College Sports
Heat Checks & Hail Marys – The Illini Football Return to Greatness Movie & How NIL Has (and Could’ve) Changed the NBA Draft
Mike Cagley, Co-Host Sports Spectacular June 23, 2025 This was a slower week for college sports overall as now most of the work is being done behind the scenes to define the House settlement and try to calm the chaos around college sports. It wasn’t a slow time for Bret Bielema and the Fighting Illini […]

Mike Cagley, Co-Host Sports Spectacular
June 23, 2025
This was a slower week for college sports overall as now most of the work is being done behind the scenes to define the House settlement and try to calm the chaos around college sports.
It wasn’t a slow time for Bret Bielema and the Fighting Illini football program who earned commitments from Kayden Bennett, Kai Prichard, Isaiah Williams, and Nick Hankins. All are at least 3-star recruits, and most are 4-star recruits depending upon the ratings service you follow.
Bielema is on a recruiting hot streak that might have been equaled by Ron Zook and there’s a chance Bielema’s streak might possibly be the hottest an Illini football coach has been in…forever.
Hail Mary #1 – If the Illini Football Program’s Return to Greatness was a Movie…
The Illini football program is poised to return to greatness under Bret Bielema. It’s fair to say one can debate if the Illini football program has ever hit “greatness” in the first place. No matter the answer to the “greatness” question, certainly Bielema is the first accomplished college football coach on the Illini sidelines since John Mackovic put on the headset for Illinois.
If one were to make a movie of this season, of Bielema taking the Illini football program to the College Football Playoff, most would consider a CFP berth to be an obstacle that most fans would believe to be unthinkable. Why would they think that? Because it’s a goal that is so darn hard that the Illini haven’t ever approached achieving it.
To have a great movie, novel or story, you must have a great villain. The Illini have quite a few obstacles to overcome. When combined, these obstacles block the path to success in a way as threatening and intimidating as a Thanos-level villain would. Let’s take a look at the obstacles faced by the Illini:
- The Illini football program has never been great – it may have had fantastic players like Red Grange, Dick Butkus and David Williams – but the football program has never experienced sustained success.
- The football program has only had two solid coaches since 1980 – just Mike White and John Mackovic. The rest have created a massive hole for Bielema to lift the program out of. Thank goodness Josh Whitman chose Bret Bielema to head the Illini football program.
- The B1G is a top-heavy conference with sharks like Ohio State, Michigan, Penn State, Oregon and USC at the top trying to eat any competition that rises from the depths.
- The University of Illinois resides in a small town without the metro areas that Ohio State, USC and Michigan can rely upon for their NIL fundraising efforts.
In the movie world, obstacles like this don’t prevent the story from having a negative conclusion if there is a hero to overcome them. In fact, obstacles like these make the success at the end of the film ultimately creates the hero that the public wants.
Thus, the film also needs a hero. Bielema has ridden into town and single-handedly cleaned up the lawless city. Clint Eastwood couldn’t have done a better job.
Bielema has the Illini on the verge of a potentially historic season for Illinois. No one is guaranteeing the Illini will have their second 10-win season back-to-back. Even if the Illini make a bowl for the second season in a row or were to fall short of that mark, they are recruiting the building blocks of future success with each recruit that commits. The bottom line is that there’s a reason for hope in the future while enjoying this season’s success. The Fighting Illini are relevant again.
If there was a movie depicting this Illini football season, Illinois has two paths the plot might take:
- Fall short of making a bowl and continue the up-and-down nature of Illini football.
- Win enough to go to a bowl again and maybe even find a way to make the College Football Playoff.
Bielema has decided to follow the path of surrounding himself with successful coaches and players. He didn’t wait for the perfect day to arrive to begin his mission. He began this journey the day he started as the head football coach of the Fighting Illini, back when no one thought last season’s success was remotely possible.
This season is the time for no excuses and by overcoming the obstacles listed above, this year will make for an epic adventure. Coupled with these recruiting successes, it will be the first step of a mythic quest, not just one “high flying” season standing in the midst of ongoing mediocrity.
I think the 2025 Illini football season would make a great movie. The obstacles are there. So is the hero. The team is ready. In a Marvel movie, the heroes would yell, “Avengers, Assemble!” Later this summer, the Thing (of the Fantastic Four) will yell out, “It’s clobberin’ time!”
Lights! Camera! Action!
Heat Check #1 – NIL Could’ve (and Should’ve) Changed the NBA Draft in the Illini’s Favor – An Illini “What If”
We are seeing a reversal in the way the NBA Draft is looked at by collegiate basketball players and their agents. Yes, the “and their agents” part seems crazy to me, but who am I to fight the inevitable march of time and constant change?
There were 363 players who entered their names into the NBA draft early in 2021. This summer, just 106 players have entered the 2025 NBA Draft early. This is the lowest since 2016.
As we have talked on the “IlliniGuys Sports Spectacular” radio show and the “I on the Illini” podcasts, the ability to make money has not only made college more attractive to players, but their agents realize this is the way for many college players who aren’t a “lock” to be NBA players to maximize their earnings. Nowadays, there is no reason to risk a big NIL payday for a G League deal that starts around $40,000 a year or an NBA two-way contract that could make them around $600,000.
How times have changed. The NIL dollars can be substantial with deals that dwarf the $600,000 best case option for players on the edge. This means we will see college teams become deeper (if they can afford it) and become older (if they can afford it). Overall, the college game will get better, teams will be more experienced, and the quality of ball will improve.
Not everything is bad about the NIL world.
The biggest “what if” is what if Kofi Cockburn had been surrounded by competent advisors when his time to choose between the NBA Draft and staying at Illinois with a superior NIL deal in place for him.
Kofi improved each year by 3 – 4 points per game and a rebound a game. If he had taken advantage of the two additional years he could’ve played, Kofi might have averaged 24 points and 11 games his senior year and 27 and 12 his COVID year. He might’ve been the NCAA all-time leader in rebounds – and who knows how good the Illini might’ve been. While he wasn’t an NBA player, Kofi was an incredible collegiate player.
The NBA Draft has been changed forever by the effects of NIL. Illini fans just wish Kofi’s advisors had been smart enough to see what most Illini fans that the NIL deal was the better deal.
College Sports
Official Site of The ECHL
WORCESTER, Mass. – The Worcester Railers Hockey Club, ECHL affiliate of the New York Islanders, announced that the club has signed forwards Tanner Schachle and Porter Schachle to contracts for the 2025-26 season. Tanner Schachle, 28, re-signs in Worcester following an 11-game stint with the team last season. Schachle had five points (1g-4a) following a trade with the Orlando […]

WORCESTER, Mass. – The Worcester Railers Hockey Club, ECHL affiliate of the New York Islanders, announced that the club has signed forwards Tanner Schachle and Porter Schachle to contracts for the 2025-26 season.
Tanner Schachle, 28, re-signs in Worcester following an 11-game stint with the team last season. Schachle had five points (1g-4a) following a trade with the Orlando Solar Bears. He has played in 146 ECHL games across his four-year professional career, amassing 43 points (14g-29a) and 168 penalty minutes.
Prior to professional hockey, Schachle played four seasons of college hockey between the University of Alaska-Anchorage and Long Island University. In 74 collegiate games, the Wasilla, Alaska native recorded 21 points (9g-12a) to go with 153 penalty minutes. Before playing in college, Schachle played three seasons in the North American Hockey League between the Kenai River Brown Bears and Fairbanks Ice Dogs. There he had 82 points (41g-41a) in 166 games along with 180 penalty minutes. Schachle played in one season in the Alberta Junior Hockey League and tallied 10 points (4g-6a) and 99 penalty minutes in 53 games played.
Porter Schachle, 24, signs on with Worcester for his first season of professional hockey. He arrives in Worcester with four seasons of college hockey experience, having split time between the University of Vermont and the University of Alaska-Anchorage. In 114 collegiate games, Schachle had 32 points (18g-14a) along with 108 penalty minutes.
Prior to collegiate hockey, Porter played 117 games in the NAHL between the Kenai River Brown Bears and Danbury Jr. Hat Tricks, totaling 76 points (35g-41a) along with 422 penalty minutes across his junior career.
College Sports
UConn men’s hockey releases 2025-26 schedule
The encore to UConn men’s hockey’s best season ever is set. On Monday, the Huskies released their complete 2025-26 schedule. The new campaign begins on Friday, Oct. 3 with weekend series at Colorado College. UConn has the next weekend off before facing Ohio State for two at home on Oct. 17-18. The Huskies then begin […]

The encore to UConn men’s hockey’s best season ever is set. On Monday, the Huskies released their complete 2025-26 schedule.
The new campaign begins on Friday, Oct. 3 with weekend series at Colorado College. UConn has the next weekend off before facing Ohio State for two at home on Oct. 17-18. The Huskies then begin Hockey East play with a home-and-home series against Boston University the following weekend.
The first half ends at Toscano Family Ice Forum against Merrimack on Dec. 6 and resumes with a New Year’s Eve tilt in Storrs versus LIU. The regular season concludes with a Mar. 7 trip to Providence.
The Huskies will play at PeoplesBank Arena (formerly the XL Center) in Hartford on four occasions: Oct. 18 (Ohio State), Stonehill (Nov. 25), UMass Lowell (Jan. 9) and Boston College (Feb. 21).
UConn will also face Harvard (Oct. 31 at home) and LIU (Jan. 31 at home; Jan. 3 away) in standard non-conference action, while the sixth annual Connecticut Ice tournament will be held on Jan. 23-24 at Yale’s Ingalls Rink. The Huskies will take on the host Bulldogs in the opening round on Friday.
In Hockey East, UConn will host Vermont for two (Jan. 16-17) while traveling to Maine for a pair (Feb. 13-14) — the only two opponents that aren’t part of a home-and-home. The Huskies will also play four teams three times: Merrimack (Nov. 1 and Dec. 6 at home; Dec. 5 away), UNH (Nov. 22 and Mar. 5 at home; Nov. 21 away), Northeastern (Nov. 15 and Feb. 6 away; Nov. 14 home) and Providence (Nov. 8, Mar. 7 away; Nov. 7 home).
All but three contests are scheduled for either a Friday or Saturday. The exceptions are a Tuesday night matchup with Stonehill, a New Year’s Eve meeting with LIU on a Wednesday, and a Thursday contest with UNH — all of which are at home.
Unlike last season when the Huskies played 12 of 13 games on the road at one point but were home for the entire month of February, the splits are much more balanced this year. UConn has a four-game home stand early in the season and a four straight road games at the end of the year, but nothing longer than that.
In total, UConn will play 34 games with exactly half of them coming on home ice.
College Sports
Frederick Richard is taking his fight to make gymnastics ‘cool’ to a new front: His uniform
Frederick Richard is challenging men’s gymnastics norms with his wardrobe. NEW ORLEANS (AP) — Frederick Richard is taking the fight to make men’s gymnastics matter to a new front: his wardrobe. The charismatic 21-year-old Olympic bronze medalist switched out the stirrup pants that have long been a staple of the men’s uniform for shorts with […]

Frederick Richard is challenging men’s gymnastics norms with his wardrobe.
NEW ORLEANS (AP) — Frederick Richard is taking the fight to make men’s gymnastics matter to a new front: his wardrobe.
The charismatic 21-year-old Olympic bronze medalist switched out the stirrup pants that have long been a staple of the men’s uniform for shorts with compression leggings at the U.S. Championships this weekend, firm in his belief that the three-tenths (0.3) deduction he receives every day of competition that he breaks the rules is worth it if it makes his sport more accessible.
Even when those tenths add up. Richard edged Fuzzy Benas by less than a quarter of a point for second place behind two-time national champion Asher Hong. If Richard had worn the traditional uniform, his margin over Benas could have been a little more comfortable.
Yet asked if the statement he is trying to make — that it’s time for men’s gymnastics to modernize its uniforms — is worth the risk to his potential placement during a given meet, he didn’t hesitate.
“It’s 1,000% worth it,” Richard said. “If you look at these kids in the crowd, I’m thinking about them and I’m thinking about when I was younger.”
While Richard quickly fell in love with gymnastics as a kid growing up in the Boston area, the stirrup pants worn by the guys on pommel horse, still rings, parallel bars, and high bar were another matter.
“If I left the gym to go to the gas station, I didn’t want anybody to see me in my pommel horse pants,” Richard said. “Kids would say, ‘Do you do gymnastics?’ I’d say ‘Yeah.’ But I didn’t want them to search ‘gymnast’ and see the uniform. I didn’t feel like it was cool.”
His solution was to design an alternative. With the help of the apparel company Turn, Richard debuted the look earlier this year and “refined” it ahead of nationals.
During the opening night of competition on Thursday, the rising Michigan junior wore maize-and-blue colored zebra-patterned leggings with (almost) matching blue shorts. On Saturday, Richard swapped the maize and blue for gray.
Both times, there was a “ND -0.3” next to Richard’s score on the first event in which the traditional pants were required. Yet Richard wasn’t as focused on the ribbon board where his score was posted, but on the young boys in the stands below them.
“(I want them to) see this, and they’re like, ‘This is cool. I want to wear this. This kid is trying to make the sport cool, he looks cool,’” Richard said. “And that’s the stuff that gets kids into the sport, that’s stuff that keeps kids in the sport.”
Even if it’s a largely American conversation.
While the popularity of men’s gymnastics in the U.S. has declined for decades (though there is optimism that the bronze medal Richard and his teammates captured at the 2024 Olympics could help stem the tide), there are no such issues overseas.
They’re not talking about stirrup pants in China. Or Japan. Or Russia. Places with dominant programs whose stars become champions and national heroes in the process.
The challenges men’s gymnastics faces in the U.S. are many. The number of Division I programs that offer it as a scholarship sport is a fraction of what it was decades ago. And the impact of the recent House settlement could make opportunities at a level that has long served as a feeder system to the U.S. national team even scarcer.
At the Olympic level, the men have long competed in the shadow of the star-studded (and highly successful) women’s program.
Richard has long understood this. He’s seen the attrition firsthand. While the uniform didn’t stop him from pressing on, he believes he might be the exception, not the rule.
Countless young boys dabble in multiple sports growing up, gymnastics included. Richard thinks tweaking the uniform requirements into something he considers more modern could remove what he thinks might be a roadblock to sticking with it for some.
“It does add to what makes a 12-year-old boy decide, ’Do I want to keep doing this sport? Or should I play football or soccer, because my friends think I’m cool when I play with them?” he said.
The rules do allow for a little latitude. Some German female gymnasts opted for full-body unitards at each of the last two Olympics, though the design does not run afoul of FIG regulations.
What Richard is doing does.
And while he stressed he would never wear his outlawed uniform in a team competition — he wore regulation pants while helping lead Michigan to the NCAA championship this spring — that might not be the case the next time he competes internationally.
“We’ll see about the world stage,” Richard said. “We’ll have to talk and see what they allow, but I want to keep pushing it. I’m having fun. I feel more free.”
He’ll have some time to think about it. When the six-man roster for the 2025 World Championships was announced late Saturday night, Richard’s name wasn’t on it. The decision had nothing to do with Richard’s uniform but the uniqueness of this year’s world meet, which does not include a team event and is largely designed for event specialists.
At his best, Richard is one of the top all-arounders on the planet. Yet even he admitted he was at about “80%” at nationals following a whirlwind stretch that included traveling to places like Uganda. Richard is partnering with the African nation to open a facility for boys there interested in acrobatics.
The joy he felt during the trip was palpable. So has the criticism he’s received back home for his uniform choice, with some telling him if he wants to look like a basketball player, maybe he should go play basketball.
While Richard’s modified look wouldn’t look out of place on the court, pommel horse specialist Stephen Nedoroscik — who won a pair of bronze medals in Paris and became a breakout star in the process (all while wearing stirrup pants) last summer — agrees with his Olympic teammate that there “should be a certain level of flexibility” when it comes to uniforms, though he also pointed out that having everyone wear identical outfits is designed to help the judges do their jobs.
“So like, you can’t wear like super baggy clothes, obviously,” Nedoroscik said. “But I do like there should be maybe a little bit of wiggle room.”
That’s all Richard says he is asking for, though it seems highly unlikely the FIG would eliminate the deduction for a uniform violation anytime soon. That is not going to stop Richard from pressing on.
“I’ll wear it for the next 10 years if I have to,” he said. “So eventually, if I keep succeeding and winning, and eventually on the international stage do the same thing and keep winning, (the FIG) will see how people like it (and) the younger kids will start wearing it … and the trend is going to grow.”
___
AP sports: https://apnews.com/hub/sports
College Sports
Jaelyn Cunnigham Joins Women’s Soccer Staff as Assistant Coach
Story Links CAMBRIDGE, Mass. – Harvard women’s soccer made an addition to its coaching staff this Summer with the hiring of Jaelyn Cunningham, who will join the program as an assistant coach. In her new role, Cunningham will work with the Crimson’s goalkeepers. Cunningham comes to Harvard after a two-year tenure as […]

CAMBRIDGE, Mass. – Harvard women’s soccer made an addition to its coaching staff this Summer with the hiring of Jaelyn Cunningham, who will join the program as an assistant coach. In her new role, Cunningham will work with the Crimson’s goalkeepers.
Cunningham comes to Harvard after a two-year tenure as the Goalkeeper Coach at the University of Houston, where she helped guide the group to success after a jump from the American Athletic Conference (AAC) to the Big 12 Conference. The Cougars enjoyed success under Cunningham and the staff, as the group helped lead the team to a 6-0-1 start in 2023, which went down as the best start to a season in program history.
“Jaelyn brings elite experience, high standards and incredible energy to the program,” said the Branca Family Head Coach for Harvard Women’s Soccer Chris Hamblin. “We are very fortunate to add a coach of Jaelyn’s caliber and are very excited for her to impact our program.”
In addition to the University of Houston, Cunningham brings a wealth of coaching experience from the University of Toledo, Queens University of Charlotte, and the HTX Soccer Club in Texas. While at the University of Toledo, Cunningham played a key role in developing several standout players, including a MAC Freshman of the Year, a single-season program record holder, and a goalkeeper who ranked fourth nationally in shutouts. Her contributions helped the team post a 10-6-4 record in 2021 — the program’s best season since 2017.
At Queens University of Charlotte, Cunningham served as the Goalkeeper Coach, helping the team to a 5-1-1 record. Under her guidance, the team’s goalkeeper earned Conference Player of the Week honors three times and was named First-Team All-Conference with a 0.903 goals-against average.
Originally from Columbus, Ohio, Cunningham is a graduate of the University of Illinois, where she was a three-year starting goalkeeper. She ranks second in school history for most saves in a single season and was named All-Big Ten in 2017.
Cunningham also has experience at the professional level. She competed with three women’s soccer clubs, the Seattle Sounders Women, The Chicago Red Stars, and The Orlando Pride over the course of her career.
Now with the Crimson, Cunningham will work closely with 2024 All-Ivy selection Rhiannon Stewart, who will be back between the posts for her senior season. Stewart will look to expand on her breakout junior season in 2025 under Cunningham’s mentorship.
The addition of Cunningham to the coaching staff marks a promising step toward another Ivy League title and sets the stage for a spirited and successful season ahead.
College Sports
Pair of Georgia stars unite for new NIL deal before 2025 college football season
Georgia quarterback Gunner Stockton and tight end Lawson Luckie are teaming up off the field in a new NIL partnership before the 2025 college football season. The Associated Credit Union – a member-owned financial institution in the state of Georgia – revealed its new partnership with Stockton and Luckie on Monday, according to DawgNation. Stockton […]

Georgia quarterback Gunner Stockton and tight end Lawson Luckie are teaming up off the field in a new NIL partnership before the 2025 college football season.
The Associated Credit Union – a member-owned financial institution in the state of Georgia – revealed its new partnership with Stockton and Luckie on Monday, according to DawgNation.
Stockton enters his redshirt junior campaign as a first-year starter after backing up Carson Beck, who transferred to Miami in the offseason. The former four-star out of Tiger, Georgia, helped lead the Bulldogs to a comeback win over Texas in the SEC championship before making his first start against Notre Dame in the College Football Playoff.
Luckie also has a significant season ahead, as the third-year tight end has worked himself into a starter alongside senior Oscar Delp.
Luckie, out of Norcross Georgia, posted career highs in receptions (24), receiving yards (348) and touchdowns (3) as a sophomore last season.
Stockton holds an On3 NIL valuation of $823,000 while Luckie sits at $318,000.
The ACU partnered with former Georgia All-American safety Malaki Starks last season before he was taken by the Baltimore Ravens the first round of the 2025 NFL Draft. Now, it’s Stockton and Luckie who will help the institution “engage with younger audiences in a way that feels genuine, aspirational and rooted in shared values.”
ACU is also “exploring ideas” for the pair of Georgia standouts to give back to their communities with football clinics alongside local schools, mentorship-focused events and youth engagement activities, according to the report.
Stockton, Luckie and the Bulldogs will open the 2025 season at home against Marshall on Aug. 30 at 3:30 p.m. ET (ESPN).
College Sports
Hezly Rivera Wins 2025 U.S. Championship All-Around Gold
The 2025 U.S. Gymnastics Championships ended with a familiar result: a Tiger atop the podium in the Smoothie King Center. Hezly Rivera won her first U.S. all-around championship Sunday following a dominant two-day run. She is the first LSU commit since Konnor McClain in 2022 to win the national elite title. She also won every […]

The 2025 U.S. Gymnastics Championships ended with a familiar result: a Tiger atop the podium in the Smoothie King Center. Hezly Rivera won her first U.S. all-around championship Sunday following a dominant two-day run. She is the first LSU commit since Konnor McClain in 2022 to win the national elite title. She also won every event title for which she was eligible: bars (in a tie with Skye Blakely), beam and floor. Leanne Wong won the vault title as one of just three people who competed two vaults in each of the two days of competition.
Hezly Rivera entered Sunday’s competition with a 0.200 lead over Joscelyn Roberson and a 0.500 lead over Leanne Wong. Hezly scored a 14.050 (5.0 D, 9.050 E) on her vault, but it didn’t beat Leanne’s massive 14.600 (5.6 D, 9.000 E) stuck Cheng. Note that Hezly and Leanne were both in the same rotation group while Roberson began on beam. After one rotation, things appeared to be separating quickly and it looked like the battle would be between the Florida graduate student and the incoming high school senior.
In rotation two, Leanne Wong scored a 13.950 (5.7 D, 8.250 E) on bars. Hezly Rivera had some cushion thanks to her higher difficulty, and it paid off when she scored a 14.150 (6.1 D, 8.050 E) to retake the all-around lead. The third rotation was the only one in which Hezly went before Leanne. Hezly led the rotation with a 14.000 (6.1 D, 7.900 E), and was the only person in the entire competition to put up 14s on the same event on both days. Leanne finished the rotation with a 13.950 (5.5 D, 8.450 E) on a very good routine.
In the end, it came down to the final two routines of the competition. Hezly had more than just a 0.200 lead in the all-around standings. She also had a 0.500 advantage in difficulty, and that meant Leanne would have to drill her routine to have a shot at a national title. Her 13.600 (5.3 D, 8.300 E) was good, but Hezly did enough and scored a 14.200 (5.8 D, 8.400 E) on her routine. While the E score may have felt a little bit too high since there were several landing errors, the routine still felt good enough to secure the title.
Annalisa Milton had a fine meet following a rough start. She started the night with an 11.250 (4.6 D, 6.650 E) on beam that included a fall. She then bounced back with a 12.600 (5.2 D, 7.700 E, -0.3 ND) on floor. Her Yurchenko 1.5 was an overlooked highlight of the meet, as it scored a 13.800 (4.6 D, 9.200 E) with the best execution score of any vault that evening. She finished off her meet with a 12.950 (5.5 D, 7.450 E) on bars.
After the awards ceremony concluded, Hezly was named one of the 11 members of the U.S. National Team, giving her the ability to go to the Senior World Selection Camp that will determine the four gymnasts selected to Worlds in Jakarta in October. Hezly is as close to a lock as possible to make a trip to Jakarta, but that’s no guarantee. The camp will be September 29-October 2. I’ll have an update on the results from that camp when everything is settled. If she goes to Worlds, those run from October 13-25 and are an individual championship only. That means there is no team competition.
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