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Warriors enjoying being part of a girls high school flag football league

Sophia Castaneda has attended many football games with the Edgewood cheerleading team. Avery Vencill grew up watching her cousins play on Friday nights and used to throw the football around with her friends in the backyard. × This page requires Javascript. Javascript is required for you to be able to read premium content. Please enable […]

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Warriors enjoying being part of a girls high school flag football league

Sophia Castaneda has attended many football games with the Edgewood cheerleading team.

Avery Vencill grew up watching her cousins play on Friday nights and used to throw the football around with her friends in the backyard.

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Even for youth, sliding mitts are baseball’s ‘must-have’

PITTSBURGH — Andrew McCutchen hasn’t had the conversation with 7-year-old son Steel yet, but the Pittsburgh Pirates star knows it’s probably coming at some point. Steel, already playing in a youth baseball league, will probably come home at one point and ask his five-time All-Star father if he can have whatever hot item his teammates […]

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PITTSBURGH — Andrew McCutchen hasn’t had the conversation with 7-year-old son Steel yet, but the Pittsburgh Pirates star knows it’s probably coming at some point.

Steel, already playing in a youth baseball league, will probably come home at one point and ask his five-time All-Star father if he can have whatever hot item his teammates might be wearing during a given spring.






Youth ballplayer Grayson Coles, left, waits for his game to get underway with his Savannah Banana sliding mitt in his back pocket, April 27, in Monroeville, Pa.




McCutchen plans to accommodate Steel up to a point. The oldest of McCutchen’s four children is already rocking an arm sleeve, just the way dad does.

Yet if Steel is hoping his father will spring for a sliding mitt — a padded glove a player can slip over one of their hands to protect it should the hand get stepped on while diving headfirst for a base — he probably shouldn’t get his hopes up.

McCutchen, who has stolen 220 bases at the major league level, has never worn one. And he’s quick to point out the next time the cleat of a fielder mashes his hand will also be the first.

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Still, the 38-year-old understands. Once upon a time, he was a 20-something who epitomized baseball cool, from his dreadlocks (long since shorn) to his goatee to his rope chain to the occasional skull cap he wore underneath his batting helmet, all of it designed to accentuate McCutchen’s innate blend of talent and charisma.

“It’s all about the drip,” McCutchen said with a smile.

Even if the “drip” (Gen Z slang for stylish clothes and their accessories) emphasizes fashion over function, particularly when it comes to the gloves — which look a bit like oven mitts — that are becoming just as ubiquitous in the Little Leagues as they are in the major leagues.






Chicago White Sox’s Scott Podsednik steals second base during a baseball game against the Cleveland Indians, June 29, 2009, in Cleveland.




Safety and self-expression

Former major leaguer Scott Podsednik (career stolen base total: 309) is credited with “inventing” the sliding mitt during the late stages of his 11-year career.

Tired of having his hand stepped on, Podsednik worked with a hand therapist for a solution. The initial mitts were relatively simple. A 2009 picture of Podsednik sliding into second base shows his left hand covered in what looks like a padded modified batting glove, all wrapped in black to match the trim on his Chicago White Sox uniform.

Things have gotten considerably more intricate over the years. Google “sliding mitt designs” and you’ll find themes ranging from the American flag to an ice cream cone to aliens to a poop emoji (yes, really).

Scott McMillen, a lawyer in the Chicago area, had no plans to get into the baseball accessory business. He first took notice of sliding mitts when his son Braydon, then 10, pointed out one of his teammates had one and said basically, “Oh hey dad, wouldn’t it be nice if I had one, too.”

They headed to a local sporting goods store, where McMillen was surprised at the variety available.

That was around 2021. By early 2024, McMillen had launched “Goat’d,” a specialty baseball accessory company with everything from sliding mitts to batting gloves to arm sleeves to headbands and more, many of them religiously inspired.

Sales during their first full year? Over 1 million units.

“We were surprised at how large the marketplace is,” McMillen said.

Maybe he shouldn’t have been.

Youth sports have bounced back from the COVID-19 pandemic. The Aspen Institute’s 2024 State of Play report noted that the participation levels in sports among children ages 6-17 were the highest they’ve been since 2015. Baseball’s numbers have steadied following a decline. Little League International told The Associated Press last fall that more than 2 million kids played baseball or softball under its umbrella across the world, an uptick over 2019.

Many of those kids are also fans of the game, some of whom may have noticed their favorite major leaguer sporting a mitt when they’re on the bases. Yes, that was San Diego Padres star Fernando Tatis Jr. sliding across home plate (feetfirst, by the way) with a bright yellow mitt on his left hand in the ninth inning of a 2-1 win over Pittsburgh last weekend.






San Diego Padres’ Fernando Tatis Jr., left, scores before Pittsburgh Pirates catcher Joey Bart can apply the tag on a wild pitch by pitcher David Bednar during the ninth inning of a baseball game in Pittsburgh, May 3.




It’s one of the many ways in which the game has evolved over the years. When McMillen grew up, there wasn’t much swag to go around.

“We had our baseball uniform and our glove (and) everyone looked the same, everyone was the same,” he said. “Now, everyone wants to express themselves individually. The best way to do that without acting like a clown is to wear something that shows people who you are.”

Self-expression, however, doesn’t exactly come cheap, particularly in an era when top-of-the-line bats are $400 or more. What amounts to an entry-level sliding mitt can go for $40, but Goat’d and others have versions that can fetch double that.

That hasn’t stopped sales from being brisk, and McMillen points out it’s not merely a luxury item.

“We don’t play football with 1940s safety equipment,” he said. “You feel better in the (batter’s) box when you have something that protects you, right? With a sliding mitt, it’s also like, ‘Hey this is fun. It’s cool. I want to be like my fave high school player, like my favorite college player.'”

It’s becoming increasingly common for McMillen and other members of the company’s staff to spot Goat’d gear at the field. In recent months, they’ve popped up in youth tournaments from Georgia to Las Vegas, sometimes in the back pockets of players as young as 6 or 7. McMillen can’t help but shake his head to see his product become part of the time-honored tradition of kids imitating their heroes.

Which is good for business and, oh by the way, probably unnecessary.

The pressure to keep up

Here’s the thing: In most — if not all — youth baseball leagues, headfirst slides that would require a player to stretch out their hand to secure the bag are illegal.

In Little League, for example, stealing bases for players 12 and under is rare because the player can take off only after the ball has reached the batter. And even if they do bolt for the next base, they have to slide feetfirst. The only times in Little League that a baserunner can dive headfirst toward a base is when they are returning to it while in a rundown or during a pickoff attempt, both of which are also rare.

That doesn’t stop the players from wanting a sliding mitt. It also doesn’t stop their parents from buying them, all part of the pressure to “keep up with the Jones” that has practically been a part of youth sports culture since the first time somebody came to practice with a batting glove or wristbands.

It’s a phenomenon Chelsea Cahill and her family has known for years. The longtime educator who lives just east of Columbus, Ohio, has spent much of the last decade shuttling her three boys from practice to games to tournaments.

What she and her husband have learned over the years is that some trends come and go, but the pressure to have the right stuff remains.

“There’s always that feeling of ‘This is the next new thing’ or ‘This is what you’ve got to get,'” Cahill said.

They appeased their sons up to a point, but only up to a point.

Last summer their youngest son Braxton, then 11, and the rest of the kids on his travel team kept pestering their parents to buy sliding mitts. Entering the final tournament, the team moms decided to give in.

Rather than plop down that kind of money for something they didn’t actually need, the moms headed to a local dollar store and bought them actual oven mitts — the kind used to pull tonight’s dinner from out of the oven. Average retail price? Less than a cup of coffee at the gas station.

Oh, and the kids loved them, and wore them during the game. Cahill posted video of them playing with the mitts stuck in their back pocket to her TikTok account. The video is now at 12 million views and counting.

“They thought it was hilarious, but we didn’t really think they would wear them for the rest of the tournament,” Cahill said. “We were wrong. They really embraced it!”

Among viewers of that TikTok, by the way, were the people at Goat’d, who sent Braxton a couple of mitts as a result.

The good news is, Cahill now won’t have to buy one for Braxton this spring. Yet there’s also something else she has learned through the years: This time in her boys’ lives is fleeting.

For proof, just look at her calendar. Her two older sons — the ones who played travel baseball just like Braxton, and asked for all the cool stuff their teammates had, just like Braxton has — gave up baseball by the time they got to high school.

Her advice to parents who might be feeling the financial pinch of what it takes to play these days: Relax.

“We’ve learned as parents is to stop taking it so seriously,” she said. “They’re kids. Let them have fun.”






Youth ballplayer Josiah Jones bats during youth baseball game in Monroeville, Pa., with his sliding matt in his back pocket on April 27.




The reality

A day after hundreds of members of the Monroeville Baseball and Softball Association marched through the Pittsburgh suburb’s well-appointed community park, the regular season is in full swing.

All four fields are alive with the chatter of coaches, parents and boys and girls aged anywhere from 5-12.

Over on Field 1, the Rays are in the middle of their season opener. Playing first base, Josiah Jones has his glove at the ready, with a black sliding mitt noticeably sticking out of his left back pocket.






Youth ballplayer Josiah Jones bats during youth baseball game in Monroeville, Pa., with his sliding matt in his back pocket on April 27.




Per the league rules, the Rays and the other players at the “Bronco” level (ages 11-12), play actual full-on baseball. They can take leads and steal bases whenever they like, though headfirst slides are only allowed when returning to a base, just like in Little League.

Longtime MBSA executive commissioner Josh Plassmeyer is milling about, trying to keep tabs on everything. Plassmeyer outlawed sliding mitts on his son Grant’s 10-and-under tournament team, calling them a “distraction” because players would spend so much time fiddling with them once they got to first base, they would miss signs from the third-base coach.

About 50 feet away, Jones settles into the box and rips a ball to left-center field. His long legs carry him past first base, and he cruises into second with an easy double.

As his teammates erupted in the dugout, Jones beamed for a brief moment. Then, as the opposing pitcher stepped onto the rubber, he took an aggressive lead off second and eyed third.

His back pocket, the one where his sliding mitt had been 30 minutes before, was empty.



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LVCVA Poised To Spend $2.7 Million On Sports Sponsorships For Girls Basketball Tourney, College Athletics Directors Meetings, Pickleball Events

ADVERTISEMENT Shop at Jay’s Market at 190 East Flamingo Road at the Koval Lane intersection east of the Strip. ADVERTISEMENT By Alan Snel, LVSportsBiz.com Publisher-Writer LAS VEGAS, Nevada — Never shy about spending public money on sports events, Las Vegas’ public tourism promotion agency is poised to approve about $2.7 million in sponsorships on an annual […]

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Shop at Jay’s Market at 190 East Flamingo Road at the Koval Lane intersection east of the Strip.

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By Alan Snel, LVSportsBiz.com Publisher-Writer

LAS VEGAS, Nevada — Never shy about spending public money on sports events, Las Vegas’ public tourism promotion agency is poised to approve about $2.7 million in sponsorships on an annual girls basketball tournament, a college athletics director convention and pickleball events.

The Las Vegas Convention and Visitors Authority (LVCVA), which also functions as Las Vegas’ unofficial sports commission, will present the three sports sponsorship deals to the agency’s public board Tuesday.

The LVCVA board typically approves the agency’s sports deals without much public comment or scrutiny. Expect that Tuesday. Here’s the sponsorships:

$1.2 million for the Nike Tournament of Champions, which is Nike’s  flagship girls’ basketball tournament established in 1997. It’s now a 32-team field of teams, with more than 800 teams with nearly 15,000 student athletes competing annually.

The sponsorship is $100,000 a year from 2025 to 2036, with the July girls hoops tourney at the Las Vegas Convention Center.

 

$843,750 for National Association of Collegiate Directors of Athletics (NACDA) to have the NACDA and Affiliates Annual Convention Week in Las Vegas in June 2030 and 2032.

Las Vegas has hosted the ADs in the past and having the university athletics directors in town allows tourism officials to also sell them on holding college sports championships in the Vegas market.

$700,000 for the Professional Pickleball Association to have two tournaments in Las Vegas each year in 2025 and 2026.

 

 

Tuesday’s agenda includes annual budget info for the LVCVA, which is budgeted to spend $36 million on sports events in 2025.

The LVCVA spent more than $33 million in 2024 for Super Bowl 58 in Feb. 2024.


 





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Record-Breaking Bay FC Women’s Soccer Star Empowers Youth

Racheal Kundananji uplifts Zambian youth through sport; Dorothy Lazard inspired the community to preserve Oakland’s past; and Sven Jobe and Mallie Testerman fire ceramics at Pier 70, continuing their families’ legacy of craftsmanship in San Francisco. Zambian footballer Racheal Kundananji may have made headlines as the world’s most expensive women’s player when she signed with […]

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Racheal Kundananji uplifts Zambian youth through sport; Dorothy Lazard inspired the community to preserve Oakland’s past; and Sven Jobe and Mallie Testerman fire ceramics at Pier 70, continuing their families’ legacy of craftsmanship in San Francisco.

Zambian footballer Racheal Kundananji may have made headlines as the world’s most expensive women’s player when she signed with National Women’s Soccer League’s Bay Football Club in early 2024, but it’s her off-the-pitch legacy that she’s most focused on building. After rising from playing soccer in secret as a girl in Lusaka to Olympic stardom and European success, Kundananji launched the Racheal Kundananji Legacy Foundation to address critical issues facing youth in Zambia—addiction, HIV/AIDS, and teen pregnancy.

Through school supplies, mentorship, and visits to places like Lusaka’s Sanity House rehab center, she’s connecting directly with young people, offering not just inspiration but tangible support. As a UNAIDS Goodwill Ambassador, Kundananji now uses her platform to champion education, prevention, and empowerment, particularly for girls. With every goal she scores in the NWSL, she’s giving kids back home another reason to believe in something bigger.

Catch Kundananji and the Bay FC team at Oracle Park on August 23 competing against Washington Spirit.


Dorothy Lazard doesn’t just remember Oakland — she helped archive it. As head of the Oakland History Center for over a decade, the retired librarian made local history accessible, personal, and urgent. Her lived experience—growing up during white flight, the rise of Black Power, and redevelopment—made her a uniquely trusted guide.

Lazard’s memoir, What You Don’t Know Will Make a Whole New World, recounts her early years after moving from St. Louis to San Francisco, and then Oakland. It’s a story about libraries as refuge, and knowledge as power. “History keepers hold the future in their hands.”

Her work helped countless people understand how Oakland came to be — and how the community might move forward. Along the way, she became something rare: a librarian with a fan club. She made local history legible and deeply human, especially for those who didn’t think of themselves as historians.

In retirement, Lazard is still writing, still remembering. The History Center is now in good hands, she says, but her legacy — of rigor, humor, and deep care — remains shelved in the stories she helped others discover.


Ceramicists Sven Jobe and Mallie Testerman are bringing new life—and ancient craft—to San Francisco’s Pier 70, transforming a former WWII shipbuilding site into a hub of contemporary artistry. Their studio, Sven Ceramics, makes elegant, gold-accented tableware for Michelin-starred restaurants, but it’s more than just beautiful design: it’s family history in full circle. Jobe’s grandmother welded ships here; Testerman’s grandfather engineered them. Now the couple fires plates, mugs, and bowls just yards from where their ancestors once built battleships.

After a decade working from a backyard studio, they’ve moved into the revitalized Building 12 with a showroom, teaching space, and a 2,300-pound kiln that barely fit in the elevator. The couple—who pivoted from careers in construction and education—designs ceramics that honor the Bay Area’s natural and built landscapes. “We’re still making stuff,” Jobe says, “just in a totally different way.” Their story is one of lineage, craftsmanship, and the slow, hot work of building something lasting.


Image: SAN JOSE, CALIFORNIA – MARCH 22: Racheal Kundananji #8 of Bay FC controls the ball during a game between Racing Louisville FC and Bay FC at PayPal Park on March 22, 2025, in San Jose, California. (Photo by Elysia Su/ISI Photos/Getty Images)

Previously: Notable Humans: Berkeley Teen Takes On World’s Toughest Swims To Raise Money For Pediatric Cancer





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Logansport Savings Bank awards grant to Chad Lambert Youth Athletic Fund | News

Logansport Savings Bank has awarded a community grant of $1,925 to the Chad Lambert Youth Athletic Fund as part of its 100th anniversary celebration. This grant is one of several that will be awarded throughout the year to local organizations chosen by LSB employees through a consensus vote, according to a press release. The Chad […]

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Logansport Savings Bank has awarded a community grant of $1,925 to the Chad Lambert Youth Athletic Fund as part of its 100th anniversary celebration. This grant is one of several that will be awarded throughout the year to local organizations chosen by LSB employees through a consensus vote, according to a press release.

The Chad Lambert Youth Athletic Fund has a tie to Logansport Savings Bank. Joni Lambert, Chad Lambert’s mother, recently retired after 22 years an LSB employee. Many current LSB employees were longtime coworkers with Lambert, and remember when Tim and Joni started the fund in their son’s memory.


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We must demand equal rights for all: Trans youth deserve to participate in school sports

To the editor: On the evening of Thursday, May 8, I attended the Berkshire Transgender Rights Town Hall at Pittsfield’s Unitarian Universalist Church. And I am so grateful that I did. In a room packed with members of the local transgender community, allies, and Massachusetts State Rep. Tricia Farley-Bouvier, trans neighbors from across the county […]

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To the editor:

On the evening of Thursday, May 8, I attended the Berkshire Transgender Rights Town Hall at Pittsfield’s Unitarian Universalist Church. And I am so grateful that I did. In a room packed with members of the local transgender community, allies, and Massachusetts State Rep. Tricia Farley-Bouvier, trans neighbors from across the county shared heartbreaking, powerful, profound, inspiring, and eye-opening personal testimonials about their childhood struggles; battles to survive cruelty, abuse, and depression; and, in several cases, the very real and transformative power of participating in sports as young people.

In April of this year, Massachusetts passed a budget bill that included a transgender sports ban, which, if it becomes law, will limit trans youth to participating only on teams that align with their biological sex. Transphobic media would have us believe that allowing trans kids to participate will create a lack of fairness in school sports, but there is no scientific evidence to prove this. Athletic abilities vary greatly from person to person, and there are many misconceptions about testosterone levels and their impact on performance. (Visit genderjustice.us for more information.)

What would be truly unfair is to deny any young person the opportunity to participate in school sports. Athletics provide a place of social connection and belonging. They support physical, mental, and emotional health and often lead to greater academic success. In addition, allowing cisgender and trans kids to interact in this way provides a crucial opportunity for increased understanding, acceptance, and respect.

Trans people are in the crosshairs in countless ways right now. Fueled by well-funded and vicious propaganda meant to create political wedge by sowing fear and division, this administration is working hard—and succeeding—in threatening their rights, safety, livelihood, and very existence. The goal seems to be to obliterate them entirely, to make them unwelcome in our society, and to render them invisible.

As North Adams City Councilor and trans activist Ashley Shade said last night, we must demand civil rights for all. That is what this country represents—life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness—for every one of us.

Please contact your representatives and tell them that you support trans youth’s right to participate in sports and that you demand equal rights for all, across Massachusetts and across the United States.

Jurian Hughes
Pittsfield

Click here to read The Berkshire Edge’s policy for submitting Letters to the Editor.



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Student talks living with arthrogryposis multiplex congenita (AMC)

WYSO Youth Radio Summer is almost here as area schools begin letting out. To kick things off, we’re launching a new season of WYSO Youth Radio. We’ll hear stories from students across Dayton, Springfield, and beyond. Tobias Ashlock from Ponitz Career Technology Center tells his story this week. He has a condition called Arthrogryposis multiplex […]

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WYSO Youth Radio

Summer is almost here as area schools begin letting out. To kick things off, we’re launching a new season of WYSO Youth Radio. We’ll hear stories from students across Dayton, Springfield, and beyond.

Tobias Ashlock from Ponitz Career Technology Center tells his story this week. He has a condition called Arthrogryposis multiplex congenita, or AMC, which causes stiff joints and limited movement in several parts of the body. In this episode, Ashlock talks with his grandmother, Cheryl Yeager, about what it’s like to live with AMC.

WYSO Youth Radio is produced for the ear and designed to be heard, not read. We strongly encourage you to listen to the audio by clicking on the blue “LISTEN” button above, which includes emotion and emphasis not on the page.

Tobias Ashlock: What was it like raising someone with AMC? Were there, like, big differences between raising an able-bodied child compared to a disabled child?

Cheryl Yeager: Yes, because there were a lot of limitations. You know, you think of childproofing for a baby and a toddler, but it was childproofing for quite a long time. You had to make sure that there was absolutely nothing on the floor or in reaching distance. There were times it was difficult, but overall it’s just like raising any other child.

Ashlock: Was there fear about my life when I was a kid?

Yeager: No, there weren’t any fears; there were struggles, especially when you didn’t want to walk.

There are a lot of things you’re not able to do, but it wasn’t fear, it was just trying to figure out a way that you were able to do things.

I hold the same expectations for all my children.

Cheryl Yeager

Ashlock: Were you happy that I was placed in a general education class instead of a special education class?

Yeager: Oh, definitely.

This is something that we had worked up to from the time that you were at Southview [Child and Family Center].

They put you in with four or five different types of disabled children, and because they realized that you were a lot smarter than these children, you’re more advanced, I should say. They recommended that you go to a regular school. You were also at Gorman [School], where you got a lot of your preschool education that you needed, and you were able to go into kindergarten with a lot of knowledge that most kindergartners did not have.

Ashlock: What do you, as my guardian, expect that I’ll be able to do after high school?

Yeager: I Think you’ll be…I feel you could do anything at a desk. If it’s going out in the field as a scientist, I think that would be quite a few limitations on you because not everything is ADA accessible as we’ve run up against a lot of problems that way in the…even the restaurants we go into, they’re not always ADA accessible. But as far as a field, you have the intelligence to become anything. It’s just going to be the physical limitations.

Ashlock: Last question, are you ready?

Yeager: Okay.

Ashlock: Did you expect more from your other kids than me after high school?

Yeager: No, I hold the same expectations.

Ashlock: Thank you so much for sitting and participating. I appreciate it.

Thank you to Joanne Casale, the Media Arts teacher at Ponitz Career and Technical Center, for making this story happen. WYSO Youth Radio is produced at the Eichelberger Center for Community Voices at WYSO.  WYSO Youth Radio is made possible by supporters like you, the Ohio Arts Council, and the Virginia W. Kettering Foundation.

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