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NE10 Announces Institutional Nominees for Man & Woman of the Year

Story Links Man & Woman of the Year History MANSFIELD, Mass. – The Northeast-10 Conference announced on Monday its list of 25 student-athletes that have been nominated for Man and Woman of the Year in 2024-25. Both honors are selected by the Conference’s Senior […]

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MANSFIELD, Mass. – The Northeast-10 Conference announced on Monday its list of 25 student-athletes that have been nominated for Man and Woman of the Year in 2024-25. Both honors are selected by the Conference’s Senior Woman Administrator (SWA) Council. 

Each nominee is a senior student-athlete that has excelled in all areas of their collegiate careers – on the playing surface, in the classroom and in the community. The two winners are set to be announced at the NE10 Banquet at Fratello’s Events in the Millyard (Manchester, N.H.) on the night of Tuesday, June 3.

ALL-TIME WINNERS OF MAN & WOMAN OF THE YEAR

Each NE10 institution nominates student-athletes for both Man and Woman of the Year. The 2024-25 academic year marks the 13th time that the league will award the NE10 Man of the Year honor, while the NE10 Woman of the Year honor has been awarded since 2005-06 and will be put forth as the league’s official NCAA Woman of the Year candidate.

Women’s basketball leads all sports with four nominees for Woman of the Year, while field hockey has three and softball has two. Football leads with three nominees for Man of the Year, while baseball, soccer and track & field have two each. 


2024-25 NE10 Man and Woman of the Year Nominees

Adelphi: Courtney Wengryn (SB) and Matthew Wenz (T&F)

AIC: Morgan Martellio (FH) and Anderson Cuello Batista (BSB)

Assumption: Marina Callahan (WBB) and Eric Giarnese (BSB)

Bentley: Maggie Whitmore (WBB) and Joe Rivers (FB)

Franklin Pierce: Aino Martikainen (WSOC) & Kesinee Prukmathakul (WGOLF) and Ryan Outerbridge (XC/T&F)

New Haven: Katie Schenk (WLAX) and Joe Vitale (FB)

Pace: Krista Dietz (FH) & Brianna Shea (SB) and Tray Alexander (MBB) & Daniel Zabbia (MLAX)

Saint Anselm: Melanie Hoyt (WBB) and Brandon Potts (FB)

Saint Michael’s: Alexandra Báez
Rentas (VB) and David Ciancio (MHOC)

SCSU: Katie Williamson (WBB) and Alexandre Rajao da Cunha (MSOC)

SNHU: Annemartine Christis (FH) and Preston Neal (MSOC)

ABOUT THE NE10

The NE10 is an association of 11 diverse institutions serving student-athletes across 24 NCAA Division II sports. Together we build brilliant futures by embracing the journey of every student-athlete.

Each year, 4,500 of those student-athletes compete in conference championships in 24 sports, making the NE10 the largest DII conference in the country in terms of sport sponsorship. Leading the way in the classroom, on the field and within the community, the NE10 is proud of its comprehensive program and the experience it provides student-athletes.

Fans can subscribe via this link to follow NE10 NOW on FloSports this season.  The partnership between the NE10 and FloSports works to provide funds back to the athletic departments of the Northeast-10 Conference in support of student-athletes while promoting the league on a national platform.



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Former champion gymnast slams USA Gymnastics over transgender policies

NEWYou can now listen to Fox News articles! USA Gymnastics is under the national microscope after its biggest star, Simone Biles, ignited mass backlash for attacking Riley Gaines over the issue of trans athletes in women’s sports. Biles has since apologized for her remarks against Gaines, but the impact of public perception to her and […]

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NEWYou can now listen to Fox News articles!

USA Gymnastics is under the national microscope after its biggest star, Simone Biles, ignited mass backlash for attacking Riley Gaines over the issue of trans athletes in women’s sports. Biles has since apologized for her remarks against Gaines, but the impact of public perception to her and the organization is only just setting in. 

Former Team USA and NCAA champion women’s gymnast Dee Worley, spoke out against USA Gymnastics after it was revealed that the organization’s webpages outlining its transgender athlete policy and resources were offline, Fox News Digital previously reported. 

Worley, a former USA Gymnastics athlete and board member, revealed in an exclusive interview with Fox News Digital her thoughts on the state of leadership for the nation’s governing gymnastics body, as the U.S. is set to host the next Summer Olympics in Los Angeles in 2028. 

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USA women's gymnastics team with gold medals

Team USA gymnasts Simone Biles, Jade Carey, Jordan Chiles, Suni Lee and Hezly Rivera pose with their gold medals. (Tim Clayton/Corbis via Getty Images)

“I think there’s been a steady decline in its ability to have backbone and its leaders’ ability to have backbone for some time now,” Worley said of the organization and its recent quiet distancing from trans inclusion policies. “When you don’t have principles that you are willing to be dyed in the wool about and be ten toes down about, then you are going to blow with every wind.”

Worley, who competed for the U.S. national team as early as high school in the late 1980s, made history at the University of Alabama as a 17-time All-American, a four-time champion and a nine-time regional champion. As a senior in 1993, she set an NCAA record with perfect 10’s in five consecutive meets. She later says she served as a USA gymnastics board member. 

Now, Worley is a women’s sports rights advocate and a member of the Independent Counil on Women’s Sports (ICONS) network. 

And she went so far as to say the organization is exhibiting “cowardice,” with its past stance and currently unclear stance on the issue now. 

“I don’t like their cowardice in any instance. Whether it means they have the trans information up in the first place or they took it down when it got hot in the kitchen. I don’t admire cowardice and I think you know find your position stand on it, but be ready for the fight if you are standing on an issue that is going to be at the detriment of women in your sport who have made your sport what it is,” Worley said. 

Previous links to three of the organization’s pages outlining its transgender eligibility policies are currently offline. When the pages were officially taken offline is currently unknown. 

One link previously led to a November 2020 announcement that the organization no longer required trans athletes to undergo sex reassignment, legal gender recognition, and hormone therapy in order to compete in the gender category of their choosing, as seen in an archive by the Wayback Machine. That page still shows up in search results, but the link now goes to a 404 error page. 

Another link previously went to a three-page PDF pamphlet of USA Gymnastics guidelines for transgender and non-binary athletes, as seen in a Wayback Machine archive. That link is now inaccessible, but is still a top result on search engines. 

Another link previously went to a nine-page PDF USA Gymnastics pamphlet titled “Transgender Athlete Inclusion Resources: Supporting Transgender and Non-Binary Athletes,” as seen in a Wayback Machine archive. That link is also no longer accessible. 

Worley predicts that the organization will announce an official amendment to its policy, but not one that goes far enough as she’d like. 

“I predict they will amend the language leaving lots of loopholes and flexibility for them to be just nebulous enough for them to change their minds if and when the time comes,” Worley said.

“I think they are very pressure driven an externally focus driven instead of being principle driven. So you cannot depend on any organization that does not stand on anything or have actual values that they refused to bend on.”

Fox News Digital has reached out to USA Gymnastics for comment. 

SIMONE BILES DOESN’T REALIZE WHAT SHE’S ADMITTING ABOUT TRANS WOMEN IN HER POSTS, RILEY GAINES SAYS

Simone Biles sidelines

Simone Biles married Chicago Bears safety Jonathan Owens in Apr. 2023.  (Joseph Weiser/Icon Sportswire via Getty Images)

For Worley, the organization’s recent stance in letting biological males compete in the women’s category represents a leftward political shift by the organization in recent years. She believes it began in after the 2008 Beijing Olympics.

“When I was a part of USA Gymnastics it was really rigid… USA Gymnastics was really about being team USA. It was about representing the United States well,” Worley said of when she competed in the 90s and early 2000s. 

“So that’s my recollection of it and it has gone way left now. In my opinion, USA Gymnastics has been absolutely plaqued by incredibly faulty leadership for many, many years and has also bent its knee to the woke mob. Which is unfortunate because it has nothing to do with gymnastics.” 

Worley recalls a shift by the organization de-prioritizing the protection of athletes after the public treatment of Gabby Douglas at the 2008 summer games. 

“I did notice that and that was kind of the tipping point for me, I noticed some type of fall off in terms of the protection of the athletes,” Worley said. 

Other major Team USA sport governing bodies have quietly amended their transgender policies amid rising opposition to trans inclusion in women’s and girls’ sports. 

USA Track and Field (USATF) official transgender eligibility policy now references the World Athletics guidelines on its official webpage. 

USATF previously referenced the International Olympic Committee (IOC)’s policy, as seen in an archive via Wayback Machine

The IOC allows biological males to compete in the women’s category, while World Athletics bans any athlete who has undergone male puberty from competing as a woman.

USA Fencing announced in April that it is preparing to change its gender-eligibility policy, after a viral protest by women’s fencer Stephanie Turner sparked mass backlash and federal intervention by protesting a trans opponent. 

The organization said it is preparing to amend its current policies that allow biological males to compete with women and girls in the event that it is “forced” to change it. 

“In the event that USA Fencing is forced to change its current stance in accordance with oversight bodies or federal legislation, the new policy states athletes competing in USA Fencing-sanctioned tournaments must compete according to their biological sex,” the announcement read. 

The proposed updated policy ensures that the women’s category “will be open exclusively to athletes of the female sex.” The men’s category “will be open to all other athletes who are otherwise eligible for competition.”

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Worley hopes that the next generation of gymnasts can help contribute to substantial change in their governing body. 

“If any female gymnasts are in a position where there is a male competitor who is claiming to be a female and wanting to compete against females, I would say to them ‘push back,’” Worley said.  

“One don’t compete if you opt out there is no one for them to compete against. Two really put pressure on the governing body who is supposed to have your back. Supposed to be supporting you of your progression in the sport. Don’t let them get away with checking the woke mob box and doing whatever they think they should be doing for optics for a very small percentage of the population at the sacrifice and compromise of your career.” 

Fox News Digital’s Connor McGahan contributed to this report.

Follow Fox News Digital’s sports coverage on X, and subscribe to the Fox News Sports Huddle newsletter.





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Four Men’s Ice Hockey Seniors Take Next Step with Pro Contracts

MANCHESTER, N.H. – Following the conclusion of the 2023-24 season, four seniors from the Saint Anselm College men’s ice hockey team took the next step in their careers, signing professional contracts and competing across the Federal Prospects Hockey League (FPHL) and Southern Professional Hockey League (SPHL). Richie Colarusso (Tewksbury, Mass.) signed with the Binghamton Black […]

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MANCHESTER, N.H. – Following the conclusion of the 2023-24 season, four seniors from the Saint Anselm College men’s ice hockey team took the next step in their careers, signing professional contracts and competing across the Federal Prospects Hockey League (FPHL) and Southern Professional Hockey League (SPHL). Richie Colarusso (Tewksbury, Mass.) signed with the Binghamton Black Bears (FPHL), appearing in one game before joining the Baton Rouge Zydeco for the final stretch of the season. Colarusso skated in four games with Baton Rouge and one with Binghamton, finishing with a minus-three on-ice rating, all recorded in his Binghamton appearance. Baton Rouge…





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What to know as protesters hit the streets of LA for 5th night

What to know as protesters hit the streets of LA for 5th night – CBS Minnesota Watch CBS News Protesters are back on the streets of Los Angeles for a fifth consecutive day as more National Guard troops and Marines arrived. President Trump said he’s told California’s Gavin Newsom to get his act together, CBS […]

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What to know as protesters hit the streets of LA for 5th night – CBS Minnesota








































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Protesters are back on the streets of Los Angeles for a fifth consecutive day as more National Guard troops and Marines arrived. President Trump said he’s told California’s Gavin Newsom to get his act together, CBS News’ Danya Bacchus has all the new details.

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Lee Corso’s Last College GameDay Show: Aug. 30 in Columbus

COLUMBUS, Ohio – ESPN College GameDay analyst and commentator Lee Corso first wore a mascot’s headgear, signaling his choice for which team would win that day’s big game, on Oct. 5, 1996, before an Ohio State vs. Penn State game at Ohio Stadium. He’ll don his last headgear Saturday, Aug. 30, in front of 100,000-plus fans at Ohio Stadium […]

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COLUMBUS, Ohio – ESPN College GameDay analyst and commentator Lee Corso first wore a mascot’s headgear, signaling his choice for which team would win that day’s big game, on Oct. 5, 1996, before an Ohio State vs. Penn State game at Ohio Stadium. He’ll don his last headgear Saturday, Aug. 30, in front of 100,000-plus fans at Ohio Stadium when the Buckeyes host the Texas Longhorns in a juggernaut of a season-opening game. 
 
ESPN, which had previously announced Corso’s retirement in April, confirmed Tuesday that its first College GameDay show of the season would be Week 1 in Columbus and it will be Corso’s final GameDay show.
 
Corso, the last remaining cast member from the original GameDay shows that started in 1987, has made 430 mascot headgear selections all-time, according to ESPN, and has a record of 286-144 for a winning percentage of .665. He wore Brutus’ headgear for that initial pick in 1993, and the Buckeyes won, 24-6. 
 
Corso will turn 90 three weeks before his last GameDay show. He played football and baseball at Florida State University and graduated from there with both bachelor’s (physical education in 1957) and master’s (administration and supervision in 1958) degrees.
 
He was a collegiate head coach for 15 years – at Louisville, Indiana and Northern Illinois – and spent one season coaching in the USFL (Orlando) before joining ESPN in 1987. 
 
Lee Corso and College GameDay notes: 

  • Corso has selected and worn Brutus Buckeye headgear a record 45 times (Alabama is next with 38); 
  • Corso has worn 69 different school mascot’s headgear; 
  • This will be the 67th time Ohio State will be playing at a GameDay locale, the most among all schools (Alabama is second with 60); 
  • Ohio State has the most GameDay victories: 46; and
  • Ohio State has hosted GameDay the most, with the Aug. 30 Saturday morning show before Ohio State vs. Texas representing the 26th GameDay broadcast from Columbus. 

 
#GoBucks
 
The People. The Tradition. The Excellence.
 



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Seattle’s new PWHL team could be ‘scary’ good

Seattle’s brand-new women’s pro hockey team is coming together. The yet-to-be-named franchise hired its first players, including league star and Olympic gold medalist Hillary Knight, last week. They added to the roster in yesterday’s expansion draft. KUOW’s Kim Malcolm checked in with Seattle Times reporter Kate Shefte for some PWHL hiring updates. This interview has […]

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Seattle’s brand-new women’s pro hockey team is coming together. The yet-to-be-named franchise hired its first players, including league star and Olympic gold medalist Hillary Knight, last week. They added to the roster in yesterday’s expansion draft. KUOW’s Kim Malcolm checked in with Seattle Times reporter Kate Shefte for some PWHL hiring updates.

This interview has been edited for clarity.

Kim Malcolm: Let’s start with who got hired, and how the draft went. What stands out for you right now?

Kate Shefte: Let’s start with Hillary Knight. She is a living legend. Team USA captain, one of the most recognizable faces in the sport, and at 35 she just tied for the PWHL scoring lead with 29 points last season. She was a heck of a first player on this PWHL Seattle team. After her, they went out and signed Danielle Serdachny, who was a former Patty Kazmaier Memorial Award winner. That’s given to the top female college ice hockey player in the United States. And they signed Cayla Barnes, an Olympian at 19, the youngest player for Team USA, who won a national championship at Ohio State. She’s a young, very experienced defender who is probably going to anchor their blue line for years to come, perhaps. If this doesn’t get people excited for the PWHL in Seattle, I don’t really know what will.

And then the draft took place yesterday. One of our colleagues here at the station said it was, “SO AWESOME” to watch. Did you feel the same way? What stood out for you?

It just blew my mind how much talent they were picking up. They just kept adding to an impossible seeming degree. The new GM, Meghan Turner, really took advantage of these expansion draft rules and just signed a really enviable team. It’s not like they picked up the scraps here. If the goal was to make expansion teams competitive immediately, which supposedly it was, they succeeded. But that’s at the cost of ticking off the inaugural six teams, because some of them are just gutted. This will probably be the last expansion draft with that particular format.

And, the Hockey News has PWHL Seattle as the Walter Cup favorite next season, with just 12 players, half a team, signed. They have to fill in a little bit, build through the draft, build through free agency, get the rest of those roster spots filled up. But this is a heck of a blueprint for a very scary team. I have to think that they probably blew a lot of their budget already, so they might be kind of top heavy, but that’s a pretty small critique of this team. They look very, very good.

Such a strong start for a brand-new team here. But how good will it all be when they hit the ice? That’s kind of an X factor.

It really is. You never know. I mean, teams can look amazing on paper and then kind of fail to get out of the gate, but a lot of these players already have familiarity with each other. They signed Hillary Knight’s Boston Fleet teammate, Hannah Bilka. They dipped from every single team except for Minnesota. And so, a lot of these people know each other. And I like to think that that will translate. I’m sure they hope it does.

Before we let you go, Kate, the team doesn’t have a name yet. Are there any updates on what they could be called?

No updates. They have half a team. They really only have one official front office employee. That process is ongoing. Apparently, they’re close to hiring a coach. They said they’re comfortable with maybe going into the season, just as PWHL Seattle and PWHL Vancouver. That is how the inaugural six played their first season. They want to nail it. They want to get it right, you know, and especially in a city where the Kraken, I think we can safely say, no matter what they’ve done on the ice, the Kraken branding is very strong, and you want to match that energy. Not to plug it, but I did write a long history piece on the Seattle Vamps.

I was about to ask you. Do you think the Vamps would fly as a name now?

Personally, I would love it. I don’t think there’s anything scandalous about that word anymore, and it’s kind of a ‘wink wink’ to what the rest of the country thinks of us, which is ‘Twilight’ country. I think it would be hilarious and very cool and kind of powerful and kind of, you know, just kind of moody. I think it’s very Seattle. One thing, I know it has nothing to do with the water, and that wouldn’t really fit in with most of our teams. I will acknowledge that.

Listen to the interview by clicking the play button above.



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Nation’s first HBCU gymnastics program at Fisk University to shut down after 2026 season

The first HBCU to have a gymnastics program will participate in its last season in 2026. Fisk University, which began competing in January 2023, will discontinue its program after next season, the school announced last week. Advertisement “Considerable challenges … to schedule competitions and build a robust recruiting pipeline,” were the reasons cited for the […]

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The first HBCU to have a gymnastics program will participate in its last season in 2026.

Fisk University, which began competing in January 2023, will discontinue its program after next season, the school announced last week.

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“Considerable challenges … to schedule competitions and build a robust recruiting pipeline,” were the reasons cited for the decision on the school’s website. Fisk competes in the HBCU Athletic Conference, and the sport isn’t sanctioned by the conference, resulting in those challenges.

“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,” Valencia Jordan, Director of Fisk Athletics, said on the school’s website. “Fisk is grateful for the hard work, dedication and tenacity of its gymnasts, staff members, and coaches who made this program possible.”

The Tennessean has reached out to Jordan for comment.

Fisk University gymnastics had early success

Despite being new on the scene, Fisk’s gymnastics team has experienced some success.

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Morgan Price of Lebanon became the first gymnast from an HBCU to win the all-around championship at the USA Gymnastics Women’s Collegiate National Championships in 2024. She repeated the feat in 2025.

“It feels good because of the hard work that has been put in,” Price said in a release after the first title. “Honestly, I didn’t know where I would place, but it was a pleasant surprise. I have heard from a lot of people so far. I am still trying to take all this in.”

Price, Allie Berkley, Aliyah Reed-Hammon, and Ciniah Rosby each earned first-team All-American honors for the 2025 season.

Paul Skrbina is a sports enterprise reporter covering the Predators, Titans, Nashville SC, local colleges and local sports for The Tennessean. Reach him at pskrbina@tennessean.com and on the X platform (formerly known as Twitter) @paulskrbina.

This article originally appeared on Nashville Tennessean: Fisk gymnastics, nation’s first HBCU program, to shut down after 2026





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