotions of the rivalry game against Canyon Tuesday night, leveling it up for district games, and more.

Sports Drive

AISD Sports Press Conference:

We hear from Amarillo High Girls Basketball Head Coach Jeff Williams, Tascosa Girls Basketball Head Coach Zac Tabor, Palo Duro Girls Basketball Head Coach AJ Johnson and Caprock Girls Basketball Head Coach Bill Long.

Sports Drive
Sports Drive

New in Town: Iron Plains Youth Football League

Zach Woodard talks to CJ Johnson, founder and president of the new Iron Plains Youth Football League along with VP Elijah Baccus about how the league was formed and what it means to the area.



Link

Continue Reading

Rec Sports

Short-Handed Cougars Fall to Wildcats

Published

on


HOUSTON – Down to six available players left in the fourth quarter, the University of Houston Women’s Basketball team fell in a tightly contested 71-62 loss against Kansas State inside the Fertitta Center on Wednesday evening.
 
Senior guard TK Pitts was Houston’s (6-9, 0-4 Big 12) only scorer in double figures, finishing with 16 points. Tess Heal led Kansas State (9-8, 2-2 Big 12) with 31 points.
 
Five players were disqualified in the fourth quarter, including four Cougars. Pitts, graduate forward Amirah Abdur-Rahim, graduate guard Briana Peguero and redshirt-senior guard Kyndall Hunter exited the game for Houston and Jenessa Cotton was the lone Wildcat who was ejected. 
 
A game of runs saw both sides trade momentum in the opening period with Houston taking an early 9-8 lead. A 7-2 run gave Kansas State a lead in the period before the Cougars capped off the quarter with five-straight points to lead 16-15.
 
Houston produced two major runs in the second, ending the quarter with seven-consecutive makes at the free throw line to extend its lead to 37-26 at the half.
 
The Wildcats pieced together several runs to cut into the deficit before free throws from sophomore guard Shun’teria Anumele knotted up the score at 45-45 to end the third period.
 
The Cougars were leading 53-49 with 6:38 remaining in the fourth quarter before Abdur-Rahim, Pitts, Peguero, Hunter and Cotton were ejected due to an altercation. After review, Kansas State was awarded six free throws, converting all six to regain the lead and escape Fertitta Center with the victory.
 
UP NEXT
Houston welcomes BYU at 1 p.m., Saturday, for Youth Basketball Day. Fans can stick around for postgame autographs with senior guard TK Pitts.
 
SUPPORT YOUR COOGS 
Fans can make a direct impact on the success of Houston Women’s Basketball by providing NIL opportunities, purchasing tickets and joining Full Court Press, which provides support directly to Houston Women’s Basketball for needs beyond its operating budget. 
   
STAY CONNECTED 
Fans can receive updates by following @UHCougarWBB on X, formerly known as Twitter, and catch up with the latest news and notes on the team by clicking LIKE on the team’s Facebook page at UHCougarWBB or on the team’s Instagram page at @UHCougarWBB
  

– UHCougars.com – 





Link

Continue Reading
Motorsports4 weeks ago

SoundGear Named Entitlement Sponsor of Spears CARS Tour Southwest Opener

NIL4 weeks ago

DeSantis Talks College Football, Calls for Reforms to NIL and Transfer Portal · The Floridian

Sports4 weeks ago

#11 Volleyball Practices, Then Meets Media Prior to #2 Kentucky Match

Rec Sports3 weeks ago

Stempien to seek opening for Branch County Circuit Court Judge | WTVB | 1590 AM · 95.5 FM

Motorsports4 weeks ago

Nascar legal saga ends as 23XI, Front Row secure settlement

Sports4 weeks ago

Maine wraps up Fall Semester with a win in Black Bear Invitational

Motorsports3 weeks ago

Ross Brawn to receive Autosport Gold Medal Award at 2026 Autosport Awards, Honouring a Lifetime Shaping Modern F1

Rec Sports3 weeks ago

Princeton Area Community Foundation awards more than $1.3 million to 40 local nonprofits ⋆ Princeton, NJ local news %

NIL3 weeks ago

Downtown Athletic Club of Hawaiʻi gives $300K to Boost the ’Bows NIL fund

Motorsports4 weeks ago

Sunoco to sponsor No. 8 Ganassi Honda IndyCar in multi-year deal

Rec Sports4 weeks ago

WNBA’s Caitlin Clark, Angel Reese and Paige Bueckers in NC, making debut for national team at USA camp at Duke

Motorsports4 weeks ago

North Florida Motorsports Park led by Indy 500 Champion and motorsports legend Bobby Rahal Nassau County, FL

Motorsports4 weeks ago

NASCAR, 23XI Racing, Front Row Motorsports announce settlement of US monopoly suit | MLex

Sports4 weeks ago

Woods, Ogunribido Named CCIW Women’s Indoor Track & Field Student-Athletes of the Week

Sports4 weeks ago

Hope College Tops MIAA Commissioner’s Cup Fall Update

Most Viewed Posts

Trending