Sports
Utah's Miller family pursuing hat trick of sports

For decades, the family of late Utah Jazz owner Larry Miller watched others shape the real estate surrounding the arena he built in downtown Salt Lake City. But after selling the NBA franchise in 2020 for $1.66 billion and their auto dealerships in 2021 for $3.2 billion, family is placing big bets on sports-driven real estate development across the region.
“Now, with our next-generation sports and entertainment team, plus our real estate group, we can create that 360 experience,” said Steve Starks, CEO of the Larry H. Miller Company.
The scale of that vision appears grander than ever following the family’s return to big-league sports ownership through the acquisition in April of a controlling stake in MLS’s Real Salt Lake and the NWSL’s Utah Royals at a roughly $600 million valuation. The Larry H. Miller Company is now spearheading three separate sports-anchored projects tied to their long-held minor league baseball club, the newly acquired soccer teams and a potential MLB expansion franchise.
“We’ve sort of worked the ‘sports land’ for almost 40 years,” said Don Stirling, executive director of the Miller Family Office and its philanthropic efforts. “There’s a time to plant, there’s a time to harvest and even a season to rest. There’s been a season of rest, to some degree, when we sold the Jazz, but we never left the land.”
Building Around Baseball
Shortly after the sale of the Jazz in late 2020 to Ryan Smith, founder of Qualtrics and head of Smith Entertainment Group, the LHM Company’s real estate arm acquired a master-planned community 20 miles south of Salt Lake City called Daybreak. It soon began construction of an adjacent sports and entertainment district called Downtown Daybreak, featuring a new privately funded stadium for the Salt Lake Bees, the minor league baseball team the family has owned since 2003. The Bees, the Class AAA affiliate of the Angels, moved into the $140 million Ballpark at America First Square for the 2025 season, serving as the anchor of a mixed-use district featuring a Miller-owned Megaplex entertainment center, outdoor concert venue, offices, retail and housing.
Last year, the LHM Company introduced plans to invest $3.5 billion in another 100-acre, mixed-use project, this time on the west side of Salt Lake City. The anchor for this development would be a ballpark for an MLB expansion team that the Millers are quietly but actively pursuing as the leaders of a coalition called Big League Utah. The state of Utah has already agreed to fund up to $900 million of the construction of the stadium in the event that the region is granted a team.
“We have real estate that we already own; we have an ownership group that’s prepared, experienced and ready; and now we have public financing already lined up,” Starks said. “Those reasons, combined with Utah’s great economy, fastest-growing state in the country, youngest state in the country [by median age], give us a compelling argument that if baseball decides to expand, that we should be one of the two markets that they expand to.”
Adding soccer
The LHM Company’s purchase of Real Salt Lake and the Royals earlier this year from former majority owner David Blitzer (who remains a minority partner) and Smith (who has exited his investment entirely) already looks like a good value, considering the Columbus Crew and Austin FC have since sold equity at reported valuations of $900 million.
“It’s nice to see very strong valuations, and I think that’s a credit to David’s commitment to not just seeking the highest dollar, but seeking the right partner,” Starks said. “Together, we hope that we’ll have strong growth on the pitch and on the revenue side, and the league is doing great things.”
The Millers have since brought on additional limited partners with ties to the region, including Waystar CEO Matt Hawkins, Built Brands CEO Nick Greer, Traeger Grills CEO Jeremy Andrus and CardWorks Chairman Don Berman. Michelle Smith, president of Miller Sports + Entertainment, said the Millers’ deep roots in Utah are set to pay immediate dividends for the club in the form of several sponsorship agreements expected to be announced in the coming weeks.
“We have that ability to run really deep in corporate partnership sales, ticket sales, media and PR strategy, as well as marketing and brand,” said Smith. “Those are all great strengths for us across all of our businesses within the platform.”
Like baseball, the Millers envision soccer at the center of a mixed-use development at the site of America First Field in Sandy, Utah. Less than two miles from LHM Company headquarters, the project would similarly feature office space, housing, retail and entertainment. The LHM Company is just beginning the process of finding an architect for the project through a request for proposal.
The new owners are also eyeing a renovation of the soccer-specific stadium itself, which opened in 2008 and has begun to show its age. Starks said that project, which will cost a minimum of $50 million, could begin as soon as the end of the 2026 MLS season.
The Millers’ ambitious three-pronged sports plan coincides with the efforts of Smith Entertainment Group, which last year purchased an NHL franchise to play at Delta Center alongside the Jazz. SEG is also renovating the arena and has secured $900 million in funding from Salt Lake City to redevelop the surrounding city blocks.
Salt Lake City is one of the smallest U.S. metros with multiple major professional sports teams, home to just 1.3 million people. But the Millers believe the region can sustain top-tier basketball, hockey, soccer and baseball, along with the large-scale developments rising alongside them.
“It’s not a tired market, it’s not a sleepy market,” Starks said. “It’s very vibrant, and the companies that are relocating there are building great businesses that want to be part of the sports teams and franchises that are there. Utah punches above its weight when it comes to supporting its sports teams.”
Sports
Kevin LaSure Joins Track & Field Program as Assistant Coach
LaSure arrives at Columbia following a highly successful decade as Director of Cross Country and Track & Field at Academy of Art University, where he led the program to sustained national prominence at the NCAA Division II level. During his tenure, his teams earned 14 top-10 national finishes, including multiple top-five performances, while producing more than 20 individual national champions and over 300 All-Americans across sprints, hurdles, middle distance, jumps, and relays.
A nationally recognized coach, LaSure has earned 11 NCAA Division II West Region Coach of the Year awards and coached athletes to five NCAA national records, multiple National Track Athlete of the Year honors, and an Olympic bronze medalist at the 2016 Olympic Games.
His impact extended well beyond performance, as his programs consistently posted strong academic results, including multiple USTFCCCA All-Academic Team honors and significant improvements in team GPA.
Prior to his time at Academy of Art, LaSure served as head coach of cross country and track & field at the University of New Haven for eight seasons after beginning his collegiate coaching career there as an assistant. Across both head coaching stops, his teams combined for numerous national qualifiers, conference championships, and regional honors, cementing his reputation as a program builder and elite developer of student-athletes.
In addition to his on-track success, LaSure is a longtime leader within the coaching profession. He has been deeply involved with the USTFCCCA Executive Committee, serving as president (2017–21) and executive council chair (2021–24), and remains a highly respected voice in collegiate track and field nationally.
While Coach LaSure will work with all track and field and cross country student-athletes, he will directly oversee the men’s and women’s sprints and relays squads.
Stay up to date on all things Columbia track & field and cross country by following the Lions on Twitter (@CULionsXCTF), Instagram (@culionsxctf) and on Facebook (@ColumbiaAthletics).
Sports
Loralai Ketner Of Sheridan HS To Run Track And Field At Augustana University – Sheridan Media
A Sheridan Lady Bronc hurdler will continue her running and jumping ways at the collegiate level.
Loralai Ketner has signed a written offer of athletic aid, to compete at Augustana College, which is a private Lutheran University, in Sioux Falls, South Dakota.
Last school year, as a junior, she was the state champ in the 4A Girls 300 meter hurdles race.
After quitting soccer, Ketner says she started competing in track in her 7th grade year.
She had also been considering the University of Sioux Falls, but liked the team bonding activities at Augustana College better.
“Comparing the 2, we fell in love with Sioux Falls and just the city itself and then Augustana, the coach is amazing, Emily is great and then the campus was great and we got to meet a lot of their team and we made bracelets, so I think things that build the team together is what pushed me more towards Augustana than USF or any other college that I had toured.”
Ketner adds she is considering majoring in nursing.
The Augustana University Viking and Lady Viking Athletic Program competes at the NCAA Division II level, in the Northern Sun Intercollegiate Conference.
Sports
Watch Wisconsin volleyball vs Stanford in NCAA tournament; time, TV
Dec. 12, 2025, 8:30 a.m. CT
Wisconsin volleyball has a couple important streaks it will look to keep alive when it meets Stanford in an NCAA tournament regional semifinal.
The third-seeded Badgers [26-4] bring an 11-match winning streak into their showdown against the second-seeded Cardinal [29-4] on Friday, Dec. 12. They also have a seven-year streak in which it has advanced into the regional finals on the line.
Which was the last team to knock off Kelly Sheffield’s team in this round? That would be Stanford in 2017.
And one streak the Badgers would like to stop on Friday is a losing streak to the Cardinal. The Badgers have never beaten Stanford, a history that includes three losses to the Cardinal in the NCAA tournament.
The matchup features two storied programs. Wisconsin is playing in the second weekend of the tournament for a 13th straight season, while Stanford has more NCAA championships [9] than any program. It beat the Badgers for its most recent title in 2019.
Wisconsin-Stanford will follow the other semifinal in the region between top-seeded Texas and fourth-seeded Indiana.
Here’s how to watch the Wisconsin-Stanford match:
What channel is Wisconsin volleyball vs Stanford? TV, livestream
- TV: ESPN
- Stream: You can stream the match on services that offer ESPN, including Fubo. A free trial is available.
Watch on Fubo
Wisconsin volleyball vs Stanford time today
- Date: Friday, Dec. 12
- Time: 1:30 p.m.
Wisconsin plays Stanford in an NCAA tournament regional semifinal match at approximately 1:30 p.m. Friday, Dec. 12, at the Gregory Gymnasium in Austin, Texas.
The Badgers swept their first and second round matches – against Eastern Illinois and North Carolina – at the UW Field House. Stanford beat Utah Valley and Arizona by 3-1 scores in its first two rounds.
How can I listen to Wisconsin volleyball vs Stanford on the radio?
Wisconsin volleyball score today
The Journal Sentinel will have live coverage from the NCAA tournament match with updates from reporter John Steppe live in Austin, Texas. Follow his live blog at jsonline.com/sports/badgers for the results and highlights.
Wisconsin volleyball bracket
First round
- Texas (1) defeated Florida A&M, 3-0, on Dec. 5
- Penn State (8) defeated South Florida, 3-1, on Dec. 5
- Colorado (5) defeated American, 3-0, on Dec. 4
- Indiana (4) defeated Toledo, 3-0, on Dec. 4
- Wisconsin (3) defeated Eastern Illinois, 3-0, on Dec. 4
- North Carolina defeated UTEP (6), 3-1, on Dec. 4
- Arizona defeated South Dakota State (7), 3-1, on Dec. 5
- Stanford (2) defeated Utah Valley, 3-1, on Dec. 5
Second round
- Texas (1) defeated Penn State (8), 3-0, on Dec. 6
- Indiana (4) defeated Colorado (5), 3-0 on Dec. 5
- Wisconsin (3) defeated North Carolina, 3-0, on Dec. 5
- Stanford (2) defeated Arizona, 3-1, on Dec. 6
Regional semifinals
- Texas (1) vs. Indiana (4), 11 a.m. Friday, Dec. 12
- Stanford (2) vs. Wisconsin (3), 1:30 p.m. or 30 minutes after the Texas/Indiana match
Sports
ECAC Announces 2025 Division I Women’s Volleyball All-ECAC and Major Awards
ECAC Announces 2025 Division I Women’s Volleyball All-ECAC and Major Awards
DANBURY, Conn. – The Eastern College Athletic Conference (ECAC) has announced its 2025 Division I Women’s Volleyball All-ECAC Teams and major awards.
Korrin Burns from Saint Francis University won Offensive Player of the Year. Jessie Golden of Brown University won Defensive Player of the Year. Yale’s Ava Poinsett won Rookie of the Year and Lauren Steinbrecher of James Madison University won Coach of the Year.
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Korrin Burns – Saint Francis University, Outside Hitter
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Jessie Golden – Brown University, Libero
Ava Poinsett – Yale University, Outside Hitter
Lauren Steinbrecher – James Madison University, Coach
ECAC Division I Women’s Volleyball All-ECAC First Team*
TaKenya Stafford – Coppin State, Rs-Sr., OH
Kiannisha Santiago – Rider University, Sr., OPP
Korrin Burns – Saint Francis University, Sr., OH
Kennedy Louisell – James Madison University, Jr., OH
Izadora Stedile – Hofstra University, Sr., OH
Alexandra Sappia – Saint Francis University, Rs-Sr., S
Jessie Golden – Brown University, Sr., L
ECAC Division I Women’s Volleyball All-ECAC Second Team
Kali Moore – Stony Brook University, Sr., OH
Arianna Ugolini – Bryant University, Sr., OH
Maya Walker – Fairfield University, Sr., MB
Ava Poinsett – Yale University, Fr., OH
Sydney Draper – Princeton University, Jr., S
Coco Figueroa – Coppin State, Jr., L
*additional due to ties in voting
ABOUT THE ECAC
The ECAC is an eighty-six year old intercollegiate athletics organization with roughly 200 member schools for traditional sports across all three NCAA Divisions – I, II and III – that exists to enhance the experience of student-athletes participating in NCAA sports, and provide great value for universities, by sponsoring championships, leagues, bowl games, tournaments and other competitions throughout the country. The ECAC also hosts a comprehensive esports program, with over 300 schools, 4,000 teams and 10,000-plus participants in twenty-four different games titles.
STAY CONNECTED
Stay updated on the latest news, championships and more by connecting with the ECAC on Facebook (ECACSports), Twitter (@ECACSports) and Instagram (@ECACSports).
Sports
Men’s and women’s track and field sets sight on nationals, again
Heading into 2026, both the NYU men’s and women’s track and field teams are aiming to build upon last season’s 42nd and 62nd place finishes, respectively, at the NCAA Division III championships last year. Additionally, NYU hopes to beat the total of nine runners the teams sent to the championships in Ohio last season.
After competing in its first meet of the season at the Dec. 5th FastTrack Season Opener on Staten Island and sending four runners from the women’s team to the Sharon Colyear-Danville Season Opener on Dec. 6, the Violets officially began its season on a positive note.
According to head coach Tyler Deck Shipley, this served as an opportunity for competitors to “see where they’re at” and give runners from cross country season a proper transition indoors, as the athletes integrate into both teams and compete year-round.
“That’s the beauty of our sport,” Shipley said. “In no other sport are we together throughout the entire academic year. A huge reason why we’ve been successful is the commitment that they’ve had to the team and to each other all year round, and letting this be a really stabilizing factor in people’s lives while they’re at NYU.”
With the first meet, the team is able to gauge where they were in comparison to last year and avenge some shortcomings.
“Last year we ran into some injuries, and so some of the best people didn’t quite get there,” Shipley said. “If all goes according to plan, we can be a big step up this year.”
The team’s runners have been open about their goal to stack the field at the NCAA’s. After strong seasons last year, junior distance runner Julian Aske and senior distance runner Janie Cooper emerged as two contenders to qualify for the championships at the end of the season. In the field events, senior thrower Emma Grunin finished 14th in shot put at the UAA Indoor Championships in 2025, and senior thrower Daniel Lee placed ninth in the weighted throws, setting both up for a potential nationals bid this season.
Team culture has been a focal point for the Violets. Not just the men’s and women’s respective cultures, but the overall team culture has “always been top of mind,” according to Shipley, especially with competitors traveling to many different events on any given competition day.
“Most of us are from areas other than New York,” senior thrower Kai Aravena said. “We don’t have family coming, so having your team there to cheer you on helps a lot.”
Leaders of the team like Aravena have highlighted the need for consistency in the team’s performances and emphasized the intensity in early practices so far.
“People have been putting in work at practice,” Aravena said. “They seemed like they were excited and ready to compete, which in previous seasons it wasn’t as such.
As both the men’s and women’s teams break for the winter recess, the teams will return on Jan. 16 for the NYC Gotham Cup on Staten Island. Looking forward, each team has weekly events after the season starts, heading into the UAA Indoor Championships on Feb. 28 and Mar. 1, followed by the NCAA Indoor Championships on Mar. 13 and 14. The teams will round out the season at the UAA Outdoor Championships on Apr. 25 and 26 and NCAA Outdoor Championships on May 21, 22 and 23.
“I always say that track and field is an individual sport disguised as a team sport, because you can’t really affect how another person on your team is doing,” Aravena said. “Having a few individual performances that do stand out would absolutely be ideal, because it shows that people have been putting in the work and we were still there to support them.”
Contact Naseem Rahman at [email protected].
Sports
2025 AVCA Two-Year College All-Americans
The AVCA is pleased to announce the 2025 All-America teams for Two-Year College women’s volleyball, as chosen by the Two-Year College Volleyball All-America Selection Committee.
Forty-five players from 38 schools made the three, 15-member All-America teams for this season. The players chosen represent all sections of Two-Year College women’s volleyball: NJCAA Division I, II, and III, the 3C2A, and the NWAC.
Five schools have two 2025 All-Americans apiece: Bellevue College, Dallas College Eastfield, Feather River College, Miami Dade College, Treasure Valley Community College, and Weatherford College.
2025 AVCA Two-Year College Award Winners
Coach of the Year: Mary Frahm, Heartland Community College
Assistant Coach of the Year: Nolan McDaniel, Cleveland State Community College
Player of the Year: Chloe Albiez, Feather River College
Libero of the Year: Mana Kaneko, Odessa College
The Libero of the Year award is new for 2025. The inaugural recipient, Mana Kaneko, played in 37 matches and had 644 digs, for a 4.57 digs-per-set average. She anchored the Odessa defense, which was a major reason the team was 31-6 and placed sixth at the NJCAA Division I Women’s Volleyball Championship.

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