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Membership Conducts 129th Annual Meeting; Passes Four Amendments

The member schools of the Wisconsin Interscholastic Athletic Association passed four amendments to the Constitution, Bylaws and Rules of Eligibility­ and conducted other membership business at the 129th Annual Meeting at the Sentry Insurance Theater today. Two of the approved amendments impact the membership’s Rules of Eligibility. After voting down a similar proposal last year, […]

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Membership Conducts 129th Annual Meeting; Passes Four Amendments

The member schools of the Wisconsin Interscholastic Athletic Association passed four amendments to the Constitution, Bylaws and Rules of Eligibility­ and conducted other membership business at the 129th Annual Meeting at the Sentry Insurance Theater today.

Two of the approved amendments impact the membership’s Rules of Eligibility. After voting down a similar proposal last year, the members voted 293-108 to approve the proposed Name, Image, Likeness (NIL)?language, making Wisconsin one of more than 40 states that permit student-athletes to enter into NIL opportunities. The approved language permits NIL?activities that are not associated or identified with their respective school team, school, conference or the WIAA and are in accordance with other prohibited NIL?activities, including language attempting to deter undue influence to transfer schools.

“With today’s vote, member schools have opted to join a growing list of states that allow student athletes to capitalize on their athletic talents in a way that is similar to students with other valued talents and skills,” Executive Director Stephanie Hauser said. “At its core, the WIAA is charged with promoting fairness and sportsmanship while protecting the integrity of the game–something I believe this NIL language preserves.”

The other amendment affecting the Rules of Eligibility, which was advanced as a recommendation of the Calendar and Contact Ad-Hoc Committee, expands the opportunities for summer coaching contact in all WIAA-sponsored sports. Coaches and members of a school’s team may now voluntarily assemble without restriction from June 1-June 30 and from July 7-July 31, except football, which requires coaching contact to conclude one week prior to the start of fall practice. No school, sport-specific coach contact will be permitted from July 1-July 6. The membership approved the amendment by a 294-106 vote.

One of the approved amendments results in a change to the Constitution. The membership voted 393-17 to allow ninth-grade teams to play the same number of contests as allowed in the Season Regulations for junior varsity and varsity teams.

The membership elected to maintain the current process for applying the performance factor for all sports with a team qualifying component. The Constitutional amendment advanced directly to the Annual Meeting by petition that would have excluded cross country from applying the competitive balance performance factor procedure was voted down by a 161-241 vote.

The one amendment impacting the Bylaws received membership approval by a 335-67 tally. In addition to the current one-game suspension, a spectator ejected from a contest is now required to complete the free online NFHS?Sportsmanship Course available on the NFHSLearn.com website. The completed course certificate must be submitted to school officials before attending any future home athletic events.

The membership also voted 390-5 in support of two editorial changes clarifying Board of Control election language outlined in the Constitution and the performance factor procedures stated in Appendix N of the Senior High Handbook. The edits do not change any existing rules or interpretations of the rules. The changes only serve as clarifications to the existing rule or interpretation.

In the Director’s Report, Hauser presented a sports-themed message in recognition of the NFL?Draft held in Green Bay this week. Her comments conveyed her vision on moving education-based athletics forward and adapting to changes in the interscholastic athletics landscape, as well as expressing her appreciation for the efforts of committee members and school leaders that contribute to the membership’s governance. 

Hauser highlighted maintaining and building the WIAA legacy, which included the announcement of the WIAA Foundation, which will be formally introduced at the Area Meetings in fall. She also introduced the launching of the first-ever WIAA Strategic Planning Process beginning with a member survey to collect the schools’ voices for future planning.

In addition, she shared that the WIAA is in good financial standing. With 85 percent of revenue generated by Tournament Series attendance, last year’s 1.3 million spectators allowed the Board of Control to recently approve tournament-related school reimbursements that will be approximately $4 million in 2025-26.   Her comments also alluded to the first year success of the Student-Athlete Leadership Team and securing facility agreements for the State Tournaments. She also acknowledged the need to confront persistent challenges to the membership’s rules and governance.

Hauser commended the dedication of more than 10,000 licensed officials and recognized the conducting of the first-ever survey to inquire how to effectively support and recruit officials. Additionally, she extended respect to former WIAA Assistant Director Karen Kuhn, who passed away in November, and acknowledged the career of Assistant Director Tom Shafranski, who retired in February.

The executive staff responded to 10 pre-submitted requests addressing five open forum topics, including the petition for the performance factor amendment involving cross country, coaches’ contact during the summertime, transgender participation policy and electronic seeding for the Tournament Series. In addition, Co-chairs Jake Beschta and Janel Batten presented an update on the efforts and progress of the Calendar &?Contact Committee.

Reid Hansche of Westosha Central High School was recognized as the Wisconsin Spirit of Sport Award recipient, sponsored by the Dairy Farmers of Wisconsin. Also recognized were the representatives of the 27 schools that received the WIAA?Award of Excellence in 2023-24.

In the 2025-26 Board of Control elections, Cory Hinkel, the current Board president and district administrator at Luck was elected to a second three-year term on the Board as the District 1 representative. Bryan Davis, the superintendent of the Oshkosh Area School District, will continue serving after being elected to a three-term representing District 4. Dennis Birr, the superintendent at Fall River, will serve a second consecutive three-year term representing District 6. Ryan McMillen, athletic director and assistant principal at Muskego, was re-elected for a three-year term representing District 7. Ted Knutson, the president at Aquinas, will return to the Board to serve a three-year term as the private school at-large representative.  Knutson formerly served on the Board from 2012-19.

In the 2025-26 Advisory Council elections, Joe Brandl, the principal at Plymouth, was re-elected to a three-year term as a large school representative. Joseph Schneider, the athletic director and assistant principal at Monona Grove, was also elected to a three-year term representing large schools. Jerry Pritzl, the district administrator at Poynette, and Vincent Propson, the athletic director and principal at Ripon, were both elected to a three-year term representing medium-sized schools.  Kyle Luedtke, superintendent at Frederic, returns to the Council to serve a three-year term representing small schools after formerly serving from 2016-19 and 2020-23. Craig Anderson Ruskin, superintendent at Pepin, was also elected to a three-year term as a small school representative.  

Approximately 456 representatives from 411 schools were registered to attend the meeting. The WIAA, as defined by its Constitution, is a private, voluntary, unincorporated, and nonprofit organization. The membership oversees interscholastic athletic programs for 513 senior high schools and 36 junior high/middle level schools in its membership.

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NCAA Panel Approves Coach’s Challenge Rule Change for Men’s College Basketball Games

The NCAA announced Tuesday it’s bringing the coach’s challenge to men’s basketball. Under the new rule, each coach will have one challenge to use at their discretion to review out-of-bounds calls, a defender’s position in or near the restricted area, and cases of goaltending or basket interference. A coach will keep one challenge if their […]

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The NCAA announced Tuesday it’s bringing the coach’s challenge to men’s basketball.

Under the new rule, each coach will have one challenge to use at their discretion to review out-of-bounds calls, a defender’s position in or near the restricted area, and cases of goaltending or basket interference.

A coach will keep one challenge if their first was successful, and they must have at least one timeout remaining in order to initiate the video review.

Karl Hicks, chairman of the NCAA Men’s Basketball Rules Committee, said in May the group was examining ways to ensure missed calls are corrected without slowing down games too much.

“Coach’s challenges were deemed to be the most efficient way to accomplish this goal,” he said, per the Associated Press’ Eric Olson. “Data from the NCAA tournament and membership conferences showed a substantial number of reviews were on out-of-bounds plays. The committee looked at other basketball leagues around the world to see what the best solution would be for the NCAA, and the committee agreed with the NBA coach’s challenge system and its one plus one process.”

Beyond implementing the challenge system, an important facet of the new rule is that only coaches, not the referees themselves, can trigger a review for out-of-bounds rulings. That should help reduce the length of time a game is ultimately delayed.

The Athletic’s Joe Rexrode argued that men’s basketball was getting too bogged down by video reviews. For example, he cited how the last 77 seconds of Michigan’s 59-53 win over Wisconsin in the Big Ten title game actually took 15 minutes in real time to complete.

To that end, Rexrode lobbied for an NBA-style challenge system. Now, he’s getting his wish.

With this change, the NCAA may have struck a better balance between striving for accuracy without significantly disrupting the flow of a game.



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Making The Leap: Division III Players Find Success With Husky Baseball

Banks, a San Francisco native, spent his first three years at Chapman University, a Division III school in Southern California. In his career at Chapman, Banks amassed a 12-5 record, a 3.51 ERA, and 185 strikeouts, earning all-conference honors as a sophomore. But when the opportunity to compete at a higher level and access more […]

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Banks, a San Francisco native, spent his first three years at Chapman University, a Division III school in Southern California. In his career at Chapman, Banks amassed a 12-5 record, a 3.51 ERA, and 185 strikeouts, earning all-conference honors as a sophomore. But when the opportunity to compete at a higher level and access more advanced resources came up, Banks was up for the challenge. “I got in the transfer portal after my junior year, and ended up getting some interest from UW,” Banks said. “Ultimately, I just think Washington was the best place to develop and become the best version of myself in my final year of college baseball.”





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New college basketball rule change gives Mike Young and other coaches more power

As there is with college sports, there is an ever-changing landscape in all sports. College basketball is looking to expand the NCAA Tournament, a bad idea, but they are making some rule changes that will help with the pace of play in the sport. The NCAA Playing Rules Oversight Panel approved rule changes to help […]

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As there is with college sports, there is an ever-changing landscape in all sports. College basketball is looking to expand the NCAA Tournament, a bad idea, but they are making some rule changes that will help with the pace of play in the sport.

The NCAA Playing Rules Oversight Panel approved rule changes to help the flow of college basketball games, and they are giving coaches some power. The biggest eye-opening rule change is a coach’s challenge, which can be used at any point throughout the game so long as the challenging team still has a timeout remaining. In all honesty, this is something that the sport has been needing for a while, and it’s good to see it finally inserted into the game. The rule will be like the rule in the NBA in terms of winning the challenge.

“If the instant replay review challenge is successful, teams will be allowed to have one additional video review challenge for the rest of the game, including overtime.”

“If the first video review challenge is unsuccessful, the team loses the ability to challenge the rest of the game.”

College basketball needed coaches challenges

Coaches can challenge out-of-bounds calls, basket interference, and whether a secondary defender was in the restricted area of the arc, which is always a difficult call in the pace of play. This is something that has been needed in college basketball, and following the NBA script is the way for them to go. It will be interesting to see how teams go about using this challenge, will some use it early, or will they save it for later in the game?

Virginia Tech coach Mike Young will be like other coaches and rely on his assistant coaches to help decide whether or not to challenge a call. This is something that should stick around even after the coaches’ feedback after next season. This is a solid move for the sport.



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14-year-old football star hires agent to navigate NIL deals – NBC4 Washington

A football player who just finished eighth grade already rakes in name, image and likeness money and has an agent to help him navigate the sponsorship deals at just 14 years old. Kaden Coleman Bennett has had a knack for finding the end zone on the football field since he first discovered the sport, and […]

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A football player who just finished eighth grade already rakes in name, image and likeness money and has an agent to help him navigate the sponsorship deals at just 14 years old.

Kaden Coleman Bennett has had a knack for finding the end zone on the football field since he first discovered the sport, and he says he’s just getting started.

“I found something that I love; I found something that I wanted to do,” he said. “And you know, since then I’ve always been playing football since I was 4.”

His athletic abilities as a running back have already earned him verbal college offers from Syracuse and Virginia Tech. He also was invited to Bill Belichick’s football camp at the University of North Carolina.

“It is kind of crazy but it’s not hard to see because of, you know, my work ethic and the work that I’ve been put in throughout the years of me with football and school,” said Kaden, who committed to DeMatha Catholic High School.

A strong village helps ensure he keeps up with his practice schedule, potential business deals and his 3.5 GPA, Kaden said. He gives his mother, Brittany Coleman, a lot of credit.

“I’m super proud of him,” she said. “He’s faced a lot of adversity, through youth sports and just different things and people coming at him and stuff like that.”

His dad and stepfather also keep him grounded.

“As a young boy, we always taught him — me and mom — always taught him how to be ready for this moment with these NIL deals,” said his father, Bernard Bennett.

“It is our responsibility to set him up and put him in the position to accomplish the goals that he wants to accomplish,” said his stepdad and trainer, Quinton Brown.

With interest from multiple sponsors and potential NIL deals already knocking on his door, Kaden says having a solid infrastructure is imperative. That’s a key reason he already signed with a sports agent, Terrence Jackson, who is helping facilitate Kaden’s first NIL deals.

“There’s a reason why I’m here, and it’s really just to be … a place of peace. Someone that knows the ins and outs,” Jackson said.

Kaden’s focus is on getting better in order to get to the next level academically, athletically and professionally.

“Eat, sleep, grind and dedication,” he said. “I just keep those four in my pocket every time.”

Kaden aspires to become a biological engineer once he finishes his football career.



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College Basketball Is Finally Fixing The Sport After Getting Bullied All Year About Shitty Endings And Refs Constantly Going To The Monitor

It’s about goddamn time. I’ve said it before, it’s not NIL or transfer portal ruining the sport. It’s the fact that the last 2 minutes of a game takes about 45 minutes of real time because the refs go to the monitor for every single play, there are timeouts, then throw in the fouls and […]

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It’s about goddamn time. I’ve said it before, it’s not NIL or transfer portal ruining the sport. It’s the fact that the last 2 minutes of a game takes about 45 minutes of real time because the refs go to the monitor for every single play, there are timeouts, then throw in the fouls and free throw shooting contests and it sucks. The sport is supposed to be free-flowing. It’s supposed to be get the ball and go, not the ball going out of bounds and everyone waiting 5 minutes as three refs huddle up to look at the monitor. Is it going to fix the sport completely? No, of course not. We’re not dumb here. But this is the massive step in the right direction. It got to the point refs wouldn’t even make a call at the end of the game knowing they can go to the monitor.

Now it’s basically the NBA rule and frankly it makes sense. It never made sense to check who the ball went off of in the last 2 minutes of the game. Points aren’t worth more, 2 points is worth the same on the first possession of the game as the last. What I can’t wait for is to see what coach fucks this up. I do think we need to add something for them to throw. I want to see a disgusted Mick Cronin reaching into his suit pocket and throwing a flag of some sort at a ref. 

It’s even more than this too. We had a nut shot problem this year. Accidental nut shots led to immediate ejections. That’s not the case anymore 

Also get ready for continuation 

Don’t have a problem with this. I do know that refs will be even more confused at the start of the year, but it makes sense to have it. If you pick up your dribble it shouldn’t be on the floor. It’s the absurd continuation that should not happen. All I know is the sport is finally taking a step in the smart direction. Replays and reviews are ruining sports, not just this one. We need less of it. We went years, decades even, without having reviews. It ruins the ending of the sport and that should at least be fixed now. 

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Where Lady Vols basketball targets sit in updated class of 2026 rankings

Where Lady Vols basketball targets sit in updated class of 2026 rankings Tennessee basketball coach Kim Caldwell gives out instructions during practice for the NCAA college basketball tournament on Friday, March 28, 2025, in Birmingham, AL. (Photo by Saul Young/News Sentinel / USA TODAY NETWORK via Imagn Images) As the off-season marches on, On3 has […]

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Where Lady Vols basketball targets sit in updated class of 2026 rankings

As the off-season marches on, On3 has updated its rankings of women’s basketball recruits in the 2026 class.

While the Lady Vols are yet to land their first commitment in the class, they are intertwined with some of the best recruits in the cycle.

Here’s a look at where Tennessee targets sit in the updated rankings.

TALK ABOUT IT IN THE ROCKY TOP FORUM

*This is not an exhaustive list of Lady Vols targets, but a quick look at some players they have been tied to to this point.

No. 2 – Kate Harping

Rankings: No. 2 NATL | No. 1 POS | No. 1 ST

Position: PG

Rating: 99 | 5-star

Hometown: Atlanta, Georgia

School: Marist School

Notes: Kim Caldwell offered on July 18, 2024, NIL deal with adidas

No. 5 – Oliviyah Edwards

Rankings: No. 5 NATL | No. 2 POS | No. 1 ST

Position: PF

Rating: 99 | 5-star

Hometown: Tacoma, Washington

School: Elite Sports Academy

Notes: Took a visit to Tennessee in January of 2025, can dunk with ease, NIL deal with adidas

No. 8 – Brihanna Crittendon

Rankings: No. 8 NATL | No. 3 POS | No. 1 ST

Position: SG

Rating: 98 | 5-star

Hometown: Thornton, Colorado

School: Riverdale Ridge

Notes: Took an unofficial visit to Tennessee in August of 2024, UT offered on May 5, 2024

No. 11 – Addison Bjorn

Rankings: No. 11 NATL | No. 5 POS | No. 1 ST

Position: SG

Rating: 97 | 4-star

Hometown: Riverside, Missouri

School: Park Hill

Notes: Tennessee was in ‘Final 15’ released in January

No. 12 – Jacy Abii

Rankings: No. 12 NATL | No. 6 POS | No. 1 ST

Position: SG

Rating: 97 | 4-star

Hometown: Frisco, Texas

School: Liberty

Notes: Tennessee in ‘Top 10’ released this June, was offered on May 16, 2024

No. 13 – Trinity Jones

Rankings: No. 13 NATL | No. 7 POS | No. 1 ST

Position: SG

Rating: 97 | 4-star

Hometown: Bolingbrook, Illinois

School: Bolingbrook

Notes: Visited Tennessee in October of 2024

No. 14 – Bella Flemmings

Rankings: No. 14 NATL | No. 3 POS | No. 2 ST

Position: CG

Rating: 97 | 4-star

Hometown: San Antonio, Texas

School: William J. Brennan

Notes: Brother plays for Houston men’s basketball

No. 41 – Leelee Bell

Rankings: No. 41 NATL | No. 11 POS | No. 1 ST

Position: PF

Rating: 94 | 4-star

Hometown: Minot, North Dakota

School: Minot

Notes: Was offered on May 23, 2025

No. 49 – Natalya Hodge

Rankings: No. 49 NATL | No. 6 POS | No. 2 ST

Position: PG

Rating: 94 | 4-star

Hometown: Knoxville, Tennessee

School: Bearden

Notes: From Knoxville, visited in October of 2024



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