College Sports
D2 Soccer Camp set for June 16
D2 Soccer Camp set for June 16-20 at Thompson High School Published 5:01 pm Friday, May 30, 2025 The Dynamic Development Soccer Camp is set to return to Thompson High School from June 16-20 as Dan DeMasters and his team of high-level coaches prepare to train the next generation of D2 campers. (File) By ANDREW […]

D2 Soccer Camp set for June 16-20 at Thompson High School
Published 5:01 pm Friday, May 30, 2025
- The Dynamic Development Soccer Camp is set to return to Thompson High School from June 16-20 as Dan DeMasters and his team of high-level coaches prepare to train the next generation of D2 campers. (File)
By ANDREW SIMONSON | Sports Editor
ALABASTER – One of the most popular soccer camps in the Birmingham area is back and bigger than ever as Dan DeMasters prepares to host the Dynamic Development (D2) Soccer Camp once again.
The 12th edition of the camp will run from June 16-20 at Thompson High School. It is open to kids from ages 5-12 and will go from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. on Monday through Thursday and 9 a.m. to noon on Friday. Half-day options are available for younger campers.
In addition, the ever-popular parents’ night will return on Thursday from 6 to 7:30 p.m. where kids play against their parents.
DeMasters will bring his experience as a former college soccer player as well as a successful high school coach to the camp. Most recently, he helped Thompson win its first girls soccer playoff game since 2013. He also won three-straight state championships as the Oak Mountain boys soccer coach from 2015-2017.
Last year’s edition brought out 188 kids to learn from a wide variety of coaches, from DeMasters’ staff with Thompson girls soccer to former college and current high school coaches like Oak Mountain’s David DiPiazza and Homewood’s Shaun McBride to current college soccer players who came to D2 Camp as kids.
“You get people like that (former college coaches), you get younger adolescents from like 18 to 22-year-olds that play in college and they’re the ones that the kids kind of look up to and they’re their heroes and then you mix in some of the camp alumni that have grown up that are coming to work at camp and mixed in with some of the Thompson crew that kind of understands the culture that we’re creating here in our program, all of that just encompasses together ,and we just try to create the best experience and we try to do the best we can,” DeMasters said.
Campers can expect to play games like World Cup, Baby World Cup, 3-on-3 and other competitions for awards. They will also learn essential soccer skills that they can put to use in their personal game.
Over the past decade-plus that the camp has run, it has become a beloved and important part of soccer development in Birmingham. Some of the most successful soccer players from Birmingham over the last few years cut their teeth at D2 Camp growing up and now play in college and even coach at the camp.
For DeMasters, seeing their growth as players and people is the most rewarding thing about running the camp year after year.
“A lot of those Oak Mountain boys that had such a successful season, they came through camp, and though it was a very small sliver, it was cool to see them have success and they grow up and now they’re men going off to college,” DeMasters said. “Some of my girls that were seniors this year, like one of my captains was like the bubble blowing champion, and she’s become such a fantastic soccer player, but you remember those things and you see pictures of them, and now my daughter is coming to camp and I think one of the girls that was at the very first camp ever at Oak Mountain, she was five years old, now she’s graduating from Oak Mountain and she’s working the camp this year, so it’s cool. It’s a really fulfilling thing. That’s sort of why you do it.”
The camp has evolved over the years to grow in size and scale, and while some faces that DeMasters is grateful for like Oak Mountain assistant coach Keegan McQueen are no longer part of the camp, he is excited to see the kids continue to develop and use the week to improve as players.
“As I’m getting older and you’re seeing the kids getting better and developing, it’s only a week of the year so you don’t think that you have an impact because one week out of 52 weeks of the year, you’re just thinking it’s a week of fun and gets the kids to kind of be in a different atmosphere, but I think when you see the kids developing each and every year, they’re getting taller and stronger and like just striking the ball better, that’s a very satisfying thing and rewarding thing I think as a coach,” DeMasters said.
Registration is open online at Dynamicdevelopmentcamps.com, and the cost to attend the regular camp is $230. A special Elite Group for 10-to-12-year-olds who want to receive high level training is available for $250.
College Sports
James Hagens Selected Seventh Overall in the 2025 NHL Draft
LOS ANGELES – Boston College forward James Hagens was selected with the seventh overall pick in the first round of the 2025 NHL Draft by the Boston Bruins on Friday night. Hagens is coming off a freshman season with the Eagles in which he posted 37 points on 11 goals and 26 assists in 37 […]

Hagens is coming off a freshman season with the Eagles in which he posted 37 points on 11 goals and 26 assists in 37 games played. He was named to the Hockey East All-Rookie Team following the conclusion of the regular season, finishing third among rookies in points (19) and second in assists (14) during league play.
Earlier this year, the Long Island native played a key role for the United States winning a gold medal at the IIHF World Junior Championship for the second-straight year, finishing tied for third in scoring for the tournament with nine points on five goals and four assists, including scoring in the gold medal game.
He is the 27th first round draft pick in program history, second-most in NCAA history. This marks the 30th straight year in which Boston College has had a draft pick, the longest such streak in college hockey history.
College Sports
NHL Draft Projections? Who Knows? : College Hockey News
June 27, 2025 PRINT To Know How College Hockey Does Today, We Need to Know Who’s Playing in the NCAA by Adam Wodon/Managing Editor (@chn-adam-wodon) LOS ANGELES As this year’s NHL Draft begins in Los Angeles, most of the NCAA-related talk in relation has been about a player not even here. Gavin McKenna — […]

PRINT
To Know How College Hockey Does Today, We Need to Know Who’s Playing in the NCAA
by Adam Wodon/Managing Editor (@chn-adam-wodon)

LOS ANGELES As this year’s NHL Draft begins in Los Angeles, most of the NCAA-related talk in relation has been about a player not even here.
Gavin McKenna — the projected No. 1 overall in next year’s draft — is not in Los Angeles, and no one’s yet sure if he’s going to play in the NCAA this coming season. But it’s presumed he will, and it’s presumed he will get some major money — relatively — to do so.
In the past, of course, it wouldn’t even have been an option. Unlike Macklin Celebrini, another highly-touted player who came to the NCAA in his draft year, McKenna chose to go to Major Junior first. For someone like Celebrini, just a couple years ago, that would’ve ruled out playing in the NCAA. Celebrini went on to have a standout season at Boston University, before getting drafted No. 1 by San Jose and playing in the NHL this past season.
But with the change in rules, opening the door for Major Junior players to then play in the NCAA, it’s not only within the realm of possiblity to play college hockey for McKenna, but it seems like something he’s actively seeking to do.
Combine that with the money now available for NCAA teams to directly pay their players, and it makes for a lot of interesting chatter. Where is he going to play? How much is he going to get? The answers are all over the map, though the consensus is that Michigan State is offering in the $200,000 range, while Penn State, the other likely landing spot, is offering more.
Meanwhile, there’s a 2025 NHL Draft to deal with. On that score, current or incoming NCAA players are not expected to make as big of a splash as some of the recent years.
Then again, who is an NCAA player? We don’t know. As many as five current Major Junior players projected to be first-round picks tonight, could go to an NCAA school this coming year. A player like Michael Misa, a projected top-three pick, has been reportedly interested in a number of schools, and perhaps also Penn State, after his brother committed there last month. However, at the draft, after being selected No. 2 overall by San Jose, Misa seemed to rule out playing NCAA hockey next year. “My goal is to make the NHL next season, so that’s where my head is at,” Misa said.
As for the ones who do know, James Hagens of Boston College was at one time thought of as a No. 1 overall pick. His draft status has slipped a bit, but he still figures to go in the Top 10.
If he winds up being the only one, however, that would be a dropoff from recent drafts. Last season, Celebrini and Artyom Levshunov went 1-2 overall. In 2023, Adam Fantilli went No. 3, with Will Smith and Ryan Leonard also in the top 10. In 2022, Logan Cooley was No. 3, and in 2021, four of the top five NHL picks went to, or were already at, Michigan.
Still there are plenty of NCAA-connected players projected to go in the first round. That number has increased since the door to Major Junior players opened, with guys like Jackson Smith (Penn State) and Cole Reschny (North Dakota) among the Canadian Major Junior players to commit to NCAA schools in the last couple months.
All in all, like a lot of things in the NCAA right now, it’s the wild west. So hang in there.
College Sports
Donovan, Ekoue, Stricker share Male Athlete of the Year honors
Story Links EAU CLAIRE, Wis. – Three University of Wisconsin-Eau Claire seniors have been named UW-Eau Claire’s Male Athletes of the Year for 2024-25. Nathan Donovan (Sr. – Hazel Green, Wis./Wahlert Catholic), Yakob Ekoue (Sr. – Hopkins, Minn.) and Jared Stricker (Sr. – High Bridge, Wis./Ashland) all finished their careers as some of the best […]


EAU CLAIRE, Wis. – Three University of Wisconsin-Eau Claire seniors have been named UW-Eau Claire’s Male Athletes of the Year for 2024-25. Nathan Donovan (Sr. – Hazel Green, Wis./Wahlert Catholic), Yakob Ekoue (Sr. – Hopkins, Minn.) and Jared Stricker (Sr. – High Bridge, Wis./Ashland) all finished their careers as some of the best in Division III history in their respective sports, earning them a three-way tie for this year’s award.
Donovan starred for the men’s soccer team, Ekoue was a national champion for the men’s track and field team, and Stricker won another national crown with the wrestling team.
Donovan became the first player in program history to earn United Soccer Coaches Division III National Player of the Year honors last fall. The two-time All-American led all of NCAA men’s college soccer — regardless of Division — in scoring with 26 goals this fall. He also had a team-high 15 assists for a total of 67 points. His goal and points totals both set new UW-Eau Claire single-season records. He was the United Soccer Coaches National Scholar Player of the Year, Wisconsin Intercollegiate Athletic Conference (WIAC) Kwik Trip Offensive Player of the Year as well as the Max Sparger Scholar-Athlete this season.
Donovan’s success was the Blugolds’ success. With Donovan leading the line, UW-Eau Claire won WIAC regular season and tournament championships and qualified for the NCAA Tournament for the third consecutive season. The Blugolds won 17 games this season and spent the entire year nationally ranked.
The senior forward’s career goes down as one of the best in the history of Division III men’s soccer. He ranks third in DIII history with 229 career points and fourth with 94 career goals.
Ekoue, like Donovan, was also the national athlete of the year in his sport. He was the U.S. Track & Field and Cross Country Coaches Association’s NCAA Division III Field Athlete of the Year this spring, earning the honor for the second time in his career.
Ekoue won a second consecutive national championship in discus at the NCAA Division III Outdoor National Championships this season, setting a facility record in the process. He also placed third in both shot put and hammer throw to earn All-America honors in both events. He scored 22 team points for the Blugolds, helping the squad finish as national runner-up.
His efforts at nationals earned him Most Outstanding Field Performer of the Championships honors. It was his second time receiving that distinction.
Earlier in the season, Ekoue won a WIAC title in discus. He holds school records in both discus and hammer throw. He finished his Blugold career with 13 All-America honors and four national championships. He joined an elite group of athletes in Division III history to earn 10-plus All-America honors.
This marks the second consecutive year Stricker earned UW-Eau Claire Male Athlete of the Year honors. He became the first two-time national champion in the history of Blugold wrestling this winter. He went unbeaten at 43-0, posting the most victories by a Division III wrestler this season, as he clinched another 174-pound crown.
Stricker was named WIAC Wrestler of the Year for the second consecutive season and was named Most Outstanding Wrestler of the NCAA Championships. He finished his career with 169 victories, which is believed to rank in or near the top five in the history of Division III. There is no official leaderboard for career victories in Division III.
This season, Stricker became the WIAC’s all-time leader in career wins and also broke UW-Eau Claire’s career pins record with 75. He ended his career on a 71-match win streak, the longest in program history. He was a three-time All-American and four-time WIAC champion.
Off the mat, Stricker was named a National Wrestling Coaches Association Scholar All-American this season.
College Sports
NBA to take over operation of NBA TV, ending TNT Sports’ run
The NBA and TNT Sports are parting ways again. TNT Sports will no longer operate NBA TV and NBA.com as of October 1, CEO Luis Silberwasser said in a Friday memo obtained by Michael McCarthy of Front Office Sports. NBA TV, which will continue to air live games next season, had been run by TNT […]

The NBA and TNT Sports are parting ways again.
TNT Sports will no longer operate NBA TV and NBA.com as of October 1, CEO Luis Silberwasser said in a Friday memo obtained by Michael McCarthy of Front Office Sports. NBA TV, which will continue to air live games next season, had been run by TNT Sports since 2008.
While TNT’s settlement with the NBA requires it to create content for the NBA’s digital platforms, it is unclear whether there will be any TNT-produced content on NBA TV beyond the end of the current agreement.
The decision is not a surprise, as early reporting that TNT would continue running NBA TV and NBA.com as part of its settlement was immediately walked back. While Silberwasser said Friday that TNT had been in negotiations to continue running NBA TV, it is not clear whether the league was ever receptive.
With NBA TV originating from TNT’s Atlanta studios, the league-owned channel had for all intents and purposes become a part of the TNT Sports family. Most, if not all, of its on-air regulars held other roles on TNT programming — whether the now-concluded NBA package, the NCAA men’s basketball tournament, or in the case of hosts and play-by-play voices, any number of properties outside of basketball.
Prior to the TNT agreement, the network operated out of the league’s Secaucus, N.J., studios.
McCarthy initially reported that MLB Network has held early talks to potentially operate NBA TV, but that was retracted in a later update. The league instead intends to take production in-house.
College Sports
Driven to Greatness
Prodigy, it typically describes a young person with exceptional skills. Being driven is someone with internal motivation, put those two together and you get Rylee McLanahan. She started playing soccer around three years old, and from day one she has loved it. “I just love the game. I feel like I fell in love with […]


Prodigy, it typically describes a young person with exceptional skills. Being driven is someone with internal motivation, put those two together and you get Rylee McLanahan.
She started playing soccer around three years old, and from day one she has loved it.
“I just love the game. I feel like I fell in love with the process of getting better and just grinding,” said Edmond North Soccer standout Rylee McLanahan.
And grind is truly what she does.
“I play for a club team in Dallas called Solar, and so I commute to practice there twice a week, I leave school and I get there around 6 pm, we get done around 9 or 9:30, we come home, I wake I go train with my trainer Alex around 6 am,” said McLanahan.
That all happens during the school year, while maintaining her 4.2 GPA.
“I’m like ranked in the top one or two percent,” said McLanahan.
Her hard work and dedication are paying off in the classroom and on the field.
“This year I scored 43 goals and fifteen assist. I broke the 6A state single season record, and then over three seasons, I think it was forty-five games I had one hundred seven total goals,” said McLanahan.
Earning the Edmond North senior to be some pretty high honors.
“Gatorade player of the year twice, Jim thorp award, I’ve been named that twice, High school sports award for the Oklahoma City metro, and like, All-city, all district, and then conference player of the year, twice,” said McLanahan.
“She’s technically sound, very tactically aware,” said Randall Robinson director of player personal with the Oklahoma City FC.
This summer Rylee is playing with the Oklahoma City FC team, the Oklahoma City team in the Women’s premier soccer league
“It is literally, the premier league in the summer for women’s soccer. It is the biggest women’s soccer league in the world,” said Robinson.
The summer league is primarily made up of elite division one college soccer players and only the best of the best high school players, and of course Rylee isa standout on the team.
“She’s just a great team player, even with all of her talent, she’s very selfless,” said Robinson.
McLanahan has already committed to playing her college soccer at the University of Florida, she will graduate in December and enroll for the Spring semester. You can see her in the WPSL league. The team has already qualified for post-season play; all those games will be played in Stillwater. Game schedules can be seen at www.wpslsoccer.com/schedule
College Sports
Patrick Reed, Harold Varner III lead LIV Golf Dallas :: WRALSportsFan.com
By The Associated Press CARROLLTON, Texas — CARROLLTON, Texas (AP) — Patrick Reed and Harold Varner III each shot 5-under 67 on Friday at Maridoe Golf Club to share the first-round lead in LIV Golf Dallas. Reed eagled the 655-yard, par-5 second hole and had four birdies and a bogey. Varner, Reed’s 4Aces teammate, had […]

CARROLLTON, Texas — CARROLLTON, Texas (AP) — Patrick Reed and Harold Varner III each shot 5-under 67 on Friday at Maridoe Golf Club to share the first-round lead in LIV Golf Dallas.
Reed eagled the 655-yard, par-5 second hole and had four birdies and a bogey. Varner, Reed’s 4Aces teammate, had six birdies and a closing bogey.
Jon Rahm was a stroke back. Abraham Ancer shot 69, and Dustin Johnson was at 70 with Graeme McDowell, Anirban Lahiri, Richard Bland and David Puig.
Bryson DeChambeau opened with a 72. He lives in Dallas and played his college golf at SMU.
Points leader Joaquin Niemann, coming off a victory at LIV Golf Virginia, shot 78. He had a 10 on the par-5 seventh.
Brooks Koepka withdrew during the round because of illness. He smashed a tee marker with his driver on the ninth hole.
___
AP golf: https://apnews.com/hub/golf
-
Motorsports2 weeks ago
NASCAR Weekend Preview: Autódromo Hermanos Rodríguez
-
Motorsports2 weeks ago
NASCAR Through the Gears: Denny Hamlin has gas, a border needs crossing, and yes, that’s a Hemi
-
Health2 weeks ago
Gymnast MyKayla Skinner Claims Simone Biles 'Belittled and Ostracized' Her amid Riley …
-
High School Sports3 weeks ago
Highlights of the Tony Awards
-
Motorsports2 weeks ago
NASCAR Race Today: Mexico City start times, schedule and how to watch live on TV
-
Professional Sports3 weeks ago
UFC 316
-
NIL2 weeks ago
Tennessee law supersedes NCAA eligibility rule
-
College Sports3 weeks ago
Fisk to discontinue history-making gymnastics program after 2026 | Area colleges
-
Sports2 weeks ago
Coco Gauff, The World's Highest
-
Health3 weeks ago
Olympic great Simone Biles shares mental health journey on first Hong Kong visit