transgender, Olympic and women's sports
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The 2028 Los Angeles Olympic Games will host approximately 15,000 athletes, competing in more than 3,000 hours of live sport across 844 events in more than 400 sports
HOUSTON — The 2025 Amateur Athletic Union (AAU) Junior Olympics is currently underway in Houston, drawing 16,000 young athletes and an estimated 60,000 total visitors to the city through August 2nd. The competition features dozens of events from gymnastics and swimming to track and field and lacrosse, held at multiple venues across Houston.
After Los Angeles agreed nearly a decade ago to host the 2028 Olympics, organizers committed $160 million to local youth sports. That investment has reduced the cost of Los Angeles Recreation and Parks programs and brought new sports, including table tennis, fencing, and archery, to kids throughout the city.
Brother-sister track duo qualify for Junior Olympics in first year, family seeks community help to make trip possible.
To understand the impact of Special Olympics, one needs to look no further than the camp that Monarch’s football team helped run last week at Meadowlark School in Erie.
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WOOD Grand Rapids on MSNFour West Michigan athletes set to compete in Junior OlympicsFour young local athletes are gearing up to head to Houston Texas in the coming days to compete on a national scale.
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Local News Matters on MSN'This is the show': E. Oakland youth athletes compete in national Junior Olympics eventsTwelve young athletes from East Oakland have qualified to compete in the 2025 USATF National Junior Olympic Track and Field Championships in Georgia. The athletes trained under East Oakland Track Gems,
The Toledo Lady Birdz and Oregon Lady Eagles continue to grow in size since forming teams within past two years. Both programs competed at the NFL Flag Championships
Excel Gymnastics of Steamboat Springs has qualified 11 athletes for the Colorado Association of Recreational Athletes state gymnastics meet in Westminster this weekend, after a strong showing at a regional meet earlier this month.
There is probably little good that can come from President Trump’s executive order on college sports given that it’s legally questionable, vaguely written in terms of enforcement and an unpredictable stick of dynamite thrown into the middle of legislative movement on the current SCORE Act making its way through the House of Representatives.