The Champions
Sports Business Journal will honor the Champions Class of 2025 throughout the year:
June: Frank Vuono
July:
Ross Greenburg
August: Gene Smith
September:
Dave Checketts
October: Carmen Policy

From the back porch in the North Jersey neighborhood where his family has lived for 120 years; two minutes from the field where he and his two brothers played high school football, and one coached for 22 years; three from the barbershop where he’s been a regular for years; and five from Angelo’s, the red-sauce joint where he’s had an account since his teen years, Frank Vuono is essentializing Lyndhurst to a visitor from Connecticut.
Sports Business Journal will honor the Champions Class of 2025 throughout the year:
June: Frank Vuono
July:
Ross Greenburg
August: Gene Smith
September:
Dave Checketts
October: Carmen Policy
“All my relatives were on this block or the next,” said Vuono, who lives in a house built on a site his grandfather bought in 1915. “And they all came over here from Italy.”
It’s a neighborhood known as “The Hook,” once a rough part of a hardscrabble town, where everyone was a cousin. Before school sports, Vuono and his brothers played football on asphalt gridirons like Copeland Avenue, from “telephone pole to telephone pole, and baseball using manhole covers as bases,” with teammates like the Jiosis, who had 11 boys, and the Giangerusos, who spawned five.
Vuono’s father worked the night shift for 31 years at a nearby Westinghouse plant, while his mother toiled in the garment industry and as a maid. To supplement the grocery bill, the family grew corn and tomatoes in their yard, helped by “fertilizer” the brothers hauled from a nearby stable.
As Vuono recollected, “We were piss-poor, barely middle class, but it was a great childhood — we didn’t know what we didn’t have.”
Vuono and his brothers were skilled enough on the gridiron that they all played college football. Frank used football as a ticket to a Princeton education and then to a career as a sports marketer, during which he helped redefine and explode what became the NFL’s multibillion-dollar sports licensing business, an influence still felt across the industry. Vuono followed that with an agency career, where he exploited the flourishing popularity of the league’s biggest stars by finding them unprecedented commercial value and opportunity.
Vuono transformed NFL licensing from a business that was paying for equipment like jerseys, cleats and even footballs to one with retail sales in the billions and licensees paying millions for the rights to display products on NFL fields, just as NFL telecasts were becoming America’s most popular TV fare.
“The NFL in the ’80s and ’90s was really the first property that began to professionalize its offerings by integrating media, events, IP and licensing, and Frank was one of those O.G.,” said MLS Commissioner Don Garber, who could also be described in those terms, having been an NFL marketer for 16 years before his 25 years with MLS. “Today, you can’t imagine watching a sports event where players and coaches aren’t wearing products available at retail.”
Added Bruin Capital CEO George Pyne: “Frank really helped create a sports licensing business when it barely existed.”
Logo Athletic founder Tom Shine was one of a number of beneficiaries from the explosion in sports merchandising in those decades. “Frank Vuono brought the sports licensing business into the 20th century,” said Shine, who later headed Reebok’s sports marketing and licensing.
Ralph Greene, who worked with Vuono at the NFL and Integrated Sports International before spending 21 years at Nike, rising to VP of Nike football and baseball, summed up Vuono’s impact succinctly: “He set modern licensing in motion,” said Greene, now a consultant. “Every inch of the NFL sideline is scripted now, but he started all of that.”
After leaving the NFL to establish seminal sports agency ISI in 1993, Vuono found new ways to market NFL stars in accordance with their mushrooming popularity. Vuono and the NFL never had the advantage of a star with the singular ability and appeal of Michael Jordan, but across the industry, the notion is that Vuono was as meaningful to NFL player marketing as David Falk was to the NBA. For years, NFL marketers talked about pushing NFL players into the marketing mainstream, by “getting their helmets off.”
Vuono orchestrated their removal.
“Frank was early as far as recognizing the marketing appeal of NFL players,” said Gary Gertzog, president of business affairs for Fanatics, who helped build Vuono’s QB Club of player talent as outside counsel and later senior vice president/general counsel at the NFL. “Top NBA players were then perceived as much more marketable — he changed that.”
“He set modern licensing in motion. Every inch of the NFL sideline is scripted now, but he started all of that.”
— Ralph Greene, industry consultant
Fourteen-year NFL quarterback Boomer Esiason went from being the league’s highest-paid player and a leader in the 1987 players strike to joining and helping to coalesce the QB Club, launched in 1990.
“Frank just had this special genius when it came to marketing and promotion,” said Esiason. “He was always great at marrying players and sponsors. The NFL was not nearly as profitable for the agents in the 1980s as the NBA, but that changed. Lots of Frank’s and David Falk’s marketing ideas were similar; they just used different athletes.”
Fred Fried’s career path took him from working with Falk at ProServ to being a founding partner of ISI with Vuono and Steve Rosner.
“Within the industry, Frank Vuono is just as renowned as David Falk,” said Fried, now a principal with consultancy Team Services LLC. “I still see today’s players seeking him [Falk] out at games because they know what he did for them, and the same is still true with Frank Vuono.”

But for a football injury, Vuono’s life and career would have been substantially different.
As a high school QB, Vuono says he was recruited by the likes of Michigan, Penn State and Tennessee. But after a knee blowout his senior year, those big-time college scholarship offers vanished. “That told me I wasn’t going to be playing pro, so it convinced me to get an education,” he said.
“Frank just has this special genius when it came to marketing and promotion. He was always great at marrying players and sponsors.”
— Boomer Esiason, former NFL QB and current broadcaster
College was no certainty then at Lyndhurst High. Just 30 of Vuono’s 288 classmates matriculated to a university. “The rest of us traveled as a pack, class to class,” Vuono remembered.
A solid connection between his guidance counselor and Princeton football coach Bob Casciola helped clinch the deal for Vuono to play for and attend the university that “felt like Disney World from the first time I walked around it.”
Football was again a determining factor. Vuono first visited Princeton’s campus as a kid for an Eagles-Giants exhibition at Palmer Stadium. “I compared every campus to Princeton after that,” he said.
During his freshman year, the contrast between north and central Jersey made itself apparent. Vuono’s first professor (“right out of ‘The Paper Chase’”) couldn’t pronounce his name. With no freshman orientation because of football camp obligations, Vuono had to acknowledge to that same tweedy prof that he didn’t know what a syllabus was. As would often be the case, Vuono eventually made the discordance work in his favor.
Matt Gourlay was one of 11 teammates rooming with Vuono at Princeton — a group which still assembles annually for a holiday meal at Angelo’s. “Frank could drop an f-bomb with the best of them, but he was still a bon vivant, a really good artist and an intellectual,” said Gourlay, now an investment banker.
“People then and now realized how genuine he is, and that bonds them.”
Offered fellow roommate Bill Mitchell:
“Frank was — and is — that unusual jock with artistic and creative abilities,” Mitchell said. “That’s as rare as finding a tech person who can sell. He was always a leader.”
With around a dozen would-be QBs on the squad, Vuono switched to tight end his sophomore year. As a senior, he was co-winner of the McPhee Award for the player with “qualities of durability and fortitude.”
Forty-eight years later, Vuono’s career achievements, and tireless fundraising efforts, garnered him accolades as Princeton’s honoree at the 2025 Ivy Football Association banquet. Steve Simcox (class of 1983), who heads the Princeton Football Association, refers to Vuono as “the godfather of Princeton football.”
“Frank is definitely a uniter,” said former Giants QB Phil Simms, a client after Vuono left the NFL. “He didn’t have to be the best player on the field, but he was always the guy that galvanized any team he’s on.”
There were some indications of Vuono’s career path while he was at Princeton. He designed, silkscreened and sold T-shirts to help Princeton teams raise money and supplement his own income. “We undercut the bookstore’s price, which they didn’t like,” he said. The business grew enough that it moved off the clotheslines strung across the dorm room and into a professional screen printer in Philadelphia.
Vuono also supplied sketches of Princeton football players for game programs.
The Black and Orange again opened the door for Vuono that led him to a marketing career. Athletic Director Royce Flippin asked Vuono what sort of job he was seeking. Thinking of his interests in business and art, Vuono replied, “advertising.” Forty-seven years later, “I still have no idea why I said that,” he remembered.
Weeks later, Vuono arrived for an interview at Young & Rubicam’s Midtown offices wearing a forgettable white leisure suit, which got him directed to the agency’s delivery area. Despite the attire, and subsequently being awakened from a sound sleep at his desk on his first day by agency CEO Ed Ney, Y&R was where Vuono found his vocation, working on brands including Kentucky Fried Chicken, Log Cabin syrup, Jell-O in its Bill Cosby days and Dash detergent.
Matt Crisci was Vuono’s first boss at Y&R. Crisci’s initial impression: Vuono “talked like a guy on the subway.” However, “in six months, he understood most of the agency business, and within a year he was doing presentations,” Crisci said. “Frank understood any business quickly, and he could always tell right away if the person on the other side of table was a bullshitter.”
Those five years as a “cocky young account guy” at Y&R imbued Vuono with a mind for marketing strategy.
“I learned to pick a positioning statement: Know who you are and don’t deviate, like any great brand,” he said.
“[Frank Vuono] talked like a guy on the subway. … In six months, he understood most of the agency business and within a year he was doing presentations.”
— Matt Crisci, Frank Vuono’s boss at Young & Rubicam
It was a Stamford, Conn., neighbor of Crisci who drafted Vuono into the NFL. John Bello, a former General Foods marketer, was then the president of NFL Properties and seeking young marketing talent. Crisci recommended his protege. Vuono resisted, because the league was on strike.
“I really didn’t know if there would be a season,” he said. The Y&R account he was working on then: Stayfree Maxi Pads. “Can you imagine my two older brothers sitting around the kitchen table saying, ‘You turned down an NFL job to continue on Stayfree Maxi Pads?’“ he said. Three years later, the NFL came around again.
Vuono joined NFL Properties in 1985, heading new business development within a licensing department he described as “the league’s stepchild … we had no Super Bowl tickets or anything,” he said. Within a few years, the NFL was staging Broadway-quality shows for its licensees on the Saturday before the Super Bowl, with appearances by the likes of Muhammed Ali, Kathy Ireland, the opposing Super Bowl coaches, NFL HOFers and even the commissioner.
Licensing at the NFL when Vuono came on board centered on kids products in the Sears’ holiday “Wish Book” catalog, a relationship that dates to the earliest leaguewide merchandising efforts in the late 1950s.
Bello was beginning to develop a strategy for authentic on-field apparel, but the league was still paying for endemic equipment, including essentials like footballs, uniforms and balls.
One of Vuono’s first trips for the league was to the 1985 Pro Bowl, where he was distressed to see the league’s best clothed in cast-off uniforms. “My first thought was that if we were treating our all-stars that way, it was broken,” he said.
The model needed to change, powered by the NFL’s geometric growth in popularity. Equipment manufacturers needed to be converted from NFL vendors to licensees paying to be on-field. Some of the more traditional labels balked. The NFL’s oldest licensee, then and now, is Wilson. It’s been making the league’s official “Duke” footballs in Ada, Ohio, since 1955, and the NFL has exclusively used Wilson balls since 1941.
“The first time I told [Wilson’s GM of football] Dennis Grapenthin that he was going to pay us, he gave me a hard look,” Vuono said. “I told him he was going to take those [NFL] balls to retail and sell way more. That became true for many companies.”
The message supporting the NFL’s Pro Line brand was clear: “Wear What the Pros Wear.”
Starter founder David Beckerman called on the league’s Park Avenue offices for eight years before finally getting an NFL license.
“They were so devoted to Sears that they had no idea about the distribution we were building in sporting goods,” Beckerman said. “Frank always saw potential early. He brought a unique intellect to the business and, as product moved from official to authentic, he understood its importance.”

Demand soared, and new licensees like Starter, Apex One and Logo Athletic moved to meet it, as sales of NFL licensed products grew from the millions to the billions in the 1980s and 90s.
The league’s licensing confidence grew, and it extended into many new consumer products, including pet products and kitchen gear. One of the most memorable was the NFL Pro Shop program in the late 1980s and early 1990s with Payne Stewart, which had the golfer attired in licensed NFL apparel while competing.
It extended NFL apparel into new retail channels, and was supported by hard goods and apparel licensees, including Antigua. The deal looked even better after Stewart won the PGA Championship and the U.S. Open wearing NFL apparel.
“We learned to pay attention to any new idea Frank had,” said Antigua founder Tom Dooley. A bonus: The only sport NFL owners loved more than football was golf.
“We learned to pay attention to any new idea Frank had.”
— Tom Dooley, Antigua founder
Licenses based on team I.P. were booming. The path to further growth was with more and better inclusion of the game’s stars, responsible for most jersey sales. Moving that revenue out of the union coffers made the Quarterback Club cartel, launched in 1990, an easy sell within the NFL, then in antitrust litigation with the NFLPA.
With help from two quarterback-heavy agents — Leigh Steinberg, whose roster included Tony Eason, Warren Moon, Ken O’Brien and Steve Young; and Marvin Demoff, bringing in uberstars Dan Marino and John Elway — the QBs were free to do individual deals, but any campaign using three or more required a QB Club agreement. The original QB Club was Elway, Moon, Bernie Kosar, Jim Kelly, Troy Aikman, Randall Cunningham, Simms, Jim Everett, Esiason, Bubby Brister and Marino. Joe Montana, then the league’s top QB, wanted more money.
Nonetheless, Mike Ornstein, former NFL VP of marketing, recalled that when building the QB Club, “they gave me an unlimited budget — and I exceeded it.” The QB Club eventually grew to more than 40 players, including non-QBs Jerry Rice and Emmitt Smith, and the brand came to life in video games, trading cards, apparel, pinball machines and some memorable ad campaigns, including Coke’s “Monsters of the Gridiron,” which turned NFL stars into ghoulish Halloween characters.
NFL players had never entrusted their rights to the league. “We [the league] were perceived as the enemy,” said Vuono. “So the Quarterback Club was such a big deal.”
Former NFL Consumer Products head Gene Goldberg termed QB Club an example of Vuono’s vision, which was lauded industrywide. Like Wayne Gretzky, ”he skated to where the puck was gonna be — that’s why he scored so often,” said Goldberg, now a principal at G Squared consulting.
Considering the politics involved, the Quarterback Club was one of Vuono’s most noteworthy NFL achievements and a neon sign that his future was in player marketing, where he had an innate understanding.

“Frank’s super power was his ability to relate to the biggest licensees and the biggest names in the game, particularly the QBs,” said Garber. “At his core, he was a player, and he had authenticity in his blood because of that.”
Peter Hughes’ eight years at the NFL matched Vouno’s. He was also the original ISI hire. “Frank made the people at the NFL know that retail licensing could be as important as the sponsorship business,” Hughes said. “He was one of the first inside the league to realize that television and the sidelines were the marketing, rather than just what was happening on the field.”
Vuono says that during his eight years with the league (1985-1993), sales of licensed products exploded from $300 million to over $2.5 billion.
“Frank was always ahead of the curve — he laid the foundation for authentic merchandise,” said Mike Loparo, a former NFL licensing director, now VP of merchandising and retail at Legends, based at Yankee Stadium. Loparo and others remembered Vuono suggesting advancements more than 30 years ago that included selling equity or a possible IPO; a vertical integration model that would have combined manufacturing and marketing of licensee goods; and the outlandish idea of selling ads on uniforms and helmets. Sound familiar?
“If the NFL would have adopted Frank’s model then, Fanatics would never have had any opportunity,” said Loparo, referring to the sports licensing industry’s behemoth, essentially a 12-year-old company, with a recent valuation of $25 billion.
Some dissatisfaction with NFL senior management and a desire to work directly with athletes compelled Vuono to launch Integrated Sports International in the early 90s, with Rosner, Lawrence Taylor’s longtime marketing agent, and Fried, who both helped Vuono launch the Quarterback Club. “Frank was well-established by then at the NFL, but the idea of unfettered creativity made the notion of an agency business appealing,” said Fried.
“Frank really helped create a sports licensing business when it barely existed.”
— George Pyne, Bruin Capital CEO
The Jersey connection was solid at the outset: Rosner’s Bayonne to Vuono’s Lyndhurst: 15 miles apart. “He was Princeton; I was Ramapo College,” laughed Rosner, “but we were highly complementary.” Another Vuono trademark: He built solid teams.
“They made certain to hire people from different backgrounds and that smorgasbord worked,” said original ISI staffer Eric Bechtel, who now heads agency IdeaQuest.
From the start, partners were impressed by Vuono’s vision. Rosner marveled over some preliminary steps done to prepare for a possible sale, even before ISI opened. Fried’s memory recalled that “Frank always thought big: One plus one plus one always equaled an unlimited number to him.”
One of ISI’s original investors was Steinberg and partner Jeff Moorad, which gave the agency access to quarterbacks. Those QB relationships often led to ownership relationships. Consequently, naming rights at NFL venues were an early triumph, including Ericsson Stadium in Charlotte, and the 49ers with 3Com for what had been Candlestick Park.
With five Super Bowl wins between 1981 and 1994, the 49ers were a hot enough team that ISI had little problem selling corporate sponsorships for both the team’s 49th and 50th anniversaries.
Other ISI stadium sponsorships in the NFL were for Reliant Stadium in Houston and the Edward Jones Dome in St. Louis. The Cowboys, looking to take their licensing rights in-house, were another early client.
It was known as a grinding, hard-charging agency, where working on Sundays was routine, buoyed somewhat by an NFL Sunday Ticket subscription. Often heard around ISI’s offices in those early days: “If you don’t kill, you don’t eat.” Supposedly that was in jest.
Within the first year, ISI was representing the likes of Aikman, Moon, Young, Hakeem Olajuwon and Clyde Drexler. Later, it added Olympians: speed skater Dan Jansen and swimmer Janet Evans. Rosner’s memory of standing with Young in the 49ers’ locker room after the QB threw six TD passes and was MVP in the 1995 Super Bowl was a milestone marker.
Other memorable moments for ISI: Vuono negotiated the deal which made Isiah Thomas the first (partial) owner of an NBA team, the Toronto Raptors. At a time when most properties banned liquor sponsorships, ISI had golfer Jim Furyk representing Johnnie Walker on the course by creating a licensed apparel brand with distribution at one Macy’s.
There are few to have achieved success in both sports licensing and corporate marketing. Vuono made that transition look simple.

“Those two worlds are typically very separate,” acknowledged Emilio Collins, the former ISI director of special events, now partner and chief business officer at Excel Sports Management, “but Frank always had a certain presence that got him into a lot of different rooms, and he was always phenomenal at growing and nurturing relationships.”
Within a few years of its founding, ISI was competing with legacy agencies like Octagon and IMG. As part of a massive rollup of agencies, SFX acquired ISI in early 1999 for $14.1 million and 60,000 shares of SFX stock. More than 40 entertainment and sports agencies were acquired and consolidated by SFX over a few years, including Falk’s F.A.M.E., ProServ, Tellem & Associates, the Marquee Group, Athletes & Artists, Alphabet City, SMTI, sports branding agency SME and the baseball agency of Randy and Alan Hendricks. The scale was real — but the promise of a super-agency with unlimited resources was never realized.
“It didn’t work from the start,” Vuono said. Turned out the financial play was paramount; SFX titan Robert Sillerman had no interest in operating the company and considerable motivation in flipping it. Vuono said that instead of dealmaking, Sillerman advised him to “go play golf.” The result: Vuono logged 150 rounds of golf that year. After SFX sold to Clear Channel for $4.4 billion in August 2000, sports became a corporate afterthought.
Rosner said there was no question he was going to form another business with Vuono, but whereas ISI had 85 employees and 150 clients when it was sold, they took office space “small enough that we wouldn’t grow much,” Rosner said.
16W Marketing opened in 2000, anchored by a bevy of pro athlete clients transitioning to broadcasting: Esiason, Howie Long, Simms, Cris Collinsworth, Brian Griese and Ron Darling. 16W, named for the New Jersey Turnpike exit that leads to the stadium shared by the Giants and Jets, had bulletin-board deals including naming rights for the Giants’ Quest Diagnostics Center, and being tapped by NFL Commissioner Paul Tagliabue to assist the Saints with corporate sales after the devastation from Hurricane Katrina in 2005.
Without corporate support, the Saints were headed to San Antonio, so Vuono says helping to save the franchise is one his favorite career moments. “The thought at the time was that if the Saints’ stadium went dark, the city was lost,” he said.
Vuono has been “partner emeritus” at 16W since 2022. He keeps his hand in the business through his 4th Quarter Marketing, save for an impressive amount of work on behalf of Hackensack Meridian Health, where Vuono, 69, is on the board of trustees, co-chairman of the John Theurer Cancer Center advisory board of directors and chairman of Hackensack Meridian Health’s marketing committee.
While Vuono says his hospital work is a “full-time job without pay,” he calls himself “retired enough” to see his three daughters and five grandchildren, and play golf “whenever.” That doesn’t mean he isn’t still ruminating about how much farther the NFL brand could extend.
“Disney created a marketing empire from a cartoon mouse,” said Vuono, echoing other sports visionaries, including David Stern, inspired and motivated by Disney’s empire. “The NFL is in America’s vernacular every day, so I still feel they’re undermarketed. Can you eat at an NFL restaurant? Is there an NFL amusement park or hall of fame?
“Why not?”
AMES, Iowa – The College Sports Communicators (CSC) has named Rachel Van Gorp a First Team Academic All-American, announced Tuesday.
Van Gorp is the second to earn first team honors, and sixth overall Academic All-American in program history. The sophomore was one of seven 2025 First Team Academic All-America selections.
The star on the court and in the classroom was named the AVCA National Libero of the Year and a Second Team All-American last month. Van Gorp has put up a GPA of 3.97 as she works toward her degree in kinesiology in health.
Van Gorp also concludes the season with the honors of AVCA First Team All-Region, Big 12 Libero of the Year and All-Big 12 First Team.
Iowa State Volleyball Academic All-Americans
2025 – Rachel Van Gorp, First Team
2022 – Alexis Engelbrecht, Third Team
2017 – Alexis Conaway, First Team
2012 – Jamie Straube, Second Team
1995 – Kirstin Hugdahl, Third Team
1994 – Kirstin Hugdahl, Third Team
Reinhardt is just the third different Creighton Volleyball player ever to earn First Team Academic All-America honors from College Sports Communicators, joining Abby Bottomley (2021) and Kendra Wait (2023, 2024). She’s one of 16 student-athletes in Creighton history in all sports to earn the prestigious honor.
Creighton (2) and Stanford (3) are the only schools with multiple Academic All-Americans this year, and the Bluejays remain the only school with multiple Volleyball Academic All-Americas each of the past three seasons. This year marks just the fourth occasion that Creighton Volleyball has had multiple Academic All-Americans, joining 2018 (Jaali Winters, Taryn Kloth), 2023 (Kendra Wait and Kiana Schmitt) and 2024 (Wait, Norah Sis).
A sixth-year senior from Cedarburg, Wis., Reinhardt led all players in BIG EAST with a school-record .447 hitting percentage, which ranked sixth nationally. The two-time All-BIG EAST selection and AVCA Second Team All-American in 2025 finished her career as the winningest player in program history and was third in career hitting percentage as well as fourth in career blocks. A Nursing major, Reinhardt was a three-time Academic All-District choice (2022, 2024, 2025), but this is her first Academic All-America accolade. Reinhardt now plays professionally for the Omaha Supernovas in Major League Volleyball.
Martin had her best season in a Bluejay uniform, earning BIG EAST Player of the Year honors before taking home BIG EAST Tournament MVP accolades as well. The four-time All-BIG EAST selection from Overland Park, Kan., is a three-time AVCA All-America pick, earning Second Team accolades in December following her senior season. Martin is a Marketing major and earned Dean’s List acclaim in 2024-25. Martin now plays in Major League Volleyball for the Atlanta Vibe.
Coached by Brian Rosen, Creighton finished the 2025 season with a 28-6 record and reached the program’s third Elite Eight since 2016, in addition to earning a 12th straight BIG EAST regular-season title.
Creighton has now had 55 student-athletes earn a combined 69 Academic All-America awards across all sports. Today’s recognition gives Creighton Volleyball 14 Academic All-America awards in program history, just ahead of softball (11) and men’s soccer (11) for the most by any Bluejay program.
Creighton Volleyball’s College Sports Communicators All-Americans
FIRST TEAM ACADEMIC ALL-AMERICA
Abby Bottomley – 2021
Kiara Reinhardt – 2025
Kendra Wait – 2023, 2024
SECOND TEAM ACADEMIC ALL-AMERICA
Megan Bober – 2012
Ava Martin – 2025
Norah Sis – 2024
Kendra Wait – 2022
Jaali Winters – 2018
THIRD TEAM ACADEMIC ALL-AMERICA
Emily Greisch – 2006
Taryn Kloth – 2018
Kiana Schmitt – 2023
Jaali Winters – 2017
Brittany Witt – 2019
For more information about CSC Academic All-District® and Academic All-America® Teams program, visit AcademicAllAmerica.com.
FIRST TEAM
Name School Yr. GPA Major
Kamryn Hunt University of Dayton Jr. 4.00 Sport Management
Kennedy Martin (1) Penn State Jr. 3.84 Labor & Human Resources
Jackie Moore Vanderbilt University Sr. 4.00 Political Science
Bergen Reilly (1) University of Nebraska Jr. 3.83 Business & Law
Kiara Reinhardt Creighton University Sr. 3.85/3.95 Nursing
Elia Rubin (2) Stanford University Sr. 3.88 Science, Technology & Society
Rachel Van Gorp Iowa State University So. 3.97 Kinesiology & Health
SECOND TEAM
Name School Yr. GPA Major
Claire Ammeraal University of Iowa Sr. 3.98 Biology
Avah Armour UCF Jr. 3.94 Finance
Lizzy Andrew Stanford University So. 3.83 Undeclared
Cassidy Hartman University of Northern Iowa Jr. 3.92 Biochemistry
Emma Hickey Valparaiso University Sr. 3.93 Civil Engineering
Allison Jacobs (3) University of Michigan Gr. 4.00/3.56 Real Estate Development Certificate
Ava Martin Creighton University Sr. 3.51 Marketing
Maya Sands University of Missouri Sr. 3.85 Parks, Recreation, Sport, & Tourism
THIRD TEAM
Name School Yr. GPA Major
Callie Bauer Western Kentucky University Sr. 3.88 Management
Korrin Burns Saint Francis University Sr. 3.82 Physical Therapy
M.E. Hargan Morehead State Sr. 3.88 Veterinary Science
Jordyn Harvey Stanford University Jr. 3.67 International Relations
Brooklyn Jaeger Texas A&M-Corpus Christi So. 4.00 Kinesiology
Avery Jolley Winthrop University Sr. 4.00 Business Administration
CSC Academic All-America® Team Member of the Year: Bergen Reilly, University of Nebraska
(1) – 1st team Academic All-America® in 2024
(2) – 2nd team Academic All-America® in 2024
CLEVELAND, Ohio— Senior Emma Gaston was named as a nominee for the Allstate National Association of College Directors of Athletics (NACDA)2025-26 winter Good Works Team nominees, NACDA announced Tuesday.
The Allstate NACDA Good Works Team is an initiative to honor and recognize student-athletes who demonstrate levels of volunteerism that go beyond their achievements in the classroom and competition. The team recognizes 60 student-athletes annually across the fall, winter and spring seasons. The 2025-26 team will feature 20 student-athletes, consisting of 10 male and 10 female athletes.
During her time competing for UIndy’s cross country and track and field teams, Gaston has dedicated her time to many nonprofit organizations, including Joy House in Indianapolis, which serves adults with life-altering diagnoses. The senior also helped raise $110,000 for the Jackson Center for Conductive Education, a non-profit organization that supports children with cerebral palsy, by organizing donors, sponsorships and silent auction packages for the center’s annual Grape Escape Gala.
In addition to her work off campus, Gaston has had a great impact on the UIndy student-athlete community as the president of UIndy’s Student Athlete Advisory Committee. Emma played a part in the development of the Hounds Leadership Academy, which is designed to develop leadership skills within the student-athlete body at UIndy. She was selected to attend the 2025 APPLE (Athletic Prevention Programming and Leadership) Training Institute in Denver, Colorado, where she received training to prevent substance abuse misuse and hazing in Division II Athletics. She is now implementing an Action Plan on UIndy’s Campus to provide education regarding substance abuse and hazing, including starting the APPLE Team at UIndy.
The final Allstate NACDA 2025-26 winter Good Works Team will be announced in early February, and a full list of nominees can be found here.

GREENWOOD, Ind. — UNI junior Cassidy Hartman on Tuesday was honored with her latest academic honor, earning Second Team Academic All-American recognition from College Sports Communicators (CSC).
To be eligible for this honor, students must be at least a sophomore both academically and athletically, must have at least a 3.50 cumulative grade-point average (GPA) on a 4.0 scale and participate in at least 90% or start in at least 66% of their team’s matches. All-Americans are voted on by the organization’s membership from its All-District teams.
Hartman, a North Liberty, Iowa native and outside hitter, is the 63rd Academic All-American selection in UNI history and 14th selection in the UNI volleyball program’s history. The 2025 season marks the second straight year a Panther has earned this honor after Kira Fallert earned second team recognition in 2024. Hartman is also the UNI’s eighth Academic All-American in the last four years overall and sixth in the last calendar year.
The 2025 Missouri Valley Conference (MVC) Player of the Year and a First Team All-MVC selection, Hartman led the league with 4.64 kills per set, along with 2.74 digs per frame, 58 total blocks and 19 aces during her junior season. Starting all 32 matches during her junior season, Hartman recorded ten or more kills in 27 matches this season, as well as six matches with 20+ kills, including a career-high 26 terminations at Southern Illinois in the regular season.
An AVCA All-American Honorable Mention selection and All-Region honoree, she also posted 14 double-double outings. A three-time MVC Player of the Week this season, Hartman was also a member of the Capital Credit Union Classic All-Tournament Team in September.
Hartman helped lead the Panthers to a 26-6 record overall, a 16-0 mark in MVC play and the program’s fourth consecutive MVC regular season and tournament titles, as well as a run to the second round of the NCAA Tournament.
UNI’s All-Time CSC Academic All-Americans
ABOUT COLLEGE SPORTS COMMUNICATORS
College Sports Communicators was founded in 1957 and is a 3,200+ member national association for strategic, creative and digital communicators across intercollegiate athletics in the United States and Canada.
From its founding in 1957 until the 2022 name change, the organization was known as College Sports Information Directors of America (CoSIDA).
The organization is the second oldest management association in all of intercollegiate athletics. College Sports Communicators became an affiliated partner with NACDA (National Association of Collegiate Directors of Athletics) in December of 2008.
UNI volleyball action can be followed all season long on social media on Facebook (UNI Volleyball), X (@UNIVolleyball) and on Instagram (@univolleyball). The full schedule and roster, along with the latest Panther news and information can be found online at UNIpanthers.com.
The Woodring family has committed $25,000 to the Mansfield University Mountaineer Foundation to establish the Michael “Woody” Woodring ’74 Scholarship to support Mountaineer track & field and cross country student-athletes.
“The Michael ‘Woody’ Woodring ’74 Scholarship is a way for his generosity and desire to help others to continue to live on, positively impact Mansfield students and give back to a place that meant so much to him,” explained Lauren Woodring, Michael’s daughter.
A native of Pittsburgh, Woodring earned a scholarship to compete on the Mansfield track & field and cross country teams. He graduated from Mansfield with a degree in political science in 1974 and earned his juris doctorate at Duquesne University. Woodring used his law degree working in the leasing office of PNC Bank.
He is survived by his wife, Diane, and two children, Lauren and John.
“Just as the impact of a campus experience extends beyond four years, a donation ensures that Mountie Athletics continues to thrive for generations,” said Andrew Petko, Mansfield director of athletics. “This scholarship will sustain our support of Mansfield student-athletes who strive for excellence in competition, in the classroom and in life.”
Learn more about the MU Mountaineer Foundation at mountaineerfdn.org.
Jan. 13, 2026, 12:15 p.m. ET
It was quite the volleyball season for Westerly’s Lyla Auth.
The outside hitter steered the Bulldogs to an undefeated championship-winning season in Division II and she graduated from Westerly in December. The 6-foot-1 star already enrolled at Manhattan University, a Division I program, after excelling in the classroom and on the court.
Auth now adds more to her high school trophy case as she earned Gatorade Player of the Year honors, which Gatorade announced on Dec. 9. She managed 268 kills with a .401 hitting percentage as Westerly won its second girls volleyball crown overall. Auth also added 256 assists, 151 digs and 41 service aces this past fall.
Auth, after earning enough credits, chose to graduate on Dec. 21. It gives her the chance to train, and become acclimated to college life, early so she can hit the ground running with the Jaspers next season. She started planning for early graduation in the summer, well before Westerly went undefeated.
“I’m moving to New York City. Anyone would be nervous about that,” Auth told the Journal in October. “But I’m really excited, and I have a good group of girls behind me and a lot of support.”
Auth, who recently made The Providence Journal All-State Girls Volleyball First Team, maintained a weighted 4.75 GPA in the classroom, according to the release. And donated her time to organizing a fundraiser that raised $6,000 for the Westerly Hospital Foundation. She also volunteered locally as a mentor to elementary school students and was a tee-ball coach for the Westerly Girls Softball League.
“Westerly was dominant in [D-II] and [Auth] was the focal point of the team,” Cranston West coach, Tom Ferri said in a statement. “She was the best hitter we faced all year — in D-I and D-II —and she set from the back row, and did it very well.”
Westerly was never truly challenged this season, outside of the D-II championship against Barrington. The Bulldogs edged the Eagles, (25-22, 25-22, 20-25, 18-25, 15-8), in a thrilling D-II championship. Auth was the best player on the court that day at Rhode Island College and helped finish off the Bulldogs’ perfect season.
Westerly (18-0) compiled 16 sweeps in the regular season and snagged a pair of 3-1 victories to open its playoff run.
“We definitely had our nerves,” Auth said after winning the title. “But it all boiled down to the fifth set. This is the set that matters, so we need to either take home the trophy or leave it behind.”
Five Youth Sports Trends We’re Watching in 2026
Kentucky VB adds an All-American honorable mention, loses Brooke Bultema to portal
BangShift.com IHRA Acquires Historic Memphis Motorsports Park In Millington Tennessee. Big Race Weekend’s Planned For 2026!
H.S. INDOOR TRACK & FIELD: GLOW region athletes face off at Nazareth University | Sports
Fifty years after IU’s undefeated champs … a Rose Bowl
2025 Volleyball Player of the Year: Witherow makes big impact on Central program | Nvdaily
Colorado volleyball poised to repeat success
Texas A&M volleyball’s sweep of Kentucky attracts record viewership
Kyle Larson opens door to 24 Hours of Daytona comeback – Motorsport – Sports
NIL Funds Are at Top of Arizona State’s Christmas Wishlist