In Skate City: New York, you take your skateboarding game to the iconic streets of the Big Apple, where you can master hundreds of tricks in real-world locations. The game hit Apple Arcade on Friday, and is playable on iPhone, Mac and more. Skate City: New York is just one of the games just added […]
In Skate City: New York, you take your skateboarding game to the iconic streets of the Big Apple, where you can master hundreds of tricks in real-world locations. The game hit Apple Arcade on Friday, and is playable on iPhone, Mac and more.
Skate City: New York is just one of the games just added to Apple Arcade. Photo: Apple Arcade
Several other titles also joined Apple’s gaming service, including a remodeled version of the original Final Fantasy. Skate City: New York, created by Snowman and Agens, offers the entire trick list from previous Skate City titles, plus abilities including wall rides, boardslides, lipslides, tap grinds, late tricks and more.
Skateboard through the Big Apple in Skate City: New York
And it’s not the only option from the series on Apple’s service. In December, Apple Arcade introduced Final Fantasy IV (3D Remake)+. This modernized version enhances graphics, refines gameplay mechanics and includes newly recorded voice acting for story sequences. (Another installment in the long-running game franchise, Final Fantasy IV: The After Years+, also hit Apple Arcade in December.)
Looking ahead, February 6 will bring PGA Tour Pro Golf, which will feature iconic locations like Pebble Beach Golf Links and Harbour Town Golf Links. Players can participate in head-to-head matches and tournaments against other players or play practice rounds.
Rather than paying individually for games or enduring nagging to make in-app purchases in “free” games, Apple Arcade offers more than 200 choices for a single .99-per-month fee.
Source: Apple
Final Fantasy+ joins Apple Arcade
It’s a must for fans of New York City, as play moves between boroughs, subway tunnels and waterfronts. But don’t expect to memorize the routes — each run is a fresh experience, because the game generates new locations every time.
In addition, Friday brought Three Kingdoms Heroes, the latest in Koei Tecmo’s hit Romance of the Three Kingdoms series, to Apple Arcade. Also new to the gaming service are Wild West adventure Rodeo Stampede+ and the casual zen experience of It’s Literally Just Mowing+.
More new Apple Arcade games
Skate City: New York is ready to download and play now from the Apple Arcade section of the App Store. It is playable on iPhone, iPad, Mac and Apple TV, and supports external game controllers on any of these platforms. Final Fantasy+ is a remastered 2D take on the original game in the world-renowned series, now on Apple Arcade. You can relive the classic from Square Enix — or experience it for the first time — without needing a retro game emulator.
All of these, including Skate City: New York, are available with a subscription to Apple Arcade. There are no other costs — the service bans in-app purchases, ads and loot boxes.
Men’s And Women’s Track and Field Finish Regular Season In Cardinal Last Chance Meet
Women’s Track and Field | 5/12/2025 3:37:00 PM
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PITTSFORD, N.Y. – The St. John Fisher men’s and women’s track and field teams competed in the Cardinal Last Chance meet on Sunday at the Polisseni Track and Field Complex. Top Meet Highlights (Women)
Olivia Grinnell placed first […]
PITTSFORD, N.Y. – The St. John Fisher men’s and women’s track and field teams competed in the Cardinal Last Chance meet on Sunday at the Polisseni Track and Field Complex.
Top Meet Highlights (Women)
Olivia Grinnell placed first and met the NCAA regional qualifying mark in the 800m run with a time of 2:20.67.
Veronica Duell placed second in the women’s long jump (5.62 meters).
Ciarra Franz placed second in the 100-meter hurdles event with a time of 14.43 seconds.
Abigail Dorunda placed second in the 100-meter run (12.34 seconds).
Sophia Leach placed second in the 400-meter run (1:00.22).
Top Meet Highlights (Men)
Hayden Penna placed first in the pole vault with a mark of 4.60 meters.
Oren Welch placed fourth in the pole vault with a mark of 4.30 meters.
Ethan Fox placed second in the 100-meter run with a time of 11.02 seconds.
Manuel Sepulveda placed first in the triple jump, recording a mark of 14.58 meters.
Bryant DePaull placed first in the high jump at 1.91 meters.
Up Next
The Cardinals’ regional qualifiers will compete in the AARTFC Championships at Williams College on Wednesday and Thursday.
Corvallis’ Hunter Loesch commits to Griz track and field | Montana High School Sports
The Montana Grizzlies track and field program is adding the best athlete in the country for his event and all they had to do was look a few miles down Highway 93. Corvallis senior Hunter Loesch recently signed to compete for the Grizzlies in college. The Blue Devils standout is currently ranked No. 1 in […]
The Montana Grizzlies track and field program is adding the best athlete in the country for his event and all they had to do was look a few miles down Highway 93.
Corvallis senior Hunter Loesch recently signed to compete for the Grizzlies in college. The Blue Devils standout is currently ranked No. 1 in the nation for high school javelin after recently unleashing a toss of 214 feet, 8 inches at the Corvallis Quadrangular home meet on May 2.
No other athlete in Montana has thrown farther than 183 feet so far this season.
There are only four high schoolers in the country that have eclipsed 210 feet in the javelin this season, and the other three are all in Missouri.
Not all states offer javelin at the high school level: it’s offered in approximately 22 states offer javelin at their high school state championship meets with some of those being of the rubber-tipped variety.
Loesch will be the heavy favorite to win the javelin title in this year’s class A state championships, which begin on May 22 in Kalispell. Loesch previously placed third at state as a sophomore and second last spring as a junior.
Digital Transformation and Future Changes in the Sports Industry | Deloitte
Why undertake a digital transformation? There is no question that technology has transformed, and will continue to transform, businesses across all industries, radically altering both the customer experience and the inner workings of organizations. The sports industry, in particular, is undergoing rapid upheaval, and digital technology is unlocking unprecedented opportunities for growth. In order to […]
There is no question that technology has transformed, and will continue to transform, businesses across all industries, radically altering both the customer experience and the inner workings of organizations. The sports industry, in particular, is undergoing rapid upheaval, and digital technology is unlocking unprecedented opportunities for growth. In order to fully capitalize on those opportunities, however, sports organizations will likely need a digital overhaul. “Doing digital” is not enough: They will have to embed digital in every aspect of the business, transforming people, processes, and technology.
Going through any kind of organizational transformation is not to be taken lightly. But given the significant opportunities that exist for sports organizations, the undertaking is well-worth considering. These opportunities fall into four categories.
Broaden content reach
Technology is playing a larger role than ever in the lives of fans, opening the way for sports organizations to create new, innovative customer experiences. Partnering with broadcasters and new distribution platforms can give fans the experiences they want, and capture viewership across multiple devices, including mobile.
The rise of the smartphone and the tablet may have contributed to an erosion in live game attendance, as more people switch to live streaming. Attendance for the National Football League (NFL) and Major League Baseball (MLB) is below 2007 levels, while both National Hockey League (NHL) and National Basketball Association (NBA) attendance has declined since the 2012-2013 season.1 At the same time, over-the-top (OTT) platforms are emerging as the new engine for growth: While the NFL has seen a drop in TV ratings, fans streaming NFL games increased 25 percent in 2017.2
Sports organizations need to strategically leverage digital media to build direct connections with fans. One way is to partner with broadcasters to master content across multiple channels, which also allows for a wealth of real-time marketing opportunities. Ultimately, digital optimization of content across platforms will help broaden content reach for sports organization.
Athletes In-Issue. https://images2.minutemediacdn.com/image/upload/v1746383055/images/voltaxMediaLibrary/mmsport/si_swimsuit/01jte8n89em29qehznfz.jpg. https://images2.minutemediacdn.com/image/upload/v1746140503/images/voltaxMediaLibrary/mmsport/si_swimsuit/01jt71b5k632thzr7s6f.jpg. Editor’s Letter 2025. Meet All 2025 Models. https://images2.minutemediacdn.com/image/upload/v1746922665/images/voltaxMediaLibrary/mmsport/si_swimsuit/01jtyb8mw936sj39xv37.jpg. Every 2025 Location It used to be that women athletes were exceptions. In order to exist at all they had to prove they were good enough to be the one woman who could train with the men. They had to sue for opportunities […]
Athletes In-Issue. https://images2.minutemediacdn.com/image/upload/v1746383055/images/voltaxMediaLibrary/mmsport/si_swimsuit/01jte8n89em29qehznfz.jpg. https://images2.minutemediacdn.com/image/upload/v1746140503/images/voltaxMediaLibrary/mmsport/si_swimsuit/01jt71b5k632thzr7s6f.jpg. Editor’s Letter 2025. Meet All 2025 Models. https://images2.minutemediacdn.com/image/upload/v1746922665/images/voltaxMediaLibrary/mmsport/si_swimsuit/01jtyb8mw936sj39xv37.jpg. Every 2025 Location
It used to be that women athletes were exceptions.
In order to exist at all they had to prove they were good enough to be the one woman who could train with the men. They had to sue for opportunities to play. They had to practice in old jerseys and in run-down gyms. They had to work full-time jobs on top of their full-time jobs to pay for the sport that defined them. They had to let the jokes about their bodies and their talent on sitcoms and Saturday Night Live and in school hallways roll off their backs. They had to sneak into men’s only races, or start their own sports leagues, or file lawsuits against federations that paid them less just because of their gender.
But none of the powerhouse athletes in this issue knew a time when women’s sports were nonexistent, or against the rules, or banned altogether. Title IX and the Battle of the Sexes were ancient history by the time they were all joining their first toddler gym classes. Serena and Venus Williams were already household names and the ’99ers had proven that women’s soccer could pack stadiums and make Sports Illustrated covers in time for these girls to hang their posters on their childhood bedroom walls.
Today, all of those exceptions have made way for a generation of women athletes to come pouring through that shattered glass ceiling—and these women are pushing the sports world, and culture in general, forward with abandon.
Just having women athletes to look up to was enough for some of these women to pursue sports themselves. When Suni Lee was 6, she watched clips of the 2008 U.S. Olympic gymnastics team endlessly, then tried to mimic the moves she saw at home. “I started breaking stuff and doing flips on the bed, and finally my mom got sick of it and just put me in gymnastics,” says Lee. Today she has six Olympic medals, including an all-around gold in Tokyo.
Suni Lee was photographed by Ben Horton at The Boca Raton. Swimsuit by OYE Swimwear. Swimsuit embroidered by Abbode. / Ben Horton/Sports Illustrated
Those same ’08 Games are a vivid memory for heptathlete Anna Hall. Since her dad coached track and field, Hall and her sisters gathered around excitedly to watch every event. They saw a young Allyson Felix shine, but another moment caught her attention, too: when Lolo Jones, the favorite for the 100-meter hurdles, clipped a hurdle and lost her lead, missing out on the podium altogether. “I think seeing everyone’s reaction to something bad happening at the Olympics made me realize how big it was,” Hall says.
And that bigness called to her. “That was when I was first like, O.K., this is what I want to do. I’m gonna go there. It just felt really important.” She was only 7 at the time, but this past summer, at 23, Hall made that dream come true in Paris, representing Team USA in the heptathlon.
When Jordan Chiles was first starting in gymnastics, she idolized Shawn Johnson and was told she could be the next Gabby Douglas. Before long, she was competing alongside some of her idols. “I was the youngest national team member, so I was able to see the dedication and passion they brought to the sport,” Chiles says. She has been embraced by the older generation and pushed the new generation forward, as a two-time Olympic medalist with a flair for tattoos and pop music. Her collegiate floor routines have become consistently viral videos, and in March she was named one of Time’s Women of the Year.
Ali Truwit was photographed by Ben Horton at The Boca Raton. Swimsuit by HAUS OF PINKLEMONAID. / Ben Horton/Sports Illustrated
While earlier generations of women athletes often had to hide their love for sports or their burgeoning athleticism because even their own families would call it unladylike, Gen Z athletes were often raised by parents who wanted to enjoy sports with their kids. Freestyle skier Eileen Gu’s mom first put her in ski school at Lake Tahoe when she was 3. “Mom really loved to ski, so she would drive four hours away to Tahoe,” says Gu. “And I’m an only child, so she thought ski school was better than babysitting, because I got to be athletic and socialize with other kids.” Her mom gets to ski a lot more now, because she accompanies Gu, 21, around the world while she competes. This year, Gu, who has two Olympic gold medals, added to her haul by capturing her 18th World Cup event, making her the winningest free skier ever—woman or man.
Eileen Gu was photographed by Ben Horton at The Boca Raton. Swimsuit by MBM Swim. / Ben Horton/Sports Illustrated
Cameron Brink, the No. 2 pick in the 2024 WNBA draft, knew basketball was a possible career path long before she started playing at age 12. Brink’s mother worked at Nike, bringing in the first era of female basketball players to the brand. “You can feel a shift, when you have those women to look up to,” says the Los Angeles Sparks forward. “Playing basketball for a living is a huge privilege, but none of this would have happened without the women before us.”
As the children of two professional tennis players, Nelly Korda and her two older siblings were encouraged to be athletic. “I started playing sports when I started walking, it’s just always something I’ve done. But our parents didn’t want us to feel like we had to play tennis, they wanted us to find what we were passionate about,” Korda says. It was her older sister Jessica’s interest in golf that got Korda and the rest of the family on the green. “Golf was a game we could all do together. You can be chill and have fun, and then if you are serious it can be intense,” she says. Soon enough, Korda followed in her sister’s footsteps and took golf very seriously, joining the LPGA tour at age 18. Today, she’s the top-ranked women’s golfer in the world.
Caroline Marks was photographed by Ben Horton at The Boca Raton. Swimsuit by It’s Now Cool. / Ben Horton/Sports Illustrated
Becoming an elite athlete wasn’t on Gabby Thomas’s radar as a child. But she was encouraged by her mom to try any sport she wanted: horseback riding, basketball, tennis, gymnastics and soccer. “Sports became a strong part of my identity and shaped who I am,” Thomas says. Ultimately her speed got her a scholarship to Harvard, and ultimately a professional and Olympic career.
Raised in Florida, Caroline Marks was most comfortable in the ocean. She also loved to hang out with her older brothers. So when they learned to surf, she followed. She won her first big trophy at an amateur competition in California. “I just remember getting this big trophy and thinking, This is the best thing ever. I just did what I love to do the most and regardless of where this is going to go, I just never want to stop doing this. Surfing is gonna be a part of my life forever,” she says. So far, the 2024 Olympic gold medalist has continued to find that joy and success on the waves.
Ali Truwit grew up in the water, too. But for her, it was a pool in Connecticut. She was a swim team kid who was constantly surrounded by competitive swimmers, some of whom would become Olympians. “I would always use them as inspiration,” Truwit says. The joy she felt in the water is what kept her training, which ultimately secured her a spot on Yale’s swim team. Just days after her college graduation, though, a shark attacked her and a friend while they were snorkeling and Truwit became a lower-leg amputee. But the empowerment and joy she’d found in the pool helped her embrace her body. “There were all these unknowns about what life without a limb is like, but swimming was such a valuable tool for me, because it was something that I could reclaim,” she says. Just a year after her accident Truwit was competing at the highest level—winning two medals at the 2024 Paralympics.
Gabby Thomas was photographed by Ben Horton at The Boca Raton. Swimsuit by GIGI C. / Ben Horton/Sports Illustrated
When Toni Breidinger was a kid in northern California, she tried gymnastics, piano and a bunch of other activities, but nothing really stuck. When her dad saw a billboard on the side of the road in Sonoma advertising a racetrack, he thought he would take Toni and her twin sister, Annie, to try a go-kart class. She was immediately hooked. They raced go-karts until Toni was 15, when she started to get opportunities to try out race cars. The thrill of driving, and winning, kept her moving up through the sport. Today, Breidinger holds the record for the most top-10 finishes in any NASCAR circuit by a woman, with 27.
The women athletes coming up today are fully cognizant of how far the sports world has come, and how far there still is to go toward gender equality.
In the traditionally male-dominated world of professional surfing, Marks got to compete in the first event to offer equal prize money for the men’s and women’s winners, at the 2019 Boost Mobile Pro in Australia. “I used to go out and there used to be hardly any girls just surfing, but now it’s like just as many girls are out there as guys,” she says.
Anna Hall was photographed by Ben Horton at The Boca Raton. Swimsuit by Andi Bagus. / Ben Horton/Sports Illustrated
The same thing is happening in other sports, as women’s purses catch up to men’s. But these athletes are anything but content, and it’s about more than money. Korda wants to see women’s golf on prime-time TV. Breidinger is hosting events for girls to get more women drivers to join her in NASCAR—she’s the only one in the Craftsman Truck Series this year, out of 35 drivers. And Truwit hopes the representation for amputee athletes increases with the explosion in coverage of women athletes in general. “The more you see people with differences doing these amazing things, the more you can see yourself in those places, too,” she says. “There’s still so much room to grow.”
Toni Breidinger was photographed by Ben Horton at The Boca Raton. Swimsuit by Andi Bagus. / Ben Horton/Sports Illustrated
Last June, Brink tore her ACL, ending her rookie season early. But undergoing surgery and doing rehab for the better part of a year gave her time to think about the WNBA in a big-picture way. “None of this would have happened without Sheryl Swoopes and all those women who came before. My rookie class, we say the same thing: We want the girls after us to have it even better,” says Brink.
How? Brink has her eye on salary increases and better benefits. And since endorsements are where most players make significant money, she hopes more diverse players get the kind of recognition she and her peers have. “Where are the endorsements for [the vets]?” says Brink. “Especially my teammates that are Black, that are gay, that use they/them pronouns. There’s a privilege that some of the rookies have in being younger and coming in at a good time, and a privilege of looking a certain way. There are women in the league that deserve more recognition, it’s just that simple: They deserve more.”
Jordan Chiles was photographed by Ben Horton at The Boca Raton. Swimsuit by I.AM.GIA. / Ben Horton/Sports Illustrated
Women athletes dominated headlines and medal podiums last summer in Paris, a trend that has been brewing for the past several Olympics. In 2024, women made up 50% of the athletes at the Games for the first time in history. But the gymnasts and track stars there, who usually get their moment on a Wheaties box once every four years, also started to notice a more sustained interest than before.
Cameron Brink was photographed by Ben Horton at The Boca Raton. Swimsuit by Tinye Swim. / Ben Horton/Sports Illustrated
Thomas, who was featured heavily in Netflix’s docuseries Sprint in the lead-up to the Games and then went on to win three gold medals in Paris, sees this momentum as fuel (a public health professional, she also works part-time at a volunteer health clinic in Austin, Texas, where she trains). “It’s so helpful and motivating for me to be in an era of sport like this, where women have so much purpose and we’re fighting for so much more than just what’s on the field or the track,” Thomas says. “It’s about making a difference to increase access and equity in our sport. That’s such a great moment to be part of.”
Lee and Chiles embody the change in what it means to be a gymnast today. When Lee was first starting out, she was shocked by how serious competitions were. Strict, abusive coaching styles were all too common, and the athletes were forced into harmfully rigid ideas about their bodies and how they should look. Few gymnasts had careers once they went through puberty. “Being a gymnast in a lot of people’s eyes was a white girl with a ponytail and I didn’t look like any of them,” says Chiles.
Nelly Korda was photographed by Ben Horton at The Boca Raton. Swimsuit by Laquan Smith. / Ben Horton/Sports Illustrated
In the past decade, however, national team members have bravely spoken out about the abusive coaching and environments they experienced, and the U.S. team has gotten older, stronger, healthier and more competitive. “I’m definitely stronger now than I was when I was younger,” Chiles says. “And I’ve accepted the fact it’s O.K. to be older in this sport.” Fans certainly have embraced that. At the Paris Games Lee says she felt like a rock star. “It was just the best feeling in the world to see that people actually cared about it,” she says.
The freedom, joy, and support enjoyed by today’s U.S. gymnasts has undeniably made the sport more fun to watch, and Lee wants that for all women athletes. “I feel like right now women are dominating in sports,” she says. “It’s such an amazing thing to see and it’s so exciting to watch. I feel like it can only get better from here.”
Montana State sweeps Big Sky weekly track and field honors
MSU Athletics and 406 MT Sports FARMINGTON, Utah — Montana State track and field swept all four Big Sky Conference athlete of the week awards, the league office announced Monday. Colby Wilson was named men’s field athlete of the week, Sam Ells was named men’s track athlete of the week, Megan Bell was named women’s field […]
FARMINGTON, Utah — Montana State track and field swept all four Big Sky Conference athlete of the week awards, the league office announced Monday.
Colby Wilson was named men’s field athlete of the week, Sam Ells was named men’s track athlete of the week, Megan Bell was named women’s field athlete of the week and Kyla Christopher-Moody was named women’s track athlete of the week.
The awards come after the Bobcats dominated the regular season-ending Tom Gage Classic on Friday in Bozeman.
Wilson, a redshirt senior from Olympia, Washington, earned his sixth weekly honor from the Big Sky this year and third of the outdoor season after clearing 17 feet, 4.25 inches in the pole vault Friday. The four-time Big Sky champion and 2025 Big Sky Men’s Most Outstanding Performer at the indoor championships in February leads the conference this season and is ranked No. 28 in NCAA Division I (17-08.25).
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Ells, a junior from Kalispell, earned his first career Big Sky weekly accolade after winning the 1,500 meters Friday. The 2024 All-Big Sky cross country honoree finished the race with an altitude-converted time of 3 minutes, 38.19 seconds, the third-fastest race in school history behind Duncan Hamilton (2023) and Harvey Cramb (2025). Ells punched his ticket to the NCAA West First Rounds with the mark and currently ranks No. 33 in the nation.
Bell, a freshman from Ann Arbor, Michigan, earned her first career Big Sky weekly honor. On her third attempt at 13-08.25 Friday, the pole vaulter cleared the bar and climbed to No. 3 all-time in Montana State history behind two-time national champion Elouise Rudy (2007) and Maisee Brown (2024). Bell currently leads the Big Sky in the pole vault and should be into the NCAA West First Rounds, ranking No. 42 in the West region.
Christopher-Moody, a graduate student from Royal Oak, Michigan, earned her third Big Sky weekly honor of this outdoor track and field season and seventh overall between cross country and track. The distance runner won the 1,500 meters Friday with an altitude-converted time of 4:19.54. The time was a about a second slower than her school record set earlier in the year (4:18.29) and was faster than the old school record that had been held by Holly Stanish since 1998. Christopher-Moody has set four school records this year: indoor mile, indoor 3,000 meters, outdoor 1,500 and outdoor 5,000.
The Bobcats head to Sacramento, California, this week for the 2025 Big Sky Outdoor Track & Field Championships, hosted at Hornet Stadium beginning Wednesday and continuing through Saturday.
Men’s Track and Field Competes at Widener Final Qualifier
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CHESTER, Pa. – The Washington and Lee University men’s track and field team competed at the Widener Final Qualifier on Monday with first-year Sam Daunt setting a new first-year record in the 5,000m. George Marable and Ryan McKenna both kicked off the meet with top ten finishes in the 400m […]
CHESTER, Pa. – The Washington and Lee University men’s track and field team competed at the Widener Final Qualifier on Monday with first-year Sam Daunt setting a new first-year record in the 5,000m.
George Marable and Ryan McKenna both kicked off the meet with top ten finishes in the 400m hurdles. Marable paced the way with a fifth place finish, crossing the finish line in a personal best time of 53.64s which improved his No. 2 all-time mark in program history. McKenna clocked in a time of 54.96s to finish in ninth place.
The Generals had a pair of student-athletes competing in the 5,000m this evening with Sam Daunt clocking in a new personal best with a time of 14:54.85 to finish in 24th place. His time marks the fastest first-year 5k in program history, surpassing Hayden Roberts’ time of 14:55.53 which was set at the Colonial Relays in 2021. William Dunaway clocked in a personal best time of 15:06.67 to finish in 29th place.
Evan Langhammer rounded out the action in the pole vault, finishing in fourth place with a mark of 4.65m (15′-03.00″).
MEET RESULTS
UP NEXT
The Generals will wait to see if their marks qualify for the 2025 NCAA Divison III Outdoor Track & Field National Championships on May 23 & 24 in Geneva, Ohio.
Nestled in the mountains of Virginia, Washington and Lee University is a proud member of NCAA Division III and the Old Dominion Athletic Conference. Founded in 1749, W&L is the ninth-oldest college in the United States and a top-ranked liberal arts university. With over 500 student-athletes in 24 varsity sports, the Generals have celebrated over 265 conference championships. Learn more about the Blue and White by visiting www.generalssports.com or on social media at @WLUGenerals.