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A new generation of gymnastics stars are ready to take center stage

The 2025 graduating class is full of champions, Olympians, and stellar athletes who have left their mark on the sport of gymnastics. These are some of the brightest stars the sport has seen in recent memory, they’ll be leaving behind enormous legacies and big shoes to fill. Oklahoma Sooners 2025 All-Around National Champion Jordan Bowers and […]

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The 2025 graduating class is full of champions, Olympians, and stellar athletes who have left their mark on the sport of gymnastics. These are some of the brightest stars the sport has seen in recent memory, they’ll be leaving behind enormous legacies and big shoes to fill.

Oklahoma Sooners

2025 All-Around National Champion Jordan Bowers and her teammate Audrey Davis graduate with three team national titles from Oklahoma.

Florida Gators

Two-time Olympic alternate and NCAA standout Leanne Wong graduates from Florida on her way to med school.

Missouri Tigers

Fan favorite Helen Hu is retiring from gymnastics for real this time, after retiring in 2023, taking the 2024 season off, and coming back to win a national balance beam title in 2025.  

Jade Carey performing a leap on the balance beam in an Oregon State Beavers leotard

Jade Carey competing for Oregon State Gymnastics | Stew Milne/GettyImages

Oregon State Beavers

Olympic medalist Jade Carey had an incredibly impressive senior season, earning four perfect 10s (three on floor, one on balance beam) to bring her career total to 16. Across her four years as a Beaver, Carey won 168 event titles, 51 this season alone. Carey was named the winner of the 2025 American Athlete, Inc. Award, which recognizes the top female senior gymnast nationwide. She is also a finalist for the prestigious Honda award, recognizing the top NCAA athlete in each sport, along with Oklahoma’s Bowers and Davis and LSU’s Aleah Finnegan. 

UCLA Bruins

UCLA’s Brooklyn Moors, Emma Malabuyo, and Chae Campbell have left an indelible impact on the program, bringing it back to its former glory and ending their careers as National Runner-Ups. Campbell won the Big 10 All-Around Title, Moors won the national floor title, and Malabuyo helped clinch the team’s advance to the finals with a second-place finish of her own on the balance beam.

Utah Utes

Olympian and Utah cornerstone Grace McCallum will return as a student coach next year, after claiming four individual runner-up finishes at NCAAs this year. LSU graduates a shocking 10 athletes, including Olympian Aleah Finnegan and last year’s American Athlete, Inc. winner and All-Around national champion Haleigh Bryant. In her career, Bryant owns at least one perfect 10 on each event, what is referred to as a “Gym Slam” in the sport.

Who are the rising stars in gymnastics, ready to take over from these legends?

Faith Torrez performing for Oklahoma Gymnastics at the 2025 Seattle Regional

Faith Torrez competing for Oklahoma Gymnastics at the 2025 NCAA Gymnastics Seattle Regional | Ali Gradischer/GettyImages

Oklahoma Sooners

Oklahoma rising senior Faith Torrez is the heir apparent to the void left by the graduates, already having a long list of accolades to her name, including multiple individual conference and national titles the past two seasons. This year, she took silver on the floor exercise and bronze in the all-around and on balance beam at NCAAs after sharing the balance beam national title with her teammate Audrey Davis last year. Torrez is the reigning SEC champion on the floor exercise and shares the conference honor on balance beam. 

OU also has a dangerous trio of rising sophomores — Addison Fatta, Lily Pederson, and Elle Mueller. Pederson is a Level 10 National Champion, while Mueller won the 2024 Nastia Liukin Cup. Fatta has Olympic Trials and international experience with Team USA as a senior elite gymnast. Fatta and Pederson both competed in the All-Around multiple times this season, with Fatta being named a first-team All-American in the All-Around after NCAAs. Mueller consistently made vault and floor lineups, breaking 9.900 in both events. 

LSU Tigers

Last year’s national champions, the LSU Tigers, boast the reigning SEC Freshman of the Year and NCAA Vault champion, Kailin Chio, and former USA Gymnastics Winter Cup All-Around Champion, Lexi Zeiss. Chio hit a 39.800 in the All-Around this season and won the national vault title. Zeiss and Chio’s teammate, Kaliya Lincoln, had a limited season due to injuries, but the Olympic alternate and Pan American champion is a powerhouse and will likely become a staple in the Tigers’ All-Around lineup and especially in the floor exercise.

Utah Utes

For much of the year, the Freshman of the Year race was neck and neck between two athletes — the aforementioned Chio and Utah’s Avery Neff, who was the number 1 recruit in the class of 2024. Neff’s season took a pause after she sprained both of her ankles during her floor routine on Jan. 17 in a home meet, but she miraculously returned to competition just three weeks later after working closely with the team’s training staff. By the end of the season, she was back in the All-Around, winning the All-Around title at Utah’s regional semifinal appearance with a 39.650. She ended her freshman season as a four-time All-American and the Big 12 Newcomer of the Year.

Joscelyn Roberson competing on the balance beam in an Arkansas Razorbacks leotard

Joscelyn Roberson competing for Arkansas Gymnastics | Stew Milne/GettyImages

Arkansas Razorbacks

Arkansas’s Joscelyn Roberson is another SEC gymnast to be reckoned with, breaking multiple program records for the Razorbacks this year. She had a nonstop year, from traveling to Paris as an Olympic alternate, touring with Simone Biles and other members of Team USA on the Gold Over America Tour, and hopping right into competition as a regular All-Around competitor for Arkansas this spring. Roberson was lights out on balance beam and floor, bringing energy and experience to the Gymbacks. She qualified to NCAAs as an individual All-Around competitor after Arkansas fell in the regional finals. She earned All-American honors on the balance beam, both at National Championships and for the regular season, and is returning to elite training during the NCAA offseason. 

Florida Gators

2026 should see comebacks from Florida’s Kayla DiCello and Skye Blakely, who should join their teammate Selena Harris-Miranda as huge contenders in the 2026 season. Blakely returned to limited competition during the 2025 season, but DiCello was sidelined the whole season after rupturing her Achilles at 2024 Olympic Trials and later requiring foot surgery. Both DiCello and Blakely were considered top prospects for the 2024 Olympic Team before their untimely injuries and have the skills and consistency to be major factors for Florida next season. DiCello’s return to the vault lineup would be a huge asset for the Gators, who struggled on the event at this year’s national semi-finals.

Transfer portal

eMjae Frazier, previously at Cal, and former Georgia Bulldog Naya Howard are both currently in the transfer portal but depending on where they land next year, could make a big splash. Frazierbroke the single season NCAA scoring record as a sophomore in 2024. (This record has since been broken by Oklahoma’s Jordan Bowers and Faith Torrez.) She’s a rockstar in the classroom too, graduating from the University of California, Berkeley in three years, and will be pursuing a master’s degree at her next program. Howard will have one year of eligibility for her new program and can make an immediate impact on any program, with a career high of at least a 9.900 on all four events.  

Big 10

The Big Ten should see a lot of stellar gymnastics from MSU’s Sage Kellerman, OSU’s Tory Vetter, Washington’s Mary McDonough, and Illinois’s Chloe Cho. This season, Kellerman earned All-American honors on both events she competed at NCAAs- vault and uneven bars. Vetter recently announced that she will return to Ohio State for her fifth year after being named to the First Team All Big Ten Gymnastics Team this year. Cho was named the Big Ten Freshman of the Year and McDonough advanced all the way to the National Championships as an individual All-Around competitor, despite Washington failing to qualify to regional competition.

Smaller programs

From smaller programs, expect a splash from Towson’s Isabella Minervini, a regional individual All-Around competitor, and Fisk’s Morgan Price, who has broken a score of records, including sweeping all five individual national titles at this year’s Women’s Collegiate Gymnastics National Invitational Championships, defending her All-Around title from last year. She also became the first HBCU gymnast to ever earn a 10.0 with an uneven bars routine earlier this season. 

Despite a large graduating class of gymnasts, NCAA gymnastics has a bright future. Between rising upperclassmen, this year’s exceptional freshmen class, and a new class of recruits, the 2026 season will be star-studded and full of exciting routines. Whether you’re a gymnastics die-hard, new to the sport, or somewhere in between, each conference has plenty of new and returning gymnasts to root for. Gymnasts will begin training with their teams this summer, and competition will start again in January 2026.



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NCAA sports set to change forever with innovative model after $20.5M decision

The NCAA and its five power conference leagues have come to a nearly $2.7-billion settlement in a pair of federal antitrust lawsuits, with college athletes set to be paid for the first time The recent NCAA settlement has brought an end to college sports’ foundation of amateurism(Image: Getty Images) The NCAA’s monumental settlement with its […]

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The NCAA and its five power conference leagues have come to a nearly $2.7-billion settlement in a pair of federal antitrust lawsuits, with college athletes set to be paid for the first time

NCAA
The recent NCAA settlement has brought an end to college sports’ foundation of amateurism(Image: Getty Images)

The NCAA’s monumental settlement with its five power conference leagues has forever altered the landscape of college sports, marking the first time student-athletes will receive payment from their institutions.

Despite its roots in amateurism, college sports are now set to become part of an innovative revenue-sharing model where schools can pay athletes up to $20.5 million annually starting in 2025-26. Following U.S. District Judge Claudia Wilken’s resolution of three separate antitrust lawsuits last week, colleges will also retroactively compensate athletes $2.8 billion for those who competed from 2016 to 2025.

This development comes on the heels of the University of Oklahoma’s announcement that it would be downsizing its athletic department staff due to revenue sharing with student-athletes, resulting in a five percent job loss. In other news, Notre Dame head coach Marcus Freeman has urged the NCAA to have just one transfer portal window instead of two.

READ MORE: U.S. Open organizers make announcement after Bryson DeChambeau and Rory McIlroy discoveryREAD MORE: Kyle Busch’s $138 billion backer makes Hendrick Motorsports announcement

Beginning in the fall of 2025, athletes will start receiving direct payments from their schools through revenue-sharing, which is expected to account for roughly $20 million per year. However, this figure could potentially increase annually depending on more profitable television deals.

The decision on how each school allocates their $20 million budget each year, including how much is used to pay players, which players are paid, and how much they receive, is left to the discretion of the individual institutions.

The new revenue-sharing model won’t impact current name, image, and likeness (NIL) deals, which have revolutionized college sports since they were introduced a few years ago.

Arch Manning
Texas quarterback Arch Manning has the highest NIL valuation ($6.8 million) out of all college athletes(Image: Getty Images)

NIL deals enable players to earn money through endorsements, social media, and other business ventures. Some of these deals have even transformed young teenagers into millionaires before they’ve entered the professional game.

Fortunately for students, NIL deals are here to stay. However, the NCAA settlement includes a reporting requirement where athletes must disclose third-party NIL deals that aren’t part of the revenue-sharing allotment they receive.

NIL deals could potentially allow schools to pay more than the $20 million they can distribute to players, although it’s been reported that the NCAA plans to monitor this in the future.

Some of the funds schools will use to compensate their student athletes will come from ever-increasing TV rights packages, particularly for events like the College Football Playoff and March Madness.

March Madness
TV rights packages for events such as March Madness will help institutions pay their athletes(Image: Getty Images)

Some schools are also raising costs to fans through “talent fees”, “concession price hikes”, and “athletic fees” added to tuition costs, providing another income source for them to distribute.

College football and college basketball are the two highest-earning sports, with top quarterbacks reportedly earning around $2m a year, which would consume about 10 per cent of a typical school’s NIL budget for all its athletes.

Regarding the NCAA payout to former athletes who competed between 2016-2024, this will only be accessible to those who were either fully or partially excluded from those payments under previous NCAA regulations.

NCAA
The recent NCAA settlement has brought an end to college sports’ foundation of amateurism(Image: Getty Images)



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Fisk University gymnastics program set to end next year

The post Fisk University gymnastics program set to end next year appeared first on ClutchPoints. Fisk University, home to the first-ever HBCU gymnastics program, has announced plans to discontinue the program in 2026. The news comes after an email was sent to students on Friday afternoon and confirmed by former Fisk University gymnast Naimah Muhammad. […]

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The post Fisk University gymnastics program set to end next year appeared first on ClutchPoints.

Fisk University, home to the first-ever HBCU gymnastics program, has announced plans to discontinue the program in 2026. The news comes after an email was sent to students on Friday afternoon and confirmed by former Fisk University gymnast Naimah Muhammad.

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The decision to discontinue the program stems from challenges in aligning it with the athletics structure. Since gymnastics is not a sanctioned sport within the HBCU Athletic Conference (HBCUAC), scheduling and recruiting have become increasingly difficult. Gymnastics is not a sport sponsored by the HBCUAC, which has required Fisk’s gymnastics program to independently finance parts of the program without formal support from the conference.

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

In the three years since its inception, Fisk University has made history on multiple occasions. In February, Fisk gymnastics made history by defeating Southeast Missouri State University (SEMO) and the University of Bridgeport in the same meet. This landmark victory marked the Bulldogs as the first HBCU gymnastics team to win against both an NCAA Division I and Division II team in a single competition.

Fisk University gymnasts like Muhammad and Morgan Price, who transferred to Arkansas in May, emerged as HBCU sports stars. Price made history as a pioneer in the sport of HBCU gymnastics. Price became the first gymnast from an HBCU to win the 2024 USA Collegiate National Title in West Chester, Pennsylvania, last season. Additionally, Kyrstin Johnson, a former gymnast from Talladega University, became the first HBCU gymnast to win a gold medal after winning the vault and placing third in the same all-around competition.

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Meanwhile, Muhammad made history as the first HBCU gymnast to compete at the NCAA, leading off the inaugural team on Floor at the Super 16 in Las Vegas on January 6, 2023, where she scored a 9.6.

Related: Kenny Latimore & Chanté Moore’s son graduates from an HBCU

Related: HBCU administrator responds to sexual assault allegations



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OU AD Joe Castiglione says House settlement approval offers ‘unprecedented opportunity’

The world of college athletics is entering a new era. On Friday night, Judge Claudia Wilken approved the House settlement in the U.S. Northern District of California, ushering in revenue-sharing for the first time in NCAA history. Beginning July 1, Division I schools will be allowed to share $20.5 million directly with athletes, an amount that will increase annually. Advertisement Schools […]

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The world of college athletics is entering a new era.

On Friday night, Judge Claudia Wilken approved the House settlement in the U.S. Northern District of California, ushering in revenue-sharing for the first time in NCAA history. Beginning July 1, Division I schools will be allowed to share $20.5 million directly with athletes, an amount that will increase annually.

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Schools have been preparing for this moment for months while awaiting the decision. OU athletic director Joe Castiglione, who confirmed in a December email to fans the program planned to share the maximum allowable revenues with their athletes, wrote Saturday he sees this new era as an “unprecedented opportunity” for his athletic department.

“The approval of the House settlement brings clarity to the future of college athletics,” Castiglione wrote Saturday on X. “But it also offers unprecedented opportunity for (OU athletics) to excel as never before.

“We’ve prepared for this day, and now that it’s here we’re ready to share revenue at the maximum allowable amount and add scholarships to create financial certainty for our student-athletes.”

Most FBS athletic departments plan to allocate roughly 75% of revenue-sharing to football ($15 million), 15-20% to men’s basketball, 5-10% to women’s basketball and the rest for other non-revenue generating sports.

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OU exceeded $200 million in revenue for the first time in the 2024 fiscal year, according to the annual financial report the school filed with the NCAA in mid-January. The department also set a fundraising record for the second time in three years last year. The Sooners received a record $110.3 million in total donations and pledges during the 2023-24 fiscal year, surpassing the $109 million raised during the 2022 fiscal year.

More: What does the NCAA settlement mean for college sports? We answer the burning questions

Athletic director Joe Castiglione speaks during an NCAA championship rally for OU gymnastics in Norman, Okla., Monday, April 28, 2025.

Athletic director Joe Castiglione speaks during an NCAA championship rally for OU gymnastics in Norman, Okla., Monday, April 28, 2025.

Castiglione has taken numerous steps over the past year to ready his athletic department for revenue-sharing. He has partnered with former AT&T CEO Randall Stephenson, who serves as executive adviser to the president and athletic director, to “help guide us into restructuring our budget for this new world of college sports and into developing a football structure with elements similar to professional sports teams.”

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Last July, the Sooners announced a new structure for football recruiting operations, partnering with former Philadelphia Eagles vice president of football administration Jake Rosenberg. Stephenson and Rosenberg were influential in hiring OU general manager Jim Nagy, who has gotten busy building out an NFL-type front office for the Sooners’ football program.

OU also hired NBA star Trae Young as its men’s basketball assistant general manager. In the role, Young will “lend support in OU player personnel and strategic roster management planning, and will serve a critical role in helping build student-athletes’ brands and maximizing their potential,” according to the school. Young will also be “assisting with the evaluation of high school and transfer portal prospects, as well as helping negotiate player contracts,” per the school’s release.

Castiglione has said previously the school remains committed to all 21 sports. Cutting sports is one of many concerns for some following the settlement approval for those involved in college athletics.

However, due to the unprecedented changes, OU athletics is laying off 5% of its full-time employees, the school confirmed May 25 to The Oklahoman.

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“OU student-athletes will continue to benefit from creative NIL partnerships worthy of their value and the enthusiasm they inspire in our fans,” Castiglione continued Saturday on X. “Amid all the change we see, our commitment to OU’s tradition of excellence remains steadfast.”

Colton Sulley covers the Oklahoma Sooners for The Oklahoman. Have a story idea for Colton? He can be reached at csulley@oklahoman.com or on X/Twitter at @colton_sulley. Support Colton’s work and that of other Oklahoman journalists by purchasing a digital subscription today at subscribe.oklahoman.com.

This article originally appeared on Oklahoman: Joe Castiglione calls NCAA settlement an ‘unprecedented opportunity’



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Panthers AD Greene on seismic House vs. NCAA settlement: ‘Pitt Athletics is definitely ready for this’

A new era in collegiate sports has officially arrived. On Friday, U.S. District Judge Claudia Wilken approved a 10-year, $2.8 billion settlement to the House vs. NCAA lawsuit originally filed in 2020 by Arizona State swimmer Grant House and TCU basketball player Sedona Prince. Wilken’s ruling came after extensive litigation and discussion over a multi-year […]

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A new era in collegiate sports has officially arrived.

On Friday, U.S. District Judge Claudia Wilken approved a 10-year, $2.8 billion settlement to the House vs. NCAA lawsuit originally filed in 2020 by Arizona State swimmer Grant House and TCU basketball player Sedona Prince.

Wilken’s ruling came after extensive litigation and discussion over a multi-year period.

Across the country, athletic directors, including Pitt’s Allen Greene, have been bracing for the ruling and working to prepare for its short- and long-term implications.

During an appearance Saturday morning on 93.7 FM, Greene painted an optimistic picture about how Pitt is positioned to meet the moment.

“No. 1, Pitt Athletics is definitely ready for this and big kudos to the team and to our university administration,” he said. “One of the things that is a huge benefit to us here at Pitt is the alignment between our board chair, our chancellor, myself and our team and our chancellor’s team.

“We’ve been able to have very transparent conversations about how we are preparing for the eventual approval of this settlement. … We’ve been strategizing for six months and even beyond. But really robustly over the last six months. I couldn’t be more proud of the team for helping put us in a very strong position moving forward.”

The seismic components of the settlement that’ll usher in massive changes to Division I college sports center around direct name, image and likeness (NIL) revenue-sharing with players starting July 1 ($20.5 million per academic year in Year 1) and $2.8 billion in NIL back payments over a 10-year span to athletes who competed at any point from 2016-2024.

Additionally, roster limits will come into play, in contrast to the per-sport scholarship limitations historically utilized by the NCAA.

The $20.5 million approved for distribution to players in 2025-26 is set to increase every year during the 10-year agreement.

For Greene — who took the helm of Pitt athletics in mid-October last year when Heather Lyke was fired after more than eight years on the job — positioning the school for the impending settlement has been a major focus.

“We were anticipating the House settlement being approved at some point in time, and we took measures from the get-go to really evaluate our investments and where we were investing,” he said. “We’ve redistributed our resources to help make sure that we are in best position for future success. Sometimes, we have to look at things a little bit differently, we may have to have had to make some unconventional decisions, but every school is facing the same battle.

“It doesn’t matter what Power Four league you’re in, doesn’t matter if you’re in the Big East or not, but if you’re going to participate in a revenue share, $20.5 (million) doesn’t just grow on a tree right outside people’s offices. We have to be very strategic with how we’re redirecting our resources to have the greatest impact.”

In the immediate aftermath of Friday’s landmark ruling, plenty of questions still remain regarding the landscape of college sports.

How harmonious an environment will exist between the still-permitted booster-backed collectives, original distributors of NIL payments beginning in 2021, and athletic departments that are now cutting checks to players?

How will Title IX concerns be addressed if and when football and men’s basketball, the two most profitable collegiate sports, absorb the lion’s share of a school’s annual revenue-sharing budget?

Will the rich get richer, whereas programs such as Pitt struggle to keep up?

And how about overall enforcement of these massive changes, to be handled by the newly announced College Sports Commission?

No one can answer those questions at the moment.

But Greene is confident about Pitt’s ability to thrive in this challenging and uncharted new era.

“We want to have a championship-caliber program,” Greene said. “I would not be at Pitt if I didn’t think that was possible here. We’re not going to have the most money — that’s part of who we are. But we may have the most grit. We’ve got to figure out how we are going to leverage all that is uniquely Pitt and use that to our advantage. Where there’s a will, there’s a way. We’re going to find a way to win at Pitt.”

Justin Guerriero is a TribLive reporter covering the Penguins, Pirates and college sports. A Pittsburgh native, he is a Central Catholic and University of Colorado graduate. He joined the Trib in 2022 after covering the Colorado Buffaloes for Rivals and freelancing for the Denver Post. He can be reached at jguerriero@triblive.com.



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WWE Money In The Bank 2025 Review, Results & Analysis

John Pollock & Wai Ting review WWE Money In The Bank featuring this year’s MITB ladder match winners, John Cena & Logan Paul vs. Cody Rhodes & Jey Uso, and a surprise return to close the show. Plus, John gives his thoughts on WWE-AAA Worlds Collide featuring El Hijo del Vikingo vs. Chad Gable. Jordan […]

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WWE Money In The Bank 2025 Review, Results & Analysis
WWE Money In The Bank 2025 Review

John Pollock & Wai Ting review WWE Money In The Bank featuring this year’s MITB ladder match winners, John Cena & Logan Paul vs. Cody Rhodes & Jey Uso, and a surprise return to close the show.

Plus, John gives his thoughts on WWE-AAA Worlds Collide featuring El Hijo del Vikingo vs. Chad Gable.

Jordan Breen Scholarship Fund: https://www.gofundme.com/f/jordan-breen-scholarship-fund

Ad-free, timestamped version available for patrons at POSTwrestlingCafe.com

WWE Money In The Bank
June 7, 2025
Intuit Dome
Inglewood, CA

  • John Cena & Logan Paul vs. Cody Rhodes & Jey Uso
  • Men’s MITB Ladder Match: Seth Rollins vs. Andrade vs. Penta vs. Solo Sikoa vs. LA Knight vs. El Grande Americano
  • Women’s MITB Ladder Match: Naomi vs. Stephanie Vaquer vs. Alexa Bliss vs. Rhea Ripley vs. Roxanne Perez vs. Giulia
  • Women’s Intercontinental Title: Lyra Valkyria (c) vs. Becky Lynch

Photo Courtesy: WWE

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Capitals surprised HC Spencer Carbery with Jack Adams Award in most heartwarming way

Washington Capitals head coach Spencer Carbery officially won the Jack Adams Award on Saturday, handed out by the NHL to that season’s best head coach. Carbery was seen as the overwhelming favorite to win the award early in the 2024-25 campaign after Washington had an outstanding start. The team finished at the top of the […]

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Washington Capitals head coach Spencer Carbery officially won the Jack Adams Award on Saturday, handed out by the NHL to that season’s best head coach. Carbery was seen as the overwhelming favorite to win the award early in the 2024-25 campaign after Washington had an outstanding start.

The team finished at the top of the Eastern Conference standings, a total flip of its 2023-24 fate when it snuck into the final wild card spot in the last game of the regular season. That form, unfortunately, was short-lived after playing 82 games, with the Capitals crashing out of the 2025 Stanley Cup Playoffs in the second round.

Carbery was told of his first-career coach of the year trophy in a very unique and heartwarming way. The team booked him to be interviewed by Monumental Sports Network’s Joe Beninati but a short time into the taped segment, he was surprised with some special visitors.

Carbery’s wife and two children emerged from behind the cameras with Craig Campbell from the Hockey Hall of Fame carrying the Jack Adams Award. Beninati then made the official announcement, sitting next to a misty-eyed Carbery.

“I had no idea,” he said in a video posted to X by the team after the ruse was up. “I was not expecting that. Oh my gosh.”

Capitals surprise HC Spencer Carbery with Jack Adams Award presented by his family

The surprises didn’t end there for Carbery. His parents also made the trip out to Washington, D.C. and followed the trophy out to congratulate their son.

“I can’t believe you, my baby,” his mother Kate Stackhouse told him as they hugged. “I’m so proud of you.”

“For them to come out and celebrate this moment with me, I’ll never forget that,” Carbery said of the occasion. He went on to credit his staff and the players for their efforts in making the recognition even possible.

Carbery is just the fourth Capitals head coach to win the Jack Adams Award since it was first handed out in 1974. He follows in the footsteps of Barry Trotz (2016), Bruce Boudreau (2008) and Bryan Murray (1984).

Washington is now also the only team in the league to have three Jack Adams winners since the 1999-2000 season. That’s the most in the last quarter century and an impressive feat for the franchise as a whole.

Carbery is also the first head coach to earn a coach of the year award in the NHL, AHL and ECHL. He earned those two other honors, leading each of Washington’s minor league affiliates: The Hershey Bears (2021) and South Carolina Stingrays (2014).





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