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April Foolin', Open Oarlocks, and a Dead Head

row2k went coast-to-coast to cover all the rowing last week, and saw funny stuff all over. Let’s Recap. First, An Early April PSA from row2k Some folks may have been caught out on Tuesday of this week, but always check the date on the really crazy news, folks: Because ‘Rebranding row “2” k: UI and […]

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April Foolin', Open Oarlocks, and a Dead Head

row2k went coast-to-coast to cover all the rowing last week, and saw funny stuff all over. Let’s Recap.

First, An Early April PSA from row2k

Some folks may have been caught out on Tuesday of this week, but always check the date on the really crazy news, folks:

Because ‘Rebranding row “2” k: UI and Logo Redesign Launch Today’ is definitely a gag if Today = 4/1, especially if the font is Papyrus (IYKYK).

We won’t name the folks who texted us having fell for it, but the 2k in row2k is here to stay, even if there is a one-off 1500m Olympic Regatta on the horizon.

Forgot to Check Something, Fellas?

Unchecked oarlocks? That never ends well:

Though as far as we can tell, this crew pulled it off (they finished the race, in second), but one rower wasn’t as lucky on the Basin:

Whither & Whether the Weather

What a different a few hundred miles can make. Here’s more of what folks braved in Boston on Saturday…

…and what they basked in down in Princeton same day:

And that’s without even getting into all the folks beachin’ it with really warm weather in San Diego and Sarasota this past weekend.

Historic Dead Head?

A typo nearly as epic as the result here:

The photo finish itself was the Photo of the Day on Monday and since the Lake Carnegie finish line doesn’t have a fancy FinishLynx camera that does the to-the-1/1000th pics that we’ve gotten used to at big regattas, the result stayed “dead headed”–but goprincetontigers.com did fix the typo.

Here’s the finish so check out the epic closing, with the #1 ‘Broascasters’ in the latest poll on the call:

Stakeboater Antics

A long day in the SoCal sun + eight minute centers + creative kids = shenanigans.

Like this ‘Karate Kid’ homage (full Crane kick sequence here–he landed it!)

And Rock-Paper-Scissors, natch.

Superfan Time

Hard to top the “The CrewFather” shirt we spotted last year, but custom tee-shirts is next level:

Well-played, Lindsey’s Grandad, and a tip of the cap to these pro regatta-watchers: they waited in the shade of the finish tower all morning and hit the beach right in time for Ava’s race.

Whole Lotta Striping Going On

Stripes are IN for the light men it seems.

But this guy might just take the W in this department

Did Someone Say row2k?

TFW you are sitting around talking about your favorite row2k photo, and the row2k guy standing next to you takes another one for you.

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Photo Pun of the Week

Photo Bomb of the Week

So much for this great coxing photo we took just in case this BC coxswain ever volunteers to do an In The Driver’s Seat column.

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To be fair, the 2 seat didn’t have much else to do since, like most ports in the Sarasota crosswind this weekend, she had a lot of time to sit there while the rower in front of used her oar to keep the bow pointed.

Friday was especially breezy, and some crews were sculling it around with two or even three blades to stay straight:

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Safe to say, it was rough on rowers and trash cans alike:

And, sad to say, at least one team tent did not make the trip home.

No School Like Old School

Ron Chen was sporting an EARC official’s hat at the racing on Carnegie that has to go back at least 40 years.

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Starboards Rule!

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Even on the port side, apparently–pretty clever placement by Mr. Rose ’75.

Stay Comfy My Friends

The kids were breaking out the beanbags at the Flicks.

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And it’s hard to beat the inflatable comfort enjoyed by the Crew Classic stakeboaters.

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Always HOCR Ready?

We’ve seen plenty of boats with old Head Of The Charles numbers on the deck or Crew Classic labels on the gunnels, but still wearing your HOCR number on your uni in March?

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That’s hard core.

Sending Mixed Messages?

These two…not quite on the same page, we guess.

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We’ll have to ask them what was up (or down) with that…maybe we can report back in next week’s Recap.

College Sports

Learfield Directors’ Cup final 2025 Division I standings revealed

Texas won the 2024-25 Learfield Directors’ Cup Division I title as the top-ranking team in the final standings released Thursday by the National Association of Collegiate Directors of Athletics. The award is annually given to the colleges and universities in the United States with the most success in collegiate athletics. The NACDA examines a school’s collective […]

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Texas won the 2024-25 Learfield Directors’ Cup Division I title as the top-ranking team in the final standings released Thursday by the National Association of Collegiate Directors of Athletics. The award is annually given to the colleges and universities in the United States with the most success in collegiate athletics.

The NACDA examines a school’s collective athletic success, pulling from 19 of its different athletic programs and scoring them. Women’s Basketball, soccer, volleyball, men’s basketball and baseball each must be included as five of the 19 programs represented for all schools.

Texas has now won the award four times. USC finished in second place while Stanford came in third. To check out which schools finished in the Top 25, look below.

1. Texas (1,255.25)

Texas softball
Texas softball (Brett Rojo-Imagn Images)

Texas’ cumulative score of 1,255.25 couldn’t be topped this year. The school reeled in national championships in men’s swimming and diving and softball. Additionally, the Longhorns racked up five third-place finishes (football, women’s basketball, women’s swimming and diving, women’s rowing and men’s tennis).

Texas put up points in each of the five sports that all schools are evaluated on. Moreover, the school put up points in the 14 other evaluated sports.

2. USC (1,253.75)

USC trailed just behind Texas in the final rankings. The school finished with 1,253.75 points compared to Texas’ 1,255.25.

The school’s national titles in men’s indoor track and field and men’s outdoor track and field helped it compete for the No. 1 spot. Alas, the school failed to score in one of the five main sports, ultimately missing out on some key points.

Stanford didn’t necessarily win as many championships as USC or Texas, but it was competitive in almost every sport. The Cardinal had 14 Top 10 finishes among the 16 total sports in which they scored.

In fairness, they did secure two titles, one in women’s rowing and the other in women’s water polo. Stanford finished with 1,251.0 points, just four points shy of the top spot.

North Carolina women's soccer
© Bob Donnan-Imagn Images

North Carolina was the second ACC team to finish in the top five, and it earned its spot. UNC won national titles in women’s soccer and women’s lacrosse.

To pile on, the Tar Heels also scored in all five required sports. UNC fans had plenty to cheer for this past year in Chapel Hill.

5. UCLA (1,149.00)

UCLA posted 1,149.0 total points in the competition, almost 100 points fewer than Texas’ total. However, the Bruins have nothing to hang their heads about.

UCLA had a massively successful year, winning a national championship in men’s water polo. Further, the school had a pair of runner-up finishes in women’s gymnastics and men’s volleyball.

For the third consecutive season, Tennessee placed in the top 10 in the Learfield Directors’ Cup. This year, all 20 sports at Tennessee reached their respective postseasons for just the second time in school history.

In total, Tennessee had five sports post top-five finishes. No Tennessee program outperformed softball, which made a run to the NCAA Tournament semifinals.

The Florida Gators celebrate after winning the national championship game of the Final Four of the 2025 NCAA Tournament at the Alamodome. (Scott Wachter-Imagn Images)
Scott Wachter-Imagn Images

Florida is the only program to finish among the nation’s Top 10 in each of the last 41 national all-sports standings. This year, Florida men’s basketball stole the spotlight, winning its third national title in program history.

Alas, the MBB program was far from Florida’s only successful team this past year. Florida had nine programs finish in the nation’s top 10 for their respective sports.

All 19 of Ohio State’s sports scored points in the competition, an obvious recipe for a high final ranking. No program outshone Ohio State’s football team, which captured its first national championship since 2014.

Of course, other Ohio State programs deserve recognition as well. Ohio State’s women’s hockey team was the national runner-up and the school’s men’s soccer team finished third nationally.

A ninth-place finish isn’t a bad way to cap off your first year in the SEC. Oklahoma adapted to its new environment masterfully this past year.

Oklahoma’s women’s gymnastics team was a standout, earning 100 points by winning its seventh national title and third in the last four years. The school’s men’s gymnastics team did its part too, finishing third in the country.

10. Duke (1,010.00)

Duke rounded out the top 10 this year. The Blue Devils scored some serious points in women’s lacrosse and women’s tennis for finishing fifth in the country in both.

Not to mention, Duke’s men’s basketball team was one of the best in the nation this past season, and made an electrifying run to the Final Four. Duke’s baseball team also had a notable campaign, reaching the College World Series.

11. Arkansas
12. Virginia
13. Michigan
14. Georgia
15. Texas A&M
16. Penn State
17. LSU
18. Oregon
19. Auburn
20. NC State
21. Nebraska
22. Alabama
23. South Carolina
24. California
25. BYU

The Learfield Directors’ Cup final rankings don’t stop there either. Here’s a link to check out how the entire field fared in the fierce competition.



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2024-25 Parade of Champions | Michigan High School Athletic Association

Contact: Geoff Kimmerly517.332.5046 or [email protected] EAST LANSING, Mich. – June 26 – A total of 93 schools won one or more of the 130 Michigan High School Athletic Association team championships awarded during the 2024-25 school sports year, with 31 teams winning the first MHSAA titles in their respective sports. A total of 23 schools won two or […]

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Contact: Geoff Kimmerly
517.332.5046 or [email protected]

EAST LANSING, Mich. – June 26 – A total of 93 schools won one or more of the 130 Michigan High School Athletic Association team championships awarded during the 2024-25 school sports year, with 31 teams winning the first MHSAA titles in their respective sports.

A total of 23 schools won two or more championships this school year, paced by Marquette’s eight earned in girls and boys cross country, boys golf, boys skiing, girls and boys swimming & diving, boys tennis and boys track & field. Detroit Country Day and Northville were next with four Finals championships apiece, and Detroit Catholic Central, East Grand Rapids, Newberry and Pontiac Notre Dame Prep all won three titles.

Winning two titles in 2024-25 were Ann Arbor Greenhills, Belleville, Clarkston Everest Collegiate, Farmington Hills Mercy, Fowler, Goodrich, Grand Rapids Catholic Central, Hancock, Hartland, Jackson Lumen Christi, Kalamazoo Christian, Negaunee, Orchard Lake St. Mary’s, Pickford, Saline and Traverse City St. Francis.

A total of 51 champions were repeat winners from 2023-24. A total of 28 teams won championships for at least the third-straight season, while 14 teams extended title streaks to at least four consecutive seasons. The Lowell wrestling program owns the longest title streak at 11 seasons, followed by Dundee wrestling’s eight consecutive titles and runs of six straight Finals victories by the Detroit Catholic Central ice hockey team and Marquette’s boys cross country and boys swimming & diving programs.

Sixteen of the MHSAA’s 28 team championship tournaments are unified, involving teams from the Upper and Lower Peninsulas, while separate competition to determine title winners in both Peninsulas is conducted in remaining sports.

For a sport-by-sport listing of MHSAA champions for 2024-25, click here (PDF).

The MHSAA is a private, not-for-profit corporation of voluntary membership by more than 1,500 public and private senior high schools and junior high/middle schools which exists to develop common rules for athletic eligibility and competition. No government funds or tax dollars support the MHSAA, which was the first such association nationally to not accept membership dues or tournament entry fees from schools. Member schools which enforce these rules are permitted to participate in MHSAA tournaments, which attract more than 1.4 million spectators each year. 

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Women's Soccer Releases 2025 Schedule

Story Links HIGH POINT, N.C. – Head Coach Aaron McGuiness and the High Point University women’s soccer team have announced the 2025 schedule on Thursday afternoon. Head Coach Aaron McGuiness: “We are excited for this season. Our non-conference has a lot of competitive games that will set us up well for a conference schedule” The […]

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Women's Soccer Releases 2025 Schedule

HIGH POINT, N.C. – Head Coach Aaron McGuiness and the High Point University women’s soccer team have announced the 2025 schedule on Thursday afternoon.

Head Coach Aaron McGuiness: “We are excited for this season. Our non-conference has a lot of competitive games that will set us up well for a conference schedule”

The Panthers welcome eight teams to Vert Stadium, hosting one NCAA Tournament team from a year ago, while traveling to eight road contests.

Just four days into the month of August, the Panthers will open with an exhibition game at Queens University, before heading to Appalachian State on August 9 for its last exhibition before the regular season starts.

On August 14, HPU will host the Hokies of Virginia Tech, who a year ago were in the quarterfinals of the NCAA Tournament. The Panthers will look for their first win against the ACC opponent to open the 2025 campaign at Vert Stadium.

HPU will hit the road for the first time on August 17 to match up with Western Carolina, before returning to High Point to welcome College of Charleston on August 24.

The Panthers will wrap up the month of August playing two games in four days. A meeting in Buies Creek with ex Big South foe Campbell University on August 28, before returning home to face Elon University on the last day of the month.

A visit cross town to UNC Greensboro is how HPU will start the month of September as the Panthers will take on the Spartans on the fourth. UNC Wilmington will head west to High Point on September 7 for a visit to Vert Stadium, before the Panthers will hit the road for their last non-conference game.

A trip to Carrol County, Georgia for a meeting with the University of West Georgia on September 14, before Big South play starts with a rematch of the Big South Championship game.

HPU will head to Spartanburg to match up with reigning Big South Champions, USC Upstate on September 24, before returning home to host the Lancers of Longwood University on the first of October.

Back on the road, but this time heading to the coast of South Carolina to meet with the Bucs of Charleston Southern on October 4. A Saturday match up with Presbyterian College on October 11 at Vert Stadium, ahead of a rematch with the Highlanders on the road on October 15. Last time out, HPU defeated Radford in the Big South semifinals off an Olimpico goal to send them to the title game.
 
The Panthers will wrap up their regular season home games as they host UNC Asheville on October 18, followed by Gardner-Webb coming to town on the 25th. The regular season will come to a close after a trip to Rock Hil to face Winthrop University of October 29. 

The 2025 Big South Tournament will be held at the Mecklenberg Sportsplex in Matthews, North Carolina. The semifinals will be on Thursday, November 6, followed by the championship on Sunday, November 9.
 

#GoHPU x #RollThers

 
 
 
 
 
 

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A draft-day slide for James Hagens would be best-case scenario for Bruins

Sitting at No. 7 overall on the draft order, the Bruins should be positioned to add a talented center prospect on Friday evening. But the consensus top prospect entering the 2024-25 season in Hagens? No shot … right? Get Starting Point A guide through the most important stories of the morning, delivered Monday through Friday. […]

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Sitting at No. 7 overall on the draft order, the Bruins should be positioned to add a talented center prospect on Friday evening.

But the consensus top prospect entering the 2024-25 season in Hagens? No shot … right?

It hasn’t taken long for that sentiment to change.

Once deemed the crown jewel of the 2025 Draft class, Hagens has now been leapfrogged by other blue-chip talents such as defenseman Matthew Schaefer and forward Michael Misa.

But Hagens’s drop on the draft board might go beyond just the top two perches.

In his last 2025 mock draft, TSN insider Bob McKenzie — using insight from 10 different NHL scouts — tabbed Hagens as the No. 7 prospect in this class.

McKenzie’s TSN colleague Craig Button has Hagens listed as the No. 8 prospect, while The Athletic’s Scott Wheeler has Boston selecting the BC star with the No. 7 pick in his final mock draft.

“Everyone I’ve talked to in the last week or so seems to think [Jake] O’Brien/[Brady] Martin/Hagens don’t get past the Flyers and Bruins at 6-7, and yet one of the top eight guys has to go outside the top seven,” Wheeler wrote. “I’ve also heard the Bruins have looked into moving up.

“I do think it’s interesting that the Flyers and Bruins seem to like the same three guys and pick back-to-back, though, and Hagens just makes so much sense for the Bruins as that high-end piece to build around if he’s there.”

Hagens is seemingly everything an NHL team would covet in a top-six, play-driving center in today’s NHL.

The 18-year-old pivot is dangerous in transition as one of the top skaters in this draft class. Even though he doesn’t have the same heft as 6-foot-5 Roger McQueen or the pugnacious approach as Martin, Hagens’s hockey IQ, hands, and puck skills make him a lethal playmaker in tight spaces.

Even if earlier comparisons to Jack Hughes might have to be tempered, the Long Island native is cut from the same cloth as slighter, uber-skilled forwards such as Clayton Keller or Logan Cooley.

In other words … a player that a talent-deficient Bruins roster would love to add to their pipeline if fortune falls their way.

“He was a key component of the US National Team Development Program and a driver there, and was able to step into Boston College and play on their top line with some really good players,” Bruins director of amateur scouting Ryan Nadeau said of Hagens during the NHL Scouting Combine. “Watching him and the way he skates and the way he can attack open ice, and the way he can create space, and he’s got such good skill and vision, and he’s such a good driver. It was impressive to watch him this year.

“His game has really come along. He’s gotten stronger, and it helped to be in college and take on that challenge. Even after school to now, he’s worked really hard to put on some extra muscle. And getting to know James and spending a little bit of time with him, he comes from a really great family.

“He gets to play with his brother at Boston College. Both his parents are eighth-grade teachers. He’s just a really, really impressive kid. He’s got a young sister who’s a pretty good hockey player, too, and just a good family dynamic. And just spending a little bit of time with him, it’s been good to see him off the ice and get to know him.”

If Hagens is available at No. 7, the Bruins would welcome the opportunity to add such a high-end center prospect to their system — with the absence of a blue-chip talent down the middle standing as the top impediment toward Boston reasserting itself as a contender in due time.

Injuries and off-the-ice concerns have held no weight over why Hagens has slipped in recent draft projections.

Rather, the knock against Hagens lies more in his 5-11 frame and the production he showcased as a freshman at BC.

At first glance, Hagens was a key cog on a strong Eagles squad — closing out his first year against Hockey East competition with 37 points (11 goals, 26 assists) in 37 games.

Perhaps Hagens’s inability to replicate the video-game-like stat lines of freshman phenoms Jack Eichel (71 points in 40 games), Adam Fantilli (65 points in 36 games), and Macklin Celebrini (64 points in 38 games) has skewered some of the sentiment about just how elite of a prospect Hagens might be.

But comparing Hagens to other ‘25 draft picks such as Misa (134 points in 63 games) should ring hollow, given the sizable step-up in competition that Hagens was routinely battling against this past year against players three to five years older than him.

The concerns over whether or not Hagens’s size could have him developing into more of a skilled 2C than a franchise centerman are more valid — although his ceiling would seemingly be higher than other potential options at No. 7 like Martin or McQueen.

Even if one might have a gripe with Hagens only submitting a point-per-game season as a college freshman at BC, his body of work for years now map out someone who should be an electrifying offensive player at the next level.

During the 2023-24 season, Hagens racked up 102 points (39 goals, 63 assists) in 58 games with the U.S. U18 National Development Program — a higher scoring total than submitted by Ryan Leonard (94), Phil Kessel (98 points), and Matthew Tkachuk (95 points) during their U18 campaigns.

The only players in that program to equal or surpass that in a single season? Patrick Kane, Cole Eiserman, Clayton Keller, Jack Hughes, Auston Matthews, Will Smith, and Gabe Perreault.

Hagens also set a scoring record at the 2024 World U18 Championships with 22 points (nine goals, 13 assists) in just seven games, breaking the mark set by Nikita Kucherov.

He may be a bit undersized, but he has a yearslong track record of decimating opposing defenses.

Had the Bruins moved up in the draft lottery and picked first or second overall, the case can be made that Hagens would fall behind the likes of Schaefer and Misa.

But at No. 7 overall? If a player with his potential is sliding that far, the Bruins shouldn’t think twice about adding such a talent to their organization.

“I love winning. I will do anything to win,” Hagens said. “Something that’s helped me get to the point where I am today is just how hard I’ve been able to work my whole life. Nothing’s ever come easy. I’ve had to work for everything that I’ve ever gotten before, and that’s something I’m super grateful for.

“That’s something that’s just within my family, something that I was raised up, taught from my parents and my coaches. So, going into those meetings just really expressing how hard I compete, and how badly I want to be on a team and hopefully win a Stanley Cup one day.”


Conor Ryan can be reached at conor.ryan@globe.com.





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Arizona GymCats head coach John Court extended through 2028

There’s no way to describe Arizona gymnastics’ 2025 season except highly successful. The team produced the Big 12 co-Specialist of the Year, the WCGA Regional Assistant Coaches of the Year, and the Big 12 Coach of the Year. Over two months after concluding his season, that coach of the year has signed an extension to […]

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There’s no way to describe Arizona gymnastics’ 2025 season except highly successful. The team produced the Big 12 co-Specialist of the Year, the WCGA Regional Assistant Coaches of the Year, and the Big 12 Coach of the Year. Over two months after concluding his season, that coach of the year has signed an extension to continue leading the GymCats.

Arizona Athletics announced that John Court has been extended through the 2028 season on Thursday afternoon. His current contract was signed in 2023 and was due to expire in 2026.

Court has been at Arizona for 26 years. He served as an assistant under both Bill Ryden and Tabitha Yim. He finally took over the program after Yim left just before the 2017-18 school year. After serving as the interim head coach for most of the season, he was given the permanent title in March 2018.

Court’s teams improved each year and had a breakout season this year. The GymCats finished second in their first season in the Big 12. Their only conference losses came to Utah in both the regular season and at the conference championships.

The team then accomplished another first. They advanced to the NCAA regional finals for the first time since the postseason format changed in 2019, pulling off an upset over Georgia to take second in their session. They also defeated Arizona State for the third time this season. It made them one of the last 16 teams standing.

Court’s extension follows the announcement of assistant Kylie Kratchwell’s promotion to associate head coach on June 18. She shares that title with Court’s longtime assistant Taylor Spears. The pair joined first-year assistant Shelby Martinez in earning the WCGA’s regional staff honors for the South Central Region.

Lead photo courtesy of Arizona Athletics



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Arizona gymnastics coach John Court signs 2-year extension

Arizona continues to lock up head coaches who’ve enjoyed recent success at the UA. The latest to sign a contract extension is gymnastics coach John Court. Court inked a two-year deal that will keep him in Tucson through 2028, the school announced Thursday. Court became the third UA head coach to sign a new deal […]

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Arizona continues to lock up head coaches who’ve enjoyed recent success at the UA.

The latest to sign a contract extension is gymnastics coach John Court. Court inked a two-year deal that will keep him in Tucson through 2028, the school announced Thursday.

Court became the third UA head coach to sign a new deal this week, following baseball coach Chip Hale and women’s tennis coach Ryan Stotland.

“We’re proud of the progress under Coach Court’s leadership and look forward to building on that momentum in the years ahead,” UA athletic director Desireé Reed-Francois said in a news release. “Under his direction, our gymnastics student-athletes are excelling academically with a 3.8 GPA this spring, serving our community with heart and delivering record-setting performances — including a Sweet 16 appearance for the first time since the current format began in 2019. This extension reflects our belief in the program’s trajectory and the values it represents.”

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Arizona gymnastics coach John Court, right, and his team point to the crowd while thanking them for coming to the meet before the winner was announced in the final home meet against Sacramento State at McKale Center on March 10, 2022.




Arizona finished in second place in its first season in the Big 12, earning Court the conference’s Coach of the Year award. The GymCats made the NCAA Tournament for the sixth time in Court’s seven seasons. The only time they didn’t make it was 2020, when the season was cut short because of the pandemic.

“I’m grateful to Athletic Director Desireé Reed-Francois, President Dr. Suresh Garimella and sport administrator Kristen Arquilla for their continued trust and support,” said Court, who previously served as a UA assistant and has been part of Arizona gymnastics since 1999.

“It’s an honor to lead this program, and I’m excited to build on the momentum of last season. Our team is committed to competing at the highest level, excelling academically and making a positive impact in the community.”

Contact sports reporter/columnist Michael Lev at mlev@tucson.com. On X (Twitter): @michaeljlev. On Bluesky: @michaeljlev.bsky.social



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