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PERFECT GAME AND THE SPORTS FACILITIES COMPANIES TO HOST YOUTH CLINIC WITH FORMER MLB ALL-STARS AHEAD OF SEC BASEBALL TOURNAMENT AT HOOVER MET COMPLEX

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PERFECT GAME AND THE SPORTS FACILITIES COMPANIES TO HOST YOUTH CLINIC WITH FORMER MLB ALL-STARS AHEAD OF SEC BASEBALL TOURNAMENT AT HOOVER MET COMPLEX

HOOVER, Ala., May 14, 2025 /PRNewswire/ — Perfect Game, the world’s largest youth baseball and softball platform and scouting service, in partnership with The Sports Facilities Companies (SFC), the nation’s leading provider of sports and recreation venue management, today announced a special Youth Clinic to be held Monday, May 19, at the Hoover Met Complex in Hoover, Alabama.

The clinic will welcome nearly 500 students from Birmingham City Schools and Hoover City Schools for a morning of instruction, games and inspiration led by five former Major League Baseball players: 13-year veteran Wes Helms, World Series champion Brett Myers, three-time All-Star reliever Tom “Flash” Gordon, All-Star slugger Ryan Klesko and seven-year veteran Jason Phillips. Media is welcome to attend the clinic from 10 am – noon and speak with the guest coaches. The Hoover Met Complex is located at 5508 Stadium Trace Pkwy, Hoover, AL, 35244.

The event will run from 9:30 a.m. to 1 p.m., the day before the start of the 2025 SEC Baseball Tournament and will feature on-field stations with athletic games, skills training and competitive challenges. Activities will be led by Jered Goodwin, vice president of scouting operations at Perfect Game, ensuring a dynamic and developmental experience for every child involved.

Each participant will receive a Rawlings baseball glove, a Perfect Game baseball, a clinic T-shirt, and one ticket valid for any session of the SEC Baseball Tournament. Lunch will also be provided.

“We’re thrilled to bring together MLB veterans, talented youth and our scouting team for a day that celebrates the game of baseball and gives back to the local community,” said Goodwin. “This is about more than just baseball — it’s about creating lasting memories and inspiring the next generation of athletes.”

“At SFC, our mission is to create places where sports change lives, and this clinic is a perfect example of that,” said Shannon Ealy, SFC’s General Manager of the Hoover Met Complex. “We’re proud to partner with Perfect Game to offer local students a meaningful experience alongside baseball legends and community leaders.”

This event underscores the shared commitment of Perfect Game and SFC to expanding access to the sport and delivering high-impact opportunities for young athletes. The clinic is at full capacity and closed to the public.

The Hoover Met Complex is a premier multi-sport venue and longtime home to elite baseball events, including Perfect Game tournaments. It will once again host the SEC Baseball Tournament, which begins Tuesday, May 20. The tournament has been held at Hoover Met annually since 1998, excluding 2020 due to the COVID-19 pandemic. Attendance records were broken in each of the past two years, with more than 180,000 fans attending in 2024.

For more information on Perfect Game, visit www.perfectgame.org. To learn more about the Hoover Met Complex, visit www.hoovermetcomplex.com.

Media contact:
Greg Casterioto / Gcasterioto@perfectgame.org / (267) 246-5709

About Perfect Game

Perfect Game is the world’s largest elite youth baseball and softball platform and scouting service, producing over 9,800+ events, hundreds of thousands of games, and showcases each year across the country. Perfect Game is dedicated to giving amateur players exposure to take their game to the next level, whether that be in college or in the professional ranks. At Perfect Game events, players perform with top-level competition in front of college recruiters and professional scouts from all over the country. Because of this, these events prove to be invaluable to college coaches as well as Major League Baseball, as they can scout a large population of talented ballplayers in one location. To date, more than 2,240 players that have played in a Perfect Game event have also played in Major League Baseball. Since 2003, 15,134 Perfect Game alumni have been selected in the MLB First-Year Amateur Player Draft. In the 2023 Draft, for example, 95 percent of all players selected had played in Perfect Game events, and every player selected on the Draft’s first day had previously attended Perfect Game events.

About The Sports Facilities Companies (SFC)

The Sports Facilities Companies (SFC) are the Nation’s leading resources for the management and development of sports, recreation, wellness, and events facilities. As a turn-key solution for community leaders and developers alike, SFC services span the gamut of sports and recreation needs from sports tourism & recreation master planning, program planning, and feasibility through professional facility management services. Our 60+ managed venues and 2,500+ team members, represented by the SF Network, welcome more than 25 million guest visits and produce over $500 million in economic impact each year. To learn more, please visit SportsFacilities.com and theSFnetwork.com.

About the Hoover Met Complex (HMC)

The Hoover Metropolitan Complex (HMC) is a world-class, multi-sport and event complex located in Hoover, Alabama. The HMC includes the Hoover Met Stadium, the state-of-the-art Finley Center with Hoover Heights Climbing Center, an RV Park, outdoor baseball/softball fields, multipurpose fields, the HMC Tennis Center, and all- inclusive Explore Playground and Splash Pad. The Hoover Met Stadium has served as the home of the SEC Baseball Tournament since 1998. The Hoover Metropolitan Complex is owned by the City of Hoover, Alabama. HMC is a member of the SFNetwork the nation’s largest and fastest growing network of sports facilities and is operated by the industry-leader in outsourced operations, Sports Facilities Companies.

View original content to download multimedia:https://www.prnewswire.com/news-releases/perfect-game-and-the-sports-facilities-companies-to-host-youth-clinic-with-former-mlb-all-stars-ahead-of-sec-baseball-tournament-at-hoover-met-complex-302455392.html

SOURCE Perfect Game USA



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North Charleston plans youth development park with community partners

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NORTH CHARLESTON, S.C. (WCSC) — North Charleston and surrounding communities will soon have a central hub for community connection and wellness focused on helping underserved youth in the area.

The Cal Ripken Sr. Foundation, The Sandlot Initiative and the City of North Charleston are partnering on the project, which has been in development for more than five years.

“We want to impact kids’ lives,” Andy Brusman, founder of The Sandlot Initiative, said.

Building connections through sports

Brusman said the initiative aims to connect communities through sports, where children focus on teamwork rather than differences.

“You have a black child that’s playing second base. You have a white child that’s playing shortstop. Neither one is looking at black and white. They’re looking at a double play partner,” Brusman said.

The hub will address what Brusman identified as a key issue for underserved youth: unstructured free time.

“It brings you discipline. From a young age, you’ve got to be able to learn how to manage your time, your schedule, and how it interacts with everything else that you’re doing,” he said.

Expanding beyond sports

While the center will start with sports programming, organizers plan to expand into mentoring, wellness and academics.

“If you can continue to build on that and add things, like getting them exposed to coding at Clemson, you’ve set that child up to understand what they can achieve going forward,” Brusman said.

The partners believe the hub will provide a safe space for children in the community.

“Soaking it all in, because at the end of the day, is the end goal here, is just give them that place to go, a safe place,” Brusman said.

The organization is currently fundraising to build two baseball and softball fields and a training facility.



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How Florida Became a Hockey Hotbed

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How Florida Became a Hockey Hotbed



































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Daniel S. Kippert | Obituaries

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Daniel S Kippert, age 63, born on April 24,1962 to parents Jack and Patricia (Sweeney) passed away on Aug 26, 2025. Dan attended Madison West High School and graduated with an Economics degree from the University of Wisconsin in 1991.

Dan worked many jobs over the years, primarily in retail. Enjoyed his time refereeing youth basketball, umpiring softball games, watching Wisconsin Badgers and Green Bay Packers.

A man who valued his privacy, Dan faced significant health challenges throughout his life, including a long battle with Ulcerative colitis and the complications of alcoholism.

While these struggles were a part of his journey, they did not define the totality of who he was as a son, brother and a friend. He is now at peace, free from the physical and mental burdens he carried for so long.

Dan is survived by his mother Patrica, brothers Mike, Dave (Jo Ann) and sister Kathy (Dan) Schmudlach, Including several cousins, nieces, nephews, their families and his beloved cat Sammy.

In keeping with Dan’s wishes, a private family memorial will be held at a later date.

He is preceded in death by his father, Jack and brother, John.

Dan’s family would like to thank all the care givers who assisted Dan throughout his healthcare journey, Sun Prairie Emergency personnel including Social Services, St. Mary’s Hospital, Dean clinic and Agrace.

​COPYRIGHT 2025 BY CHANNEL 3000. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. THIS MATERIAL MAY NOT BE PUBLISHED, BROADCAST, REWRITTEN OR REDISTRIBUTED.



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2026 National Girls & Women in Sports Day Youth Clinic

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Duke Athletics is proud to host the National Girls and Women in Sports Day Clinic, presented by Blue Cross and Blue Shield of North Carolina at historic Cameron Indoor Stadium! 

As a proud partner of Duke Athletics, Blue Cross NC has enhanced its commitment to women’s athletics by being the presenting sponsor of National Girls & Women in Sports Day. Building on its commitment to support youth mental health, connectivity and resiliency, Blue Cross NC encourages participation in sports and an active lifestyle that supports physical and mental wellbeing. By partnering with youth, parents and community leaders like Duke Athletics, Blue Cross NC believes there is opportunity to help reduce stigmas associated with mental health for young people in sports.

This year’s clinic is scheduled for Saturday, February 7, 2026 from 9-10:30 a.m., in Cameron Indoor Stadium. Each participating women’s varsity sport will have a designated section in the stadium to teach a sport-related skill or technique. 

The clinic is FREE of charge and open to girls and boys in Grades 1-8.  Registration is not required but strongly encouraged. A Parent or Guardian must be present at all times.

Additionally, this season, registered participants will receive a complimentary ticket to the Duke Women’s Basketball game on Sunday, February 8th against SMU.

Please fill out the below form to register. Do not forget to download, complete, and bring the participation agreement with you to the clinic!

Participation Agreement



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2025 in Review: Seven Questions for Assemblymember Mia Bonta, an Outspoken Advocate for Maternal Health and Working Families 

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Assemblymember Mia Bonta (D-Oakland). File photo. Credit: California Black Media Credit: California Black Media

By Edward Henderson, California Black Media 

Assemblymember Mia Bonta (D-Oakland) serves California’s 18th Assembly District (East Bay). She was first elected in a special election on Aug.31, 2021. 

Bonta, who says she is guided by a long-standing commitment to educational equity, community safety, and expanding opportunities for working families, has built a legislative record focused on addressing systemic inequities through prevention-focused, community-driven solutions. 

Raised in a Puerto Rican family that valued public service, she has spent her career advocating for resources that strengthen schools, expand access to childcare and healthcare, and remove bureaucratic barriers that disproportionately harm Black, Indigenous, immigrant, and low-income communities.

Her work, she says, reflects a deep belief in uplifting historically underserved neighborhoods, ensuring families can afford to live and thrive in the East Bay, and protecting the social safety nets that help vulnerable residents meet basic needs. 

Throughout 2025, Bonta’s efforts emphasized dignity, access, and fairness across issues ranging from maternal health and immigration to youth justice reform. While celebrating hard-won policy victories shaped by community advocates and impacted families, she has also been candid about the persistence of deeply rooted challenges –particularly for young people navigating systems that too often prioritize punishment over support. 

California Black Media (CBM) spoke with Bonta about her successes and disappointments in 2025 and her outlook for the new year. 

What stands out to you as your most important achievement last year and why?  

I was proud to lead AB 1261, expanding access to legal counsel for immigrant youth. I came into the Legislature to fight for our children, and with the federal administration openly targeting young people for deportation, this bill was a labor of love. No child should be forced to stand alone in a courtroom, navigating a legal process they don’t understand, often in a language they don’t speak. That is not who we are as Californians. I’m grateful my colleagues and our governor agreed.

How did your leadership last year contribute to improving the lives of Black Californians?   

I led AB 1376 to reform our youth probation system, which for too long has kept young people trapped in cycles of law enforcement contact and contributed to the school-to-prison pipeline. Of the more than 10,000 young Californians navigating probation, 86% are youth of color. Under prior law, non-custodial wardship probation often came with as many as 50 separate requirements, each one a potential technical violation that could extend supervision and derail healthy adolescent development. Research shows that this instability leads to school disengagement, employment barriers, and repeated involvement with the system.

AB 1376 limits the length of probation and requires that conditions be individualized, developmentally appropriate, proportional, and not excessive, to provide real, immediate relief for youth across the state.

What frustrated you the most last year?  

It has been frustrating to operate under yet another Trump administration rather than one that could have been led by a daughter of Oakland. With deep cuts to health care, violent immigration raids, and rising costs, the challenges facing California families have only grown. But these pressures also make the work we’re doing more urgent.

What inspired you the most last year? 

I am constantly inspired by the people of AD-18 – Oakland, Alameda, and Emeryville. They never give up, never back away from a righteous fight, and continue to push forward even when the odds are stacked high. Their resilience fuels my own, especially in the hardest moments.

What is one lesson you learned in 2025 that will inform your decision-making in 2026? 

We are strongest when we fight together. Last year, I was especially proud of the broad coalition we built to secure funding for the RIGHT Grant, which allows community-based organizations to provide critical in-person rehabilitation services inside our state prisons. Even in a tough budget year, we were able to elevate this as a priority because we demonstrated how wide and deep the support was.

In one word, what is the biggest challenge Black Californians are facing currently? 

Trump.

What is the goal you want to achieve most in 2026? 

In 2026, I look forward to fighting to protect health care access, advancing smart and effective public safety policies, and continuing to invest in communities that have been overlooked for far too long.



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Jr. Ams Girls Youth Hockey Taking Off | SWX Tri-Cities/Yakima

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PASCO, WA – Girl’s hockey is gaining momentum, and the Junior Americans are creating opportunities for girls of all ages to engage with the sport. The organization has experienced steady growth in recent months, highlighted by their latest hockey event.

Executive Hockey Director Garrett Stephenson shared that they hosted a “Try Hockey for Free” event in October, which saw 42 girls participate. “This is the most this program has seen for a Try Hockey for Free event before,” said Stephenson.

With professional women’s hockey gaining popularity, girls now have role models to look up to and opportunities to pursue the sport. The girls’ club is continuing its efforts with tournaments scheduled for March.



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