College Sports
Why the 'Conclave' Streaming Surge Is a Licensing Cautionary Tale
Donald Rumsfeld popularized the concept of known knowns, known unknowns, and unknown unknowns (though ‘popularized’ might be the wrong term for a convoluted quote from a Secretary of Defense about the Iraq War). “Conclave” provides an illustrative example of how to view content performance through this risk assessment framework. A movie’s premiere is something of a “known known” that can be choreographed […]


Donald Rumsfeld popularized the concept of known knowns, known unknowns, and unknown unknowns (though ‘popularized’ might be the wrong term for a convoluted quote from a Secretary of Defense about the Iraq War). “Conclave” provides an illustrative example of how to view content performance through this risk assessment framework.
A movie’s premiere is something of a “known known” that can be choreographed months in advance to maximize its odds of success. Awards season is a “known unknown” for a movie like “Conclave.” The particular nominations, wins, and whether a film will be a breakout hit of the awards circuit can’t be known in advance, but can be planned for to some degree.
College Sports
Wildcats Announce 2025 Fall Schedule
Story Links 2025 Schedule VILLANOVA, Pa. – Eleven regular season home games at the newly resurfaced Higgins Soccer Complex highlight the 2025 Villanova Men’s Soccer regular season schedule announced today. “We’re excited to release our 2025 schedule, which features a strong slate of home games and a number of high-caliber opponents that will test us early […]


VILLANOVA, Pa. – Eleven regular season home games at the newly resurfaced Higgins Soccer Complex highlight the 2025 Villanova Men’s Soccer regular season schedule announced today.
“We’re excited to release our 2025 schedule, which features a strong slate of home games and a number of high-caliber opponents that will test us early and help prepare us for the rigors of Big East play,” said head coach Mark Fetrow, who enters his second season at the helm after succeeding longtime head coach Tom Carlin in November 2023.
“This schedule reflects our commitment to growth and excellence, and we’re looking forward to competing in front of our fans and representing Villanova with pride. Go Cats!”
A young Wildcats squad will open the new campaign on Thursday, Aug. 21 when it hosts Rider at 4 p.m. That match is the first of three in a row at Higgins that also includes an Aug. 28 date with Iona (kickoff at noon) and a Philly Soccer Six Labor Day clash with Saint Joseph’s (also with a noon kickoff).
Villanova will celebrate Alumni Day on Saturday, Sept. 13 when it welcomes 2024 NCAA College Cup participant Princeton to the Higgins Soccer Complex at 1 p.m. The Wildcats will face another Ivy League foe that played in the postseason when they visit Penn on Sept. 23.
The BIG EAST slate begins with a clash against DePaul on Friday, Sept. 19 at 4 p.m. Other league foes set to visit Villanova’s West Campus include Seton Hall (Oct. 11); Creighton (Oct. 17); and St. John’s (Nov. 1). The Wildcats will wrap up league play at Marquette on Saturday, Nov. 7.
Other non-league opponents set to travel to Villanova in the second half of the schedule include NJIT (Oct. 7), VMI (Oct. 21) and Holy Family (Nov. 4).
A new artificial turf, replacing the original surface that debuted when the facility was rechristened in 2014, is currently in the installation process at the Higgins Soccer Complex.
College Sports
Michigan State Athletics
EAST LANSING, Mich. – Michigan State head women’s basketball coach Robyn Fralick announced the addition of three players to the 2024-25 roster. The Spartans add a trio of transfers in guard Jalyn Brown (Baltimore, Md./Arizona State), forward Marah Dykstra (Vancouver, Canada/Montana State) and guard Rashunda “Spider” Jones (South Bend, Indiana/Purdue), “We are so excited about […]

The Spartans add a trio of transfers in guard Jalyn Brown (Baltimore, Md./Arizona State), forward Marah Dykstra (Vancouver, Canada/Montana State) and guard Rashunda “Spider” Jones (South Bend, Indiana/Purdue),
“We are so excited about the additions of Jalyn Brown, Marah Dykstra and Rashunda Jones to our Michigan State Women’s Basketball program,” Fralick said.
Brown is a 6-1 guard who played two seasons at Arizona State after one year at Louisville. The Baltimore, Maryland native has scored 1,032 points during her collegiate career. Last season, Brown earned honorable mention All-Big 12 honors after she led the Sun Devils in scoring, averaging 18.0 points and 3.7 assists per game. She graduated from St. Frances Academy, which is the same high school that Spartan All-American Nia Clouden attended.
“Jalyn is a proven dynamic three-level scorer with a lot of playing experience. She will add length and versatility to our team, and we are excited about her impact both offensively and defensively in our program,” Fralick said.
Dykstra is a 6-2 forward who played three seasons at Montana State. She captured first-team All-Big Sky honors last season and second-team during the 2023-24 season. Last season, Dykstra averaged 12.0 points and 4.3 rebounds per game. During her collegiate career, Dykstra has scored 743 points. A native of Vancouver, B.C., Canada, prior to playing for the Bobcats, she played her high school basketball at Churchill Secondary. She also has international experience playing for Team Canada. During the summer of 2022, Dykstra played in the FIBA U18 Americas Championship, helping Team Canada win a silver medal.
“Marah brings a wealth of both playing experience and winning at a very high level,” Fralick said. “She has been part of great teams at Montana State and with the Canadian National Team. She is very easy to play with and consistently impacts winning.”
Jones is a 5-8 guard who played two seasons at Purdue. The South Bend, Indiana, native played in 59 games for the Boilermakers over the last two seasons. She earned a spot on the Big Ten All-Freshman team during the 2023-24 season and has averaged 8.8 points in her college career. Jones played at South Bend Washington High School, where she was the 2023 Indiana Miss Basketball runner-up.
“Rashunda is a very experienced player in the Big Ten. She understands the level of competition every night in our league. She has had a consistent impact on both sides of the basketball and we are excited to see her utilize her speed and creativity in our system,” said Fralick.
These four transfers join three incoming Spartan freshmen: Jordan Ode (Maple Grove, Minn./Maple Grove High School), Anna Terrian (Pewaukee,Wis./Pewaukee High School) and Amy Terrian (Pewaukee, Wis./Pewaukee High School).
College Sports
Get to know St. Xavier’s new ice hockey coach, Pat Donaldson
On Monday, St. Xavier announced Pat Donaldson as its new head hockey coach. According to a release, Donaldson has more than 14 years of experience coaching hockey at the varsity and youth levels. He led Marquette University High School (Wisconsin) to back-to-back sectional finals and coached teams at multiple youth organizations in Wisconsin. Advertisement “We’re […]

On Monday, St. Xavier announced Pat Donaldson as its new head hockey coach.
According to a release, Donaldson has more than 14 years of experience coaching hockey at the varsity and youth levels. He led Marquette University High School (Wisconsin) to back-to-back sectional finals and coached teams at multiple youth organizations in Wisconsin.
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“We’re excited to welcome Coach Donaldson to the St. Xavier community,” St. Xavier Athletic Director Tim Banker said. “His experience, passion and commitment to developing young men will be a great asset as we continue building a hockey program rooted in the excellence of St. X athletics!”
St. Xavier made the Ohio High School Athletic Association state hockey tournament just once in 2008. The only other Cincinnati school to make it, Moeller, did so in 2005. The Bombers were 26-10-2 in 2023-24 but fell to 12-24-3 this past season.
Donaldson attended Marquette University High School and the University of St. Thomas in St. Paul, Minnesota. St. Thomas’s hockey team joined Division I in 2022 and is currently coached by Enrico Blasi, who led Miami University hockey to the NCAA national championship game in 2009.
“I’m incredibly excited for the opportunity to lead the St. Xavier hockey program,” Donaldson said. “My goal is to create an environment where players compete with passion, enjoy the game, and feel empowered to grow both on and off the ice. I’m looking forward to building a team built on discipline, accountability, and relentless effort, while staying true to the Jesuit values of St. X.”
This article originally appeared on Cincinnati Enquirer: Cincinnati St. Xavier names Pat Donaldson as new head hockey coach
College Sports
Hagens making case to be top pick of 2025 Draft
James’ father, Mike Hagens Sr., was a defenseman for three seasons (1997-2000) at SUNY-Brockport, an NCAA Division III school in New York. He coached his sons with the Long Island Royals Under-13 and Under-14 teams in 2019-20. James spent two seasons at Mount St. Charles (2020-22), and had 115 points (54 goals, 61 assists) in […]

James’ father, Mike Hagens Sr., was a defenseman for three seasons (1997-2000) at SUNY-Brockport, an NCAA Division III school in New York. He coached his sons with the Long Island Royals Under-13 and Under-14 teams in 2019-20.
James spent two seasons at Mount St. Charles (2020-22), and had 115 points (54 goals, 61 assists) in 54 games for the Under-15 team in 2021-22.
“One thing that doesn’t get discussed enough is that the rink at Mount St. Charles is a smaller sheet, so you really don’t have the same time and space and are grinding, developing smaller games on a tighter sheet,” Mike Sr. said. “It forces you to keep your eyes up, to look for options and be quicker in your decision-making. It’s the whole USA Hockey small-area-game-mentality.”
James moved on to the NTDP in Plymouth, Michigan, in 2022-23 and led the U-18 team with 63 assists, 102 points and an average of 1.76 points per game in 58 games in 2023-24.
“At the NTDP I learned if you want to make it to the next level, want to be able to play hockey in the NHL, you have to be a dog,” Hagens said. “You have to learn to compete and that anytime you step on the ice, whether for a practice or game, in the shooting room or the weight room, you have to give it your all. You have to make sure you’re ready for the opportunity when it happens.”
Hagens has been a reliable force for the United States on an international level too. He had 22 points (nine goals, 13 assists) in seven games to help the U.S. to a silver medal at the 2024 IIHF World Under-18 Championship in Finland. It was a single-tournament record, breaking the mark set by Nikita Kucherov in 2011 (21 points; 11 goals, 10 assists with Russia).
College Sports
Emma Spanik
Spanik Emma Spanik: PSU Altoona soccer Name: Emma Spanik High school: Glendale Hometown: Blandburg Sport: Soccer Position: Center back College choice: Penn State Altoona Other colleges considered: Slippery Rock, Juniata Why I picked PSU Altoona: “I picked PSU Altoona because I’ve always loved the school and felt they have amazing opportunities and programs.” Greatest high […]


Spanik
Emma Spanik: PSU Altoona soccer
Name: Emma Spanik
High school: Glendale
Hometown: Blandburg
Sport: Soccer
Position: Center back
College choice: Penn State Altoona
Other colleges considered: Slippery Rock, Juniata
Why I picked PSU Altoona: “I picked PSU Altoona because I’ve always loved the school and felt they have amazing opportunities and programs.”
Greatest high school achievement: ” My greatest high school achievement would have to be winning the District 6 championship with my favorite people.”
Coach Nikki Spanik’s quote: “Emma has been a huge asset for our team through the years — with her speed and defensive skills landing her in a varsity starter position since she was a freshman. Her ability to run the back line was crucial in helping us build our program from not qualifying for playoffs my first year to D6 champions. Her presence of grit, speed and defensive battles to win the ball will be hard to replace. She showed up to every game focused and consistent with 100% dedication to the team. Playing for PSU Altoona is a huge honor and one she’s talked about since attending a game in sixth grade. I wish her nothing but success as she steps into this challenging new chapter in her life and achieves the dream of playing for PSU Altoona.”
How I got my start in soccer: “I got my start in soccer playing in the local AYSO program at the age of 5.”
Favorite college growing up: Penn State
Other interests: Spending time in nature and with my family
What getting to play in college means to me: “Playing in college is a surreal feeling because it means the little girl who started in a little area with her big dreams made it.”
Probable college major: Early childhood education
Parents: Nichole and Jason Spanik
College Sports
Why SEC reversed course on AQ
Headed into the start of SEC spring meetings, the Big Ten believed it had a partner in its push to transform the College Football Playoff into something more akin to the NFL. The Big Ten and SEC have grown significantly closer over the last year, having orchestrated a takeover of the College Football Playoff that […]


Headed into the start of SEC spring meetings, the Big Ten believed it had a partner in its push to transform the College Football Playoff into something more akin to the NFL.
The Big Ten and SEC have grown significantly closer over the last year, having orchestrated a takeover of the College Football Playoff that gives them say over whether and how the format will change for 2026 and beyond.
The two conferences strengthened the bond with historic conference meetups — first in Nashville in October 2024 and then in New Orleans in February. At those meetings, the Big Ten’s preference to move to more automatic qualifiers — four each for the Big Ten and SEC, two each for the ACC and Big 12 — began to resonate with an SEC contingent that had previously resisted.
Those involved in the discussions and participants in the meetings say once Big Ten leaders laid out the reasoning for a move to more automatic qualifiers — chief among them taking away power from a perceived inconsistent selection committee process and allowing for better non-conference scheduling — it gained traction within the SEC. The Big Ten believed a move to more automatic bids would lessen the selection committee “conflicting itself week-to-week,” according to one source familiar with the discussions, and allow for consistency that it didn’t think was possible for a 13-person group that changed its membership year-over-year.
“Make it about how you compete against your conference and take out any sort of perceived bias or politicking and campaigning and let it play out how each conference thinks is best for them,” is how one Big Ten source explained the pitch.
Still undecided, SEC holds the key to College Football Playoff as 5+11 format gains steam
Brandon Marcello
It helped that the Big Ten caught the SEC in a perfect storm during that February meeting after the conference experienced three schools (Alabama, Ole Miss and South Carolina) just miss the playoff cut in a process SEC leaders felt didn’t properly weigh the challenge of playing in the conference. The idea of dramatically lessening the selection committee’s power didn’t sound so bad now after the SEC only got three teams into the first year of the 12-team CFP.
Big Ten sources described those shared meetings with the SEC, which featured both commissioners and athletic directors from all member schools, as “critical” in garnering support for a move to a 16-team playoff with more automatic qualifiers. At Big Ten meetings in late May in California, multiple Big Ten sources were bullish about where things stood between the two conferences in their push for playoff expansion. The concern wasn’t what the SEC would do but instead trying to build a consensus with the ACC and Big 12, which had both opposed the 4-4-2-2-1-3 model despite a firmly held belief that they didn’t need either to ultimately achieve their goals.
The key, then and now, was the SEC.
And as the SEC kicked off its annual meetings down in Sandestin, Florida, last week, there was no reason for concern. SEC commissioner Greg Sankey was careful with his wording in describing the idea but didn’t exactly hide his support of it, either. He said the SEC was “interested but not committed,” a typical Sankey move to nod at what he wanted but give himself cover.
Yet as the week at the beach closed, the SEC was trending away from the 4-4-2-2-1-3 model and instead was rallying around the Big 12’s preferred 5 + 11 model that featured the top five-ranked conference champions receiving automatic bids and the other 11 going to the top ranked at-large teams. It was a stunning reversal that caught multiple Big Ten sources off guard and could set up a potentially fascinating heavyweight battle between the two most powerful conferences if the SEC becomes entrenched on the 5+11 idea.
How did we get there? It begins with a powerful group that is often overlooked in these discussions.
SEC coaches forcefully against AQs, 9 conference games
Six of the 10 highest-paid football coaches in America reside in the SEC, including the game’s highest-paid coach, Georgia‘s Kirby Smart. National championship-winning coaches like Smart are almost demigods in their community, revered for their success on Saturdays and their ability to bring in millions of dollars in revenue when everything is going well.
But when it comes time to making big decisions that could shape their everyday reality, even the powerful, outspoken coaches like Smart and Ole Miss’ Lane Kiffin rarely get what they want. Just look at Smart’s impassioned speech about the transfer portal last week and why nothing has changed despite overwhelming support at the FBS head coach level.
What one must remember is that what’s most important to a football coach could be just one of the many issues their athletic director is dealing with at any given time. Go up another level and think about everything a university president or chancellor must contend with daily. The higher up the food chain you go, the more attractive extra revenue that an expanded CFP and a move to nine SEC conference games might look.
This time was different, though.
The SEC football coaches coming out so strongly against AQs, both publicly and privately, caught SEC leaders by surprise, according to multiple sources. The joint conversation between athletic directors and football coaches became heated at times, as some ADs, banking on the extra $5 million or so in revenue a ninth SEC game would bring, became frustrated over the tides turning against their preferred outcomes. The majority of the coaches vehemently opposed the idea of a play-in weekend, believing it would diminish the importance of the SEC Championship Game. The play-in playoff concept, a key component of Big Ten commissioner Tony Petitti’s playoff plan, is another potentially sizable source of new revenue that some ADs would like to get their hands on.
“Having football coaches in the room was really good,” Mississippi State AD Zac Selmon told CBS Sports. “We’re considering all options and what’s best for our institutions and the SEC.”
Selmon said his position on automatic qualifiers “evolved a lot” after the joint meetings with the Big Ten but that he still wrestled with whether that was the best path for the SEC, a notion only amplified down in Sandestin after discussing with his colleagues.
“I grew up in sports, and if you want to win a championship, you have to go earn it, and I still think that’s exactly how it is in the SEC,” Selmon said. “If you get into the CFP, you’ve earned your way there, and you should.
“In some years, we could have a model where there’s seven SEC teams in the expanded CFP. Is that good for the game? I don’t know, but it shows the strength of our league. There’s still work to be done on what options, but I always feel comfort knowing Commissioner Sankey has done an unbelievable job carrying the load. The same for us at Mississippi State with Mark Keenum, the chair of the (CFP) Board of Managers. I still think there’s work to be done on the entire ecosystem just because of the disparity in our league is a gauntlet.”
How will selection process change?
From the start of the SEC’s week on the Gulf Coast, it felt like a targeted attack on the current CFP selection process.
Multiple coaches came out against a process that led to more Big Ten (4) than SEC (3) teams in the playoff.
“There’s no outcry, saying it’s unfair when the SEC gets 13 of 16 teams in (the NCAA) basketball tournament by using RPI,” Smart said. “I have a hard time thinking Ole Miss, South Carolina and Alabama were not part of the best teams in the country.”
Lane Kiffin, who advocated for simply taking the 16 best teams and getting rid of automatic bids altogether, wanted the selection process tweaked.
“Somehow, the formula of how they figure out the teams has to change,” Kiffin said. “I’m not just saying that because we lost three games and didn’t make it; I’m saying that because other sports do a much better job of figuring out the quality of the team over just the losses, figuring out the quality of wins that they have, their strength of schedule that they play.”
When pressed on what specifically he’d like to see done to emphasize those things, including from an analytics or formula standpoint, Kiffin admitted he didn’t really have an answer.
“You got to use some of the indexes,” he said. “I’m not going to pretend I understand them all and which ones are the best, but I know other sports have figured that out better than us.”
Therein lies part of the problem moving forward. The SEC doesn’t like how the selection committee handled last year’s playoff field. Guess what? The Big Ten has similar concerns, which is why it is trying to deemphasize the committee’s impact with the introduction of more automatic qualifiers. In the Big Ten’s plan, the committee would primarily focus on seeding. It would only have to select three at-large teams — if it expands to 16 teams — rather than the seven teams it currently picks.
Conversely, if a 5 +11 model is adopted, it’d give the committee more power — and put even more pressure to get it right — in picking 11 of the field’s teams.
The limited amount of data points available in football makes it challenging to come up with college football’s version of NET or RPI. Still, it is clear that changes can — and likely will — be made to an ambiguous process to find the best teams that doesn’t officially take strength of schedule into account. As former Big East commissioner Mike Tranghese, a member of the inaugural CFP selection committee, told CBS Sports in December: “They said, ‘We want to get the best teams.’ But no one told us how to find the best teams.”
Florida AD Scott Stricklin, another former member of the selection committee, was even more forceful in his rebuke of a system he once willingly participated in, saying, “A committee is not ideal to choose a postseason. I question whether it is appropriate for college football.”
Selmon wants “more clearly defined metrics” and to make the selection process less subjective. He doesn’t know the exact formula to fix the problems but is confident it can be done.
“I can pick up my phone and have food delivered here in five minutes. I could probably buy a house in about 10 minutes. We’ve got super computers that can look at things that are going on in Vegas with odds. They can be pretty dialed in,” Selmon said. “So I think we need some more objective metrics to say this is what the pathway looks like before we can fully get to a system everybody feels good about regardless of what seat you’re sitting in, what league you’re in, and think this is for the good of college football.”
At the conclusion of the SEC spring meetings, the conference handed out a seven-page packet entitled, “A Regular Season Gauntlet,” that highlighted “no other conference has a regular season as grueling as the SEC’s.” Within the packet, the SEC pointed out different metrics used, whether the metrics were objective or predictive and where the conference ranked. The intent was obvious: The SEC, using a variety of metrics, believes it has been the clear best conference over the last decade and that more of those metrics need to be factored into the selection process.
As Sankey put it,” “I do think there’s a need for change. How do you explain some of the decisions that have been made?”
Imagn Images
What now?
On Monday, Sankey reiterated his long-held belief that the SEC doesn’t need automatic qualifiers. Appearing on the “Dan Patrick Show,” the SEC commissioner, who has been the unwitting face of the automatic qualifiers debate, made clear that’s not his preference.
“I’d give no allocations,” Sankey said. “This whole 5-7 thing that exists now, I’d just make it the 12 best teams. I was clear on that. When we get into rooms, we make political compromises, if you will.”
Sankey and the other conference commissioners are expected to have a call Tuesday to further discuss the latest CFP discussions. They’ll meet in person on June 18 in Asheville, North Carolina. Sankey told the SEC presidents and chancellors last week it was important to collaborate with the other conferences and that the SEC couldn’t “bulldog” a format on the others, as one SEC president told CBS Sports.
A week ago, expansion to 16 teams with multiple AQs per power conference felt increasingly like a foregone conclusion. With it came a possible Big Ten-SEC scheduling alliance and a play-in weekend where the conferences could create additional must-see television programming.
Now, the 5 + 11 model has more steam than ever. It seems more and more doubtful that the SEC will move to a nine-game conference schedule in 2026. (The Big Ten, according to Yahoo Sports, has already voiced private displeasure over moving to 5+11 if the SEC sticks to eight conference games.) SEC football coaches harshly rejected the play-in championship weekend idea.
Will the SEC maintain this stance and throw cold water on its burgeoning relationship with the Big Ten? Or, as time passes and decisions get made without coaches in the room, will the SEC eventually make its way back to a model that guarantees it four spots in the playoff?
Only time will tell, but the industry is already grappling with the aftershocks of the SEC’s week in Sandestin that could be the most impactful spring meetings in a long time.
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