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Looking inward can prevent becoming the ‘crazy sports parents’

Ben Shelton on his relationship with Trinity Rodman American tennis star Ben Shelton talks about the launch of his new relationship with USA soccer’s Trinity Rodman. Sports Seriously The “crazy sports parents,” Skye Eddy says, have ruined the experience for everyone. You know them. They live vicariously through their child. They have unrealistic expectations for […]

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The “crazy sports parents,” Skye Eddy says, have ruined the experience for everyone.

You know them. They live vicariously through their child. They have unrealistic expectations for him or her as an athlete. Or they are simply so unreasonable that there’s little we can do to help them understand us better.

“As a coach, I’ve had an irrational parent on my team, and it has made my season miserable,” says Eddy, a former USWNT hopeful turned sports parent advocate. “They’ve been taking way too much of my time and energy from the children by asking too many questions. And so as coaches, when we’ve been in those experiences, we say, ‘OK, well, we’re just gonna avoid all parents, because that was a really difficult season.’ ”

Even Eddy, a one-time defensive MVP of the NCAA women’s soccer Final Four for George Mason who later coached on the staff at the University of Richmond, found herself labeled as one of them.

She saw a veil come over the organization’s executive director when she wanted to chat. To him, she was “a crazy parent, complaining about my daughter … I’m like, ‘Oh no, no, no, I’m just here to help,'” she says.

Then the door shut. It was the ignition that launched her passion project, soccerparenting.com, which today has about 43,000 members nationwide. It offers advice, training and encouragement for coaches and parents and youth sports leaders with a goal of helping us understand each other a little better.

From Eddy’s experience and research, the vast majority of parents are not “crazy,” but level-headed folks who just stressed.

“Parenting is stressful these days, like society’s stressful,” says Eddy, 53, a mother of two kids put through the athletic wringer. “You add on a sports experience, and there is a lot.”

Eddy spoke with us about how our soccer parenting, and sports parenting, can improve when we take a more introspective look at ourselves. From the discussion, USA TODAY Sports came with ways we can soothe our stress around our kids’ games and improve the environment in which they are playing.

Your child’s sports journey is unique from your own. Maybe you need to care less about it.

Eddy, a former goalie, reached as high as U.S. women’s soccer player could go in the 1990s, barring making the national team. She played professionally in Italy. She pushes back at the notion that she was living out her own athletic experiences when her daughter, Cali, also became an elite soccer player in high school.

“I loved my athletic career,” Eddy says. “I just didn’t know what to say to her to help her, because our mindsets are so different.

“She was like, ‘I want to play D-I, I want to play D-1,’ and she was getting D-1 interest, but she wasn’t pursuing it. She would not pick up a phone and call the coach. She was struggling with her self-esteem, her confidence around herself as an athlete, and so she really needed coaches calling her. She needed to be built up like that.”

Eddy was seeing things from her own point of view, and what she would have done. In more recent years, she came across a term (“Decoupling”) that would have helped her.

It is associated with a romantic relationship, where two people pull back from their emotional connection but remain friends. It can also apply to teenagers growing into their own identities as athletes.

“It’s sort of like not feeling things so deeply, letting our children dictate the path and us really being OK with it,” she says. “That is the learning, the making the mistakes: Not calling the coach, not eating the right food, or going to the sleepover the night before and playing really badly.

“And I think that because as parents, it’s so easy to feel like the stakes are so high, we try to interject too much.”

But how do we redirect ourselves? The process can start with our actions on the sidelines, and often when our kids are very young.

Your sideline behavior may be relieving your stress but stunting your child’s progress

You may not admit you’re stressed at your kids’ games. But perhaps unintentionally, you are projecting it onto them.

You cheer loudly. You jump up and down on the bleachers. You call to them. You interfere.

“That’s stress,” Eddy says.

Soccer Parenting’s Sideline Project, which helps condition parents on game day, identifies three types of sideline behaviors:

  • We’re “supportive” when we sit in attentive silence, cheer after positive outcomes for our child and his or her teammates, and perhaps even a good play from the other team.
  • We’re “hostile” when we yell at referees, yell at our child, or even other players. (Keep reading.)
  • We may not realize when we’re being “distracting.” This means we’re offering specific instructions to a child. Go to the ball! Get rid of it! Run!

“Distracting behavior serves one primary purpose: To alleviate our stress as parents and coaches,” Eddy says in her Sideline Project online course. “Players should be hearing their teammates and reasonable information from their coach, not their parents.”

In the video, she demonstrates the Stroop Effect, named after an American psychologist who measured selective attention, processing speed and how interference affects performance.

She has an interactive exercise using colors to illustrate how your children feel when they are concentrating in a game and adults interrupt them. I hitched when I did it.

“There’s a lag,” Eddy says. “This moment of interruption. That is how your child feels when they are playing, concentrating on the technical skill and what their decision is going to be, and they hear your voice telling them to shoot or pass.”

Instead, a good youth coach won’t distract, but give a subtle cue – a nod, a whistle, a finger point or a closed fist – to trigger something they worked on in practice.

“Whatever it is that we’re screaming, we’re taking away their learning opportunity,” Eddy says.

‘Do you realize I’m 13?’ If we focus on being less distracting, the truly hostile parents stand out

Cali was a tough defender. So tough, apparently, that she once came home from road club soccer tournament and reported: “Another parent from the other team was sitting on the sideline, flicking me off. She just sat there, giving me the finger, staring right at me.

“I said, ‘You do realize I’m 13 and you’re a grown adult, right?'” she told her mom.

Eddy estimates that 2% of the youth sports ecosystem, perhaps one parent per team, are these hostile ones. Many of us are merely distracting, a quality we can correct.

U.S. soccer recently updated a referee abuse prevention policy for youth and amateur soccer. Suspensions from two games to lifetime bans are now issued if you belittle, berate, insult, harass, touch or physically assault sports officials.Report the abusers and get them thrown out. They are not part of our experience.

I like to sit with the opposing team’s fans when my sons are pitching in their baseball games. While I get a different video angle, I meet new people and feel and hear their emotions. Sometimes I just listen to them. It helps remind me why we are all in this.

“We care so much about sport because of the connection,” Eddy says.

We can communicate easier with coaches if both sides respect boundaries

Cali quit soccer for short time when she was eight. She was bored.  

Players were standing in lines. They did the same warmup at every practice. They weren’t even given adequate instruction, Eddy thought. It was labeled as an advanced development program.

When she asked other parents what they thought of the environment, they were fine with it.

“It struck me that until parents understand what a good learning environment looks like, to lead to player inspiration and joy and really giving kids a connection to sport, then we’re really going to be missing a big part of the solution when it comes to improving youth sports,” she says.

“The last thing we want to do is be perceived as one of these irrational parents, so we’re not curious, we don’t ask questions, we don’t listen to our instincts, we don’t follow up when we when we probably should, because we don’t want to be perceived to care too much when there’s a big difference between being irrational and caring.”

When she tried to speak up and was rebuffed, she became a youth coach. And soccerparenting.com was born.

One of its foundational principles is to encourage coach and parent interaction, with clear and appropriate boundaries.

Some suggested parameters a coach can use:

The door is open to chat … When your kid comes home from practice in a bad mood or doesn’t want to go the next day; if he or she is having trouble playing a particular position; if you don’t fully understand the scoring system or rules of the sport.

The door is closed to chat … If you have a complaint about another player that doesn’t involve a safety issue; if you’re wondering why the coach made a tactical decision; if you don’t respect a coach’s time and want to have a long conversation after practice. (You can schedule one instead.)

“We see the correlation between parents having more understanding and the children’s experience getting better, and then therefore clubs and coaches having to get better,” Eddy says.

Coach Steve: Three steps to dealing with a ‘bad’ coach

Be proactive, and intentional, about the way you handle stress

Even when we feel we have things under control during games, sometimes we don’t. Eddy laughs about once walking across the field with a plan in her head of what she would say to Cali. It didn’t involve the game. Instead, in the heat of the moment, she said: “You really need to work on your left foot.”

“Where did that come from?” she says. “I had zero intention of saying that. It just poured right out of me.”

When I posed a question on social media about how we can be better soccer parents, Palmer Neill, of Dallas, told me: “Basically, when you feel like doing something at a game or practice other than cheer or clap … just don’t do it. Let the coach be the coach and let the ref, ref. You don’t have (a) role. Life gets a lot easier when you realize this.”

But we can also recognize that sometimes we slip, too, and take precautions. When Neill barks to his 10-year-old son to get onsides, or about an opponent’s hand ball, he sits back in his chair and doesn’t get up. He tries to stay seated during the game.

“It seems to give me one extra second to think before I sit up (or stand-up) and yell,” he says.

Our own education and reflection, Eddy says, can relieve stress.

Know the rules (and recent modifications to them). Know your kid’s goals in sports. Be curious, not upset, when other kids have more skills than yours.

Perhaps it’s the Relative Age Effect, where young athletes born earliest among their age grouping are faster and stronger. Or that those kids move better because they play other sports or have more free play outside with friends and have better functional movement skills.

We can put our own sports paths into better context, too.

Coach Steve: MLS NEXT youth soccer rankings emphasize development over wins

Remember they are still kids, even when they’re creeping toward adulthood. There is satisfaction in watching who they are becoming.

What did you do when you were eight? Twelve? Sixteen?

When Eddy thinks about it, she liked to socialize at the local skating rink.

She only trained twice a week with her soccer team. On off days, she rode to a local park and kicked the ball into a piece of plywood against a fence. She would dive at the rebounds.

She used to wonder if Cali, who came back to soccer on her own terms, was getting enough reps on her own.

“What would I have been doing if I was in intense practices for an hour and a half four days a week, plus traveling to a lot in the games?” Eddy says. “Would I still have been doing that? Likely not.”

In today’s world, it feels like kids sports matter a lot more. Maybe they do when we have more opportunities to play in front of college coaches. Maybe they don’t when we play rec soccer, like Eddy’s son, Davis, did, and parents screamed when he missed a shot.

Davis, now a junior in college, had a better experience playing at a small high school.

“Having that outlet for sport was really important to his development, just as a person, and getting some space and, kind of way to blow off some steam as a student,” she says.

Cali decided to work at a sleepaway camp in Maine during the summer before her junior year, a crucial one for college recruiting. She became a Division III All-American and now works for the Columbus Crew.

“I remember thinking, ‘Oh my gosh, it’s so hard for you,’ but not saying that out loud,” Eddy says. “That was a really important capstone to a really important thing in our life. Yet, she really missed a lot of opportunities, and there were consequences of that. We just need to make sure that it’s our child’s voice that we’re hearing.”

We are when we let them lead the way, to choose friends over sports when they wish, and to have those sleepovers. Well, maybe not the sleepovers.

Steve Borelli, aka Coach Steve, has been an editor and writer with USA TODAY since 1999. He spent 10 years coaching his two sons’ baseball and basketball teams. He and his wife, Colleen, are now sports parents for two high schoolers. His column is posted weekly. For his past columns, click here.

Got a question for Coach Steve you want answered in a column? Email him at sborelli@usatoday.com



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St. Anthony Scores Big Win, Advances To Semifinals – The562.org

The562’s baseball coverage in 2025 is sponsored by the Millikan, Long Beach Poly, and Lakewood baseball boosters. The562’s coverage of St. Anthony athletics is sponsored by Jane & B.I. Mais, Class of 1949. Start strong and finish stronger. That’s been the recipe for St. Anthony baseball this week in the CIF Southern Section Division 5 […]

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The562’s baseball coverage in 2025 is sponsored by the Millikan, Long Beach Poly, and Lakewood baseball boosters.

The562’s coverage of St. Anthony athletics is sponsored by Jane & B.I. Mais, Class of 1949.

Start strong and finish stronger.

That’s been the recipe for St. Anthony baseball this week in the CIF Southern Section Division 5 baseball playoffs, and it’s helped the Saints cook up a return to the semifinals for the first time since 2019.

St. Anthony took an early lead and leaned on its bullpen late on the way to a 7-2 quarterfinal win on Friday at Hillcrest.

Second baseman and pitcher Nick Galluccio was instrumental in executing the St. Anthony game plan. The junior led off with a single, stole second and came around to score the first run of the game before pitching the last three innings to clinch the victory.

“He’s been a catalyst and he doesn’t get blown away by the moment,” St. Anthony coach Kris Jondle said of Galluccio.

“Coach let me be the leadoff hitter for the playoffs and I’ve just got to perform,” Galluccio said. “I love this game and I bleed for it. This is my first year here as a transfer (from Mater Dei) and I’ll die for these guys. We’re all together and there’s never a dull moment (in the dugout) and we just keep it going. We always stick together and fight as a team.”

Top Saints pitchers Jaylen Butler and Benny Lane weren’t available after the marathon second-round win on Tuesday, so Jondle turned to junior Austin Cassidy (2 IP, R, H), senior A.J. Ortiz (2 IP, 2 H, 2 K) and Galluccio (3 IP, R, 3 H, 2 K) who were efficient while stranding 11 runners.

“They looked good and that was huge because we were up against it after Tuesday’s 12-inning game and all of the boys came in and threw strikes,” Jondle said. “We told them, ‘Make us beat them with the bat.’ We didn’t want to start rallies for them.”

St. Anthony third baseman Aidann Ruiz and first baseman Anthony Valdez killed a Hillcrest rally with solid defense in the fourth inning. Ruiz went behind the bag on a slow chopper, and got to Valdez who made a nice pick for the inning’s final out.

“Basically all you have to do is get behind the ball, trust your arm, trust your first baseman and trust your team,” Ruiz said. “If you trust you can make the play, you make the play.”

Ruiz also started the 4-run rally in the seventh inning to add insurance runs to a 2-run lead. The sophomore platted Benny Lane and pinch-runner Matthew James with a double.

Lane scored twice, as did Butler’s spot in the lineup after he scored Galluccio with a double in the top of the first inning. Senior John Arnold also had an RBI knock in the first. The shortstop has reached base in eight of his last nine trips to the plate.

The St. Anthony offense was particularly patient at the plate against Hillcrest ace Chris Sampson. He had 79 nine pitches after three innings and exited after the fourth. The Saints saw three bullpen arms in the 4-run seventh inning.

“We’re playing as a team, no one is above anyone, everyone is together, we’re a great group of guys,” Ruiz said. “I’m proud. It’s my first year here but it feels like I’ve been here for eight (years) already.”

St. Anthony hosts Northwood in the semifinals on Tuesday at Clark Field.



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Youth curfew for Memorial Day weekend at DC’s Wharf

From 5 p.m. Friday through 5 a.m. Tuesday, anyone under the age of 18 must be accompanied by a parent, guardian or authorized adult over the age of 21. WASHINGTON — After hearing from D.C. residents all week about the need to curb youth violence in the city, Mayor Muriel Bowser and Police Chief Pamela […]

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From 5 p.m. Friday through 5 a.m. Tuesday, anyone under the age of 18 must be accompanied by a parent, guardian or authorized adult over the age of 21.

WASHINGTON — After hearing from D.C. residents all week about the need to curb youth violence in the city, Mayor Muriel Bowser and Police Chief Pamela Smith are taking action, starting in the Wharf neighborhood. 

Starting Friday night through Tuesday morning, the Wharf — which is private property — will institute a juvenile curfew from 5 p.m. through 5 a.m. Anyone under the age of 18 at the Wharf must be accompanied by a parent, guardian or authorized adult over 21 once the curfew is in effect. 

Any underage person at the Wharf after the curfew begins will be asked to leave on their own; if they refuse, they could be arrested for unauthorized entry. 

“With any curfew violation, the intent is not to arrest,” Smith said, noting that any youth violators would need to be picked up by a parent before they can be released from police custody. 

The curfew comes after several recent nights of chaos involving large groups of teenagers swarming the Navy Yard neighborhood. The latest incident occurred Saturday evening, when MPD responded to what it described as “large groups of juveniles” creating disorder, causing disturbances, and committing at least two robberies in the area. Officers arrested three minors and said investigations are ongoing. A community meeting Tuesday night in Southeast got tense as neighbors expressed fear, frustration and a growing sense of urgency, with many pushing for a curfew in the area.

“It’s frightening, it’s appalling,” said Carolette Sweatt, a Navy Yard resident. “A curfew is a mandate, but it could work … There’s a way D.C. can implement and enforce parenting.”

Smith said that while the Wharf curfew is just in place for Memorial Day Weekend, her department will consider weekend curfews all summer if necessary. Bowser also reiterated that her office will be proposing legislation to update the city’s curfew policies, though she declined to give details on what those changes may entail. Currently, D.C. youth curfews start at midnight on weekends and 11 p.m. on school nights. When pressed for specifics, Bowser said that a 7 or 8 p.m. start time for curfews could be “in the ballpark” of what she will propose. 

“What we are seeing today is different than decades ago,” Smith said when asked whether she would consider bringing back former daytime programming considered successful with teens. “Social media meetups, group chats and viral challenge are shaping real world behavior, and oftentimes without parents realizing it. We need our parents, our adults, our communities to pay attention.”

The city will also host a special holiday edition of its regular “Late Night Hype” events, similar to programming hosted over winter break. “Holiday Hype” will run from 7 p.m. through 11 p.m. Friday, Saturday and Sunday nights at the Banneker Recreation Center. Music, games, food and a “range of activities for teens” will be included. 

“If your kid is looking for something to do this weekend that will be a place where we are providing some programming,” Bowser said, noting that past events like this have averaged 1,700 people in attendance. 

Chief Smith also said that police presence across the District will be increased all weekend. 

“Anyone who chooses to be disruptive will also be met with consequences,” the chief said. “Unlawful behavior will result in an arrest regardless of age.”

WATCH: Full press conference on DC youth safety 



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LOCAL: Acceleration program for youth to begin June 11

Open Audio Article Player Sign-ups are available in the Pipestone Area Schools office Pipestone Area Schools once again is offering a middle school acceleration program set to begin on Tuesday, June 11. This is run through the Pipestone County Medical Center & Family Clinic, affiliated with Avera, with a cost of $30 per child. The […]

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Sign-ups are available in the Pipestone Area Schools office

Pipestone Area Schools once again is offering a middle school acceleration program set to begin on Tuesday, June 11.

This is run through the Pipestone County Medical Center & Family Clinic, affiliated with Avera, with a cost of $30 per child.

The program is for student-athletes entering fifth and sixth grade, and will focus on plyometrics, running and strength training — in an effort to create a foundation for future success in sports.

Pipestone County Medical Center staff member Jeff Haufschild administers the acceleration program for fifth- and sixth-graders. (Contributed photo from PCMC)

PCMC athletic trainer Jeff Haufschild will administer the program, which will run on Tuesdays and Thursdays from 11 a.m. to noon in the PAS high school gymnasium.

This will last six weeks (June 11-27 and July 9-25 with the week of Independence Day off).

Sign-ups are available in the PAS office.

For information, email Haufschild at jeffrey.haufschild@pcmchealth.org.



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Dolphins wrap spring season, gear up for busy summer in the pool

Guy Dossi/Calaveras Enterprise file photo The Bret Harte Dolphins youth swim team wrapped up its brief two-meet spring season on May 21 in Angels Camp. With spring competition in the books, attention now turns to the summer season, which begins in June. Practices will be held Monday through Thursday, from June 9 through July 31. […]

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Guy Dossi/Calaveras Enterprise file photo

The Bret Harte Dolphins youth swim team wrapped up its brief two-meet spring season on May 21 in Angels Camp.

With spring competition in the books, attention now turns to the summer season, which begins in June. Practices will be held Monday through Thursday, from June 9 through July 31. Swim meets are scheduled for June 19, July 10, 17, and 31 at Bret Harte’s aquatic center, with an additional meet on July 26 in Oakdale. The season will conclude with an awards dinner on August 1.

Boys, 6-and-under
Henry Reece competed in four events: he finished the 25-yard butterfly in 39.61 seconds, the 25-yard freestyle in 37.37, the 25-yard backstroke in 40.50, and the 25-yard breaststroke in 40.20.

Girls, 7-8 years old
Romy Jacobson swam three events, finishing the 25-yard freestyle in 35.33, the 25-yard backstroke in 33.08, and the 25-yard breaststroke in 36.05.

Girls, 9-10 years old
In the 100-yard freestyle, Dylan Shinn posted a time of 2:16.36, and Winter Hessels followed closely at 2:17.00. In the 25-yard freestyle, Hunter Olsen finished in 24.26, Kateri Steigerwald in 26.65, Hessels in 28.58, and Rylie Olsen in 30.22. In the 25-yard backstroke, Hunter Olsen clocked 26.73, Steigerwald 27.67, Rylie Olsen 30.04, Shinn 32.50, Hessels 33.00, and Davis 35.41. Hessels and Shinn also competed in the 50-yard backstroke, finishing in 1:13.38 and 1:17.24, respectively.

In the 25-yard breaststroke, Rylie Olsen finished in 36.62, followed by Shinn (37.68), Steigerwald (37.84), Hessels (38.02), and Hunter Olsen (40.01). Hunter Olsen completed the 50-yard breaststroke in 1:15.58, with Hessels close behind at 1:18.42. In the 50-yard freestyle, Rylie Olsen clocked in at 1:01.92, Davis at 1:04.57, Shinn at 1:07.28, and Hessels at 1:11.02.

Boys, 9-10 years old
In the 100-yard freestyle, Ryder Craig finished in 2:01.84 and Elijah Madsen in 2:16.37.
Juliana Davis swam the 25-yard butterfly in 40.31. In the same event, Ronin Rugo finished in 31.56 and Madsen in 37.45. In the 50-yard butterfly, Elliot Reese recorded a time of 1:12.19, with Madsen at 1:22.42. Craig completed the 25-yard freestyle in 22.79 and Rugo in 26.78.

In the 25-yard backstroke, Craig clocked in at 26.98. In the 50-yard backstroke, Craig led with 1:01.60, followed by Madsen at 1:13.25 and Reese at 1:13.30. Craig swam the 25-yard breaststroke in 34.80. In the 50-yard breaststroke, Rugo finished in 1:05.12, followed by Craig (1:08.52), Reese (1:12.53), and Madsen (1:29.33). In the 50-yard freestyle, Scott finished in 50.99, while Ybarra posted 57.50.

Boys, 11-12 years old
Ambrose Scott finished the 100-yard freestyle in 1:44.66. In the 50-yard backstroke, Drake Miskowski led with 50.55, followed by Scott (53.38) and Samuel Ybarra (1:06.06). Miskowski also completed the 50-yard breaststroke in 55.27, while Scott clocked in at 1:00.24.

Girls, 13-14 years old
Addy Rugo had a strong showing, finishing the 100-yard freestyle in 1:13.46, the 100-yard individual medley in 1:26.87, the 50-yard breaststroke in 45.94, and the 50-yard freestyle in 32.35.

Boys, 13-14 years old
In the 100-yard freestyle, Fulton Scott finished in 1:06.67, and Luca Presto in 1:13.28.
In the 50-yard butterfly, Maddox Nelson recorded 39.85, followed by Presto (43.20) and Abraham Ybarra (55.14). Nelson completed the 100-yard individual medley in 1:31.19, with Presto finishing in 1:37.26.

Scott led the 50-yard backstroke with a time of 35.60, followed by Presto in 49.07.
In the 50-yard breaststroke, Scott finished in 41.34, Nelson in 41.75, Presto in 51.13, and Ybarra in 56.44. Scott also topped the 50-yard freestyle with a time of 28.69, followed by Presto (32.55), Nelson (37.13), and Ybarra (51.52).

Girls, 15-16 years old
Winslow Scott swam three events, finishing the 100-yard freestyle in 1:16.91, the 50-yard breaststroke in 46.60, and the 50-yard freestyle in 35.67.





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NH Senate Republicans advance another bill allowing classification by sex

In the bitterly partisan fight over transgender policy, there appears to be a dispute looming among Republicans in Concord, but GOP majorities continue to move bills through the Legislature.This week, the Senate GOP majority passed another bill allowing the separation of sexes in bathrooms, youth sports and correctional facilities.”Women are being marginalized in this environment, […]

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In the bitterly partisan fight over transgender policy, there appears to be a dispute looming among Republicans in Concord, but GOP majorities continue to move bills through the Legislature.This week, the Senate GOP majority passed another bill allowing the separation of sexes in bathrooms, youth sports and correctional facilities.”Women are being marginalized in this environment, and as far as I’m concerned, this has to stop,” said Majority Leader Regina Birdsell.Democrats continue to compare bathrooms divided by sex rather than gender identity to Jim Crow racial segregation in America’s past.>> Download the free WMUR app to get updates on the go: Apple | Google Play <<“Separate but equal became the legal fiction that upheld decades of state-sanctioned discrimination,” said state Sen. Debra Altschiller, D-Stratham.While Republicans are united on gender classification bills, a disagreement is developing over legislation to ban the prescription of puberty blockers to minors for purposes of gender transition.This week, Senate Republicans amended House Bill 377, removing felony charges as the penalty for doctors who might violate the law.”The other thing is, is this essentially grandfathers anybody who’s on these treatments now. That won’t be taken away from them. They can continue on that,” said state Sen. David Rochefort, R-Littleton. “Previously, there was a date of Jan. 1 where they would have to stop therapy.”House Republicans are not in favor of that amendment.”We understand the concerns for those children who have already initiated these interventions, but believe their long-term health is best supported by safely discontinuing them,” the bill’s sponsor, state Rep. Lisa Mazur, R-Goffstown, said in a written statement. “Tapering off under medical supervision is safer than continuing indefinitely, and qualified providers are ready to offer compassionate, evidence-based support throughout the process.” If the bill passes the Senate, representatives and senators will have to sort out their differences regarding that change.

In the bitterly partisan fight over transgender policy, there appears to be a dispute looming among Republicans in Concord, but GOP majorities continue to move bills through the Legislature.

This week, the Senate GOP majority passed another bill allowing the separation of sexes in bathrooms, youth sports and correctional facilities.

“Women are being marginalized in this environment, and as far as I’m concerned, this has to stop,” said Majority Leader Regina Birdsell.

Democrats continue to compare bathrooms divided by sex rather than gender identity to Jim Crow racial segregation in America’s past.

>> Download the free WMUR app to get updates on the go: Apple | Google Play <<

“Separate but equal became the legal fiction that upheld decades of state-sanctioned discrimination,” said state Sen. Debra Altschiller, D-Stratham.

While Republicans are united on gender classification bills, a disagreement is developing over legislation to ban the prescription of puberty blockers to minors for purposes of gender transition.

This week, Senate Republicans amended House Bill 377, removing felony charges as the penalty for doctors who might violate the law.

“The other thing is, is this essentially grandfathers anybody who’s on these treatments now. That won’t be taken away from them. They can continue on that,” said state Sen. David Rochefort, R-Littleton. “Previously, there was a date of Jan. 1 where they would have to stop therapy.”

House Republicans are not in favor of that amendment.

“We understand the concerns for those children who have already initiated these interventions, but believe their long-term health is best supported by safely discontinuing them,” the bill’s sponsor, state Rep. Lisa Mazur, R-Goffstown, said in a written statement. “Tapering off under medical supervision is safer than continuing indefinitely, and qualified providers are ready to offer compassionate, evidence-based support throughout the process.”

If the bill passes the Senate, representatives and senators will have to sort out their differences regarding that change.



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Ashwaubenon man inspiring change among youth athletes with ‘4th N Long’ brand

ASHWAUBENON (NBC 26) — A well-known football term is becoming a catalyst for change in the lives of many young athletes in the Green Bay area. Avery Rhenwrick, an Ashwaubenon native, has transformed his passion for football into a mission to help young athletes overcome financial barriers through his clothing brand “4th N Long” and […]

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ASHWAUBENON (NBC 26) — A well-known football term is becoming a catalyst for change in the lives of many young athletes in the Green Bay area.

Avery Rhenwrick, an Ashwaubenon native, has transformed his passion for football into a mission to help young athletes overcome financial barriers through his clothing brand “4th N Long” and nonprofit “4th N Goal.”

“Being in the city, seeing the fans surround the team of the Packers is kind of what brought me the passion of the game,” Rhenwrick said.

The 28-year-old’s own football journey was cut short by injuries.

After breaking his shoulder during his freshman year of high school and suffering another injury the following year, Rhenwrick decided to leave the sport.

“At the time I was like, I’ll find another way to be around the game someway, somehow,” Rhenwrick said.

In 2020, he established his clothing brand “4th N Long” after recognizing that many families couldn’t afford the costs associated with youth sports.

“And that really hit home to me, coming from a single mother household myself, it was a struggle to play when I was younger,” Rhenwrick said.

Through 4th N Long, Rhenwrick uses 20% of proceeds to fund sports-related costs for young athletes.

The brand name carries special significance.

“I felt like it fit perfectly. Not only to the kids we’re helping but also in life in general,” Rhenwrick said.

In football, “4th and long” refers to a team needing to gain a significant amount of yards to get a first down, requiring belief even when facing a difficult task.

In 2023, Rhenwrick launched 4th N Goal, a nonprofit that serves young athletes like fourth graders Anshawn Skenandore and Kingston Haas, who both dream of playing professionally and giving back to their communities.

“Since I was four, that’s when I started playing football. I got cut but I never stopped,” Skenandore said.

“My goal is to always trust in God and go the route He’s taking me. I want the next generation to be great just like the generation of Michael Jordan, Kobe Bryant, Brett Favre,” Haas said.

Rhenwrick’s work extends to football camps hosted by 4th N Goal.

His efforts earned him the title of “2024 Young Entrepreneur of the Year” by the Greater Green Bay Chamber.

“I want them to look at me as somebody, that came from Green Bay — that had a dream, that had a passion for something which is sports, and was able to find a way to make a difference in that avenue,” Rhenwrick said.

The 4th N Goal annual youth football camp will be held on May 31 at East High School starting at 11 a.m.

Kids in attendance will have the opportunity to learn from and meet Packers lineman Elgton Jenkins.
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This story was reported by a journalist and has been converted to this platform with the assistance of AI. Our editorial team verifies all reporting on all platforms for fairness and accuracy.





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