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Texas hiring Xavier head coach Sean Miller after firing Rodney Terry

The school announced Sunday it had fired Rodney Terry after nearly three seasons in charge. Terry took over as Texas’ head coach eight games into the 2022-23 season when Chris Beard was suspended and ultimately fired for a domestic violence accusation that ultimately resulted in dropped charges. Texas athletic director Chris Del Conte considered hiring […]

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Texas hiring Xavier head coach Sean Miller after firing Rodney Terry

Sean Miller is replacing Rodney Terry as men's head basketball coach at Texas. (Photo by Dylan Buell/Getty Images)

The school announced Sunday it had fired Rodney Terry after nearly three seasons in charge. Terry took over as Texas’ head coach eight games into the 2022-23 season when Chris Beard was suspended and ultimately fired for a domestic violence accusation that ultimately resulted in dropped charges.

Texas athletic director Chris Del Conte considered hiring Miller two years ago but Terry’s run to the Elite Eight convinced him otherwise.During that season, Arizona vacated wins from earlier in his tenure because of the FBI’s corruption investigation into college basketball. As part of that investigation, Miller was accused of being involved in then-illicit payments to make sure DeAndre Ayton went to Arizona instead of Kansas.Texas went 19-15 overall in 2024-25 and was 6-12 in the SEC. That came after a 21-13 season and a No. 7 seed in the 2024 NCAA tournament a year ago in the Longhorns’ final season in the Big 12. Texas beat Colorado State in the first round of the tournament but then lost by four to Tennessee in the second round.

Rodney Terry has been fired by Texas after three seasons as head coach. (David Buono/Getty Images)
The decision to move on from Terry means Texas will pay a .4 million buyout as part of the five-year deal he signed after that Elite Eight run.The Longhorns were 7-1 in 2022 when Terry took over as the interim coach and went on to finish second in the Big 12. After winning the Big 12 tournament title in dominating fashion over Kansas, the Longhorns were a No. 2 seed in the NCAA tournament before losing 88-81 to Miami in the Elite Eight.Not long after news of Terry’s firing broke, the Austin American-Statesman reported that Xavier’s Sean Miller will be the Longhorns’ new coach. The school then announced the move officially on Monday afternoon.

AUSTIN, TX - MARCH 01: Texas Longhorns head coach Rodney Terry holds his head down in frustration during the SEC college basketball game between Texas Longhorns and Georgia Bulldogs on March 1, 2025, at Moody Center in Austin, Texas.  (Photo by David Buono/Icon Sportswire via Getty Images)

That tournament run was enough to get Terry promoted to be the team’s permanent coach. But Texas couldn’t sustain that success, even though the school signed five-star prospect Tre Johnson ahead of the 2024-25 season. Johnson was the team’s leading scorer with nearly 20 points per game.

Arizona made the NCAA tournament seven times in Miller’s tenure, but the Wildcats missed the tournament in both 2019 and 2021. At Xavier, the Musketeers have made the NCAA tournament in six of Miller’s eight seasons and lost to Illinois in the first round on Friday night after beating Texas.Texas scraped its way into the 2025 NCAA tournament as one of the last teams in the field. The Longhorns were a somewhat surprising inclusion in the field, but lost to Miller’s Xavier on Wednesday night in the First Four.

At Texas, Miller will be tasked with succeeding at a resource-rich program where big success has been hard to come by over the past two decades. Texas hasn’t been back to the Final Four since 2003 and has lost on the first weekend of the tournament 13 times since then. That Elite Eight trip in 2023 was just the fourth time Texas had advanced to the Sweet 16 since the 2003 team led by T.J. Ford fell to eventual national champion Syracuse in the semifinals.

The Longhorns fell 86-80 after leading by eight at halftime. Texas led by 10 with 13:04 to go, but Xavier chipped away at the lead and moved ahead with just over five minutes remaining.

“I am so appreciative to have served the University of Texas and our men’s basketball program for 13 seasons,” Terry said in a statement. “It was a dream of mine to be the head coach of the Longhorns, and I’ve been able to live that dream. I want to thank all of our coaches and current and former players who not only helped us win a lot of games, but more importantly represented this great university in a first-class manner.”Miller just finished the third season of his second stint at Xavier. He returned to the school ahead of the 2022-23 season after a year out of college basketball. Miller was at Arizona from 2009 through 2021, but was fired at the end of the 2021 season.A disappointing first season in the SEC has led Texas on what appears to be a very brief search for a new men’s basketball coach.

Sean Miller is replacing Rodney Terry as men’s head basketball coach at Texas. (Photo by Dylan Buell/Getty Images)

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Adam Schefter joins star studded golf outing to raise NIL funds for Michigan athletes

ESPN Senior Analyst and guru of the breaking news story, Adam Schefter, is an unabashed supporter of his alma mater. Schefter graduated from the University of Michigan in 1989, majoring in journalism, and has been an avid supporter of the university, its athletes, and the sports programs ever since. Schefter has supported causes to better […]

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ESPN Senior Analyst and guru of the breaking news story, Adam Schefter, is an unabashed supporter of his alma mater. Schefter graduated from the University of Michigan in 1989, majoring in journalism, and has been an avid supporter of the university, its athletes, and the sports programs ever since. Schefter has supported causes to better facilities and health programs for athletes while defending his school fervently on his ESPN platform.

Recently, Schefter was spotted at the Champions Circle golf outing with men’s basketball head coach Dusty May. The Champions Circle is a collective founded by former Michigan alumni who are prominent business leaders in their respective fields. The collective played a critical role in the transition of Bryce Underwood from LSU to Ann Arbor, and they also provide mentorship and financial guidance to athletes who are landing multi-million dollar deals through NIL.

The annual golf outing pairs celebrities, alums, coaches, and athletes to raise money and awareness for NIL and mentorship opportunities across Michigan sports. The newest five-star basketball commitment, Trey McKenney, was also on hand with his new teammates at the outing, and one can only imagine the amount of money that was raised for the athletes and the collective. The financial and star power of the Michigan alum base were out in full force once again, showcasing the unique nature and influence of the University of Michigan.

– Enjoy more Michigan Wolverines coverage on Michigan Wolverines On SI –

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Fisk University women’s gymnastics team, the first at an HBCU, to stop competing after 2026

NASHVILLE (AP) — Fisk University’s bold experiment in women’s gymnastics is coming to an end. The school has announced it is shuttering the program at the end of the 2026 season. Fisk made history in 2023 when it became the first historically Black college or university to launch a women’s artistic gymnastics team. Advertisement Fisk’s […]

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NASHVILLE (AP) — Fisk University’s bold experiment in women’s gymnastics is coming to an end.

The school has announced it is shuttering the program at the end of the 2026 season. Fisk made history in 2023 when it became the first historically Black college or university to launch a women’s artistic gymnastics team.

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Fisk’s ambitious move to start the program played a hand three years later in the athletic department choosing to discontinue it. Scheduling became challenging because gymnastics is the only sport at Fisk that does not compete against other HBCU schools, forcing the program to get creative and requiring the team to travel longer distances than the university’s other sports.

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

The school said it will work with the affected athletes and coaches to ensure a “seamless transition.”

The announcement came just weeks after Fisk standout Morgan Price — a three-time All-American who became the first HBCU gymnast to record a perfect 10 — transferred to Arkansas, where she will join her older sister Frankie.

Talladega College, an HBCU in Alabama, attempted to follow in Fisk’s footsteps in 2024. That program shut down after one season due to financial concerns.

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AP sports: https://apnews.com/sports



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Fran Brown puts community first in push for NIL support

GEDDES, N.Y. (WSYR) — Bellevue Country Club was packed all day long on Monday as the Syracuse Football NIL Golf Outing started early and finished up with a dinner and auction to raise money for the football NIL fund. For Head Coach Fran Brown, however, the support he wants from the community is genuine support. […]

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GEDDES, N.Y. (WSYR) — Bellevue Country Club was packed all day long on Monday as the Syracuse Football NIL Golf Outing started early and finished up with a dinner and auction to raise money for the football NIL fund.

For Head Coach Fran Brown, however, the support he wants from the community is genuine support. He wants people to come to the games in the fall and want to give to the program in order to bring back the tradition it once had.

Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

For the latest news, weather, sports, and streaming video, head to WSYR.



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Fisk University women’s gymnastics team, the first at an HBCU, to stop competing after 2026

NASHVILLE (AP) — Fisk University’s bold experiment in women’s gymnastics is coming to an end. The school has announced it… NASHVILLE (AP) — Fisk University’s bold experiment in women’s gymnastics is coming to an end. The school has announced it is shuttering the program at the end of the 2026 season. Fisk made history in […]

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NASHVILLE (AP) — Fisk University’s bold experiment in women’s gymnastics is coming to an end. The school has announced it…

NASHVILLE (AP) — Fisk University’s bold experiment in women’s gymnastics is coming to an end.

The school has announced it is shuttering the program at the end of the 2026 season. Fisk made history in 2023 when it became the first historically Black college or university to launch a women’s artistic gymnastics team.

Fisk’s ambitious move to start the program played a hand three years later in the athletic department choosing to discontinue it. Scheduling became challenging because gymnastics is the only sport at Fisk that does not compete against other HBCU schools, forcing the program to get creative and requiring the team to travel longer distances than the university’s other sports.

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

The school said it will work with the affected athletes and coaches to ensure a “seamless transition.”

The announcement came just weeks after Fisk standout Morgan Price — a three-time All-American who became the first HBCU gymnast to record a perfect 10 — transferred to Arkansas, where she will join her older sister Frankie.

Talladega College, an HBCU in Alabama, attempted to follow in Fisk’s footsteps in 2024. That program shut down after one season due to financial concerns.

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AP sports: https://apnews.com/sports

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© 2025 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, written or redistributed.



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NCAA’s Baker: Will Congress back $2.8B settlement with antitrust protection?

Associated Press Now that the NCAA has taken care of its business, its president wants Congress to deliver. NCAA President Charlie Baker, like his predecessor a proponent of federal legislation to lock in some of the seismic changes hitting college sports, told The Associated Press on Tuesday that draft legislation circulating in Washington is what […]

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Associated Press

Now that the NCAA has taken care of its business, its president wants Congress to deliver.

NCAA President Charlie Baker, like his predecessor a proponent of federal legislation to lock in some of the seismic changes hitting college sports, told The Associated Press on Tuesday that draft legislation circulating in Washington is what the association has been asking for. Now, it’s simply a matter of passing it.

“One of the messages we got from them was, ‘Clean up your own house first, and then come talk to us,’” said Baker, a former Massachusetts governor whose political acumen was a key selling point when he was selected for the NCAA job in 2023.

The NCAA delivered, Baker said, with new rules that guarantee better post-graduate health care and scholarship protections for athletes, and then with the crown jewel of reforms — the $2.8 billion lawsuit settlement that a federal judge approved last week.

The most fundamental change from the settlement is that schools can now directly pay players through revenue-sharing.

For that to work, though, Baker and the NCAA have been lobbying for a limited form of antitrust protection that would prevent, for instance, lawsuits challenging the spending cap prescribed by the settlement, which will be $20.5 million in the first year. The Washington Post reported that draft legislation would include room for that sort of protection.

Baker suggested that antitrust exemption might also include a carve-out for eligibility rules, which is not part of the settlement but that has landed the NCAA in court as a defendant in various lawsuits challenging a long-held rule that athletes have five years to complete four seasons of eligibility.

“The consequences of this for the next generation of young people, if you play this thing out, are enormous,” Baker said. “You’re moving away from an academic calendar to sort of no calendar for college sports, and that is hugely problematic.”

Baker said the other top two priorities for the legislation are:

—A preemption of state laws that set different rules for paying players, which amounts to “competitive advantage stuff” for state legislatures seeking to give their public universities a recruiting edge.

“That’s not just an issue for the NCAA on a level-playing-field basis, it’s an issue for the conferences,” Baker said.

Greg Sankey, the commissioner of the Southeastern Conference, agrees with that, recently saying that it was not good to have a league spanning 12 states operating under 12 different laws guiding player payments and other elements of college sports.

—A ban on college athletes being deemed employees. Recently, Tennessee athletic director Danny White suggested collective bargaining for players was “the only solution.” Whether that would lead to a direct employment model is difficult to know, but Baker said he’s not the only one against it.

“This is something every student leadership group I’ve ever talked to has pretty strong feelings about,” he said. “They want to be students who play sports, they don’t want to be employees because a lot of them worry about what the consequences for their time as students will be if they’re obliged to be employees first.”

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College Hockey Inc » College Hockey to Send Select Team to 2025 Spengler Cup

Tuesday, June 10, 2025 Squad of NCAA DI Standouts to Compete in Prestigious Tourney The Spengler Cup takes place Dec. 26-31 in Davos, Switzerland. For the first time in the 102-year history of the Spengler Cup, a team of select college hockey players representing NCAA Division I hockey will compete in the prestigious men’s tournament […]

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Tuesday, June 10, 2025

Squad of NCAA DI Standouts to Compete in Prestigious Tourney


College Hockey to Send First-Ever Team to 2025 Spengler Cup
The Spengler Cup takes place Dec. 26-31 in Davos, Switzerland.

For the first time in the 102-year history of the Spengler Cup, a team of select college hockey players representing NCAA Division I hockey will compete in the prestigious men’s tournament in 2025. The joint announcement was made today by Spengler Cup Davos and the Hockey Commissioners Association (HCA), in conjunction with College Hockey Inc.

Held annually in Davos, Switzerland, since 1923, the six-team invitational tournament traditionally features club and national teams from Europe and North America. It is hosted by the Swiss professional team HC Davos each year from Dec. 26-31 at Eisstadion Davos. The University of North Dakota competed in the 1982 Spengler Cup, and the University of Minnesota participated in 1981.

The 2025 tournament will be the first time a select team representing college hockey has ever competed in the event. Officially named the U.S. Collegiate Selects, the team will be comprised of active NCAA Division I players of any nationality representing all six conferences and the Division I independent programs.

The roster, as well as the coaching and support staff, will be named at a later date.

“We couldn’t be more excited to be sending a college hockey team to participate in the Spengler Cup,” said HCA President and Hockey East Commissioner Steve Metcalf. “The players that get selected will have an unforgettable experience at the oldest club tournament in the world.”

“We are honored by the invitation to participate in the Spengler Cup, one of the most prestigious hockey events in the world,” said Sean Hogan, College Hockey Inc. Executive Director. “The opportunity to field a team of NCAA student-athletes is a testament to the elite level of play within college hockey and represents an incredible experience for everyone involved—players and staff alike.”

For more information, visit the official Spengler Cup website.



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