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San Francisco Chronicle
08-07-2025
- Sport
- San Francisco Chronicle
Giants legend Willie Mays' personal collection to be auctioned off in S.F.
Baseball history heads to San Francisco this September as the personal collection of Hall of Famer Willie Mays — from his 1954 World Series ring to his Presidential Medal of Freedom — goes up for bid at Hunt Auctions. One of the greatest players in baseball history, Mays was a 24-time All-Star and stands alone as the only player in MLB history to retire with at least 3,000 hits, 300 home runs, 300 stolen bases and a .300 career batting average. Mays died just over a year ago at age 93. Honoring Mays' wishes, all proceeds from the auction will be donated to the Say Hey! Foundation, which he founded in 2000. The foundation provides athletic training, education, health services and other support to underprivileged youth. 'For all of his extraordinary achievements, as a baseball player, Willie Mays wanted his enduring legacy to be helping children,' said Jeff Bleich, Mays' friend and chair of the Say Hey! Foundation. 'Willie believed that every child deserves the chance to make the most of their talents.' More For You Giants blend Roupp's start and a small-ball attack to beat Phillies in series opener Giants welcome Casey Schmitt back from IL, option Tyler Fitzgerald to Triple-A Among the most illustrious items from Mays' personal collection that will hit Hunt Auctions are his 1954 New York Giants championship ring, National League MVP awards from 1954 and 1965, his 1979 National Baseball Hall of Fame induction ring and his Presidential Medal of Freedom, which he was honored with in 2015 by President Barack Obama. With exception to a few items that Mays re-acquired from the public market, almost every item in the auction will make its debut for public purchase. Bleich said that Mays had one piece of instruction to Hunt Auctions president David Hunt: 'Make this the best auction ever to help those kids.' The auction will take place on Sept. 27 at the King Street Warehouse event space, which sits adjacent to Oracle Park. Following the auction, hundreds of additional items from the collection will be sold exclusively online on Sept. 28. The National Sports Collectors Convention will feature the first public display of the collection in Chicago between July 30 and Aug. 3.


San Francisco Chronicle
13-06-2025
- Business
- San Francisco Chronicle
Bay Area scores another major soccer event with 2025 NWSL championship at PayPal Park
PayPal Park, Bay FC's home stadium in San Jose, will host the 2025 NWSL championship game on Nov. 22, the league announced on Friday morning. The league's championship contest was held at Kansas City's women's soccer-specific CPKC Stadium last season and Audi Field in Washington, D.C., the season prior. Bay FC have played home games at PayPal Park the past two seasons and have three years left on a lease with the San Jose Earthquakes-owned stadium. The playoffs will begin the weekend of Nov. 7-9, with the semifinal round set for the following week, Nov. 14-16. 'The NWSL Championship brings another top soccer event to the Bay Area in 2025 and is an indicator of how impactful the Bay Area is in the global soccer landscape, the tremendous support of the game across the region and the widespread passion shown by fans for women's sports,' Bay FC CEO Brady Stewart said in a news release. 'We're looking forward to putting on a top-tier event for fans of both Bay Area soccer and the NWSL.' More For You 'We all played for her': Bay FC, Angel City honor Savy King during match The Bay Area is the site of several significant soccer events in the next year-plus. The 18,000-seat PayPal Park is scheduled to host four matches in the upcoming CONCACAF Gold Cup, including Sunday's contest between the U.S. men's national team and Trinidad and Tobago. Santa Clara's Levi Stadium will host six games of the 2026 FIFA World Cup. PayPal Park has previously hosted the NCAA College Cup, most recently in 2019, but has never hosted an NWSL postseason contest. '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 statement. '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 top eight teams in the NWSL regular season will make the playoffs. Bay FC, who qualified for the first round in its expansion season a year ago, entered Friday tied for eighth place in the league with 15 games left to play. Two NWSL clubs – North Carolina in 2019 and Portland in 2018 – have played a championship game at their home field since the league went to a neutral site format in 2015. The championship game will be played at 5 p.m. Pacific and air on CBS for the fourth consecutive season. Tickets will be available for purchase in August, and the league announced that Bay FC season-ticket holders will get early access.


San Francisco Chronicle
01-06-2025
- Sport
- San Francisco Chronicle
How Metro athletes fared at CIF State Track and Field championships
How Metro athletes finish in Saturday's CIF State Track and Field championships in Clovis (Fresno County): METRO MEDALISTS FIRST: Prince Babalola-Buchango (St. Ignatius), 200 (20.79), Kira Gant Hatcher (St. Mary's) triple jump (40-5), Jaden Jefferson (De La Salle), 100 (10.27), Khaliq Muhammad (Pittsburg), pole vault (17-10½), Hanne Thomsen (Montgomery), 3,200 (9:48.98) SECOND: Santia Ali (Clayton Valley), triple jump (39-10¾), Benjamin Bouie (Crystal Springs Uplands), 1,600 (4:04.84), Babalola-Buchango (St. Ignatius), 110 HH (13.59), Maya Ifo Desai (Mitty) girls discus (154-3), El Cerrito boys 4x100 relay (40.72), Landon Pretre (Menlo School), 3,200 (8:54.25), Hannah Rutherford (Mountain View), 400 (54.27), Thomsen (Montgomery), 1,600 (4:35.69) THIRD: St. Francis 4x800 girls relay (8:57.49), Sabrina Zanetto (St. Francis), 800 (2:09.22) More For You Trans athlete embraced as California track and field champion by peers while adult activists duel FOURTH: Avery Boyse (Burlingame) 12-2), Kinga Czajkowska (Palo Alto), 1,600 (4:42.91), De La Salle 4x100 relay (40.80), Jefferson (De La Salle), 200 (20.86), Corinne Jones (St. Mary's), triple jump (38-8½), Ellie McCuskey-Hay (St. Ignatius) long jump (19-3), Rachael Osicka (California), high jump (5-6), Pittsburg girls 4x100 relay (46.42), Kaleb Pleis (San Ramon Valley), long jump (23-9½), Aydon Stefanopoulos (Los Gatos), 1,600 (4:06.68) FIFTH: Babalola-Buchango (St. Ignatius), 100 (10.56), Ben Stout (Amador Valley), high jump (6-7), Evan Usher (Woodside), shot put (58-4¾), discus (179-11) SIXTH: Khairee Baker (American Canyon), 100 (10.61), Bellarmine 4x800 relay (7:44.84), Devon Bertoli (Cardinal Newman), shot put (57-9¼), Emmanuel Fitzgerald (San Mateo), discus (177-10), Joshua Haven (Bellarmine), 300 hurdles (37.87), Kimiko Hirahara (Las Lomas), high jump (5-5), Annalise Horn (Redwood), long jump (18-9½), Tristan Kippes (Palo Alto), 800 (1:52.35), Grady Wachob (Benicia), high jump (6-7) SEVENTH: Anthony Dean (De La Salle), triple jump (47-6½), Daniela Hughes (Los Altos), triple jump (38-5½), McCuskey-Hay (St. Ignatius), 100 (11.63), Joshua Taylor (King's Academy), shot put (56-11½) EIGHTH: Amaya Bharadwaj (Palo Alto), 1,600 (4:48.14), Miles Cook (Sacred Heart Cathedral), 1,600 (4:10.73), Amaya DeFlorimonte (Bishop O'Dowd), triple jump (38-1), Case Jacobson (St. Francis), shot put (56-3½), McCuskey-Hay (St. Ignatius), 200 (24.31), Ryan Shen (Monta Vista), long jump (22-7¼), Lily Symon (Los Altos), 800 (2:10.24) Girls: Long Beach Wilson 46, Long Beach Poly 28, Santiago 28, Jurupa Valley 27, Carlsbad 25