Sports
'Speed plays'
PHOENIX − What if he never hits a home run his entire major league career?What if he never drives in more than 50 runs in a season?But….what if Chandler Simpson changes the complete baseball landscape, exploiting his surreal speed and uncanny ability to get on base, allowing us to view and appreciate the game as […]

PHOENIX − What if he never hits a home run his entire major league career?What if he never drives in more than 50 runs in a season?But….what if Chandler Simpson changes the complete baseball landscape, exploiting his surreal speed and uncanny ability to get on base, allowing us to view and appreciate the game as if we’re turning the clock back a quarter-century ago.“That’s my dream,’’ Simpson, 24, tells USA TODAY Sports. “I feel like God gave me the gift to motivate and inspire other generations that come after me. I mean, I’ve heard it my whole life about the little power I have. But you don’t have to hit home runs in this home-run era. There’s other stuff that I can do well on the field that can make make up for it.“I want to prove that you can make it to the big leagues, succeed in the big leagues, and that speed plays.’’Follow every MLB game: Latest MLB scores, stats, schedules and standings.
And, oh, does Simpson ever know speed. Simpson, called up to the major leagues with the Tampa Bay Rays last week, may be the fastest man in the game. He has two stolen bases in six games. He has already turned routine ground balls to second base and one-hoppers to first base into hits, hitting .304 entering Saturday. He once scored from second base on a routine sacrifice fly in college. He was timed running to first base in just 3.88 seconds by scouts last week.
He stole 104 bases last season in 121 attempts at Class AA and Triple-A, becoming the first player to steal 100 bases in a minor league season since 2012, and only the third to accomplish the feat in the last 20 years.“I love stealing bases,’’ Simpson says. “It gets me real hyped because I know that when I get on, all eyes are on me. Everybody in the stadium, the pitcher, the catcher, the pitching coach, their manager, all of the fans in the stands, my manager, my teammates, they all know that I’m going to steal.“It’s man vs. man, me vs. you, and I feel that nobody can stop me.’’Well, there actually may be one way to keep him from stealing …“We were sitting around talking about how we can keep him from stealing bases if he gets on,’’ Arizona Diamondbacks veteran reliever Shelby Miller said. “We decided the best way may be to just throw over to first base three times. That way, if you don’t get him, it’s just a balk and doesn’t count as a stolen base.’’Says Diamondbacks starter Brandon Pfaadt, who faced him last week: “He’s an absolute game-changer with his speed. He’s like (three-time batting champion) Luis Arraez with speed. If Arraez could run like this guy, he’d probably hit .550. This guy is going to be pretty fun to watch, as long as you’re not facing him.’’
Next stop, to go where no player has gone since Vince Coleman in 1987, stealing 100 bases in the major leagues.
“I would love to see it,’’ Kenny Lofton, the six-time All-Star and five-time stolen base champion, tells USA TODAY Sports. “Finally, speed is starting to get back into the game thanks to him and people understanding just how important it is. Speed guys don’t get the glory. They’ve have never gotten the glory. Baseball doesn’t make it that important, they just keep talking about home runs.
“Well, if you want you to score runs, well, what better way than speed? Speed kills, but it’s never promoted. Hopefully, this young man can bring it back and show people just how important it is in the game. It’s time for baseball to praise and support guys like him, not just the home-run guys all of the time.’’
If baseball wants to only talk about home runs and power, Simpson may never have his name mentioned again the remainder of his career.Simpson went to the plate 1,119 times during in his three-year minor-league career. He hit exactly one home run.And, naturally, that one didn’t clear the fence, either.It was an inside-the-park home run on June 7, 2024 against the Biloxi Shuckers. Simpson merely slapped a ball past third baseman Brock Wilken, which then got away from left fielder Zavier Warren. The ball rolled to the fence, and by the time Simpson sped around the bases and slid into home, he had his first professional homer.It was his first home run since Feb. 25, 2022, when hit the only homer of his collegiate career, a grand slam against Gardner-Webb for Georgia Tech.Well, that actually didn’t go over the fence, either.“The right fielder went up to catch it,’’ Simpson said, “and it topped off his glove, and went over the fence.“But, hey, it still counted.’’Simpson, who entered high school at just 5-foot-5 and 130 pounds and is now 5-11, 170 pounds, proudly recalls that he did hit one home run at St. Pius X Catholic High School in Atlanta during his senior season where his mom is the principal. Atlanta center fielder Michael Harris, who grew up playing against Simpson since they were 6-year-old kids in Little League, and played as rivals during their summer travel leagues, remembers being a witness for the historic moment, with Simpson sprinting around the bases so fast that his own teammates had to tell him to slow down.So, considering Simpson’s absence of home-run power, pretty easy for the guys back home to provide good natured teasing?“How can you tease him?’’ Harris says. “He hits .350 wherever he goes. He steals 100 bases. He knows his game. He’s not a guy who’s going to try to hit homers. He knows he can get on base and make an impact with his legs.’’Says Rays reliever Eric Orze, who played with Simpson in the minors: “Dude is electric. It’s unbelievable what he does. He’s a threat just walking onto the field. He walks to the plate, can miss-hit a ball, and it’s a single. He hits the ball hard and it’s a double or triple. And as soon as he’s on first base, the pitcher is worrying because he’s going to take second base at some point. And once he does, he’s not stopping there.’’St. Louis Cardinals center fielder Victor Scott, one of Simpson’s closest friends who also grew up in Atlanta, says their speed is nearly identical. They finished in a dead heat in a foot race in 2023 − the year Scott and Simpson each stole 94 bases in the minors.Still, there’s a subtle difference.Scott had a career .264 batting average and .344 on-base percentage with 17 homers in his three minor-league seasons.Simpson has a career .324 batting average and .389 on-base percentage, with a strikeout rate of just 8.8%, with that one inside-the-park homer.“When he got called up and he FaceTimed me,’’ Scott said, “I think I was more excited than when I got called up. He’s just an unbelievable person. He was willing to go up against anybody who went against the grain of what his ideology was, and his success. Not everybody is blessed with an insane amount of power, hitting the ball with an exit velocity of 110-mph-plus, and hitting 450-foot home runs.“But guys like Chandler and myself can be trailblazers for the game. There’s more than one way to play this game, you can use your speed to bunt, steal bases, and impact games that way.’’Besides, as Simpson will attest, creating havoc on the basepaths during an inning can be just as alluring, if not a whole lot more, than spending 20 seconds to round the bases after a home run.“Whenever I step to the plate,’’ Simpson says, “I want to try to wreck havoc. They’re going to have to worry about putting me on base. They’re going to have to worry about me on base and its going to be a problem pitching to other people in the lineup. I want to be that guy who is feared by pitchers and fielders as well.’’Simpson, who didn’t even play the outfield until he was drafted in the second round of 2022, playing shortstop and second base his entire life, doesn’t want to be known simply as a speedster. Speed can be negated in the big leagues if you can’t get on base and can’t play defense. He has much bigger aspirations than being the next Terrance Gore or Billy Hamilton.He watches videotape of hitting champions Rod Carew, Tony Gwynn, Rickey Henderson, Wade Boggs and Arraez, and stolen base kings like Vince Coleman, Hamilton and Lofton. He examines tapes of sprinters, from everyone from Olympians Tyson Gay, Usain Bolt, Michael Johnson to determine what mechanics he can incorporate into his own game. He even talked to Gwynn’s son, Tony Gwynn Jr., seeking advice and what he learned from his father, the eight-time batting champion who died in 2014.“I’ve studied Luis Arraez, his hitting drills, what he does in the off-season, all of his hitting mechanics to be a better hitter,’’ Simpson says. “I feel like (Arraez) definitely doesn’t get the recognition that he deserves, winning three batting titles in a row with three different teams. Putting the bat on the ball, not striking out, getting on base, and hitting for average. I want to be that guy, too.’’And if Simpson is that guy, if he becomes a batting champion, steals 100 bases, or becomes a modern-day version of Ty Cobb who won five batting titles and led the league in stolen bases same season, look out world, a new brand of baseball could be coming.“He plays differently than what people are accustomed to seeing in this modern era of baseball,’’ Rays pitcher Pete Fairbanks says. “I think in some ways it’s a breath of fresh air to see somebody that has tailored their approach to their skill set. I think that anytime you see somebody that has that unique of a skillset, and then is willing to play within it, that’s something that is admirable. If he’s successful, you’re going to see a lot of people buy into it.’’Says Rays infielder Brandon Lowe: The Aaron Judges of the world are few and far between. But I think the Chandler Simpsons will probably be few and far between, as well. I mean, I don’t know that I’ve ever seen anybody float the way that he floats.’’The only real question is whether he can terrorize the opposition in the big leagues just as he did in the minors? Simpson has no doubt he will, proving everyone wrong at each level he played, so what’s one more step?“I think all of us have some questions about how’s his skill set going to play up here, right?’’ Rays manager Kevin Cash said. “People are curious to see how major league infielders again him. You can get a lot of infield hits in the minors, but can you do it up here?“We’re about to find out.’’Says Rays GM Eric Neander: The speed is top of the scale, but it’s that bat-to-ball skill that is unique. He doesn’t chase. He puts the ball in play at an extremely high rate. He controls the strikezone. There’s a reason he hit .355 last year, and it wasn’t just because he was fast.’’If successful, who knows, Simpson says, maybe the best athletes may start turning to baseball again, and the increase in young Black players will finally start to rise after being stalled at 6% on this year’s opening-day roster.
“I feel like there were a lot of Black players, but then it kind of dropped off,’’ Simpson says. “But now I feel like change is coming.
“Believe me, I’m ready to be part of it.’’
Around the basepaths
≻ Walt Jocketty, who passed away Friday at the age of 74, was one of the most genuine, sincere and fabulous GMs of his era.
There have been few executives more beloved than Jocketty, the architect of World Series championship teams in Oakland and St. Louis while also leading the Cincinnati Reds to the postseason.
“He’s tied for first,’’ Hall of Fame manager Tony La Russa said, “with the finest person I’ve ever known.’’
≻ The San Diego Padres pulled off the best trade never made this winter.
The Padres told every team in baseball that closer Robert Suarez is available with their money crunch, wanting to shed his $10 million salary.
Well, they did not get one single trade offer.
Not one.
Suarez has been perfect this season, going 10-for-10 in save opportunities with a 0.00 ERA and 0.455 WHIP.
≻ It has finally happened. They have begun work on the Athletics’ $1.75 billion Las Vegas ballpark site, grading the 9-acre stadium site.
The groundbreaking ceremony is scheduled for June. The stadium is scheduled to open before the 2028 season.
≻ What story evaporated more quickly this season? The torpedo bats or the Los Angeles Dodgers ruining baseball with their mammoth payroll.
The Dodgers are a sub-.500 team since opening the season 8-0 and the Yankees have discovered that it wasn’t the torpedo bats, but the Milwaukee Brewers pitching that caused their power surge.
≻ The Philadelphia Phillies, among other teams, already are keeping a close eye on Cardinals closer Ryan Helsley, who will likely be dealt by the trade deadline. Yet, the Phillies are adamant they will not include top prospects Andrew Painter or Aidan Miller in any trade.
The Arizona Diamondbacks, with lefty reliever A.J. Puk sidelined for the foreseeable future, also have interest in Helsley,
≻ Scouts have been in awe by Diamondbacks reliever Juan Morillo, who was discarded by the Dodgers and signed as a minor-league free agent by the D-backs. Morillo, who was just called up last week, has been lighting up the radar gun at 100-mph and has yet to give up an earned run.
“That will be the greatest minor-league free-agent signing of the year, hands down,’’ said one scout.
≻ The Brewers would love to have a mulligan and not expose pitcher Shane Smith to the Rule 5 Draft. The Chicago White Sox nabbed Smith with the first pick in December, and he is now their ace, going 1-1 with a 2.30 ERA and a 0.95 WHIP in his first five starts.
≻ The Yankees realized they have no choice but to take Devin Williams temporarily out of the closer’s role with his 11.25 ERA this season, but remain confident he’ll soon be back to being an All-Star caliber closer.
“When you go from a small market to New York, it’s a different animal,’’ one executive said. “It just takes awhile to get acclimated. He’ll be all right.’’
≻ The Brewers were planning to pounce on free agent first baseman Paul Goldschmidt this winter if Rhys Hoskins opted out of his contract, believing he’d have a huge bounce-back season. Hoskins elected to stay, and Goldschmidt, after having the worst season of his 15-year contract, signed a one-year, $12.5 million contract with the Yankees.
Goldschmidt has been everything the Yankees hoped for, and more, hitting .364 with an .877 OPS.
≻ You think the Dodgers’ new home clubhouse is fancy?
Well, it’s the first one that comes equipped with eight state-of-the-art, multi-function, heated-seat, bidet-equipped Japanese-style toilets.
The idea came from Roki Sasaki, who was trying to decide where to sign this winter, and told the Dodgers it would help persuade him to come their way with the new toilets.
“It sounds like a joke,’’ Sasaki told the Orange County Register, “but for me, it’s pretty important.’’
≻ No one has been crushed with more injuries to their outfield than the Tampa Bay Rays, who have four outfielders on the injured list and only three true outfielders on the roster with Christopher Morel and rookies Chandler Simpson and Kameron Misner. They acquired Travis Jankowski from the White Sox to give them a veteran reinforcement.
≻ The Toronto Blue Jays are still looking for a return on their 5-year, $92.5 million investment on outfielder Anthony Santander. He is hitting .182 with two homers and a .537 OPS.
≻ Remember when Kyle Tucker opened this spring by going 0-for-20 with the Chicago Cubs?
Neither does anyone else.
No one has made more money this first month of the season than Tucker, whose free-agent value has skyrocketed from $300 million to perhaps more than $500 million.
≻ Scouts are raving about D-backs prized infield prospect Jordan Lawler, who is lighting it up at Triple-A Reno, and predict that he could be their everyday second baseman next season while moving injury-prone Ketel Marte to first base.
≻ Atlanta is in no hurry to call up veteran closer Craig Kimbrel, whose fastball has been clocked at only 91-92 mph in his first two outings at Triple-A.
≻ Considering that Baltimore Orioles assistant GM Sig Megdal used to be an engineer at NASA, is it any surprise that the Orioles’ analytics department is working with engineering researchers to create AI technology to modify how pitchers are scouted and developed.
“We’re in the American League East with some very-large-market teams,’’ Mejdal told the Baltimore Sun, “and in order for us to succeed, we have to be very good at everything. To ignore a potential like this would be foolish.”
≻ Future Hall of Fame pitcher Justin Verlander, who’s 38 victories shy from 300, has gone six starts now without a victory, just one shy of the longest drought of his career.
≻ Kudos to veteran reliever Drew Pomeranz, who refused to give up after surgeries and injuries derailed his career since 2021, returning last week with the Cubs for his first MLB appearance since August, 2021.
≻ Prayers to Minnesota Twins legends Tony Oliva, 86, and Kent Hrbek, 64, who are recovering from having strokes within days of one another two weeks ago.
≻ It took 681 days, but there was Liam Hendriks finally stepping on the mound for the Boston Red Sox, after recovering from Stage 4 non-Hodgkins lymphoma and Tommy John surgery.
≻ The most emotional moment on the field this week came at Angel Stadium where Pirates starter Andrew Heaney, wearing No. 45 this season in honor of his late best friend, Tyler Skaggs, pitched six shutout innings in the Pirates’ 3-0 victory.
“It is a number that has meaning to me,” Heaney, who spent seven years with the Angels, told the Athletic. “But at the same time, it’s not my number. It’s my number. But I’m wearing it because it was his number.”
Skaggs died on July 1, 2019, after ingesting a lethal dose of fentanyl.
≻ While the Rays have no idea where they’ll be playing in a few years after pulling out of their deal in downtown St. Petersburg, the folks in Orlando announced they have received pledges of $1.5 billion towards a stadium project to lure the Rays.
≻ Has there been a better multi-year free agent signing than Nick Pivetta of the Padres, who is 4-1 with a 1.20 ERA and 0.767 WHIP? They signed him in spring training to a four-year, $55 million contract that is so backloaded that he’s making just $1 million this season.
You think the Baltimore Orioles, who have MLB’s worst ERA, and a whole lot of other teams wish they had taken the plunge?
≻ The scariest part of the New York Mets’ torrid start for the rest of the NL East is that they are doing this without starters Sean Manaea and Frankie Montas, and still have the lowest ERA in baseball.
≻ No one outside their own clubhouses believes the A’s or Marlins will be actual contenders in September because of their pitching flaws, but scouts have been quite impressed with their potent offenses, and firmly believe the A’’s will be in the postseason before they depart for Las Vegas in three years.
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Sports
2025 Nazareth Athletics Hall of Fame Class Revealed
General | 5/29/2025 12:16:00 PM Story Links ROCHESTER, NY – Seven student-athletes, the 2001 and 2002 women’s volleyball teams, and the first-ever coach of the men’s/women’s cross country and track and field programs, Scott Love, will be inducted to the Nazareth Sports Hall of Fame in 2025. The ceremony will take place […]

General | 5/29/2025 12:16:00 PM
ROCHESTER, NY – Seven student-athletes, the 2001 and 2002 women’s volleyball teams, and the first-ever coach of the men’s/women’s cross country and track and field programs, Scott Love, will be inducted to the Nazareth Sports Hall of Fame in 2025. The ceremony will take place on Saturday, September 20, 2025 in Beston Hall at Nazareth University.
The athletes from the class include 2016 men’s lacrosse graduates Luke Wooters and Troy Haefele, Alyssa Johnston ’13 (women’s lacrosse), Tim Zyburt ’16 (men’s volleyball), Taylor Pierson ’16 (women’s track and field), Brian Seeley ’05 (men’s golf), Ben Klempka ’05 (men’s tennis). The class is rounded out by the 2001 and 2002 women’s volleyball teams that advanced to the Elite 8 in consecutive seasons, and Scott Love who began the men’s and women’s cross country/track and field programs in 2003. The 2001 and 2002 women’s volleyball team will be inducted as “one” team.
Wooters is the all-time leader in men’s lacrosse program history with 363 points on 190 goals and 173 assists in 71 career games. Up until 2025 he was the all-time leader in goals scored before Quinn McKercher overtook the mark. The dynamic attackman was three times named a USILA All-American, including twice on the second team. The 2013 Empire 8 Offensive Player of the Year was named to the Empire 8 First Team three times and second team once. During his freshman campaign, he racked up 64 goals, which continues to be the best single season mark at Nazareth.
Haefele proved to be another standout on the lacrosse field for the Golden Flyers with 178 goals and 109 assists for 287 points. His 178 goals is the third best mark in school history, while both his assists (109) and points (287) rank fifth. Haefele was a four-time All-Empire 8 First Team selection and named USILA Honorable Mention two times. Haefele, along with Wooters, teamed up to win the Empire 8 Championship in 2013, while also making an NCAA Tournament appearance in 2015.
Johnston joins the 2025 hall of fame class after excelling in the midfield for four seasons, collecting four Empire 8 All-conference selections, including three on the first team. Her 149 career draw controls (2nd), 81 caused turnovers (3rd), along with points at 214 (6th) and goals 155 (6th) all rank among the program best. She was three times named all-region, including a first team selection in 2013. For three seasons, she was Nazareth’s leading score (2011-2013), including scoring at least one goal in 58 of 64 games. During her four-year run, Nazareth made the Empire 8 playoffs each season and she was an all-tournament selection in 2013.
2016 graduate Tim Zyburt was a monster outside hitter for the Golden Flyers. Upon graduation, Zyburt held the kills record at Nazareth with 1,411. That record held until 2025, when Owen Wickens surpassed with 1,508. He is second all-time in attack attempts (2,996), 8th in digs (55), 10th in total blocks with 257, sixth in sets played (428), and fifth in matches played (131). He was impressively a three-time all-american, including a first team selection as a junior and senior. The Wheaton, IL native was also a three-time First Team All-UVC honoree. The team leader in kills four years in a row, Zyburt helped the squad to a four-year mark of 105-28, with NCAA Tournament berths in 2013 and 2015.
Pierson made her mark in just three seasons for the Golden Flyers as a dynamic sprinter and long jumper, appearing in five NCAA Championships. She twice earned all-american honors after finishing 8th in the long jump at the 2013 NCAA Outdoor Championships at 5.73 meters (18 ‘ 9.75″) and fifth in the 2014 Indoor Championships in the long jump 5.55 meters (18 feet, 2 1/2 inches). For indoor, she won the long jump at Empire 8s and was part of the 4 x 400 winning team in 2013. For outdoor she was a two-time champion at Empire 8s in the long jump (2013, 2015). She is all over the Nazareth record book for top marks for indoor and outdoor in the long jump and 200. For indoor, she is among the best in the 60-meter, the 300, and the 4 x 200 and 4 x 400 relays. For outdoor she ranks among the best in the 100 and 4 x 400 relay.
2005 graduate Brian Seeley was a two-time Empire 8 Men’s Golf All-Star, including being named the Player of the Year in 2004 as a junior. He won the Empire 8 individual title in fall of 2004 with rounds of 77 and 75 to finish with an 8-over-par total of 152 at Seven Oaks Golf Club in Hamilton, NY. Seeley’s season scoring averages were 81.24, 80.00, 79.52 and 81.42 for a four-year average of 80.39 for 71 rounds. For his career, he delivered six other top 10 career finishes, including a seventh-place at the Empire 8 Tournament in fall of 2002. In his senior season, he was named a recipient of Robert A. Kidera Scholar-Athlete award in 2005.
Rounding out the individual student athletes is men’s tennis star Ben Klempka who ranks as the program’s all-time wins leader with 147 total (71 singles and 76 doubles). He was a three-time First-Team singles player for the Empire 8, three-time First-Team in doubles and one-time second team. In his freshman season he won 41 matches (18 singles and 23 doubles) in 2001-02 and 39 matches (18 singles, 21 doubles) as a senior in 2004-05.
The 2001 and 2002 women’s volleyball teams were among the best-ever at Nazareth, with each team advancing to the Elite 8 of the NCAA Division III Women’s Volleyball Championships. Coached by Linda Downey, Nazareth went 36-3 (7-0 in Empire 8) in 2001, falling to Wellesley in five sets in the NCAA Quarterfinals. In 2002, Nazareth was 36-6 overall (7-0 in the Empire 8), and falling to Trinity in the NCAA Quarterfinals at Nazareth.
Scott Love, who started both the men’s and women’s cross country, as well as track and field programs in 2003, completes the hall of fame class. Love coached back-to-back Empire 8 Men’s cross country runners of the year in Brendan Epstein (2007) and Nick Stenuf (2008). In 2007, Stenuf, Epstein and Jessica Brown all became Nazareth’s first qualifiers for the NCAA Championships in cross country. Stenuf returned to the cross country NCAAs in 2008, placing 19th to become the first-ever cross country all-American. Love coached the first-ever track and field all-American in 2006 with Nick Stenuf in the 800-meters.
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Sports
The Portland Bar That Screens Only Women’s Sports
When Jenny Nguyen was in her twenties, working as a chef in her home town of Portland, Oregon, she became a regular at pickup basketball games organized by a group of “lawyers, plumbers, women from all walks of life,” she told me recently. “The only thing we had in common was basketball.” Some of the […]

When Jenny Nguyen was in her twenties, working as a chef in her home town of Portland, Oregon, she became a regular at pickup basketball games organized by a group of “lawyers, plumbers, women from all walks of life,” she told me recently. “The only thing we had in common was basketball.” Some of the women became her close friends, and one became a longtime girlfriend. When they weren’t playing, they got together to watch women’s games at sports bars—or tried to. Persuading a bartender or a manager to turn one on was a “constant situation,” Nguyen, who is now forty-five, recalled.
On April 1, 2018, the group got lucky when they met at a bar to watch the final of that year’s women’s N.C.A.A. tournament, in which Notre Dame defeated Mississippi State by just three points, with a player named Arike Ogunbowale—now a point guard for the Dallas Wings—hitting the game-winning jumper with 0.1 seconds left on the clock. As they were leaving, Nguyen remembered, “I hugged my friend, and I was, like, ‘That was the best game I’ve ever seen.’ And she goes, ‘Yeah, can you imagine if the sound was on?’ ” In the excitement, Nguyen had barely noticed that they’d been relegated to a small, silent TV in a corner. “I was really frustrated, not just with myself but with the whole situation,” she told me. “I said, ‘The only way we’re ever going to watch women’s sports the way it deserves is if we have our own place.’ ”
Exactly four years later, Nguyen opened the Sports Bra, a pub that exclusively screens women’s sports, in a storefront in Northeast Portland that was once occupied by a gay bar called Jocks. In the years before it opened, the concept was a running gag among Nguyen’s friends. “Whenever somebody would turn us down at the bar, we’d be, like, ‘Oh, at the Sports Bra they show volleyball,’ ” she said. Today, the Bra, as Nguyen calls it, is an institution imbued with that puckish idealism. Most of the twenty-odd beers on tap come from breweries that are owned or operated by women, and there are drinks named for the pioneering golfer Patty Berg (an Arnold Palmer with a cherry on top) and for Title IX. The homey space, panelled in dark wood, recalls a nineties coffeehouse, chockablock with sports memorabilia and flyers advertising community events: an adult L.G.B.T.Q.+ summer camp, an Asian climbers’ meetup called ElevAsian.
I planned my visit to the Bra to coincide with an Indiana Fever game, in the hope that the beloved point guard Caitlin Clark would draw a crowd. A few days before I arrived in Portland, Clark strained her left quad, an injury that would bench her for at least two weeks. Still, in the course of the day, a healthy stream of patrons showed up, some just to eat and drink: in addition to classics like burgers and fries, Nguyen offers a rack of ribs, adapted from her mother’s recipe for thit kho (pork braised in coconut soda), and wings dressed in “Aunt Tina’s Vietna-Glaze” (brown sugar and fish sauce) or a house-fermented buffalo sauce. Pretaped footage of women’s sailing, hockey, beach volleyball, and gymnastics played on the bar’s TVs until the Fever game aired live.
Jenna Dalton, an artist in her forties dressed in a tie-dyed tunic, with corkscrew curls cut in an asymmetrical bob, watched the game with her partner, George Kunz, a bespectacled, retired educator with a white ponytail. “I don’t like sports at all, and I have a rule that we don’t watch sports in my house,” Dalton told me. “But, I’ve got to tell you, I like watching the W.N.B.A.” Part of it is the pleasure of “watching women succeed in things,” she said. “But I also just like that it’s a little more scrappy. I find the N.B.A. to be very polished and boring.” Kunz added, “You feel like you’re not just watching a game—there’s a movement.”
Another couple, Katie Camarano and Brandon Fischer, on vacation from Champaign, Illinois, sat on a banquette, sharing a soft pretzel. “I’m a Fever fan,” Camarano said. “I like the pickups, I like the pace that they’re playing at. It’s just a lot more fun to watch. I mean, he can tell you”—she gestured at Fischer—“I used to not give a crap about basketball. It didn’t seem very important to me, men playing. Cool, you can dunk a ball—you’re seven feet tall, I don’t understand how that’s meant to be impressive!” Fischer winced. “I can feel myself getting under his skin a little bit,” Camarano said, then proceeded undeterred. “They miss a ton of their free throws. It’s a free point, how are you missing that? I feel like the women have to play a little bit more, physically, because no one that I’ve seen is tall enough to get in the air and dunk.”
At halftime, three young women wearing Fever gear got up and left, before the Washington Mystics won by six points. A trio of gray-haired women wandered in: a local married couple named Peggy Berroth and Sara Kirschenbaum, and their friend Lisa Hurtubise, who was visiting from Minneapolis. Kirschenbaum and Hurtubise met in 1984, in Columbus, Ohio, when they organized a women’s peace walk, trekking almost two hundred miles from Akron to Dayton in the course of ten days, protesting in front of nuclear-weapons facilities.
“I’m a sports fanatic,” Berroth, a retired labor-and-delivery nurse with a pronounced Boston accent, told me. Title IX was passed when she was in high school, in Massachusetts, but she found that female athletes were still given short shrift. “I was on the track team,” she said. “I was a miler, I ran the eight hundred for the relay, and I also threw the discus. There was no coach, there was no uniform. I went to the school board and I said, ‘How come the boys have two pairs of shoes, and we don’t have any shoes?’ They didn’t give us the time of day.” Berroth is a season-ticket holder for the Portland Thorns, the city’s pro women’s soccer team, and likes to watch away games at the Bra, when she can get a seat. “When I see twenty-six thousand people sitting in those stands, it just makes my heart sing,” she said.
As a prerecorded rock-climbing competition played on the TV nearest their table, Hurtubise, whose two daughters played hockey in Minneapolis, approached a bartender and asked whether they might consider putting on an N.B.A. game instead—the Minnesota Timberwolves were playing the Oklahoma City Thunder in the Western Conference finals. She shrugged agreeably when the bartender declined.
When Nguyen told her parents, who immigrated to the U.S. from Vietnam in the seventies, about her plan for the Bra, they were skeptical. “The very first thing my mom said was ‘Do you think right now is a good time to open a lesbian bar?’ ” Nguyen said, laughing. “At no point in the conversation did I say I was opening a lesbian bar, but Mom knew that that Venn diagram looks very much like a circle.” The moment proved to be the right one. Not only was there a dearth of places to watch women’s sports—as far as Nguyen could tell, hers would be the first bar in the U.S. devoted to screening them—there was also a lack of queer and specifically lesbian spaces, even in a city as progressive as Portland.
The Bra was met with some hostility—Nguyen said that she received death threats, and that vandals broke windows—but it was also an immediate success. Hundreds of people showed up to the opening, which was the day after Portland lifted its indoor mask mandate, and in the middle of the N.C.A.A. tournament. “It was mayhem, hugging and crying,” Nguyen said. “There was lots of exchange of fluids.” The place was buoyed, too, by a groundswell of support from “the lesbian network”: friends of friends who were eager to help with accounting, general contracting, washing dishes. The Bra stirred strong emotions among both patrons and staff. “When I was a server those first couple years, I had a bruise here,” the general manager, Katie Leedy, remembered, showing me how she would pinch the skin between her thumb and pointer fingers. “Because I would just be, like, ‘I can’t cry every time I talk to a table.’ ”
Earlier this month, Nguyen announced that the Bra was franchising and expanding into four new cities—Indianapolis, Boston, Las Vegas, and St. Louis—with the help of an investment from Alexis Ohanian, a co-founder of Reddit, better known to some as Serena Williams’s husband. In 2019, after he learned that Megan Rapinoe’s team, the Seattle Reign, sold for just three and a half million dollars, Ohanian “rage-tweeted” about women’s sports being undervalued, and vowed to buy or start a team. (He’s the founding control owner of Angel City F.C., L.A.’s pro women’s soccer team.) Some commenters called him an idiot. He felt a kinship with Nguyen when he saw people ridiculing the Bra online. “If you’re polarizing people this early with an idea, it means you’re really on to something,” he told me. “People are not going to waste their time hating unless they feel very threatened.”
By the end of the year, there will be more than two dozen women’s sports bars open across the country. Jax Diener, who opened Watch Me! Sports Bar, in Long Beach, California, last year with her wife, told me that she and Nguyen are members of a Slack chat with the owners of similar establishments, including A Bar of Their Own, in Minneapolis, and Rikki’s, in San Francisco. “The founding mothers,” Diener said, are a tight-knit group, generous with advice and emotional support.
“I think lesbians are always searching for more community spaces,” the comedian and “Daily Show” correspondent Grace Kuhlenschmidt told me recently. Kuhlenschmidt, who grew up in L.A., was not much of a sports fan until she went to her first New York Liberty game, in 2021, and found the Barclays Center filled with “almost exclusively women and older lesbians,” she said. “I was, like, ‘I’m in Heaven.’ ” Now she hosts Liberty watch parties—complete with seafoam-green Gatorade-and-Midori slushies—at Singers, a campy Bed-Stuy queer bar. When I mentioned Watch Me!, Kuhlenschmidt told me that she had family in Long Beach and spent many holidays there. “One time, my mom called me out of the blue and was, like, ‘Grace, guess what? There’s a huge lesbian community in Long Beach!’ And I was, like, ‘That is awesome. Is that the only reason you called?’ ” ♦
Sports
Beachwalk blends luxury living with resort amenities on the shores of Lake Michigan
Tucked along the shores of Lake Michigan, Beachwalk is both a resort and a neighborhood – a place where families spend their summers or put down roots for a more permanent life on the beach. It’s a vacation community offering a blend of luxury and tranquility in Northwest Indiana, with chances for kayaking, fishing, beach […]

Tucked along the shores of Lake Michigan, Beachwalk is both a resort and a neighborhood – a place where families spend their summers or put down roots for a more permanent life on the beach. It’s a vacation community offering a blend of luxury and tranquility in Northwest Indiana, with chances for kayaking, fishing, beach volleyball, tennis, and more.
Managed by 1st American Management Company, Beachwalk maintains its charm and order through year-round care. With its scenic views, plentiful amenities and leisure activities, and a close-knit neighborhood, many families stay for decades. One of those long-term residents is Rich Murphy, who, along with his wife Jill, has called Beachwalk home for 25 years.
“I was initially drawn in by the Lake Michigan and Dunes lifestyle,” he said. “It’s as if a beach of southern Spain was dropped into Indiana, but in the fresh waters of Lake Michigan. We’re raising our family here, and have three daughters.”
Murphy’s love for the community led to his election to the Beachwalk Property Owners Association. His involvement extends beyond residency, and he noted that Beachwalk attracts visitors from all over the world.
“I think people might be surprised that we get residents from all over the country and the world,” he said. “Beachwalk is a destination, and I’ve heard people say that our beach is among the best they’ve ever experienced.”
While some residents only stay during the warmer season, Murphy values the year-round experience.
“My favorite part of living here is our friends, family, and neighbors who all have homes here,” he said. “I also appreciate the changing dynamics of Lake Michigan. You can see the Mediterranean-like blue waters of the summer, the shelf ice of mid-winter, and all the blazing sunsets over the Chicago skyline. The beauty of Lake Michigan is always there, but ever changing.”
Daniel Sullivan, a five-year resident of Beachwalk, feels that most of the community shares Murphy’s admiration.
“I think the vibe of the community is of a shared appreciation for the environment,” Sullivan said. “We all love these homes that have a traditional feel of a beach community, spending time with family and friends surrounded by white picket fences and stunning architecture. You get the sense that you’re on vacation all the time.”
“Beachwalk is a beautiful community. I think many people, especially those of us from Northwest Indiana, take Lake Michigan and all it has to offer for granted. From salmon and perch fishing to pleasure boating, miles of sandy beaches and breathtaking sunsets, it’s truly a special place,” said Michael R. Bottos, President and COO of 1st American Management Co., Inc. “We’ve built a strong relationship with the residents of Beachwalk and are excited to see what the future holds for this community.”
To explore rental opportunities and discover everything the Beachwalk community has to offer, visit beachwalkvacationrentals.com and funatbeachwalk.com.
Sports
ADM Girls Track and Field Teams Rack Up IATC All-State and Elite All-State Honors | Raccoon Valley Radio
RVR does not own photos Several individuals from the Adel-DeSoto-Minburn Track and Field Team are being recognized with postseason honors for their performances at the state meet in May. ADM was recently named the Class 3A Champions for the second consecutive year, and have been selected for many events by the Iowa Association of Track […]


RVR does not own photos
Several individuals from the Adel-DeSoto-Minburn Track and Field Team are being recognized with postseason honors for their performances at the state meet in May.
ADM was recently named the Class 3A Champions for the second consecutive year, and have been selected for many events by the Iowa Association of Track Coaches in the All-State and Elite All-State divisions.
For All-State, junior Elise Coghlan and senior Josi Dufoe got in for the 100 meter hurdles, while Dufoe qualified for Elite All-State. Coghlan was also named All-State in the 400 meter hurdles, while senior London Warmuth got All-State and Elite All-State for the High Jump. Then, the Tiger relays of the 4×100 (Dufoe, Calli Seehase, Jada Grove, and Peyton Standley) and 4×200 meters (Dufoe, Seehase, Grove, and Aniston Tollari) made All-State, with the Girls Shuttle Hurdle Relay, consisting of Dufoe, Coghlan, Bella Smyth, and Haley Nelson achieved both All-State and Elite All-State as they captured a state meet record of 1:01.15.
In addition, ADM Head Coach Bart Mueller was named the Class 3A Coach of the Year from the IATC.
Sports
Former Aztec J.J. Spaun Wins the U.S. Open
SAN DIEGO — Former San Diego State men’s golfer J.J. Spaun captured the 2025 U.S. Open, battling a weather delay on arguably the toughest course in the world at Oakmont Country Club in Oakmont, Pennsylvania, 10 miles outside of Pittsburgh. Along with a pair of major wins last season by Xander Schauffele at the PGA […]

SAN DIEGO — Former San Diego State men’s golfer J.J. Spaun captured the 2025 U.S. Open, battling a weather delay on arguably the toughest course in the world at Oakmont Country Club in Oakmont, Pennsylvania, 10 miles outside of Pittsburgh. Along with a pair of major wins last season by Xander Schauffele at the PGA Championship and The Open, a former Aztec has won three of the last six majors.
Spaun, who starred for SDSU from 2009-12, carded a final round 2-over-par-72 to finish as the lone player under par at 1-under 279, beating runner-up Robert MacIntyre by two strokes. Spaun, who had one career win entering the tournament in the 2022 Valero Texas Open, was at 5-over through his first eight holes of the final round with five bogeys before a 96-minute weather delay. When he resumed on the ninth hole, he had three pars, and then went three-under over his final seven holes with four birdies and a bogey.
Spaun’s 64-foot, 5-inch putt on the final hole to clinch the two-shot win was the longest in the field for the tournament. Spaun became the fifth U.S. Open champion to finish his tournament birdie-birdie in regulation and just the second player in the last 120 yards to shoot a 40-plus on the front nine and to win the U.S. Open. Spaun opened with a 66 in Thursday’s opening round to lead by a shot at 4-under. He followed with a 2-over 72 on Friday before a 1-under 69 on Saturday had him playing in the second-to-last group today. The other three players in today’s final two groups shot a combined 20-over par while Spaun carded a 2-over par.
Spaun entered the weekend as the 25th-ranked player in the Official World Golf Rankings (OWGR).
Spaun twice received All-America recognition by both the (GCAA) and Golfweek during his time at San Diego State (2009-12). He captured five individual tournament crowns during his career at SDSU, which is tied for most in school history with Aztec Hall of Famer Lennie Clements.
In addition, Spaun earned Mountain West Player of the Year honors as a senior in 2012 and garnered three straight all-conference accolades. He concluded that season ranked 17th nationally by Golfstat.com and 21st by Golfweek after leading SDSU to its best-ever Division I team finish with a fifth-place tie in the match-play phase at the NCAA Championships.
Justin Hastings, meanwhile, was the only amateur to make the cut. He opened with back-to-back 73s, before shooting 73 and 76 on the weekend and finishing tied for 55th at +15. It was the second straight amateur Hastings competed in where he was the low amateur (also the Masters). San Diego State is likely the first college to have a U.S. Open champion and the low amateur medalist in recorded history.
Hastings had arguably the best season in San Diego State history, racking up two victories and posting the second-best scoring average (70.33) in program history. Out of his 11 collegiate tournaments, he had two wins (by four strokes each), a runner-up finish and six top-10 efforts. Hastings became the fourth Aztec to win a MW Championship, April 25-27, carding an 18-under-par 198. He also won the Lamkin Classic, March 10-11, in a tournament-record 16-under 200. He was named an honorable mention All-American by two publications, as well as a PING All-West region selection for a third straight season, the Mountain West Golfer of the Year and an all-MW pick for a third consecutive year. Last weekend, Hastings led the Internationals to a 35-25 win at the Arnold Palmer Cup after going 4-0 in his events at Congaree Golf Club in Ridgeland, South Carolina.
San Diego State won its fourth consecutive MW championship last month and a spot in the NCAA Tallahassee Regional, where the Aztecs tied for seventh out of 14 teams, two spots from advancing to the NCAA Championship.
Sports
From car park to arena for ‘world record performances’: Facility for Singapore World Aquatics Champs unveiled
The full costs of building the temporary facility and hosting the event has not been publicly revealed. In February this year, then Senior Parliamentary Secretary for the Ministry of Culture, Community and Youth Eric Chua said that construction cost of the temporary facility is still being finalised, but it is expected to be “comparable” to the […]
The full costs of building the temporary facility and hosting the event has not been publicly revealed.
In February this year, then Senior Parliamentary Secretary for the Ministry of Culture, Community and Youth Eric Chua said that construction cost of the temporary facility is still being finalised, but it is expected to be “comparable” to the cost borne by other host cities that built temporary facilities to host the event.
He added that tourist revenue generated from the upcoming World Aquatics and World Aquatics Masters Championships is projected to hit S$60 million (US$44.7 million), with 40,000 international visitors expected at the month-long event in Singapore.
Mr Chay echoed similar comments on Monday when asked about the cost of the arena and whether it was within the budget.
“At these major championships, they built temporary venues for all events. But for us, we’re using an existing venue at OCBC Aquatic Center for two of our major events – diving as well as water polo. And we built this facility for swimming as well as artistic swimming, and of course, in Sentosa, we’ll have open water and diving,” he said.
“I’m happy to say that the cost of organising this, building this facility, is comparable to that of Doha as well as Fukuoka (World Championships).”
Late last year, the Pan Pacific Hotels Group, Trans-Eurokars Mazda and OCBC were unveiled as the event’s hotel, automobile and banking partners, with Singtel on Monday announced as the official network connectivity partner of the meet.
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