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The Salem Red Sox have one of the most famous names in baseball. That's why they're changing it.

Salem’s minor league baseball team is about to change its sox. This will be the last season the team will be known as the Salem Red Sox. Come next year, the team will be called … well, we don’t know yet. The new name hasn’t been picked yet, although a small group of team officials […]

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The Salem Red Sox have one of the most famous names in baseball. That's why they're changing it.

Salem’s minor league baseball team is about to change its sox.

This will be the last season the team will be known as the Salem Red Sox. Come next year, the team will be called … well, we don’t know yet.

The new name hasn’t been picked yet, although a small group of team officials knows which names are the finalists. The announcement won’t come until after the season is over. 

When Salem shucks off its Red Sox name and logo, it will join a long and growing list of minor league teams that have traded the name of their Major League affiliate for something unique — and for which the team can make a lot more money selling merchandise.

Like many things in life, this is all about money.

“I grew up a Red Sox fan,” says team General Manager Allen Lawrence. “When we became the Red Sox in 2009 nobody thought that was cooler than me. In the early stages of our life, there were a lot of benefits to it. There was no question who we were affiliated with. The Red Sox are one of the biggest brands in the world.”

Here’s the downside: The Salem team doesn’t really make much money selling merchandise. If you just want a T-shirt or hat that says “Red Sox,” you don’t need to go through the team. You can buy those almost anywhere, and that licensing money eventually finds its way back to Fenway Park in Boston to help pay the $27 million that Rafael Devers will make this year, even if he’s only playing half the game as a designated hitter. Not that many people really want merchandise that specifically says “Salem” on it. “The only people buying Salem Red Sox merchandise outside this market are family members of the players, and that’s pretty limited,” Lawrence says.

The key words there are “outside this market.”

These days, sports teams strive to cash in far beyond their own ballpark. The Sports Business Journal reports that the Atlanta Braves get about 8% of their revenue from merchandise sales. For minor league teams, who don’t have fat TV contracts, merch sales become even more important (we just don’t know how important because, unlike the Braves, they’re not publicly traded). Lawrence says Salem’s goal with the name change is to double its merchandise sales.

The Danville Otterbots logo. Courtesy of the team.

When the Danville Otterbots, a summer league team for college players, announced its unusual name in 2021, it quickly sold merchandise to 50 states — and countries as far away as Australia. 

“All I can say is, and I’m not lying, it took close to 48 hours to pack up the merchandise orders that came in just in the 18 hours after the brand announcement and ship them out,” the team’s general manager said then.

When the Danville Dairy Daddies, another college-level team in a different league, came out with its unusual name in 2024, same thing. Fifty states and ka-ching!

The Danville Dairy Daddies. Courtesy of the team.

Same with the Burlington Sock Puppets in North Carolina; the Rocket City Trash Pandas in Madison, Alabama; the Hartford Yard Goats in Connecticut; the Amarillo Sod Poodles in Texas and … well, it’s a very long list. Over the years, but particularly in recent ones, minor league teams have moved to cash in with unique names that can help them sell merchandise — not just in the stadium but around the country and even around the world. As recently as 2019, the last year that the Appalachian League existed as a minor league before converting to a college-level league, all 10 teams were named after their Major League affiliates. Now, somebody in Australia has Danville Otterbots gear. Of the 120 minor league teams formally affiliated with Major League counterparts, only 11 still bear the names of their big league team. Next year, when the Salem team takes the field as whatever the Salem team will be called, there will be 10 (or fewer, if others change their names).

The impetus for changing the team’s name began six years ago. Back in 2019, the Salem Red Sox adopted an “alternate ID” for home games on Thursday nights, the traditional cheap beer night. In a nod to the growing number of breweries in the Roanoke Valley, the team that plays on those Thirsty Thursdays is known as the Salem Beermongers. 

“It really kind of took off,” Lawrence says. “We sold merchandise in 44 states in a very short period of time. We thought, ‘This is cool. We’ve never done that.’” 

Even now, Salem still sometimes makes the highly rated Sports Center on ESPN for the Beermongers when the network needs something light. “They’re never going to feature the Salem Red Sox,” Lawrence says. “There’s no uniqueness to the logo. They’ll choose the [Akron] Rubber Ducks or the Trash Pandas or the [Richmond] Flying Squirrels before they land on the Red Sox.”

And all those national network appearances, however brief, are essentially free commercials for fans to buy merchandise with an unusual name or logo or both — so the gimmicky promotion with the alternate ID of the Beermongers has led to a wholesale renaming.

The process of renaming a team is not as simple as you might think. When the Arizona Coyotes of the National Hockey League moved to Salt Lake City, the team spent a season as the Utah Hockey Club because it took that long to work through trademark issues. One fan favorite — the Yetis — got nixed because the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office said that was too close to the Yeti brand of water coolers. Instead, the team recently announced it would become the Utah Mammoth. Extinct ice age beasts can’t sue for trademark infringement, but they look really cool on a logo.

Lawrence explains that many of the decisions related to a new name don’t have much to do with the name itself but things such as: “What would be fun? What would the mascot look like? Can it be easily embroidered? Can it look good on a T-shirt?” Lawrence likened the process to naming a child. “What will kids in school 10 years from now rhyme his name with that could be made fun of?”

Salem Red Sox fans. Courtesy of the team.

Part of the goal is to find a name that is “unique to the area.” Some of the new-fangled names for minor league teams play off their location: the Augusta (Georgia) Green Jackets are a reference to the Masters golf tournament, the Lansing Lugnuts are a nod to Michigan’s auto industry, the Altoona Curve to a famous railroad bend in Pennsylvania. Closer to home, Salem’s Carolina League rivals down U.S. 460 are the Lynchburg Hillcats, which plays off that city’s nickname as the Hill City. On the other side of the state, the minor league team in Norfolk is the Tides, which seems self-explanatory for a port city. 

“You want to have your own identity,” Lawrence says. “Salem Red Sox doesn’t scream ‘minor league.’ There are so many names out there that are unique and fun but also relate to the market. We didn’t check either of those boxes.”

The team contracted with the Atlanta-based Collegiate Licensing Company to come up with a new name. “They did a lot of research,” Lawrence says. A lot of that has revolved around the outdoors, an asset that the Roanoke Valley has pushed in recent years. “They came up with a few different ideas,” Lawrence says. “We’ve honed in on one that we think it is a little bit stronger than the others” — but, naturally, he’s not giving it away.

All the names and logos under consideration have been sent to Major League Baseball for approval. “They did make one small suggestion to one name we were considering.” Otherwise, they have all been cleared. No Yeti problems yet.

One question is whether “Salem” stays in the name. Since minor league baseball arrived in Salem in 1955 — this year marks 70 years — the nicknames have changed, but the teams have always been the Salem This or the Salem That. Never Roanoke Valley. Not Blue Ridge. Not Virginia. And definitely not Roanoke. If you know anything about the Roanoke Valley, you know why. Salem is Salem, and Salem is very proud of being Salem.

There’s no language in the team’s contract with Salem that requires the team to bear the name “Salem,” although it’s safe to say that the city feels very strongly that it should. There is a trend toward regional names or using city nicknames. The Kinston Indians in North Carolina became the Carolina Mudcats, then became the Down East Wood Ducks before moving to Spartanburg, South Carolina, to become the Hub City Spartanburgers.

Ultimately, though, we come back to the M word — or maybe two M words: marketing and money. Whatever the name is, Lawrence says, the biggest consideration is “can we sell it in this area but also sell nationally and get some legs behind?” 

Here’s where things can get tricky. The team conducted focus groups with season-ticket holders, sponsors and others who might be considered “community stakeholders.” One concern some had, he says, was, “Why would you change from the Red Sox? That’s such a powerful brand? What if you changed it to something stupid?”

What’s stupid, though, is often open to debate, especially where the cash register is concerned. 

Almost a decade ago, the new collegiate summer league team in Savannah, Georgia, needed a name. Those chose “Bananas,” thinking that was funny and kind of rhymed. It also took off in such unexpected ways that the Savannah Bananas have now evolved into an independent, barnstorming novelty team, similar to the Harlem Globetrotters. They’ve also become a cash machine that some speculate is worth $1 billion. 

“There’s not a name more stupid than the Bananas and they’re selling more merchandise than some Major League teams,” Lawrence says. 

So what will Salem’s new name be? All we know is what it won’t be. It won’t be the Bananas. That’s already taken. 

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CAC Releases 2025-26 Championship Postseason Sites

The Continental Athletic Conference has announced postseason championship tournament sites, dates and formats for its 13 sports during the upcoming 2025-26 athletic season. Planned championship events are: Men’s and Women’s Cross Country Date: Friday, November 7, 2025 Host School: Florida College Site: Holloway Park in Lakeland, Florida Women’s Volleyball (Six Teams) Dates: November 14-15, 2025 […]

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The Continental Athletic Conference has announced postseason championship tournament sites, dates and formats for its 13 sports during the upcoming 2025-26 athletic season.

Planned championship events are:

Men’s and Women’s Cross Country

Date: Friday, November 7, 2025

Host School: Florida College

Site: Holloway Park in Lakeland, Florida

Women’s Volleyball (Six Teams)

Dates: November 14-15, 2025

Host School: Haskell Indian Nations University

Location: Lawrence, Kansas

Men’s and Women’s Soccer (Six Teams Each)

Dates: November 7-11, 2025

Host School: Georgia Gwinnett College

Location: Lawrenceville, Georgia

Men’s and Women’s Basketball (Eight Teams Each)

Dates: February 26-March 1, 2026

Host School: Georgia Gwinnett College

Location: Lawrenceville, Georgia

Men’s & Women’s Outdoor Track & Field

Date: Monday, April 20, 2026

Host School: Florida National University

Location: Ansin Sports Complex in Miramar, Florida

Softball (Five Teams)

Dates: April 29-May 2, 2026

Host School: Georgia Gwinnett College

Location: Lawrenceville, Georgia

Baseball (Five Teams)

Dates: April 29-May 3, 2026

Host School: Georgia Gwinnett College

Location: Lawrenceville, Georgia

Championship-winning teams and top individuals at the cross country and track and field events will represent the CAC in the NAIA national championships in their sports.

With 12-member institutions from across the country, the CAC promotes the education, development and welfare of student-athletes through their various experiences and participation in NAIA intercollegiate athletics.



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Emilia Guerra-Acuna Joins Beach Volleyball Staff

Story Links TUCSON, Ariz. – Arizona beach volleyball head coach Steve Walker announced on Monday that Emilia Guerra-Acuna will serve as an assistant coach for the program after recently finishing her career four-year at Boise State.   “Emilia is a proven winner and team leader,” Walker said. “She is a great role […]

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TUCSON, Ariz. – Arizona beach volleyball head coach Steve Walker announced on Monday that Emilia Guerra-Acuna will serve as an assistant coach for the program after recently finishing her career four-year at Boise State.  

“Emilia is a proven winner and team leader,” Walker said. “She is a great role model for aspiring young athletes, bringing high character, discipline and a strong work ethic to positively impact those around her. We are delighted to welcome her to the Arizona Beach Volleyball program and she will be a great addition to our staff.” 

Guerra-Acuna registered 86 career wins for the Broncos, the most in program history, and picked up all-conference honors three times in her career. She earned first team accolades in 2023 and 2025 and second team honors in 2024 in addition to being named to the Southland Conference All-Academic team on two occasions.  

“This is an incredible opportunity to begin my coaching career with Arizona Beach Volleyball,” said Guerra-Acuna. “I want to thank head coach Steve Walker and Director of Athletics Desiree Reed-Francois for believing in me and welcoming me to Arizona Athletics. I also want to thank head coach Allison Voigt and assistant coach Alex Venardos from Boise State University, for creating the relationships and the respect for this program during my playing career. I can’t wait to get to Tucson and get started.” 

A native of San Antonio, Guerra-Acuna attended Brandeis High School and was a four-year member of the indoor volleyball team. She played club volleyball for 210 Beach Volleyball Club in San Antonio, where her team won the inaugural BVCA Club National Championship in 2021.  

Guerra-Acuna graduated from Boise State in May 2025 with an undergraduate degree in Health Studies while minoring in Psychology and earning a certificate in Spanish.  



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Northwest Athletic Conference Honors BC Teams, Players | Culture + Life

The Northwest Athletic Conference recently honored two Bellevue College teams and two student athletes at its annual Hall of Fame event.   This is the first time Bellevue College has been honored in eight years. It’s also the first time women’s teams and players have been inducted, a release from the school noted.  Rhoda Bell, one […]

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The Northwest Athletic Conference recently honored two Bellevue College teams and two student athletes at its annual Hall of Fame event.  

This is the first time Bellevue College has been honored in eight years. It’s also the first time women’s teams and players have been inducted, a release from the school noted. 

Rhoda Bell, one of the appointees, was a women’s track and field student athlete from 1980 to 1981. She still holds the fastest two times in the 400-meter race in the NWAC.  

Lisa Kinderlan, a fellow appointee, also played for women’s track and field as well as women’s cross country from 1980 to 1982. She was the only woman from Bellevue College to compete in three Olympic trials. 

“This was a great way to honor the rich sports history at Bellevue College,” Jeremy Eggers, Bellevue College’s athletics director, said in the press release. “There’s a lot of history here that is undocumented on our side … And what they did back then is what we’re continuing to strive to do in the sports that we do currently have.” 

The 1981 Women’s Cross Country Team was the No. 1 ranked team in the nation for community colleges. The 1983 Women’s Track and Field Team set four conference records — three of which are still standing 41 years later, the release said.



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LSU strength and conditioning coach has leg amputated after Fourth of July jet ski accident

BATON ROUGE — Former LSU softball player Katie Guillory is recovering after her leg was amputated following a Fourth of July jet ski accident, her family said. The Carencro native is currently an assistant strength and conditioning coach at LSU for both beach volleyball and gymnastics. Guillory suffered a severe injury to her lower left […]

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BATON ROUGE — Former LSU softball player Katie Guillory is recovering after her leg was amputated following a Fourth of July jet ski accident, her family said.

The Carencro native is currently an assistant strength and conditioning coach at LSU for both beach volleyball and gymnastics.

Guillory suffered a severe injury to her lower left leg on Friday, her mother Cindy Guillory said in a Facebook post Saturday. Doctors were unsuccessful in restoring blood flow to the beach volleyball and gymnastics coach’s leg.

“She is stable otherwise,” her mother said, noting that her leg was amputated below the knee.

On Sunday, Guillory’s mother gave an update on her condition, saying she was in “severe pain after the surgery, but they were able to do an additional block.”

“She is resting comfortably right now. Thanks for all the concerns, well wishes and prayers,” Cindy Guillory said.

The younger Guillory played softball at LSU before joining the university’s strength and conditioning team in 2022 after several years of coaching at the University of Illinois and Liberty University.

Guillory was a team captain for the LSU Tigers’ softball team and helped lead that team to the Women’s College World Series in 2012.

On Friday, the Ascension Parish Sheriff’s Office told WBRZ that they responded to a jet ski accident caused by a boat wake that resulted in a “serious injury to her lower leg.”

A spokesperson said that the Department of Wildlife and Fisheries was working on the case, but WBRZ has not been able to confirm whether this incident near Blind River Bar involved Guillory.



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Track and Field Alum Brooke Ury Earns Fullbright Award

PROVIDENCE, R.I. – A former school record holder and Ivy medalist has been presented with a prestigious award by the University. Brooke Ury ’24 is one of 36 recent Brown alumni or graduate students who have been presented with a Fullbright Scholarship.   Overseen by the U.S. Department of State, the Fullbright U.S. Student Program […]

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PROVIDENCE, R.I. – A former school record holder and Ivy medalist has been presented with a prestigious award by the University. Brooke Ury ’24 is one of 36 recent Brown alumni or graduate students who have been presented with a Fullbright Scholarship.
 
Overseen by the U.S. Department of State, the Fullbright U.S. Student Program promotes peace through intellectual and cultural exchange. They are presented each year to individuals to help conduct research or teach English in locations around the world, and are selected for their professional and academic records, as well as their potential to engage culturally with their host communities. Over the last decade, Brown has consistently been one of the nation’s top Fullbright producers.
 
Ury was selected for a Fullbright Research Award to conduct environmental health research in Munich, Germany, specifically studying the health impacts of air pollution, temperature and climate change.
 
Ury graduated from Brown in 2024 as the school record holder in the 60 meter hurdles (8.49) and the 100 meter hurdles (13.83).
 


BROWN UNIVERSITY SPORTS FOUNDATION

The Brown University Sports Foundation (BUSF) is the backbone of our athletics program, playing a crucial role in enhancing the student-athlete experience. This is possible through philanthropic support from our alumni, parents, fans, and friends. Your gift through the Sports Foundation can immediately impact today’s Brown Bears, helping them excel in the classroom, in competition, and, most importantly, in the community. Please click 
here to learn more about how you can support the Bears.

 

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For the latest on Brown Athletics, please follow 
@BrownU_Bears on X and @BrownU_Bears on Instagram. Like BrownUBears on Facebook and subscribe to the BrownAthletics YouTube channel.





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2024-25 CSUN Top Moments – A Pair of CSUN Teams in National Rankings

Story Links From June 11 to August 11, GoMatadors.com will present the top CSUN Moments from the 2024-25 sports season. Today, we celebrate the Men’s Volleyball and Women’s Water Polo teams who were each nationally ranked during the 2024-25 academic year.    CSUN Athletics produced a pair of programs that reached national rankings in their respective […]

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From June 11 to August 11, GoMatadors.com will present the top CSUN Moments from the 2024-25 sports season. Today, we celebrate the Men’s Volleyball and Women’s Water Polo teams who were each nationally ranked during the 2024-25 academic year. 
 


CSUN Athletics produced a pair of programs that reached national rankings in their respective sports during the 2024-25 season. CSUN men’s volleyball finished the season ranked ninth, while women’s water polo reached as high as 16th during the 2025 campaign.

In men’s volleyball, CSUN finished with an 18-11 overall record and was ranked ninth in the final AVCA National Collegiate Coaches Poll of the season. The Matadors, under third-year head coach Theo Edwards, were ranked in the top-10 in the final poll of the season for the second time in the last seven seasons and 17th time since the creation of the AVCA national poll in 1986.

After concluding the season with a heartbreaking five-set loss to No. 4 UC Irvine in the Quarterfinals of the Outrigger Big West Men’s Volleyball Championship, the Matadors would finish the season ranked ninth. During the 2025 season, CSUN reached a season-high No. 7 national ranking a total of three times. After opening 2025 ranked No. 15 in the Preseason Coaches Poll, the Matadors steadily climbed in the rankings, culminating with a 12-2 record and a No. 7 national ranking on Mar. 3. That marked the highest national ranking for the Matadors since also ranking seventh on Jan. 15, 2018.

One week later, CSUN received a season-high 302 points (Mar. 10) to also rank seventh where it would remain until Mar. 17. The Matadors, ranked in all 17 national polls during the 2024 season, were ranked in all 17 polls during the 2025 season (7th three times, 8th, 9th five times, 10th, 12th, 13th, 15th three times, and 16th twice).

 

Over the course of the 2025 season, the Matadors defeated a total of eight ranked teams including No. 5 Hawai’i (Apr. 4), No. 8 Grand Canyon (Feb. 19), No. 10 UC San Diego (Apr. 10, Apr. 12), No. 10 Pepperdine (Feb. 8), No. 15 Lewis (Mar. 20), No. 19 Princeton (Mar. 12), and No. 20 George Mason (Feb. 2).

The CSUN women’s water polo team finished the 2025 season at 16-13 overall. CSUN was ranked in the Collegiate Water Polo Association top-25 national poll in 12 weeks of the season. 

The Matador water polo team would be ranked as high No. 16 on the year, marking the highest the program had been ranked nationally in a decade. CSUN remained ranked in the top-20 through the first three weeks of the season after winning seven of its first eight matches. The team would also collect a victory over nationally-ranked Villanova in a 17-14 decision at Matador Pool on March 2.

CSUN’s 2025 season marked the third consecutive year the water polo program had recorded a winning season, the first for the program since notching three straight winning years from 2013-2015. Head coach Matt Warshaw also moved up to second place in school history in all-time coaching victories at 117, just 11 off the pace from breaking the program’s all-time win mark. 

#GoMatadors

 



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