Florida
CFP championship games to return to Atlanta, South Florida
(AP Photograph/Wilfredo Lee, File)
Atlanta and South Florida have been chosen to host School Soccer Playoff nationwide championship video games for the second time.
The CFP introduced Monday that Laborious Rock Stadium in Miami Gardens, Florida, can be the location of the title sport scheduled to be performed in January 2026, the ultimate sport of the present 12-year media rights take care of ESPN.
Miami Gardens hosted the 2021 sport, following the 2020 pandemic-altered season.
“South Florida was an amazing host for the 2021 nationwide championship sport regardless of the occasion having to be scaled again due to COVID-19, and we stay up for returning in 2026 with a full complement of occasions and actions throughout nationwide championship weekend,” CFP Government Director Invoice Hancock stated in a press release.
The sport between Alabama and Ohio State at Laborious Rock Stadium, residence to the Miami Dolphins, was restricted to about 15,000 followers due to COVID-19 restrictions. The stadium holds greater than 65,000.
In its announcement, the CFP stated the host of the 2025 sport additionally was chosen and can be introduced at a later date.
An individual acquainted with the choice, chatting with The Related Press on situation of anonymity as a result of the official announcement had not been made, stated Mercedes-Benz Stadium can be the location of that sport.
The Atlanta Journal-Structure first reported that call.
Mercedes-Benz Stadium, the 75,000-seat, retractable-roof stadium, is residence to the NFL’s Atlanta Falcons, Main League Soccer’s Atlanta United and the Peach Bowl.
A information convention has been scheduled on the stadium on Tuesday to make the announcement. Georgia Gov. Brian Kemp and Atlanta Mayor Andre Dickens are scheduled to attend.
The primary Alabama-Georgia championship sport in 2018 was performed in Atlanta and gained by the Crimson Tide in extra time.
Florida
Investing in Water Quality: Florida Takes a Proactive Strategy for Sustainable Infrastructure
Amid a national conversation on infrastructure and environmental sustainability, Florida positions itself at the forefront with a significant financial commitment to investing in water quality. Governor Ron DeSantis’s recent announcement of a $1.5 billion investment, focusing heavily on the iconic Everglades Restoration Project, comes at a critical time. As Florida’s population continues to swell, the strain on water resources and wastewater systems grows, echoing a broader national urgency to upgrade aging infrastructures and ensure ecological and public health. The move aims to prevent scenarios like the 2022 Jackson, Mississippi water crisis, underscoring the high stakes of proactive environmental management.
What does this substantial investment mean for Florida’s future, and how will it impact its residents’ environment and quality of life? This pressing question has many Floridians and environmental scientists pondering.
Daniel Ferreira, the Assistant Chair and Associate Professor of Environmental Science at Kennesaw State University, offers a detailed analysis of the scope and implications of Florida’s water infrastructure strategy, highlighting the urgency of investing in water quality.
Here are the key takeaways from Professor Ferreira’s insights:
- Preventative Investment: The funding is a crucial preventative measure to avoid disasters like those experienced in Jackson, Mississippi, where failed water systems led to severe public health crises
- Long-term Sustainability: This investment caters to future water needs and infrastructure resilience, a strategic move as Florida’s population grows
- Ecosystem Protection: By upgrading wastewater treatment facilities, Florida aims to prevent pollution in its waterways, crucial for maintaining healthy ecosystems and supporting biodiversity
- Economic Implications: Beyond environmental benefits, robust water infrastructure can drive economic stability and growth, ensuring businesses and communities thrive
- Public Health: Ensuring access to clean and safe water is fundamentally linked to public health, and this funding helps secure this right for all Floridians
Through this funding, Florida sets a national example for how states can and should invest in critical infrastructure, reflecting a broader commitment to environmental stewardship and public safety. The strategy of investing in water quality not only protects the environment but also enhances the quality of life for Florida’s residents.
Article by James Kent
Florida
Dave Hyde: Dagger! Florida Panthers crush Tampa Bay to take dominating 3-0 lead
Sure, just as everyone said before the playoffs began, this is one great, in-state hockey rivalry.
In South Florida.
In Tampa, they’re booing now. In St. Pete, they’re livid. On west coast of Florida, they can’t believe their big weapon, Nikola Kucherov, hasn’t scored or how their top-rated power play was harmless in four chances Thursday in the Panthers’ 5-3 win in Game 3.
It’s 3-0 in the series now, meaning the remnants of Tampa Bay’s proud Stanley Cup dynasty is being ground to dust like the Ming Dynasty by the Florida Panthers.
“I thought the big story would be the penalty-killing,’’ Panthers coach Paul Maurice said about Game 3.
This series’ big story is bigger. It’s better. It’s Panth-ier. The story is that Vegas’s co-favorites to win it all have entered the playoffs in just the manner you’d want a team with championship aspirations to do.
They’ve come out and taken the lead every game. Their goalie, Sergei Bobrovsky, hasn’t been asked to do too much but has made big moments when asked. Their specialty teams like, yes, the penalty kill, have flexed their muscle.
The Panthers’ big guns have come out gunning in these opening games, too. Sam Reinhart scored his second goal of the series on Thursday minutes after Tampa Bay had its first lead of the series, 2-1. Brandon Montour then made it 3-2 from just inside the blue line.
This series has been so one-sided that Panthers star Matthew Tkachuk has been able to hone his shooting at empty nets. He got his second such goal to end Game 3. Can someone call Elias for the record on empty-net goals in a series sweep?
“The depth of this lineup is a joke, right?” said Steven Lorentz after the game on Bally Sports.
Knock, knock.
Who’s there?
Lorentz scoring on the fourth line. That’s who.
No joking, these Panthers made a run to the Stanley Cup Final last spring and are better this spring. That doesn’t mean they make it back. It just means it’s going to take a special team or hot goalie to knock them off and Tampa Bay isn’t it.
The most impressive stretch for the Panthers of this series was the third period Thursday when they entered with a goal lead and Tampa Bay knew its season was effectively on the line.
The Panthers gave up seven shots in that period to the league’s fifth-ranked offense. Seven. Sure, Tampa Bay scored with five minutes left to cut it 4-3, but the Panthers weren’t releasing their vise grip on this series.
Tampa Bay’s big offense has taken 19, 23 and 29 shots this series. That’s nothing.
“We’re in a position right now that we would have dreamed about at the beginning of the series,” Tkachuk said. “We’re in a great position. To stand here now and say we’re up 3-0, I’ll gladly take it.
“But there have been stretches where they’ve played really, really well. think it’s been a close series so far in the first three games.”
That’s just the defense-first, grind-like-a-banshee style of this team.
“We never dominate games that’s not really who we are,’’ Maurice said. “Most of are games we are in the grinder. That’s how our games are played. And battled.”
Some things beyond taking too many penalties Thursday will have to be cleared up as the playoffs run. They’re not all hockey-centric, either. Montour, for instance, wore an odd T-shirt after the game that seemed to be decorated with pictures of veteran teammate Nick Cousins.
Quirky? Well, this team has the quirk gene in it.
More than that, it has a playoff gene. A contending gene. It can close out this series Saturday in Tampa Bay with a win. Tampa Bay has won enough series through the years to know the trouble it’s facing.
Tampa Bay coach Jon Cooper said, “You want the believers to show up to the rink (Friday). And if you’re not going to believe, then you don’t have to come. We’ll see how many guys show up.”
That’s what the Panthers have done to a former champion. This big state rivalry only feels big in one part of the state.
Florida
Florida AG files lawsuit against ACC in FSU case
TALLAHASSEE, Fla. — Florida’s attorney general sued the Atlantic Coast Conference on Thursday in an attempt to receive the media rights contracts with Florida State University as part of an ongoing dispute as FSU seeks to leave the conference.
Attorney General Ashley Moody said the ACC has failed to turn over the contracts despite a public records request she made in January. She argues that the contracts are public records because they involve an agreement with a government-run university.
The university and conference are suing each other as FSU seeks to leave the ACC and explore a more lucrative landing spot. The Seminoles are challenging an agreement that binds the school to the league for the next 12 years with more than half a billion dollars in fees for leaving.
On Monday, a judge ordered the two sides into mediation.
FSU had been signaling discontent for a year about the ACC falling further behind the Big Ten and the Southeastern Conference in payouts, even while raking in record revenues.
The ACC’s revenue increased to nearly $617 million during the 2021-22 season, with an average distribution of nearly $39.5 million per school for full members. Still, that leaves ACC schools receiving about $10 million a year less than SEC schools even though ESPN is partnered with both leagues in broadcast deals.
Clemson, another ACC school, has joined FSU in challenging the ACC’s right to charge hundreds of millions of dollars to leave the conference.
Neither Clemson nor Florida State has filed formal notice to withdraw from the ACC.
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