Sports
LA28 Olympics adds Honda to top sponsorship tier in push towards US$2.5bn sales target
Deal also covers Team USA and includes media buy with NBC LA28 has now secured as many sponsors in 2025 as it did during whole of last year Automotive category made available to local organising committee after Toyota chose not to renew IOC TOP deal Japanese carmaker Honda has been named a founding partner of […]


- Deal also covers Team USA and includes media buy with NBC
- LA28 has now secured as many sponsors in 2025 as it did during whole of last year
- Automotive category made available to local organising committee after Toyota chose not to renew IOC TOP deal
Japanese carmaker Honda has been named a founding partner of the Los Angeles 2028 Olympic and Paralympic Games, making it the first brand to join the event’s top sponsorship tier in nearly four years.
Financial terms of the deal, which also sees Honda become the official automotive sponsor of Team USA for the next two Olympics, have not been disclosed. However, it has secured the highest designation available for local sponsors of LA28, with Delta Airlines reportedly paying US$400 million to become the inaugural founding partner of the Games in 2020.
Comcast is currently the only other founding partner of LA28 after Salesforce opted to end its sponsorship less than three years into the deal.
As part of the agreement, Honda will supply a suite of vehicles to help transport athletes, officials and other stakeholders during the Games, offering an opportunity to showcase the company’s electric range, such as its upcoming Honda 0 Series and Acura RSX.
Honda, which first established a presence in the US in Los Angeles in 1969, will also benefit from a multi-platform media collaboration with NBCUniversal, which will spotlight the brand during its coverage of both Milano Cortina 2026 and LA28.
Local organisers have a stated aim of securing US$2.5 billion in sponsorship revenue for LA28 and are planning to have US$2 billion of that total secured by the end of 2025.
John Slusher, who is the chief executive of US Olympic and Paralympic Properties, the joint venture selling combined partnerships on behalf of LA28 and the US Olympic and Paralympic Committee (USOPC), told Sports Business Journal (SBJ) that the deal with Honda means more than US$1.5 billion have now been generated from sponsorship sales.
Meanwhile, speaking to the Los Angeles Times, LA28 chairman Casey Wasserman said the backing of Honda was both financially and strategically significant.
“As a privately funded games, our mandate is to generate the revenue we need to produce these Games,” Wasserman said. “The biggest line item of that is sponsorship revenue. To be able to announce another big partner with a really spectacular brand who has been invested in Southern California for a long time is both [financially] important but also, in many ways, strategically important.
“It’s another brand that sees the power of our Olympic platform to tell their story in a community that’s very important to that industry that they’ve been invested in for a long time.”
Sports
KU’s post-House plan includes 25 new athletic scholarships, primarily in women’s sports | News, Sports, Jobs
photo by: Kansas Athletics KU athletic director Travis Goff speaks at volleyball coach Matt Ulmer’s introductory press conference on Tuesday, Jan. 21, 2025, at Horejsi Family Volleyball Arena. Frisco, Texas — The announcement of Kansas baseball coach Dan Fitzgerald’s amended six-year contract in June provided some insight into KU’s future […]


photo by: Kansas Athletics
KU athletic director Travis Goff speaks at volleyball coach Matt Ulmer’s introductory press conference on Tuesday, Jan. 21, 2025, at Horejsi Family Volleyball Arena.
Frisco, Texas — The announcement of Kansas baseball coach Dan Fitzgerald’s amended six-year contract in June provided some insight into KU’s future plans in the wake of the House v. NCAA settlement by suggesting that the baseball program would receive “an increase in scholarships.”
The House settlement, which became effective on July 1, replaced previous scholarship limits with newly devised roster limits under which any number of players can be on scholarship.
In some sports, that allows for the possibility of a dramatic increase in investment. For example, college baseball teams can now furnish scholarships to as many as 34 players on their rosters, compared to the previous limit of 11.7.
“That’s been one of the lowest-scholarshiped programs in college athletics,” KU athletic director Travis Goff said. “And so we really see that one as an opportunity to move the needle.”
Indeed, at Big 12 media days on Wednesday, Goff explained further details of in which sports KU plans to boost its athletic scholarship totals.
In all, the department is adding about 25 new scholarships. As Goff put it, KU is “beholden and committed” as a result of Title IX to factoring in its on-campus gender ratio with its athletic scholarship offerings. While KU’s population is currently about 53% female and 47% male and trending toward 55-45, Goff said, 70% of the new scholarships will go to women’s sports, including specifically soccer, softball, women’s track and field, and volleyball. Meanwhile, baseball will be one of the main men’s sports benefiting from the remaining 30%.
Under the new rules, any money that KU spends on additional scholarships beyond its previous offerings will be deducted from the recently implemented cap of $20.5 million that the athletic department can pay its athletes across all sports. (The maximum dollar amount allowed for new scholarship offerings this year is $2.5 million, which KU won’t get close to by providing just 25 scholarships.)
At the same time, KU also plans to participate in revenue sharing for baseball and therefore find a balance between the two methods of bolstering its program.
“We’re not going haywire in any of those, but we think the combination creates a really competitive opportunity for baseball to be certainly relevant in this next chapter,” Goff said.
While baseball will be one of the main beneficiaries of additional scholarship investment, Fitzgerald previously said that it wasn’t necessarily a topic in his contract discussions specifically.
“There are things we’re doing this year, but it’s going to be different next year,” he said on July 2. “Our numbers do increase next year. I don’t think any of us know what this is going to look like three years from now.”
Sports
Wrestlers Add Five Transfers to 2025-26 Roster
Story Links First Look The Chattanooga Mocs wrestling room is a work in progress, both literally and figuratively. Construction on what is to become one of the premier preparation facilities in the nation are well underway and due to be completed close to the start of the school year. That room got […]

First Look
The Chattanooga Mocs wrestling room is a work in progress, both literally and figuratively. Construction on what is to become one of the premier preparation facilities in the nation are well underway and due to be completed close to the start of the school year. That room got a serious competition boost with Coach Kyle Ruschell‘s announcement of five transfers enrolled for the 2025-26 season.
First Take
“We talk all the time about high aspirations for this program. We want our guys working for the highest honors, National Champions, All-Americans. If they’re striving for those, all the other goals fall into place. We’re especially proud of the number of transfers we have who are coming home to Tennessee.” – Coach Kyle Ruschell on the transfers coming into the program
Resources
2025-26 Roster
The Breakdown
Cooper Flynn (Seymour, Tenn.)
Weight: 125 – Previous School: Minnesota – Senior
- 2-time NCAA Championships qualifier with a 3-4 record in the event.
- Ranked No. 15 in final NCAA Coaches Rankings.
- Won the Cougar Clash and was runner-up in the Mountaineer Invitational.
- Earned seven ranked wins en route to a 16-8 record. All eight losses were against fellow ranked opposition.
- NWCA Scholar All-American.
Hunter Mason (Greeneville, Tenn.)
Weight: 141 – Previous School: Virginia Tech – Sophomore
- 21-14 in two seasons with the Hokies, one a redshirt.
- Five of his eight 2024-25 wins included bonus points.
- 2024 Southeast Open Champion including a semifinal win over former Moc and NCAA Qualifier Isaiah Powe.
- Third-place endings in the Patriot and App State Opens in his first campaign (2023-24).
- Former 4-time undefeated Tennessee State Champion at Greeneville High School.
Billy Meiszner (Orland Park, Ill.)
Weight: 149 – Previous School: Kent State University – Junior – Pronounced: MIZE-ner
- Coming off a 16-7 season with the Golden Flashes.
- 2024-25 wins over NCAA Qualifiers: Carson DesRosier (The Citadel) & Andrew Clark (Rutgers).
- 2024 Navy Classic Champion.
- 28-13 in last two years at Kent State.
Carter Neves (Dayton, Ohio)
Weight: 285 – Previous School: Ohio State – RS Freshman – Pronounced: Neeves
- Spent one season at Ohio State as a redshirt in 2024-25.
- 2024 National Prep Champion after runner-up finish in 2023 at Blair Academy.
- 2022 State Champion in Ohio after runner-up finish in 2021 at Graham High School.
- Won the Walsh Ironman, the Beast of the East and the Escape the Rock tournaments and did not surrender a single offensive point during the 2023 season.
- Finished third in freestyle at the U20 UWW Junior Nationals and the U.S. Open Juniors in 2023 after a runner-up finish at the U17 World Team Trials in 2021.
- Ranked seventh in his class at 285.
Mason Reiniche (Soddy-Daisy, Tenn.)
Weight: 165 – Previous School: Oregon State – Senior – Pronounced: Ren-ish
- 2024 fourth-place finish at the Pac-12 Championships.
- 36-20 career record with the Beavers.
- Co-champion at 2023 Southeast Open.
- Third-place at the 2025 Cyclone Open and fourth in 2024 Michigan State Open.
- Prepped at the Baylor School where he was a 3-time state champ (2016, 2018, 2019).
- 3-time runner-up at National Prep Championships (2017, 2018, 2019).
Final Thoughts
“Our priority in the transfer market was to bring in high-level competition at a variety of spots. Naturally that focus was also on spots where we lost starters. Along with our incoming freshmen and the returners in the room, we’re very excited about the season to come.” – Coach Ruschell on the roster to date
GoMocs.com is the official website of the Chattanooga Mocs. Buy officially licensed gear in our online store. The Mocs can also be followed on their official Facebook page or on Twitter. Find out how to join the Mocs Club and support more than 300 student-athletes by clicking here. Go here to learn about NIL Marketplace opportunities with our student-athletes.
Sports
Gavin Arroyo and Jason O’Donnell To Represent Long Beach State At The 2025 World Aquatics Championships In Singapore
LONG BEACH, Calif. – Long Beach State Men’s Water Polo will be represented by head coach Gavin Arroyo and senior Jason O’Donnell at the 2025 World Aquatics Championships in Singapore set to start July 10. The tournament involves all six aquatic disciplines, and the Water Polo events will resume July 24 with other events running […]

Arroyo is set to be part of the coaching staff of Team USA at another international competition as an assistant coach to Dejan Udovic after a fantastic 2024 where he earned the bronze medal at the Paris Olympic Games and his sixth Coach of the Year award after winning the Big West Championships.
O’Donnell will take part of his first World Aquatics Championship as he will represent team Canada in Singapore before coming back to the Beach for his final season. Both USA and Canada are in Group C alongside Brazil and the hosts, Singapore.
Arroyo and O’Donnell will face each other in the first round of the Men’s competition July 11. More information about the tournament can be found at https://www.worldaquatics.com/competitions/4725/world-aquatics-championships-singapore-2025/schedule?phase=All&disciplines=WP.
Sports
Sherman considers renaming of residential street
City staff have proposed changing the name of Monte Cristo Way to Edmond Way as a way of differentiating it from Monte Cristo Drive and Monte Cristo Circle. Photo Credit: Michael Hutchins / Herald Democrat By Michael Hutchins Herald Democrat For nearly 200 years, Alexandre Dumas has told the story of a man who changed […]

Sports
South Dakota State’s Hunter Wallster receives NCAA Postgraduate Scholarship
SDSU Sports Information BROOKINGS — South Dakota State’s Hunter Wallster becomes one of 42 spring athletes to receive the NCAA Postgraduate Scholarship, as announced by the NCAA on Monday. “Congratulations to Hunter on this tremendous honor that puts an exclamation point on his incredible career as a Jackrabbit,” head coach Rod DeHaven said. “He worked […]

SDSU Sports Information
BROOKINGS — South Dakota State’s Hunter Wallster becomes one of 42 spring athletes to receive the NCAA Postgraduate Scholarship, as announced by the NCAA on Monday.
“Congratulations to Hunter on this tremendous honor that puts an exclamation point on his incredible career as a Jackrabbit,” head coach Rod DeHaven said. “He worked very hard in the classroom, labs, and as an athlete to achieve this award! All the best to him in his future endeavors.”
The NCAA awards a one-time, non-renewable $10,000 scholarship to 21 men and 21 women three times a year across three seasons (fall, winter, spring) to encourage student-athletes to pursue postgraduate education. To be considered for the scholarship, student-athletes must be in their final year of undergraduate studies, hold at least a 3.200 cumulative GPA, and have performed with distinction in the varsity sport for which they are nominated.
Wallster received this award following an impressive four-year stint with the Jackrabbits. During his time at SDSU, Wallster collected four conference titles, two in the weight throw and two in the hammer throw. He also made the Summit League All-League team from 2023-25 in both indoor and outdoor track and field seasons.
Wallster holds the school record in the hammer throw. He threw 207-01 (63.12m) to take the program record and finish runner-up at the 2023 Summit League Outdoor Championships. Wallster’s program record qualified him for the 2023 NCAA West First Round Regionals, where he threw 183-06 (55.93m) to finish 43rd.
Sports
For 3rd straight year, CCC Women’s Volleyball sends more than 100 to next level
The streak is now at three straight years that California Community College women’s volleyball programs have moved more than 100 student-athletes to play and continue their educations at the next level. The 2024-2025 class includes 19 players who earned NCAA Division I scholarships, featuring All-Americans Morgan Castaneda (American River) and Aniyah Hall (San Mateo) each […]

The streak is now at three straight years that California Community College women’s volleyball programs have moved more than 100 student-athletes to play and continue their educations at the next level.
The 2024-2025 class includes 19 players who earned NCAA Division I scholarships, featuring All-Americans Morgan Castaneda (American River) and Aniyah Hall (San Mateo) each going to San Jose State University, All-State Lucy Ryan (Feather River) now at Cal Baptist, and All-South Region selection Jordyn Romero (Mt. San Antonio) moving to the University of Buffalo (NY).
Overall, 42 colleges have transferred 114 student-athletes to play volleyball, a number of them choosing to compete on both indoor and beach teams.
’24 3C2A state champion Feather River had the most scholarship athletes with seven, followed by San Joaquin Delta, Cerritos, and Mt. San Jacinto with six, then San Diego Mesa, American River, Fresno City, and Coalinga each with five.
Forty-eight student-athletes are moving to out of state universities.
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