College Sports
Allen and Michelson Both Named IRCA National Coach of the Year Finalists
By: Justin Lafleur Story Links HANOVER, N.H. – A pair of Dartmouth men’s rowing head coaches have been named finalists for their respective IRCA National Coach of the Year awards. Wyatt Allen, the Betsy and Mark Gates 1959 Head Coach of Men’s Heavyweight Rowing, is one of four heavyweight finalists while […]

HANOVER, N.H. – A pair of Dartmouth men’s rowing head coaches have been named finalists for their respective IRCA National Coach of the Year awards. Wyatt Allen, the Betsy and Mark Gates 1959 Head Coach of Men’s Heavyweight Rowing, is one of four heavyweight finalists while men’s lightweight head coach Trevor Michelson is one of two finalists on the lightweight side. Dartmouth is the only school to have finalists for both men’s heavyweight and lightweight rowing.
Allen joins the head coaches of Washington (Michael Callahan), Cal (Scott Frandsen) and Syracuse (Dave Reischman) as finalists. He led the Big Green to a historic season, highlighted by the varsity eight finishing third at the IRA National Championship. It was the boat’s best finish since 1992. The crew also earned silver at the Eastern Sprints. The Big Green earned three total medals at sprints, which also included bronze from the second and fourth varsity eights, while advancing all its boats to the grand finals at nationals.
Michelson and MIT head coach Will Oliver are the two coach of the year finalists on the lightweight side. Under Michelson’s guidance, the Big Green finished second in the varsity eight and in total team points at IRAs, marking the program’s top team points standing in program history. It was also Dartmouth’s first medal at nationals since 2012. The varsity eight finished with a time of 5:32.250 in the grand final, less than three seconds behind first-place Harvard and ahead of MIT, Penn, Princeton and Navy.
College Sports
Hong commands all-around as Senior National Team and World Champs roster named at Xfinity U.S. Championships – Crescent City Sports
by Rachel Duke, USA Gymnastics Communications NEW ORLEANS – Asher Hong (Tomball, Texas/Stanford University) dominated the senior all-around competition Saturday evening to conclude men’s action at the 2025 Xfinity U.S. Gymnastics Championships in New Orleans. The Senior National and World Championships Teams Presented by Xfinity were selected following competition. Hong commanded the all-around both Thursday and […]

by Rachel Duke, USA Gymnastics Communications
NEW ORLEANS – Asher Hong (Tomball, Texas/Stanford University) dominated the senior all-around competition Saturday evening to conclude men’s action at the 2025 Xfinity U.S. Gymnastics Championships in New Orleans. The Senior National and World Championships Teams Presented by Xfinity were selected following competition.
Hong commanded the all-around both Thursday and Saturday, winning the title with a combined 170.020 – a nearly eight-point lead from second place. He also collected gold medals on vault (29.594), floor exercise (30.016) and still rings (29.286), and picked up silver on parallel bars (28.100).
With a late push, Frederick Richard (Stoughton, Mass./University of Michigan) rallied to a second-place finish in the all-around, winning silver with a 162.555. Fuzzy Benas (Richmond, Texas/University of Oklahoma) completed the top three, securing bronze with a 162.310.
Winning apparatus titles on Saturday were Patrick Hoopes (Lehi, Utah/U.S. Air Force Academy) on pommel horse (31.300), Brody Malone (Aragon, Ga./EVO Gymnastics) on parallel bars (28.150), and Taylor Burkhart (Arvada, Colo./Stanford University) on horizontal bar (28.960).
The 2025 Junior and Senior National Teams and World Championships teams Presented by Xfinity also were announced Saturday evening. Complete teams are listed alphabetically below.
Senior Men’s World Championships Team Presented by Xfinity
October 19-25 in Jakarta, Indonesia
- Taylor Burkhart — Arvada, Colo./Stanford University^
- Brandon Dang — San Jose, Calif./University of Illinois
- Asher Hong — Tomball, Texas/Stanford University
- Patrick Hoopes — Lehi, Utah/U.S. Air Force Academy
- Brody Malone — Aragon, Ga./EVO Gymnastics
- Kameron Nelson — Columbus, Ohio/Ohio State University
- Donnell Whittenburg — Baltimore, Md./EVO Gymnastics
Junior Men’s World Championships Team Presented by Xfinity
November 20-24 in Manila, the Philippines.
- Maksim Kan — Muskego, Wis./Salto Gymnastics Center*
- Danila Leykin — Sarasota, Fla./EVO Gymnastics
- Dante Reive — West Point, N.Y./United States Military Academy
- Nathan Roman— Poway, Calif./University of Oklahoma
- Hunter Simpson — Palmetto, Fla./EVO Gymnastics^
Senior Men’s National Team Presented by Xfinity
- Fuzzy Benas — Richmond, Texas/University of Oklahoma
- Taylor Burkhart — Arvada, Colo./Stanford University
- Crew Bold — Delray Beach, Fla./University of Michigan
- Brandon Dang — San Jose, Calif./University of Illinois
- Asher Hong — Tomball, Texas/Stanford University
- Patrick Hoopes — Lehi, Utah/U.S. Air Force Academy
- Jun Iwai — Lewisville, Texas/Texas Dreams Gymnastics
- Josh Karnes — Erie, Pa./Penn State University
- Riley Loos — El Dorado Hills, Calif./ Stanford University
- Brody Malone — Aragon, Ga./EVO Gymnastics
- Kameron Nelson — Columbus, Ohio/Ohio State University
- Dante Reive — West Point, N.Y./United States Military Academy
- Frederick Richard — Stoughton, Mass./University of Michigan
- Donnell Whittenburg — Baltimore, Md./EVO Gymnastics
- Colt Walker — Austin, Texas/Stanford University
Senior Men’s Development Team Presented by Xfinity
- Sasha Bogonosiuk — Buffalo Grove, Ill./University of Oklahoma
- Danila Leykin — Sarasota, Fla./EVO Gymnastics
- Preston Ngai — Elk Grove, Calif./University of Illinois
- Alex Nitache — Knoxville, Tenn./University of Nebraska
- Nathan Roman — Poway, Calif./University of Oklahoma
Junior Men’s National Team Presented by Xfinity
- Peyton Boerner — Mayfield Heights, Ohio/Gym World
- Hayden Brown — Corona Del Mar, Calif./SCATS Gymnastics
- Lincoln Dubin — Bellefonte, Pa./EVO Gymnastics
- Hunter Egan — Montgomery, Texas/Cypress Academy of Gymnastics
- Cooper Gunderson — Delano, Minn./Mini-Hops Gymnastics
- Elijah Gutierrez — South Lyon, Mich./Infinity Gymnastics Academy
- Kiefer Hong — Tomball, Texas/Cypress Academy of Gymnastics
- Maksim Kan — Muskego, Wis./Salto Gymnastics Center
- Jakson Kurecki — Nokomis, Fla./EVO Gymnastics
- Jovan Jimeno — Manassas, Va./Capital Gymnastics
- Ori Reilly — Windermere, Fla./Gymnastics USA
- Hunter Simpson — Palmetto, Fla./EVO Gymnastics
- Anthony Ruscheinsky — Summit, Wis./Salto Gymnastics Center
- Jay Watkins — Morristown, Tenn./GymTek Academy
*Denotes traveling replacement athlete
^Denotes non-traveling replacement athlete
The Xfinity U.S. Gymnastics Championships conclude Sunday with the final day women’s competition. The 2025 Junior and Senior Women’s National Teams will be determined along with national titles.
College Sports
Blues expand girls hockey development program with inaugural tournament
MARYLAND HEIGHTS, Mo. — The St. Louis Blues have been steadily expanding the Girls Hockey Development Program they launched in 2020 as the organization’s NHL All-Star Legacy initiative. The Blues marked a new milestone this weekend when they hosted the inaugural 12U Tier 1 Ice Breaker Invitational at Centene Community Ice Center from Friday to […]

MARYLAND HEIGHTS, Mo. — The St. Louis Blues have been steadily expanding the Girls Hockey Development Program they launched in 2020 as the organization’s NHL All-Star Legacy initiative.
The Blues marked a new milestone this weekend when they hosted the inaugural 12U Tier 1 Ice Breaker Invitational at Centene Community Ice Center from Friday to Sunday, bringing together elite programs for both on-ice competition and off-ice development.
Event coordinator Brittany Koch is Blues senior coordinator, community hockey, and an on-ice instructor for the program with playing experience at the high school and college level.
“This is really important because I grew up playing hockey,” Koch said. “I’ve been to plenty of youth tournaments, so I’ve kind of seen what’s been done, and I haven’t really seen anything like this. We’re just really focusing on the off-ice portion. I’ve went to games and either I made it to the championship game, or I left, but I never got to learn what to do off ice. We didn’t have anything. The tournaments were fun, don’t get me wrong, but there was nothing to do between games, but to do this and have something for the girls to keep them going and not have them sit in their hotel rooms, was really important.
“Games are great, but think we also need to focus on the off-ice aspect as well.”
Five of the nation’s top Tier 1 girls hockey programs — the St. Louis AAA Lady Blues, Carolina Jr. Canes, San Jose Jr. Sharks, Arizona Kachinas, and Milwaukee Jr. Admirals — took part in a round-robin style tournament with a four-game minimum and a championship game.
They also participated in a session on nutrition and leadership training from 1st Phorm, a Women in Sports Panel and Festival, and a Skills Competition.
Two-time Olympic medalist Alex Cavallini is an on-ice instructor and youth hockey ambassador for the Blues. The goalie won gold with the United States at the 2018 PyeongChang Olympics and silver at the 2022 Beijing Olympics.
“It’s such a special event,” Cavallini said. “When I first spoke to the Blues about it when they came to me, I was so ecstatic for it. It’s something that I’ve been personally looking forward to just bring in teams here to St. Louis to see how great the Blues organization is because I just know how important girls hockey is to the St. Louis Blues and how much they want to grow the game. This is just a testament to what they are out here trying to do every day in St. Louis.”
College Sports
Hockey East Releases Tentative 2025-26 Boston College Women’s Hockey Schedule
On Saturday, the tentative Boston College women’s hockey schedule was released on the Hockey East website. The site notes that the slate of games, which does not include times, is subject to change. The Eagles start their 2025-26 campaign with an exhibition game against Stonehill College on Sept. 20 before taking a road trip to […]

On Saturday, the tentative Boston College women’s hockey schedule was released on the Hockey East website. The site notes that the slate of games, which does not include times, is subject to change.
The Eagles start their 2025-26 campaign with an exhibition game against Stonehill College on Sept. 20 before taking a road trip to Minnesota for a two-game series from Sept. 26-27.
After traveling to Saint Anselm College in New Hampshire, BC hosts Holy Cross for its 2025 home opener on Oct. 10, a Friday. The Eagles play the next six games as visitors—one at Providence, two at Cornell, one at Merrimack, and two at Vermont—before returning to Chestnut Hill, Mass. on Nov. 7 to start a home-and-away series with UConn.
BC plays five of its next seven contests in Conte Forum, consisting of a home-and-away series with Comm. Ave. rival Boston University, a home game against Merrimack, two home games against St. Lawrence, a home-and-away series with Northeastern, and a home contest with Colgate.
The remainder of the Eagles’ 2025-26 schedule is primarily composed of Hockey East games—two against Providence (Jan. 16 and Feb. 13), three against New Hampshire (Jan. 23-24 and Feb. 20), two against Maine (Jan. 30-31), one against UConn (Feb. 6), one against Northeastern (Feb. 14), and a season-closing contest against Boston University (Feb. 21).
In that span, BC will additionally suit up against Holy Cross on the road on Jan. 9, host Harvard on Jan. 13 in the first round of the 2026 Women’s Beanpot, and travel back to Holy Cross on Feb. 6. The Eagles have a matchup scheduled for Tuesday, Jan. 20 which is TBD, depending on the outcome of BC’s first-round Beanpot matchup with the Crimson.
In 2024-25, the Eagles went 21-13-2 overall and 16-9-2 in Hockey East, eventually falling to the Terriers on March 5 in the Hockey East Tournament Semifinals, which ended their season.
BC took BU to double overtime but could not finish the job, losing 3-2. The Eagles made the tournament semifinals by defeating Maine, 4-3, in the first round of the tournament on March 1.
This year, Katie King Crowley is entering her 19th season as the Jane Rattigan Head Women’s Hockey Coach. In her near two decades of coaching on the Heights, Crowley has returned BC women’s hockey to an elite, national power from a sub-.500 team when she arrived as an assistant coach in 2003.
Crowley has guided the Eagles to six NCAA Frozen Fours (2011, 2012, 2013, 2015, 2016, 2017), 11 NCAA Tournaments (2009, 2011-2019, 2021), five Hockey East regular-season titles, three Hockey East tournament championships, and six Beanpot trophies.
Crowley is one of 12 coaches in NCAA women’s hockey history to boast 300 or more wins in her career, with her 300th victory arriving on Feb. 14, 2019 in a 2-1 defeat of Maine.
College Sports
Jordan Cornette on the new “NBA on NBC” and more
When Jordan Cornette joined NBC Sports two years ago, he had a premonition that the company would reacquire broadcasting rights to the National Basketball Association. Cornette proved to be correct and will officially add NBA coverage to his slate of responsibilities beginning in the fall, when Comcast commences a sweeping 11-year media rights deal reportedly […]

When Jordan Cornette joined NBC Sports two years ago, he had a premonition that the company would reacquire broadcasting rights to the National Basketball Association. Cornette proved to be correct and will officially add NBA coverage to his slate of responsibilities beginning in the fall, when Comcast commences a sweeping 11-year media rights deal reportedly worth $2.45 billion/year that will place regular-season and playoff games on the NBC broadcast network and Peacock streaming platform.
Sports Media Watch contributor Derek Futterman caught up with Cornette ahead of the October launch of the NBA on NBC and Peacock to discuss the new venture and his time with NBC Sports. The interview is edited for length and clarity.
Sports Media Watch: How significant is it to have NBC Sports back involved broadcasting NBA contests?
Jordan Cornette: “Look at the names on the roster. I won’t rip through them all because I don’t want to leave one out, and they’re all so impressive. I’m just excited to be on that list to be able to deliver that. I know that what NBC is going to do with the NBA this year is going to be so well received by everybody, and we’re so diligent in our preparation and we’re so committed to covering this the proper way and to elevate a league that’s already so elevated.”
SMW: What was your level of confidence in the company landing broadcast rights to the NBA?
JC: “I’m never confident in anything but my ability. You could never be confident that you think media rights are going to go one way or a company’s projection and the momentum they have going this way is where it’s always going to stay. The landscape is just too ever-changing. It’s a turbulent business, this TV thing, in a great way and then sometimes in a frustrating way, but there was definitely no part of me that was like, ‘Oh, they’re guaranteed to get this.’ I had a good feeling that they would get it.
“I guess there was part of me that was thinking, ‘It makes too much sense. I know the NBA would love a partner like NBC because of how great it was when they were working in a partnership before,’ so there was a belief that it could probably happen, but I can’t ever say I was super confident about it because you just never know in this business. But what I did know is honestly, full disclosure, even if the NBA didn’t come, my role with NBC was so fortified and great things that I was doing, I was already very happy with my role. So to add the NBA on top of that, which is like the ultimate dream for a basketball guy, that’s when I feel like, ‘I’m playing with house money right now,’ to add that element of work to what I’m doing.”
SMW: You are going to be working as a courtside reporter for the new entity along with Ashley ShahAhmadi, Zora Stephenson and Grant Liffmann. What were the conversations like in securing this new position and expanding your responsibilities?
JC: “It was a big part of why I wanted to come over to NBC and why there was no negotiation with them and somebody else once I knew that there was full-time opportunity with NBC because I saw the future, and knowing that the NBA was coming and knowing what my ability was as a TV personality — because it’s more vague and far-reaching — I knew that there’d be some space for me, whether it be hosting in studio, whether it be a courtside reporter or whether it ever became an analyst for a game. I knew there’d be a fit somewhere for me in that NBA coverage…
“I know, and I’d like to think that my bosses know, ‘Whatever position we think Jordan can potentially do, he’s going to deliver because that’s what he’s done since he’s gotten here with NBC,’ and so I knew that that potential with the NBA, there’d be some opportunity, and whatever that opportunity is, I’m going to wrap my arms around that thing, I’m going to give it my all, and I’m going to thrive in that role and help enhance what is already this incredible team.”
SMW: Former basketball players seldom take on courtside reporting roles on the broadcasts, instead usually serving as an analyst. How can you leverage your esoteric knowledge and distinctive experiences with enterprising journalism?
JC: “I’m, by nature, I like to tell stories. I’m a very curious person in nature, so I think that lends well to the role of sideline reporter is tell stories, be curious, ask questions, but I also am going to frame this thing in my own way, and then collaboratively, we’ll see how that looks with management and the vision…
“Everything about my approach has been kind of unique, and so I’m going to bring that to sideline reporting. I don’t know how many guys that hold collegiate records on the basketball court that are sideline guys, so that’s the way to differentiate me.”
SMW: What are your thoughts on working under the leadership structure of NBC Sports president Rick Cordella and executive producer and president of production Sam Flood? How do they assist in facilitating success?
JC: “With the leadership of Rick and Sam, everybody knows where they stand. Everybody knows the direction of the company, everybody knows where they stand with the group, everybody has direct lines to leadership. So it just feels like, ‘Okay, I know where I stand, I know who I am,’ and when you have that, it makes your teammates truly teammates, and it fosters such a special environment, and one that is really unique, and it’s really cool to see what’s going on there at NBC.”
SMW: How will you go about working alongside the variety of play-by-play announcers and analysts on the talent roster?
JC: “The commonality of our love for the game also forges that thing into a better place, and so I’ve always prided myself on being able to find that connection, that synergy with a group that I’m working with, to have that great back and forth, so that’s never been something I’ve shied away from, that’s not something that I ever step into with trepidation. That’s always pretty much come organically, that chemistry, and I’ve seemingly always been able to find it with whoever I’m working with.”
SMW: You lost your job at ESPN as a result of layoffs implemented as a cost-cutting measure. What were your feelings upon discovering that you would not be returning?
JC: “I was completely blindsided because I thought I was safe, but it was a great learning opportunity for me that the jobs that we hold [are] not ours. We’re just borrowing them, and anybody can be replaceable, so never put too much of your identity in your job. Give all you can to the job, but understand that there’s so much more to you than just the role you hold, and also be grateful in every day you step in and get to do the really cool things we get to do in sports…
“I’m grateful for ESPN because of that platform it provided for me to kind of showcase my ability, and I learned very quickly that there was a high demand for me to go other places, and to find NBC, what ultimately became an even better place for me and an even better place to work and thrive and work in even cooler entities and properties and be a part of those, somehow what I thought was one of the tougher days of my career ended up being the best thing that ever happened for me.”
SMW: You met your wife, Shae, while working at Campus Insiders and ended up hosting two shows together at ESPN. What has it been like to work alongside her and watch her concurrently thrive in the business?
JC: “A guy named Josh Wine brought me over to Campus Insiders, and I don’t know if he’s well known in a ton of circles, but he should be because he’s discovered a lot of talent, one of them being my wife too in Shae and bringing her over there. And we were two young and raw people but very passionate and committed to working and climbing in this business, and we met there as friends and co-workers, and it blossomed into something that we never could have imagined a couple of kids later and a career in working in two of the most powerful networks in this business.”
SMW: In addition to reporting on the NBA, you will continue appearing on NBC Sports coverage of college basketball. How are you going to go about balancing both responsibilities?
JC: “I can truly cover so many different sports, and I can sit in so many different chairs and I can achieve in so many different verticals within the medium that I think that is rare, and I’ve always prided myself on that, but it comes with a lot of work. I’ve been lucky to get a lot of reps, and I’ve been lucky to get a lot of opportunities along the way that have positioned me to be this guy.”
SMW: How do you go about preparing for the regular season as the start of basketball approaches?
JC: “It’s funny — I get to watch my Netflix shows and other things in this part of the year because once we hit basketball — so once we really hit the start of football from college football on to the last major golf season, I’m only watching sports. That’s all that’s on the TV, and it really helps to have a wife who works in the business because she’s perfectly okay with that, she’s watching it with the same level of interest, so that’s all that’s on my screen, so the NBA and college basketball during that part of the season, and obviously college football as well, so that’s very easy for me.”
SMW: Why is the arrangement for the NBA to air on broadcast, cable and streaming platforms under the 11-year media rights deals the best path forward for the league?
JC: “Accessibility. You can get it in so many different ways, and each network is going to approach it differently. Nobody wants to go to a restaurant, look at a menu and see one thing on the menu. They want a variety, they want to try a bunch of different things, and so each network’s going to have its own flavor, its own style, and I think that’s great for every viewer and all the consumers and audiences out there that it won’t feel monotonous.
“You’ll get a different vibe with each different place, but also just the offering will be so robust — you’ll be able to see it everywhere, it’ll be more accessible to everybody to watch these games, and I think that’s great, and I’m excited for the league. That’s why I’m excited to be covering it because it’s a league that I love, and I think with these rights deals, it’s putting the league in its best possible position, and that’s a win for everybody, so I am lucky to be one of a few lucky people across different networks that get to cover this great game at its highest level.”
College Sports
Ohio State president Ted Carter named to NCAA Board of Governors
On Thursday, the NCAA announced some new appointees to its Board of Governors, and one of those names included was Ohio State president, Ted Carter. The board, though not nearly as powerful as before, is a collection of influential individuals who help shape the landscape of college sports. Carter was appointed as the 17th president […]

On Thursday, the NCAA announced some new appointees to its Board of Governors, and one of those names included was Ohio State president, Ted Carter. The board, though not nearly as powerful as before, is a collection of influential individuals who help shape the landscape of college sports.
Carter was appointed as the 17th president of Ohio State by the OSU Board of Governors on August 22, 2023. Before that, he served in the same capacity at Nebraska. He is a former college athlete himself, having played ice hockey at Navy from 1977 to 1981, lettering all four years.
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Carter will serve a two-year stint on the Board of Governors. The appointment is a significant one, especially considering all the changes that we’ve seen in college athletics over the last few years. Having a voice from Ohio State involved in the room can’t do anything but help.
This article originally appeared on Buckeyes Wire: Ohio State president Ted Carter joins NCAA Board of Governors
College Sports
Arizona Wildcats softball: Emma Kavanagh wins title in summer league
The college softball season may have ended in June, but Emma Kavanagh was not satisfied. Kavanagh did not have the kind of freshman season she hoped for at Arizona, so she headed back home to the Midwest and got back to work in the Northwoods Softball League, a summer league that consists primarily of current […]

The college softball season may have ended in June, but Emma Kavanagh was not satisfied. Kavanagh did not have the kind of freshman season she hoped for at Arizona, so she headed back home to the Midwest and got back to work in the Northwoods Softball League, a summer league that consists primarily of current college players. It worked out well for her.
Kavanagh’s Madison Night Mares won the league title on Aug. 6. It was a superb experience for the sophomore-to-be in a variety ways, but it was not without its sacrifices.
While other players might have been taking some time off, maybe spending some of that revenue sharing money that some college softball players will see, Kavanagh was not only working but paying to do it. The Northwoods Softball League charges players according to how many games they play. If they play the full season, the cost is $335. Kavanagh appeared in 39 of the Night Mares’ 42 games.
Kavanagh ended the season with a .429 average in 126 at-bats. The average was the third-best in the league, trailing only teammates Ava Carroll of Washington (.459) and Ella Stephenson of Michigan (.448). Carroll also played the full season while Stephenson played half of it. Kavanagh’s at-bats ranked fifth.
Kavanagh’s eight home runs and 41 RBI ranked sixth in the league. Her 12 doubles were tied for third. She also drew 17 walks, good for 14th in the league standings.
While Kavanagh came in listed as a catcher on the roster, she got to play other positions for head coach Lexi Godwin. That was an important step in her development with Arizona featuring two senior catchers next season, including All-American returner Sydney Stewart and Big East Player of the Year Grace Jenkins.
Kavanagh ended the year listed as a 1B/UTIL when she was named an NWLS post-season all-star. She was the only true freshman to be named an all-star. She joined redshirt freshman Taylor Chillingsworth of San Jose State as the only college rookies to earn the honor.
The Northwoods League Softball program started playing in 2024, but the baseball side of the organization has been in operation for 30 years. The collegiate summer leagues offer opportunities in both sports to “to develop players for their college, Olympic and future professional play,” according to the league’s FAQ.
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