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Overhead view of Journalism's Preakness Stakes win

Overhead view of Journalism's Preakness Stakes win

Yahoo18-05-2025

Preakness 2025 Preview: Bob Ehalt on Triple Crown Drama, Journalism, & Betting Tips!
Join us for an exclusive interview with Bob Ehalt from Bloodhorse.com as we dive into the 150th Preakness Stakes and all the Triple Crown drama! Bob breaks down the impact of Kentucky Derby winner Sovereignty skipping the race, why Journalism is a must-watch, and whether trainer Todd Pletcher's River Thames could steal the show. Plus, get expert betting tips, long-shot picks, and insights on the Triple Crown schedule debate. Don't miss this ultimate guide to the 2025 Preakness! Subscribe for more horse racing content! Visit sportsnaut.com for the latest racing news! Race Date: May 17, 2025 Location: Pimlico Race Course, Baltimore, MD Timecodes: 00:00 - Intro to Preakness 2025 00:29 - Welcome Bob Ehalt from Bloodhorse.com 00:50 - Sovereignty skips Preakness: Impact on horse racing 03:20 - Controversy over whip violations 05:20 - Should the Triple Crown schedule change? 09:01 - Journalism's significance in the Preakness 12:49 - River Thames & Todd Pletcher's chances 14:02 - How a smaller field changes race tactics 15:54 - Expected pace for the Preakness 16:42 - Long-shot betting picks 18:18 - Wayne Lucas' chance at history 18:43 - Closing thoughts & thanks to Bob Ehalt Preakness Stakes 2025 Triple Crown 2025 Bob Ehalt Bloodhorse Sovereignty Kentucky Derby Journalism horse racing River Thames Preakness Todd Pletcher Preakness Wayne Lucas Preakness Horse racing betting tips Preakness long shots Triple Crown schedule debate Pimlico Race Course Horse racing news Preakness preview Bloodhorse interview #Preakness2025 #TripleCrown #HorseRacing #BobEhalt #Bloodhorse #Sovereignty #JournalismHorse #RiverThames #ToddPletcher #WayneLucas #BettingTips #PreaknessStakes #Pimlico #HorseRacingNews #LongShots Follow us! Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/sportsnaut/ ikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/@sportsnaut X: https://x.com/Sportsnaut Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/sportsnaut/
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2025 NWSL Championship to be played in San Jose at Bay FC's stadium
2025 NWSL Championship to be played in San Jose at Bay FC's stadium

New York Times

time40 minutes ago

  • New York Times

2025 NWSL Championship to be played in San Jose at Bay FC's stadium

The 2025 National Women's Soccer League (NWSL) Championship is heading to the Bay Area. San Jose's 18,000-seat PayPal Park, the home stadium of Bay FC and Major League Soccer's San Jose Earthquakes, will host this year's title match, the league announced Thursday. The championship will take place on Saturday, Nov. 22 with a 5 p.m. PT kickoff for the fourth straight year. It will be broadcast on CBS and stream on Paramount+. Advertisement 'We're thrilled to bring the NWSL Championship back to the West Coast and to a region with as rich a history in women's soccer as the Bay Area,' NWSL commissioner Jessica Berman said in a news release. 'This community's passion for the game, combined with the excitement surrounding one of our newest teams in Bay FC, makes it the perfect setting to celebrate the league's top talent and crown our next champion.' The Bay Area houses some of the top collegiate programs in the nation in Stanford, Santa Clara, and Cal. In 2010, the Bay Area-based FC Gold Pride claimed the title in the now-defunct Women's Professional Soccer league with a roster bursting with star players, including Marta, Christine Sinclair, Shannon Boxx and Camille Abily. 'The history of women's soccer runs deeply and strongly in the Bay Area,' said Bay FC co-founder and former USWNT player Brandi Chastain. 'From the roster of the national team players born and raised here to the first-ever professional domestic league champions coming from here, our community's fabric is woven with the greatest the game has to offer.' In its inaugural 2024 season, Bay FC averaged 13,000 fans at PayPal Park, the fifth-highest attendance in the league. It marks the second time in three years that the NWSL championship will take place on the West Coast, with its milder winters. Last year, the final between the Orlando Pride and Washington Spirit was held at CPKC Stadium in Kansas City, Mo. In 2023, San Diego's Snapdragon Stadium hosted the title match between Gotham FC and Seattle Reign, and in 2022, the title game took place at Audi Field in Washington, D.C. Like last year, eight of the 14 teams in the NWSL will make it to the postseason, playing in four quarterfinals between Nov. 7-9. Two will air on ESPN/ABC, while the other two will be split between CBS/Paramount+ and Prime Video. The semifinals will be held the weekend of Nov. 14-16 and will be shared by CBS/Paramount+ and ESPN/ABC. Tickets for the 2025 final go on sale in August. (Photo of the Orlando Pride celebrating the 2024 NWSL championship: Jamie Squire / Getty Images)

Phoebe Gates And Sophia Kianni Sit Down With Olympian Eileen Gu On The Burnouts
Phoebe Gates And Sophia Kianni Sit Down With Olympian Eileen Gu On The Burnouts

Forbes

time42 minutes ago

  • Forbes

Phoebe Gates And Sophia Kianni Sit Down With Olympian Eileen Gu On The Burnouts

Filmed in New York City the week her Sports Illustrated Swimsuit Issue hit stands, champion freestyle skier, Gu, joined former Stanford peers Gates and Kianni for a candid conversation about cultural identity, belonging, and what it means to come of age in the public eye. Together, the three women explored the realities of life in their early 20s—navigating global visibility, solo travel, building businesses, and learning who they are through self-exploration. Gu reflected on her meteoric rise, including the surreal moment of waking up to hear Tucker Carlson speaking about her, the pressure of answering geopolitical questions moments after winning Olympic gold, and what it meant to take bold leaps with Victoria's Secret and Sports Illustrated. Her exchange with Phoebe and Sophia is a window into the nuance of female ambition—how culture, identity, and power shape the journey, but remain deeply personal and singular to each woman. Gu made history at the 2022 Winter Olympics, securing two golds and a silver medal, becoming the only action sports athlete to clinch three medals in a single Olympic event. At age 18, she set the record for the youngest freeski Olympic gold medalist. Gu's extraordinary feats extend beyond the Olympics; she's the first snowsport athlete to claim three medals at both the 2021 XGames and FIS World Championships and the inaugural female freeskier to execute a double cork 1440 and unnatural double cork 1620 in competition. Gu also currently holds the win record for any freeski athlete, male or female, with 18 FIS World Cup victories. When asked about the criticism she received for choosing to represent China instead of the U.S. in the Olympics, she explained that her focus was always on her passion for skiing rather than geopolitical issues, 'And so there was a press conference right after the Olympics, like literally right after I won the Olympics. I was taken into this press room by myself. No agent, no mom, no family, nothing. Totally vulnerable, just me and in front of me, there's a room of reporters. They asked, 'So what do you think about US-China geopolitics?' And I'm like, I just won the Olympics. Like you were asking me to solve problems. I'm just trying to focus on what is relevant to me, what I actually can have an impact on, and also what I'm passionate about.' She is not just a champion on the slopes but also a voice for young people, particularly girls. Her advocacy for female empowerment earned her the Vogue Aurora Award in 2019. Gu has also made her mark on the fashion world since the age of 15, including walking the runway for Louis Vuitton, closing the Brunello Cucinelli 2025 show, and opening and closing the Bosideng 2024 show at Milan Fashion Week. She was one of the Founding Collective members of Victoria's Secret, and has brand ambassadorships with brands like Louis Vuitton, Tiffany, IWC, and Porsche. She has been featured on covers of Vogue, Harper's Bazaar, V Magazine, L'Officiel and Marie Claire. For her Sports Illustrated Swimsuit cover Gu embodied her inner femininity, 'I wanted to embody strength. I wanted to embody femininity and the intersection of beauty and power.' She even wrote her college essay on this topic. With Gu only being 21, the conversation left you eager to see where you accomplishments take her next. The Burnouts recently launched this past April in partnership with Alex Cooper's Unwell Network and dives into the unfiltered reality of building a startup as two 20-something women in NYC. Season one guests have thus far included Kris Jenner, Sara Blakely, Whitney Wolfe Herd, and Chelsea Handler. Both Gates and Kianni are also co-founders of Phia, a viral venture-backed AI shopping tool that finds the best prices on fashion across 40,000+ retail and resale sites, coined as the Google Flights for fashion. Phia debuted at #21 in the App Store within 48 hours after launch, with over 100k+ downloads. Together, Phoebe and Sophia have 1.5M+ followers and 100M+ social impressions, and are quickly becoming the new faces within the zeitgeist of Gen Z entrepreneurship.

USA Fencing changes policies that prioritized LGBTQ-friendly states, prevented playing of national anthem
USA Fencing changes policies that prioritized LGBTQ-friendly states, prevented playing of national anthem

Fox News

timean hour ago

  • Fox News

USA Fencing changes policies that prioritized LGBTQ-friendly states, prevented playing of national anthem

USA Fencing's board of directors voted to amend its current policy that prioritized states with LGBTQ-friendly laws for host sites for competitions and a policy that prevented the playing of the national anthem at some events. The decision comes after months of criticism for punishing a woman fencer who refused to fence a trans opponent, which included scrutiny from federal lawmakers at a congressional hearing in early May. The changes were voted into effect at a board of directors meeting on Saturday. An official announcement states that USA Fencing "adopted a streamlined policy that applies criteria prioritizing cost, safety and convenience to every national-event bid across all 50 states." The new policy "ensures host cities meet stringent member-safety and cost-efficiency standards." Meanwhile, the board's new national anthem policy will go into effect at the 2025 Summer Nationals and will be reviewed annually by the tournament committee. "On recommendation of the tournament committee, the board adopted a uniform national anthem policy governing all USA Fencing national events," the announcement said, adding that the new policy will "provide consistent, respectful minimum guidance for honoring the flag and anthem across nine annual tournaments." Back in December, the board held a vote to play the national anthem at the start of tournaments before "all NACs and National Championships," but it was voted against 8-2 with one abstention. The previous host site policy, which was announced in November 2022, gave preference when selecting host cities for national tournaments to states without laws that "harm members of LGBTQ communities" and states that do not "have laws undermining the reproductive health of women." That policy went into effect in the 2023 season, the same year it changed its gender policy. It later released a list of states that it intended to "avoid where possible" and the states that it flat out would not allow hosting major events. The states on the "do not allow" list were Florida, Indiana, Louisiana, Mississippi, Missouri, Montana, Oklahoma, South Carolina, South Dakota, Tennessee and Texas. The states on its "avoid where possible" list included Alaska, Arizona, Georgia, Idaho, Kansas, Kentucky, Nebraska, North Carolina, North Dakota, Ohio, Utah, West Virginia, Wyoming, Alabama, Arkansas, Idaho, Indiana, Kentucky, Louisiana, Mississippi, Missouri, North Dakota, Oklahoma, South Dakota, Tennessee, Texas and West Virginia. The previous policy became one of the organization's biggest points of criticism after fencer Stephanie Turner ignited global backlash against the organization when she recorded a video of her kneeling in protest of a trans opponent during a competition in Maryland in late March. The footage went viral amid news that Turner was disqualified from the event and dealt a black card for refusing to fence. The controversy was then the subject of a federal hearing on May 7. The Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE) Subcommittee's "Unfair Play: Keeping Men Out of Women's Sports" saw Turner testify against USA Fencing chair Damien Lehfeldt. Lehfeldt took harsh criticism from Republican lawmakers for the organization's transgender inclusion and host site selection policies. DOGE Subcommittee Chairwoman Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene, R-Ga., called out the organization for its host city policy. "In selecting sites for its national fencing events, for instance, the board policy is to avoid states whose laws and policies on LGBTQ rights and abortion it opposes. It uses 'Equality Maps' to determine which states to blacklist from its competitions, and which to favor," Greene said. "This ends up favoring a lot of blue states and harming a lot of red ones. So, it creates politically-determined winners and losers — but it has absolutely nothing to do with fencing. And it contradicts USA Fencing's statutory duty as an NGB to 'develop interest and participation throughout the United States' in fencing." USA Fencing also announced that it is preparing to change its current policy that allows trans athletes to compete in the women's category back in April. "In the event that USA Fencing is forced to change its current stance in accordance with oversight bodies or federal legislation, the new policy states athletes competing in USA Fencing-sanctioned tournaments must compete according to their biological sex," the announcement read. The proposed updated policy ensures that the women's category "will be open exclusively to athletes of the female sex." The men's category "will be open to all other athletes who are otherwise eligible for competition." Follow Fox News Digital's sports coverage on X, and subscribe to the Fox News Sports Huddle newsletter.

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