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Seeley-Swan alum Klaire Kovatch on way to NCAA championships for Colorado State

FORT COLLINS, Colo. — Klaire Kovatch, a former Montana high school standout at Seeley-Swan, is headed to the NCAA Outdoor Track and Field Championships following a strong showing in the discus last Saturday at the NCAA West Regional meet in College Station, Texas. Kovatch entered the meet expected to qualify for nationals — her season-best […]

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FORT COLLINS, Colo. — Klaire Kovatch, a former Montana high school standout at Seeley-Swan, is headed to the NCAA Outdoor Track and Field Championships following a strong showing in the discus last Saturday at the NCAA West Regional meet in College Station, Texas.

Kovatch entered the meet expected to qualify for nationals — her season-best mark ranked No. 9 in the region. Her first attempt of 172 feet, 8 inches was not enough to put her over the line, but her second throw of 178-2 vaulted her into qualifying position.

Kovatch sat in 12th place with a handful of competitors still to throw, but the she on as the final scores came through to earn a berth to the national meet.

Kovatch, a redshirt junior at CSU, was a three time Class C state discus champion in high school and helped Seeley-Swan to an overall team title in 2021. She was the 2021 Gatorade girls track and field athlete of the year for Montana in 2021.

The NCAA Outdoor Track and Field Championships will be held June 11-14 in Eugene, Ore. Other area athletes to qualify include Montana State’s Rob McManus (3,000-meter steeplechase), Harvey Cramb (1,500 meters), Hailey Coey (long jump), and the Bobcats’ 4×400 women’s relay team of Olivia Lewis, Peyton Garrison, Giulia Gandolfi and Caroline Hawkes.





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Ava Grace Wheaton looks back on sophomore season with Jaguars

Ava Grace Wheaton looks back on sophomore season with Jaguars | Santa Rosa Press Gazette Please ensure Javascript is enabled for purposes of website accessibility Home Sports Ava Grace Wheaton looks back on sophomore season with Jaguars Thank you for supporting […]

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Ava Grace Wheaton made it to the NCAA track and field meet for the first time in her college career this season.


Wheaton, a Pace grad, competed in the javelin for South Alabama in the NCAA First Round at Hodges Stadium in Jacksonville.


(Photo provided by South Alabama Athletics)

 

The remainder of this article is available only for our website subscribers, who help fund our mission of keeping you updated on news you want and need to know. You can become a subscriber for as little as $5.67 a month.



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Volleyball Summer Hitting Camp in South Florida Now Enrolling Ages 13–17

FORT LAUDERDALE, FL, UNITED STATES, June 28, 2025 /EINPresswire.com/ — Fort Lauderdale United Volleyball (FL United VB) is excited to open registration for its Summer Hitting Training Sessions, a targeted program designed to help athletes ages 13 to 17 build power, precision, and confidence at the net. These small-group sessions are perfect for beginner and […]

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FORT LAUDERDALE, FL, UNITED STATES, June 28, 2025 /EINPresswire.com/ — Fort Lauderdale United Volleyball (FL United VB) is excited to open registration for its Summer Hitting Training Sessions, a targeted program designed to help athletes ages 13 to 17 build power, precision, and confidence at the net. These small-group sessions are perfect for beginner and intermediate players ready to elevate their offensive skills in a focused, supportive environment.

Led by FL United VB’s experienced club coaches, each session offers step-by-step instruction and high-quality reps that break down every phase of the attack—helping athletes develop stronger approaches, cleaner arm swings, and smarter shot selection.

With limited capacity and hands-on coaching, this is one of the most effective ways to improve your hitting game this summer.

Program Overview

Summer Hitting Training Sessions
– Ages: 13–17

– Location: FTL UTD Training Facilities
7601 SW 39th St., Davie, FL

– Days: Mondays & Wednesdays

– Time: 3:00 PM – 4:00 PM

Training Dates:
– June 30 & July 2

– July 7 & July 9

– July 21 & July 23

– July 28 & July 30

Capacity: Maximum 20 athletes per court to ensure personal attention.
What We’ll Train

– Approach Footwork: Master proper 3-step and 4-step approach patterns for better timing and power.

– Arm Swing Mechanics: Build a strong, safe, and efficient hitting motion.

– Timing & Contact: Learn how to consistently connect with sets at the ideal contact point.

– Target Hitting: Improve placement and accuracy to beat blockers and find open court space.

– Live Feedback: Receive real-time corrections and individual guidance from experienced coaches.

Why Join?

– Small Group Instruction: Low athlete-to-coach ratio for maximum reps and personal feedback.

– Game-Like Situations: Gradual progression from technique to competitive scenarios.

– Skill Confidence: Learn and refine mechanics in a positive, focused training environment.

“This program is perfect for any athlete serious about improving their offensive skills,” says Club Director Steve Patella. “Our coaches are committed to helping each player understand the mechanics and build confidence every time they step onto the court.”

Registration & Pricing

– Pricing:
– $70 for 2 sessions per week
– $45 per single session drop-in

Secure a spot today—space is limited and expected to fill quickly.

Visit www.ftlutdvolleyball.com/hitting-training-sessions for full details and registration.

About Fort Lauderdale United VB

Fort Lauderdale United Volleyball is a youth sports academy that offers elite-level volleyball training for athletes across South Florida. Built on the principles of passion, competition, and personal growth, the academy provides a curriculum-driven environment where players can train, compete, and thrive.

Charlotte Arkwright
Exults Digital Marketing Agency
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Fort Wayne’s Empowered shines at AAU volleyball junior nationals | Recreation

The championship of the 16 Club division in the AAU Junior National Volleyball Championships went to a Fort Wayne outfit, Empowered Volleyball Academy, on Tuesday. Empowered 16 Elite Black went undefeated in the tournament, finishing 13-0, and beat Illini Elite, which was also unbeaten entering the match, 27-25, 25-19 to capture the title. The tournament […]

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The championship of the 16 Club division in the AAU Junior National Volleyball Championships went to a Fort Wayne outfit, Empowered Volleyball Academy, on Tuesday.

Empowered 16 Elite Black went undefeated in the tournament, finishing 13-0, and beat Illini Elite, which was also unbeaten entering the match, 27-25, 25-19 to capture the title.

The tournament was held in Orlando, Florida, at the Orange County Convention Center and was the 52nd annual iteration of what has become the world’s largest volleyball tournament, with more than 6,500 teams competing.

The victorious Empowered team was coached by Natasha Nestleroad, whose staff of assistants included former Carroll volleyball standout Kassandra Till.

On the roster were several players who have already made their mark on the local high school volleyball scene, including Darcy Ritchie, from West Noble, who was a high honorable mention selection on The Journal Gazette’s All-Northeast Indiana team, and Amelia Kesterke of Lakewood Park Christian who was an honorable mention pick.

Empowered finished first in a division that featured 159 entrants. The team played all 13 of its matches over a four-day span, including four matches each Monday and Tuesday. It lost just one set Tuesday on the way to the title.

The group from the Summit City prevailed in tightly contested clashes with EVA 16 Blue (24-26, 25-21, 18-16), VAQUERAS 16F Mario (25-18, 22-25, 21-19), and River City Jrs 16 Navy (23-25, 25-23, 15-11).

Hudson Lake affected by dredging project

Public access to Hudson Lake may be disrupted beginning in early July through the fall due to a dredging project aimed at improving boating access.

The project, funded by the Indiana Department of Natural Resources Lake and River Enhancement program and Hudson Lake Conservation Association, will hydraulically pump sediment from the access channel and a navigation channel between the lake’s east and west basins to an upland area on the northwest end of the lake.

This may result in temporary blockage or restrictions near these sites due to dredging equipment or piping on the lake.

The DNR advises lake users to plan accordingly and boat responsibly near any obstacles until the completion of the project.

JG calling for more outdoor experiences

Fishing and hunting are enjoyed by young and old, but those are not the only pastimes for residents of northeast Indiana. Bird watching, hiking, camping, and all manner of sports activities are done daily.

The Journal Gazette would like to showcase all manner of recreational activities on the weekly Recreation page.

The Journal Gazette’s Outdoors experience feature lends a forum for readers to share their love of all things outdoors, or indoors, with their neighbors.

If you have an outdoor experience you’d like to share, email your stories and photos to The Journal Gazette at jgsports@jg.net. Please provide full names, ages, hometowns, type of animal and when and where caught.

Photos must be jpegs.



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Szentes & PSN triumph!Waterpolo Development World

If Egypt is the new powerhouse of the HaBaWaBa movement, as demonstrated last Saturday by Sodic Sports Club’s double in the U9 and U11 categories, the Hungarian school is a timeless certainty: the U13 finals day of the HaBaWaBa International Festival PLUS 2025 turned into a stage of excellence for Magyar waterpolo. In both the […]

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If Egypt is the new powerhouse of the HaBaWaBa movement, as demonstrated last Saturday by Sodic Sports Club’s double in the U9 and U11 categories, the Hungarian school is a timeless certainty: the U13 finals day of the HaBaWaBa International Festival PLUS 2025 turned into a stage of excellence for Magyar waterpolo. In both the women’s U13 tournament and the mixed team competition, in fact, the final challenges were entirely “made in Hungary”.

Szentes player celebrating the U13 Girls HaBaWaBa PLUS win (ph. Giacomello).

Szentes player celebrating the U13 Girls HaBaWaBa PLUS win (ph. Giacomello).

The final of the U13 girls’ tournament (11 teams participating) starring Szentes Starfish and OSC Girls from Budapest was exciting and balanced. The game, played point to point, ended in a draw (7-7) before being decided in an electrifying final chapter on shootouts. Thanks to saves by number 1 Emma Meszaros, it was Szentes Starfish who won the gold medal, ending the match on 11-10 score: it’s the first HaBaWaBa title for the club coming from South Hungary.

The U13 mixed-teams tournament had as many as 58 squads at the start, a marked increase from 51 teams registered in 2024. PSN Sharks – club from the city of Pecsi that won the U11 title at HaBaWaBa in 2019 – and Balaton VK from Balatonfuzfo were face to face in the final game. The two teams put on a superb technical and competitive match, leading the score by turns: a goal by the Sharks with 35’’ to go set the score at 6-6, sending the game to shootouts. At penalties phase, kids from Pecsi handled the tension better, winning overall 9-7 and clinching the second ever HaBaWaBa title for their club.  

PSN Sharks' joy after winning the U13 mixed teams tournament at HaBaWaBa PLUS 2025 (ph. Giacomello).

PSN Sharks’ joy after winning the U13 mixed teams tournament at HaBaWaBa PLUS 2025 (ph. Giacomello).

SEMIFINALS AND THIRD PLACE. In the morning semifinals of the U13 girls’ tournament, Starfish Szentes overcame the Swiss RZO U13D team 12-4, while OSC Girls won 8-3 over Entente 95 Filles from France. In the final for 3rd place RZO U13D defeated 7-3 Entente 95 Filles and took the lowest step on the podium. 

In the U13 mixed teams’ tournament, the semifinals ended with Balaton’s narrow victory over Vasas (7-6) and PSN Sharks’ success over Rapallo Gialli (9-4). The final for 3rd place ended with Vasas’ victory over the Italian team (13-11).

PSN celebration... (ph. Giacomello).

PSN celebration… (ph. Giacomello).

FAIR PLAY. During the closing ceremony, the winning teams of the Fair Play Trophy will also be awarded: the trophy is assigned to the most correct teams in the two tournaments based on the scores given by the juries. In this edition, it was lifted by Universo Silvi – at its first ever participation in the U13 girls’ tournament – and Pescara Nuoto e Pallanuoto, in the mixed team competition.

SEE YOU IN 2026. HaBaWaBa 2025 has thus come to an end, in the last two weeksthe “game of the ball in water” brought together at the Bella Italia & EFA Village in Lignano Sabbiadoro 147 teams from 5 continents and 15 countries: Australia, Croatia, Egypt, France, Greece, Hungary, Italy, Montenegro, Palestine, Monaco, Singapore, Slovakia, Switzerland, Turkey, United States. 

The event – supported by World Aquatics, European Aquatics, FIN, CONI and realised thanks to the help of sponsors Turbo, Compact Goals, Ossidabile and All Risks Consulenze Assicurative – proved once again to be a huge success, a true festival capable to create unforgettable memories in little athletes, coaches and fans, transforming waterpolo into a means of spreading the noblest values of sport. 

HaBaWaBa will return to Lignano Sabbiadoro in the summer of 2026, but the HaBaWaBa movement will continue to gather in the coming months in the various stages of the HaBaWaBa International Circuit scattered around the world, from Brazil to Egypt, from Spain to South East Asia.

PSN Sharks on the podium of HaBaWaBa PLUS 2025 (ph. Giacomello).

PSN Sharks on the podium of HaBaWaBa PLUS 2025 awarded by Olympic champions Zoltan Szecsi e Branislav Mitrovic (ph. Giacomello).

Szentes Starfish, HaBaWaBa International Festival PLUS 2025 U13 Girls tournament champions: Emma Meszaros, Lea Szolfi Ludescher, Boglar Toth, Petra Boldizsar, Eszter Tyukasz, Ajsa Jenei, Emma Kata Hekedi, Lena Kecskes, Kata Szabo, Lilla Galfi, Kiara Vanda Nagy, Liliana Berkes, Laura Somogyi, Luca Meszaros. Coach: Fruzsina Bravik.

 

PSN Sharks, HaBaWaBa International Festival PLUS 2025 U13 mixed teams tournament champions: Balazs Marcz, Zalan Tibor Kovacs, Peter Lubiczki,  Bence Daniel Chvojka, Manolo De Blasio, Adam Zalan Becsei, Zsigmond Labossa, Sebestyen Wagner, Otman Taya, Donat Horvath, Adam Kindl, Balint Jozsef Kovacs, Goran Predacs, Miroszlav Poszovacs, Dominik Kovacs. Coach: Tamas Voros.

***

 

Click here for further infos about HaBaWaBa

 

 



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AJEE WILSON’S 1:58.76 800 STEALS THE SHOW AT DENMAN/NJ INTERNATIONAL MEET AT MONMOUTH UNIVERSITY

AJEE WILSON’S 1:58.76 800STEALS THE SHOWAT DENMAN/NJ INTERNATIONAL MEETAT MONMOUTH UNIVERSITY WEST LONG BRANCH, N.J. – None of the 700-plus competitors at Monmouth University last Sunday (June 22.2025) went home happier than Ajee Wilson.The two-time USA Olympian, 12-time USATF National champion, World Indoor champion and Diamond League champion, a graduate of nearby Neptune High School, […]

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AJEE WILSON’S 1:58.76 800
STEALS THE SHOW
AT DENMAN/NJ INTERNATIONAL MEET
AT MONMOUTH UNIVERSITY

WEST LONG BRANCH, N.J. – None of the 700-plus competitors at Monmouth University last Sunday (June 22.2025) went home happier than Ajee Wilson.
The two-time USA Olympian, 12-time USATF National champion, World Indoor champion and Diamond League champion, a graduate of nearby Neptune High School, and Philadelphia’s Temple University,who continues to live and train in Philadelphia, ran her fastest 800 meters in over three years and was totally delighted.
Her 1:58.76 triumph. in the Joetta Clark Diggs women’s 800-meter run at the Elliott Denman/New Jersey International Meet at Monmouth’s Joe Compagni Track at Kessler Stadium, sent a clear signal that she was again ready to run with the national and global elite.
“It’s been three long years, my body was just not responding (to workouts and racing),” she said.a few minutes after the confidence-building triumph.
“But everything went great today. And, best of all, it was back home (in Monmouth County).”/
McKenna Keegan (1:59.73) and Kassidy Johnson (2;00.78) ran 2-3 in a race that, on a
sun-splashed, steamy late afternoon, saw all of them better the meet record that had been in the books for 35 years. Joetta Clark (now Joetta Clark Diggs) had run 2:01.50 in 1990.
NJ International events are named for prior greats of the sport – almost all of them New Jersey
products – And this two-lapper was titled the Joetta Clark Diggs women’s 800.
And, in an interesting happenstance, Clark Diggs (the four-time Olympian and National Track and Field Hall of Famer) was not only on the premises – and competing in the women’s Masters 100-meter sprint – but was there to cheer on Ajee Wilson and all those in “her event,” too.
Another Olympic 800-meter runner cheering from the sidelines – but not competing –
was Monmouth University alumna Allie Wilson (no relation to Ajee), who ran the two-lapper at the 2024 Paris Games,
It was thus a five-ringed gathering. All told, the three Olympians at the meet ran for this nation at seven Games from Seoul1988 to Barcelona 1992 to Atlanta 1996 to Sydney 2000 to London 2012 to Rio de Janeiro 2016
to Paris 2024.
With the 1:58.76, Ajee Wilson climbs to fourth on the USA list for this 2025 season which will be capped by the USA Nationals in Oregon in August and World Championships in Tokyo in September.
There’s still a long road to travel but the 1:58.76 gives Wilson, who continues to live and train in Philadelphia, her home (following her Neptune High School stardom) for the past dozen years, the confidence she has the ability to
make that journey as a member of Team USA.
For the third consecutive year, the meet was named for Elliott Denman, the West Long Branch resident who’d been a 1956 Olympian in the 50-kilometer race walk and twice a National champion, before moving from New York to New Jersey and starting a 35-year run as Olympic and all-sports writer and columnist for the
Asbury Park Press, then continuing to write for an array of other newspapers, magazines and websites.
Along the way, he found time to be a founding father of the “new” Shore Athletic Club in 1964, and saw the club gain major state, national and international prominence in the years since.
The New Jersey International Meet was staged by Shore AC in cooperation with Monmouth University, and directed by Shore AC officers Joe Compagni, Dave Friedman and Erin O’Neill and a team of volunteers Its history began as the Bob Roggy Memorial Meet at Holmdel in 1987,following the tragic death, in an accident following the 1986 Olympic Sports Festival in Houston, of the brilliant Holmdel athlete who’d risen to World Number One in the javelin throw.
Back on the track, fans were treated to a sizzling Dr. John Connors men’s 1500-meter race
won by Ben Allen of the Westchester County-based Empire Elite Club in 3:37.80 over Camden Gilmore (3:38.92) ,with four others under 3:44, representing sub-four minute mile pace.
“Great meet,” said Allen, a former Minnesota collegiate star at Concoridia-St. Paul. “Thanks to everybody here for putting it on. We need more meets like this.”.
Other top men’s track performers were Jonathan Farinha (10.47) in the Frank Budd Memorial 100, Jeff Chen (21,41) in the Andy Stanfield Memorial 200, Alex Amanywah (46.97) in the Larry James Memorial 400, and Will Culbertson (1:48.03) in the Rich Kenah 800, which saw eight more sub-1:50.
Other leading women’s racers were Rachel Taylor (12.01) in the Fred Thompson 100, Zoe Goldstein (23.79) in the Stanfield 200, Jane Underwood (53.79) in the Aliann Pompey 400, and Abbe Goldstein (4:13.69) in the in the Chrissy D’Alessandro Shaheen Memorial 1500.
Edward Williams sped the men’s Renaldo Nehemiah men’s 110 hurdle in 13.86; Sophia Myers claimed the Dawn Bowles women’s 100 hurdles in 14.03.
The Bob Roggy Memorial men’s javelin throw continues as a feature event in the meet and was
won this time by Chris Fredericks with a toss of 231-10…
Claiming the Barbara Friedrich Parcinski women’s javelin title was Julia Campezato with a 146-3 throw,
with Parcinski, the famed Manasquan High School and Newark State (now Kean University) graduate and 1968 Olympian. on hand to cheer her on.
Numerous brilliant peformances were recorded in the other throws.
Going 1-2 in the Ira Wolfe men’s hammer were the nationally ranked Tyler Williams (239-0), Jordan Crayon (233-11.)
Jordan West muscled out a 64-11 1/4 win over Chris Van Niekirk (64-5)t in the Al Blozis Memorial men’s shot put.
Paris 2024 Olympian and Princeton graduate Obi Amaechi took the Art Swarts women’s discus throw with a near meet record toss of 189-9; Noah Kennedy-White led the Swarts men’s discus at 170-11.
Princeton senior star Greg Foster Jr. extended the Herb Douglas Memorial long jump record to 26-0 1/4 in a duel with ex-Rutgers star A’Nan Bridgett (24-11 1/4.)
Mike Pascuzzo Memorial high jump ttitlists were Isaiah Harris (6-8) in the men’s event and Grace Campbell (5-10) in the women’s competition. Paul Richard Memorial men’s and women’s pole vault champions were Dalton Yeust (15-3) and Sydney Horn (13-11 1/4.) Tops in the Norman Tate triple jump were Matayo McGraw (49-0 1/4), men and Kayla Woods (43-2 1/4), women.
Leading rthe way in the Elliott Denman one-mile racewalk were Shore AC’s Ryan Allen, a Villanova senior, in 6:43.57, over Canada’s Dmitry Babenko. Dorit Attias of Lakewood led the women’s racewalk.
.. Numerous other men’s and women’s events were staged in the Open, Masters and Youth categories, , providing action on all levels. Perhaps the busiest athlete all day was Shore AC’s tireless. Masters Division international star Rick Lee, 64, of Bayville, Ocean County. He won the meet’s first event, the Horace Ashenfelter 2,000-meter steeplechase in 7:31.36, took his division of the Dr, Harry Nolan/Dr, George Sheehan Masters Mile in 5:34.73,, and was still running as the meet reached twilight, winning his Masters 5000-meter division in 19:00.12. Oh, and he added a little earlier speedwork with a 1:06.03 400.
“Not bad for the day,” said the stamina-laden Lee.
It’s just another chapter in his amazing career.
He’s just back from a 60-64 divisional win in the famed and ultra-grueling Comrades Double Marathon
in South Africa.
The Mary Conry Memorial women’s masters mile went to Josiah Tanner (6;04.55.)
A special feature once again was the Community Mile, in which over 30 took part, running, jogging, walking or strolling, in a benefit event for the Pancreatic Cancer Action Network, and Shore AC Development Fund.
In mid-meet ceremonies, scholarship awards were presented to scholastic senior stars May Hanlon of
Toms River North (the Dick and Pat Hill Memorial Award) and Cleatus Oakes of Point Pleasant Boro
and Liliah Gordon of Northern Burlington Regional (Shore AC Development Fund Awards.) Hanlon, just back from raising her personal high jump record to 5-7 1/4 placing sixth in the New Balance Nationls in Philadelphia, then took second in the Mike Pascuzzo HJ in this one.
Inducted into the Shore AC Hall of Fame were noted coaches Aliann Pompey (St. John’s
University), Leroy Hayes (Asbury Park High School) and Caleb Morris (Neptune
High School), and 400-meter standout Maurelhena Walles, now excelling in the
Masters ranks.
Earning the Chester Bowman Memorial “Chariots of Fire” award was
Shore AC charter member and former Monmouth (then-College) coach John Kuhi.
Full results at Vipertiming.com.

  • One of the finest and most prolific writers in our sport, Elliott Denman has written about our sport since 1956, when he represented the US in 1956 Olympic Games at the 50k race walk, the longest event on the Olympic schedule. A close observer of the sport, Elliott writes about all of our sport, combining the skills of a well honed writer with the style of ee Cummings. We are quite fortunate to have Elliott Denman as a friend and advisor.

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Sports gambling you know, investing in a baseball player's future earnings, you may not

Invest in an athlete and reap the rewards?Is this sports gambling?”No, this is an actual investment. This is like venture investing, like investing in startups,” said Rob Connolly, the co-founder of Finlete. So, for example, if Red Sox minor leaguer Jhostynxon Garcia makes the majors and signs a big deal, you make money, as does […]

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Sports gambling you know, investing in a baseball player's future earnings, you may not

Invest in an athlete and reap the rewards?Is this sports gambling?”No, this is an actual investment. This is like venture investing, like investing in startups,” said Rob Connolly, the co-founder of Finlete. So, for example, if Red Sox minor leaguer Jhostynxon Garcia makes the majors and signs a big deal, you make money, as does Finlete’s Connolly (think finance plus athlete), a startup that’s starting a new way of getting into the game for fans.”You’re able to buy shares and those shares are directly tied to that athlete’s future earnings,” he said. One of his clients is Garcia, the man they call The Password, who is playing center field and hitting over .300 for the Woo Sox.”We love him. He’s got that ‘it’ factor. We’re from San Diego, and we remember Fernando Tatis coming up, and Tatis had that swagger to him, and we see a lot of that same swagger in him,” Connolly said. You can sign up, make an account, and invest in his career for $1.36 a share, just don’t give out your password.The minimum investment is $300.The players get the money now; you would get it later.So, I know you’re asking, how much money can you really make?Garcia is the No. 5 prospect in the Red Sox organization.Were you to invest $1,000 and he becomes a huge success with, say, a $300 million MLB contract, you make around $20,000.”Especially when you start doing your homework and you look at what the top 100 baseball prospects’ average career earnings are when you go back 10 years, and you can connect the dots and see that this is an actual investment,” Connolly said.

Invest in an athlete and reap the rewards?

Is this sports gambling?

Advertisement

“No, this is an actual investment. This is like venture investing, like investing in startups,” said Rob Connolly, the co-founder of Finlete.

So, for example, if Red Sox minor leaguer Jhostynxon Garcia makes the majors and signs a big deal, you make money, as does Finlete’s Connolly (think finance plus athlete), a startup that’s starting a new way of getting into the game for fans.

“You’re able to buy shares and those shares are directly tied to that athlete’s future earnings,” he said.

One of his clients is Garcia, the man they call The Password, who is playing center field and hitting over .300 for the Woo Sox.

“We love him. He’s got that ‘it’ factor. We’re from San Diego, and we remember Fernando Tatis coming up, and Tatis had that swagger to him, and we see a lot of that same swagger in him,” Connolly said.

You can sign up, make an account, and invest in his career for $1.36 a share, just don’t give out your password.

The minimum investment is $300.

The players get the money now; you would get it later.

So, I know you’re asking, how much money can you really make?

Garcia is the No. 5 prospect in the Red Sox organization.

Were you to invest $1,000 and he becomes a huge success with, say, a $300 million MLB contract, you make around $20,000.

“Especially when you start doing your homework and you look at what the top 100 baseball prospects’ average career earnings are when you go back 10 years, and you can connect the dots and see that this is an actual investment,” Connolly said.

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