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Sterling Park District offering kids’ summer sports camps – Shaw Local

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STERLING — With school out for the summer, kids across the Sauk Valley have extra time and energy to burn. The Sterling Park District is offering a variety of summer sports camps to keep them active and engaged.

Diving

The SPD’s Dive Camp runs from 6-7:30 p.m. every Tuesday and Thursday beginning June 17 through June 26 at the Duis Recreation Center, 211 E. 23rd St. in Sterling.

The camp instills confidence in young swimmers by covering beginning diving principles, including approach, basic dives and diving rules, utilizing the Duis Center’s pool and gym areas.

Dive Camp is open to children ages 8 and up, costs $40 to attend and no diving experience is required.

Soccer

The SPD’s Youth Soccer Camp begins on Monday, July 7, at the Westwood Fitness & Sports Center, 1900 Westwood Drive in Sterling. Children of all skill levels in grades pre-kindergarten through eighth will learn the basic fundamentals of soccer with an emphasis on technique.

Sessions for children in pre-K through second and third through fifth grade will run from 5:30-7:30 p.m. July 7-10. Kids in sixth through eighth grade can join sessions held at the same time from July 11-13.

The cost is $85 to attend and children who register by Sunday, June 15, will receive a free camp T-shirt.

Basketball

Westwood will also host basketball skills clinics for boys and girls in July. The clinics will teach the fundamentals of the sport while emphasizing proper techniques and are open to children of all skill levels in grades four through nine.

The boys’ clinic will run from Monday, July 14, through Friday, July 18. Clinics for boys in grades four through six will take place from 10 a.m. to noon, and from 1-4 p.m. for grades seven through nine.

The girls’ clinic will run from Monday, July 21, through Friday, July 25. Clinics for girls in grades four through six will take place from 10 a.m. to noon, and from 1-4 p.m. for grades seven through nine.

Registration is $75, and those who sign up by June 15 will receive a basketball clinic T-shirt.

Tennis

Westwood will also host a free week of outside tennis (Barcode 16453) from 10:30-11:30 a.m. July 14-17, for kids ages 7-14. Participants must register by Thursday, July 3, to receive a free gift bag. The event will be moved inside the Westwood Tennis Center in the event of rain. Contact Chris Dudley at 815-622-6063 with any questions.

The Westwood and Duis centers offer a variety of other classes for kids and teens, including gymnastics, aquatics, fitness and more. For more information or to register your child, visit Sterlingparks.org or call the Duis Center at 815-622-6200 or Westwood at 815-622-6201.



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Beloved Cleveland youth basketball coach honored at Rhodes High School game

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CLEVELAND, Ohio (WOIO) – Keith Schofield, who died on November 22, was honored at James Ford Rhodes High School before Tuesday night’s varsity basketball game.

Schofield led the team to a city championship in 2004 and is remembered for the impact he had on his players.

His family was given a framed jersey with his last name on the back.

“After a win or a loss just to hear the conversations he would have on the phone about the boys,” Schofield’s daughter Randi said. “They were like his sons.”

Schoefield survived a hit-and-run accident in January 2022 when his car was catapulted off I-90 onto West 98th street below.

His family previously told 19 News that health issues he already had were made worse by the impact of the crash.

His legacy lives through the lives he touched.

“He’s my best friend. Just the most understanding individual I’ve ever come across,” Randi Schofield said. ”Always there. Always a phone call away.”



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Youth hockey theft exposed by a Colorado mom. Then came the threats.

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Updated Dec. 17, 2025, 6:22 a.m. ET

For months, Brooke Wilfley raised concerns that the president of her local youth hockey governing board was using his position for profit. 

The Denver-area hockey mom discovered that the president, Randy Kanai, was secretly routing the Colorado Amateur Hockey Association’s money through his private company. 

She reported his conflicts of interest and mismanagement to everyone she could: board members, club directors, coaches and four USA Hockey leaders who oversee the nonprofit. Little was done. 

Then in January 2023, Wilfley received a letter from the Colorado Amateur Hockey Association’s attorney. The board, it said, was launching an investigation. 

Into her. 





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Detroit Pistons insiders gave thousands to Mary Sheffield’s campaign

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by Leah Samuel, Outlier Media
December 17, 2025

At a Nov. 13 public hearing of Detroit City Council’s planning committee, the mood in the chamber tilted toward optimism. 

Speaker after speaker endorsed plans for a new WNBA headquarters and youth sports complex — backed by Detroit Pistons owner Tom Gores — urging approval of a nearly $40.7 million tax subsidy to clean up the former Uniroyal site on the Detroit River. The YMCA of Metropolitan Detroit, Henry Ford Health, Eastside Community Network, Detroit Riverfront Conservancy, and the Boys & Girls Clubs of Southeastern Michigan voiced support for the project. 

A few did not. 

“The Pistons are a rich organization,” said Carolyn Hughes. “I’m not sure this is an organization that needs me to abate its taxes. … Why are we offering this abatement? And what are we — specifically, Detroiters — receiving? What benefits are we receiving from this, other than having activity on the site?” 

Notably absent from the hearing was current City Council President and Mayor-elect Mary Sheffield. The following week, she voted to redirect tax dollars for the project. Sheffield then missed the final session of the term, when her colleagues unanimously approved an additional $4.4 million-plus tax break for the development. 

One detail that got little attention — if any — as the subsidies sailed through city hall is how the Pistons and Pistons-adjacent interests bankrolled Sheffield’s mayoral campaign. 

According to county election records, Pistons vice chairman Arn Tellem and his family gave more than $43,000 in direct and indirect contributions to Sheffield’s mayoral campaign. That includes $16,600 from Tellem and his wife Nancy in direct contributions, plus another $10,000 donation to Detroit Next, a political action committee that backed Sheffield. Another $16,650 came from the Tellems’ son, Pistons personnel vice president Eric Tellem and his wife Emily. Arn Tellem did not respond to messages for comment. 

Last month, Sheffield named Arn Tellem a co-chair of her transition team. 

“The Pistons agreement was proposed by the current mayoral administration and approved unanimously by the entire city council,” Samantha Myers, spokesperson for Sheffield’s transition team, said by email. “As she has done throughout her career on Detroit City Council, the Mayor-elect supported this project based solely on its merits and its benefit to the community and constituents she serves.” 

Sheffield’s campaign drew tens of thousands of dollars from developers, construction companies and building trade groups. She also received donations from high-profile NBA fans, including Earvin “Magic” Johnson’s wife Earleatha “Cookie” Johnson, actor Samuel L. Jackson and cultural critic Michael Eric Dyson. 

Have thoughts or questions about these campaign contributions or potential conflicts of interest? Reach out to civic life reporter Briana Rice at briana@outliermedia.org. Mayor-elect Sheffield is also soliciting input for her incoming administration.

Earlier this month, Sheffield married Rickey Jackson Jr. Jackson’s sister plays for the Los Angeles Sparks. 

Days before Election Day, Sheffield faced criticism for having voted years earlier to approve millions of dollars in city contracts for a demolition firm whose owner she was dating at the time. Experts faulted Detroit’s oversight system for vague standards and a narrow interpretation by the city’s ethics board. As mayor-elect, Sheffield appointed an Ethics Compliance Committee as part of her transition team. 

”There are currently no state laws that prevent Detroit’s mayor or other Michigan politicians from accepting campaign contributions from affiliated organizations or their leaders,” said Neil Thanedar, executive director of the Michigan Campaign Finance Network. ”Detroit residents can respond by filing a formal complaint with the Detroit Board of Ethics and advocating for statewide ethics reform.” 


‘A true hood champion’ 

Sheffield, the granddaughter of storied labor leader Horace Sheffield Jr., has long cast herself as an advocate for grassroots causes. On the campaign trail, she leaned heavily on her progressive record. 

“Mary Sheffield’s a true hood champion,” said Morningside resident and community activist Vaughn Arrington. “I think she would continue to focus very narrowly on communities that are not feeling Detroit’s growth.” 

Sheffield’s record on Pistons-related developments reflects the balance she’s tried to strike throughout her time in public office: keeping powerful corporate interests close while preserving her reputation as a champion of the community. 

In 2017, she voted to approve $34.5 million in public funding for the Pistons’ move to the city, despite public outcry. That same year, she sponsored the “jock tax,” which taxes NBA players and staff every day they work in the city. 

Sheffield supported tax subsidies for the team’s Performance Center headquarters and later the $3 billion Future of Health development, in which the Pistons are a partner. The pair of projects — both located in the City Council district she represents — each required the developers to negotiate community benefits. The Future of Health benefits deal includes Section 8 housing vouchers, a $2 million donation to the city’s affordable housing fund, $1 million for a community land trust, and more. 


Balancing act 

The WNBA facility, by contrast, is not mandated to have a community benefits agreement. The ordinance applies to projects valued at $75 million or more that receive at least $1 million in tax abatements or city land. Developers plan to build the riverfront sports complex in two phases: a $50 million WNBA headquarters that would open in 2029 and a subsequent “youth development academy” that would be operated by an unnamed nonprofit with a yet-to-be-named price tag. 

As a councilmember in 2021, Sheffield unsuccessfully pushed to lower the community benefits ordinance’s threshold to apply to projects valued as low as $50 million. During her campaign for mayor, she told Outlier Media she’s interested in reworking community benefits agreements to “expand home repair commitments.” And earlier this year, she and the council commissioned a study on the viability of a city “amusement tax.” 

Sheffield, who did not make herself available for an interview for this story, is soliciting input for her incoming administration on her website and plans to survey residents in January. 

“The mayor-elect has spent her entire career uplifting the voices and the needs of Detroiters,” said Samantha Myers, a spokesperson for Sheffield’s transition team. “She will bring that same focus to the mayor’s office and evaluate everything through that lens.” 

Sheffield takes office Jan. 1. 

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Parks and Recreation Programs for Teens

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<br /> <br /> Parks and Recreation Programs for Teens | Greensboro, NC <br /> <br />













































































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  • Greensboro Youth Council

    Make new friends, earn service learning hours, and learn new skills with Greensboro’s oldest teen organization.




Make new friends, earn service learning hours, and learn new skills with Greensboro’s oldest teen organization.







  • Youth Leadership Greensboro

    Are you ready to change your community for the better? Join the next session of Youth Leadership Greensboro.




Are you ready to change your community for the better? Join the next session of Youth Leadership Greensboro.


































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Virginia Tech Helmet Lab Releases First Independent Safety Ratings for Youth Hockey Helmets

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Key Takeaways

  • Virginia Tech Helmet Lab tested 33 youth hockey helmets, awarding 10 helmets a five-star rating and six a four-star rating
  • The ratings address a market of approximately 800,000 youth players in the United States and Canada combined
  • Parents of youth hockey players drove demand after showing strong interest in the lab’s 2015 adult hockey helmet ratings
  • The Hockey Equipment Certification Council remains the only widely used benchmark, certifying helmets meet ASTM standards without performance-based ratings
  • Youth hockey helmets represent the 13th sport or industry-specific headgear rated by the lab since its launch 15 years ago

Independent Performance Data Enters Youth Hockey Market

The Virginia Tech Helmet Lab released its first ratings for youth hockey helmets on December 16, providing parents and program operators with performance-based safety data for 33 helmets currently on the market. The lab applied its STAR (Summation of Tests for Analysis of Risk) framework to award ratings from zero to five stars based on impact protection.

“It includes every helmet we could get our hands on, including some that are no longer being manufactured but that players might still be wearing,” said Steve Rowson, the lab’s director and a professor of biomedical engineering. “The goal is simply to provide moms and dads and other stakeholders in the youth hockey community an independent resource so they can make an informed decision and purchase a helmet in the context of impact protection.”

The complete list of rated helmets, including advertised retail prices, is available at the Helmet Lab’s webpage.

Market Demand and Player Population Drive Research

The lab’s decision to test youth hockey helmets came directly from market response to its 2015 adult hockey helmet ratings. Rowson noted that parents of youth players showed the strongest interest in those varsity ratings, signaling clear demand for youth-specific data.

The youth hockey market substantially exceeds the adult player population. According to USA Hockey and Hockey Canada, approximately 800,000 youth players participate in the United States and Canada. The International Ice Hockey Federation reports an additional 275,000 players throughout Europe.

Testing Methodology Adapted for Youth Players

Virginia Tech researchers leveraged existing literature on impact exposures in youth hockey and utilized equipment from previous youth football helmet testing, including a youth-sized test dummy. The testing protocol accounts for lower impact energies associated with youth play compared to adult hockey.

Currently, the Hockey Equipment Certification Council provides the only widely used benchmark for hockey helmets. The council certifies that helmets meet American Society for Testing and Materials safety standards but does not produce performance-based ratings that compare helmet protection levels.

Broader Context for Safety Equipment Standards

The youth hockey helmet ratings continue the lab’s 15-year track record of developing independent consumer guides that double as development roadmaps for manufacturers. This summer, the lab updated ratings for bicycle, varsity football, and youth football helmets in response to measurable safety performance improvements in those categories.

Rowson emphasized that while the research aims to help individuals select better headgear, the ratings also encourage helmet manufacturers and sports organizations to prioritize safer product development.

via: News VT


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About Youth Sports Business Report

Youth Sports Business Report is the largest and most trusted source for youth sports industry news, insights, and analysis covering the $54 billion youth sports market. Trusted by over 50,000 followers including industry executives, investors, youth sports parents and sports business professionals, we are the premier destination for comprehensive youth sports business intelligence.

Our core mission: Make Youth Sports Better. As the leading authority in youth sports business reporting, we deliver unparalleled coverage of sports business trendsyouth athletics, and emerging opportunities across the youth sports ecosystem.

Our expert editorial team provides authoritative, in-depth reporting on key youth sports industry verticals including:

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  • Sports technology and data analytics innovation
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Whether you’re a sports industry executive, institutional investor, youth sports parent, coach, or sports business enthusiast, Youth Sports Business Report is your most reliable source for the actionable sports business insights you need to stay ahead of youth athletics trends and make informed decisions in the rapidly evolving youth sports landscape.

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Are you a brand looking to tap into the world’s most passionate fanbase… youth sports?

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About Play Up Partners

Play Up Partners is a leading youth sports marketing agency connecting brands with the power of youth sports. We specialize in youth sports sponsorships, partnerships, and activations that drive measurable results.

Why Sponsor Youth Sports?

Youth sports represents one of the most engaged and passionate audiences in sports marketing. With over 70 million young athletes and their families participating annually, the youth sports industry offers brands unparalleled access to motivated communities with strong purchasing power and loyalty.

What Does Play Up Partners Do?

We’ve done the heavy lifting to untangle the complex youth sports landscape so our brand partners can engage with clarity, confidence, and impact. Our vetted network of accredited youth sports organizations (from local leagues to national tournaments and operators) allows us to create flexible, scalable programs that evolve with the market.

Our Approach

Every partnership we build is rooted in authenticity and value creation. We don’t just broker deals. We craft youth sports marketing strategies that:

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Our Vision

We’re positioning youth sports as the most desirable and effective platform in sports marketing. Our mission is simple: MAKE YOUTH SPORTS BETTER for athletes, families, organizations, and brand partners.


Common Questions About Youth Sports Marketing

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Las Vegas police seek possible victims of man accused of sexual assault

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LAS VEGAS (FOX5) — Las Vegas police are asking the public if there are any additional victims of a man accused of sexual assault.

Officials with the Las Vegas Metropolitan Police Department have arrested Sergio Reyes Rojas, 44, for sexual assault. He was booked into the Clark County Detention Center on five charges: three counts of sexual assault against a child less than 16 years old, one count of child abuse or neglect and one count of kidnapping a minor.

Las Vegas Metropolitan Police Department officials provided a photo of Sergio Reyes Rojas
Las Vegas Metropolitan Police Department officials provided a photo of Sergio Reyes Rojas(Las Vegas Metropolitan Police Department)

Detectives say there may be additional victims as Rojas has ties to valley youth sports programs. The Nevada Youth Soccer Association told FOX5 Tuesday that they are aware of Reyes’s charges and he has been suspended indefinitely from all youth soccer activities.

The association says he’s also been reported to US Soccer and to the SafeSport program for further attention.

“We have also been informed by the club that he had headed that he has been replaced in his administrative and coaching capacities,” the association says.

Anyone who may have been a victim of Rojas or has information about this crime is urged by police to contact the Sexual Assault Detail at 702-828-3421. To remain anonymous, contact Crime Stoppers by phone at 702-385-5555, or on the internet at www.crimestoppersofnv.com.



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