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Half an hour before dress rehearsal, the Wicked Witch of the West (Elina Thach) sat on the gym floor behind Glinda the Good Witch (Sisilia Steransky), using a curling iron on her friend’s hair, while teacher and choreographer Kaitlyn Stewart worked on Elina’s face, using green paint to give her a more witchy appearance. […]
Half an hour before dress rehearsal, the Wicked Witch of the West (Elina Thach) sat on the gym floor behind Glinda the Good Witch (Sisilia Steransky), using a curling iron on her friend’s hair, while teacher and choreographer Kaitlyn Stewart worked on Elina’s face, using green paint to give her a more witchy appearance.
“We all help each other out,” said Sophia Kurlandski, 13, who has the role of Dorothy in the musical “The Wizard of Oz (Youth Edition)” at St. Nicholas – St. Mary School in Wilkes-Barre. “Everybody is so nice. If we forget a line, someone will tell us.”
This helpful group of cast and crew, fifth- through eighth-graders under the direction of teacher and Crescent Players advisor Christina Reynolds, is getting ready to tell the classic story of a girl and her friends and her little dog, too, during performances in the school gym, set for 7 p.m. May 9-10, and 2 p.m. May 11.
Tickets are $12 general admission; $10 seniors; $8 students, available at the door or by calling the school office (570-823-8089) in advance. The Saturday show includes an extended intermission with desserts, so tickets are $3 extra.
What will please the audience most about the show?
“The music,” said Simon Vo, 12, who will appear as the Wizard.
“The storyline, and maybe the songs,” said 11-year-old Elliott Reynolds, who plays the Tin Man.
“My role,” said 13-year-old Elina Thach, who plays the Wicked Witch. “I don’t sing or dance but I have great lines, and I have a really cool cape and broom.”
She also been practicing a mean cackle, which she believes helped her gain the role she wanted.
Sisilia Steranski 13, also has the role she wanted. Not only does she feel that Glinda the Good Witch matches her personality, but, she said, “Pink is my favorite color.”
And Glinda does wear a bright pink dress with a wide skirt.
Other interesting costume touches include the curly mane that makes Lexi Barry look like a Lion, the shiny fabric that helps Elliott Reynolds portray the Tin Man and the cloth “straw” that sticks out of Myles Madden’s Scarecrow sleeves.
And if you’re wondering why one group of actors wears hats covered with cotton that looks like clouds, as well as tunics with long fringes that fly out when they run around the stage — they’re the cyclone that carries Dorothy away from Kansas to the Land of Oz.
Several students have more than one role. Simon Vo, for one, portrays the Wizard in Oz but back in Kansas he is the man with the traveling show who meets Dorothy as she’s trying to run away.
“He’s kind of a con man,” Simon said. “But he does give Dorothy good advice — to go home.”
There’s no question I’ve written a version of this sentence before, but there are few coaches who have earned the benefit of the doubt like Kirby Smart. Last season, Jalon Walker made 60 tackles and garnered second-team All-SEC recognition. Smael Mondon Jr. posted 57 stops, and they helped UGA both win a conference title and […]
There’s no question I’ve written a version of this sentence before, but there are few coaches who have earned the benefit of the doubt like Kirby Smart.
Last season, Jalon Walker made 60 tackles and garnered second-team All-SEC recognition. Smael Mondon Jr. posted 57 stops, and they helped UGA both win a conference title and make the College Football Playoff.
Both of them are gone, and Georgia—well, it’s not concerned.
CJ Allen registered 76 tackles in 2024 as Raylen Wilson had a mini-breakout year with 47 takedowns (7.0 for loss) and Chris Cole chipped in 16 stops. As if that’s not enough, Justin Williams and newcomer Zayden Walker were 5-star signings. Georgia just needs one of them to contribute in a small role, barring injuries.
The linebacker pipeline in Athens is flowing right along.
College Sports “I think it’s in some ways relief that it’s here, that we can move forward, that we can meet this moment.” Boston College athletic director Blake James wouldn’t get into specifics on how much the school expects to be paying athletes for the 2025-26 academic year. Pat Greenhouse/Globe Staff By Amin Touri, The […]
College Sports
After more than a decade of creeping change and shifting winds in college sports, the biggest reshaping of the landscape arrived Friday.
Federal judge Claudia Wilken signed off on a settlement resolving three antitrust compensation cases brought against the NCAA. Now, schools will be allowed to pay athletes directly — rather than under the guise of name, image, and likeness (NIL) — as soon as next month.
Along with schools gaining the ability to share up to $20.5 million with athletes per year, the NCAA is on the hook for nearly $2.8 billion in back pay to former athletes — long barred from compensation for their athletic performance — over the next 10 years.
The football powerhouses in the Big Ten and SEC — and their massive television deals — have prompted much of the seismic shift in college athletics that resulted in this settlement. But the changes are felt throughout the NCAA, including in Massachusetts.
It’s particularly significant for Boston College and UMass, the state’s two institutions that compete in FBS, the highest level of college football, each of which has spent several months preparing for sweeping change after the deal was initially approved in October before a lengthy hold-up.
“It’s been a little bit of what we would call, ‘Hurry up and wait,’ ” said UMass athletic director Ryan Bamford. “I think it’s in some ways relief that it’s here, that we can move forward, that we can meet this moment.”
While athletes will still be able to earn money through the NIL deals that have taken over collegiate athletics, the ability to pay athletes directly is a monumental shift.
How universities will handle payments is the first question on the agenda, particularly at the state’s flagship university, which has to contend with the added wrinkle of public funding and the scrutiny that comes with it.
“You’re building the systems, the policies, the procedures, working with campus infrastructure,” Bamford said. “Our student-athletes aren’t employees, so they don’t fit into the HR model. You can’t pay through financial aid, because — you can pay scholarships and room and board and tuition and fees and things like that — but anything that’s rev share is above and beyond. So you’ve got to get the tax people, the Treasury people, the general counsel, to look at your agreement.“
While college football’s powerhouses are certain to max out the $20.5 million they can dole out to athletes, that likely won’t be the case at UMass — that number would represent close to 40 percent of the total operating budget of an athletic department such as UMass’s.
Boston College athletic director Blake James wouldn’t get into specifics on how much the school expects to be paying athletes for the 2025-26 academic year, saying “it’s too early to really know,” while confirming BC’s participation in revenue sharing.
UMass, meanwhile, will be looking to spend between $6 million and $8 million in the first year and in the $10 million-$12 million range in the second, with the long-term goal to be spending around 60 percent of the cap.
“If we’re at 60 percent of whatever [the cap] continues to grow to, we’re probably in a really good, healthy Group of Five position,” Bamford said. “The MAC is not going to spend a ton of money, but we want to be where maybe some of the lower Big East, lower Power Fours are in basketball, and then in football.
“We want to be competitive with the Group of Five. I think we can be in the top, probably, 20 percent of the Group of Five in football with our number. So, you know, that’s certainly a goal.”
Another question is how schools will divide the money within their own department, with a lion’s share of the cash at FBS schools likely heading into football pockets. That’s an especially unique challenge at BC, which has to compete against some of college football’s best in the ACC, while its greatest success has come not on the field but on the ice.
The men’s hockey team boasts five national championships and reached the national title game again in 2024, while the women have made six Frozen Fours since 2010.
“We’re the only team in the ACC that has ice hockey,” James said. “So we’re going to continue to evolve under this new college athletics approach consistent with who we are as an institution, and part of that is recognizing the importance that ice hockey means to us at Boston College and as part of our athletic program.”
It’s possible the new rules could provide an opportunity to BC’s city rivals on the ice at Boston University and Northeastern — neither of which has a football team to fund — to gain some ground. The fourth member of the Beanpot quartet, Harvard, could be looking at a further slip among its rivals, as the Ivy League has opted out of revenue sharing, which Harvard confirmed to the Globe this week.
UMass, another Hockey East competitor, with its most recent national relevance coming through men’s hockey (a Frozen Four in 2019 and a national championship in 2021), will also skew more of its money toward hockey and what arguably remains the Minutemen’s biggest brand, men’s basketball.
The most common formula thrown around in recent months has been that schools will look to use around 75 percent of the money on football, 15 percent on men’s basketball, 5 percent on women’s basketball, and the remaining 5 percent elsewhere.
UMass, Bamford said, won’t be that high in football, with greater slices of the pie given to men’s and women’s basketball, as well as hockey.
“Over time, it’ll sort itself out,” Bamford said. “When you make the jump, the formula and the ratios and the percentages are a little bit skewed. But for instance, we’re going to fund, probably $2.5 million on our women’s sports just in scholarships alone.
”We’ve kind of let each coach determine how they want to do it and based on the budget. And I think our coaches are feeling like in talking to their peers, especially in the Group of Five, that we’re in a really strong spot.”
There are plenty of concerns to go around, from how new roster limits rules will affect walk-ons to the effects the settlement could have on Olympic sports, where collegiate athletic programs have long produced some of the nation’s best athletes without generating a lot of revenue in return.
For James, whose place as a Power Four AD means competing with the nation’s true powers, the primary concern is how schools are going to toe the line.
“I think my concerns would be … the enforcement,“ he said. “I think if everyone follows the rules of the settlement, I think it will put college athletics into a better place than it’s been in some time. With that said, I think there’s always opportunities for people to work around the intent of what has been put in place, whether it’s through the letter of the rule, or just something that they feel that they have to do in their best interest.
“And I would say that’s my biggest concern: How do we get everyone to support and embrace this and give college athletics a chance to grow in this whole new world?”
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The football powerhouses in the Big Ten and SEC — and their massive television deals — have prompted much of the seismic shift in college athletics that resulted in this settlement. But the changes are felt throughout the NCAA, including in Massachusetts. Get Starting Point A guide through the most important stories of the morning, […]
The football powerhouses in the Big Ten and SEC — and their massive television deals — have prompted much of the seismic shift in college athletics that resulted in this settlement. But the changes are felt throughout the NCAA, including in Massachusetts.
It’s particularly significant for Boston College and UMass, the state’s two institutions that compete in FBS, the highest level of college football, each of which has spent several months preparing for sweeping change after the deal was initially approved in October before a lengthy hold-up.
“It’s been a little bit of what we would call, ‘Hurry up and wait,’ ” said UMass athletic director Ryan Bamford. “I think it’s in some ways relief that it’s here, that we can move forward, that we can meet this moment.”
While athletes will still be able to earn money through the NIL deals that have taken over collegiate athletics, the ability to pay athletes directly is a monumental shift.
How universities will handle payments is the first question on the agenda, particularly at the state’s flagship university, which has to contend with the added wrinkle of public funding and the scrutiny that comes with it.
“You’re building the systems, the policies, the procedures, working with campus infrastructure,” Bamford said. “Our student-athletes aren’t employees, so they don’t fit into the HR model. You can’t pay through financial aid, because — you can pay scholarships and room and board and tuition and fees and things like that — but anything that’s rev share is above and beyond. So you’ve got to get the tax people, the Treasury people, the general counsel, to look at your agreement.“
While college football’s powerhouses are certain to max out the $20.5 million they can dole out to athletes, that likely won’t be the case at UMass — that number would represent close to 40 percent of the total operating budget of an athletic department such as UMass’s.
Boston College athletic director Blake James wouldn’t get into specifics on how much the school expects to be paying athletes for the 2025-26 academic year, saying “it’s too early to really know,” while confirming BC’s participation in revenue sharing.
UMass, meanwhile, will be looking to spend between $6 million and $8 million in the first year and in the $10 million-$12 million range in the second, with the long-term goal to be spending around 60 percent of the cap.
“If we’re at 60 percent of whatever [the cap] continues to grow to, we’re probably in a really good, healthy Group of Five position,” Bamford said. “The MAC is not going to spend a ton of money, but we want to be where maybe some of the lower Big East, lower Power Fours are in basketball, and then in football.
“We want to be competitive with the Group of Five. I think we can be in the top, probably, 20 percent of the Group of Five in football with our number. So, you know, that’s certainly a goal.”
Another question is how schools will divide the money within their own department, with a lion’s share of the cash at FBS schools likely heading into football pockets. That’s an especially unique challenge at BC, which has to compete against some of college football’s best in the ACC, while its greatest success has come not on the field but on the ice.
The men’s hockey team boasts five national championships and reached the national title game again in 2024, while the women have made six Frozen Fours since 2010.
“We’re the only team in the ACC that has ice hockey,” James said. “So we’re going to continue to evolve under this new college athletics approach consistent with who we are as an institution, and part of that is recognizing the importance that ice hockey means to us at Boston College and as part of our athletic program.”
It’s possible the new rules could provide an opportunity to BC’s city rivals on the ice at Boston University and Northeastern — neither of which has a football team to fund — to gain some ground. The fourth member of the Beanpot quartet, Harvard, could be looking at a further slip among its rivals, as the Ivy League has opted out of revenue sharing, which Harvard confirmed to the Globe this week.
UMass, another Hockey East competitor, with its most recent national relevance coming through men’s hockey (a Frozen Four in 2019 and a national championship in 2021), will also skew more of its money toward hockey and what arguably remains the Minutemen’s biggest brand, men’s basketball.
The most common formula thrown around in recent months has been that schools will look to use around 75 percent of the money on football, 15 percent on men’s basketball, 5 percent on women’s basketball, and the remaining 5 percent elsewhere.
UMass, Bamford said, won’t be that high in football, with greater slices of the pie given to men’s and women’s basketball, as well as hockey.
“Over time, it’ll sort itself out,” Bamford said. “When you make the jump, the formula and the ratios and the percentages are a little bit skewed. But for instance, we’re going to fund, probably $2.5 million on our women’s sports just in scholarships alone.
”We’ve kind of let each coach determine how they want to do it and based on the budget. And I think our coaches are feeling like in talking to their peers, especially in the Group of Five, that we’re in a really strong spot.”
There are plenty of concerns to go around, from how new roster limits rules will affect walk-ons to the effects the settlement could have on Olympic sports, where collegiate athletic programs have long produced some of the nation’s best athletes without generating a lot of revenue in return.
For James, whose place as a Power Four AD means competing with the nation’s true powers, the primary concern is how schools are going to toe the line.
“I think my concerns would be … the enforcement,“ he said. “I think if everyone follows the rules of the settlement, I think it will put college athletics into a better place than it’s been in some time. With that said, I think there’s always opportunities for people to work around the intent of what has been put in place, whether it’s through the letter of the rule, or just something that they feel that they have to do in their best interest.
“And I would say that’s my biggest concern: How do we get everyone to support and embrace this and give college athletics a chance to grow in this whole new world?”
Amin Touri can be reached at amin.touri@globe.com.
NEW YORK – The 2024-25 MLS NEXT season culminates at 2025 MLS NEXT Cup in Nashville, TN as the best youth teams in the U.S. and Canada compete for an illustrious MLS NEXT championship. (VIEW BRACKETS) The single-elimination knockout tournaments will be held from June 14-22 at Richard Siegel Soccer Complex in Murfreesboro, TN with […]
NEW YORK – The 2024-25 MLS NEXT season culminates at 2025 MLS NEXT Cup in Nashville, TN as the best youth teams in the U.S. and Canada compete for an illustrious MLS NEXT championship. (VIEW BRACKETS)
The single-elimination knockout tournaments will be held from June 14-22 at Richard Siegel Soccer Complex in Murfreesboro, TN with two championship matches contested on Saturday, June 21 and the final four championship games on Sunday, June 22.
2025 MLS NEXT Cup is the conclusion of the 2024-25 MLS NEXT season, featuring 32 of the top teams in each of the four different age groups (U15, U16, U17, U19) that qualified for the competition based on results from league play or by winning their respective group at MLS NEXT Flex, a qualifying event that took place from May 9-13.
For the first time in the program’s history, MLS NEXT Cup will include championship brackets in the U13 and U14 age groups. Teams were invited to the competition based on the Quality of Play rankings – a groundbreaking initiative launched this season that ranks teams utilizing Taka’s analytical formula which evaluates game play by focusing on the caliber of a team’s offensive and defensive actions in a match. (U13-U14 Brackets)
The U13 and U14 age groups will each feature 24 teams competing in a single-elimination bracket to take home the title, with both championship matches on June 22. Each match will be 60 minutes with 30-minute halves and go straight to penalty kicks in the event of a tie.
MLS NEXT Cup Playoffs matches will be 80 minutes in the U15 age group and 90 minutes in the other three age groups. If the match is tied at the end of regulation, all games will head to penalty kicks, except for the four championship matches, which will feature two five-minute periods of extra time. If the championship matches are still tied after the extra time periods, they will then head to penalty kicks to decide a winner.
Nineteen MLS NEXT Cup games, including all four championship matches, will stream live on MLS’ YouTube page. Across the four age groups represented in the playoffs, five round of 32 matches, two round of 16 matches, four quarterfinal games, and four semifinal contests will also be available to watch on MLS’ YouTube page. Jalil Anibaba, Calen Carr, AJ Ricketts, and Evan Weston will be the broadcasters for the tournament from June 14-22 in Nashville.
2025 MLS NEXT Cup Broadcast Schedule |
|||||
Date | Time (in CT | Round | Age Group | Home Team | Away Team |
June 14 | 5:30 PM | U16 | Round of 32 | NEFC | Chicago Fire FC |
June 14 | 8:15 PM | U16 | Round of 32 | Austin FC | Blau Weiss Gottschee Academy |
June 15 | 2:45 PM | U17 | Round of 32 | Weston FC | FC Greater Boston Bolts |
June 15 | 5:30 PM | U19 | Round of 32 | Queen City Mutiny FC | Houston Dynamo FC |
June 15 | 8:15 PM | U19 | Round of 32 | Cedar Stars Academy Bergen | San Jose Earthquakes |
June 16 | 3:30 PM | U17 | Round of 16 | TBD | TBD |
June 16 | 6:15 PM | U19 | Round of 16 | TBD | TBD |
June 17 | 8:30 AM | U15 | Quarterfinal | TBD | TBD |
June 17 | 11:00 AM | U16 | Quarterfinal | TBD | TBD |
June 18 | 8:30 AM | U17 | Quarterfinal | TBD | TBD |
June 18 | 11:15 AM | U19 | Quarterfinal | TBD | TBD |
June 19 | 8:30 AM | U15 | Semifinal | TBD | TBD |
June 19 | 11:00 AM | U16 | Semifinal | TBD | TBD |
June 20 | 8:30 AM | U17 | Semifinal | TBD | TBD |
June 20 | 11:15 AM | U19 | Semifinal | TBD | TBD |
June 21 | 8:30 AM | U15 | Final | TBD | TBD |
June 21 | 11:30 AM | U16 | Final | TBD | TBD |
June 22 | 8:30 AM | U17 | Final | TBD | TBD |
June 22 | 11:30 AM | U19 | Final | TBD | TBD |
The full schedule for MLS NEXT Cup Playoffs will be available HERE and the final 2024-25 final league standings are available HERE.
In 2024, two MLS clubs and two MLS NEXT Elite Academies took home the title in their respective age groups – U15 Chicago Fire FC, U16 FC DELCO, U17 LA Galaxy, and U19 Strikers FC. The LA Galaxy will look to become the first club to win three-straight championships with representation in the U15, U16, and U19 age group. Notable standout players at MLS NEXT Cup who have gone on to star in MLS include Benjamin Cremaschi (Inter Miami CF), Alex Freeman (Orlando City SC), Zavier Gozo (Real Salt Lake), Taha Habroune (Columbus Crew), Peyton Miller (New England Revolution), Sergio Oregel Jr. (Chicago Fire FC), and Andrew Rick (Philadelphia Union).
Teams that do not qualify for MLS NEXT Cup can also participate in the MLS NEXT Cup Showcase. The Showcase provides MLS NEXT players an opportunity to compete in front of hundreds of collegiate, international, and professional coaches and scouts. All clubs participating in the MLS NEXT Cup Showcase will play three matches over a four-day span. Clubs who are eliminated in the first two rounds of MLS NEXT Cup are also eligible to participate in the Showcase.
The event will also host two MLS NEXT ‘Best Of’ matches in which top players from MLS NEXT Cup Showcase teams will compete at the U18 age range. These players are selected based on their performance in league play, at MLS NEXT Fest, and at MLS NEXT Flex. The ‘Best Of’ matches provide a unique opportunity for players to compete against one another as top collegiate, international, and professional coaches evaluate their performances.
NEWYou can now listen to Fox News articles! Ohio State is officially bringing its NIL collectives in-house. According to multiple reports, Ohio State’s athletic department is teaming up with Learfield’s Ohio State Sports Properties to form “Buckeye Sports Group,” an initiative designed to support and enhance NIL opportunities for Ohio State athletes. This news comes […]
NEWYou can now listen to Fox News articles!
Ohio State is officially bringing its NIL collectives in-house.
According to multiple reports, Ohio State’s athletic department is teaming up with Learfield’s Ohio State Sports Properties to form “Buckeye Sports Group,” an initiative designed to support and enhance NIL opportunities for Ohio State athletes.
This news comes on the heels of the House v. NCAA settlement being formally approved, in return, paving the way for schools to now begin paying their athletes millions of dollars as soon as next month. The terms of the House settlement include approval for each school to share up to $20.5 million with athletes over the next year and $2.7 billion that will be paid over the next decade to thousands of former players who were barred from that revenue for years.
With the creation of the “Buckeye Sports Group,” Ohio State will now consolidate the school’s two existing NIL collectives, the 1870 Society and The Foundation. The partnership with Learfield will allow Buckeye athletes to access the sports marketing companies’ NIL technology, which will in return assist athletes with brand deals, corporate partnerships and personal brand development in a more organized manner.
“Ohio State has always been a leader in college athletics, and this initiative is another step forward to build upon our strong NIL foundation,” Ohio State’s Deputy Director of Athletics Carey Hoyt said in a release, announcing the NIL partnership. “By combining the power of our athletic brand with Learfield’s expansive network, we are creating an innovative, full-service approach to NIL that directly benefits our student-athletes.”
Moving forward, financial agreements reached between athletes and third parties won’t count toward an athletic department’s annual cap, though any deal greater than $600 is now subject to approval by NIL Go, an online clearinghouse within the College Sports Commission, a freshly formed regulatory body created in response to the House v. NCAA lawsuit.
Ohio State has already been at the forefront when it comes to success in the NIL space. Sophomore wide receiver Jeremiah Smith has a reported NIL valuation of $4.2 million according to On3, which ranks third-highest among all college athletes, and he’s inked notable deals with Nintendo, Red Bull and Lulelemon. Smith was recently unveiled as a co-cover star athlete for “College Football 26.”
Fellow Buckeye football standout Caleb Downs has already had remarkable NIL success as well, carrying an NIL valuation of $2.4 million, which also ranks among the top valuations in college athletics. Downs, who transferred to Ohio State from Alabama following Nick Saban’s retirement in 2024, has partnerships with Panini, Beats by Dre and American Eagle.
“As we enter a new era for college athletics, we’re excited to build on our past successes and create even more meaningful NIL opportunities for Ohio State student-athletes,” Vice President & General Manager of Learfield’s Ohio State Sports Properties Todd Knisley said in the release. “With the strength of Buckeye Nation behind us, we’re able to unlock incremental opportunities for partnerships on a local, regional, and national scale.”
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Featuring a full three-game final for the first time in four years, the NCAA Women’s College World Series hit multiple viewership highs on ESPN. The three-game Texas-Texas Tech NCAA Women’s College World Series Final averaged 2.2 million viewers across ESPN and ESPNU, the highest average on record for the event and up 13% from the […]
Featuring a full three-game final for the first time in four years, the NCAA Women’s College World Series hit multiple viewership highs on ESPN.
The three-game Texas-Texas Tech NCAA Women’s College World Series Final averaged 2.2 million viewers across ESPN and ESPNU, the highest average on record for the event and up 13% from the previous high set by last year’s two-game Oklahoma-Texas series.
Friday’s winner-take-all Game 3 averaged 2.41 million viewers, marking the largest college softball audience on record — surpassing the previous mark of 2.33 million for Tennessee-Arizona Game 3 in 2007. All three games of this year’s series rank among the top ten, with Game 2 ranking sixth (2.13M) and Game 1 seventh (2.11M). (Keep in mind out-of-home viewing was not tracked in Nielsen’s estimates prior to 2020.)
Compared to the previous Game 3 — Oklahoma-Florida State in 2021, which aired in a Thursday afternoon window due to rain — viewership jumped 54% from 1.57 million.
Overall, four games of this year’s WCWS rank among the top ten, with a UCLA-Tennessee game on ABC earlier in the tournament placing fifth (2.19M).
The full, 15-game WCWS averaged 1.3 million — up 24% from last year and a new record for the event, surpassing the previous high set in 2021. The complete NCAA softball tournament averaged 591,000, up 3% from last year and the highest in four years.
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