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Sliding mitts are baseball’s ‘must-have,’ even if at youth levels, they’re all fashion, no function | National

PITTSBURGH (AP) — Andrew McCutchen hasn’t had the conversation with 7-year-old son Steel yet, but the Pittsburgh Pirates star knows it’s probably coming at some point. Steel, already playing in a youth baseball league, will probably come home at one point and ask his five-time All-Star father if he can have whatever hot item his […]

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PITTSBURGH (AP) — Andrew McCutchen hasn’t had the conversation with 7-year-old son Steel yet, but the Pittsburgh Pirates star knows it’s probably coming at some point.

Steel, already playing in a youth baseball league, will probably come home at one point and ask his five-time All-Star father if he can have whatever hot item his teammates might be wearing during a given spring.

McCutchen plans to accommodate Steel up to a point. The oldest of McCutchen’s four children is already rocking an arm sleeve, just the way dad does.

Yet if Steel is hoping his father will spring for a sliding mitt — a padded glove a player can slip over one of their hands to protect it should the hand get stepped on while diving headfirst for a base — he probably shouldn’t get his hopes up.

McCutchen, who has stolen 220 bases at the major league level, has never worn one. And he’s quick to point out the next time the cleat of a fielder mashes his hand will also be the first.

Still, the 38-year-old understands. Once upon a time, he was a 20-something who epitomized baseball cool, from his dreadlocks (long since shorn) to his goatee to his rope chain to the occasional skull cap he wore underneath his batting helmet, all of it designed to accentuate McCutchen’s innate blend of talent and charisma.

“It’s all about the drip,” McCutchen said with a smile.

Even if the “drip” (Gen Z slang for stylish clothes and their accessories) emphasizes fashion over function, particularly when it comes to the gloves — which look a bit like oven mitts — that are becoming just as ubiquitous in the Little Leagues as they are in the major leagues.

Safety and self-expression

Former major leaguer Scott Podsednik (career stolen base total: 309) is credited with “inventing” the sliding mitt during the late stages of his 11-year career.

Tired of having his hand stepped on, Podsednik worked with a hand therapist for a solution. The initial mitts were relatively simple. A 2009 picture of Podsednik sliding into second base shows his left hand covered in what looks like a padded modified batting glove, all wrapped in black to match the trim on his Chicago White Sox uniform.

Things have gotten considerably more intricate over the years. Google “sliding mitt designs” and you’ll find themes ranging from the American flag to an ice cream cone to aliens to a poop emoji ( yes, really ).

Scott McMillen, a lawyer in the Chicago area, had no plans to get into the baseball accessory business. He first took notice of sliding mitts when his son Braydon, then 10, pointed out one of his teammates had one and said basically, “Oh hey dad, wouldn’t it be nice if I had one, too.”

They headed to a local sporting goods store, where McMillen was surprised at the variety available.

That was around 2021. By early 2024, McMillen had launched “ Goat’d,” a specialty baseball accessory company with everything from sliding mitts to batting gloves to arm sleeves to headbands and more, many of them religiously inspired.

Sales during their first full year? Over 1 million units.

“We were surprised at how large the marketplace is,” McMillen said.

Maybe he shouldn’t have been.

Youth sports have bounced back from the COVID-19 pandemic. The Aspen Institute’s 2024 State of Play report noted that the participation levels in sports among children ages 6-17 were the highest they’ve been since 2015. Baseball’s numbers have steadied following a decline. Little League International told The Associated Press last fall that more than 2 million kids played baseball or softball under its umbrella across the world, an uptick over 2019.

Many of those kids are also fans of the game, some of whom may have noticed their favorite major leaguer sporting a mitt when they’re on the bases. Yes, that was San Diego Padres star Fernando Tatis Jr. sliding across home plate ( feetfirst, by the way ) with a bright yellow mitt on his left hand in the ninth inning of a 2-1 win over Pittsburgh last weekend.

It’s one of the many ways in which the game has evolved over the years. When McMillen grew up, there wasn’t much swag to go around.

“We had our baseball uniform and our glove (and) everyone looked the same, everyone was the same,” he said. “Now, everyone wants to express themselves individually. The best way to do that without acting like a clown is to wear something that shows people who you are.”

Self-expression, however, doesn’t exactly come cheap, particularly in an era when top-of-the-line bats are $400 or more. What amounts to an entry-level sliding mitt can go for $40, but Goat’d and others have versions that can fetch double that.

That hasn’t stopped sales from being brisk, and McMillen points out it’s not merely a luxury item.

“We don’t play football with 1940s safety equipment,” he said. “You feel better in the (batter’s) box when you have something that protects you, right? With a sliding mitt, it’s also like, ‘Hey this is fun. It’s cool. I want to be like my fave high school player, like my favorite college player.’”

It’s becoming increasingly common for McMillen and other members of the company’s staff to spot Goat’d gear at the field. In recent months, they’ve popped up in youth tournaments from Georgia to Las Vegas, sometimes in the back pockets of players as young as 6 or 7. McMillen can’t help but shake his head to see his product become part of the time-honored tradition of kids imitating their heroes.

Which is good for business and, oh by the way, probably unnecessary.

The pressure to keep up

Here’s the thing: In most — if not all — youth baseball leagues, headfirst slides that would require a player to stretch out their hand to secure the bag are illegal.

In Little League, for example, stealing bases for players 12 and under is rare because the player can take off only after the ball has reached the batter. And even if they do bolt for the next base, they have to slide feetfirst. The only times in Little League that a baserunner can dive headfirst toward a base is when they are returning to it while in a rundown or during a pickoff attempt, both of which are also rare.

That doesn’t stop the players from wanting a sliding mitt. It also doesn’t stop their parents from buying them, all part of the pressure to “keep up with the Jones” that has practically been a part of youth sports culture since the first time somebody came to practice with a batting glove or wristbands.

It’s a phenomenon Chelsea Cahill and her family has known for years. The longtime educator who lives just east of Columbus, Ohio, has spent most of the last decade shuttling her three boys from practice to games to tournaments.

What she and her husband have learned over the years is that some trends come and go, but the pressure to have the right stuff remains.

“There’s always that feeling of ‘This is the next new thing’ or ‘This is what you’ve got to get,’” Cahill said.

They appeased their sons up to a point, but only up to a point.

Last summer their youngest son Braxton, then 11, and the rest of the kids on his travel team kept pestering their parents to buy sliding mitts. Entering the final tournament, the team moms decided to give in.

Sort of.

Rather than plop down that kind of money for something they didn’t actually need, the moms headed to a local dollar store and bought them actual oven mitts — the kind used to pull tonight’s dinner from out of the oven. Average retail price? Less than a cup of coffee at the gas station.

Oh, and the kids loved them, and wore them during the game. Cahill posted video of them playing with the mitts stuck in their back pocket to her TikTok account. The video is now at 12 million views and counting.

“They thought it was hilarious, but we didn’t really think they would wear them for the rest of the tournament,” Cahill said. “We were wrong. They really embraced it!”

Among viewers of that TikTok, by the way, were the people at Goat’d, who sent Braxton a couple of mitts as a result.

The good news is, Cahill now won’t have to buy one for Braxton this spring. Yet there’s also something else she has learned through the years: This time in her boys’ lives is fleeting.

For proof, just look at her calendar. Her two older sons — the ones who played travel baseball just like Braxton, and asked for all the cool stuff their teammates had, just like Braxton has — gave up baseball by the time they got to high school.

Her advice to parents who might be feeling the financial pinch of what it takes to play these days: Relax.

“We’ve learned as parents is to stop taking it so seriously,” she said. “They’re kids. Let them have fun.”

The reality

A day after hundreds of members of the Monroeville Baseball and Softball Association marched through the Pittsburgh suburb’s well-appointed community park, the regular season is in full swing.

All four fields are alive with the chatter of coaches, parents and boys and girls aged anywhere from 5-12.

Over on Field 1, the Rays are in the middle of their season opener. Playing first base, Josiah Jones has his glove at the ready, with a black sliding mitt noticeably sticking out of his left back pocket.

Per the league rules, the Rays and the other players at the “Bronco” level (ages 11-12), play actual full-on baseball. They can take leads and steal bases whenever they like, though headfirst slides are only allowed when returning to a base, just like in Little League.

Longtime MBSA executive commissioner Josh Plassmeyer is milling about, trying to keep tabs on everything. Plassmeyer outlawed sliding mitts on his son Grant’s 10-and-under tournament team, calling them a “distraction” because players would spend so much time fiddling with them once they got to first base, they would miss signs from the third-base coach.

About 50 feet away, Jones settles into the box and rips a ball to left-center field. His long legs carry him past first base, and he cruises into second with an easy double.

As his teammates erupted in the dugout, Jones beamed for a brief moment. Then, as the opposing pitcher stepped onto the rubber, he took an aggressive lead off second and eyed third.

His back pocket, the one where his sliding mitt had been 30 minutes before, was empty.


AP MLB: https://apnews.com/hub/mlb





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Kelly Drive closed as thousands of youth rowers compete on Philadelphia’s Schuylkill River for the Stotesbury Cup Regatta

PHILADELPHIA (WPVI) — The 98th Stotesbury Cup Regatta is temporarily suspended on Friday due to a storm delay. Officials sent out a message just before noon saying all further launching is suspended until further notice and to take cover. The event draws thousands of youth rowers, who were set to compete on the Schuylkill River […]

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PHILADELPHIA (WPVI) — The 98th Stotesbury Cup Regatta is temporarily suspended on Friday due to a storm delay.

Officials sent out a message just before noon saying all further launching is suspended until further notice and to take cover.

The event draws thousands of youth rowers, who were set to compete on the Schuylkill River Friday and Saturday.

The two-day event is billed as the largest high school rowing competition in the world.

Thousands of young athletes from crews across the country will be competing against each other, moving their oars in unison to propel their boats through the waters of Philadelphia’s Schuylkill River.

Organizers say 800 boats will hit the water at some point during this competition.

The regatta is organized by the Schuylkill Navy of Philadelphia, which is the non-profit that governs Boathouse Row and will host several events through the summer.

The organization also focuses on a year-long effort of teaching student athletes river safety and rowing techniques to prepare them for competition on a global stage.

Friday’s competition was schedule to go from 7:30 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. and picks up again Saturday from 8 a.m. to 5:30 p.m., with finals competition beginning at 1 p.m. Saturday.

Copyright © 2025 WPVI-TV. All Rights Reserved.



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Friday Night Nets, a free youth basketball program, returns to Newport News

NEWPORT NEWS, Va. — Friday Night Nets, a basketball initiative aimed at keeping kids and young adults out of trouble, is returning to Newport News this summer. The free event will be held at Denbigh Community Center and Achievable Dream Tennis Center every Friday night until Aug. 22. Youth, 17 and under, are allowed to […]

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NEWPORT NEWS, Va. — Friday Night Nets, a basketball initiative aimed at keeping kids and young adults out of trouble, is returning to Newport News this summer.

The free event will be held at Denbigh Community Center and Achievable Dream Tennis Center every Friday night until Aug. 22.

Youth, 17 and under, are allowed to play from 6 p.m. to 8 p.m. — anyone over 18 can play from 8:30 p.m. to 11 p.m.

Basketball is the main focus of the weekly event, but there are also plenty of other fun activities for attendees, such as free food, haircuts, eGaming, and many community resources.

This program was started by Mayor Phillip Jones last year with the intent to curb crime among the city’s youth.

Returning attendee Antonio Clements says this program helps keep him busy.

“I can get into a couple of situations that I know I shouldn’t be involving myself in, but on the court it’s just on the court,” Clements said.

Registration is open on the Newport News Parks and Recreation website.





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County Seeks Proposals for Youth Sports Grant

  MAYVILLE, N.Y. —The Chautauqua County Youth Bureau is looking to increase the positive impact that athletics have on young people in the county.  The Chautauqua County Department of Mental Hygiene and Social Services (DMHSS) is accepting applications for funding provided by the Office of Children and Family Services (OCFS) to support Youth Sports Programs […]

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MAYVILLE, N.Y. —The Chautauqua County Youth Bureau is looking to increase the positive impact that athletics have on young people in the county.  The Chautauqua County Department of Mental Hygiene and Social Services (DMHSS) is accepting applications for funding provided by the Office of Children and Family Services (OCFS) to support Youth Sports Programs for under-resourced youth under the age of 18. 

For the purposes of this funding opportunity, the following program/service areas have been identified as priorities:

Youth Sports Education Funding (YSEF) – Programs that enable youth to be active and encourage physical fitness. OCFS encourages a wide and flexible definition of sports that includes organized activities with movement, including physical fitness activities such as, but not limited to yoga, hiking, dance, and active outdoor pursuits.

Youth Team Sports (YTS) – Programs that support an organized physical activity. OCFS defines “team sport” as an organized physical activity in which groups of two or more individuals compete with two or more opposing individuals. Sporting activities where individuals engage in competition on behalf of an organized group including, but not limited to, team tennis, team golf, or racing sports such as swimming or skiing, are included in this definition. 

Eligible applicants should be from interested non-profit community-based organizations, cities, towns, and villages within Chautauqua County with a federal identification number and charity registration number that is able to meet the County’s insurance requirements. The grant program, created under the New York State Office of Children and Family Services (OCFS), and will run during the program year October 1, 2025 through September 30, 2026. The grant may be used to fund programming that provides opportunities for youth in under-resourced communities to learn and participate in sports programming. 

Program costs can include the following:

  • Coaches/instructors/direct service staff/mentors (including training/professional development)
  • Referee fees
  • Scholarships
  • Purchase of equipment or uniforms
  • Capital investment (e.g., swimming facilities, fields, fences, storage, lighting).
  • Instruction or coaching necessary to support youth’s ability to participate in team sports.
  • Facility/field space

The application period for the Youth Sports grant begins May 16th and closes June 17th   at 3:30 p.m. The Request for Proposal (RFP), which outlines all criterion, is available on the Chautauqua County Website (chqgov.com/YouthGrantFunds). Funding decisions and awards will be based upon New York State Office of Children and Family (OCFS) guidelines. 

For more information, contact the Chautauqua County Youth Bureau at kimballn@chqgov.com.

 



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Trump’s DEI approach shows he likely didn’t coach youth sports

Trump’s DEI approach shows he likely didn’t coach youth sports By Tom Tyner • May 16, 2025 1:30 am I don’t know this for a fact, but I would bet that Donald Trump never coached any of his kids’ soccer, baseball or basketball teams. I say this because I think Mr. Trump has a […]

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Trump’s DEI approach shows he likely didn’t coach youth sports

I don’t know this for a fact, but I would bet that Donald Trump never coached any of his kids’ soccer, baseball or basketball teams. I say this because I think Mr. Trump has a mistaken notion of what diversity, equity and inclusion really means. I coached both my kids in multiple sports over many years, and everything I know today about diversity, equity and inclusion I learned from coaching youth sports.

Let’s start with diversity. On my daughter’s soccer and basketball teams, every year we had girls with blond hair, girls with dark hair, and at least two girls with red hair. If I had coached a few more years, I suspect we’d have had girls with pink hair or lime green hair and artfully coifed hair of colors never seen in nature on the team, and they’d have been just as welcome as everyone else on the team.

Equity? All my soccer coaching was done at the parks and rec level where there were no tryouts and the coaches were volunteers (or in some cases, if you happened to miss a parents’ meeting, were volunteered). The only rules of soccer we needed to understand was that if it moves, kick it, and if it doesn’t move, kick it until it does. At that level of play, coaches needed only a whistle and a cursory understanding of the nuances of the rule of offsides. If you wanted to play on a parks and rec league team, you got on one. My little league and youth basketball coaching experience was more limited, but still no kid was turned away if they wanted to play on a team, even those who actually didn’t really want to play on a team, but whose parents outvoted them so they played.

I learned very early in my youth soccer coaching days that most of the girls on the team just wanted to play a little soccer and have a little of fun, particularly if that fun included laughing at their coach whenever he tried to demonstrate a sophisticated soccer move, such as kicking a ball or dodging a kicked ball or hunting for his missing whistle. Winning was less important than having a good time with their friends. I therefore made sure that every girl on the team got an equal amount of playing time in every game so they all felt equally included as members of the team, even those girls who were only playing because their parents wanted them to play. I figured even if the girls didn’t really want to play, their parents deserved the chance to see their daughters on the field for as much time as every other parent saw their daughters on the field.

I suspect Mr. Trump would have seen youth sports as a zero-sum game where, for some kids to be declared winners, an equal number of kids needed to be seen as losers. But there’s much more than keeping track of winners and losers going on in youth sports. There’s exercise and fresh air and tasty treats after a game or match. There’s learning new skills and making new friends and spending time with old friends. There’s traveling to exotic new places like the Tri-Cities, Spokane and Bellingham to play soccer with other kids with different accents and different color hair and skin and jerseys. There’s that special feeling of being a part of something bigger than yourself, of giving every ounce of yourself for your teammates, of being part of something special and lasting. There’s also lots of laughter and muddy cleats and icy fields and long rides home in cars full of sprawling girls and the unforgettable aroma of dirty socks.

Trying to stay on top of the latest dumb thing our President has done has diverted many of us from noticing some of the more interesting things happening in 2025. For example, I bet you didn’t realize that 2025 is the first year that’s a square number since 1936. The square root of 2025 is 45 and the square root of 1936 is 44. The next year that’s a square number will be 2116 (46 x 46). See? Isn’t that more interesting than nonsense about reopening Alcatraz as a prison or invading Greenland?

Tom Tyner of Bainbridge Island writes a weekly humor column for this newspaper.





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Paper routes nixed for younger kids in New York | News, Sports, Jobs

Jess Cadwallender makes his rounds delivering the last afternoon edition of The Free Lance-Star Friday, June 12, 1998, in Fredericksburg, Va. (William Helton Jr. — The Free Lance-Star via AP) ALBANY — For decades, a carveout in New York’s child labor laws allowed kids as young as 11 to legally partake […]

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Jess Cadwallender makes his rounds delivering the last afternoon edition of The Free Lance-Star Friday, June 12, 1998, in Fredericksburg, Va.
(William Helton Jr. — The Free Lance-Star via AP)

ALBANY — For decades, a carveout in New York’s child labor laws allowed kids as young as 11 to legally partake in the time-honored tradition of a paper route.

Flipping papers into suburban hedges, bicycling through snow squalls, dodging dogs and getting stiffed for tips became a rite of passage for generations of youths.

But a change to the law quietly made via the state budget this month makes clear the job is now not allowed for anyone under 14 years old. The move was first reported by Politico.

The change comes even though paper boys and girls have mostly gone the way of phone booths, mimeograph machines and their urban “newsie” forebears who shouted “Extra! Extra!” on street corners.

While many teens used to take on paper routes as after-school jobs, that became rarer decades ago as more daily newspapers switched to early morning deliveries. Newspapers are now increasingly online and tend to rely on adults with cars to make home deliveries, according to industry watchers.

“The need for a workforce of kids to go throwing newspapers on stoops is just a thing of the past,” said attorney Allan Bloom, an employment law expert with the Proskauer firm.

Lawmakers made the change as part of a broader update of child labor laws. Bloom likened it to a “cleanup” as lawmakers streamlined the process for employing minors and increased penalties for violating child labor laws.

Diane Kennedy, president of the New York News Publishers Association, said she was not aware of any newspapers in New York using youth carriers.

Christopher Page recalled buying his first guitar on earnings from a paper route started in the late ’70s in suburban Clifton Park, north of Albany.

“I just had a 10-speed that I destroyed. It was truly rain or shine. I’m out there riding the bike or even in the winter,” said Page.

When dogs chased him on his bike, Page would ward them off with his shoulder bag full of newspapers.

At age 13, Jon Sorensen delivered the Syracuse Herald-American on Sunday with his 11-year old brother in the Finger Lakes town of Owasco from the back of their mother’s Chevy station wagon.

“That was back when papers were papers — a lot of sections and a lot of weight,” recalled Sorensen, now 68 and Kennedy’s partner. “I can remember trudging through the snow. … I don’t think I ever dropped one, because if you did you had to be heading back to the car and pick up another copy.”

Sorensen stayed in the newspaper business as an adult, covering state government and politics for papers including New York Daily News and The Buffalo News.

“The hardest part of the job wasn’t delivering the paper, it was collecting,” Sorensen recalled. “It wasn’t always easy to get people to pay up.”














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Lady Pirate Youth Basketball Camp is taking registrations

The Bluffton Lady Pirate Youth Basketball Camp will be held on June 24 and 26 from 5:00-7:00 p.m. This camp is open to all girls entering grades 3-6 and will be held in the Bluffton High School gym. Staff will be Bluffton High School Girls Basketball coaching staff as well as current Lady Pirate basketball players. Participants will need […]

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The Bluffton Lady Pirate Youth Basketball Camp will be held on June 24 and 26 from 5:00-7:00 p.m.

This camp is open to all girls entering grades 3-6 and will be held in the Bluffton High School gym.

Staff will be Bluffton High School Girls Basketball coaching staff as well as current Lady Pirate basketball players.

Participants will need t-shirt, shorts, tennis shoes and a water bottle. The cost is $30 per camper.

Please send in registration by June 9 to be guaranteed a T-shirt and basketball.



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