Address Newsletter
Our weekly digest on buying, selling, and design, with expert advice and insider neighborhood knowledge.
AUSTIN, Texas — A total of four high school prospects have each signed an Athletic Scholarship Agreement (ASA) to play basketball next season at The University of Texas, head coach Sean Miller announced Wednesday. Austin Goosby (Melissa, Texas), Bo Ogden (Austin, Texas), Joe Sterling (Encino, Calif.) and Coleman Elkins (Austin, Texas) will join the Longhorns for the 2026-27 season. The four-person class is currently ranked No. 6 nationally by 247 Sports and No. 7 by On3.
Goosby (6-5, 175), a guard from Melissa, Texas, who plays at Melissa High School, is ranked as the No. 18 prospect in the nation by 247 Sports, No. 19 by ESPN, No. 23 by On3 and No. 24 by 247 Sports Composite. Goosby is the No. 2-ranked player in the state of Texas according to 247 Sports Composite. In his junior year in 2024-25, he averaged 24.1 points and 7.1 rebounds per game while leading Melissa to the first round of the Class 5A Division I state tournament. During the 2025 Nike EYBL (Elite Youth Basketball League) season, Goosby played for Drive Nation (Texas) and averaged 16.2 points, 6.2 rebounds, 3.8 assists and 1.7 steals per contest in the 17U Spring circuit while earning a spot on the EYBL 17U Spring All-Circuit first team. His older brother, Trevor, is a redshirt sophomore offensive lineman on the football team at The University of Texas.
“When you become the head coach at The University of Texas, everything starts with the state we’re in,” Miller said. “It’s incredibly important that you are able to recruit the right people and players that fit who we are and this amazing place that we all are a part of. Austin Goosby as a person, as a student, the family that he comes from, the winning pedigree that he brings to the table and obviously the talented basketball player that he is, he was a priority for us almost on the day that I got here as the new head coach. To see this come through and have him sign with us today is a big, big moment. Austin and I have the same birthday so as I told him, one of the great gifts I’ve ever received on my birthday is his commitment to The University of Texas. In terms of Austin as a player, he’s very unique in that he has great size and athleticism but he also has an incredible basketball IQ. His ability to make decisions passing and playmaking are second to none. Defensively, his ability to change the game with steals and blocks and being able to guard a variety of players really makes him the ultimate two-way guard. He has a limitless future and we’re excited to help him reach all of his goals and dreams, and I know he will help us become a better program.”
Ogden (6-6, 195), a guard from Austin, Texas, who plays at Westlake High School, is ranked as the No. 30 prospect in the nation by 247 Sports, No. 34 by On3, No. 37 by 247 Sports Composite and No. 42 by ESPN. Ogden is the No. 4-ranked player in the state of Texas according to 247 Sports Composite. During his junior year at St. Michael’s Preparatory School (Austin, Texas), he averaged 14.8 points, 4.8 rebounds and 1.9 assists per game while leading St. Michael’s to a 32-4 mark and the Class 6A TAPPS (Texas Association of Private and Parochial Schools) state championship. Ogden hit the game-winning shot at the buzzer to lift St. Michael’s to a 50-48 victory over Dallas Parish Episcopal in the state championship game. He earned TAPPS Class 6A all-state honors and was named the 2025 All-Austin Metro Mr. Basketball by Austin Sports Journal. While playing with the ASAK Elite program on the 2025 spring and summer Adidas 3SSB circuit, Ogden ranked ninth on the circuit in scoring at 20.9 points per game while hitting 52.8-percent from three-point range and 86-percent from the free throw line. He also won a gold medal with USA Basketball as he helped the USA 3×3 Men’s U18 National Team win the title at the FIBA U18 World Cup in Hungary in August 2024. In his sophomore season at St. Michael’s, Ogden averaged 18.3 points and 5.2 rebounds per contest and converted 46-percent from three-point range while leading his team to a 34-2 mark.
“We’re fortunate to have Bo,” said Miller. “I know his last name is Ogden, but he stands on his own two feet. He had his pick of the litter of great programs he could have gone to and he could have blazed his trail away from Austin, but he decided to stay in his home state and his home city and thank goodness be a part of our program moving forward. What I love about Bo as a player is he has a great skill level with his ability to make threes. But that’s not the only thing he can do. He’s 6-foot-6 and he’s clever and the thing that drew me to him the most when I watched him closely this spring and summer is he has great competitive spirit. He does not back down. He has a toughness about him, a chip on his shoulder in a good way, that I believe will serve him well as a college player.”
Sterling (6-4, 170), a guard from Encino, Calif., who plays at Harvard-Westlake School, is ranked as the No. 93 prospect in the nation by ESPN, No. 100 prospect by 247 Sports Composite, No. 105 by On3 and No. 106 by 247 Sports. As a junior in 2024-25, he helped Harvard-Westlake post a 31-3 overall record (7-0 in league play) and advance to the CIF regional semifinals. During this past spring and summer on the Pro 16 circuit, Sterling averaged 21 points, three rebounds and three assists per contest and converted 44-percent from three-point range while leading Team CPSA to the championship of the PUMA league. In his sophomore season at Crespi High School, he averaged 20.9 points per game.
“Joe is signing up into a highly competitive environment and will develop,” said Miller. “If you know anything about him, he has a chip on his shoulder. He can really shoot the ball, play both guard positions and he comes from an incredible winning pedigree, especially his high school program.”
Elkins (6-10, 240), is a forward from Austin, Texas who is playing his senior season at Blair Academy (Blairstown, N.J.). During his junior year in 2024-25, Elkins played a St. Andrew’s Episcopal School (Austin, Texas) and averaged 15 points and 7.6 rebounds per game.
“Coleman really came onto our radar this summer watching him and continuing to watch him at Blair Academy this fall,” said Miller. “One of the things we presented to him was development. We want him to take the early time here at The University of Texas to get bigger and stronger, to work every day playing at a very high level in practice so that you pave the way for the day when your time will come. With his skill level at 6-10, it wouldn’t surprise me if in a couple of short years he is a key contributor to a lot of things here.”
2026-27 Texas Basketball Recruiting Class (as of November 19, 2025)
|
Name
|
Yr
|
Pos
|
Ht
|
Wt
|
Hometown (High School)
|
|
Coleman Elkins
|
Fr.
|
F
|
6-10
|
240
|
Austin, Texas (Blair Academy [N.J.])
|
|
Austin Goosby
|
Fr.
|
G
|
6-5
|
175
|
Melissa, Texas (Melissa HS)
|
|
Bo Ogden
|
Fr.
|
G
|
6-6
|
195
|
Austin, Texas (Westlake HS)
|
|
Joe Sterling
|
Fr.
|
G
|
6-4
|
170
|
Encino, Calif. (Harvard Westlake HS)
|
A proposal to convert 42 acres of farmland in Big Bend, Wisconsin into a regional youth sports destination is advancing through the local approval process. Eric Weishaar, owner and developer of Breck Athletic Complex, presented plans to the Big Bend Plan Commission in November.
The project would require amending the village’s comprehensive plan to change the land designation from Medium Density Residential to Commercial. A joint public hearing between the Village Board and Plan Commission is set for Jan. 29 at 6 p.m. at Village Hall.
“This is going to be the first, really of its kind in the area. It’s going to be the biggest in the area, probably almost in the state,” Weishaar said during the November meeting.
The development would include six turf baseball fields, a championship baseball field with plaza seating, seven full-size soccer fields, three futsal fields, and four lacrosse fields. The 155,000-square-foot indoor facility would support year-round training across multiple sports.
Supporting amenities include concessions, restrooms, playgrounds, fitness trails, and plazas. The site plan also incorporates commercial outlots along Highway 164 for a craft bar/restaurant, banquet hall, hotel, gas station, and future retail.
Construction is planned across eight phases. Soccer fields would come first, with a potential opening as early as spring 2026 if ground breaks this coming spring. Baseball and softball fields are targeted for spring 2027 to give tournament operators lead time for scheduling.
Weishaar told commissioners that national tournament operators have committed to lease agreements spanning 25 to 30 years. SC Wave, affiliated with the Milwaukee Wave professional soccer organization, is also identified as a key partner.
“They rent places, spaces from all over the place, and they really want to consolidate. They’re actually pretty anxious to announce in their club, hey everybody, we’re going to have a permanent home,” Weishaar said.
The complex is expected to draw teams from outside Wisconsin for weekend-long tournaments, creating demand for nearby lodging and dining.
Developers emphasized that the facility would use modern LED field lighting designed to minimize light spill into nearby residential areas. Tournaments are expected to conclude by 10 or 11 p.m.
“This is not something that is going on all night,” Weishaar said.
The project still requires zoning and site plan approvals. Developers have asked local officials whether the review process can be expedited to meet tenant timelines.
If approved, Breck Athletic Complex would join a growing list of large-scale youth sports facilities positioning themselves as regional tournament destinations. The combination of indoor and outdoor capacity, long-term operator commitments, and adjacent commercial development reflects a model increasingly favored by developers seeking year-round revenue streams.
via: GM Today
photo: Courtesy of Village of Big Bend
YSBR provides this content on an “as is” basis without any warranties, express or implied. We do not assume responsibility for the accuracy, completeness, legality, reliability, or use of the information, including any images, videos, or licenses associated with this article. For any concerns, including copyright issues or complaints, please contact YSBR directly.
About Youth Sports Business Report
Youth Sports Business Report is the largest and most trusted source for youth sports industry news, insights, and analysis covering the $54 billion youth sports market. Trusted by over 50,000 followers including industry executives, investors, youth sports parents and sports business professionals, we are the premier destination for comprehensive youth sports business intelligence.
Our core mission: Make Youth Sports Better. As the leading authority in youth sports business reporting, we deliver unparalleled coverage of sports business trends, youth athletics, and emerging opportunities across the youth sports ecosystem.
Our expert editorial team provides authoritative, in-depth reporting on key youth sports industry verticals including:
Whether you’re a sports industry executive, institutional investor, youth sports parent, coach, or sports business enthusiast, Youth Sports Business Report is your most reliable source for the actionable sports business insights you need to stay ahead of youth athletics trends and make informed decisions in the rapidly evolving youth sports landscape.
Join our growing community of 50,000+ industry leaders who depend on our trusted youth sports business analysis to drive success in the youth sports industry.
Stay connected with the pulse of the youth sports business – where industry expertise meets actionable intelligence.
Sign up for the biggest newsletter in Youth Sports – Youth Sports HQ – The best youth sports newsletter in the industry
Follow us on LinkedIn
Follow Youth Sports Business Report Founder Cameron Korab on LinkedIn
Introducing Play Up Partners, a leading youth sports marketing agency connecting brands with the power of youth sports. We specialize in youth sports sponsorships, partnerships, and activations that drive measurable results.
Play Up Partners is a leading youth sports marketing agency connecting brands with the power of youth sports. We specialize in youth sports sponsorships, partnerships, and activations that drive measurable results.
Youth sports represents one of the most engaged and passionate audiences in sports marketing. With over 70 million young athletes and their families participating annually, the youth sports industry offers brands unparalleled access to motivated communities with strong purchasing power and loyalty.
We’ve done the heavy lifting to untangle the complex youth sports landscape so our brand partners can engage with clarity, confidence, and impact. Our vetted network of accredited youth sports organizations (from local leagues to national tournaments and operators) allows us to create flexible, scalable programs that evolve with the market.
Every partnership we build is rooted in authenticity and value creation. We don’t just broker deals. We craft youth sports marketing strategies that:
We’re positioning youth sports as the most desirable and effective platform in sports marketing. Our mission is simple: MAKE YOUTH SPORTS BETTER for athletes, families, organizations, and brand partners.
Common Questions About Youth Sports Marketing
Where can I sponsor youth sports? How do I activate in youth sports? What is the ROI of youth sports marketing? How much does youth sports sponsorship cost?
We have answers. Reach out to info@playuppartners.com to learn how Play Up Partners can help your brand navigate the youth sports landscape.
Youth sports organizations: Interested in partnership opportunities? Reach out to learn about our accreditation process.


A little more than 100 Pajaro Valley Unified School District students received an early Christmas present at Pajaro Valley High’s first annual toy drive event on Dec. 23.
Children from H.A. Hyde, Ohlone and Hall District elementary schools got a chance to pick from an assortment of toys inside the gymnasium prior to the varsity girls’ basketball game against North Monterey County.
The youngsters also got a special visit from Santa Claus and Little Santa Claus, who spoke to the group prior to making their way to the newly packaged basketballs, board games, backpacks and stuffed animals.
“My mission is to not just coach basketball, but help young people and help families through a difficult time during Christmas,” Pajaro Valley girls’ basketball head coach Darren Jackson said. “For most families, it’s difficult for them to go out and purchase gifts. It was an awesome turnout.”
It’s been nearly a decade since Jackson began the toy drive tradition with his wife Melissa, a teacher at Sherwood Elementary in Salinas.
“[Melissa] was telling me there’s a lot of kids that’s struggling, and there’s a lot of homeless kids out there,” Jackson said. “So, she inspired me through her job.”
Jackson spent 24 years at North Salinas High before taking the helm at Pajaro Valley in September. The Grizzlies’ first-year head coach said he was hoping to keep the tradition alive in Watsonville.
Jackson and the girls’ basketball team were dished an assist from PV High Activities Director Julie Brusa.
Brusa and ASB student body members stepped in by helping collect dozens of donations, including 25 bicycles given out through a raffle.
“[Brusa and the ASB student body] played a role,” Jackson said. “It was a girls’ basketball function but we turned it into a school function.”
FLORENCE, Ala. (December 30, 2025) – For a second straight year, the University of North Alabama Department of Athletics will host a free youth clinic to celebrate National Girls and Women in Sports Day on Saturday, January 31 from 10 a.m. to noon at the UNA Rec Center.
The free clinic is sponsored by Blue Cross Blue Shield of Alabama and is open to ages 4-12.
“Hosting our second annual National Girls & Women in Sports Day clinic reflects our commitment to empowering girls through athletics,” said Debbie Williams, UNA Associate Athletic Director for Business Affairs and Senior Woman Administrator. “After welcoming over 100 young girls last year, we are excited to continue growing this event by giving our female student-athletes the opportunity to inspire confidence, demonstrate leadership and highlight the positive impact of sports both on and off the field.”
All of UNA’s women’s sports programs, including student-athletes and coaches, will be involved in the camp. This includes women’s basketball, beach volleyball, indoor volleyball, cheer and dance, cross country, women’s golf, soccer, softball and women’s tennis.
Following this event, the UNA women’s basketball team will host FGCU at 6 p.m. inside CB&S Bank Arena. The NGWSD celebration will continue during the game. This game will also serve as Youth Sports Night.
NGWSD is an initiative created by the Women’s Sports Foundation. The annual observance is the first Wednesday of February during National Signing Day.
To register, click here.
For more information on North Alabama Athletics, visit www.roarlions.com and follow UNA Athletics on Facebook, Twitter and Instagram.
Luxury Homes

The saying goes “money talks, wealth whispers,” but the eye-popping homes — complete with eye-popping price tags — behind the biggest residential real estate transactions across Massachusetts in 2025 are talkers.
At a time when the $925,000 median sales price for a single-family home in Greater Boston already seems out of reach for many, this top trio is in a mortgage payment (or cash offer) league of their own.
As for the locations, the neighborhood backdrop to these transactions isn’t shocking: Martha’s Vineyard, Boston’s Back Bay, and Nantucket rule the roost. Here are the three priciest home sales in the Bay State in 2025, according to MLS and Zillow data.

Price: $37,000,000
Sold: July 10, 2025
The crown jewel home of 2025 came with a presidential seal of approval alongside its $37 million price tag. Blue Heron Farm in Chilmark, better known as the former Summer White House for the Obama family, officially claimed the year’s top spot. Spanning nearly 30 acres on Tisbury Great Pond, this compound is a self-contained ecosystem of luxury, featuring a 150-year-old barn relocated from Pennsylvania.

Beyond eight bedrooms and a private beach, the ultimate flex is the Norman Foster-designed pool house — why shouldn’t your swim break come with ties to a Pritzker Prize-winning architect? Listed by Maggie Gold Seelig of MGS Group Real Estate, this sale confirms that privacy isn’t priceless — it can be acquired on the Vineyard for tens of millions of dollars.

Price: $21,000,000
Sold: Nov. 24, 2025
If you’ve ever walked down the French boulevard-inspired stretch of Commonwealth Avenue in the Back Bay and wondered who owns those entire townhouses, the most up-to-date answer is the new owner of Number 59. Fetching a cool $21 million in November, this “sunny side” (aka the southern-facing stretch) stunner on the “Gold Coast” between Berkeley and Clarendon Streets defies the Back Bay trend of chopping grand estates into condos — remaining a glorious, 11,300-square-foot single-family monolith.

With 8 bedrooms, 10 bathrooms (8 full and two half baths), elevator access to all floors, and an attached garage (a Back Bay rarity), it is the architectural equivalent of a unicorn. Also listed by Maggie Gold Seelig, who had a firm hand on eight-figure deals this year, this 1910 masterpiece includes a separate staff or guest apartment.
Price: $21,000,000
Sold: Jan. 7, 2025
Tying with our Back Bay entry for the silver medal at $21 million, this Nantucket compound proves that “The Cliff” is just as much its own tax bracket as it is a neighborhood. This restored 6-bedroom, 10-bathroom grand dame dating to 1908 was listed by Gary Winn of Maury People Sotheby’s and includes a separate guest house. The real showstopper, however, is the more-than-900-square-foot rooftop deck — allegedly the largest of any residential property on the island — offering 360-degree views that practically demand a champagne toast at sunset. Inside, the home features a secret study hidden behind a foyer panel, which is frankly the only rational place to hide when you have a full house of summer guests.
Our weekly digest on buying, selling, and design, with expert advice and insider neighborhood knowledge.
PLATTSBURGH, N.Y. (ABC22/FOX44) – The Plattsburgh YMCA on Monday said they were proud that City of Plattsburgh officials approved $50,000 in funding to continue its free youth sports program for another year.
“Every time a child steps onto the court or the field, they learn the value of teamwork while building confidence, resilience, and determination,” said Kris Tate, COO for the Plattsburgh YMCA. “When communities invest in youth sports, we see healthier, stronger young people.”
Advertisement
According to the YMCA, more than 700 kids participated in its sports programs in 2025, and more than half of those, over 400, were City of Plattsburgh residents.
Busy Plattsburgh intersection poised for overhaul
Under the terms of the funding, which was approved earlier this month, sports are free for City of Plattsburgh kids ages 12 and under.
The association offers sports including basketball and tee ball – the next program is indoor soccer, which will be held in the spring, with registration open to the community on January 9.
Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
For the latest news, weather, sports, and streaming video, head to ABC22 & FOX44.
Most of what shapes a kid doesn’t happen during the game.
It happens before the first pitch — when they’re putting on a jersey that fits, tightening their cleats, and slipping a glove onto their hand that feels like it belongs there. Those details seem small to adults. To a child, they’re everything.
In Carson City, as in every town, there are kids who want to play and families who do everything they can to make that happen. Registration gets paid. Schedules get rearranged. Rides get worked out. What doesn’t always fall into place is equipment — especially something as personal and essential as a glove.
That gap usually stays invisible. Quiet. Unspoken.
And that’s exactly why it matters.
A Simple Idea, Done the Right Way
The idea is not complicated: an annual glove drive for Carson City Little League.
Not a spectacle. Not a fundraiser built on attention. Just a dependable, once-a-year effort to make sure that kids who need a glove have one — without ever being asked to explain why.
No announcements. No labels. No moments a child carries with them longer than they should.
Handled discreetly by the league, supported by the community, and grounded in respect.
Why This Matters More Than It Sounds
A glove is more than leather and laces.
It’s confidence. It’s safety. It’s the difference between playing free and playing guarded. Between reaching for the ball and hoping it doesn’t come your way.
Kids feel those differences immediately. They also remember who noticed — and who didn’t.
Youth sports are supposed to be where kids learn how to belong. That lesson starts before a coach ever speaks.
This Isn’t Charity. It’s Stewardship.
This wouldn’t be about rescuing anyone. It would be about maintaining the field, in the broadest sense of the phrase.
Communities take care of their parks, their schools, their traditions. Youth sports deserve the same quiet upkeep. When we remove small barriers early, we prevent bigger ones later — loss of confidence, loss of interest, loss of belief that a place is meant for you.
That kind of care doesn’t require applause. It requires consistency.
Why Make It Annual
Because needs don’t announce themselves once and disappear.
Kids grow. Gloves wear down. Circumstances shift. An annual glove drive acknowledges that reality without judgment or urgency. It makes support part of the rhythm, not a reaction to crisis.
When something becomes routine, it becomes reliable. And reliability is what kids trust.
The Real Outcome
If this works the way it should, no one will talk about it much.
Kids will show up ready to play. Coaches will coach. Parents will watch. Baseball will happen.
And a few players — ones we’ll never identify, and don’t need to — will step onto the field feeling equal instead of exposed.
Those are the quiet things that let kids play.
And they’re worth doing right.
— Chris Graham is a Carson City native, writer and lifelong baseball fan. A former Western Nevada College play-by-play broadcaster, his work focuses on sports, culture and community. He can be followed on his Substack at https://substack.com/@gamenotes.
#11 Volleyball Practices, Then Meets Media Prior to #2 Kentucky Match
Nascar legal saga ends as 23XI, Front Row secure settlement
Sunoco to sponsor No. 8 Ganassi Honda IndyCar in multi-year deal
Maine wraps up Fall Semester with a win in Black Bear Invitational
WNBA’s Caitlin Clark, Angel Reese and Paige Bueckers in NC, making debut for national team at USA camp at Duke
Ross Brawn to receive Autosport Gold Medal Award at 2026 Autosport Awards, Honouring a Lifetime Shaping Modern F1
NASCAR, 23XI Racing, Front Row Motorsports announce settlement of US monopoly suit | MLex
Rick Hendrick comments after the NASCAR lawsuit settlement
Nike Signs 10 LSU Athletes to NIL deals
Creating a Legacy: Maddie Scheier