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YOUTH SPORTS: FCA golf brings down scores, raises spirits | Faith

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PORT CHARLOTTE — The Fellowship of Christian Athletes has had a very busy summer training local kids to be better athletes and Christians.

This past week, the FCA was at Aileron Golf Course in Port Charlotte for a golf clinic to help boys work on their short game, long game, and in life.

Tom Parker, area director at FCA, said kids from Florida and throughout the country came out for five days to compete and learn more about their faith. Their last day was Thursday.

“The kids have learned how to strike the ball, change weight and things to take their game to the next level,” Parker said. “We had one who was newer at the game who couldn’t hit the ball more than 30 feet, but who is now hitting the ball 150 yards.”

For five days, the kids would spend the morning at Aileron for training, with help from staff and club professionals. They then departed for other courses such as Riverwood and Lemon Bay to compete in match play, stroke play, foursomes and contests like longest drive and closest to the hole.

Parker said the players have shown they will be forces to contend with once the golf season begins in the fall. Two players shot 74 on Wednesday, with several others shooting under 80.

Campers came from all over. Karl Meredith, 15, from Frederick Md., said he had a coach who worked with him on his downswing to improve on his approaches. He scored a 78 on Wednesday.

Meredith also learned a lot about his faith and wants to take what he learned to teach others about the work of God.

“Every night we would get together with our huddle leaders and get questions about faith that they can have discussions about. A lot of guys showed me a side that I hadn’t seen,” Meredith said. “Tom showed us how he tried to get the best of both God and Satan. He said to look at God and not to look back at temptation. It helped me grow my relationship with God.”

Zack Parker, Tom’s son, is from Port Charlotte and will golf at Pine View School this fall. He said he liked the course and the format, which encouraged smaller groups who formed deeper bonds.

“I learned a lot about weight shifts with the driver and it helped me get the second-best score of my life (a 74, winning the playoff),” Parker said. “After breakfast, having 10 to 15 minutes to talk about God before going on the range is a great way to start the day.”

Huddle-group leaders played a big role in the camp. Luke Shamblin, a recent college grad from Charleston, S.C., said being in FCA has brought him out of some dark places in his life.

“We played golf every day, but more importantly, we’ve been able to build a strong relationship with the kids,” Shamblin said. “The huddle times at night and the morning devotions have been the most important part of the camp. We wanted them to strengthen the perspective they have in their faith.”

The FCA held a coach’s camp, wrestling camp (in which 75 kids locally took part), cheer camp and this camp so far this summer.

FCA has a lot going on in the coming weeks. Next week, Charlotte football will go to Stetson University for a clinic. The following week, Port Charlotte football will attend a camp in Naples.

A Night of Champions is coming up in August at Murdock Baptist Church, with a guest speaker to be determined. A golf tournament will happen in October, tentatively at Lemon Bay Golf Course.

The FCA gala will happen at the end of October at the Charlotte Harbor Event Center, with several speakers expected for that.

Parker said FCA is looking for staff, both men and women, as well as funding, as they have increased their budget.

For more information or to express interest, call Parker at (941) 456-5433 or email him at tparker@fca.org.



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BYU’s G League addition played well in 83-73 win over K-State – Deseret News

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MANHATTAN, Kansas — After Kansas State had cut No. 10 BYU’s lead to six points early in the second half Saturday afternoon, Cougars coach Kevin Young inserted 6-foot-10 newcomer Abdullah Ahmed into the game and pulled out rim protector supreme Keba Keita.

The timing seemed ripe for the Wildcats to continue their comeback, but Ahmed was able to hold his own inside, and even contributed a couple of buckets to push BYU’s lead out to nine points on two different occasions.

Kansas State got no closer than seven points the rest of the way and BYU rolled to an 83-73 victory in the Big 12 opener in front of 11,010 at Bramlage Coliseum. Ahmed, whose nickname is “Biddo,” finished with four points, two assists and three blocks in only his second game in a BYU uniform.

“Biddo helped us get that win,” said senior forward Richie Saunders. “It’s good to have him here.”

Of course, not everybody is happy to see Ahmed playing in the college ranks, after the native of Cairo, Egypt, spent the last two seasons playing for the Westchester Knicks in the NBA’s G League. Ahmed, who is classified as a sophomore in eligibility, joined the Cougars a few months ago, gained his eligibility just before the holiday break, and scored one point in his debut, BYU’s 109-81 win over Eastern Washington on Dec. 22.

Ahmed went undrafted in the 2025 NBA draft, while a player that Baylor recently signed to the chagrin of many and added to its roster — 21-year-old James Nnaji, certainly was. The 7-footer was booed every time he touched the ball in Baylor’s 69-63 loss at TCU on Saturday, while finishing with five points and four rebounds in 16 minutes off the bench.

Prominent college basketball coaches such as UConn’s Dan Hurley, John Calipari of Arkansas and Tom Izzo of Michigan State have publicly complained recently about NCAA rules that allow the G League players and NBA-drafted players to join college programs — Baylor’s addition of Nnaji has drawn far more criticism than BYU’s addition of Ahmed — as midseason roster acquisitions.

Neither Nnaji nor Ahmed have appeared in NBA games.

For his part, Young defended the practice at Big 12 basketball media days in Kansas City in October when rumors surfaced that BYU was recruiting Ahmed, and he doubled down on that belief last Thursday when previewing the BYU-Kansas State game.

“I’ve seen a lot of the discussion points there. The first thing I would say is just the amount of respect I have for all the legends of the game as it relates to college coaching,” Young said. “A lot of guys I grew up watching and being fans of (have criticized the rules) and their broad experience and the longevity that they’ve had (is impressive). I don’t blame them for raising an eyebrow to the way things are going, because it’s so different.”

But “different” doesn’t necessarily mean it is a bad thing, Young said, while expressing “respect” for coaches who have been able to coach at the collegiate level for as long as Calipari and Izzo have.

“In terms of how I see what is happening, I think the big thing is understanding what the rules are, and understanding that you have to play within those rules, and being able to put together a team that you think is going to help you win,” Young said. “The opinion I have and the thing that I’ve heard a lot is this idea of what it (negatively) does to the kids and what it does to the high school players.”

The veteran coaches are saying that allowing pros — from the G League or overseas — to play college basketball is lessening opportunities for high school players. Young coached in the NBA’s developmental leagues (D League and G League) from 2007-16 and then was an NBA assistant with the Philadelphia 76ers from 2016-20 and Phoenix Suns from 2020-24 before landing the BYU job in 2024.

Young said making younger players have to “pay their dues” is not always a bad thing.

“I do understand it impacts some high school players and young guys. But at the same time, I think it could really help if we reimagine what it looks like for a young player,” he said. “I was in the G League for nine years and sometimes you get a kid from a power conference team and they aren’t ready to help us win and they have a long road ahead of them. … Some of those guys flamed out and their lives look a lot different than if they had stayed in school and gotten more ready to play in the NBA.”

Cougars on the air

Arizona State (0-1, 9-5) at No. 10 BYU (1-0, 13-1)

  • Wednesday, 7 p.m. MST
  • At the Marriott Center
  • Provo, Utah
  • TV: Peacock
  • Radio: BYU Radio 107.9 FM/BYURadio.org/BYU Radio app

Young acknowledged that it is “never ideal” to bring in a player in the middle of the college season, as Baylor and BYU have done. He said it is “no different” than bringing in a guy before the NBA trade deadline when teams are preparing to make a playoff run, “which is essentially how I viewed us bringing in Biddo.”

Young said the BYU coaching staff did its due diligence and properly vetted Ahmed to ensure he would be the right fit and not disrupt a team that has lost just once, by two points to No. 3 UConn in Boston.

“We felt in our particular case that it was a calculated risk that we were willing to take. He’s a great young man. He understands how to play and he’s unselfish, and he fits with what we’re doing,” Young said. “So I think it’s situational. You throw the wrong guy (on the team) and the whole thing is going to blow up. So you got to be super careful. In our own case, so far, it’s gone good.”

BYU returns to the Marriott Center on Wednesday to host Arizona State (0-1, 9-5) at 7 p.m. The Sun Devils fell 95-89 to Colorado on Saturday in Tempe.

BYU head coach Kevin Young questions a call during game against Kansas State, Saturday, Jan. 3, 2026, in Manhattan, Kan.
BYU head coach Kevin Young questions a call during game against Kansas State, Saturday, Jan. 3, 2026, in Manhattan, Kan. | AP



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Standing Rocks County Park offers winter sports options in central Wisconsin

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STEVENS POINT, Wis. (WSAW) – Standing Rocks County Park provides winter sports opportunities for families and outdoor enthusiasts in central Wisconsin, featuring three ski hills designed for beginners and learners.

The park offers daily ski passes at $18 for adults, $15 for youth skiers, and free admission for children eight years and under. The slopes remain open as long as snow conditions allow or until March 15, whichever comes first.

“As a kid, this is where I learned how to ski back. I’m in my mid-30s now, so just kind of keeping on the tradition with the family,” said Bryan Konkol. “It’s a perfect hill for little kids to learn, and the price is reasonable.”

The park features more than eight miles of trails and paths for cross-country skiing, fat-tire biking and snowshoeing. A second lodge serves cross-country skiers, while a sledding hill operates near the main lodge.

Park workers brought rehabilitating birds of prey to teach young skiers about local wildlife during recent visits.

“I just see how much joy it gives them. And yeah, I mean, it’s just the weather’s perfect, and it’s just something they love to do,” Konkol said.

Young visitors Parker and Madison expressed enthusiasm for the slopes. “I like going fast down all the hills, and it’s super fun,” Parker said. Madison added, “I just like going down there because we get to go down the hills fast.”

The ski slopes operate weekends from 11 a.m. until 4 p.m. Cross-country trails remain open from 6 a.m. until 11 p.m., with some trails illuminated after dark. Ski rentals are available in the main lodge for $15 to $20.

Click here to download the WSAW news app or WSAW First Alert weather app.

Click here to submit a news tip or story idea.



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Flag football is exploding nationwide. Nevada girls were ahead of the curve.

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Nevada may rank last nationwide for youth participation in sports, but when it comes to flag football, it’s a leader. 

The Nevada Interscholastic Athletic Association, the governing body for the state’s high school sports, in 2012 launched a flag football pilot program in Clark County. It was approved as a varsity sport in 2016, making Nevada just the second state after Florida to authorize flag football. 

Nationwide and in Nevada, flag football is especially popular among female athletes.

“There’s a lot of trailblazers out there in Nevada who have been championing it for girls,” said Charles Torwudzo, the manager of the U.S. national teams and of player personnel at USA Football, the governing body for flag and touch football.

Nevada’s program is one of the nation’s strongest, boasting multiple athletes on the U.S. flag football teams for both teenage girls and adult women. Last year, more than 1,800 girls played high school flag football in Nevada. 

That’s triple the number playing in the 2013-14 school year, the earliest year data is available from the National Federation of State High School Associations.

“Nevada specifically has a great grassroots baseline out there, as one of the early adopters,” Torwudzo said.

Sixteen states now authorize girls’ high school flag football, with 12 of these states doing so in the last three years alone. The sport’s growth has been helped by millions of dollars from benefactors such as Nike and the NFL and has unfolded as interest in women’s sports explodes.

Collegiate opportunities are also increasing. At least 65 NCAA schools sponsor girls flag football at the club or varsity level, including UNLV and UNR. Nevada State University launched its first team this fall.

The sport was also recently approved to join the NCAA Emerging Sports for Women program, the first step to possibly becoming an official sport for the top three divisions.

Scott Blackford is the director of programs at Nevada Youth Sports, an organization that runs recreational and club sports in Southern Nevada and manages charter schools’ sports leagues.

Blackford said his Las Vegas-based sports organization has seen girls’ participation in their flag football teams increase by 250 percent since 2021. Four years ago, one in every 10 of their flag football players was female. Now that number is one in every four, he said.

He attributed the sport’s popularity to its inclusivity. 

“It’s a sport almost anybody can play. Tackle football is for a certain type of person,” Blackford said. “Flag football is also football, but allows kids to to enjoy the game without the other stuff that tackle brings.”

Torwudzo theorized that the sport has found success because of its limited barriers to entry, with minimal equipment and easy-to-learn rules.

Girls who play flag football said the activity has given them a chance to make the sport their own.

Maci Joncich, a Henderson native who in 2024 became the youngest member of the U.S. women’s national flag football team, told The Nevada Independent she grew up playing the sport with her older brothers. 

She said she thinks the sport is so popular because it “gives girls the opportunity to really work for something” by joining competitive varsity teams.

Flag football has changed gender patterns in sports nationwide, according to Project Play, a branch of the Aspen Institute think tank. Although boys still generally participate in sports at higher rates than girls, that gap has grown significantly smaller since the pandemic. 

That trend has not materialized in Nevada, where U.S. Census Bureau data shows girls’ sports participation was higher than boys’ prior to the pandemic but has since dropped dramatically. 

But when it comes to football, girls in Nevada are far outpacing boys, whose participation in high school tackle football has dipped slightly in the last decade. Girls’ participation in flag football has tripled. 

Joncich said she never expected this level of participation among girls.

“Younger girls will come up to me at events and say, ‘I want to play,’” Joncich said. “It warms my heart, because I never used to see that growing up.”

Alyce Brown of The Associated Press contributed to this article.



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Louisiana’s broadband push is led by this internet company | News

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ABBEVILLE — At an event celebrating the completion of another project by Cajun Broadband, the little internet company that could, there were speeches by local officials, a video message from Gov. Jeff Landry, a ribbon-cutting.

And there was seafood gumbo, cooked the night before by Chris Disher, the company’s co-founder.

His grandmother made her gumbo with tomatoes, but Disher skipped them, knowing the crowd, and used shrimp and oysters harvested from parish waters.

The gathering in Vermilion Parish, like much of what Cajun Broadband does, had a personal feel that belied a bigger truth: The company is among those leading Louisiana’s push to bring speedy internet to the state’s rural reaches.

This fall, it won $18.2 million in federal funding from the Broadband Equity Access and Deployment Program, or BEAD, to connect another 4,000 homes and businesses. This month, they’ll be among the companies breaking ground with that funding: “We’re small, so we can build fast,” Disher said.

Already, the Broussard-based company provides fiber internet across Acadiana, in a doughnut-like shape surrounding Lafayette. In 2023, Inc. Magazine named it among the fastest-growing companies in the U.S. — landing at 603 out of 5,000 and fourth among those based in Louisiana.

“We kept doubling the size every year,” Disher said, “because we didn’t understand just how big this need was in the rural communities.”

Humble beginnings

But it started in 2017 with an antenna in a pine tree.

Disher’s two then-teenage sons had been nagging him for years about the slow, spotty internet. One Sunday before church, they’d hooked up their Xbox for a software update, “and the game wasn’t even 5% done updating after being gone for like three and a half hours,” said his son Matthew.

Meanwhile, Chris Disher’s close friend and now partner Jimmy Lewis, an IT professional struggling with his own internet service, had been driving by an empty tower on his way to work each day.

He wondered: What if we put an antenna on that?

They got the OK, grabbed a chain saw and mounted a dish. “And Chris is hollering up at me, ‘We’ve got 60 megs!” Lewis said, short for 60 megabytes per second. “We’ve got 60 megs!”

They hooked up one neighbor, then another, then 10. They kept their day jobs, at first, working nights and weekends.







A Cajun Broadband turck is a welcome sight on a rural Louisiana road

Matthew Disher splices fiber in a Cajun Broadband truck for a Maurice home in December.




Within two years, they had more than 1,000 customers, said Daniel Romero Jr., operations manager. (Disher declined to give a current count, but the company’s website touts “nearly 10,000 customers across seven Louisiana parishes.”)

“We just kept going and kept building and kept working,” said Lewis, Cajun’s managing director.

When Louisiana’s Granting Underserved Municipalities Broadband Opportunities, or GUMBO, program was announced, Disher bought a nice tie and went door-to-door, parish to parish. In late 2022, with nearly $20 million in GUMBO funding, Cajun Broadband installed some 90,000 feet of fiber in St. Martin Parish.

It was the first completed project in the state under GUMBO, whose mission is in its name. Cajun Broadband competed with and beat bigger companies to nab GUMBO funds, said Veneeth Iyengar, executive director for the Louisiana Office of Broadband Development and Connectivity.

“They bootstrapped this business,” he said. “They saw a need in their community that was not fulfilled, and they decided to bootstrap it through entrepreneurial capitalism and build a business which is now impacting thousands of lives.”

Still, the business has stayed small and nimble. Ask an employee how many of them there are, and they’ll begin ticking off names, counting the number on two hands. It feels like family, said Steven Creduer, field supervisor. “I’m leaving my house to go to my other house.”

Disher’s son, Matthew, works in the field as a splicer now. Romero’s daughter works for the company, too.

Employees exchange “Merry Christmas” texts with customers. Many of them had long struggled to use Zoom, to upload and to stream, and were thrilled to spot Cajun Broadband’s trailer on their rural roads. Technicians see firsthand how people rely on the internet for necessities, from health care to homework.

“People are really happy you’re there,” Disher said.







NO.cajunbroadband.adv.13.jpg

Company founders and state and local officials hold a ribbon-cutting ceremony for the expansion of Cajun Broadband into Vermilion Parish Tuesday, December 9, 2025, at the LSU AgCenter Cooperative Extension Building in Abbeville, La.




‘Issues on top of issues’

A Louisiana-born-and-educated engineer, Disher hadn’t yearned to be an entrepreneur, the 55-year-old said. “I never wanted to do anything on my own.”

For years, he worked for General Electric in the oil fields of Singapore and Brazil, eventually supporting six regions from Broussard — but traveling often. Then GE downsized, and Disher lost his job.

With his wife’s encouragement, he became Cajun Broadband’s first full-time employee, he said. “She just kept saying, ‘You can do it, you can do it.’”

At first, he felt responsible to his family, his mortgage in mind. Then, he felt responsible for the company’s employees, their families in mind. Now, he feels responsible for the region and its residents.

Several broadband customers were in at the LSU Ag Center office in Abbeville for last month’s ribbon-cutting, which marked the completion of three broadband projects in Vermillion Parish comprising some 500,000 feet of fiber to 1,750 homes and businesses. 

Among the beneficiaries: Michelle Romero, a 38-year-old mother, nurse and health coach who can now upload her workout videos in a few minutes, rather than several hours. (Disher used healthier oils in his gumbo, knowing she’d be in the crowd.)

And there’s the North Vermilion Youth Athletic Association, which for years had struggled to make credit card sales in its concession stand using Cox internet.

“We had issues on top of issues,” said Josh Broussard, the nonprofit’s president.

Cajun Broadband offered the athletic association free hookups, Wi-Fi service and boosters in exchange for some publicity. Now, the park has strong enough service to fuel live scoreboards and stream games, Broussard said, which means that they can host regional tournaments.

Broussard, who played sports at the park as a child, said the change is much needed. 

“I saw what it was, and I just want to improve it,” Broussard said, “and make it better than what it was when we were there.” 



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Kazakhstan Shines on Global Stage: Landmark Sport Achievements in 2025

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ALMATY – Kazakhstan’s athletes delivered another successful year in the country’s sporting history in 2025, achieving breakthroughs across football, boxing, tennis and winter sports.

Kairat FC team. Photo credit: Kairat FC

From historic firsts to record medal hauls, Kazakhstan’s presence on the world sports map grew stronger than ever.

Football: A breakthrough year and growing international recognition

The defining moment of the year came when FC Kairat qualified for the UEFA Champions League group stage for the first time in its history, defeating Scotland’s Celtic FC in a dramatic penalty shootout in Almaty. The club’s international rise was further reinforced, when FC Kairat was ranked among the 500 best football clubs in the world by the International Federation of Football History and Statistics (IFFHS). Kairat became the only Kazakh club on the list, placing 240th overall with 90.75 points.

FC Kairat’s momentum culminated on Dec. 9 when Anarbekov became the first Kazakh footballer ever to be named UEFA Champions League Player of the Match. His exceptional performance against Olympiacos earned him a 9.2 rating from UEFA, which also included two of his saves among the best of the matchday. 

Kazakhstan’s young football talent also gained international visibility, with 17-year-old forward Dastan Satpayev being recognized among the world’s top five young players by Score 90. Meanwhile, Italian giant Inter Milan highlighted Anarbekov’s skills in a dedicated feature. Institutional progress followed as well as the Kazakhstan Football Federation’s national academy received official FIFA Talent Academy status, making Kazakhstan only the ninth country in the world to achieve it.

Boxing: Dominance continues and a new Hall of Fame legend

At the IBA World Championships in Dubai, the Kazakh team finished second overall, collecting six medals – three gold, one silver, and two bronze. Saken Bibossinov (54 kg), Orazbek Asylkulov (57 kg), and Abylaikhan Zhussupov (71 kg) captured world titles.

Gennady Golovkin. Photo credit: olympic.kz

The year also brought historic recognition for Kazakhstan with Gennady Golovkin becoming the president of World Boxing Federation and his election to the International Boxing Hall of Fame. Golovkin, selected in the 2025 ballot, became the first Kazakh boxer inducted into the Hall and joined global legends such as Muhammad Ali, Manny Pacquiao, and Mike Tyson. 

Kazakhstan further cemented its dominance by topping the medal standings at the World Boxing Championships in Liverpool, where the national team earned seven gold medals.

Tennis: International titles and historic rankings

Kazakhstan strengthened its global presence in tennis with some of the most significant victories to date. Elena Rybakina made history when she became the first Kazakh player to win the WTA Finals, defeating World No. 1 Aryna Sabalenka in straight sets in Riyadh. She finished the year ranked fifth in the WTA standings, while Yulia Putintseva entered the top 20 for the first time in her career.

Elena Rybakina (L) and Yulia Putintseva (R). Photo credit: Kazakhstan Tennis Federation

On the men’s side, Alexander Bublik captured the ATP 500 Terra Wortmann Open in Halle, Germany, securing his fifth career ATP title after defeating a series of top-ranked players, including Daniil Medvedev. 

The next generation also delivered promising results as 17-year-old Amir Omarkhanov climbed to No. 4 in the global junior rankings, bolstered by a breakthrough season. Kazakhstan also continued expanding its tennis ecosystem, hosting the ATP 250 Almaty Open.

Chess

Kazakhstan continued its rapid rise in global chess, achieving historic results across elite, youth, and team competitions. A historic moment took place inside the British Parliament when top Kazakh grandmasters played an exhibition match against members of the UK Parliament.

Bibisara Assaubayeva. Photo credit: Ministry of Tourism and Sports of the Republic of Kazakhstan

A major milestone came when FIDE President Arkady Dvorkovich announced that Kazakhstan won the most medals worldwide in all FIDE competitions in 2024. The momentum continued into 2025 with the national women’s team placing fourth at the FIDE World Women’s Team Championship in Linares and earning three individual medals.

Kazakhstan’s rising star Meruert Kamalidenova delivered another impressive result by finishing as women’s vice-champion at the sixth El Llobregat Open in Spain, a major international event featuring participants from 33 countries.

Youth achievements further underscored Kazakhstan’s depth of talent. At the 27th Asian Youth Chess Championship in Bangkok, Kazakh players captured 11 medals, including five gold across classical, rapid, and blitz events.

Bibisara Assaubayeva also achieved the norms required to become Kazakhstan’s second female grandmaster, following Zhansaya Abdumalik, reinforcing the nation’s expanding influence in the chess world.

Winter sports

Kazakhstan’s athletes delivered a series of outstanding results in winter sports, particularly at the 2025 Asian Winter Games in Harbin, where the national team earned 20 medals – four gold, nine silver, and seven bronze. Among the most significant accomplishments were the country’s first-ever victories in short track and freestyle acrobatics. 

Mikhail Shaidorov. Photo credit: olympic.kz

The men’s 5,000-meter relay team secured Kazakhstan’s inaugural gold in short track, while the freestyle acrobatics duo defeated two leading Chinese teams to win the nation’s first gold in that discipline. Kazakhstan’s men’s hockey team also continued its tradition of excellence by winning the Asian Winter Games title for the fifth time.

Figure skating brought additional triumphs when Mikhail Shaidorov secured silver at the 2025 ISU World Championships in Boston, marking Kazakhstan’s third-ever medal at the event and earning him a place at the 2026 Winter Olympics.

Expanding success beyond traditional arenas

Kazakhstan also reached new heights in sports outside its long-established strengths. In motorsports, Artline Kazakhstan became the world champion in the Lamborghini Super Trofeo series, marking the country’s first world title in the sport.

Kazakh player Daniil Golubenko, representing the Brazilian organization FURIA. Photo credit: digitalbusiness.kz

Kazakhstan also saw a breakthrough in eSports when Kazakh Counter-Strike player Daniil Golubenko, representing FURIA, won the Intel Extreme Masters (IEM) Chengdu 2025 tournament with a dominant 3:0 performance and was named MVP. 

Meanwhile, Kazakhstan launched its first professional women’s eSports league, the Female Pro League, which aims to promote inclusivity and create new opportunities for female gamers. 

Youth and junior success: A foundation for future champions

At the Asian Youth Games in Bahrain, Kazakhstan achieved its best-ever result, winning 93 medals and ranking third overall. The country’s next generation of boxers also excelled at the ASBC Asian U22 & Youth Boxing Championships in Colombo, where Kazakh athletes captured 22 gold medals, including sweeping all women’s weight divisions.

Kazakh athletes competed in more than 20 sports. Photo credit: National Olympic Committee’s press service.

Kazakh juniors continued to show promise in tennis, figure skating, and athletics, demonstrating the growing depth of talent across multiple sports.

From Champions League debuts and world titles to Hall of Fame inductions and record-breaking youth performances, 2025 solidified Kazakhstan’s reputation as a rising global sports nation. 





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Car Thief Crashes Into Oakland Youth Boxing Club and Flees the Scene, Damaging Historic Ring

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The driver of a stolen car crashed into Lightning’s Boxing Club in Oakland early New Year’s Day after colliding with another car — sending two people to the hospital — then fleeing on foot. The estimated repair costs are between $50,000 and $1000,000.

As KTVU reports, a boxing ring used by heavyweight champion George Foreman in the 1980s sustained extensive damage after a car thief crashed into Lightning’s Boxing Club on 5845 MacArthur Boulevard in Oakland at some point in the early hours Thursday morning. Kris Lopez, who co-owns the gym with his wife Denise Lopez, said the impact of the crash was forceful.

“It’s like an earthquake,” Kris Lopez told KTVU. “The force knocked over the ring stairs and pushed the ring out of place.”

Per KRON4, the Lopezes are raising funds for the repairs and staff payroll through GoFundMe, which was close to $10,000 Sunday morning. According to the fundraiser’s page, the boxing ring will need to be replaced.

Per KTVU, the gym has played a crucial role in supporting underserved youth in the community, some of whom have become professional boxers.

“Dear Oakland Community, we have given our all to this city for the better good—mentoring youth, creating positive members of society, and even producing the occasional boxing champion,” the fundraiser’s page states. “Your donation will help us continue this important work and keep our doors open for the next generation. Please give what you can so we can get back to saving the community and inspiring our youth through the sport of boxing!”

Per NBC Bay Area, the boxing club is temporarily relocating to Geoffrey’s Inner Circle, a local nightclub and event space in Oakland’s Black Arts and Business District, but the Lopezes hope to reopen as soon as possible.

“I just want to keep the boxers going,” Kris Lopez told NBC Bay Area. “We have a nationally ranked amateur boxer, and of course my son and all the other kids who need this place to participate in something positive.”

“I’ve had so many people tell me, your husband changed my life,” Denise Lopez told KTVU. “That makes it worth doing.”

Authorities are still searching for the suspect in the crash.

Image: GoFundMe



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