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Fisk University Ends Its Historic Gymnastics Program

by Daniel Johnson June 8, 2025 The university shared its impactful decision with its student body in an email. After starting the nation’s first gymnastics program at an HBCU in 2023, Fisk University has made the decision to shutter the program at the conclusion of the 2025-2026 gymnastics season, citing recruitment disadvantages and scheduling issues […]

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Morgan Price, Fisk, HBCU, gymnast

The university shared its impactful decision with its student body in an email.


After starting the nation’s first gymnastics program at an HBCU in 2023, Fisk University has made the decision to shutter the program at the conclusion of the 2025-2026 gymnastics season, citing recruitment disadvantages and scheduling issues as reasons for their decision.

In a press release, Valencia Jordan, the director of Fisk Athletics addressed the rationale behind the university’s choice to end its support of the gymnastics program, which helped to raise the university’s profile.

“While we are tremendously proud of the history our gymnastics team has made in just three years, we look forward to focusing on our conference-affiliated teams to strengthen our impact in the HBCU Athletic Conference,” Jordan said. “Fisk is grateful for the hard work, dedication and tenacity of its gymnasts, staff members, and coaches who made this program possible.”

As Forbes reported, the university shared its impactful decision with its student body in an email, and although both Fisk and Wilberforce University currently sponsor women’s gymnastics, the sport is not sanctioned by the HBCU Athletic Conference.

Morgan Price, the biggest star in Fisk University’s gymnastics program, got out ahead of the announcement, declaring her intent to transfer to the University of Arkansas.

Price, an Arkansas native, initially considered competing for the Razorbacks in her final season of eligibility when she signed to Fisk University, where all she did was guide the program to back to back national championships and score the first perfect 10 in HBCU gymnastics history.

The other cornerstone of Fisk’s gymnastics program, head coach Corrinnne Tarver, resigned one month into the program’s 2025 season, Tarver had led the program since its inception in the 2022-2023 season.

Even though these departures were notable, the decision to discontinue the gymnastics program led some athletes, alumni and fans to express disappointment and disagreement with the university’s decision, especially after it won five national titles and set a new program record by having seven players named to the All-American squad.

According to HBCU Gameday, the now-settled House v. NCAA lawsuit, which entitles players to direct payments from universities, has been a source of consternation from smaller schools, like HBCUs, and it hangs over the university’s decision, an ill omen, like an albatross.

According to Southwestern Athletic Conference (SWAC) Commissioner Charles McClelland, the settlement is anticipated to create financial urgency for HBCU conferences, which opt-in to the revenue-sharing model created by the settlement. For those who don’t opt in, like Fisk University, the path is uncertain and they risk losing out on athletes who may look to cash in on their talents.

“It is now allowable for institutions to directly give NIL money to their student-athletes,” McClelland said in December 2024. “That means there’s going to be an influx of athletes that are looking for NIL payments. You’re going to have to have some name, image, and likeness money set aside to compete. There’s going to be some challenging times from a financial standpoint.”

RELATED CONTENT: Morgan Price Becomes First HBCU Gymnast To Win Back-To-Back USA Gymnastics All-Around Titles





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Gophers hockey adds D3 transfer from Minnetonka to 2025-26 roster

Augsburg University transfer forward Graham Harris verbally committed to Gophers men’s hockey on Monday according to multiple reports. BREAKING: Augsburg (D3) transfer F Graham Harris has verbally committed to Minnesota, per @FutureGophers Listed at 6 feet, he plays HS hockey for Minnetonka. He had 22 points with 9 goals and 13 assists in his first […]

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Augsburg University transfer forward Graham Harris verbally committed to Gophers men’s hockey on Monday according to multiple reports.

Hailing from Minnetonka, University, Harris scored 24 points at the high school level in 2020-21 with 10 goals and 14 assists. He then played three seasons in the North American Hockey League (NAHL) before beginning his college career at Division III Augsburg last season.

Related: Study shows Gophers hockey is a serious moneymaker for U of M athletics

Standing at 6 feet, he finished with 22 points last season, with nine goals and 13 assists. He’s 22 years old and he will have three years of eligbility remaining with the Gophers.

Harris now gives Minnesota 25 projected players for the 2025-26 season, which is one below the new max of 26. He’s the 14th forward projected to be on next year’s team.

Picture via: @tonyliebert (X)

Gophers roster outlook / Picture via: @tonyliebert (X)

We’re nearly 80 days away from the Gophers opening their 2025-26 season at home against Michigan Tech. They technically have one roster spot left, but it would be fair to think Harris could be their final addition.





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Hugh Freeze, John Cohen discuss Auburn’s experience with new NIL GO clearinghouse

Auburn’s roster building and NIL strategies since the House Settlement was passed have been under a microscope this summer. The Tigers’ 2026 recruiting class has plummeted in the national rankings since June, a drop highlighted by four players decommitting. Head coach Hugh Freeze and athletic director John Cohen both attributed the recent struggles to Auburn’s […]

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Auburn’s roster building and NIL strategies since the House Settlement was passed have been under a microscope this summer.

The Tigers’ 2026 recruiting class has plummeted in the national rankings since June, a drop highlighted by four players decommitting. Head coach Hugh Freeze and athletic director John Cohen both attributed the recent struggles to Auburn’s adjustment to the new revenue sharing era and the program’s strategy for preserving the current roster and staying under the cap.

Both Freeze and Cohen have emphasized that they don’t believe other schools are operating by the same rules as Auburn, something they think could change on Aug. 1, when offers can start going into writing.

Each athletic department operates under the rev-share cap of $20.5 million, but third-party NIL deals don’t count against the cap. The Deloitte NIL GO clearinghouse was introduced to vet NIL deals, in theory eliminating the large pay-for-play deals often handed out by booster collectives.

Those deals aren’t necessarily illegal now, but money that comes from the University or an affiliate — deals that aren’t third-party — would count against the cap. The clearinghouse is still in the early stages, but Freeze and Cohen gave some insight on how it has affected Auburn so far.

“Truthfully, we haven’t had that many in the football building yet that we’ve gotten the word back on,” Freeze said at an AMBUSH event in Atlanta on Monday.

With things still being in the early stages, Freeze avoided giving an extensive comment on Auburn’s deals through NIL GO, deferring to Cohen. However, he did use it as an example of why he thinks Auburn’s rev-share and NIL strategies are the right ones.

Freeze made the point that if players who have already been in college and proven themselves have had trouble getting deals approved or agreeing on a value through the clearinghouse, he doesn’t want to promise large numbers to high school recruits.

Cohen elaborated more on Auburn’s experience with NIL GO so far, saying that it’s “a little hit or miss right now.”

“You’re convinced that something that a businessperson in the business community put through is gonna go through and sail through, and it doesn’t,” Cohen said. “And then you’re convinced that something that something everybody else puts in probably isn’t going to go through, and it does. But I think we’re all going to go through this learning experience.”

Cohen said that if information from the SEC and Deloitte suggests that Auburn is taking the wrong approach, the program will adjust, emphasizing the time still left between now and the early signing period in December.

He was asked specifically if Auburn had the funding and support from its boosters to adjust and strike quickly if the landscape changes, to which Cohen said Auburn will “do what it takes.”

Despite Auburn’s low position in the recruiting rankings, Cohen is still confident in how the 2026 class will finish, praising Freeze’s ability as a recruiter.

“You can’t confuse patience with inactivity. This man, who was just sitting right here, is as active a recruiter as any coach I’ve ever seen in any sport,” Cohen said. “I just spent two hours in a car with him, and he was called by seven different recruits. They called him. That’s the kind of relationship he has with recruits…

“There are staffs out there in which the head coach really isn’t part of that process, that there’s a separate group. Not Hugh Freeze, he’s personally in the middle of it, and it takes a lot of time, but no matter what he’s doing at that moment, he stops everything in his life to talk to those recruits and to talk to their families.”

Time will ultimately tell whether or not Auburn’s approach will work, but for now, neither Cohen or Freeze is backing away from their strategy yet.

Peter Rauterkus covers Auburn sports for AL.com. You can follow him on X at @peter_rauterkus or email him at prauterkus@al.com

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Sigler Traded Gymnastics for Volleyball and Never Looked Back

Teraya Sigler wanted to be the next Simone Biles. However, at 6-foot-3. she was told she was too tall for gymnastics. She then turned to swimming. Admittedly, she was not very good at it. She swam the breaststroke and felt she was good at it, but not good enough to have a future in the […]

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Teraya Sigler wanted to be the next Simone Biles. However, at 6-foot-3. she was told she was too tall for gymnastics.

She then turned to swimming. Admittedly, she was not very good at it. She swam the breaststroke and felt she was good at it, but not good enough to have a future in the sport.

“Swimming was fun, but I was humble enough to know I wasn’t very good at it,” Sigler said on Sports Nightly on Husker Radio Network Monday night. “I loved the breaststroke, but I was never the fastest in the pool.”

The phenom then turned to volleyball and became one of the very best in the country. When she graduated from high school, she was the top volleyball recruit in the country.

“I said fine, I’ll take my height somewhere else,” Sigler said. “Volleyball just happened to work out.”

Volleyball did not just work out for Sigler. She became one of the best to play the sport when she was in high school. She took home all the hardware and the accolades. She also had a lot of involvement with the U.S. National Team.

Sigler was named the Gatorade Arizona Player of the Year as well as the MaxPreps Arizona Player of the Year, after both her junior and senior campaigns. She represented the U.S. Girls U19 Team that won the gold medal at the 2024 NORCECA Championships in Canada.

There was never a question she wanted to play volleyball in college. There was also no question as to where she wanted to play.

She said once Nebraska came calling, she knew she was going to make Lincoln home.

“With college, I was looking to go outside of Arizona and I always thought Nebraska was a cool place,” Sigler said. “Nebraska is the best place that celebrates volleyball. It was a done deal when they reached out.”

Sigler wanted to be the best, regardless of the sport. She watched tape of the best in different sports and tried to emulate them.

“Whatever sport I played, I looked at the best and tried to replicate them,” Sigler said. “I can strive to be consistently good for a long time, but I will never be perfect, so there is no reason to strive for perfection. It’s just not attainable.”

She grew up in a family that thrived in sports. Her mother was a beach volleyball player and they were all very competitive. It helped make Sigler, an outside hitter, the best at what she does.

“I give all the glory to my family for making it fun,” Sigler said. “They made me work hard at the same time.”

While she was the best in high school, she said everyone on the Cornhuskers’ team was used to being the best where they came from too,

“Coming into a school where everyone was the best in their school is very humbling,” Sigler said. “These girls here are elite athletes.”

Stay up to date on all things Huskers by bookmarking Nebraska Cornhuskers On SI, subscribing to HuskerMax on YouTube, and visiting HuskerMax.com daily.



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Why National Championship Pressure Towers Over Hockey

For many, no matter how many prodigies hockey secures Penn State will be first and foremost a football school. That in itself is pressure packed. For some zealots, football has always been in the national championship picture, but that isn’t true. Following Penn State’s last national championship in 1986, under Joe Paterno, only in 1994 […]

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For many, no matter how many prodigies hockey secures Penn State will be first and foremost a football school. That in itself is pressure packed.

For some zealots, football has always been in the national championship picture, but that isn’t true.


Following Penn State’s last national championship in 1986, under Joe Paterno, only in 1994 did Penn State ever truly flirt with national championship aspirations. After the 1994 season, only twice in Paterno’s final 17 seasons (1999, 2008) did Penn State ever reach 9-0, and it never hit 10-0. 

Under Paterno’s watch in Penn State’s first 19  Big Ten seasons, the program appeared in three New Year’s Six bowls – during the same stretch  Penn State tumbled from being a true national power and slipping behind traditional powers like Michigan and Ohio State as well as Wisconsin, Michigan State and Iowa began to leap front Penn State. 

Many of these zealots somehow transpose Paterno’s first 21 seasons— which is the reason Paterno is a coaching immortal— where Penn State had six undefeated regular seasons, played for four national championships, winning two and winning 10 of 14 New Year’s Six bowls.

Penn State had poor timing against Notre Dame

Photo by Matt Lynch, Nittany Sports Now: James Franklin


Part of that “Mandela Effect” has carried over to the James Franklin era and has added fuel to the fire of often deserved criticisms towards Franklin of not winning the big games.

Following Penn State’s heartbreaking loss in the College Football Playoff Semifinal at the Orange Bowl to Notre Dame, Franklin’s record against AP Top 10 teams dropped to 4-20.

In perspective, Paterno was 3-12 in his final 15 games against AP Top 10 teams, so he wasn’t getting the job done either. 

When a Penn State fan identifies their sport allegiance, the odds are football will be the sport over hockey, and in many Penn State fans minds of a certain age, Penn State is still the reigning perennial national power it was in the late 1970’s up until the mid 1980’s. 

This is the absolute closest Penn State has been to that mid-1980’s level.

This is no disrespect to the legendary 1994 team, who finished No. 2 that season and was recognized by ESPN in their celebration of the 150 years of college football as the highest ranked team to not win a national championship. But they were preseason No. 9 going into 1994.

There have been three Penn State teams that have started in the Top 5 since: 1995 at No. 4, 1999 at No. 3 along with 1997 squad being preseason No. 1. This should be the highest preseason rank for Penn State since these teams.

This is another log onto the fire.

When you consider the bevy of talent that has returned such as quarterback Drew Allar, who could have been selected in the Top 10 of this past Draft, running backs Nicholas Singleton and Kaytron Allen, offensive lineman Vega Ioane, defensive lineman Dani Dennis-Sutton and Zane Durant, as well as defensive backs Zakee Wheatley and AJ Harris, that is a national championship nucleus. 

Another log was added when Penn State made defensive coordinator Jim Knowles the highest paid assistant coach in college football history at north of $3 million per season.

‘You Don’t Mess Around With Jim’: Penn State Set to Hire Jim Knowles as Defensive Coordinator

When you consider how aggressive Penn State was in the transfer portal retooling their wide receiver room and adding depth at key positions like offensive line and linebacker it shows the sense of urgency to get this done. 

I feel the vision Franklin has wanted and conveyed to Penn State’s administration was tasted in the waning moments of the Orange Bowl. Everyone at Penn State felt they should have been able to drive to get points to move on to play for a national championship. 

To be so close and be denied in such fashion gave Franklin more leverage than he has ever had at Penn State. 

The aggressiveness of hockey cannot be overlooked, but Penn State’s proverbial “bread” will always be buttered by the success of what happens in Beaver Stadium. The wrestling program has a John Wooden-esque dynasty amongst us winning 12 of the last 14 national championships that was competed for, hasn’t lost a dual meet since 2020, and  that dominance hasn’t even made a dent into the engine that is Penn State football. 

If Penn State were to come up short this year, going “all-in” with significant investment to build the most complete rosters in the country, assemble thebest coaching staff in the nation of being able to retain Andy Kotelnicki another year and bringing in Knowles, a very favorable schedule that has Penn State the first five weeks in State College before hitting the road, that will leave many wondering what it would take to get it done.

Everyone got a taste of Franklin’s vision back in January being only moments away from getting to the national championship last season.

The immense pressure to satisfy that hunger is now on Franklin and his team is to deliver a return trip to Miami for the National Championship. Hockey may have gotten a hockey prodigy, but the significant investment to deliver a football national championship dwarves anything that happens at Pegula Ice Arena.



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University of New Hampshire

DURHAM, N.H. – The University of New Hampshire women’s hockey program, under the leadership of 12th-year head coach Hilary Witt, announced its 2025-26 schedule on Monday and season tickets are on sale now.   UNH women’s hockey season tickets are $75 per seat for the 18-game package. CLICK HERE to buy your seat now for a value […]

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DURHAM, N.H. – The University of New Hampshire women’s hockey program, under the leadership of 12th-year head coach Hilary Witt, announced its 2025-26 schedule on Monday and season tickets are on sale now.
 
UNH women’s hockey season tickets are $75 per seat for the 18-game package. CLICK HERE to buy your seat now for a value of less than $5 per game.

CLICK HERE to view complete schedule.

 

For the second consecutive year, UNH and Maine face off in an exhibition game at the Whittemore Center at Key Auto Group Complex when the Wildcats and Black Bears collide Sept. 20 (2 p.m.).

 

New Hampshire opens regular-season play with a two-game home series against Mercyhurst University on Sept. 25 (6 p.m.) & 26 (1 p.m.). The teams split the series in Erie, Pa. last November.

 

October starts with four consecutive road games as the Wildcats travel to Assumption University (Oct. 3-4) and Union College (Oct. 10-11). UNH faces off against regional rival Harvard University at the Whitt on Oct. 18 (2 p.m.).

 

The ‘Cats begin a stretch of nine consecutive Hockey East league games Oct. 24 at Boston University. That league opener is followed by home-and-home series against both Merrimack College and Providence College with games at the Whitt on Nov. 1 (2 p.m.) vs. the Warriors and Nov. 7 (6 p.m.) against the Friars.

 

UNH travels to UVM for two games against the Catamounts on Nov. 14-15, then plays a game at Holy Cross (Nov. 21) before playing host to those Crusaders on Nov. 22 (7 p.m.).

 

The Wildcats are back on the road to play Ivy League foe Brown University on Nov. 30 and Northeastern on Dec. 2.

 

New Hampshire begins a stretch of five consecutive home games Dec. 5 (6 p.m.) against Maine and the Buffalo Wild Wings Border Battle continues Dec. 6 (2 p.m.). The Wildcats ring in 2026 with two games against LIU on Jan. 3-4 – both games scheduled for a two o’clock start – and the homestand ends Jan. 10 (TBA) vs. Boston University.

 

UNH wraps up the season series vs. Northeastern with a Jan. 16-17 home-and-home series in which the teams face off at the Whitt on the 17th (TBA). The ‘Cats play Friday home games four consecutive weeks beginning Jan. 23 (6 p.m.) against Boston College and continuing Jan. 30 (6 p.m.) against UConn, Feb. 6 (2 p.m.) vs. Merrimack and Feb . 13 (2 p.m.) vs. UConn.

 

In the final weekend of the regular season, UNH goes to BC on Feb. 20 and then welcomes UVM to the Whittemore Center on Feb. 21 (2 p.m.).

 

The Hockey East tournament begins Feb. 25 with the first round, followed by the Feb. 28 quarterfinals, March 4 semifinals and the March 7 championship game.

 

WHOC home schedule 2025-26 graphic



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Ireland, Orr Named 2025-26 Men’s Hockey Captains; Androlewicz, Aben Tabbed as Assistants

Story Links EASTON, Mass. (July 14, 2025) – Stonehill College men’s ice hockey head coach David Berard has announced the team’s leadership group for the upcoming 2025-26 season. Senior forward Frank Ireland and senior defenseman Evan Orr will serve as co-captains, while graduate goaltender Connor Androlewicz and sophomore forward Zach Aben have been named assistant captains. […]

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EASTON, Mass. (July 14, 2025) – Stonehill College men’s ice hockey head coach David Berard has announced the team’s leadership group for the upcoming 2025-26 season. Senior forward Frank Ireland and senior defenseman Evan Orr will serve as co-captains, while graduate goaltender Connor Androlewicz and sophomore forward Zach Aben have been named assistant captains.

Ireland returns as captain for the second consecutive season, while Orr is elevated to co-captain after serving as an assistant during the 2024-25 campaign. Androlewicz and Aben will wear a letter for the first time in their collegiate careers. The leadership group—consisting of two seniors, one graduate student, and one sophomore—brings a combined six years of experience within the Skyhawks program.

A cornerstone of the program since arriving on campus, Ireland has been part of Stonehill’s leadership core since his sophomore year and enters the season as one of just three four-year seniors on the roster. The Easton native leads all players in Stonehill’s NCAA Division I era with 74 career points (32 goals, 42 assists) in 95 games. In 2024-25, he tallied 12 points on six goals and six assists, including a power-play goal against LIU and a pair of multi-point efforts—one coming in an overtime win against Merrimack at Warrior Ice Arena on November 12.

Orr, a transfer from Michigan Tech, made an immediate impact in his first season with the program in 2024-25, earning NCAA Division I Independent Hockey All-Star honors. He recorded a career-best 15 points on eight goals and seven assists, ranking second on the team in goals and leading the Skyhawks with five game-winning tallies—three in overtime. One of those overtime winners secured a historic 3–2 road victory over No. 9 UMass Lowell, marking Stonehill’s first-ever win over a nationally ranked Division I opponent.

Androlewicz, who joined the Skyhawks from the University of Maine, turned in a breakout season in net during 2024-25. He appeared in 30 games, setting a Stonehill Division I single-season record with 11 wins while posting a 3.11 goals-against average. His stellar February earned him NCAA Division I Independent Co-Goaltender of the Month honors. Androlewicz also played a critical role in Stonehill’s four shutouts—another program record—sharing the crease with Linards Lipskis.

Aben enters his sophomore campaign after an impressive freshman season and becomes just the third sophomore in program history to earn a leadership role at the Division I level, joining current teammate Ireland and former Skyhawk, Carter Rapalje. In 30 games, Aben led all Skyhawk freshmen with 11 points (4 goals, 7 assists) and was one of just two players to score a shorthanded goal, joining 2025 graduate Henri Schreifels.

The Skyhawks aim to build on a milestone 2024-25 season that featured a Division I era program-record 12 wins—an improvement of 10 victories from the previous year. Stonehill posted a 7-7 mark at home, captured 10 wins over Division I opponents, and earned road wins against Merrimack, Lake Superior State, UMass Lowell, and LIU—setting a new program benchmark for success away from home.

For the latest on Stonehill Athletics, follow the Skyhawks via social media on TwitterFacebook, and Instagram.

 





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