Rec Sports
Photos: Arena Construction on Home Stretch at St. Thomas – Newsroom
Construction on the Lee & Penny Anderson Arena at the University of St. Thomas is about to enter its final summer sprint. With less than six months until opening, crews are beginning to roll out the finishing touches on the roughly 5,000-seat multiuse arena.
As new milestones are reached daily, the future home for St. Thomas men’s and women’s basketball and hockey programs is coming into focus. In the last month, floor installation for the men’s basketball practice court began. The concrete slab for the facility’s secondary ice rink was completed. And outside, masonry crews have made significant progress installing Kasota limestone, giving the arena its signature look.



Set to open in October 2025, the main arena will quickly transform from basketball court to hockey rink as scheduling demands. The facility will also host campus events, such as commencement ceremonies, concerts, and community gatherings.

St. Thomas recently exceeded its fundraising goal for Lee & Penny Anderson Arena, raising more than $131 million. It is the largest single fundraising campaign for a campus facility in the university’s history.



Once complete, Lee & Penny Anderson Arena will be one of the greenest athletic facilities in the nation. St. Thomas is pursuing LEED Silver certification from the U.S. Green Building Council.



Aside from St. Thomas hockey and basketball games, the arena will also provide potential opportunities for the university to partner with local schools and youth sports organizations.



Season tickets for the basketball and hockey inaugural seasons in Lee & Penny Anderson Arena are on sale now at tommiesports.com/tickets.
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Rec Sports
Roundup of news from Hull’s wide world of sports — The Hull Times
• The Hull High Boys Varsity Basketball team also split its last two matchups, losing a close game, 48-47, to Academy of the Pacific Rim Charter School in Boston on Friday, January 2, and defeating Falmouth Academy at home, 60-20, on Monday. Up next for the 3-2 team are a rematch with Academy of the Pacific Rim at home on Thursday, January 8 at 6:30 p.m. and a road game against Upper Cape Cod Regional Vocational Technical High School on Friday, January 9 at 6:30 p.m. The JV squad defeated the Academy of the Pacific Rim team, 54-35, on January 2 and will play the Dragons again on Thursday at 5 p.m. before the varsity game.
• The Girls Varsity Basketball team is 0-6 on the season after losses to Ursuline Academy in the Scituate Holiday Tournament, 40-19, on December 31, and a 44-37 loss on the road to New Heights Charter School in Brockton on Monday. Next up for the Pirates are a road game against Boston Latin Academy on Friday, January 9 at 6 p.m. and then home matchups against Excel Academy Charter School on Monday, January 12 at 6:30 p.m. and Abington High School on Wednesday, January 14 at 5:30 p.m.
• The Hingham-Hull Cooperative Gymnastics squad’s next competition will be held on Saturday, January 10 at 6 p.m. against Scituate High School at the South Shore YMCA Gymnastics Training Center.
• The next meet for the Boys and Girls Indoor Track teams will be against Mashpee on Monday, January 26 at 4 p.m. at the Reggie Lewis Center in Boston.
• For the full schedule for each Hull High team, visit www.arbiterlive.com/Teams?entityId=10611.
• Hull Pirates In-Town Youth Basketball begins this weekend. Programs include a skills and drills co-ed session for grades 1 and 2 from 8-9 a.m., a co-ed program for grades 3 and 4 from 9-10 a.m., as well as an open gym program (also co-ed) for grades 5-8 from 10-11:30 a.m., all at the Jacobs School gym. Some travel teams are on the road this weekend, but there are home games as well:
Saturday, January 10 at the Jacobs School: Girls Grade 6 vs. Hingham at 2 p.m.; Girls Grade 7 vs. Marshfield at 3 p.m.; Girls Grade 8 vs. Cohasset at 4 p.m.
Sunday, January 11 at the Jacobs School: Girls Grade 7 vs. Halifax at 12 p.m.
Sunday, January 11 at the Hull High: Boys Grade 8 vs. Hanover at 1 p.m.; Boys Grade 4 vs. Scituate at 2:15 p.m.; Boys Grade 3 vs. Norwell at 3:30 p.m.
For more information, visit http://hullbasketball.leagueapps.com/camps.
• A combined Girls 3/4 travel basketball team competes at the fourth-grade level and has a record of 1-3. Next games are against Kingston on Saturday, January 10 at 6 p.m. and against Sandwich on Sunday, January 11 at 2 p.m. All games are played at Indian Head Elementary School in Hanson, so fans have to travel to take in a game. The full schedule of game times and weekly opponents is at this link: www.oldcolonybasketball.org/team/hull/4/1.
• Registration is open for Hull Youth Lacrosse – two travel teams and the in-town programs – through January 22. For more information, visit www.hulllax.com or email hullyouthlax@gmail.com if you have any questions.
• Coaches, league organizers, and superfans – We need your help to report the scores and results of the latest events in Hull’s sports world! Please send local sports news and photos to sports@hulltimes.com. Deadline is Wednesday at noon. When providing details of the games or races, please be sure to include the sport/team, the players’ full names, and the final scores. When sending photos, names of those pictured are greatly appreciated, as well as who should get credit for taking the photo.
Thank you for your help!
Rec Sports
Century standout travels through Europe with Northern Lights Volleyball club team – Post Bulletin
The Northern Lights Volleyball 16-1 club team spent the holidays traveling through Europe and competing in two tournaments abroad Dec. 25-Jan. 5.
The team won the 18U Youth Alpen Tournament in Innsbruck, Austria and took third place in the 19U SV Dynamo International Youth Tournament in Apeldoorn, Netherlands.
The 16-1 team out of Burnsville, Minn., is made up of players from high schools around the state, including Rochester Century’s sophomore Laney Stellmaker. Other players on the roster attend Eagan, Prior Lake, St. Paul Academy, Lakeville North, East Ridge, Thomas Jefferson (Bloomington), Waconia and Chanhassen.
According to its website, the SV Dynamo tournament “guarantees three days of top-level volleyball with the best youth teams from the Netherlands and beyond. For many clubs, the youth tournament has been the ideal preparation for the Open Club (national championships for club teams). Foreign top youth teams see the tournament as a unique opportunity to measure their strength against European opponents.”
The NLV 16-2 team also traveled and competed in the tournaments, finishing third in Apeldoorn and sixth in Innsbruck.
Players from both teams documented their travels with
journals and videos.
Stellmaker, an All-Big Nine selection, recorded 493 set assists, 200 kills, 313 digs, 61 ace serves and 20 blocks during her sophomore campaign with the Panthers. She also reached 1,000 career set assists during the 2025 season.
Our newsroom occasionally reports stories under a byline of “staff.” Often, the “staff” byline is used when rewriting basic news briefs that originate from official sources, such as a city press release about a road closure, and which require little or no reporting. At times, this byline is used when a news story includes numerous authors or when the story is formed by aggregating previously reported news from various sources. If outside sources are used, it is noted within the story.
Rec Sports
Introducing Community Coach | USA Ultimate
Colorado Springs, Colo. (January 8, 2026) – USA Ultimate has recently made available a new, free resource for adults teaching young, beginning ultimate players. This new program, titled Community Coach, offers a learning experience targeted to individuals who have an interest in coaching but limited experience with the sport of ultimate.
The effort — led by USA Ultimate’s Youth and Education Program Manager Sam Callan — was developed in collaboration with Youth Programs Director Dan Raabe and Grant Boyd of USA Ultimate Affiliate, California Ultimate, with input from others in the ultimate coaching community.
The program went live with a soft launch near the end of last year and is currently available through the USA Ultimate’s Mobile Coach website and app.
The course is aimed at those looking to start middle school programs and includes:
- An introduction to coaching, including advice from elite ultimate coach Matty Tsang.
- A module covering the basics of the game and how to facilitate a learning environment with videos covering how to teach skills, including throwing and catching.
- Videos featuring longtime ultimate coach Libby Cravens explaining how to teach offensive and defensive plays.
- Four introductory practice plans with equipment lists and advice for how to change things up to fit different groups and spaces.
- A kid-friendly rules introduction and additional resources.
“We are excited to introduce this new coaching program for adults who are newcomers to ultimate,” shared Callan. “Making ultimate accessible is an ongoing goal of USAU and getting parents and teachers involved is a great way to extend the availability of ultimate programming to youth who are exploring new sports.”
Rec Sports
More pools and pickleball — a quick guide to what’s in Pima County’s new parks master plan
Pima County is getting ready to invest in parks and pools — and new splash pads, expanded aquatics programs and upgraded community centers are coming.
Those measures and many others are included in the county’s first-ever Parks and Recreation Master Plan, which will guide how the department spends money and plans facilities for the next 10-20 years. Here are the highlights.
The big ideas
The plan identifies six priority areas to guide decision-making: strengthening organizational capacity, expanding access and equity, maintaining existing assets, broadening recreation programs, enhancing partnerships and advancing sustainability.
Action items in the 20-year plan include:
- Investing in pool facilities at several locations to replace outdated pumps, filters, heaters and locker rooms
- Modernizing community centers on the northwest side, south side and west side to improve accessibility and functionality
- Developing Esmond Station Park in the Vail area to meet recreation needs in one of the county’s fastest-growing regions
- Adding new splash pads and shaded playgrounds countywide
- Expanding aquatics capacity and youth sports programming
- Converting turf to drought-tolerant landscaping and transitioning parks to reclaimed water irrigation
- Installing solar lighting at five or more parks and replacing athletic field lights with LEDs
What the county manages now
Pima County Parks and Recreation oversees 41 parks across 5,707 acres, 12 community centers, nine pools, 106 sports fields, nine dog parks, three shooting range complexes, and 150 miles of multi-use paths — including the popular 138-mile Chuck Huckelberry Loop. The department also runs a swim team program with more than 800 young swimmers.
The City of Tucson and other local towns maintain their own systems of parks, separate from the county system.
Why the plan matters
The department is facing financial pressures. According to benchmarking data in the plan, Pima County’s parks funding is $17 per capita compared to $24 at the low end nationally — a gap of about $6.6 million annually.
Staffing is also below national benchmarks. The department has about 237 full-time employees, roughly 25 fewer than recommended for a system this size. And budget growth has trailed inflation by 22.7%, leaving the department about $1.5 million short of its 2019 inflation-adjusted spending level.
Popular programs like swim lessons and water aerobics regularly sell out early in the season at pools like Manzanita and Kino, but staffing and facility constraints prevent the department from expanding offerings to meet demand.

What the community said
The planning process gathered input from more than 650 households through surveys, plus feedback at community events including Tucson Meet Yourself, the Rillito and Rincon Valley Farmers Markets, the Fourth Avenue Street Fair, and the Tucson Rodeo.
Common themes emerged across all five county districts:
- Repairing and updating existing parks, pools and community centers
- Expanding aquatics programs and community events
- Adding walking loops, dog parks and playgrounds
- Improving overall sports field and park access
- More pickleball courts
Among the more surprising requests is a cricket field in Catalina Foothills.
What’s next
The Parks and Recreation Advisory Commission approved the plan on Nov. 14 and then the Board of Supervisors approved it on Dec. 16.
Implementation will require general fund support and is expected to unfold in three phases: short-term goals through Fiscal Year 2030, mid-term goals through 2035, and long-term sustainability initiatives extending to 2046.
Paying for these improvements will be the topic of future county budget discussions. Some capital projects, including pool renovations and park updates, may be funded through bond initiatives.
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Lakers’ JJ Redick reflects on ‘resilience’ and loss a year after Los Angeles wildfires
SAN ANTONIO — JJ Redick’s phone buzzed during the Los Angeles Lakers’ coaches meeting Wednesday in San Antonio, just as the staff began trying to figure out a way to beat a conference rival on the second night of a back- to-back.
Redick knew the anniversary was near. But he didn’t know it was that date until he read his wife, Chelsea’s, Instagram post and all of the emotions flooded back. Tears filled his eyes.
“Sorry, guys,” he told his staff.
A year ago, the Lakers were in Dallas when Redick woke up from a pregame nap to learn that his family would be evacuating the house they rented in the Pacific Palisades, a community they planned to make their permanent Los Angeles home. A fire that began in the Santa Monica Mountains sprinted through dried-out vegetation pushed by dangerous winds. By nightfall, it devoured nearly an entire community, including the home in which Redick, his wife and two children were living. Another fire in the nearby San Gabriel Mountains did the same in Altadena. In total, at least 31 people died. An estimated 13,000 homes were destroyed.
In the 12 months since, Redick and his family bounced from hotels to short-term rentals and then back again to hotels. He and his family have vowed to rebuild the Palisades Recreation Center, where his sons once played youth sports. That effort continues this week with the foundation Redick co-founded, LA Sports Strong, hosting its largest fundraiser to date on Thursday.
Following the Lakers’ loss to the San Antonio Spurs on the first anniversary of the fires, Redick told The Athletic that the impact of the fire on his family and friends still lingers — and has even brought to light again the characteristics in the people he loves most.
“Sometimes you have to be reminded by the resilience of people,” Redick said. “We’re having a big event (Thursday). It’s our first real large fundraising event for the rebuild of the rec center. We’re making a lot of headway. And seeing families that have relocated multiple times over the last year — we had to as well — we were in a hotel for five and a half to 10 months before we ended up getting settled. … I told Chelsea today … I’m proud of her, and I’m proud of the kids, and I’m proud of all our friends.
“It’s been a lot for a year.”
Redick and his family recently moved into a new home. Many of his friends and neighbors have not.
As he reflected on the past year, Redick didn’t revisit the horrific drive through the Palisades the morning after the fire, the difficult trip back with a reporter or the grief-filled nights inside hotel lobbies with friends who had lost everything. Instead, he spoke with some level of gratitude for his loved ones and their resilience through a defining period in their lives.
“The first 10 days, you’re devastated,” he said. “You’re in shock, and you’re just trying to function in some ways.”
In some ways, Redick’s family was fortunate. He said his sons’ school wasn’t impacted by the fires, so they had some sense of normalcy. His job, too, created an escape. But the devastation landed hardest at home — particularly for his wife.
“I think for a long time, Chelsea, she wore it the hardest. And she’s a mom, and what do moms want? They want to nest. They want to have a bed for their kids, and they want to have stuff up on the walls that show that this is where we live and this is where our family plays Rummikub together and watches stupid Netflix kid shows together. Like the disruption of that.”
Nearly all of their personal belongings, and the routines that had given the family comfort, were lost in the fires.
“It didn’t really get normal again for a long time,” Redick said. “And I think a lot of people are still going through that. And that was the angst that we felt as a family. I know my boys felt it for months and months after. And it wasn’t until we felt settled again. And even that took two to three weeks of, ‘Oh, OK, we can actually turn off that valve of anxiety that we’ve had for the last 10 months.’”
In the immediate aftermath of the fires, Redick became one of the public faces of the tragedy. He spoke emotionally about the rec center and the bonds he formed in the Palisades following the Lakers’ first practice back after the fires. He was raw, and he promised to try to be a part of solutions.
A year later, he remembered that sentiment.
“I talked about our family. We were, we’re gonna be fine,” he remembered. “We were gonna go through the very specific challenges that our family was gonna face. And that was devastating and sad. And was emotional.
“I think the harder part, and it still is, it’s like that sense of loss of community. … We still feel that. And all the people that we hung out with in Palisades, we still hang out with them all the time, but they’re just not in the Palisades.”
Stories like this, tied to the anniversary, remember the devastation. For Redick, the reminders are constant.
“There are certainly stories like us. Like, now we’re settled. But I know so many people that aren’t still settled,” Redick said. “And it’s just amazing to see their … spirit and hope and optimism. We all have bad days, but the resiliency really just stuck out to me about everyone in that community.”
Rec Sports
UW-La Crosse aims to break attendance record Saturday during Bubba’s Youth Day honoring coach Moran Lonning’s son
UW-La Crosse is inviting the community to Mitchell Hall on Saturday for a day of play and remembrance, dedicated to the legacy of Charlie “Bubba” Lonning Weber.
The festivities kick off at from noon-2:45 p.m. with the Charlie’s Kids fest, and lead into the UW-L women’s basketball game after that, where attendance is free and they hope to break the WIAC single-game attendance record of 2,112 fans.

The game will also feature a deeply personal tribute, as the Eagles take the court in special jerseys. Each jersey will be inscribed with the names of 19 infants who have passed away, serving as a visual memorial to raise awareness for pregnancy and infant loss.
Know before you go: Bubba’s Youth Day & Charlie’s Kids fest
If you are planning to help “Fill Mitchell Hall” Saturday, here is the schedule and what you need to know:
- Charlie’s Kids fest (Noon–2:45 p.m.): The pre-game party takes place in the Mitchell Hall Fieldhouse. It features inflatables, obstacle courses, and activity stations for kids (preschool through 8th grade).
- The Big Game (3 p.m.): Stick around as UW-La Crosse Women’s Basketball takes on UW-Platteville. This is the official push to break the WIAC attendance record of 2,112 fans.
- Admission is FREE: Both the fest and the basketball game are free for fans of all ages.
- Registration & Waivers: While the event is free, children participating in the fest must be accompanied by an adult. You can save time by signing the required waiver online before you arrive.
- The Cause: The event is hosted by Bubba’s Fund, which supports the Charlie’s Kids Foundation. Their mission is to provide SIDS education and “sleep safe” resources to new parents, a mission that has already significantly impacted childcare safety in the La Crosse area.
While the record is a target, organizers say the primary goal is to “Fill Mitchell Hall” with support for a cause that has already transformed local childcare safety.

The event supports Bubba’s Fund, established by UW-L women’s basketball coach Moran Lonning and her husband, Alex Weber, after their son Charlie passed away in 2024 at just three months old.
Since then, the fund has reached a major milestone in successfully providing automated external defibrillators (AEDs) to every state-licensed childcare facility in La Crosse.
Saturday’s events will help sustain that momentum and support “Rising Athletes,” a nonprofit that removes financial barriers for local youth sports.
Charlie’s Kids Fest at Mitchell Hall Fieldhouse is free for children (preschool through 8th grade) and features inflatables, obstacle courses, plus a chance to play alongside UW-L student-athletes.
Parents are encouraged to sign a participation waiver in advance at bubbasfund.org.
Moran was a guest on La Crosse Talk on Thursday morning with Sean Dwyer.
La Crosse Talk airs weekdays at 6-8 a.m. Listen on the WIZM app, online here, or on 92.3 FM / 1410 AM / 106.7 FM (north of Onalaska). Find the show on Apple Podcast, Spotify or here.
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