Rec Sports
How do athletes stand out in a ‘broken’ college recruiting system?
Getting recruited: This is Part 2 of a series that looks behind the curtain of college recruiting. USA TODAY Sports was granted behind-the-scenes access by the football staff at the University of Pennsylvania, a Division I program that offers a high academic profile but no Name, Image and Likeness (NIL) money or scholarships. This week: Negotiating the constant change of college sports.
Read Part I: How college recruiting can be like the dating game
PHILADELPHIA — When Jon Dupont was just starting out as a football coach, he had to fend off flying mammals as he ascended the stairs to his attic domicile.
“I’d have a tennis racket over my head so that the bats didn’t fly down and buzz me,” he says.
Dupont remembers making $2,500 a year at Worcester (Massachusetts) Polytechnic Institute, but the housing was free (critters included).
It got better when he moved to Trinity College in Hartford, (Connecticut). The school paid for his master’s degree in economics, and he got free housing and meals.
“Some people aspire to be a college football coach someday,” says Dupont, who has been on Penn’s football staff since 2006. “I thought at first I was gonna be an engineer and then I was gonna work in finance. I’m like, ‘I’ll try that out for a couple years while I try to figure out what I want to be.’
“My goal was to get my master’s degree because I knew that having an advanced degree was gonna be important. And I knew how volatile being a football coach is.”

Dupont spoke Nov. 19 from his office at Franklin Field. Less than a week later, he and his nine full-time colleague faced an unknown future in their field after head coach Ray Priore stepped down after 38 years on the staff.
Priore’s replacement will have the opportunity to evaluate and retain the staff, but they understand new coaches tend to bring in their own guys.
“I don’t know what I would do when I grow up,” Dupont said that day with a smile.
The thrill of playing and coaching sports can be intoxicating. But what we experience away from the field can sometimes make us feel helpless.
There are politics involved from youth to professional sports, and there are unknowns. Who truly knows who you are and what you can do? How can you get your name in front of people who can enhance your experiences and sports career?
USA TODAY Sports offers advice about how young athletes can best present themselves in this world of inevitable uncertainty and change.
YOUTH SPORTS SURVIVAL GUIDE: Pre-order Coach Steve’s upcoming book for young athletes and their parents
Make sure your offer, or opportunity to play at a college or university, is firm
Recruiting is about building relationships. There are recruits in Penn’s expected freshman class next fall whom the current coaches worked to admit.
Other recruits are in midstream, and the coaches, before their fate at the school is determined, will try and keep them in play.
If you are an incoming recruit and the coach who recruited you leaves the school, have a conversation with the athletic department, admissions office and/or new coaching staff. See if you can get something in writing that you will be part of the team when you enroll.
At some point in any recruiting process, where things can change on a dime, you might have to look elsewhere.
“The problem we have is everyone’s gonna say yes to you until it filters out,” Bob Benson, Penn’s associate head coach, told me less than two weeks ago, ahead of Penn’s final game. “And you can’t really afford to say no. You gotta be very diligent.”
Priore, Penn’s outgoing head coach, said schools initially offer based on talent, but it’s your job to know the difference between offers and committable offers.
He has seen recruits post on social media in the spring of their junior years they have offers from Ivy League schools. He knows, though, that there are rigorous academic hurdles Ivy League recruits must clear and a complicated financial aid eligibility form that prolong the process.
“What we say is you’d be someone we’d love to have,” Priore said before he stepped down. “We can offer you a spot if you get into school but from a talent standpoint, you’re really talented but there are all these different stages.
“Everybody can offer anybody. But what are you offering? It’s our evaluation and based upon everything going right, then it could be all great for you. But it’s just the first thing.”
A ‘broken’ system; do you need to pay for a recruiting service?
Under Priore, Penn worked from a list of thousands of kids per high school class, which it eventually whittled down to 20 to 40 on a flow chart.
How do we even get noticed?
Every year, according to Brian Cruver, there’s roughly 4.5 million athletes self-identifying as wanting play their sport in college.
Cruver was a parent wondering that question. He didn’t have an extensive sports background and his son, Carson, wanted to pursue playing football in college.
Cruver is a tech startup executive who help found billion dollar businesses, including a germ-killing robot company called Xenex. His latest venture is called Scorability. He started it with his friend, Brett Andrew, whose daughter, Gella, plays beach volleyball for Florida State. Cruver’s son, Carson, ended up at Florida Atlantic.
Scorability is a centralized database that coaches access that includes athletes’ transcripts, athletic numbers and videos as well as coach and even parent evaluations.
It has initially dipped its feet into football recruiting and plans to expand to women’s volleyball, men’s and women’s soccer, men’s and women’s basketball, baseball and softball in early 2026.
“I’m good at building great software product teams that can take those products to market,” Cruver tells USA TODAY Sports. “All the lessons I learned along the way with these tech startups, I want to apply to this big, broken thing, which is college sports recruiting.
“There’s a lot of adjectives. Let’s start with inefficient: Extremely inefficient for everybody involved. No one really likes how it works. They just kind of accept it as how it is. Most parents and athletes don’t know what the process is until it’s over.
“It was chaos and it was confusing and we never really knew what was going on. And it worked out for (my son). It doesn’t work out for everybody. We were frustrated, but at the same time, we were very involved parents with resources, and I was looking around at these other athletes whose parents are maybe not as involved, and maybe don’t have as many resources and feeling like, ‘OK, we didn’t like this experience, imagine what it’s like for everybody else.’ “
Expensive is another adjective. There are websites and/or advisors that charge hundreds, if not thousands of dollars to help get your kid onto a college team. Scorability is free to athletes.
“Don’t pay for recruiting services,” says Dupont, Penn’s recruiting coordinator. “The recruiting services that parents pay for, these recruiting gurus, when I get messages from them, I want to turn them off. I don’t even know them. I’m talking about individual recruiting advisors. Tons of those people out there are getting paid good money from families to do exactly what they’re doing. But their interest is not the kids’ interest. It’s their own interest to continue to get paid. So they’ll go out there and they’ll sell anybody they can possibly sell.
“And then they know better than you. And I’ve had that before, too, guys getting offended with our evaluation. I would rather the high school coach reach out to me. I trust him. And I have a relationship with him and I go visit him.”
Penn’s staff has used Scorability, which has, among other clients, TCU, Miami (Fla.), Oklahoma State, SMU as well as a junior colleges and Division II and III schools.
The better student you are, the better chance you have of playing college sports. But coaches separate you based on your athletic numbers, also known as your metrics: Not only your height and weight, but also your speed, strength and jumping ability. If you’re a baseball player, it’s velocity as a pitcher and exit velocity as hitter; a volleyball player, it’s how high you touch.
“I think all parents exaggerate,” says Benson, also Penn’s defensive coordinator who has been a head or assistant college coach for four decades. “That’s why you have to get back to metrics.”
Make sure you’re realistic about your chances at a school and have the metrics to qualify
Scan the online rosters of schools for which you’re interested in playing and look at heights and weights of their players. Many coaches will want to see you in person at the camps they run for high school prospects. Find out the specific metric numbers they’re looking for you to hit.
Coaches also want your numbers to be verified. If your son is a baseball player, for example, and plays in Perfect Game or Prep Baseball Report tournaments, his metrics will be recorded and stored on profile pages through those organizations.
One of Scorability’s benefits is it collects and compiles your metrics from college camps you attend. Coaches who subscribe to Scorability can see data from thousands of camps (and showcases) for their sport. These are athletes who want to be recruited and are choosing to share the data with college programs.
Scorability has recently acquired Ryzer, which puts on showcase camps for a number of sports, meaning all of your information from Ryzer camps (and other camp partners) will be stored in Scorability.
“A lot of kids are magically two inches taller than they really are,” says Cruver, Scorability’s CEO. “Think about how much traveling all these coaches are doing around the country, only to find out that a 6-4 kid is really 6-2.
“We do a good job of getting verified measurables, visual content, photos and videos. So in the case of football, it’s not just their 40 (-yard dash) time, it’s a verified 40 time with a video of the 40 being run, with a mentality assessment and a coach evaluation on that kid. So you get to know, he runs a 4.3, great. But what’s he going to be like in the locker room?”

How do you present yourself to a school in the best possible way?
Penn has paid for Scorability and other services like Catapult, Verified Athletics and The UCReport. Penn’s coaches receive numerous emails per day from such services with names of potential players.
It’s the job of coaches at schools like Penn without recruiting departments to scour the data.
As a recruit, you need ways to jump off the page apart from your numbers as coaches sort you by, say, class, region of the country, GPA or SAT score.
“We really value when parents are honest about (how) these are the strengths of my son, these are the weaknesses, these are the areas that I’d like to see him grow, this is the type of program that I think he would thrive in and why,” says Jerheme Urban, a former NFL wide receiver and the head football coach at Division III Trinity University, which uses Scorability. “The more information that we can gather on the front end of things outside of just the metrics really allows us to be more intentional.
“I’m not gonna a disqualify kid from our recruitment process if the parents talk about the areas of growth that their kid needs. I think that’s self-aware. We’ve seen some really good parent evals come in as well in terms of how they’ve helped him grow in certain areas.”
Cruver says one of the goals of Scorability is to help kids stand out for their human qualities as much as their metrics.
“These coaches will watch thousands of hours of highlights and video,” he says. “And they get a good sense of athleticism from that. But they may narrow it down to 20 kids who athletically are about the same. And then what every coach tells us in every sport, whether it’s softball or golf or football, what it really comes down to is who do they want in their locker room? Who do they want in their weight room? Who’s gonna be loyal to the team? Who’s gonna be coachable? Who’s gonna be a good teammate? We had a golf coach the other day tell us, ‘When I recruit, I’m thinking about who do I want to ride in a van with for six hours?’ “
Playing a collegiate sport can be like a full-time job. Coaches want to know if you are willing to wake up at 5:30 every morning for a practice or a workout. Do you want to hit the weight room six times a week? Can you squeeze in studying and sleep, too?
I was a collegiate rower for three years. I decided to stop so I could stay up late to study, socialize with friends and have more time to pursue a career path my senior year. In other words, to have a typical college experience.
Dupont, Penn’s recruiting coordinator, played Division III baseball and football at St. Lawrence University in Canton, New York. It led him to coaching.
He wasn’t making full-time money with benefits until he was 30 and, yet, he said in nearly the same breath, he can’t imagine doing anything else.
“You’re just constantly locked into something, whether it’s the football season, recruiting, offseason workout programs with your players,” he said. “But I love it.”
Part III (final installment) coming next weekend:Using sports to find a life path for success.
Borelli, aka Coach Steve, has been an editor and writer with USA TODAY since 1999. He spent 10 years coaching his two sons’ baseball and basketball teams. He and his wife, Colleen, are now sports parents for two high schoolers. His Coach Steve column is posted weekly. For his past columns, click here.
Got a question for Coach Steve you want answered in a column? Email him at sborelli@usatoday.com
Rec Sports
Philly Athletes That Gave Back Big in 2025
It’s been a really good year to be a sports fan in Philadelphia. The Phillies saw the playoffs (again), the Union had the best record in soccer, the Sixers drafted a superstar, the Flyers are finally playing well, and the Birds won the big one (again).
Loyal sports fans know the truth. Philadelphia is the best sports city in the world. Full stop. Less known: Part of what makes Philadelphia’s sports scene so spectacular is our teams’ commitment to using their station in life to do good and give back.
Below are just some of Philadelphia’s champions both on and off the field. Whether they’re supporting local youth, standing up for mental healthcare, or spreading their wealth, our athletes, their bosses, and at least one mascot leave a lasting positive mark on Philadelphia. Here’s some of what they did in 2025.
Lane Johnson, Eagles: Mental Health Warrior

The Birds two-time Super Bowl champion, five-time All-Pro and six-time Pro Bowl O-lineman has been open for over a decade about his struggles with anxiety and depression. This season Johnson began using his voice in The Citizen to spread awareness about caring for mental health, especially in the world of sports, where an estimated 50 to 60 percent of athletes deal with some form of mental distress.
Each week, Johnson spotlights mental health champions and programs in the cities the Birds are playing that week. So far, he’s covered the friends who have helped him along his journey, youth-focused, and his personal mentors.
His motivation? We’ll let Lane take it from here:
It’s really important to me to keep talking about mental health. Other athletes coming forward helped me feel less alone, I want everyone else out there to feel less alone. To see that we’re all more alike than we are different. To understand that there are only so many things in life we can control — and that’s where we should use our energy.
Johnson is also an outspoken advocate — from his actions to his custom cleats on “My Cause My Cleats” day, for the Travis Manion Foundation, a local organization that supports veterans and the families of fallen soldiers.
Jalen Hurts, Eagles: Citizen of the Year

It was a no-brainer to name Jalen Hurts The Citizen’s 2025 Citizen of the Year. The Eagles quarterback gives back to Philadelphia in profound ways — and we’re not just talking about his MVP-deserving Super Bowl performance this February.
For the 2024-25 football season, Hurts through his foundation donated $5,000 for every touchdown he made to keep Philadelphia schools cool during the hot summer months. Through the “Keep It Cool” initiative, he was able to send $170,000 to Philly schools to purchase and to install air conditioners in schools around the district. That’s 34 touchdowns if you’re keeping count.
For this year’s My Cause, My Cleats, Hurts chose to champion the Children’s Hospital of Pennsylvania for the second year in a row. For help designing the cleat, Hurts visited patients at the hospital to get their suggestions. Cue wholesome content. Those very same cleats are now up for auction with all proceeds going to CHOP. The bid is currently at $5,000, with three months left of the auction. Put your bid in here.
A natural at giving a rousing sideline pep talk, the speech Hurts gave at our 2025 Citizen of the Year Awards was a thoughtful call to action for each Philadelphian to help each other out. Get inspired by watching it here.
Kyle Schwarber, Phillies: Designated Do-Gooder

Every Phillies fan’s holiday wish came early when the Phillies announced they’ve settled on a 5-year contract with three-time All-Star Kyle Schwarber. The $150 million deal includes a rare philanthropic clause which has Schwarber donating $150,000 per year — $750,000 — in total from his salary directly to Phillies charities.
Looks like all those times Phillies’ fans chanted “Pay the man!” at Citizens Bank Park this year worked out in everyone’s favor.
Schwarber has a storied history of supporting public safety personnel. This summer, he, through Schwarber’s Neighborhood Heroes, hosted his annual block party at Yards Brewing Co. to benefit first responders and military families. Since 2017, Schwarb’s org has donated more than $770,000 in grants to public safety nonprofits.
The Philadelphia Sports Writers Association recognized Schwarber with their 2025 Ed Snider Humanitarian of the Year Award. Also this year: The Schwarbomber became the second Phillies player to ever reach 50+ home runs in a single season.
A.J. Brown, Eagles: The Giving Receiver

Our star wide receiver’s nickname “Always Open” might not mean to, but it applies to A.J. Brown’s willingness to help local kids.
A.J. Brown launched his foundation in 2024 “to create pathways for youth to build resilience, confidence, and a brighter future. Through programs and support focused on empowerment and opportunity, they help young people believe in themselves, push through challenges, and see success as something within reach.”
How’s he done it? By donating 100 bicycles and helmets to kids in Southwest Philadelphia. Paying for groceries trips for families in New Jersey. Visiting Boys Latin to give students backpacks, school supplies and back-to-school cuts.
Like Lane Johnson, Brown has been open about his own mental health struggles and advocated for mental health awareness. Proceeds from his “Check On Your Teammates” clothing collection go toward mental health research. This May, Mayor Cherelle Parker bestowed the first ever ‘Making a Better Philly Changemaker Award’ on our #11.
Aaron Nola, Phillies: ALS Advocate

Back when this Phillies ace was a rookie, he met up with reps from the ALS Association during a team visit. The brief meeting deeply impacted Nola, whose uncle, Alan Andries, was diagnosed with ALS in 2015.
Since then, the veteran pitcher has been an advocate for people with ALS, raising $250,000 for ALS research with Strike Out ALS bowling tournaments nationwide. In 2025, the MLB’s charitable arm, Players Trust, recognized Phillies pitcher Aaron Nola as 2025’s Philanthropist of the Year for his work with ALS and his work supporting veterans with the nonprofit Team Red, White and Blue, who benefited from his $1,000-per-strikeout promise last year, to the tune of nearly $200,000.
“We’re human beings longer than we are baseball players,” he said upon receiving the honor.
Garnet Hathaway, Flyers: Hath’s Heroes

Forward Garnet Hathaway and his wife Lindsay started their nonprofit Hath’s Heroes in 2019 to benefit first responders. Last year, they teamed up with Flyers Charities on the campaign Hits for Hath’s Heroes, which raised $30,000 for Families Behind the Badge Children’s Foundation, a nonprofit that helps connect first responders with mental health resources.
This year, he partnered with Dogfish Head brewery to create a limited edition IPA, Engine 19, whose sales will go to his namesake charity. Of course, the beer is Flyers orange.
Tyrese Maxey, Sixers: Here with the Assist

Everyone’s favorite point guard founded his namesake foundation in 2021 to support young people and their families through education, athletics and community initiatives. This year, Maxey hosted a night of giving dinner, celebrity golf tournament and basketball skills camp for 7-to-12-year-olds. No word on whether part of those skills involved using a can opener.
Maxey is also the team’s top contributor to Assists for Safe Communities, a collaboration between the Sixers and Penn Medicine, that donates $76 to grassroots violence prevention programs in Philly for every assist the team gets on the court. (He leads the team in assists.) The initiative raised $144,476 last year, contributing to: Design FC, Free All Minds Academy, Level Up Philly, Open Door Abuse Awareness Prevention, Ordinarie Heroes, and The Apologues.
Jeffrey Lurie, Eagles: A Champion for the Autism Community

This year, the Eagles owner donated $50 million — “largest single donation to U.S. academic medical centers focused on autism research across the lifespan,” according to Penn — to Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia and Penn Medicine to develop the Lurie Autism Institute for research into and development of innovative treatments for autism spectrum disorder.
The center expands on Lurie’s commitment to supporting individuals affected by autism. He’s overseen the Eagles’ Autism Foundation since 2018 — and since donated more than $40 million to autism research and support. Under his leadership, the Birds became the NFL’s first team to have a sensory experience room in its stadium. No coincidence Eagles mascot Swoop regularly wears headphones.
John Middleton, Phillies: Art Collector Turned Art Sharer

The Philadelphia Phillies owner isn’t just a collector of All-Star-worthy baseball players. For the past 50 years, the scion of a family cigar fortune has collected fine 19th and 20th century American art — and, in the process, earned status as one of the world’s top 200 art collectors.
Until now, the Middleton Family Collection has been very private. That changes April of next year, when both the Philadelphia Art Museum and the Pennsylvania Academy of Fine Art will display a groundbreakingly expansive — 1,000 works! — exhibition entitled Nation of Artists. Will Jasper Johns’ Flag, which Middleton is rumored to have purchased for $28.6 million, be there? Only one way to find out: Check out the self-funded exhibition — which opens a few days after the Phils season starts.
Honorable Mention: Gritty, Flyers — Calendar Model … For Good

Less an athlete and more a Philly’s very own deity, the delightfully weird goggly-eyed orange fuzzball with a cult following posed for his very own calendar to be there with you every step of the way in 2026. Each month features a photo of Gritty at Philadelphia landmarks — wearing costumes to boot — alongside handwritten notes from the legend himself.
All proceeds from calendar sales go to Flyers charities, dedicated to two main causes: eliminating financial barriers to hockey, a notoriously expensive sport, and aiding local families affected by cancer.
MORE SPORTS COVERAGE FROM THE CITIZEN
Rec Sports
Oak Ridge police investigating death of 2-year-old boy
OAK RIDGE, Tenn. (WVLT) – The Oak Ridge Police Department is investigating the death of a two-year-old boy.
On Dec. 16, officers responded to a report of an unconscious child at a home in Oak Ridge, according to a city spokesperson.
The child, identified as Gabriel Adam Mitchell, was taken to Methodist Medical Center and later pronounced dead, officials said.

The investigation remains ongoing, officials said, adding that ORPD is waiting for autopsy results to determine a cause of death.
Additional information was not released.
Copyright 2025 WVLT. All rights reserved.
Rec Sports
FOX 11 Storm Chaser checks out road conditions in Winter Storm Diego
(WLUK) – Although the snow diminished early Monday morning across our area, Winter Storm Diego is making the morning commute a little tricky.
FOX 11’s Savannah Wood is in the FOX 11 Storm Chaser to check out road conditions amid Winter Storm Diego.
Very strong winds are expected to pickup, with blowing and drifting snow becoming a major concern.
The FOX 11 Storm Chaser is out in Winter Storm Diego, December 29, 2025. (WLUK)
Most of our area’s main roads are partially covered in snow, while some roads, especially to the north, are completely snow covered.
The FOX 11 Storm Chaser is out in Winter Storm Diego, December 29, 2025. (WLUK)
JOIN THE CONVERSATION (2)
Here’s the latest forecast from FOX 11. Watch Good Day Wisconsin and FOX 11 News at Five, Nine and Ten for continuing coverage.
Rec Sports
Youth Soccer | News, Sports, Jobs
MODIFIED/JAYVEE/COED LEAGUE
Chase Card’s five goals sent the Thunderbirds to a 7-6 victory over the Green Goblins.
Brody Moore and Mackenna Boozer collected a goal apiece for the winners.
For the Green Goblins, Tyson Anderson tallied a hat trick, Gabriel Guerrero added two goals and Aiden Sadjak had one.
— — —
C.J. Archer tallied three goals, and Jackson Warner, Ashton Carrington and Brody VanGuilder each had one as the Dragons downed the Golden Cougars 6-1.
A.J. Stewart collected the lone goal for the Golden Cougars.
— — —
Preston Eccles’ five goals highlighted the Cardinals’ 5-0 win over Falconer.
Laden Wojtowicz and Myles Harrison both added a goal for the winners.
— — —
Michael Montalbano scored six goals and Bentley Huber added a hat trick as U-Knighted Wolverines defeated Goalie Locks 14-2
Amare Davis added two goals, and Dominick Olmstead, Leo Olmstead and Cole Bouquin all had one.
For Goalie Locks, Terry Davis and Rhodes Haluska each had one.
— — —
The Eagles trimmed Queens 2-1 as Travis Horvath tallied both goals.
Keira Cressley had the lone goal for Queens.
— — —
Zane Getner scored four goals and Owin Reams and Hunter Vanderhoof both had three as the Kings blanked the Fireball Flyers 16-0.
Noah Caldwell and Ridgley collected two goals apiece, while Karson Fredeers and Macon Gentz each had one.
GIRLS VARSITY
Falconer/Cassadaga Valley/Maple Grove shut out Pine Valley 8-0.
Giada Schauman scored two goals, and Mackenzie Keeler, Kylie Kress, Madilyn Seastrum, Lily McPherson, Sydnee Snow and Kenley Lincoln tallied once each.
— — —
Gianna Bowles collected four goals, Serena Smith had three and Elia Monroe chipped in two to lead Randolph past Warren 9-5.
Grace Wilkins and Lani Wenzel both had two goals and Adalena Schmidt added one for Warren.
— — —
Grace Wilkins recorded a hat trick and Madalynn Sliter added one to spark Warren to a 4-1 win over Eisenhower.
Rosalie Rondeau registered the lone goal for Eisenhower.
BOYS VARSITY
Westfield defeated Pine Valley 8-1, behind two goals apiece from Parker Gambino, Mike Clark and Avery Peterson.
Jack Bralton and Dawsen Gambino both chipped in a goal to the winning effort.
Andres Morillas had the lone goal for Pine Valley.
— — —
Brady Dobek scored five goals to highlight Dunkirk’s 10-3 win over Warren.
Lucas Felt added two goals, while Jaxson Cooper, Erick Millan and Jaryel Vazquez each had one for the winners.
For Warren, Mason Warner scored twice and Tim Giger once.
— — —
Warren knocked off Chautauqua 10-8.
For the winners, Tim Giger scored four goals, Mason Warner added three, and Bill Bennett, Reilly Morgan and Logan Ristau all had one.
Travis Horvath scored four goals, and Lucas Horvath and Landon DeAnthony added two apiece.
Rec Sports
Built for the moment: Sienna Betts’ rise with USA in 2025
MIES (Switzerland) – Poise has become a defining trait of Sienna Betts’ rise on the international stage.
Highly rated before she ever suited up for USA at global level this year at the FIBA U19 Women’s Basketball World Cup, Betts has approached each opportunity with a calm assurance that has translated into impact well beyond the box score. Rather than chasing individual numbers, she has embraced the demands of playing within one of the deepest rosters in youth basketball.
“
I am thinking about the amazing USA players who have worn these numbers before
“It’s just amazing to be part of the USA U19 Women’s Basketball legacy,” Betts said earlier this year in Brno. “I am thinking about the amazing USA players who have worn these numbers before as we try to now add to that history.”
That sense of responsibility has been evident in how she plays. Betts has controlled the paint through efficient scoring, strong rebounding and disciplined defense, while remaining composed when defenses collapse around her.
“It is great to see how we compare against people that we don’t get to see much in competition,” she added. “You really learn a lot about yourself in these games.”
Team-first impact
In a system built on balance and depth, Betts has focused on doing what the team needs most – whether that means finishing plays inside, protecting the rim, or making the extra pass when double teams arrive.
Betts was excited to hopefully win the title and have some great memories in Brno with all of her friends and teammates. And that’s exactly what they did.
“We’re all really, really close,” she said.
That mindset has allowed her influence to extend across both ends of the floor, reinforcing why she is viewed as one of the most complete post prospects of her generation.
A family connection to the game
Basketball has always been central to Betts’ life. Her older sister, Lauren Betts, previously won gold at the same age group, while their family’s shared passion continues to shape their journeys.
Lauren won gold in Debrecen four years ago
“It’s a very common topic for us – basketball connects us all,” Betts explained. “We’re really, really lucky to have that, and to be able to talk about all our different things.”
That bond is strengthened by healthy competition.
“We’re all very competitive too, so it always ends up being about who’s best at this and who’s best at that,” she laughed. “But at the end of the day, we’re very supportive of each other.”
Looking ahead
The next chapter has seen Sienna line up alongside her sister at UCLA. After recovering from an injury, Sienna made her collegiate debut on December 17 and scored 5 points against Cal Poly. Her next game, she reached double-digits and scored 14 points against Long Beach State.
Just before the New Year, she recorded 5 points and 4 boards in an important win against Ohio State.
Her approach remains unchanged – grounded in legacy, relationships and the pursuit of collective success.
Calm under pressure and clear in purpose, Sienna Betts continues to show that she is not just built for the moment, but for what comes next in the international game.
You might like this:
Sienna Betts’ brilliance in Brno: a portrait of poise and power
FIBA
Rec Sports
Marblehead sports moments of 2025
With 365 days to look back on, there’s no way anybody can remember every single event that took place in a given calendar year. But nonetheless, as a newspaper, we attempt to chronicle such a project in 600 words or less, give or take a couple of hundred, for the year’s final edition or the beginning of a new one. If, by chance, I missed an event in the following prose, email me at jmcconnell@marbleheadnews.net, and I’ll make sure to include it in the next edition of the Marblehead Current on Jan. 7.

Running whiz Nate Assa completes senior year with state, regional titles; All-American honors
MHS senior track captain Nate Assa, currently starring as a freshman on the Purdue University track teams, had unparalleled success throughout his final year as a Magician athlete.
Assa started off his remarkable run to national glory during the All-State Meet of Champions at the Reggie Lewis Athletic Center in Roxbury on Feb. 22. It’s where he won the two-mile in 9:05.3. One week later on March 1 back at the Lewis complex, he secured the All-New England championship with a personal best time of 9:04.60. A couple of weeks later at the New Balance Indoor Track National High School Meet in Allston, he ran a 14:32 5K to finish sixth, which earned him a spot on the All-American team.
In early May, Assa received an invite to run against his national peers once again, this time outdoors in Amherst, New Hampshire. He placed ninth in the mile there with a personal best time of 4:15.21.
Pretty much one month later on June 5 at Fitchburg State University, Assa (9:14.52) conquered the state for the second straight season in the two mile, and the regional meet followed in New Britian, Connecticut on June 14, where he secured that title again in the 3,200 meters, crossing the finish line with a personal best of 9:04.57, while running that distance. He was then off to the New Balance National Outdoor Meet in Philadelphia on June 19, and at the end of that day, he took home the silver medal after completing the 5,000 Franklin Field course in 14:25.19, which was also a personal best for that distance. In a space of only three months, the Marblehead two-miler was able to accumulate two state crowns and two regional conquests, while finishing among the Top 6 twice nationally after running slightly longer distances. There’s no doubt that Nate’s streak of successful outcomes won’t be duplicated anytime soon.

Athletic complex named after former athletic director, coaching legend
In late July, the Marblehead High School athletic complex that includes Piper Field was renamed to honor former athletic director and football coach Alex Kulevich for his many contributions that he made to the program over the years. Kulevich and his family were on hand for the dedication.
MHS girls basketball team plays at the TD Garden
On Saturday, Jan.11, coach Paul Moran’s squad was invited to participate in the Lawson Invitational Tournament, held annually at the TD Garden in memory of Andrew James Lawson, a Norwell native, who passed away in 2018 at the young age of 27 after a two-year battle with cancer. But that’s only half the story. Andrew was also a Down’s Syndrome victim, but he never let it stop him from participating in sports at an early age. He was a three-sport athlete at Norwell High School, and after graduation he then became a coach of its boys soccer and basketball teams. He was also a Special Olympics athlete. Upon his death, his family set up a foundation in his name that promotes inclusion and support for individuals with intellectual and developmental disabilities, and this Garden tournament every year heightens awareness of the cause. By the way, Moran’s club defeated its Northeastern Conference rival Saugus, 39-36 on the fabled parquet Celtics floor. It was just one of many games there on that day in early January.

Coach steps up to save season
When Hadley Woodfin resigned as head coach of the MHS girls co-op hockey team last December, there was concern that the season might have to be cancelled until Jon Strzempek, the boys JV coach, stepped up to become its interim head coach in early January. They finished the year with a 4-15-1 record and plenty of promise for future success.
In early April, athletic director Kent Wheeler took the interim tag off Strzempek, and proceeded to make him the team’s permanent head coach.

MHS swim team wins 24th NEC title under Guertin’s watch
Since 1989, the high school swim program has had just one leader, and she is the legendary Sue Guertin. Last February, she once again guided her Magicians in the pool to another Northeastern Conference championship. It was the 24th title in Sue’s coaching career at the high school. For the record, the team went undefeated last winter with a 6-0 record.
Best of the rest for 2025
After finishing up with an 8-0-1 record, the girls indoor track team shared the indoor NEC title with perennial powerhouse Peabody…
Marblehead Youth Basketball Association sixth grade traveling team won its second straight Cape Ann League title after beating Lynnfield at Salem High School, 52-47…
The Marblehead Little League Softball 11-year-old all-star team avenged the 2024 loss to Peabody to win this year’s District 16 title going away, 16-1. Pitcher Tatum Cole led the way by throwing a no-hitter to help secure the easy win…
The 1985 Marblehead High School baseball team, coached by Roger Tuveson, celebrated the 40th anniversary of its state championship….
Stefan Shepard for sports and Charlotte “Charlie” Roszell for arts were this year’s recipients of the Sterny’s Way Scholarships, named after David Stern, longtime youth sports coaching legend, who was also a strong supporter of the Arts. He passed away in 2010. The scholarships were established in his name in 2019….
The Hockey Headers began their season earlier this month with two games against NEC rival Winthrop at the Herb Brooks Arena in Lake Placid, New York, the site of the gold medal-winning 1980 U.S. Olympic men’s hockey team’s Miracle on Ice success story. Despite losing both games, it was definitely an experience that these Marblehead boys will never forget.

Related
-
Motorsports3 weeks agoSoundGear Named Entitlement Sponsor of Spears CARS Tour Southwest Opener
-
NIL3 weeks agoDeSantis Talks College Football, Calls for Reforms to NIL and Transfer Portal · The Floridian
-
Sports2 weeks ago#11 Volleyball Practices, Then Meets Media Prior to #2 Kentucky Match
-
Motorsports2 weeks agoNascar legal saga ends as 23XI, Front Row secure settlement
-
Motorsports2 weeks agoSunoco to sponsor No. 8 Ganassi Honda IndyCar in multi-year deal
-
Sports2 weeks agoMaine wraps up Fall Semester with a win in Black Bear Invitational
-
NIL3 weeks agoEd Orgeron: Paying players via NIL would only require a ‘minor adjustment’
-
Rec Sports2 weeks agoWNBA’s Caitlin Clark, Angel Reese and Paige Bueckers in NC, making debut for national team at USA camp at Duke
-
Motorsports3 weeks ago
NASCAR, 23XI Racing, Front Row Motorsports announce settlement of US monopoly suit | MLex
-
Sports3 weeks agoHope College Tops MIAA Commissioner’s Cup Fall Update





