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A global endeavor

The sport management major is leading a global initiative to build accessible turf soccer fields in underserved communities, with the latest project underway in northern Argentina. Inspired by a childhood trip and fueled by study abroad experiences, his mission blends a love of soccer with a drive to create lasting social impact. Josh Lubetkin ’25 was […]

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A global endeavor

The sport management major is leading a global initiative to build accessible turf soccer fields in underserved communities, with the latest project underway in northern Argentina. Inspired by a childhood trip and fueled by study abroad experiences, his mission blends a love of soccer with a drive to create lasting social impact.

Josh Lubetkin ’25 was just 10 years old when he first understood the power of soccer. While visiting Israel, he watched local children play on crumbling courts and dusty patches – fields in name only. Yet, their passion was undeniable.

“These kids need a field,” Lubetkin remembers thinking.

Josh Lubetkin ’25, Elon portrait
Josh Lubetkin ’25, a senior sport management major, is the individual behind the Lubetkin Field Foundation, a grassroots initiative aimed at building free, accessible turf soccer fields for underserved communities around the world. His current focus? A mountaintop village in northern Argentina called Tilcara, where the country’s national team once trained for the 1986 World Cup.

That early spark has grown into a global mission. Now approaching graduation from Elon University, Lubetkin is leading efforts to construct turf soccer fields in underserved communities – his latest project taking shape in Tilcara, a remote mountain village in northern Argentina.

What began as a Bar Mitzvah project in Israel – raising $30,000 to build a turf field at a children’s school in Ofakim, Israel – has evolved into the Lubetkin Field Foundation, a grassroots initiative using soccer as a tool for community building.

“It’s about giving kids a vibrant space to come play,” Lubetkin said, his excitement rising above the many logistical challenges of international work. Those challenges include language barriers, coordination with local officials, and raising funds — all while balancing his responsibilities as a college student.

The idea for the Argentinian project emerged during Lubetkin’s January 2023 study abroad course, Through the Lens of ESPN, led by Associate Professor David Bockino. The class toured major athletic venues, national media outlets, and iconic soccer sites like Boca Juniors, River Plate, and Argentina’s national training facility – an experience Lubetkin ranks among his top five life moments. A lifelong fan of Messi, Di María, and Agüero, he saw Argentina’s recent World Cup victory as the perfect backdrop for his next effort.

Lubetkin in Ofakim, Israel
Lubetkin (in white) cuts a ceremonial ribbon at the opening ceremonies for the soccer field he helped build at a children’s school in Ofakim, Israel. Photo courtesy of Lubetkin.

In Tilcara, Lubetkin found both inspiration and opportunity. With help from Juan Franchini, a sport consultant and professor at the Argentine University of Enterprise (UADE), he’s navigated the cultural and administrative steps needed to bring the project to life.

Franchini emphasized the importance of the field to Tilcara, a “small and humble community of 12,000,” which has never had a public soccer facility with artificial turf.

City officials hope to build a full soccer complex, and Lubetkin’s field — located on land once used by Argentina’s national team — is the first step.

“This field has to be public and open to everyone. That’s my only requirement,” Lubetkin said. “And it has to be turf, so the community doesn’t have to worry about maintenance.”

The new field – funded once again through a $30,000 campaign – includes goals, balls, and basic equipment. Construction is already underway, with site leveling and concrete work in progress.

Franchini praised Lubetkin’s professionalism and maturity throughout the project’s easy stages.

“He works like a real colleague of sport industry,” Franchini said Lubetkin. “He is responsible and committed to his job. And he is a person you can trust because when he says something, he does it.”

Josh Lubetkin at Gran Parque Central
As part of their January 2023 study abroad course, Through the Lens of ESPN, Lubetkin and his classmates toured Gran Parque Central in Montevideo, Uruguay. Having opened in 1900, Gran Parque Central is the oldest current stadium in Americas.

Soccer has always been central to Lubetkin’s life. Though he didn’t compete at the college level, he played varsity soccer in New Jersey and has stayed connected through travel. During a semester abroad in London, he attended 23 Premier League matches – visiting nearly every stadium in the league.

As a young project leader, he admits he’s sometimes underestimated. “People don’t always think it’s real or legitimate at first,” he said. But each completed field adds to his credibility and momentum.

His ultimate vision is ambitious: to build six fields on six continents, creating accessible spaces that empower and connect communities through play. Antarctica might be the only holdout, he joked.

Although Lubetkin originally applied to Elon as a psychology major, a first-year sport management course with Assistant Professor Khirey Walker changed his path. “That class flipped the switch,” Lubetkin said. “I realized I could build a career around what I love.”

Elon student Josh Lubetkin with Lucas Paquetá
While studying in Europe, Lubetkin regularly attended Premier League matches. During one such outing, he grabbed a selfie with Lucas Paquetá, a Brazilian soccer player for West Ham United. Photo courtesy of Lubetkin.

“As a student, Josh was always locked in on the material but never afraid to crack a smile or spark some fun in class,” Walker said. “His energy, curiosity, and can-do attitude made him a standout.”

What stood out most, Walker added, was Lubetkin’s curiosity. “He consistently went above and beyond – connecting class concepts to real-world issues and his own career goals.”

Lubetkin now hopes to combine his passion for sport with a career in advertising. After graduation, he’ll head to Fort Lauderdale, Florida, to work as an account coordinator for Zimmerman Advertising – a role he hopes will eventually lead him back into the sport industry.

For now, his focus remains on Tilcara and growing the Lubetkin Field Foundation. He’s managing the project solo – building a website, applying for grants, handling fundraising, and spreading the word. His ultimate goal is to turn the foundation into a formal nonprofit and expand to new global locations, with London already on the horizon.

“This has always been about more than just a field,” he said. “It’s about creating safe, joyful spaces for kids to play — and hopefully changing lives in the process.”

Interested in supporting the Lubetkin Field Foundation? Click here.

Thanks to the Lubetkin Field Foundation, this plot of land in Tilcara, Argentina, will soon become the community’s first public soccer field with artificial turf.
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College Sports

Report: Tennessee State not fielding men’s hockey team for 2025-26, aiming to move start to 2026-27 – College Hockey

After it was first announced in June 2023 that Tennessee State would field an NCAA Division I men’s hockey team for the upcoming 2025-26 season, it appears that will not happen. According to a report in the Tennessean, “uncertainty about a home ice location or practice facilities, a lack of fundraising, and unrest about the […]

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After it was first announced in June 2023 that Tennessee State would field an NCAA Division I men’s hockey team for the upcoming 2025-26 season, it appears that will not happen.

According to a report in the Tennessean, “uncertainty about a home ice location or practice facilities, a lack of fundraising, and unrest about the school’s financial situation are all contributing factors for the delay of the program.”

Tennessee State would have been the first-ever hockey team at an historically black, public university. It now appears that 2026-27 will be the earliest the Tigers will take the ice.

A source with knowledge of the situation, who wished to remain anonymous because the news has not been made official, told the paper that Tennessee State’s hockey team had not met its fundraising goals for 2025-26.

Duanté Abercrombie was named the Tigers’ inaugural coach in April 2024.



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McKenna, projected No. 1 pick in 2026, announces he will play at Penn State

Penn State (22-14-4) reached the Frozen Four for the first time last season after defeating Connecticut 3-2 in overtime to win its regional final. It lost 3-1 to Boston University in the national semifinals. The program moved to the NCAA Division I level for the 2012-13 season and has made a rapid ascent. “I think […]

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Penn State (22-14-4) reached the Frozen Four for the first time last season after defeating Connecticut 3-2 in overtime to win its regional final. It lost 3-1 to Boston University in the national semifinals.

The program moved to the NCAA Division I level for the 2012-13 season and has made a rapid ascent.

“I think it’s just a lot of work from a lot of people in the hockey program and the athletic department and the community, the alumni,” Penn State coach Guy Gadowsky said. “So many people that have been doing a lot of work for the program since its inception. I guess it’s just the law of the farm that you keep doing the job, and eventually you get rewarded for it.”

McKenna said another of the aspects that swayed him was the facilities for the players, which are housed at Pegula Ice Arena. The building is named for Buffalo Sabres owner Terry Pegula.

“It’s all hockey all the time,” Gadowsky said. “This building is for them. … I’ve never seen a better hockey weight room, and it’s literally, it’s 10 feet across the hall from our locker room. They thought of making sure that we have great nutrition right in the locker room area, everything from the underwater treadmill and athletic training facilities right in the locker room. Everything is extremely convenient for the hockey players and that’s something that was important to Mr. Pegula.

“The atmosphere right from Day 1 was incredible, and as we’ve improved, they’ve improved. This is the most fun place to watch a hockey game, that’s for sure.”

McKenna will have help this season. Defenseman Jackson Smith, selected by the Columbus Blue Jackets with the No. 14 pick of the 2025 NHL Draft, will join McKenna as a freshman. The 18-year-old was 10th among WHL defensemen last season with 54 points (11 goals, 43 assists) in 68 games with Tri-City.

Among the returning players from last season will be the team’s top two scorers, forwards Aiden Fink and Charlie Cerrato.

Fink, a Nashville Predators prospect, was fourth among NCAA players with 53 points (23 goals, 30 assists) in 40 games. Cerrato, who had 42 points (15 goals, 27 assists) in 38 games, was chosen by the Carolina Hurricanes in the second round (No. 49) of the 2025 NHL Draft. He’s the second-ever Penn State player to be chosen in the NHL draft, and first since Denis Smirnov by the Colorado Avalanche in the sixth round (No. 156) of the 2017 NHL Draft.

In addition, Gadowsky was a finalist for the Spencer Penrose Award as NCAA Division I coach of the year.

“The main goal is obviously to win a championship,” McKenna said. “I think you kind of saw what Penn State did this year, making it to the Frozen Four. They’ve come a long ways, and I think next year when I go there, obviously that’s the goal, to win a championship with them.”

Other players selected in the 2025 draft committed to play NCAA hockey this season include forward Cole Reschny (No. 18, Calgary Flames), who is leaving Victoria of the WHL for the University of North Dakota; and forward Malcolm Spence (No. 43, New York Rangers), who is going to the University of Michigan from Erie of the Ontario Hockey League.

Defenseman Keaton Verhoeff, another top prospect for the 2026 draft, will attend North Dakota after playing the past two seasons with Victoria.

NHL.com senior draft writer Mike G. Morreale contributed to this report



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Michigan State hockey losing star player after NHL trade

This past season, Michigan State hockey had the top player in all of college hockey, Isaac Howard, who won the Hobey Baker award for what many thought would be one last ride. After a trade on Wednesday between the Tampa Bay Lightning and the Edmonton Oilers, Howard will be leaving East Lansing after all. It […]

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This past season, Michigan State hockey had the top player in all of college hockey, Isaac Howard, who won the Hobey Baker award for what many thought would be one last ride. After a trade on Wednesday between the Tampa Bay Lightning and the Edmonton Oilers, Howard will be leaving East Lansing after all.

It was a fairly shocking surprise when Howard announced he would return to the Spartans for one more year back in April. At the time, there was some friction between Howard and Tampa Bay, who had drafted him in the first round of the 2022 NHL Draft, and Howard cited a ‘philosophical divide’ between him and the Lightning as a major reason he would return to MSU.

Now, Howard is in Edmonton, and he signed a three-year contract to start his professional career with the Oilers. While this marks the end for Isaac Howard with MSU, Spartan hockey fans can at least be consoled by the fact that Trey Augustine, one of the best goaltenders in college hockey, will be delaying his pro career and staying with MSU for one more year.

Contact/Follow us @The SpartansWire on X, and like our page on Facebook to follow ongoing coverage of Michigan state news, notes, and opinion. You can also follow Andrew Brewster on Twitter @IAmBrewster.





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Running a Baseball League Sparked Sarah Dunkel-Jackson to Start the Hockey Challenge Camp

Sarah Dunkel-Jackson and her husband, Jim, started a baseball league in Michigan for kids with unique medical and learning needs five years ago.  Intertwined with her work as a researcher and professor at Michigan State University, Dunkel-Jackson conducted a formal program evaluation of the league, which involved talking with players, parents and coaches about how […]

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Sarah Dunkel-Jackson and her husband, Jim, started a baseball league in Michigan for kids with unique medical and learning needs five years ago. 

Intertwined with her work as a researcher and professor at Michigan State University, Dunkel-Jackson conducted a formal program evaluation of the league, which involved talking with players, parents and coaches about how it could be improved.

“Overwhelmingly it was positive, but the thing to improve baseball was to add more sports,” Dunkel-Jackson said. “I was reviewing it with my son, and he said, ‘Mom, can we do hockey?’

“And I said, ‘You know what? Let’s do it.’”

That’s how the Hockey Challenge Camp was born. The camp is open to younger kids all the way up through young adults, some who’ve played hockey before on organized teams and others who are new to playing the sport. The camp takes players of all abilities and ages.

Dunkel-Jackson recently won the Willie O’Ree Community Hero Award for her work founding the camp. The annual award is given to someone who has positively affected their community, culture or society all through the sport of hockey. 

The nomination itself excited Dunkel-Jackson because it gave her a chance to highlight the importance of accessible sports and a community coming together to run a program like Hockey Challenge Camp.

“It doesn’t have to be this scary, really difficult thing to do,” Dunkel-Jackson said. “You just get some really good community members together and some good organizations who share those values and who can run a program like this.”

She was also excited about the award because of the “incredible story” of O’Ree. Dunkel-Jackson recalled reading the chapter about him in Wayne Gretzky’s book, “99: Stories of the Game.”

“That was really cool to see that, somebody who’s already overcome barriers to accessing sports like hockey,” Dunkel-Jackson said. “Just to be said in the same sentence as him was kind of, ‘Wow,’ humbling and a big honor.”

Sports have always been a big part of Dunkel-Jackson’s life. She grew up right outside East Lansing, Michigan, and loved watching her little brother play hockey. However, she didn’t play because there weren’t girls teams when she was a kid. 

Dunkel-Jackson ran track, played basketball, won a softball state championship her senior year of high school and played lacrosse in college.

After grad school, she and her husband moved to Ontario and worked with kids with disabilities. They later moved back to Michigan and Dunkel-Jackson got her job at MSU. She’s part of the Research in Autism and Developmental Disabilities Lab and the Department of Human Development and Family Studies.

As coaches for softball and baseball in the community program, the couple saw kids who’d stop coming to practices because they weren’t quite at the skill level. That sparked the need to start the Baseball Challenge League, finding a way to make the sport work for kids no matter their ability level.

“Being part of a team is something all kids should get a chance to do,” she said. “When we saw that not a lot of kids had the opportunity to participate in a sport because they just weren’t being able to adapt to their needs, I just wanted to do something about that. Every kid should have a chance to play.”

Dunkel-Jackson is also the guardian for her older cousin, Stephanie, who’s participated in the Special Olympics, plays a variety of sports and is a bocce ball state champion.

This year’s Hockey Challenge Camp will be held mornings in the first week of August. Every participant gets one or two hockey buddies who play hockey on house or travel teams. Buddies help campers learn to skate and spend time on the ice together.

The camp includes various on-ice and off-ice sessions. The first is for the hockey buddies as an orientation to educate them about questions such as: What is a disability? What are invisible and visible disabilities? How can they help campers and meet them with their specific needs? They also teach them a Stay, Play, Talk strategy where hockey buddies stay with their buddy, play hockey with their buddy and talk to their buddy in the best way that works for them.

They end camp with a morning scrimmage and a pizza party before a night game at Munn Ice Arena on Michigan State’s campus the following day.

In its third year in 2025, the camp has grown from 12 players and about 20 buddies the first year to more than 90 people registered for this year’s camp.

“It’s grown a ton,” Dunkel-Jackson said. “Half of them are buddies this year, but we have a bunch of new players. We’re really excited to adapt to their needs.”

Funding from winning the Willie O’Ree Award went towards purchasing new sleds and equipment for the camp.

It brings Dunkel-Jackson a lot of joy to see the campers happy playing hockey.

“They just love to play hockey,” she said. “And that’s what it’s about. It’s just kids playing hockey, that’s all.

“Because no, not everybody’s going to be a (Tier I) hockey player… but everybody can love participating in a sport in some way. Just finding opportunities for them and seeing that they’re having a blast and hanging out with their friend, I just love that. I’m glad we get the opportunity to do that.”

Dunkel-Jackson appreciated the chance to share the story of the Hockey Challenge Camp, with the hope the other communities will see it and say: “‘Yeah, we can do something like that.’ That’s just what I hope,” she said.

Story from Red Line Editorial, Inc.





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University of New Hampshire

GLOUCESTER, Mass.  – Six student-athletes on the 2024-25 University of New Hampshire women’s hockey team have been named American Hockey Coaches Association Krampade All-American Scnolars.   Senior forward and two-time captain Kira Juodikis (Windsor, Ontario) received this accolade for the fourth consecutive year as she earned a Business Administration: Management degree with a 3.97 cumulative GPA.   Sophomore forward Julia […]

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GLOUCESTER, Mass.  – Six student-athletes on the 2024-25 University of New Hampshire women’s hockey team have been named American Hockey Coaches Association Krampade All-American Scnolars.
 
Senior forward and two-time captain Kira Juodikis (Windsor, Ontario) received this accolade for the fourth consecutive year as she earned a Business Administration: Management degree with a 3.97 cumulative GPA.
 
Sophomore forward Julia Cabral (Lee, N.H.) and sophomore goaltender Noemi Martinez (Glen Ridge, N.J.) both earned Scholar All-American recognition for the second time in as many years.
 
Senior defender Marina Alvarez (Center Moriches, N.Y.), senior forward Brooke Hammer (Commerce Township, Mich.) and junior forward Hannah Rodgers (Wilmington, N.C.) are all first-time honorees.
 
To earn recognition on this ninth annual list, a student-athlete had to attain a 3.75 or higher GPA in each semester of the 2024-25 academic year and had to play in 40 percent of the team’s games; exceptions were granted for injuries and backup goaltenders. The school is also required to be an ACHA member.
 
A total of 349 Division I women were named to the ninth annual Krampade All-American Schoalars list. 
 
All six Wildcats were named to the 2024-25 Hockey East All-Academic Team with Juodikis and Martinez also earning Top Scholar-Athlete recognition for recording a perfect. 4.0 GPA in the academic year. 



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Isaac Howard traded to Edmonton, signs to begin pro career

Michigan State forward Isaac Howard will start his pro hockey career rather than return to the Spartans. Howard signed a three-year entry-level contract with the Edmonton Oilers on July 8 after being traded from the Tampa Bay Lightning for forward prospect Sam O’Reilly. Howard, who won the 2025 Hobey Baker Award given to the best […]

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Michigan State forward Isaac Howard will start his pro hockey career rather than return to the Spartans.

Howard signed a three-year entry-level contract with the Edmonton Oilers on July 8 after being traded from the Tampa Bay Lightning for forward prospect Sam O’Reilly.

Howard, who won the 2025 Hobey Baker Award given to the best player in college hockey last season as a junior, was set to return to East Lansing after contract negotiations with the Lightning broke down following MSU’s season. Instead, he’ll start his career in the Edmonton organization.

Howard was the 31st overall pick by the Lightning in the 2022 NHL Draft and had 26 goals with 26 assists in 37 games for the Spartans last season, including the double-overtime game-winning goal against Ohio State in the Big Ten tournament championship game.

Howard is now set to join the Oilers, who have reached the Stanley Cup Final before losing to the Florida Panthers in each of the past two seasons.

The Spartans now have two open roster spots to fill ahead of the 2025-26 campaign following Howard’s departure. Earlier on July 8, top prospect and likely No. 1 overall 2026 draft pick Gavin McKenna committed to play at Penn State next season over the Spartans, who were the other finalist to land him.

Contact Nathaniel Bott at nbott@lsj.com and follow him on X @Nathaniel_Bott



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