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Rec Sports

With new year approaching, MSU’s Bryce Grebe looks back on freshman season

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BILLINGS — Members of the Montana State football team were in Billings on Wednesday afternoon hosting a free youth camp and participating in a Bobcat Collective event.

MTN Sports caught up with Bobcat linebacker Bryce Grebe. Grebe talked filling in for the injured Danny Uluilakepa midway through last season, the impact his brother Brody had on his development, as well as enjoying Brody’s wedding earlier in July.

Following is a look at the conversation:

MTN Sports: How important is it to you that you guys are out in the Montana communities holding camps for the youth?

Bryce Grebe: The amount of support the Billings community gives us is just phenomenal. To be able to give back and really inspire the kids and go out and make an impact on them, it’s something they’ll never forget and I’m honored to do it, honestly.

MTN: Your brother (Brody) had a great career at MSU. He celebrated his wedding in the past week or so. How was that?

Grebe: It was a good night, for sure. I was able to be his best man and give a speech. It was a fun time. We got coaches down there, old players, Troy (Andersen). It was just good to see the guys that Brody played with and the impact he had on people.

MTN: Speaking of impact, what kind of blueprint did he lay for you, so to speak, as to get through your career at MSU and hopefully get to the next level?

Grebe: I lived with him this last year and just the amount he taught me — how to live the college life and do your thing day-in, day-out — and just the effort he showed me and accountability and just the blueprint he laid for me to follow. I can look back and go, ‘Oh, how did Brody do that? He was an All-American. How did he do things?’ For me to be able to follow that in his footsteps is just amazing.

MTN: You had to play a ton last year after Danny Uluilakepa went down in that Idaho game. To get thrust into action as a redshirt freshman, was it kind of like getting thrown to the fire, thrown to the wolves?

Grebe: For sure. To start off the season I was getting a little playing time, 10 plays here and there, and I was Danny’s backup. He goes down — you never know when someone is going to go down — he goes down, I’m up. Let me tell you, I was so nervous. Sitting there on the sideline, he goes down, thoughts going through my head. In all reality, it was time for me to step up and it was really meant to be.

The countdown is on to Montana State’s season opener at FBS power and defending Big Ten champion Oregon on Aug. 30.





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Rec Sports

Charles Sharper Gala spotlights afterschool sports and wellness program

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The Sharper Ball, a fundraiser and gala benefiting The Healthy Youth USA Foundation, will take place Sunday, Dec. 21, at the Sandy Springs Performing Arts Center.

The ball has historically drawn strong support from local and state elected officials, professional athletes, and members of the Sandy Springs community.

The gala will feature a live band performance by The Tony Tatum Experience, a DJ, a red-carpet reception, and an auction that includes vacation packages, a visit to the High Museum of Art, portrait sessions in Miami, Florida and more.

The Healthy Youth USA Foundation is led by Executive Director Charles Sharper, who launched the organization’s afterschool program in 2005 with a mission to help children lead more active, healthy lives.

The afterschool program currently serves students from Ison Springs, Woodland, and Dunwoody Springs elementary schools. The nonprofit previously included Spalding Drive Elementary School before it closed earlier this year. About 120 students participate each weekday, Sharper said.

Students receive daily snacks, homework assistance, and opportunities for physical activity, including dance, athletics such as dodgeball, and arts and crafts. Last Friday, students staged a performance and fashion show for parents.

The program is housed at the Family Enrichment Center at North Atlanta Church of Christ.

Sharper said affordability has been a guiding principle.

“Our giveback is being the lowest-priced afterschool program,” Sharper said. The cost is $75 per week, with a one-time $50 registration fee per family.

This year’s Sharper Ball will be held at the Sandy Springs Performing Arts Center on Sunday, Dec. 21. (Photo courtesy of The Healthy Youth USA Foundation.)

A former adjunct physical education teacher, Sharper said he started the organization out of a desire to help children become more active after learning that a generation of youth was at risk of serious illness due to sedentary lifestyles.

“I always had a dream of opening an afterschool program or a recreation center,” he said. “Exercise builds confidence.”

Sharper also draws inspiration from his own life experience. He entered foster care as a child with his twin sister and older sister. The three were later adopted by their foster parents when he was 9. Before foster care, he said, he lived in poverty.

“This offers an opportunity to reach kids in a different way,” Sharper said of the youth program. “Everything I’m offering, someone once offered to me. Sports is what I leaned on to get through my own trauma. I understand the value of it. I know kids are going to grow and become better individuals as a result of this program.”

During the summer, students swim and skate weekly, he said, and the program expands to include middle school students. The organization also takes children on field trips during the summer months to Mercedes-Benz Stadium, Truist Park and other destinations.

“We’re doing things in a light, fun way,” he said. “So when they get to high school, they already have a lot of skills.”

Healthy Youth USA also offers a contemporary and hip-hop dance program. And in the fall and spring, students can play in an eight-week basketball league, which has  games on Fridays and Saturdays.

The Sharper Ball is held every two years and has historically raised about $100,000 per event. This year’s fundraising goal is $75,000. Sharper said economic conditions may be affecting how much supporters are able to give.

While tickets ($150) are sold out, Sharper said that in years past, the event itself served as an opportunity to raise awareness and has resulted in grants from first-time supporters.

Sponsors include Topgolf, Tito’s Handmade Vodka, Kaiser Permanente, Zoo Atlanta and Great Wolf Lodge, Sharper said. Harmony Nutrition and Sandy Springs Together, a nonprofit dedicated to affordable housing, are presenting sponsors.

“Healthy Youth USA has been offering affordable, quality afterschool programs for years,” said Melanie Couchman,  co-founder of Sandy Springs Together. “Affordable afterschool care goes hand-in-hand with the need for affordable housing and creating family stability. We are very pleased to be supporting this program.”



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Rec Sports

i9 Sports – Hello Woodlands

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Winter Season Starts January 17th!

Every kid deserves a league that believes in them.

At i9 Sports in The Woodlands, we build athletes for life through confidence, teamwork, and skills that last. Fun comes first and fundamentals always—because every kid plays, and every kid grows.

Serving families across The Woodlands, Spring, and Klein, our programs in soccer, basketball, flag football, volleyball, and baseball create a positive, safe, and fun environment for every child to thrive. With games and practices at top local venues like Bear Branch Sports Fields, Rob Fleming Park, and Church at Woodforest, we bring the best of youth sports right to your community.

Our coaches focus on sportsmanship, personal growth, and a lifelong love for the game. More than just a league, i9 Sports is a community where kids learn, grow, and build confidence both on and off the field.

Join us this Winter Season and experience why local families trust i9 Sports to deliver fun, family-friendly youth leagues that make a difference!

Learn more and register today at https://www.i9sports.com/Franchises/182?season=20261

Date: Winter Season Starts January 17th

Time: Start times vary by program. Saturday-Sunday leagues with weekday Clinics & Training Sessions. 

Locations: Multiple locations, including Church at Woodforest, Falconwing Park, Alden Bridge Sports Park, Providence Classical School and more.

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Olympian Chris Mazdzer on Goal Setting

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Chris Mazdzer is no stranger to goal setting. The now-retired luge athlete competed in four winter Olympic Games, winning the silver medal in 2018 and becoming the first non-European racer to ever medal in the men’s single luge. Since he retired from the sport two years ago, he’s only become clearer on the best ways to set goals that are actually achievable at any level of sport.

Growing up near Lake Placid in upstate New York gave Mazdzer a firsthand view of the work that went into actually achieving an athletic goal. Home to many Olympians, Lake Placid is a primary training ground for elite winter sports because an Olympic Training Center is located there. “If you walk down Main Street in Lake Placid, you’re probably going to run into an Olympian, and I was very fortunate that I learned at a young age that Olympians aren’t superheroes. There’s nothing super about us: We’re ordinary people, just living and training. What I learned was that Olympians set themselves apart because they set goals, and more importantly, they do the little things every single day in order to bring those goals closer. They just work relentlessly to achieve them.”

He often speaks to young athletes about the example of the Terra Nova Expedition to the South Pole in 1911. There were two teams of explorers, led by Roald Amundsen and Robert Falcon Scott. Amundsen’s team took the approach of hiking 20 miles every day, regardless of weather. Scott’s team based their mileage on the weather conditions, with some days spent hiking much further than 20 miles, some days spent resting. Amundsen’s team won the race by five weeks. Scott’s team made it to the South Pole, but none survived the journey back.

To Mazdzer, this piece of expedition history perfectly encapsulates the idea of doing a little bit, a lot of the time. “Doing something every day is more important than doing a lot, some of the time,” he says. “For example, if you want to get strong, you’re not going to go to the gym for five hours one day a week. It’s obviously better to work out one hour five times a week. And that’s the part of goal setting that is often missed…the commitment to consistency.”

“Anyone can set goals, anyone can write things down, but once you’ve set the goal, what are the ongoing things you need to do to accomplish the big goal?” he adds. “Being able to break a goal down to the daily actions is the key.”

Consistency with daily actions doesn’t always mean doing the same thing every single day, though. Mazdzer gives the example of a skier trying to get prepared for the upcoming season in the summer months. “Step one shouldn’t be ‘wait for snow,'” he says. “If that’s what your goal setting looks like, you’re missing out on a lot of chances to get closer to your goal. Instead of waiting for snow to practice, what else can you do on a daily basis? You can get stronger in the gym. You can dial in your gear and figure out the best setup for your skis for different conditions. If you don’t go into the granular details of goal setting, then those aren’t goals, they’re just dreams.”

Keeping an eye on the big goal—making the team, winning the race—is still key, though. “You do need to have that big goal, that shiny thing that you are always aiming towards, because that helps you stay in alignment,” Mazdzer says. “The monotony of those small daily actions can get really boring, so to stay motivated, you do need that big goal to work towards.”

There’s also a side benefit of defining the smaller goals and daily actions you can take to achieve your big goal, Mazdzer adds. Not every goal is going to be achieved: Sport is ultimately defined by failure, even the greatest athletes of all time didn’t win every race or make every team. But the reason they were able to keep pushing towards their next goal was because they saw enough small successes and daily wins along the way to feel motivated even when the big goal didn’t work out.

Mazdzer himself has a great example of this: In his Olympic career, his goal was always to finish in a medal position. But he only medaled in one of the four Olympic Games he competed in. Did his goal or his approach look different in the year he finished in the silver medal position? No. And that’s the point.

“Even if you give 100%—doing those daily actions and accomplishing all of the things you need to in order to theoretically hit that goal—you don’t always get 100% back,” he says. “There were many years when I was giving 100% but getting 10% back, and I’d wonder if I was doing something wrong. But a lot of the time, nothing is actually wrong. There are circumstances out of your control, whether it’s equipment or weather conditions or other teams. Success in sport often depends on things that you can’t control, and it’s easy to give up in those moments. But through consistency, through dedication, you can keep trying. You just have to understand that your results don’t always reflect the input.”

Being able to come back from missing your goal and get back to the daily commitments is what Mazdzer defines as a strong, resilient athlete.

Takeaway
Get clear on your big goal, write it down, and then work backwards. Once you know what goal you are trying to accomplish, break it down into actionable, measurable pieces. Mazdzer suggests doing something every single day to achieve your goals, even after failure.

 

TrueSport

About TrueSport

TrueSport®, a movement powered by the experience and values of the U.S. Anti-Doping Agency, champions the positive values and life lessons learned through youth sport. Backed by U.S. Congressional mandate, TrueSport inspires athletes, coaches, parents, and administrators to change the culture of youth sport through active engagement and thoughtful curriculum based on cornerstone lessons of sportsmanship, character-building, and clean and healthy performance, while also creating leaders across communities through sport. 

For more expert-driven articles and materials, visit TrueSport’s comprehensive collection of resources. 

This content was reproduced in partnership with TrueSport. Any content copied or reproduced without TrueSport and the U.S. Anti-Doping Agency’s express written permission would be in violation of our copyright, and subject to legal recourse. To learn more or request permission to reproduce content, click here.  





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Rec Sports

Steven A. Lent – Duluth News Tribune

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Steven A. Lent of Duluth, MN, passed away unexpectedly on Monday, December 15th, 2025 at the age of 75. He was born at St. Luke’s Hospital on August 11th,1950 to Sherman and Alice (Greseth) Lent. He grew up and raised his family in Kenwood. He was a member of First Lutheran Church. He graduated from Duluth Central High School in 1968. He attended the University of Minnesota-Duluth from 1969-1971, then transferred to the University of Minnesota to finish his degree, and graduated in 1973 with a degree in Electrical Engineering. In the summer of 1973 he started working at Minnesota Power. During his time employed at Minnesota Power he worked in many departments, and obtained his Masters Degree in Business Administration from the University of Minnesota-Duluth. He worked there his whole career until his retirement in April 2014, after 43 years. 


On September 28th, 1974, he married his beloved wife, Joyce (Handy). Together they raised their two children, Bryan and Becky in Kenwood. He was passionate about and actively involved in youth sports, both as a player and coach. He participated in football and track & field in high school. He participated in track & field at the University of Minnesota-Duluth, and held the shot put record there for many years. He was well known in Duluth and the surrounding area as being “The Home Run Hitter” through his many years of slow pitch softball. He coached many youth sports, making significant impacts on hundreds of children in Duluth. He continued to support youth sports through his adored grandchildren. 


He was preceded in death by his parents, and brother Thomas. He is survived by his loving wife Joyce; Children: Bryan (Ashley) Lent, and Becky Lent (Ty Lounsberry); Grandchildren: Callie Kleiman, Berklee Lent, Trent Lounsberry, and Georgia Lent; Brother-in-law Don Handy and many relatives, and dear friends.


A visitation to celebrate the life of Steve will be held on Friday, January 2nd at Ridgeview Country Club, 700 West Redwing Street, Duluth, MN, 55803; visitation from 1-4pm, light refreshments will be provided.


A private family service and burial will be held at a later date at Park Hill Cemetery in Duluth. Arrangements by Affordable Cremation and Burial.


In lieu of flowers, the family suggests donations in Steve’s honor to The Dick Forbort Fund, Duluth Superior Community Foundation, 324 W Superior St, #700, Duluth, MN, 55802; or https://theranchteammatesforlife.org/donate/

 





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Visit Eau Claire and Sonnentag Center host 2026 Flag Football tournament

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EAU CLAIRE, Wis. (VISIT EAU CLAIRE PRESS RELEASE) – Visit Eau Claire, in partnership with the Sonnentag Center, has secured a major national sporting event for 2026, bringing the Pylon 7on7 Flag Football Tournament to the Sonnentag Field House on March 14–15, 2026.

Pylon 7on7 is a premier traveling flag football tournament that attracts elite high school athletes from across the country. The Eau Claire stop is expected to welcome more than 30 teams and over 1,000 athletes, coaches, families, and spectators, generating direct economic impact for the community.

While Pylon 7on7 features high-level flag football competition, the event is widely recognized as a critical exposure platform for student-athletes pursuing collegiate opportunities. Over the past two decades, Pylon has helped produce over three thousand Division I college commits and over 300 NFL alumni, establishing itself as a proven pathway for athletic development, competition, and visibility.

“We’re extremely excited to welcome Pylon 7on7 to Eau Claire,” said Lucas Connolly, Sports Relationship Manager for Visit Eau Claire. “This event brings elite competition to our community and provides young athletes with a platform to compete, be seen, and develop, while highlighting the Sonnentag Center as a top-tier venue for national sporting events.”

Scheduled between Pylon 7on7 events in Philadelphia and Los Angeles, Eau Claire’s inclusion reflects the growing reputation of the region as an attractive host for large-scale sporting events.

“This tournament is another example of how Eau Claire continues to grow as a destination for youth sports, and we are excited to partner with Visit Eau Claire to welcome Pylon 7on7 Football and the many athletes, families, and visitors who will experience our community,” said Steve Kirk, Interim General Manager of the Sonnentag Center.

The event was secured through a collaborative effort between Visit Eau Claire’s sales team and the Sonnentag Center. This partnership reinforces a shared commitment to attracting impactful sporting events that drive visitation, showcase local facilities, and elevate Eau Claire’s profile on a national stage.



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Midweek Matinee A Celebration for Community’s Kids

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EUGENE, Ore. — She made free throws for points No. 6 and 7 earlier in the game, and so it was only fitting that Mia Jacobs was back at the line Thursday afternoon with the chance to get the Oregon women’s basketball team to point No. 67.

With Matthew Knight Arena packed with school kids for a midweek matinee, the viral “6-7” trend created a moment of joyous jubilation late in the third quarter when Jacobs completed a three-point play for the Ducks’ 67th point, on the way to an 85-59 win over Portland. After making the free throw, Jacobs backpedaled down the court making the ubiquitous hand gesture associated with “6-7,” as did hundreds of kids in the arena.

“I don’t know why it’s a thing but it is, and the kids love it,” said Jacobs, who passed up a three-pointer that would have gotten the Ducks to 67 points, instead driving to the hoop and scoring while absorbing contact. “I didn’t know that it was the point to get six-seven. And then they fouled me and I realized, you have to make a free throw. So it was kind of funny.”

Jacobs finished the game with 21 points and 10 rebounds for her second straight double-double, and Katie Fiso finished one rebound shy of a triple-double, tallying 10 points, 11 assists and nine boards. Amina Muhammad added 12 points, while Avary Cain and Sarah Rambus added 11 each.

6-7 Crowd Kids

And the Ducks teamed up to create a core memory for the kids in attendance, peaking with the free throw by Jacobs for the 67th point of the game. UO coach Kelly Graves immediately called timeout, allowing for an extended celebration by the young fans in the stands.

“I just think it’s important to have a game like this for the kids,” Graves said. “That’s a memory that they had today. It was a fun, fun atmosphere. They got to be around their friends, and they were exposed to our basketball team. And you never know what kind of impact it makes.”

The UO women mostly executed with aplomb in the atmosphere, shooting 44.9 percent for the game and committing just 14 turnovers while forcing 24.

“I feel like when we’re having fun, we’re playing the best type of basketball,” Fiso said. “I keep mentioning it — like, we compete in practice, and that’s where we get our sense of joy. We know there’s a fine line, when to be serious and then when to be goofy. I feel like that’s gonna take us far, because we know when to switch that.”

Katie Fiso

How It Happened: The Ducks took control early by scoring the first seven points of the game, though the start seemed a bit uneven given that the UO women only had three field goals over the first seven minutes of the day. Then Fiso hit a three-pointer and Cain followed with another, and Oregon took a 19-7 lead into the second quarter.

It was 22-9 in the second when the Ducks put together a 9-0 run, with all nine points scored by Muhammad and Cain. Muhammad ended up with 10 points in the period, helping the Ducks take a 44-19 lead into halftime.

“They’re great and they’re amazing,” Fiso said of Muhammad and Cain’s play off the bench. “They came out with a lot of energy, a lot of sense of urgency, too. Just creating the right plays, making the right shots.”

The opening minutes of the second half went back and forth. Portland cut Oregon’s 25-point halftime lead down to 19 a couple of times, the last at 56-37.

“We’re still a pretty young team, all things considered,” Graves said. “We’ve got to learn to come out in that second half and play with the same kind of intensity, and not just trade basket for basket.”

Bench Jube

Jacobs, one of Oregon’s most veteran players, led the way out of that span. From the point Portland got within 56-37, Jacobs scored Oregon’s next 11 points, the capper the three-point play for a 67-39 lead.

By the fourth quarter, about the only remaining drama pertained to Fiso’s triple-double chase. She came up just short, but it seems only a matter of time before she notches one.

“I’m happy I can be that person for my team,” Fiso said. “And I know that in order to be great, yes, the assists are cool, but if I want to get to that next level, I gotta start filling up all the other stats. My coaches are on me in film, like, if you want to be great, you got to fill up all the other stuff as well. So that was kind of my initiative.”

Up Next: The Ducks face Stanford at the Women’s Bay Area Classic in San Francisco on Sunday (3 p.m., ESPN).



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