The Middletown Press (Middletown, CT)

Harvey is impacting Texas sports

- By Kristie Rieken

HOUSTON » The University of Houston has postponed its football game at Texas-San Antonio on Saturday as the city deals with catastroph­ic flooding from Hurricane Harvey.

The Cougars have been in Austin practicing since Friday, but decided that this week was not the time to play a game.

“The epic disaster that continues to unfold in and around the city of Houston has made it evident that our athletic events are not a priority at this time,” Houston athletics director Hunter Yurachek said Tuesday. “Our focus during the coming days will be on assisting the city of Houston and University of Houston communitie­s in recovery efforts and allowing our coaches, staff and student athletes to devote the necessary time to ensuring the safety and security of their family, friends and loved ones.” Officials said they will explore

options for rescheduli­ng the game. Houston has an off date on Nov. 11.

The Cougars will not compete in any sports this weekend with events in cross country, volleyball and soccer also being canceled.

The storm has also forced theHouston Dash to play their scheduled home game against the Seattle Reign FC on Sunday at Toyota Stadium in Frisco, Texas. Tickets to that game are $20 with all proceeds going to the American Red Cross.

The changes are the latest to hit Houston sports teams. The Astros were forced to play their series against the Texas Rangers at the home of the Tampa Bay Rays while the Texans are playing their “home” preseason game on the road against the Dallas Cowboys instead. The Rice football team hasn’t been home in days, holed up in Fort Worth on the TCU campus after a game in Sydney, Australia, over the weekend.

Meanwhile, theHouston Rockets and owner Leslie Alexander upped their donation to Hurricane Harvey relief efforts to $10 million. Alexander pledged $4 million to Houston mayor Sylvester Turner’s Hurricane Harvey Relief Fund on Monday before announcing that he’d donate $10 million to help flood victims.

The donation is the largest of many contributi­ons by Houston’s sports teams and athletes in recent days. Astros owner Jim Crane and the Astros’ foundation pledged $4 million to the cause and Major League Baseball also contribute­d, joining with the players associatio­n to donate $1 million to the Red Cross and relief organizati­ons chosen by the players.

The Texans and owner Bob McNair donated $1 million to the United Way of Greater Houston Flood Relief Fund. The NFL Foundation said it would match the $1million donation, and New England Patriots owner Robert Kraft and his family pledged to match all funds donated to the American Red Cross in support of Harvey flood relief up to $1 million.

Houston star J.J. Watt started a fundraisin­g page online that has raisedmore than $3.2 million since its inception on Sunday.

The fund was given a boost by a $1 million donation from Titans controllin­g owner Amy Adams Strunk, who said the flooding and devastatio­n has been painful to watch as a native. Strunk said Watt has created something to provide immediate aid and the Titans, founded in 1960 as theHouston Oilers, want to be a part of the effort to rebuild the area.

Watt’s original goal was to raise $500,000, but he’s now aiming to raise $4 million.

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