New Photo - 'Is it worth it?': Red flags to watch with youth sports programs

'Is it worth it?': Red flags to watch with youth sports programs Stephen Borelli, USA TODAY August 3, 2025 at 6:03 PM USA Hockey didn't invent the line, but Ken Martel has used it when he talks about succeeding in sports.

- - 'Is it worth it?': Red flags to watch with youth sports programs

Stephen Borelli, USA TODAY August 3, 2025 at 6:03 PM

USA Hockey didn't invent the line, but Ken Martel has used it when he talks about succeeding in sports.

"As many as possible for as long as possible with the best environment possible," the organization's senior director of player and coach development told USA TODAY Sports in an interview last year.

He was referring to the American Development Model program he helped install more than a decade and a half ago, when the sport was losing young players in our country.

The ADM, which has become the cornerstone of USA Hockey's message, has helped bring them back to the ice in droves and, in Martel's thinking, continues to help generate world junior championship titles.

"When you have more kids playing, certainly a few more of them will turn out to be good and you'll see 'em on TV, right?" he says.

USA Hockey created the ADM to help keep kids, parents and coaches engaged while, at least in theory, giving everyone a chance to organically develop to his or her full athletic potential.

It starts with getting boys and girls enthused from an early age, infusing a love of competition (without a laser focus on winning) and engaging them into adulthood.

USA Hockey reports 577,864 registered players (kids and adults) for 2024-25, up from 465,975 in 2008-09.

"Geography is no longer a predetermining factor in who can be good in our sport," Martel says.

USA TODAY reported Aug. 1, however, about how one NHL club has a monopoly over North Texas ice. It effectively controls the pathways by which the region's young players advance, Kenny Jacoby writes, and has reminded (and even threatened) parents they can block it at any time.

Inside the StarCenter ice rink in Mansfield, Texas.

"You get so beaten down, and you see your kid get screwed over for opportunities, and you decide, 'You know what? Maybe I do have to play by their rules to get where I want to be,' " says Kat Pierce, a hockey mom whom a Dallas Stars employee attempted to reprimand when she criticized them in a social media post.

The power to decide to play a sport, and to stick with it, is ultimately the choice of our kids. As parents we have a right to speak up to a coach or organization without fear of them being penalized.

We know from this story and others about the so-called "professionalism of youth sports" that the system isn't always that simple. Here are eight red flags to watch with youth sports programs:

You don't feel like you have a say with anything

USA Hockey delegates much of its authority to regional affiliates. The Texas Amateur Hockey Association oversees Texas and Oklahoma.

Member associations' votes are weighted by the number of players they register and, as USA TODAY reports, tilt heavily in the interests of those in Stars leagues or with teams that rent Stars ice.

It's an issue with which many of us can relate, at least to some degree. Running a youth team or league is entrusted in the hands of a few – club owners or the board. All too often, it seems, they prioritize their own interests: Making a steep profit or giving their own kids All-Star slots.

You should never feel you don't have power, though. Volunteer for the board, file a complaint with the league about a nepotistic coach or speak to other parents if something doesn't feel right. It probably isn't.

Band together in your opposition. A board or coach can brush aside one complaint but a collective one isn't as easily ignored, and it isn't good for business.

Coach Steve: How do I deal with a bad coach? Here are three steps

You fear if you speak up, your kid will be penalized

OK, maybe it's not that simple. When Jacoby, my USA TODAY colleague, reported about the Stars' heavy influence in North Texas, he came across a number of parents hesitant to raise concerns out of fear of retaliation against their kids.

One dad who coached at a Stars complex inquired about coaching at a competing rink after he felt the Stars had failed to address a safety concern. The Stars fired him when he did so, according to emails he provided, and allegedly banned his 5- and 7-year-old daughters. (A Stars employee denied banning his daughters.)

No one wants to risk putting their kids' dreams, or even their playing time, in jeopardy. But think about the concern for a moment. Is being on a team where you're afraid to rock the boat really a situation you want your child to have to endure?

Before you do anything, talk to your son or daughter about their experience. They might not want to be there anyway. You always have a voice in their sports journey.

You fear if you leave, there will be no 'better' options

Think of yourself as an investor in your team or league. Its leaders should be open to your constructive criticism on how to make it better.

Don't take to social media to complain, where you risk making someone feel public embarrassment. Instead, schedule a private meeting where you can mention your concerns diplomatically. The reaction you get will give you a good indication of where you stand.

If they aren't willing to consider spreading out rink fees over a larger group of teams, or giving every kid equal playing time when you're paying for a college showcase experience, for example, this might not be worth your time.

No single team will make or break whether your child reaches an elite level of a sport, but a single experience might determine whether they keep playing at all.

We can help. Submit your feedback here about how the corporatization of youth sports has affected you and your kids. We wrote in a line specifically for those of you who've faced retaliation or threats.

You feel pressured (or are outright told) not to play other sports

An internal study the NHL and NHL Players' Association conducted in 2018 found that out of the 700-plus players on rosters, 98% of them were multisport athletes as kids.

"Get out, play multiple sports," says USA Hockey's Martel. "Look, if your passion's not ice hockey, you're never gonna really turn out to be a great player if you don't truly love it. And if you find a passion that happens to be another sport, wonderful."

The American Development Model recommends multisport play until at least age 12. Arguments can be made to take it longer.

"I am dead set against single-sport athletes (while kids are growing up)," former football coach Urban Meyer has said. "When my son was playing baseball I had many people tell me that he should just stop playing other sports and focus on baseball. I got in big arguments with people, and a lot of those kids that (at) nine, 10 years old were great - they blew out. They burned out, and they're not playing anymore."

Meyer said he looked at kids who played football and another sport at a high level. Brenda Frese, another national championship-winning coach, also loves recruiting basketball players who play multiple sports.

"We just see the benefits of it – you know, mentally, physical, socially, you name it," Frese's husband, Mark Thomas, told me in an interview for a 2023 profile of the Maryland women's coach and her family.

"At an early age, teams try to take over your calendar. A key little tool I learned is that as long as you're playing multiple sports, you give yourself some leverage that they can't take over your schedule completely because you have commitments to multiple teams. Eventually, you may have some hard-line coaches."

When one of the couple's twin sons played club soccer in seventh grade, Thomas recalled the coach telling parents and players: We expect you to only play soccer now and if you're not just playing soccer, then we don't want you.

"From the soccer club's end, why wouldn't you keep more kids involved?" Thomas said. "I mean, he was never a kid who was gonna be a professional or anything like that. I didn't understand the point."

The National Athletic Trainers' Association recommends playing for one team at a time, playing a sport for less than eight months per year and at no more hours per week than your age.

You can always specialize the year before high school if you are concerned about making a specific team, but playing other sports recreationally on the side will make you a better athlete.

You're on a team with a primary focus of winning titles

As Martel looked to reinvent American hockey, he discontinued a 12-and-under national championship.

"The only pushback we got was from a few adults that run programs; it was more about them than it was about the kids," he says. "Why do we need to run across the country at 12 for a championship? If you're gonna run a 12U national championship, the 10U coach starts aggregating players because we need to get them all together so that they're ready by the time they're 12. And it just starts the race to the bottom sooner."

Project Play, a national initiative of the Aspen Institute to build healthy communities through sports, surveys children. When it asks them what they like most about playing sports, having fun and playing with friends always ranks at the top and by a lot, according to Aspen Sports & Society community impact director Jon Solomon.

Solomon says winning games and chasing scholarships rank lower, such as in the Washington, D.C. State of Play report.

Yes, kids thrive off game situations. But instead of loading up on age-specific travel tournaments, play the 8- through 12-year-olds together, as USA Hockey suggests. Prioritize small-sided games in practice over "boring" drills, as Martel calls them.

"We do different things in that to get them to work on different technical abilities and different tactical situations," Martel says. "But kids have fun. They get to problem solve. There's autonomy to that. And you see that in our play."

It costs a lot less, too.

A team - or a tournament - requires you to stay at specific hotels with no flexibility

We love the adventure of traveling with our kids through their sports. Hitting the road can give them exposure to top competition. It's also a prime intersection for collusion.

For years, according to USA TODAY reporting, three Stars executives organized tournaments that required out-of-town participants to book minimum three-night stays at select hotels. At the same time, they ran their own for-profit company that took a cut of the revenue.

After our investigation, the Stars say they will be "loosening" the policies.

Although stay-to-play arrangements remain common across youth sports, I have never encountered one over about eight years of traveling with my sons for their baseball teams.

The hotels our team or a tournament recommends are always suggestions. I book at a better rate through my rewards program if I find one.

We sometimes run into tournaments that are a couple of hours from home. Once the game times are announced, we might choose to return for one of the nights.

Having that choice improves our quality of life, and our satisfaction with the team.

The coach has a chummy relationship with a few of the other players' parents

The most effective coaches maintain a cordial yet arm's length rapport with parents.

They lay out the ground rules in a meeting before the season – no parent coaching from the bleachers, perhaps? – and say something to parents who violate them.

Playing for close friends is inevitable when kids are younger. When they are preparing to play high school ball or competing in front of college coaches, though, there are enough distractions without having to worry about your coach favoring someone over you.

You can't answer affirmatively: 'Is it worth it?'

Brent Tully was a former defenseman who helped Team Canada win two world junior championships in the 1990s. He later became general manager for an elite junior hockey team in Ontario and has coached younger players. He's also a father of two athletes.

He has seen first hand the long hours and travel, the tens of thousands of dollars spent, the living "hand-to-mouth," as Pierce, the Texas hockey mom, described in my colleague's story.

All for what?

"I can't imagine parents at the end of that last year (when) their child isn't drafted," Tully said in 2024. "And that's the end. The disappointment of the ending, it's all too frequent.

"My oldest son, back when he was playing, they were an average to below average team. And they stayed that way, even beyond the years he had stopped playing. I knew some of the fathers pretty well. And one father, at the end of nine years of minor hockey - and he complained all the time, complained about his son's ice time, about the coaching - I remember saying to him, 'So was that all worth it?' Was that fun? All the money you spent. Your son's now gone to college, and he's working a job and you could have had him play house league, probably left with a lot less frustration. And he can still play the game his whole life at the level he's playing. ...

"Regardless of where a boy or girl plays, that should be a great experience."

Coach Steve: 10 questions athletes should consider if they play on a travel team

With the right experience, his sport can be ingrained in someone from "cradle to grave," as USA Hockey's Martel describes.

"Hockey is played with no contact in a lot of places," he says. "We have 70-and-over national championships. It's really low impact and it's a lot of fun. There's people that play when they're 100. So hopefully you come back to the sport and you're involved over a life.

"You don't see that in American football. No one wants to go out and get tackled and have to go to work the next day."

Steve Borelli, aka Coach Steve, has been an editor and writer with USA TODAY since 1999. He spent 10 years coaching his two sons' baseball and basketball teams. He and his wife, Colleen, are now sports parents for two high schoolers. His column is posted weekly. For his past columns, click here.

Got a question for Coach Steve you want answered in a column? Email him at [email protected]

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Red flags in youth sports programs, how to spot and respond to them

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'Is it worth it?': Red flags to watch with youth sports programs

'Is it worth it?': Red flags to watch with youth sports programs Stephen Borelli, USA TODAY August 3, 2025 at ...
New Photo - WNBA players call out officiating, but league officials trust their process

WNBA players call out officiating, but league officials trust their process Ira GorawaraAugust 3, 2025 at 8:15 PM Sparks coach Lynne Roberts is called for a technical foul during a game against the Las Vegas Aces at Crypto.com Arena on July 29.

- - WNBA players call out officiating, but league officials trust their process

Ira GorawaraAugust 3, 2025 at 8:15 PM

Sparks coach Lynne Roberts is called for a technical foul during a game against the Las Vegas Aces at Crypto.com Arena on July 29. (Gina Ferazzi / Los Angeles Times)

With red welts scattered like landmarks of the war she'd just waged, Kelsey Plum let the microphone have it.

"I drive more than anyone in the league," the Sparks guard said, voice taut. "So to shoot six free throws is f— absurd. And I got scratches on my face, I got scratches on my body, and these guards on the other teams get these ticky-tack fouls, and I'm sick of it."

Plum played 41 minutes during an overtime loss to the Golden State Valkyries, during which she was awarded those six free throws. She is one of many WNBA players, coaches and fans who have vented frustration over what they see as inconsistent and unreliable officiating this season.

Yet, within the walls of the league's officiating office, there is steadfast belief that referees are doing their jobs well.

Las Vegas Aces coach Becky Hammon questions a referee's call during the game against the Sparks at Crypto.com Arena on July 29. (Gina Ferazzi / Los Angeles Times)

"Overall, I'm very pleased with the work this year," said Monty McCutchen, the head of referee training and development for all NBA leagues.

But McCutchen and Sue Blauch, who oversees WNBA referee performance and development, aren't blind to the backlash — acknowledging "some high-profile misses that we need to own on our end."

To do so, they pointed to an officiating analysis program through which 95% of games are watched live, with every play graded by internal and independent reviewers. Those evaluations are used to chart each referee's performance over time.

Teams can flag up to 30 plays for review per game through a league portal — including isolated calls or themes spanning multiple games. League officials respond with rulings on each clip and compile curated playlists by call type, delivering them directly to the referees.

Read more:Kelsey Plum voices frustration over lack of calls in Sparks' loss to Valkyries

"There's no shortage of feedback," McCutchen said.

But the WNBA's structural backbone of officiating differs from the NBA in significant ways. With just 35 referees, all of whom moonlight calling NCAA or G League games, the WNBA relies on part-timers earning $1,538 per game as rookies, with each official calling 20 to 34 contests per season.

"You're working three very different kinds of basketball," said Jacob Tingle, director of sport management at Trinity University who has conducted research on officiating networks and pathways. "The reason the NBA or MLB works is because that's all you do — you're working the same kind of game only."

The WNBA lacks a centralized replay center, a developmental league to groom talent and shuffles crew combinations from game to game — a patchwork system that can strain referees expected to deliver consistency.

Sparks guard Kelsey Plum questions the official's out-of-bounds call during a game against the Las Vegas Aces at Crypto.com Arena on July 29. (Gina Ferazzi / Los Angeles Times)

"When you don't have group cohesion, you don't have the same level of trust in your partners," said David Hancock, a professor who studies the psychology of sports officiating. "We've done one study — when referees felt more connected to their group, they also felt they performed better."

McCutchen said teams get a verdict on the calls they send for review. But beyond that, there's no insight into grading or transparency about patterns the league has researched. So when it seems a whistle has been swallowed during a game, players and coaches are left searching for consistency.

"You don't know in the WNBA anymore," said Joshua Jackson, a Louisiana State University professor who studies media and athlete perception. "I can't tell when I'm watching a game exactly what this foul call is going to be. I'll hear the whistle and think, 'OK, maybe it's a reach-in and then suddenly it's a view for a flagrant one instead? Wait, how did we get here?'"

The whistle has become one of the WNBA's biggest wild cards. Angel Reese called it "diabolical." Lynx coach Cheryl Reeve said after a fourth-quarter letdown led to a loss that the game was "stolen from us." Belgian guard Julie Allemand told The Times she felt more "protected" playing in EuroBasket. And Napheesa Collier, one of the stars of the 2025 season, warned "it's getting worse."

Read more:WNBA players embrace continuously growing tunnel walk fashion

The whistle, or lack thereof, might echo louder in 2026, when the WNBA begins a $2.2-billion, 11-year media rights deal with Disney, Amazon and NBCUniversal — each of whom will air more than 125 games a year across TV and streaming networks.

Nicole LaVoi, who helms the Tucker Center — a research hub focused on advocating for girls and women in sports — said the narrative surrounding female athletes forces them to walk a tightrope: speak up and risk being dismissed as an emotional woman or stay quiet and let the league's image unravel.

"This is a broader, contextual, systemic issue," LaVoi said. "It's not just about bad refs making bad calls. This is a much larger problem within a system where women's sport has been undervalued and underappreciated for decades."

Many players have ignored concerns about the perception they whine too much about officiating, arguing the inconsistency in calls is dangerous.

Lucas Seehafer, a professor and kinesiologist at Medical University of South Carolina who tracks WNBA injuries, said players have suffered 173 injuries this season and missed 789 games, entering Saturday's games.

Sparks forward Cameron Brink reacts toward an official after no foul was called after the ball was stripped from her as she was driving to the basket at Crypto.com Arena on July 29. (Gina Ferazzi / Los Angeles Times)

Injuries are undoubtedly multifactorial, Seehafer said. Still, inconsistent whistles can leave players unsure of how much contact to expect — forcing them into unfamiliar movements or hesitation. And that can lend itself to awkward landings, a key contributor in lower-extremity injuries.

"The athletes strive on consistency and mechanical efficiency," said Nirav Pandya, a pediatric orthopedic surgeon and sports medicine specialist at UC San Francisco. "When you don't know how much contact's going to be allowed, it does throw off that rhythm, which increases your injury risk."

When Caitlin Clark suffered a groin injury in mid-July, her brother — in a now-deleted X post — blamed the officials for letting too much contact slide.

"People go watch the WNBA because of the talent," LaVoi said, "and when the talent is sitting on the bench, that's not very exciting to fans."

Read more:WNBA motherhood: The balancing act between career and kids

While critics are quick to call out officiating, referees are navigating a structure stretched thin.

Brenda Hilton, founder of Officially Human — an organization dedicated to improving the treatment of sports officials — said 70%-80% of officials quit within their first three years, largely due to online abuse.

"The people that are doing the work are people, they are fallible," LaVoi said. "The players are fallible as well, so are the coaches. So can we get back some compassion for the humanity of the people doing it, and appreciate the fact that they love what they do? They're not doing it because they're getting huge NIL deals and branding opportunities."

NBA and WNBA officiating leaders have not announced any plans for changes to their system, so the stress will probably continue among players, coaches, fans and those who control the whistles.

Get the best, most interesting and strangest stories of the day from the L.A. sports scene and beyond from our newsletter The Sports Report.

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WNBA players call out officiating, but league officials trust their process

WNBA players call out officiating, but league officials trust their process Ira GorawaraAugust 3, 2025 at 8:15 PM Spar...
New Photo - 12-year-old Chinese swimming sensation draws global praise and a note of caution

12yearold Chinese swimming sensation draws global praise and a note of caution Peter Guo August 3, 2025 at 4:00 PM 12yearold Yu Zidi of China won a bronze medal in the women's 4x200meter freestyle relay at the World Aquatics Championships in Singapore last week.

- - 12-year-old Chinese swimming sensation draws global praise and a note of caution

Peter Guo August 3, 2025 at 4:00 PM

12-year-old Yu Zidi of China won a bronze medal in the women's 4x200-meter freestyle relay at the World Aquatics Championships in Singapore last week. (Xia Yifang / Xinhua News Agency via Getty Ima)

HONG KONG — A 12-year-old Chinese swimmer has become a global sensation with her history-making times, even as observers and fans back home caution against overhyping the young athlete.

On Thursday, Yu Zidi became the youngest-ever medalist at the World Aquatics Championships, which are being held in Singapore this year. On Sunday, she finished 4th place in the women's 400 individual medley final.

Yu was part of the Chinese team that took bronze in the women's 4x200-meter freestyle relay, with the United States winning silver and Australia winning gold. Though she did not compete in the final, she received a medal because she swam in the qualifying race.

"I was really excited to join the relay. It felt great," Yu told reporters Thursday. "The World Championships are fun, and I hope to swim faster."

Yu competing in the women's 200-meter butterfly heats in Singapore on Wednesday. (Lintao Zhang / Getty Images)

The Chinese prodigy began swimming around age 6 just to beat the heat in her home province of Hebei. She said she never thought about becoming a professional athlete until a coach approached her at a swimming pool one day.

"At the time, I thought: why not give training a try?" Yu told Xinhua, China's state-run news agency, in May.

Yu, who is also the youngest person to medal at a major international competition since 1936, could earn an individual medal on Sunday in the women's 400-meter medley. Her times are so fast that they allowed her to compete at the World Aquatics Championships even though the minimum age requirement is usually 14.

She has already come close to medaling in two other events in Singapore, missing the podium by 0.06 seconds in the women's 200-meter medley on Monday and 0.31 seconds in the women's 200-meter butterfly on Thursday.

At the Chinese national championships in May, Yu finished the 200-meter individual medley with a time of 2:10.63, winning a silver medal and setting a world record in the event for any 12-year-old, male or female.

Hailed as the world's greatest swimmer her age, Yu has been compared to phenoms such as Katie Ledecky of the United States and Summer McIntosh of Canada, with times that would have put her on the verge of medaling at the 2024 Paris Olympics. Already, Yu is swimming the 400-meter individual medley about 15 seconds faster than McIntosh was at the same age.

Yu at the World Aquatics Championships in Singapore on Thursday. (Wu Zhizun / Xinhua News Agency via Getty Ima)

Her stunning performance before she's even a teenager has many wondering how she might shape competitive swimming in the years to come.

But some Chinese sports fans and commentators have urged the public not to overhype the preteen rising star.

Yu's sudden fame may expose her to "disproportionate" pressure that could keep her from achieving her full potential, the state-backed digital news outlet Shanghai Observer said in an editorial Thursday.

"We must let this 12-year-old grow her splash slowly into a wave," it said, adding that there is "no need to rush into hero worship."

The warning hinted at a shift in how China promotes its elite athletes in the wake of persistent doping allegations and what has been criticized as a "toxic" fan culture.

Success at the highest levels of sport has been central to China's construction of national identity, with the government focused on dominating medal tables at the Olympics and other events.

But the push for gold medals also puts a lot of stress on the countries' star athletes, as does the intensity of public scrutiny.

Organized sports fandom first emerged around 2016 when Chinese social media users, jaded by sex scandals that had tarnished the wholesome image of pop stars they previously adored, began following Olympic athletes instead, said Zhang Bin, a veteran sports commentator in China.

The new fans brought "sophisticated strategies" from the entertainment industry, setting off "fandom wars" among different groups that tried to outdo each other in supporting their athletes, Zhang said.

China's extreme sports fan culture, which can include fan mobs, cyberbullying of athletes and heckling behavior at sports events, was especially visible around the Paris Olympics last year.

When gold-medal-winning diver Quan Hongchan returned to her hometown, visitors flocked to her home for days. Some livestreamed with their phones while others flew drones, and travel agencies even started offering tours of her village.

Pan Zhanle, an Olympic champion swimmer, was praised for disbanding his official fan group after his success at the Paris Games overwhelmed him with a surge of new followers.

The Chinese government has been cracking down, with its cyberspace watchdog saying in April that it had shut down over 3,700 social media accounts with illegal or noncompliant content aimed at Chinese athletes.

Fan Zhendong in Doha, Qatar, in January 2024. (VCG / Getty Images)

But sometimes the frenzy goes beyond the internet. Chinese table tennis player Fan Zhendong, an Olympic gold medalist, said he was traumatized when a stranger sneaked into his hotel room in 2023.

"I never thought, as an athlete, I would have to go through something like this," he told Phoenix TV last week, adding that organized online abuse had caused him "severe" mental stress that contributed to several unexpected losses.

Since sports prodigies naturally attract followers, fan groups could also be a concern for Yu in the future, said Zhang, who was at the World Aquatics Championships in Singapore.

China is often overprotective of its athletes, but it "may not be a good thing if Yu is living in isolation like protected giant pandas," he said.

"For athletes, learning to interact with the media is a necessary part of their development," Zhang added.

Jessie Zhou, 23, a graduate student in Hong Kong who closely follows table tennis star Fan, said it was a "good call" for Chinese media to cover Yu in a "restrained tone" while extreme sports fandom remains unresolved.

"Just let the kid stay focused on training," Zhou said.

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12-year-old Chinese swimming sensation draws global praise and a note of caution

12yearold Chinese swimming sensation draws global praise and a note of caution Peter Guo August 3, 2025 at 4:00 PM 12y...
New Photo - Israeli forces kills over 20 aid-seekers in Gaza as Israeli minister prays at flashpoint holy site

Israeli forces kills over 20 aidseekers in Gaza as Israeli minister prays at flashpoint holy site WAFAA SHURAFA, SAM METZ and SAMY MAGDY August 3, 2025 at 6:35 PM Families of hostages protest, demanding the release from Hamas captivity in the Gaza Strip, at the plaza known as the hostages square in ...

- - Israeli forces kills over 20 aid-seekers in Gaza as Israeli minister prays at flashpoint holy site

WAFAA SHURAFA, SAM METZ and SAMY MAGDY August 3, 2025 at 6:35 PM

Families of hostages protest, demanding the release from Hamas captivity in the Gaza Strip, at the plaza known as the hostages square in Tel Aviv, Israel, Saturday, Aug. 2, 2025. (AP Photo/Ariel Schalit) ()

DEIR AL-BALAH, Gaza Strip (AP) — Israeli forces killed at least 23 Palestinians seeking food on Sunday in Gaza, according to hospital officials and witnesses, who described facing gunfire as hungry crowds surged around aid sites, as the malnutrition-related death toll also rose.

Desperation has gripped the Palestinian territory of more than 2 million, which experts have warned is facing famine because of Israel's blockade and nearly two-year offensive.

Yousef Abed, among the crowds en route to a distribution point, described coming under what he called indiscriminate fire, seeing at least three people bleeding on the ground.

"I couldn't stop and help them because of the bullets," he said.

Southern Gaza's Nasser Hospital said they received bodies from routes to the sites, including eight from Teina, about three kilometers (1.8 miles) away from a distribution site in Khan Younis, which is operated by the Gaza Humanitarian Foundation, the private U.S.- and Israeli-backed contractor that took over aid distribution more than two months ago.

The hospital received one body from Shakoush, hundreds of meters (yards) north of a GHF site in Rafah. Another nine aid-seekers were killed by troops near the Morag corridor, it said.

Three Palestinian eyewitnesses, seeking food in Teina and Morag, told The shootings occurred on the routes to distribution points, which are in military zones secured by Israeli forces. They said they saw soldiers open fire on hungry crowds advancing toward troops.

Further north in central Gaza, hospital officials described a similar episode, with Israeli troops opening fire Sunday morning toward crowds of Palestinians trying to reach GHF's fourth and northernmost distribution point.

"Troops were trying to prevent people from advancing. They opened fire and we fled. Some people were shot," said Hamza Matter, one of the aid seekers.

At least five people were killed and 27 wounded near GHF's site close to Netzarim corridor, Awda Hospital said.

Eyewitnesses seeking food have reported similar gunfire attacks in recent days near aid distribution sites, leaving dozens of Palestinians dead.

The United Nations reported 859 people were killed near GHF sites from May 27 to July 31 and that hundreds more have been slain along the routes of U.N.-led food convoys.

The GHF launched in May as Israel sought an alternative to the U.N.-run system, which had safely delivered aid for much of the war but was accused by Israel of allowing Hamas, which guarded convoys early in the war, to siphon supplies.

Israel has not offered evidence of widespread theft. The U.N. has denied it.

GHF says its armed contractors have only used pepper spray or fired warning shots to prevent deadly crowding. Israel's military has said it only fires warning shots as well. Both claimed the death tolls have been exaggerated

Israel's military did immediately responded to questions about Sunday's reported fatalities. GHF's Media Office said there was no gunfire "near or at our sites."

Meanwhile, the Gaza health ministry said six more Palestinian adults died of malnutrition-related causes over the past 24 hours. It said Sunday's casualties brought the death toll among Palestinian adults to 82 over the five weeks since the ministry started counting deaths among adults in late June. Malnutrition-related deaths are not included in the ministry's count of war casualties.

Ninety-three children have also died of causes related to malnutrition since the war in Gaza started in 2023, the ministry said.

Israeli minister prays at flashpoint holy site

Israel's far-right National Security Minister Itamar Ben-Gvir prayed at Jerusalem's most sensitive holy site, a move swiftly condemned as a incitement by Palestinian leaders as well as Jordan and Saudi Arabia.

At the hilltop compound in the Old City revered by Jews and Muslims, Ben Gvir called on Israel to annex the Gaza Strip and encourage Palestinians to leave.

"This is the only way that we will return the hostages and win the war," he said.

His visit on Sunday in honor of Tisha B'av, a day in which Jews mourn the destruction of two Jewish temples at the site, was the first in which a government minister openly prayed at the site.

Under the status quo, Jews have been allowed to tour the site but are barred from praying, with Israeli police and troops providing security. Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu's office said afterward that Israel would not change the norms governing the holy site.

Nabil Abu Rudeineh, spokesman for Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas, condemned Ben Gvir's visit. Ambassador Sufian Qudah, a spokesperson for Jordan's Foreign Ministry, condemned what he called "provocative incursions by the extremist minister" and implored Israel to prevent escalation.

Ben Gvir's visit took place on Tisha B'av, a day in which Jews mourn the destruction of their temples. He condemned a video that Hamas released of 24-year-old hostage Evyatar David showing him emaciated in a dimly lit tunnel in Gaza.

Hamas and Islamic Jihad, the second-largest militant group in Gaza, triggered outrage when they released separate videos of individual hostages this week. Israeli media hasn't broadcast the videos, calling them propaganda, but Netanyahu met with the hostage families on Saturday, pledging further efforts to return them to Israel.

Red Crescent Facility Shelled

The Palestinian Red Crescent said the Israeli military attacked its headquarters in the southern city of Khan Younis early Sunday, killing a staffer and wounding three others.

The overnight strike wrecked the organization's multi-story building, leaving its offices full of broken concrete and blood, with gaping holes in the walls and floors, according to video released by the organization.

Red Crescent said the military shelled its Khan Younis facility three times between around 1 a.m. local time.

Elsewhere in Khan Younis, an Israeli strike hit a school sheltering displaced people, killing at least two, Nasser hospital said.

Israel's military did not immediately respond to questions about either strike.

The war began when Hamas attacked southern Israel on Oct. 7, 2023, killing about 1,200 people, and abducting another 251. They are still holding 50 captives, around 20 believed to be alive, after most of the rest were released in ceasefires or other deals. Israel's retaliatory military offensive has killed more than 60,400 Palestinians, according to Gaza's Health Ministry.

The ministry, which doesn't distinguish between civilians and combatants in its count, is staffed by medical professionals. The United Nations and other independent experts view its figures as the most reliable count of casualties. Israel has disputed its figures, but hasn't provided its own account of casualties.

___

Metz reported from Jerusalem and Magdy from Cairo.

___

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Israeli forces kills over 20 aid-seekers in Gaza as Israeli minister prays at flashpoint holy site

Israeli forces kills over 20 aidseekers in Gaza as Israeli minister prays at flashpoint holy site WAFAA SHURAFA, SAM M...
New Photo - Mandy Moore Calls Out Driver Who Rear-Ended Her Family in Hit-and-Run: 'What Kind of Human Does That?'

Mandy Moore Calls Out Driver Who RearEnded Her Family in HitandRun: 'What Kind of Human Does That?' Charlotte PhillippAugust 3, 2025 at 8:00 AM Alberto Rodriguez/Variety via Getty Mandy Moore Mandy Moore is calling out a driver who rearended her family in a hitandrun incident "The woman who rear end...

- - Mandy Moore Calls Out Driver Who Rear-Ended Her Family in Hit-and-Run: 'What Kind of Human Does That?'

Charlotte PhillippAugust 3, 2025 at 8:00 AM

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Mandy Moore

Mandy Moore is calling out a driver who rear-ended her family in a hit-and-run incident

"The woman who rear ended my family and then drove off [when] we pulled over, hope your karma finds you," the This Is Us star wrote on her Instagram Stories on Friday, Aug. 1

Moore shares three children with her husband, Taylor Goldsmith: sons August "Gus" Harrison, 4, and Oscar "Ozzie" Bennett, 2, as well as daughter Louise "Lou" Everett, 10 months

Mandy Moore is calling out a driver who rear-ended her family in a hit-and-run incident.

On Friday, Aug. 1, the This Is Us alum, 41, revealed on her Instagram Stories that a woman struck her family's car before speeding off.

"The woman who rear ended my family and then drove off [when] we pulled over, hope your karma finds you," she wrote in the since-expired post, per Page Six. "Thankfully everyone was OK but what kind of human does that?"

Moore shares three children with her husband, musician Taylor Goldsmith: sons August "Gus" Harrison, 4, and Oscar "Ozzie" Bennett, 2, as well as daughter Louise "Lou" Everett, 10 months. The actress didn't specify in her post which of her family members were present during the accident.

Mandy Moore/Instagram

Mandy Moore, Taylor Goldsmith and their three kids

Moore has been candid about her family's struggles following the loss of their Los Angeles home in the Eaton Fire in January.

On Feb. 11, she posted a photo of her house on Instagram, sharing that "the contents of our home are a near total loss" due to its proximity to the fires and other burning structures. Moore previously said on Jan. 9 that "miraculously" the "main part" of the house was "still standing."

"Pretty much everything will have to be disposed of…maybe even the walls too," she wrote. "We won't be there for a very long time as it and the neighborhood itself get sorted out and cleaned and the rebuilding starts."

Six months after the fires, Moore's friend and former This Is Us costar Chrissy Metz shared in an interview with Extra that Moore was "doing well."

"I mean, thank goodness. A lot of the structure was able to be salvaged, which is great, but it's so jarring. It's so life-altering, and she has children and pets," Metz said.

In an Instagram update in March, Moore revealed that she and Goldsmith, 39, were ready to begin rebuilding, as she shared photos taken before their home burned down.

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"I miss this space and our home and Altadena immensely, so I'm looking forward to rebuilding version 2.0," the A Walk to Remember star said at the time.

Micelotta/Disney via Getty

Mandy Moore.

The Eaton Fire was one of a series of wildfires in L.A. that left more than 80,000 people displaced, including numerous celebrities, and destroyed more than 1,000 structures. The deadly blaze ignited on Jan. 7 and was fully contained on Jan. 31, along with the Palisades Fire.

Moore and Goldsmith have also been candid about wanting to still have fun as a new family of five amid the loss of their home.

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Earlier this week, the Tangled star shared an adorable photo of her family on Instagram as she recounted her time spent at the beach on vacation. In the sweet image, Moore could be seen sitting in the surf alongside her husband while her son Ozzy hung on around her neck.

Sitting beside the star, Gus was pictured squishing his hands into the sand and looking down. Goldsmith propped up the couple's youngest child, daughter Lou, as she sat in his lap.

Other snaps showed the family enjoying the beach and watching sunsets. "Nothing beats a beach vacation with some of your besties (here's looking you at you @whatsgabycookin)," Moore wrote in the post's caption. "What an epic few days, @fspuntamita! We can't wait to come back (Gus hasn't stopped talking about it)!!"

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Mandy Moore Calls Out Driver Who Rear-Ended Her Family in Hit-and-Run: 'What Kind of Human Does That?'

Mandy Moore Calls Out Driver Who RearEnded Her Family in HitandRun: 'What Kind of Human Does That?' Charlotte ...
New Photo - MLB Speedway Classic between Braves, Reds drowned out by rain after less than an inning of play

MLB Speedway Classic between Braves, Reds drowned out by rain after less than an inning of play Andy BackstromAugust 3, 2025 at 10:44 AM The 2025 MLB Speedway Classic between the Atlanta Braves and the Cincinnati Reds at Bristol Motor Speedway didn't get much actual baseball in Saturday in Bristol, ...

- - MLB Speedway Classic between Braves, Reds drowned out by rain after less than an inning of play

Andy BackstromAugust 3, 2025 at 10:44 AM

The 2025 MLB Speedway Classic between the Atlanta Braves and the Cincinnati Reds at Bristol Motor Speedway didn't get much actual baseball in Saturday in Bristol, Tennessee. (Photo by Daniel Shirey/MLB Photos via Getty Images) (Daniel Shirey via Getty Images)

The Atlanta Braves and Cincinnati Reds were ready to start their engines Saturday night at Bristol Motor Speedway in Tennessee.

Then Mother Nature waved the red flag not once but twice before play was ultimately suspended.

The MLB Speedway Classic began with a 2 1/2 hour rain delay, followed by less than a full inning of baseball, followed by another delay that resulted in a suspension of play until Sunday at 1 p.m. ET at the same venue.

Cincinnati will take a 1-0 lead into the next day. The Reds scored off an Austin Hays single to left, their third hit of the frame.

First pitch finally arrived at 9:40 p.m. ET.

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Because of the lengthy delay, Braves starting pitcher Spencer Strider was scratched from the start. Strider, who grew up in Tennessee, went through warmups prior to the delay.

Left-handed reliever Austin Cox, who had previously started only three games in his brief MLB career, got the nod for the Braves instead. They were planning to lean on their bullpen Saturday night.

The Reds, on the other hand, didn't scratch their starter. They still rolled with Chase Burns, a 22-year-old who grew up in Tennessee as well and played college baseball for the Tennessee Volunteers.

Burns produced a 1-2-3 inning to start the game.

Leading up to the original 7:15 p.m. ET start time, pregame festivities included performances from Pitbull and Tim McGraw, U.S. Navy Musician First Class Kathryn Dobyns singing the national anthem, NASCAR pit crews helping introduce the starting lineups by servicing Braves- and Reds-themed stock cars and a flyover by four U.S. Navy F/A-18 Super Hornets from Naval Air Station Oceana in Virginia Beach.

But the rain started coming down. It was pouring when Braves icon Chipper Jones and Reds legend Johnny Bench participated in the ceremonial first pitches.

Jones, an eight-time All-Star and one-time World Series champion with the Braves, threw to NASCAR driver Chase Elliott.

Fellow NASCAR driver Kyle Busch — a two-time NASCAR Cup Series champion — walked out to Bench, a 14-time All-Star and two-time World Series champion with the Reds, and traded spots, allowing the 77-year-old Bench to man his old position as catcher.

As the rain continued to hit the converted diamond in the heart of the race track, the tarp came out.

Racing fan and @Reds pitcher @Bsinger51 joins @Ken_Rosenthal to talk about tonight's experience so far at Bristol Motor Speedway. pic.twitter.com/PbGKDCZxFW

— FOX Sports: MLB (@MLBONFOX) August 2, 2025

Nevertheless, a good number of fans originally expected to break MLB's all-time regular-season, single-game attendance record Saturday stayed put.

Ken Rosenthal and Tom Verducci collected interviews for Fox Sports during the delay, showcasing how players and coaches for both teams still shared that enthusiasm.

The grounds crew started removing the tarp around 8:50 p.m. ET.

After the field was drained, the game finally started. But it wasn't long before the rain picked up again and the tarp returned.

"We'll be back tomorrow, 1 o'clock resume," said Michael Hill, MLB senior vice president of on-field operations. "We are optimistic for a better weather forecast tomorrow."

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MLB Speedway Classic between Braves, Reds drowned out by rain after less than an inning of play

MLB Speedway Classic between Braves, Reds drowned out by rain after less than an inning of play Andy BackstromAugust 3...

See, Guys, Pamela Anderson and Liam Neeson Are Living Proof that AgeAppropriate Relationships in Hollywood "Can" Exist and Be Exciting Stephanie SengweAugust 3, 2025 at 6:30 AM TOBIAS SCHWARZ/AFP via Getty Liam Neeson and Pamela Anderson Every time a Hollywood power couple emerges, this entertainmen...

- - See, Guys, Pamela Anderson and Liam Neeson Are Living Proof that Age-Appropriate Relationships in Hollywood "Can" Exist and Be Exciting

Stephanie SengweAugust 3, 2025 at 6:30 AM

TOBIAS SCHWARZ/AFP via Getty

Liam Neeson and Pamela Anderson

Every time a Hollywood power couple emerges, this entertainment journalist rejoices.

My favorite dopamine hit this week came courtesy of Pamela Anderson and Liam Neeson, a couple that seems so improbable and yet so right. Even though I did not see this coming even 14 days ago, I am now cheering them on to go the distance (should they choose to, of course).

Rumors that these two were an item began circulating earlier this month as they embarked on the promo tour for their upcoming film, The Naked Gun. The movie, which premiered on Aug. 1, was heralded by early viewers for its hilarity and irreverence, and it seems the chemistry Anderson and Neeson — who play love interests — had onscreen translated offscreen. During their press tour, the two were pictured getting close, staring deeply into each other's eyes and planting kisses on each other — apparently to fake us out … or ... not?

And while they decided to play it coy when asked if they were an item on the Today show, a source confirmed to PEOPLE on July 29 that they are, in fact, dating. "It's a budding romance in the early stages," an insider told PEOPLE. "It's sincere, and it's clear they're smitten with each other."

Dia Dipasupil/Getty

Pamela Anderson and Liam Neeson

What's great about this coupling is that it just feels like the heavens are proving that good things happen for good people, as both stars have had their fair share of public heartbreak.

Anderson's history of tumultuous relationships is no secret. She's been married five times, most prominently to Mötley Crüe drummer Tommy Lee, from 1995 to 1998. They welcomed two sons, Brandon, 27, and Dylan, 26, over the course of their rocky marriage.

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And while she admitted to being deeply in love with Lee, their relationship was marred by too much public scrutiny and legal woes to really stand a chance. One domestic dispute in particular found Lee charged with felony spousal abuse; he was sentenced to six months in jail.

"The divorce from Tommy was the hardest, lowest, most difficult point of my life," Anderson wrote in her memoir, Love, Pamela. "I was crushed. I still couldn't believe that the person I loved the most was capable of what had happened that night. We were both devastated, but I had to protect my babies."

Nils Jorgensen/Shutterstock

Pamela Anderson and Liam Neeson

In the years since, Anderson has led a quiet life raising her two boys and eventually relocating to British Columbia, where she bought, renovated and has made a home out of a motel once owned by her grandparents.

For someone who was brutally judged by the public, she's managed to build her career back brick by brick with the release of her well-received memoir, subsequent Netflix documentary and a successful Broadway run, all culminating in her SAG and Golden Globe nominations for The Last Showgirl, earlier this year. Now, her latest project has led her to a new love and I am here for it.

The world shared in Neeson's devastation when in 2009, his wife of 15 years, Natasha Richardson, had died of an epidural hematoma after hitting her head in a skiing accident. The couple shared two boys, Micheál, 30, and Daniel, 28. Since Richardson's death, Neeson's public romantic life has been mostly quiet; asked in 2024 if he was interested in dating, the Taken actor told PEOPLE, "No, in a word. I'm past all that."

So, with all this background, it feels especially serendipitous that these two would fall for each other on a movie set, at this point in their lives.

Kristina Bumphrey/Variety via Getty

Pamela Anderson and Liam Neeson with their respective sons

They're both well-established in their careers, working mostly for the love of the craft and not necessarily for the fame or money. Their children are launched and they've both expressed contentment with the way their lives are going, making a new romance a serendipitous, happy surprise, but not necessarily something they needed to feel complete.

With Anderson being 58 and Neeson being 73, their 15-year age gap doesn't feel inappropriate, which is quite refreshing. It feels as though there's a healthy maturity in the relationship, one that comes with having weathered the ups and downs of career, life, parenthood, love, loss and everything in between.

With all the heartbreak Anderson and Neeson have had to endure, this story — which feels like it's straight out of a Nora Ephron movie — gives, dare I say, all of us, a reason to believe in love. Neeson is known by those he works with to be a gentleman, soft spoken and beloved by his exes; he appears to be quite different temperamentally than her previous partners. Anderson is fun and has always lived life on her own terms and can bring some of her spontaneity to his more straight-laced persona.

Here's hoping for true love to win (and for their film to be a huge hit, so we can see their chemistry onscreen again in a sequel).

The Naked Gun is available in theaters on August 1.

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See, Guys, Pamela Anderson and Liam Neeson Are Living Proof that Age-Appropriate Relationships in Hollywood “Can” Exist and Be Exciting

See, Guys, Pamela Anderson and Liam Neeson Are Living Proof that AgeAppropriate Relationships in Hollywood "Can...

 

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