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Chesapeake Baysox Oyster Catchers alternate logo supports cause

An unfortunate and unintentional logo design ultimately led the Chesapeake Baysox to partner for a good cause.The Baysox, the Double-A affiliate of the Baltimore Orioles, and Minor League Baseball announced Friday a season-long campaign to partner with Cervivor Inc., a nonprofit organization dedicated to cervical cancer advocacy and education.Reaction went viral when the team released in March its Baysox Oyster Catchers alternate logo that some fans said resembled intimate body parts.Needless to say, the team is moving on, but not without purpose.In a statement released Friday, the team said, in part: “What began as a lighthearted moment quickly evolved into something far more meaningful — a unique opportunity to harness the power of sports and community to raise awareness and funds in support of a nonprofit dedicated to cervical cancer education and advocacy.””We’re honored to use our platform for meaningful action,” said Ellen Walsh, the chief marketing officer of Attain Sports, the owner of the Baysox. “When the original Oyster Catchers logo went viral, we saw an opportunity to turn that moment into a bigger movement by shifting the conversation toward a cause that deserves greater visibility.”So, the Baysox unveiled a new secondary logo for the Oyster Catchers, the team’s alternate identity for the 2025 season.”The updated design features a baseball glove with a teal-and-white cervical cancer ribbon and a pearl, reflecting the Chesapeake Bay’s iconic oyster, while symbolizing strength, hope and the team’s commitment to supporting those affected by cervical cancer,” the team statement said.But this is about more than just a logo.”It’s about amplifying survivor stories and driving awareness for a preventable disease that impacts far too many,” Walsh said in a statement. “The Oyster Catchers’ alternate identity has become a powerful symbol of hope and purpose. As fans rally behind it, they’re helping to advance Cervivor’s important, life-saving mission.”In recognition of those affected by cervical cancer, the Baysox will take the field as the Oyster Catchers during five Friday home games this season: June 27, July 11, Aug. 15, Aug. 22 and Sept. 5. Fans are encouraged to wear teal and white, the colors representing cervical cancer advocacy. As teal is also featured in the Baysox team colors, it serves as a powerful symbol of unity, the team said.”This partnership with the Baysox and MiLB shines a powerful light on this preventable cancer — raising awareness, empowering survivors and advancing life-saving tools like regular cervical screenings and the HPV vaccine,” said Tamika Felder, founder and chief visionary of Cervivor, who launched the organization 20 years ago after surviving the disease at the age of 25. “This collaboration isn’t just about awareness — it’s about action. Together, we’re building a movement and making change happen.”Oyster Catchers games will also feature in-game tributes, survivor recognitions and educational moments on the power of prevention.Game-worn Oyster Catchers jerseys will be auctioned at the end of the season to raise money for Cervivor. Additionally, 10% of all Oyster Catchers merchandise sales this season will go to Cervivor, and MiLB has pledged to match the Baysox’s donations.”MiLB is proud to stand with the Baysox and Cervivor in bringing greater visibility to this critical cause,” said Casey Brett, MiLB’s senior vice president of business development. “We’re grateful to Attain Sports and Cervivor for all the hard work to bring this campaign to fruition and couldn’t be more excited to support these great Cervivor fundraising initiatives.”The new Oyster Catchers merchandise capsule is available for online presale with a limited in-stadium release starting on June 27.From the archives:
An unfortunate and unintentional logo design ultimately led the Chesapeake Baysox to partner for a good cause.
The Baysox, the Double-A affiliate of the Baltimore Orioles, and Minor League Baseball announced Friday a season-long campaign to partner with Cervivor Inc., a nonprofit organization dedicated to cervical cancer advocacy and education.
Reaction went viral when the team released in March its Baysox Oyster Catchers alternate logo that some fans said resembled intimate body parts.
Needless to say, the team is moving on, but not without purpose.
In a statement released Friday, the team said, in part: “What began as a lighthearted moment quickly evolved into something far more meaningful — a unique opportunity to harness the power of sports and community to raise awareness and funds in support of a nonprofit dedicated to cervical cancer education and advocacy.”
“We’re honored to use our platform for meaningful action,” said Ellen Walsh, the chief marketing officer of Attain Sports, the owner of the Baysox. “When the original Oyster Catchers logo went viral, we saw an opportunity to turn that moment into a bigger movement by shifting the conversation toward a cause that deserves greater visibility.”
So, the Baysox unveiled a new secondary logo for the Oyster Catchers, the team’s alternate identity for the 2025 season.
“The updated design features a baseball glove with a teal-and-white cervical cancer ribbon and a pearl, reflecting the Chesapeake Bay’s iconic oyster, while symbolizing strength, hope and the team’s commitment to supporting those affected by cervical cancer,” the team statement said.
But this is about more than just a logo.
“It’s about amplifying survivor stories and driving awareness for a preventable disease that impacts far too many,” Walsh said in a statement. “The Oyster Catchers’ alternate identity has become a powerful symbol of hope and purpose. As fans rally behind it, they’re helping to advance Cervivor’s important, life-saving mission.”
In recognition of those affected by cervical cancer, the Baysox will take the field as the Oyster Catchers during five Friday home games this season: June 27, July 11, Aug. 15, Aug. 22 and Sept. 5. Fans are encouraged to wear teal and white, the colors representing cervical cancer advocacy. As teal is also featured in the Baysox team colors, it serves as a powerful symbol of unity, the team said.
“This partnership with the Baysox and MiLB shines a powerful light on this preventable cancer — raising awareness, empowering survivors and advancing life-saving tools like regular cervical screenings and the HPV vaccine,” said Tamika Felder, founder and chief visionary of Cervivor, who launched the organization 20 years ago after surviving the disease at the age of 25. “This collaboration isn’t just about awareness — it’s about action. Together, we’re building a movement and making change happen.”
Oyster Catchers games will also feature in-game tributes, survivor recognitions and educational moments on the power of prevention.
Game-worn Oyster Catchers jerseys will be auctioned at the end of the season to raise money for Cervivor. Additionally, 10% of all Oyster Catchers merchandise sales this season will go to Cervivor, and MiLB has pledged to match the Baysox’s donations.
“MiLB is proud to stand with the Baysox and Cervivor in bringing greater visibility to this critical cause,” said Casey Brett, MiLB’s senior vice president of business development. “We’re grateful to Attain Sports and Cervivor for all the hard work to bring this campaign to fruition and couldn’t be more excited to support these great Cervivor fundraising initiatives.”
The new Oyster Catchers merchandise capsule is available for online presale with a limited in-stadium release starting on June 27.
From the archives:
Sports
Tritons Picked Fourth in Preseason Big West Coaches’ Poll
LA JOLLA, Calif. — UC San Diego men’s volleyball was picked to finish in a tie for fourth in the 2026 Big West Men’s Volleyball Preseason Coaches’ Poll, the conference announced today.
The loaded Big West also sees all six of the conference’s teams ranked in the national AVCA preseason poll. The Tritons are No. 10 nationally.
Long Beach State was picked to win The Big West by the conference’s head coaches after winning the national championship last season. UC San Diego’s projected fourth place finish is the same as the Tritons’ actual finish in 2025 after they went 18-12 overall and 3-7 in Big West play.
The 2026 Triton men’s volleyball season begins at home on January 6 against Jessup. The team’s Big West opener will also be at home as the Tritons host CSUN on March 3. Season and single game tickets are both on sale now.
The Tritons will face each Big West opponent home and away this season with the exception of Hawai’i, who will play in La Jolla twice. The Hawaiian Islands presents the 2026 Outrigger Big West Men’s Volleyball Championship will be April 23-25 on the campus of UC Irvine.
| 2026 Big West Men’s Volleyball Preseason Coaches’ Poll | ||
| Rank | Institution | Points |
| 1. | Long Beach State | 24 (4) |
| 2. | Hawai’i | 22 (2) |
| 3. | UC Irvine | 17 |
| T-4. | UC San Diego | 9 |
| CSUN | 9 | |
| UC Santa Barbara | 9 | |
About UC San Diego Athletics
After two decades as one of the most successful programs in NCAA Division II, the UC San Diego intercollegiate athletics program has begun a new era as a member of The Big West in NCAA Division I. The 24-sport Tritons earned 30 team and nearly 150 individual national championships during its time in Divisions II and III and helped guide 1,400 scholar-athletes to All-America honors. A total of 83 Tritons have earned Academic All-America honors, while 39 have garnered prestigious NCAA Post Graduate Scholarships. UC San Diego scholar-athletes exemplify the academic ideals of one of the world’s preeminent institutions, graduating at an average rate of 90 percent, the highest rate among public institutions in NCAA Division I or II. For more information on the Tritons, visit UCSDtritons.com or follow UC San Diego Athletics on social media @UCSDtritons.
Sports
Bruening Named to Men’s Volleyball Preseason Team
IRVINE, Calif. – The Big West Conference released its 2026 Men’s Volleyball All-Conference Preseason Team on Monday, with UC Santa Barbara’s George Bruening earning preseason honors. Bruening was named to the team alongside players from No. 2 Hawai’i, No. 3 Long Beach State, and No. 11 CSUN.
Bruening exited the 2025 season with a spot on the All-Freshman team as well as a First Team Honorable Mention. He was also recognized as the SBART Men’s Volleyball Athlete of the Year. He averaged 2.97 kills per set and hit .299, the highest on the team.
Additionally, UC Santa Barbara was voted to finish fourth in the conference. Their first match of 2026 will take place on Jan. 8 at 2:00 p.m. versus Kentucky State in Rob Gym.
The Big West Preseason Coaches’ Poll
| Rank / Institution | Points (First Place Votes) |
| 1. Long Beach State | 24 (4) |
| 2. Hawai’i | 22 (2) |
| 3. UC Irvine | 17 |
| T-4. CSUN | 9 |
| T-4. UC San Diego | 9 |
| T-4. UC Santa Barbara | 9 |
The Big West Preseason Coaches’ Team
| Student-Athlete | Institution | Position | Year | Hometown |
| George Bruening | UC Santa Barbara | OH | R-So. | Newport Beach, Calif. |
| Alex Kandev | Long Beach State | OH | So. | Sofia, Bulgaria |
| Jalen Phillips | CSUN | OPP | R.-Jr. | Anaheim, Calif. |
| Tread Rosenthal | Hawai’i | S | Jr. | Austin, Texas |
| Adrien Roure | Hawai’i | OH | So. | Lyon, France |
| Kristian Titriyski | Hawai’i | OPP | So. | Sofia, Bulgaria |
| Skyler Varga | Long Beach State | OPP | R.-Sr. | Muenster, Saskatchewan |
Sports
OVC Mourns the Loss of SIUE Academic Advisor, Former UTM Volleyball Player Lindsey Schmidt
Lindsey has served as an Academic Advisor at SIUE since 2008 and graduated from OVC member institution UT Martin, where she was a standout volleyball student-athlete and helped the Skyhawks to two regular season conference championships. She was named the Most Valuable Player of the 2002 OVC tournament.
“This is heartbreaking for all who knew Lindsey,” said Andrew Gavin, Vice Chancellor and Director of Athletics. “She has long been a beloved member of our athletics family, because of her infectious energy, positive attitude, and incredibly helpful and loving heart. She has provided so much support and love to countless current and past Cougar student-athletes.”
Lindsey was a member of the student-athlete success team at SIUE, working hand in hand with Deputy AD Jaci DeClue for nearly two decades. Lindsey’s support and passion helped student-athletes at SIUE achieve incredible results academically, with 39 consecutive semesters posting a cumulative grade point average of 3.0 or higher. In November, SIUE was recognized as having the top Graduation Success Rate nationally among Division I public institutions.
“Lindsey was a source of light and warmth to all who knew her, with the remarkable ability to make everyone feel seen, valued, and special through her kindness, humility, and genuine care for others,” DeClue shared. “During her 17 years at SIUE, she played a vital role in building an academic support program that served thousands of student-athletes, leaving behind a legacy of compassion, excellence, and lasting impact.
“It was truly an honor to work alongside Lindsey for the past 17 years and to witness firsthand the difference she made every single day. She will be deeply missed by her colleagues, students, and all whose lives were made better by knowing her, and SIUE Athletics will not be the same without her.”
In 2024, she was awarded the Thurston Banks Award by the Ohio Valley Conference, an award that recognizes individuals for their outstanding contributions to OVC student-athletes’ academic success and learning and development.
Sports
Creighton volleyball lands Wisconsin transfer outside hitter Trinity Shadd-Ceres
Sports
Buckshot’s Best of 2025: No. 4 – Bailey Wride races to 2nd NSIC title, wins 1,000 meters at NSIC Indoor Championships
MINOT, N.D. – Earning a conference championship definitely deserves a place on the best moments of the year, so it is no surprise that a second individual title earns this runner a spot in the top 5 in our countdown.
No. 4 on Buckshot’s Best of 2025 is two-time NSIC champion Bailey Wride, who raced to the conference crown in the women’s 1,000 meters at the NSIC Indoor Track & Field Championships.
A standout distance runner from Kalispell, Montana, Bailey made her mark as a freshman at Minot State as she set a new all-time school record and won the women’s NSIC 600-meter title at her first NSIC Indoor Championship meet, in February of 2004, clocking a time of 1 minute, 36.76 seconds.
A reigning NSIC champion, the sophomore headed to the 2025 NSIC Indoor Championships having broken her own school record in the 600 with a time of 1:35.74 earlier in the 2024-25 indoor season, but she would not defend her title, instead stepping up to the 1,000 meters.
That change didn’t affect Wride one bit as she once again broke an all-time Minot State record and raced to a second NSIC title, winning the 1,000-meter crown in 2:55.63 to become a 2-time NSIC individual champion.
BUCKSHOT’S BEST OF 2025
No. 10: Minot State soccer finishes 4th in NSIC, hosts playoff game
No. 9: Minot State men’s hockey claims MCH Tournament title in 1st season as an MCH member
No. 8: Beaver women’s hockey goalie and freshman Jillian Ackerman earns All-American honors
No. 7: Jace Carlisle shoots school-record 7-under 65, finishes 4th at NSIC Championship to earn NSIC All-Tournament Team honors
No. 6: Jaxon Gunville sets career 3-pointer record with 316 made 3s, and ties the single-game 3-pointer record
No. 5: Haleigh Lematta earns return to NCWWC Nationals Tournament becoming 1st Beaver women’s wrestler to qualify twice for Nationals.
No. 4: Bailey Wride races to 2nd NSIC title, wins 1,000 meters at 2024-25 NSIC Indoor Track & Field Championships.
No. 3: Revealed December 30
No. 2: Revealed December 31
No. 1: Revealed January 1
Sports
Texas Longhorns coaching and athletics administration legend Jody Conradt completes career
AUSTIN, Texas – Jody Conradt, who built University of Texas Women’s Basketball and Texas Women’s Athletics into a respected, enviable broad-based collegiate powerhouse, is retiring from fulltime appointment. She most recently served as special advisor to Longhorns Vice President and Folger Family Athletics Director Chris Del Conte.
Effective December 31, 2025, she will continue as a department volunteer, providing input and support as requested or needed. She also will complete a nine-year tenure on the NCAA Infractions Committee in August 2026.
Conradt completes 49 notable years after joining UT in spring 1976 as the first fulltime women’s head coach in two sports – basketball and volleyball. Prior to moving the Longhorns’ women’s programs into the NCAA championships structure in 1982-83, she coached in the Association for Intercollegiate Athletics for Women (AIAW) era, had teams that dominated the Southwest Conference for most of two decades and coached teams for 10 years in the Big 12 Conference. Her teams won a staggering and historic 183 consecutive games against SWC opponents from January of 1978 to February of 1990.
She retired from coaching following the 2006-07 season with 900 career victories, 10 SWC and two Big 12 Conference regular season titles, nine SWC postseason tournament championships and one Big 12 Conference postseason tournament crown, one AIAW Final Four and three NCAA Final Four appearances and the first perfect season (34-0 in 1985-86) in NCAA women’s basketball history. That 1985-86 team captured the only national basketball title at Texas.
Prior to Texas, she was an athletics administrator, coached volleyball, basketball and other sports and was a physical education instructor at Sam Houston State (1969-73) and UT Arlington (1973-76).
Conradt was the first women’s coach not required to teach collegiate classes upon joining UT. She coached volleyball for the first two years and then served former Texas women’s AD Donna Lopiano as basketball coach and associate athletics director for all women’s sports for the next 15 years. She conceptualized the academics support structure for women student-athletes, hiring fellow Baylor graduate Dr. Sheila Rice to head those services in 1977 and then Dr. Randa Ryan in the 1990s. She also insisted upon important career readiness/life skills programming and mentorship as part of academics services, along with behavioral/mental health and intervention for disordered eating.
In the late 1970s, Conradt sought the services of former NCAA shot put champion Dana LeDuc to develop her team with strength and conditioning programming as he was doing with men’s sports. She also was instrumental in recruiting first Becky Bludau Marshall and later Tina Bonci (1985) to oversee sports medicine/wellness services specifically designed for elite female student-athletes. The protocols in these units were considered best in class and eventually expanded under the direction of Conradt and legendary men’s athletics director DeLoss Dodds to provide services for all men and women student-athletes.
As conference realignment altered the college athletics landscape in the early 1990s, Conradt was named director of UT’s eight-sport separate women’s athletics department in spring 1992 when Lopiano became executive director of the Women’s Sports Foundation in New York City. In the same month, undergraduate women on several UT club sports teams filed a Title IX lawsuit against the University, seeking more scholarship and participation opportunities for women.
Conradt and Dodds worked with UT administration and UT System Board of Regents to settle the lawsuit in May 1993, which resulted in adding three varsity sports: women’s soccer (fall 1993), softball (fall 1996) and rowing (fall 1998). Conradt hired accomplished hall of fame caliber coaches, including Chris Petrucelli in soccer, Connie Clark in softball and Carie Graves in rowing. She also performed both basketball coach and AD jobs for nine years (1992-2001) before returning to basketball coaching solely in April 2001. Her 2003 team reached the NCAA Final Four and won both Big 12 regular season and postseason tournament crowns. Texas also won the 2004 Big 12 regular season title.
To date, eight of UT’s 11 women’s sports have won national championships, and the three others (golf, soccer, beach volleyball) are well positioned to vie for one in the near future.
Texas Athletics emphasized class attendance, graduation and career readiness long before NCAA governance required “life skills” programming. Conradt’s basketball team members were media personalities, brand ambassadors, polished public speakers and ultimate representatives of the University and attracted deserved attention and fan support from UT faculty and staff, government civic leaders, politicians, artists and musicians and authors.
Texas women’s basketball attendance soared to 8,000-plus in the mid-to-late 1980s, creating a model that many other institutions and athletics departments sought to emulate. Schools sent representatives to Austin to learn about Texas Women’s Basketball frameworks for media coverage, tv and radio exposure, fundraising, sponsorships, marketing and community engagement.
Donors, keenly interested in the academic futures of Texas women student-athletes, eagerly established endowed scholarships at then UT-established levels to underscore the emphasis on the importance of student-athletes attaining a college degree to launch their career sustainability and personal success. Conradt and her fellow coaches structured mentoring programs for successful and high-profile female professionals to meet with female student-athletes and encourage them to pursue careers in areas considered ground-breaking for women.
Intuitively sensitive to her team’s burgeoning public profile after winning the national championship in 1986 and achieving the first sold-out NCAA Women’s Basketball Final Four in Austin in 1987, Conradt worked with Dodds, Lopiano and former men’s basketball coach Tom Penders to establish the Neighborhood Longhorns Program in 1989. More than 5,500 fifth-through-eighth grade students from more than 30 grade schools and middle schools from Austin Independent School District and other districts participate in NLP programming, which includes after-school tutoring by UT students and student-athletes and emphasis on class attendance and good grades, which lead to such rewards as UT campus visits for museum and college department tours, Texas Longhorns men’s and women’s sports events and a scholar award event that honors high achieving students with savings bonds for future college education.
The NLP returned to Texas Athletics’ department structure in 2025 after being administered for several decades by campus operational units. Conradt continues on the NLP Advisory Board, citing the program as one that allows the University to reach across the community and impact and incentivize youngsters to work toward attending college someday. An official credit hour course in service learning was launched in fall semester 2025 within the College of Education, with more than 30 students tutoring students in a pilot at Gus Garcia Young Men’s Leadership Academy. The course will continue under leadership of Dr. LaToya Smith, executive senior associate AD for student services in athletics and NLP advisory board longtime member and UT graduate Howard Nirken.
Conradt is in nearly every athletics hall of fame. She was just the second woman after Delta State legend Margaret Wade to be inducted to the Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame in Springfield. She is both an inductee and emeritus board of directors member of the Women’s Basketball Hall of Fame in Knoxville. She has been a trusted Women’s Basketball Coaches Association leader and led its ethics committee during her years as head coach.
In March 2026, she is being honored along with higher education notable Ruth Simmons with the History-Making Texan Award from the Bullock Texas State History Foundation as part of annual Texas Independence Day celebrations.
(UT)
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