Featured highlights:
Cal Ripken Jr., Tatyana McFadden, Torrey Smith to speak at Project Play Summit 2024
Service Learning through Sports
Maryland pioneers new soccer model
and more…
News
Original content from the Aspen Institute
Cal Ripken Jr., Tatyana McFadden, Torrey Smith to speak at Project Play Summit 2024
Service Learning through Sports
Maryland pioneers new soccer model
and more…
TAKOMA PARK, Maryland – It’s 3:40 pm on a fall afternoon, and as classes let out, about 40 children flood into the outdoor patio at Rolling Terrace Elementary School. They come for snacks and soccer and receive life lessons along the way.
On this day, many are antsy to play soccer, tying their free cleats and chatting loudly with friends rather than listening to their mentors discuss what optimism and persistence mean. Lukas Barbieri, a high school student who is the youngest of Rolling Terrace’s soccer mentors, eventually quiets the kids down.
“Does anyone remember what optimism means?” Barbieri asks.
“Helping your friends,” says one child. “Being thoughtful,” adds another.
“Sort of,” Barbieri replies. “Optimism means you have to believe in yourself.”
In a sense, this scene represents what optimism for youth sports looks like.
The Year in Play - enjoy some of our favorite moments of 2023
Apply to be a Project Play Champion
Read our 2023 Impact Report
and more, including inspiration from our friends at Project Play Mexico
Aspen Institute and Under Armour announce Project Play Summit is coming to Baltimore on May 14-15, 2024, followed by State of Play Washington D.C. report in 2025.
Teen knee injuries on the rise
New sports governance resource hub
Meet our newest staff member, Ruby Avila
SAVE THE DATE…Project Play Summit 2024, May 14-15 in Baltimore - join the presale list!
Plus more ideas, insights and inspiration….
Among the most dreaded injuries in sports, the rate of anterior cruciate ligament (ACL) injuries among high school athletes has grown significantly over the past 15 years, according to a new data analysis by organizations collaborating to assess and address the problem of serious knee injuries.
The National ACL Injury Coalition reviewed injury data for 12 major girls and boys sports over five three-year periods from 2007 to 2022, as supplied by certified athletic trainers in the High School RIO surveillance program. From period one to five, the average annual ACL injury rate grew 25.9% to 7.3 injuries per 100,000 athlete exposures. ACL injuries now represent more than 14% of all injuries involving the knee.
Comparing world sport systems
ACL injury prevention = more W’s
Future of Sports Journalism: Nov 15, noon ET
SAVE THE DATE…Project Play Summit 2024, May 14-15 in Baltimore
Plus more ideas, insights and inspiration….
The Aspen Institute studied the governance models and ecosystem results in 11 peer countries, with a focus on youth sport participation rates and elite performance – the grassroots and treetops. The countries studied vary in population, geography, culture and forms of government, but all have found success in either youth sports or elite sports, or both.
Project Play communities mobilize in Oakland, Seattle-area and Baton Rouge
Reward NGBs for Grassroots Progress
Project Play 2024 Member Spotlight with MLS Executive VP Sola Winley
Project Play Champions recognition
Plus more ideas, insights and inspiration….
Like other professional leagues that are members of Project Play 2024, MLS has come to recognize both the need and the opportunity to introduce programs at the very opposite end of the talent pipeline that delivers their commercial product. Tom Farrey, executive director of the Sports & Society Program, sat down with MLS executive VP and chief engagement officer Sola Winley to ask why.
Rewarding National Governing Bodies that best support grassroots sports and tying financial incentives to coach training were among the ideas heard Sept. 6 by an independent commission studying entities that shape the sport ecosystem for 11 million Americans.
The Commission on the State of U.S. Olympics & Paralympics (CSUSOP) was established by Congress in 2020 to study recent reforms after the Larry Nassar sex-abuse scandals and make recommendations for policy changes in governance and oversight of the U.S. Olympic and Paralympic Committee (USOPC) and its affiliated NGBs. After funding delays, the commission began its work in early 2023 and will deliver a final report to Congress and the public in the spring of 2024.
The future of sports governance
Where did the money go?
LeagueApps’ Jeremy Goldberg: Tech and advocacy matter
Replay our Future of Sports: What about special admissions for athletes?
Plus more ideas, insights and inspiration….
Treat knee injuries like brain injuries
Future of College Sports: Special Admissions
Champions spotlight
Summit Rewind: Why Sport Matters Now
Plus more ideas, insights and inspiration….
Growth of flag football
How to work with NGBs
Developing a plan to reduce knee injuries
Plus more ideas, insights and inspiration….
10 memories from our 10th Project Play Summit
Commission an “opportunity to think big”
School sports equity toolkit
Beyond Team USA is great human potential
Plus more ideas, insights and inspiration….
Stack Sports is an emerging software-as-a-service provider and the newest member of the Project Play 2024 industry roundtable. In this PP2024 Member Spotlight, Stack Sports CEO Jeff Young sits down with Tom Farrey to talk about why Stack has made it their business to grow youth sports participation.
COLORADO SPRINGS, COLORADO – The independent commission set up by Congress to review recent reforms and governance of the U.S. Olympic and Paralympic Committee and its affiliated National Governing Bodies of sport plans to do so with an eye toward how those organizations fit into and contribute to the larger sport ecosystem, a co-chair of the commission said at the Project Play Summit.
In a livestream session, Dionne Koller discussed the scope of the work of the Commission on the State of the U.S. Olympics and Paralympics, and the need for better sports policy. The USOPC and NGBs get their statutory authority from the Ted Stevens Olympic and Amateur Sports Act, the law that created the current U.S. Olympic system in 1978.
Full agenda release for Project Play Summit
Follow us on Instagram
More Pepper, please!
Plus more ideas, insights and inspiration….