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Q&A: Chuck Todd says youth sports could help save local news

This article was originally published by Northwestern University’s Medill Local News Initiative and is republished here with permission. Few people have as much experience in political media as Chuck Todd, who hosted NBC’s public affairs program “Meet the Press” for nine years and worked at the network for almost two decades. He stepped down as anchor of […]

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This article was originally published by Northwestern University’s Medill Local News Initiative and is republished here with permission.

Few people have as much experience in political media as Chuck Todd, who hosted NBC’s public affairs program “Meet the Press” for nine years and worked at the network for almost two decades.

He stepped down as anchor of “Meet the Press” in 2023 following a change in management at NBC News and left the network earlier this year. In 2024, he’d criticized NBC on the air for hiring former Republican National Committee Chair Ronna McDaniel as a contributor. The network soon backtracked on the hire.

He’s now the host of “The Chuck ToddCast,” and he’s turned much of his energy toward addressing America’s local news crisis and the collapse of its business model.

His idea: Local youth and high school sports could help resurrect the local news ecosystem.

Medill’s Local News Initiative spoke with Todd last week about why he’s made this a priority of his and how he’s seen the landscape shift through his time covering politics.

Answers have been edited and condensed for clarity and brevity.

Eric Rynston-Lobel: When you first started in politics and media, what do you remember the local news ecosystem looking like?

Chuck Todd: I started professionally in the world of media in 1992. Started working for a publication called The Hotline. What it was was a compendium, or an aggregation — we weren’t using that word then. We were locally sourced political information written for a professional audience here in Washington. I was probably as big of a consumer of local news as anybody in D.C. We tried to get our hands on every Sunday paper we could get, even if it was a day late.

Fast forward to today, if you’re trying to figure out who’s running in a swing congressional seat in Kansas, you might be better off subscribing to Cook Political Report or one of the insider publications in D.C. because there’s nobody who’s a beat reporter for the third congressional district in Kansas anymore. There was a time where there were probably 50 people I would’ve rattled off and said, “Oh, that guy’s the expert in politics in Iowa, in South Carolina.”

Rynston-Lobel: As you’ve seen this infrastructure crumble, what impact have you seen it have on the way politics gets covered as well as the issues people care about and how they’re interacting with their government?

Todd: If the conversation is, “Do you feel like you know what’s going on in your community?” or when you ask people, “How do you find out?” What you end up finding out is, “Well, I got a Facebook group,” or, “There’s a listserv.” “I follow this.” If you want to know what’s happening in your community, we’ve made it where people have to find out on their own. We don’t work the other way. It doesn’t get pushed to them.

The first three hires I would make starting a local news organization would be a lead high school sports reporter, a micro weather forecaster and a consumer/food reporter, somebody who every day lets you know where stuff was cheaper — groceries, restaurants to take your kids. The newspaper was such an elegant delivery system. It had news for news junkies; that’s nice. But it was also the place where you went for commerce, to buy and sell stuff, to find a job, to follow your favorite sports team, maybe to do some puzzles, maybe to entertain yourself. So how do you recreate that experience in this more modern, digital era?

Rynston-Lobel: I want to dive more into this local sports idea. From what I’m understanding, your argument is basically that you see local high school and youth sports as the way to get people to build up that trust, and through that, then you can start delivering other types of information that’s going on beyond sports?

Todd: I view it as the most sustainable stream. I think the nonprofit model has a lot of limitations to it, including the fact that to some people, “nonprofit” is code for “leans left” if you’re not careful. With the whole NIL thing that’s happening in college sports, you have the expansion of opportunities in sports to pay for college, so what’s that going to mean? We’re about to see an explosion in youth sports participation. I have a friend of mine whose kid is getting NIL money for beach volleyball. These universities are all expanding their bandwidth of what sports they want to specialize in. Look at softball: Texas Tech spent $1 million to get the best pitcher (NiJaree Canady), and it allowed them to get to the Women’s College World Series, and they ended up having their best attendance they’ve ever had for softball in Lubbock, Texas. That is going to trickle down.

Think about the demographic of the parents of a kid in youth sports. They’re all under the age of 45, which is a demographic that nobody in the news business has right now. That’s why I think it’s a lucrative base to start from. Too many local news start-ups start with trying to get the news junkies to pay for subscriptions to pay for it, but I think you’re a closed audience there. That instead, you start with the widest-possible pool of people to begin with and also are desirable for advertisers so you can have an ad-based system.

Rynston-Lobel: So what are you envisioning?

Todd: I don’t want news behind a paywall. I think a paywall is for tiers, but the basics should be available to everybody. And then if you want more of something, you pay a little bit extra for that.

My vision is that the local news organization, they hold all the rights for all the youth sports. So if you can’t make it to your kid’s game, you’re watching the livestream on the local news site. They are your conduit.

One of the things I’ve learned as I’ve been doing my own fact-finding to see what publishers are needing, what’s missing out there and all that stuff is a lot of local businesses hate the Google ad network, but there’s really no other alternative. I think if you can build a locally-sourced ad network that doesn’t feel like you’re just having some algorithms decide where your ad shows up, that there’s also opportunity there. But the basic premise is that local sports and youth sports, if you could get that audience, that’s the better audience. It’s a better glue for a community. The red families and the blue families all want to see their kids play. It’s a safe space for advertisers.

Rynston-Lobel: What else have you found as you’ve done more research into this idea?

Todd: If you can find a way to fund journalism indirectly, then maybe you will also do what’s missing in local news right now, which is, the coverage that accidentally informs people who are not looking to be informed. That’s been the missing piece.

There’s a great study that a couple of academics did about 20 years ago. There’s always been this correlation between newspaper delivery to your house and voting. So these academics wanted to see if being forced to have a paper delivered to your house, would that increase the likelihood you would vote in the next local election? And sure enough, it did. Just the act of someone taking that paper off their doorstep and throwing it away, putting it in the recycle bin at least informed them when the election was. There were always members of the community that never intended to read the top stories in the paper, but because they went to the paper looking for something else, they accidentally got informed.

We’ve lost that, and I think the reason why there’s this complete disconnect sometimes between what people know or don’t know is that we’ve lost that one thing that we all looked at; we were all looking at the same headline. The people that didn’t want to be informed got informed of something, too. Now, if you don’t want to be informed, it’s a lot easier to stay away. To me, it’s on the local news organization to provide enough potential ways to get that person to consume something you produce.

If I were The Texas Tribune, I’d hire the best hunting columnist in America and only have them do reviews of new hunting rifles, how to build a better duck blind. What’re you going to do? You’re going to attract that audience that normally doesn’t interact with your news, and maybe over time, that audience, they trust that, “Oh, they hired this person, I trust this person, I really like their advice on what to purchase to make my hunting experience better. Maybe I’ll read their news stories too.” That’s the whole thesis on why local sports is a tentpole.”



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Despite youth, Magi not lacking in potential | News, Sports, Jobs

Mike Kraft/MDN Minot High freshman Nolan Moore returns a shot during practice at Hammond Park on Tuesday, Aug. 19. Moore will serve as the No. 1 singles player for the Magicians this season after the team graduated five seniors from last year’s squad. Add the boys tennis team to the list of Minot High fall […]

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Mike Kraft/MDN
Minot High freshman Nolan Moore returns a shot during practice at Hammond Park on Tuesday, Aug. 19. Moore will serve as the No. 1 singles player for the Magicians this season after the team graduated five seniors from last year’s squad.

Add the boys tennis team to the list of Minot High fall sports programs that are going through a youthful renaissance this season.

Not since his second year at the helm back in 2010 can Magicians head coach Scott DeLorme remember one of his teams being so void of upperclassmen. Fast forward to 2025 and DeLorme finds himself with a roster that features just one senior following the graduation of five of their top seven players from a year ago.

“I started in 2009 and I inherited a bunch of seniors,” DeLorme said. “2010 was a down year. It was a young team. A lot of kids who had played very little tennis. This team is not in that boat. We’ve developed a program here where we have kids playing all year round. Even though they are young, they’ve played competitive stuff, whether it’s tennis, whether it’s baseball, whether it’s hockey. They know how to compete and we just need to use that as a way to improve.”

Olver Thompson is the lone senior on the roster this season and was an All-WDA selection as a junior, along with departed seniors Aidan Diehl, Greyson Schaeffer, Thomas Griffith and Nolan Callahan. The Magicians also graduated Conor Odahlen.

Thompson rotated between No. 5 and No. 6 singles last season and compiled a team-high seven wins in West Region dual competitions. He teamed up with Griffith at No. 2 doubles and the pair placed fifth at the West Region tournament. Now, the Our Redeemer’s Christian School student will serve as No. 2 singles and he and freshman Nolan Moore will lead the Magicians as the No. 1 doubles pair. Thompson is embracing his new leadership role, taking lessons from last year’s senior class.

“It’s a lot of responsibility just keeping the culture how it’s been in the past all the years I’ve been in high school and even before that,” Thompson said. “Getting the next generation ready for Minot tennis. I’m enjoying it while it lasts. Every day at practice just being positive and coming here ready to learn and getting better is what the seniors all did and something I try to model myself after.”

Thompson’s new doubles partner will serve as Minot’s No. 1 singles player this season after placing seventh at the West Region tournament last year. As a freshman, Moore will likely play the majority of his singles matches against older, more experienced players, but he is up for the challenge. One player he is looking forward to playing the most is Mandan’s Jared Christen, who placed second at WDA behind teammate Karter Hatzenbuhler, and sixth at the state competition.

“It’s going to be pretty fun,” Moore said. “There’s a lot of good guys you get to play against. I’m just going to go out and play my best.”

DeLorme said his top four singles players have been determined, with junior Hunter Ressler getting the No. 3 spot and freshman Henrik Evanoff slotting into No. 4. The rest of the lineup is less clear, but will come into focus over the next month or so.

“Our top four is pretty well set,” DeLorme said. “Those four have separated themselves a little bit and then after that we have four or five guys who have a chance. They all kind of bring something different to the table. They all kind of have different skill sets and we’ll plug those four guys in our lineup whether it’s singles or doubles come tournament time and whatever pieces we need to fill, then we’ll look at the next four or five of who has what strengths to fill in those pieces. We have some options, but we’re going to have to see how the season plays out.”

The real puzzle that DeLorme has to solve is what to do with his doubles pairings. No longer does he have the luxury of automatically being able to slot in Diehl and Schaeffer at the No. 1 spot and feeling like he can put a win in pen before the match even begins. Diehl was a four-time All-WDA and three-time all-state selection, while Schaeffer was a four-time All-WDA and two-time all-state selection during their run with the Magicians. The pair won back-to-back WDA doubles titles as juniors and seniors and placed third at state last season.

“They’ve been a team knowing every time we played we were going to write them into that No. 1 spot in the lineup and they were as good as it gets as one of the top teams in the state for the last two or three years,” DeLorme said. “This year we definitely have some talent. Nolan Moore has been around for awhile, Oliver Thompson is a senior who’s going to have a heck of a season for us. We’re going to rely on those two guys very heavily early on in the year and then hopefully as we go forward over the next six weeks our 3-8 continually get better and by the end of September, early October, we’ve got multiple options for doubles and singles lineups in that respect that kids have made some improvement.”

Diehl is the second-most winningest player in the program’s history with 205 victories between singles and doubles, trailing only Josh Oothoudt (221). Diehl won six WDA dual matches last season, rotating between No. 1 and No. 2 singles.

DeLorme said there are a number of factors that go into creating doubles pairings, but there is something more important than anything tennis related.

“They’ve got to get along,” DeLorme said. “That’s the biggest part of it. Sometimes you’ll get a big server. Sometimes you’ll get a good returner. Ultimately it comes down to a lot of reps in practice, a lot of sets in matches during the season to see what plays together. Sometimes it’s the pair you least expect to be together and then all the sudden they turn into a decent doubles team. We really don’t know where we’ll go with doubles teams this year beyond Nolan and Oliver at the top spot. After that, we’ll try a whole bunch of combinations and well talk to the kids after each match weekly and just see what they think, what they like, what they didn’t like playing with so and so and when it’s all said and done we’ll have a little say, but players kind of dictate that on a comfort level.”

While the Magicians may not enter this season as the juggernaut they’ve been in year’s past, they also don’t expect to fly under the radar. Minot was picked to finish third in the WDA preseason coaches’ poll behind Mandan and Bismarck Legacy. The Braves enter as the favorite after claiming the WDA Tournament title away from the Magicians last year, winning the trophy for the first time in program history and snapping Minot’s three-year reign.

“We’re young, but I think the goal is still the same thing: get back to the state tournament and keep Minot High how it’s been,” Thompson said. “And win the West. That’s another thing we just try to do every year. It’s a tight top four as usual. Legacy will be good, Mandan will have a good team. But just focusing on ourselves is going to be the biggest thing and getting better every day.”

Since the start of North Dakota high school boys tennis in 1976, the Magicians have only twice failed to qualify for the state tournament (1984, 2009). While DeLorme expects there to be some growing pains, particularly early in the season, he knows his roster has the team to keep up the program’s rich tradition of making it to the state tournament once again.

“That’s our gold standard,” DeLorme said. “That’s the ultimate goal is to get to the state tournament. Once you get there anything can happen, but this team is definitely going to have to improve over the next six weeks to make that happen. We’re good enough, but so are three or four other teams. We just need to push them every day and we’ve had a good seven or eight first days of practice, so hopefully that continues.”

DeLorme will get his first look at the team when Minot hosts the annual Minot Round Robin tournament at Hammond Park and Cameron Indoor Tennis Center. The tournament opens on Friday, Aug. 22, with the dual team portion beginning at 9 a.m. at Hammond Park. The Magicians will have matches against Bismarck High, Bismarck Century and Mandan. Minot North and Bismarck Legacy will also be part of the festivities. The Magicians have won the dual portion of the round robin 27 times.

The tournament concludes on Saturday, Aug. 23, with the individual portion split across the two venues.



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Northwest Sports Update: Sounders move on to Leagues Cup semifinals, Mariners look to rally against the A’s at home

Seattle edged Puebla in shootouts last night at Lumen Field after the two clubs played to a scoreless draw in regulation. SOUNDERS NEWS The Sounders are moving on to the Leagues Cup semifinals. Seattle edged Puebla in shootouts last night at Lumen Field after the two clubs played to a scoreless draw in regulation. Sounders […]

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Seattle edged Puebla in shootouts last night at Lumen Field after the two clubs played to a scoreless draw in regulation.

SOUNDERS NEWS

The Sounders are moving on to the Leagues Cup semifinals.

Seattle edged Puebla in shootouts last night at Lumen Field after the two clubs played to a scoreless draw in regulation.

Sounders keeper Andrew Thomas made the game-winning save to secure the quarterfinals win.

They’ll now face the LA Galaxy in the tournament semifinals next Wednesday.

The Galaxy have the higher seed as the reigning MLS Cup champions, so the match will be played in California.

All four clubs remaining in the tournament – which pits 18 MLS teams against 18 teams from Mexico’s Liga MX – hail from the United States.

Inter Miami and Orlando City each won their quarterfinal matches and will play each other next week.

SEAHAWKS NEWS

Emotions ran high in the Seahawks’ joint practice against the Green Bay Packers.

ESPN’s Brady Henderson reports that there were roughly a dozen skirmishes in today’s two-hour session, including a few that escalated into full-on fights.

Packers right tackle Zach Tom was kicked out after exchanging punches with Seahawks linebacker Ernest Jones IV and cornerback Devon Witherspoon.

Packers quarterback Jordan Love described it as one of the bigger fights he’s seen in his career.

We’ll see if the intensity carries into the Seahawks’ final preseason game against the Packers at Lambeau Field this Saturday.

MARINERS NEWS

The Mariners are looking to collect themselves on their day off today after a rocky road trip out East.

Seattle’s on a five-game skid and have lost seven of their last eight games.

They just gave up 29 runs in their most recent three-game series against Philly.

The team added a potential reinforcement for its struggling bullpen earlier this week by signing former All-Star Michael Fulmer to a minor league contract.

The 32-year-old right-hander has made three MLB appearances this year, giving up three runs over roughly six innings with the Red Sox and Cubs.

The M’s are back home now for a six-game homestand, starting tomorrow with the Athletics.

Coverage begins at 6:00 and first pitch is at 7:10 on KPUG.

WNBA NEWS

Fans are packing WNBA arenas this year like never before.

Officials say the league has already broken its single-season attendance record, with two and a half weeks left in the regular season.

The league’s 13 teams have drawn just over 2.5 million fans so far, breaking the past record in 2002 when the league had 16 teams.

The surge in popularity has partly been attributed to the Caitlin Clark-Angel Reese rivalry that hit the league last year, along with the expansion Golden State Valkyries and expanded TV coverage.

According to Across the Timeline, the Storm have the fifth-highest attendance in the league, with nearly 12,000 fans heading to Climate Pledge each game.

FERNDALE YOUTH SPORTS

Youth sports organizers in Ferndale need your help.

Ferndale Youth Sports announced today that it’s secured exclusive rights to the NW Baseball Fields.

It’s looking for an individual or company to help scrape one or all four of the infields and dispose of the dirt.

Anyone who’s able to lend a hand can contact info@ferndaleyouthsports.com.



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Little League denounces sports betting on youth competition – NBC10 Philadelphia

This week, as usual, sports bettors can get action on MLB games from U.S.-based gambling sites. Meanwhile, at least a couple of offshore bookmakers are offering odds on games at the Little League World Series. Team managers, and Little League itself, are not pleased. “I’m not a fan,” said South Carolina’s manager Dave Bogan, noting […]

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This week, as usual, sports bettors can get action on MLB games from U.S.-based gambling sites. Meanwhile, at least a couple of offshore bookmakers are offering odds on games at the Little League World Series.

Team managers, and Little League itself, are not pleased.

“I’m not a fan,” said South Carolina’s manager Dave Bogan, noting he goes to Las Vegas twice a year. “It’s just not appropriate, it feels dirty, quite honestly.”

In news conferences throughout the Little League World Series, U.S. team managers have voiced their displeasure with gambling on their games — players at the tournament top out at 12 years old. Little League International also released a statement last week denouncing sports betting on youth competition.

“Little League is a trusted place where children are learning the fundamentals of the games and all the important life lessons that come with having fun, celebrating teamwork, and playing with integrity,” the statement said. “No one should be exploiting the success and failures of children playing the game they love for their own personal gain.”

BetOnline and Bovada are among the offshore sites offering daily odds on LLWS matchups. They are both based outside the United States and are both illegal to use in the U.S. and not subject to its laws. BetOnline is located in Panama and has offered sports betting and gambling since 1991. Bovada, a Costa Rica-based company, joined the scene in 2011.

BetOnline’s brand manager Dave Mason said in a post on X that BetOnline is making the moneylines itself and that it “ain’t easy.” He has posted odds on X throughout the tournament.

Jon Solomon, the community impact director of Project Play, an initiative of the Aspen Institute’s Sports and Society program, said there are negative effects on young players whose games are the subject of betting. Such wagering, he says, is fairly common.

In 2018, Project Play surveyed Mobile County, Alabama, and found that “26% of surveyed youth said they had played in a game where adults bet money on who won or the final score,” according to its State of Play report.

The report said that tackle football, basketball and baseball were more likely to be gambled on by adults according to the children surveyed.

“This is just, you know, bets that usually sort of happen, maybe at the field, or in the gym,” Solomon said in a phone interview. “Kids are already facing a lot of pressure in youth sports these days. It is a highly commercialized industry with a lot of people already making a lot of money.”

Here are the states that have the most Little League World Series titles.

When gambling is involved in the actual performance of the game, Solomon believes the pressure can be even higher. The report showed that gambling “was witnessed by both boys (33%) and girls (19%).” In professional and collegiate sports, Solomon noted instances of athletes getting harassed by gamblers — think any kicker who missed a last-second field goal.

“Now imagine the stakes for a more impressionable child, right, or teenager?” Solomon said. “It’s so unhealthy and so unneeded, and I think if anyone is betting on youth sports, they should seriously seek help because you have a serious addiction most likely.”

Hawaii Little League manager Gerald Oda is adamant that gambling on these games takes away from the “beauty” of Little League.

“This is the only tournament where you’re representing your local community,” Oda said. “It’s that innocence, that pureness that these kids show on the field.”

Oda believes the memories his 12-year-old players make are more important than the games won or lost.

“It’s about them experiencing this whole moment here. They’re going to have memories saying that when I was 12, this is what we did,” Oda said. “Gambling is here to stay, but I am thankful that Little League is very protective of what they have, and they should be. You know that pure joy and emotion whether you win or you lose, that’s the greatest thing.”

Solomon said youth sports is “all about the delivery of the sport” from leagues and coaches.

“Sports, if not delivered properly, can be harmful to children and betting on sports would definitely fall into that category of it being harmful,” Solomon said. Pressure from parents and coaches, as well as early sports specialization, can also negatively impact youth sports.

In 2018, the Supreme Court struck down the Professional and Amateur Sports Protection Act that made sports betting illegal across most of the U.S for over 25 years. Now, 39 states and Washington, D.C., have legalized sports betting but states don’t allow wagers to be made where those competing are under 18.

In keeping with those laws, no online betting sites such as FanDuel, Draft Kings or ESPN Bet offer lines on the LLWS and Nevada’s manager TJ Fechser hopes that doesn’t change.

“We’re in a big crazy world now and if we ever see publicized sports books throughout the world standardizing it, we have to really look into ourselves. Is this appropriate?” Fechser said. “I’m not the decider on this, but I don’t want to see it being standardized.”



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Sports foundation donations support youth across Hamilton

‘This is just the beginning,’ says HSG Foundation chair of first wave of donations to local charities focused on food security and education NEWS RELEASE HAMILTON SPORTS GROUP FOUNDATION ************************* Earlier this month, the Hamilton Sports Group (HSG) Foundation proudly made its inaugural round of charitable donations. This marks a meaningful milestone in the HSG […]

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‘This is just the beginning,’ says HSG Foundation chair of first wave of donations to local charities focused on food security and education

NEWS RELEASE

HAMILTON SPORTS GROUP FOUNDATION

*************************

Earlier this month, the Hamilton Sports Group (HSG) Foundation proudly made its inaugural round of charitable donations. This marks a meaningful milestone in the HSG Foundation’s commitment to supporting youth across the region. The funds were raised through initiatives led in partnership with FirstOntario Credit Union, a longstanding ally in promoting youth health and wellness in Hamilton and surrounding communities.

Donations were distributed to three community organizations that are actively improving lives through nutrition, education, and access to resources:

  • Food for Life – $5,000
  • Operation Backpack – $1,500
  • United Way Halton and Hamilton – $1,500

This first wave of giving underscores the Foundation’s mission to reduce barriers and create opportunities for young people to thrive. It also reflects FirstOntario’s growing legacy of local impact through collaborative programs including the Garney Henley Hat campaign launched earlier this year, which raised funds for the Foundation while honouring one of the Tiger-Cats’ most celebrated legends.

“Our work with the Hamilton Sports Group Foundation is deeply rooted in a shared commitment to community,” said Joanne Battaglia, senior vice president, marketing, communications and community partnerships, FirstOntario Credit Union. “We’re proud to support local charities that provide direct services to youth and families. Whether it’s through essential food security support, a commemorative merchandise campaign in support of community organizations, or football programming, we believe these partnerships help build stronger, healthier communities for all.”

These inaugural donations mark just the beginning of the Foundation’s giving efforts. With continued support from community members and local businesses, the Foundation is poised to expand its reach and deepen its impact throughout the region.

“This inaugural round of donations is a proud moment for our Foundation and a testament to the power of community partnership,” said Glenn Gibson, chair of the Hamilton Sports Group Foundation. “Thanks to the incredible support of FirstOntario Credit Union, we’re able to invest in organizations that are making a real difference in the lives of young people across our region.”

We thank everyone involved in making this inaugural contribution possible and look forward to sharing more stories of impact in the months ahead.

About Food For Life

Food for Life is a volunteer-powered, grassroots organization redistributing fresh, healthy food to those in need across Halton and Hamilton. Since 1995, it has relied on strong community partnerships and the support of 400 volunteers to amplify the impact of a lean, 22-member staff. Every $1 donated delivers $7 worth of nutritious food to families in need. Learn more online.

About Operation Backpack

Operation Backpack is a volunteer-led initiative providing backpacks filled with school supplies to children in need across Hamilton. Founded 14 years ago, the program now supports over 1,600 students annually, thanks to strong partnerships with the Hamilton Steelworkers Area Council, ArcelorMittal Hamilton East, the Hamilton Tiger-Cats, and other local supporters. Its mission is simple: help kids start the school year prepared and confident. Learn more online.

About United Way Halton and Hamilton

United Way Halton and Hamilton (UWHH) supports a network of over 100 local programs that help individuals and families thrive. Focused on addressing the root causes of poverty, supporting mental health, and enabling children and youth to reach their full potential, UWHH works collaboratively with community partners to drive lasting, measurable impact. Every dollar raised is invested locally to create opportunities and improve lives across Halton and Hamilton. Learn more online.

Staying informed is the best defence.

*************************



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Elimination stings, but Mexico team proud of their summer | News, Sports, Jobs

RALPH WILSON/Sun-Gazette Correspondent Iker Castaneda starts out on the mound for Mexico during the International game against Japan at the Little League World Series on Tuesday. Japan won 6-0. There was disappointment after Tuesday’s game from fans and players of the El Swing Perfecto Little league team from Chihuahua, Mexico. The Mexico team had a […]

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RALPH WILSON/Sun-Gazette Correspondent
Iker Castaneda starts out on the mound for Mexico during the International game against Japan at the Little League World Series on Tuesday. Japan won 6-0.

There was disappointment after Tuesday’s game from fans and players of the El Swing Perfecto Little league team from Chihuahua, Mexico.

The Mexico team had a tough run at the Little League World Series. Mexico fell to Chinese Taipei on the second day of the tournament, 3-0, and from there had to win two games in two days in the elimination bracket.

Mexico used five home runs, including a grand slam, to eliminate Puerto Rico on Saturday, 11-5, before bouncing earning a 2-1 thrilling win over Panama on Sunday.

Navigating the elimination bracket is far from an easy task, and unfortunately for Mexico, the run came to a close on Tuesday with a 6-0 loss to a strong Japan team.

But sitting alongside an interpreter at the post-game press conference, Mexico manager Esteban Gallardo wasn’t mad his team didn’t make a run. He wasn’t upset they didn’t win.

He had everything in perspective. This is the Little League World Series, and you’re among the best in the world.

“It’s a privilege to be here. We’re happy, but not satisfied with our actions. We didn’t perform as we expected, but we have strength to work harder and do better next year,” Gallardo said.

“It’s a magical tournament and I’m happy with the team that they worked hard,” Gallardo added. “We need to emphasize that they are kids and they are coming here to do their best.”

That’s the spirit of Little League at the World Series. Yes, everyone is playing to be named the best team in the world, run around the field at Lamade Stadium holding the Little League World Series championship and touch the bust of Howard J. Lamade after the final game. But the journey to get to South Williamsport is impressive in itself for all 20 teams that find themselves here.

“A lot of people are happy (back home) with the work that we did,” Gallardo said. “My mind is focused on work and trying to come back here and have better results because the majority of the goal is already established. (Getting here) is not an exception.”

Losing can teach lessons in life at the youth sports level. And losing at the World Series is no exception. It stings for the players from Mexico, but no doubt they’re looking at the positives to take away from it.

Gallardo sure did.

“Everyone can go and think about what they did so they can see the opportunities and continue working to be a better player and a better person,” Gallardo summed up.



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Guest Column: Youth sports build health, connections, lifelong skills | Columns

From small towns to big cities, Indiana’s tracks, fields and courts are alive with action. Thousands of Hoosier students are back to school and back to playing the sports they love. Beyond exercise and competition, participation in school and community sports remains among the most powerful ways for young people to build physical health, peer […]

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From small towns to big cities, Indiana’s tracks, fields and courts are alive with action.

Thousands of Hoosier students are back to school and back to playing the sports they love. Beyond exercise and competition, participation in school and community sports remains among the most powerful ways for young people to build physical health, peer connections and life skills that last well beyond the final whistle.


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