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Brian Dawkins podcast
Freddie Crittenden in 2024. (AP Photo/Petr David Josek) THIS IS THE SPORTS SPECTRUM PODCAST WITH MATT FORTE & JASON ROMANO, FEATURING FREDDIE CRITTENDEN Freddie Crittenden is a U.S. track and field athlete who competed in the 110-meter hurdles at the 2024 Summer Olympics in Paris. In college at Syracuse University, he was a two-time first-team […]

Freddie Crittenden in 2024. (AP Photo/Petr David Josek)
THIS IS THE SPORTS SPECTRUM PODCAST WITH MATT FORTE & JASON ROMANO, FEATURING FREDDIE CRITTENDEN
Freddie Crittenden is a U.S. track and field athlete who competed in the 110-meter hurdles at the 2024 Summer Olympics in Paris. In college at Syracuse University, he was a two-time first-team All-American.
Today on the podcast, Freddie talks about his Olympic experience, overcoming injury to race, becoming a girl dad, signing a contract with Adidas, the transformative experiences during his athletic career, and the significance of love as a core principle in his relationship with Jesus.
>> Do you know Christ personally? Learn how you can commit your life to Him. <<
I started track in 3rd Grade. After 22 years, countless meets, thousands of hurdles, constant injuries, amazing teammates , 5 amazing Coaches, my best friendships in this life, 6x Team USA, 2xDLF, and 1 World Champs……. I can say I Am an OLYMPIAN.
Freddie Crittenden III, OLY
— Freddie Crittenden III, OLY (@__respect_earnd) July 2, 2024
RELATED PODCASTS:
– Kelly Cheng, USA Beach Volleyball Olympian
– Anna Hall – USA Olympic heptathlete
PLEASE CONSIDER SUBSCRIBING, FOLLOWING AND LEAVING A REVIEW
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Ole Miss Ready for New Era of College Athletics
OXFORD, Miss. – After approval of the House vs. NCAA settlement, college athletics has entered a new era of revenue sharing with student-athletes, and Ole Miss is welcoming this significant step towards a stable future for the industry. Finalized last Friday (June 6) by U.S. District Judge Claudia Wilken, the landmark agreement resolved three antitrust lawsuits […]


OXFORD, Miss. – After approval of the House vs. NCAA settlement, college athletics has entered a new era of revenue sharing with student-athletes, and Ole Miss is welcoming this significant step towards a stable future for the industry.
Finalized last Friday (June 6) by U.S. District Judge Claudia Wilken, the landmark agreement resolved three antitrust lawsuits — House v. NCAA, Hubbard v. NCAA, and Carter v. NCAA. The settlement opens the door for schools to share up to $20.5 million annually with its student-athletes starting July 1, 2025.
The $20.5 million will be made up of new scholarships and cash distributions, while student-athletes may continue receiving compensation for the use of their Name, Image and Likeness.
Additionally, the NCAA will distribute approximately $2.8 billion in back-pay damages over the next 10 years to current and former Division I athletes who competed since 2016, acknowledging their contributions to the revenue created for college athletics departments nationwide.
“We are excited for this new chapter, which prioritizes the well-being and success of our student-athletes,” said Keith Carter, Ole Miss Vice Chancellor for Intercollegiate Athletics. “This settlement not only provides unprecedented financial opportunities but also enhances support services, including mental health resources, nutrition programs and extended medical coverage, ensuring our athletes thrive both on and off the field.
“While the past few years have seen Ole Miss reach historic heights, we look forward to embracing a new model in college athletics and finding some much needed stability. More importantly, we are excited about the new opportunities afforded to our student-athletes. With a commitment to millions of dollars in new scholarships along with revenue sharing, our student-athletes will benefit in a variety of new ways.”
In this new structure, The Grove Collective will remain a key partner for Ole Miss Athletics, providing a valuable channel for Rebel fans to connect with student-athletes through athlete-focused content, public appearances, special events and other fan opportunities. In addition, the Magnolia Sports Group, the corporate marketing agency of The Grove Collective, will help identify, solicit and source NIL opportunities for our student-athletes within the Ole Miss business community.
From a broader exposure standpoint, Ole Miss recently extended its agreement with Ole Miss Sports Properties and Learfield as the athletics department’s exclusive multimedia rightsholder. That unit will continue to leverage the program’s brand growth as well as the student-athletes’ celebrity to align with businesses of all sizes.
“As always, we will find new and innovative ways to compete and win at the highest level,” Carter said. “While it may look different moving forward, we are excited to expand our relationship with The Grove Collective and Magnolia Sports Group. Their partnership coupled with the extensive reach of Ole Miss Sports Properties and Learfield Impact NIL service should lead to countless marketing opportunities for our department and our student-athletes.
“The revenue generated by these groups comes in addition to the vitally important capital support of the Ole Miss Athletics Foundation, which continues to drive major gifts fundraising as well as tickets, parking and other gameday services. It’s only through these partners that we can provide the preeminent student-athlete experience that is a staple of our athletics culture.”
The establishment of the College Sports Commission, a new regulatory body, will oversee the enforcement of third-party NIL deals and revenue-sharing practices for student-athletes. The Commission, which is independent of the NCAA, will only enforce settlement-related rules and investigate any potential violations.
“We are committed to the new model and working with the new College Sports Commission,” Carter said. “While change can be challenging, we are prepared for the new era of intercollegiate athletics.
“Ole Miss has never had a brighter future, due in large part to the unwavering support of our fans and donors. We couldn’t have reached this point without their passion, and we look forward to embarking on this journey together.”
Stay up to date with all the latest Ole Miss sports news and content this offseason! Subscribe to The Sip, the official newsletter of Rebel Athletics, and we’ll drop the best Ole Miss stories, videos and social media content to your inbox.
Update today to the all-new version of the Ole Miss Sports app, presented by Renasant Bank. The new app will serve as a dynamic hub for Rebel gameday content, including ticketing, parking, schedules, shopping for official Ole Miss merchandise and much more. Click here for more info or to download.
Health
Guthrie Clinic awards $28,000 to mental health & recovery programs
(WBNG) — The Guthrie Clinic awarded $28,000 in community benefit grants to three local nonprofits working to transform lives across the region. The grants will expand access to vital mental health services and recovery programs for community members in need. The Abuse and Rape Crisis Center in Towanda, PA was awarded $20,000 to improve mental […]


(WBNG) — The Guthrie Clinic awarded $28,000 in community benefit grants to three local nonprofits working to transform lives across the region.
The grants will expand access to vital mental health services and recovery programs for community members in need.
The Abuse and Rape Crisis Center in Towanda, PA was awarded $20,000 to improve mental health care acsess for survivors of domestic and sexual violence in Bradford Co.
Cortland ReUse was awarded $5,000 to expand its Restart Initiative. The initiative offers professional opportunities to those recovering from substance addictions.
Secure Better Living Inc. in Gorton, N.Y., was awarded $3,000 to strengthen its Pathways to Recovery program. This program addresses mental health and substance use disorders through peer support, guidance and resources in the Ithaca area.
Copyright 2025 WBNG. All rights reserved.
Health
Meet Muskegon
MUSKEGON, MI – It’s no surprise that Mia Clemence’s favorite subject in school is history because she’s spent the majority of her athletic career at Fremont High School rewriting its record book. The senior standout for the Packers became her school’s all-time leading scorer in girls soccer this spring with more than 100 career goals […]


MUSKEGON, MI – It’s no surprise that Mia Clemence’s favorite subject in school is history because she’s spent the majority of her athletic career at Fremont High School rewriting its record book.
The senior standout for the Packers became her school’s all-time leading scorer in girls soccer this spring with more than 100 career goals and broke the school record in girls basketball for points scored in a game this past winter when she dropped 40 points in a win over Mason County Central.
“I didn’t even know I broke the career goals record until a few days later,” Clemence told MLive. “My coach texted me to congratulate me and I didn’t even realize it. That’s never really been my goal (to break records). I’m more focused on winning as a team because I’m a competitive person, but if we win games and I happen to break records along the way, that’s just a plus to the experience.”
During her athletic career at Fremont, Clemence has helped elevate the volleyball, basketball and girls soccer programs to new heights, including district championships in all three sports.
“We all want to win, and it makes it more fun when we do,” she added. “I think that’s why we’ve enjoyed playing soccer, basketball and volleyball these past few years. We started winning a lot more games, and that’s made us work a little harder because we want to keep that feeling going.”
Clemence will become a part of local history later this week, as the Muskegon Area Sports Hall of Fame awards her the 2025 Female Scholar-Athlete of the Year award.
The senior standout for the Packers will join recent winners such as Ella Andree of Spring Lake and Abbi VanderKooi of Western Michigan Christian, as well as former local legends such as Sophia Wiard, Jordan Walker and Abby Cole.
“I feel very honored that I was picked for the (Scholar-Athlete of the Year) award,” she added. “I’m happy I won because I know there have been a lot of impressive people who have won it in the past and I appreciate the (Muskegon Area Sports Hall of Fame) committee for selecting me.”
Clemence was nominated by Fremont athletic director Dave Walls, who has witnessed first-hand the senior star’s selflessness on a daily basis both on and off the field of competition.
“Mia is a program changer, a school changer and a culture changer,” Walls said. “She’s an incredible athlete but the unseen work she does behind the scenes is what I believe sustains her excellence.
“Earlier this spring, we were struggling to find a ball boy or girl for our junior varsity soccer matches. During the first home JV game of the season, I was scanning the crowd from the press box and I heard a voice call out from the stands. It was Mia, who immediately volunteered to serve as ball girl for the match.
“I had to think to myself that this is our best athlete at our school and she’s stepping up to do something that few people will notice but is essential to keeping a program running. That’s just one of many examples of her leadership and impact.”
The senior standout for the Packers will attend Northern Michigan University this fall with plans to potentially walk on to the women’s soccer team with the Wildcats.
“I didn’t really know if I wanted to play college soccer at first,” she admitted. “At the end of last year, I realized that I didn’t want to be done playing yet, and I wanted to try and play at the college level. I know I started kind of late in the recruiting process, but I knew I needed to at least give it a shot.”
The Muskegon Sports Hall of Fame panel makes it its mission to shine a light on some of the top student-athletes in the area each academic school year with its Scholar-Athlete Award, which is presented at the Hall of Fame’s annual induction ceremony in June.
This year’s list of candidates is filled with record-breaking performers, state champions, and most importantly, impactful members of their communities.
Each school in the Muskegon area was requested to send in a male and female nomination for this year’s edition of the award. The Hall of Fame subcommittee then released its Top 5 finalists and ultimately chose a male and female winner.
The 38th annual Muskegon Area Sports Hall of Fame induction ceremony will be held on Saturday, June 14, 2025, at the Fricano’s Event Center in Muskegon. The event begins with a social hour at 5 p.m., followed by dinner at 6 p.m. and the ceremony slated to begin around 6:45 p.m.
Tickets are available online and can be purchased by clicking here.
Below are the female Scholar-Athlete Award nominees, including finalists and award winner for 2025.
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AWARD WINNER
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Mia Clemence, Fremont
Sports: Basketball (4), Soccer (4), Volleyball (4)
GPA: 3.8
Athletic honors/awards:
Basketball: All-State selection in 2025; all-region selection in 2025; 2-time all-conference selection; led Fremont to the back-to-back WMC Lakes Division conference championships in 2024-25; as well as district titles (2024-25) and a regional title berth in 2025; named MLive Muskegon Player of the Year in 2025; averaged 19.3 points per game; set school record for points scored in a single game (40); 3-pointers made in a season (64), and 3-pointers made in a career (100).
Soccer: 2-time All-State selection; 4-time all-conference selection; all-region selection in 2024; all-time leading scorer in school history (106); single-season school record holder for goals (40); led Fremont to its first district championship in 15 years in 2024 and netted a hat trick in her team’s game against Howard City Tri-County in the 2024 Division 3 regional semifinals.
Volleyball: 2-time all-conference selection; all-district selection in 2024; all-region selection in 2024; three-time district champion; regional finalist (2023); conference champion (2024); academic all-state; all-area selection (2024).
Academic honors/awards: National Honors Society member
Extracurricular activities: Member of the Newaygo County RESA
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FINALISTS
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Zoe Dull, Spring Lake
Sports: Golf (4), Basketball (2), Soccer (4)
GPA: 4.304
Athletic honors/awards:
GOLF: 2-time individual state runner-up; 2-time All-State selection; 1-time honorable mention all-state selection; 3-time team conference champion; 2-time individual conference champion; took individual medalist honors in 14 of 18 events as a senior, took runner-up in three others and finished fourth in the other event.
SOCCER: 2-year varsity player; member of the 2024 Division 2 state championship team; starting midfielder for the Lakers this spring.
Academic honors/awards: Full-ride scholarship to Central Michigan University for golf.
Extracurricular activities: National Honor Society, Rotary Interact, World Language Club, Travel Club, Girl Up club.
Future plans: Attending Central Michigan University with plans to major in Engineering.
—
Navea Gauthier, Shelby
Sports: Volleyball (4), Basketball (4), Tennis (2)
GPA: 3.53
Athletic honors/awards:
Volleyball: 4-time All-State selection; 4-time all-conference selection; 4-time all-region selection; JVA All-National team (twice); AAU All-American (three times); All-Area Selection (four times); All-Area Player of the Year (twice); MHSAA individual record holder for career kills; USA Volleyball National Development Program selection.
Academic honors/awards: National Honor Society Member; Academic Silver Medal (Magna Cum Laude).
Extracurricular activities: Three-year volunteer for Shelby’s fifth and sixth grade volleyball teams.
Future plans: She is currently attending Ohio State University as an early enrollee and is taking courses toward a Psychology degree and plans to work with kids and teens with mental health struggles upon graduation.
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Emma Herremans, Ravenna
Sports: Volleyball (4), Bowling (4), Softball (4)
GPA: 3.888
Athletic honors/awards:
SOFTBALL: 3-time all-state selection; team state semifinalist in 2023; 3-time all-conference selection; 3-time all-regional selection; 3-time team regional champion; 3-time all-district selection; 3-time team district champion; USSSA All-American team selection (2018); USA All-American Team selection (2020); High School FN Top 50 infielder; 3-time MLive Muskegon Player of the Year selection; 2-time CatchMark Player of the Year selection; listed 11 times in the MHSAA record book.
BOWLING: 2-time all-state selection; 2025 Division 4 team state champion; 3-time individual state qualifier; 3-time all-conference selection; individual regional champion in 2024; 3-time all-region selection; 4-time team regional champion.
VOLLEYBALL: All-conference selection in 2023
Academic honors/awards: 11-time academic all-conference selection; earned academic scholarship with Ferris State via WNF Provost’s Scholarship.
Extracurricular activities: National Honor Society Member; Vice President of the Class of 2025; President of the Executive Board of Student Council; Member of Trap Team; over 80 hours of community service.
Future plans: Emma plans to attend Ferris State University to further her academic and softball career. She plans to major in Human Biology. After Ferris, she plans on attending physical therapy school to become a physical therapist.
—
Ava Pelton, Montague
Sports: Soccer (4), Wrestling (4), Golf (1)
GPA: 4.230
Athletic honors/awards:
WRESTLING: 2-time all-state wrestler; 114 career wins; first girls in Muskegon County to win 100 career matches.
SOCCER: 3-time all-conference selection
Academic honors/awards: Academic all-state for soccer and wrestling; 4-time West Michigan Conference Scholar Athlete award winner; 2-time DECCA state qualifier; National DECCA Qualifier.
Extracurricular activities: Volunteer with youth groups, youth sports
Future plans: Will attend Muskegon Community College to study education.
—
NOMINEES
—
Jollie Fellows, North Muskegon
Sports: Volleyball (4), Soccer (2)
GPA: 3.79
—
Nadia Hill, Muskegon
Sports: Basketball (4), Track (4), Volleyball (2)
GPA: 3.5
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Lindsey Ladd, Muskegon Catholic Central
Sports: Volleyball (3), Basketball (3), Soccer (4)
GPA: 3.970
—
Grace McDowell, Whitehall
Sports: Golf (4), Basketball (4), Tennis (4)
GPA: 4.159
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Nazalia Mendiola, Orchard View
Sports: Volleyball (4), Basketball (4), Bowling (2), Soccer (4), Track (1)
GPA: 3.5
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Kennedy Mey, Hesperia
Sports: Cross country (4), Track (3), Wrestling (1), Basketball (1)
GPA: 3.57
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Lexie Nienhuis, Hart
Sports: Cross country (4), Competitive cheer (4), Track (4)
GPA: 4.05
—
Jocee Pleune, Grant
Sports: Volleyball (4), Basketball (4), Tennis (3)
GPA: 3.7
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Mady Snyder, Reeths-Puffer
Sports: Softball (4), Volleyball (4)
GPA: 4.302
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Gillian Sorrelle, Grand Haven
Sports: Soccer (4), Basketball (4)
GPA: 3.8
—
Mayson Southland, Mona Shores
Sports: Golf (4), Basketball (2), Tennis (1), Lacrosse (1)
GPA: 3.54
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Kirsten VanOrman, Western Michigan Christian
Sports: Soccer (4), Basketball (4), Volleyball (1)
GPA: 3.959 (unweighted)
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Lila Volkers, Kent City
Sports: Cross Country (4), Basketball (4), Track (4), Soccer (4)
GPA: 4.04
—
Gracie Willea, Oakridge
Sports: Volleyball (4), Softball (4)
GPA: 4.080
—
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Health
Public wants transgender athletes to stick with birth
(TNND) — Most Americans believe transgender athletes should only be allowed to play on teams that match their sex at birth, a new poll from Gallup found. And Gallup found the public is less supportive of transgender athletes than they were several years ago. Today, 69% of Americans believe transgender athletes should only be allowed […]


(TNND) — Most Americans believe transgender athletes should only be allowed to play on teams that match their sex at birth, a new poll from Gallup found.
And Gallup found the public is less supportive of transgender athletes than they were several years ago.
Today, 69% of Americans believe transgender athletes should only be allowed to play on teams that match their birth gender.
Support for allowing people to play on teams based on their gender identity has dropped 10 percentage points over the last four years, standing now at 24%.
President Donald Trump signed an executive order in early February aimed at barring transgender female athletes from competing in women’s or girls’ sports.
Gallup noted that Trump has also signed executive orders eliminating federal recognition of gender identity, banning transgender individuals from serving in the military, and restricting access to gender-affirming health care for minors.
Peter Loge, the director of the School of Media and Public Affairs at George Washington University, said transgender issues have become more prominent in the political discourse.
And Trump has become a leading voice in that discourse.
Loge said Trump has put transgender issues on the agenda, because he knows those are political winners for him.
Trump’s influence might be reflected in the Gallup survey data, which shows a more conservative trend toward the topic.
For example, just 9% of Republicans told Gallup that it’s morally acceptable for a person to change their gender.
Nearly a quarter of Republicans felt that way in 2021.
Overall, 40% of Americans said it’s morally acceptable for a person to change their gender, down six percentage points from four years earlier.
About seven in 10 Democrats said it was morally acceptable for a person to change their gender, up a few percentage points from 2021.
“It’s a culture war issue,” said Anne Whitesell, a political scientist at Miami University in Ohio who has studied gender and politics.
Whitesell said Republicans are united on transgender policy, while Democrats have found less consensus.
“The issue for Democrats is much thornier,” she said.
Whitesell said the political debate over transgender policies is a continuation of years of fighting about gay rights.
That fight was largely resolved when the Supreme Court decided same-sex marriage was legal in 2015, she said.
Just 1.3% of American adults identify as transgender, according to Gallup.
Loge said that makes transgender issues an easy target for Republicans.
Whitesell said transgender people aren’t a large voting bloc.
And a lot of voters don’t personally know a transgender person, so the political debates can become more symbolic than personal, both Loge and Whitesell said.
Loge said transgender issues, including sports participation, are complicated.
“It’s complicated medically. It’s complicated socially. It’s complicated in all sorts of ways. But ‘it’s complicated’ makes a terrible bumper sticker,” he said of the way the issue divides along political lines.
Trump’s order for his military transgender ban argued that “expressing a false ‘gender identity’ divergent from an individual’s sex cannot satisfy the rigorous standards necessary for military service.”
But a post-9/11 veterans group criticized the ban as targeting dedicated warriors “for the sake of scoring political points.”
And in the debate over transgender sports participation, a young woman who made headlines by taking a knee against a transgender competitor in a fencing bout told lawmakers that she felt “betrayed” and “unwelcome” in the sport she loved.
“That knee I took in protest was a cry for help and an act of desperation,” female fencer Stephanie Turner said in a congressional hearing last month.
Turner told lawmakers that biological males have an advantage with speed and power in her sport.
But in the same hearing, National Women’s Law Center CEO Fatima Goss Graves told lawmakers that transgender bans are discriminatory and, in her view, they hurt all women.
“As an expert in women’s rights in sports and in society, I want to be clear here: Transgender women do not pose a threat to women’s sports. Transgender women belong in sports,” Goss Graves said at the House hearing.
The Gallup poll found 90% of Republicans believe transgender athletes should only be allowed to play on sports teams that match their birth sex.
That view was held by 72% of independents and 41% of Democrats.
Gallup also asked if people should be allowed to use the gender they identify with on government documents, such as a passport or driver’s license.
Two-thirds of Americans said people should be required to use their birth sex on government documents.
The vast majority of Republicans, 89%, and a minority of Democrats, 38%, said people should be required to use their birth sex on government documents.
More Americans viewed being transgender as a decision that was influenced by a person’s upbringing and environment rather than factors the person had from birth, the Gallup poll showed.
That view was held by half of Americans, with another 30% telling Gallup that people are born as transgender. The remaining share of people either said it’s both nature and nurture, it’s neither, or they didn’t have an opinion.
Most Republicans, 76%, told Gallup they think a person is transgender based on upbringing and environment, not from birth.
Health
Esports team implements NCAA mental
June 10, 2025 Team launches training program in effort to ease burdens of competitive stress, academic pressure In accordance with new NCAA guidelines, UND has implemented a new mental health program for its esports teams, one that provides guidance to support the athletes’ mental well-being. UND archival photo. By Vanessa Washington “Psychological issues include depression, […]

Team launches training program in effort to ease burdens of competitive stress, academic pressure

By Vanessa Washington
“Psychological issues include depression, anxiety, apathy, uncooperative attitude, tension, sleep disturbances, mental distress, aggressive affect and behaviors, distress in social life, and emotional disturbances,” the 2021 study declared.
The activity also “was associated with the presence of depression, social phobia, obsession–compulsion, interpersonal sensitivity, hostility, phobic anxiety, paranoid ideation, psychoticism attention-deficit hyperactivity disorder and gaming addiction.”
As that last item suggests, the activity being looked at by the Industrial Psychiatry Journal study is excessive gaming.
You see – and as UND’s Frank Swiontek and Ryan Kraus fully understand – there’s a lot more to video gaming than just relaxing with buddies and having fun.
Swiontek is the innovation officer at UND, and Kraus is the head coach of UND’s esports team. Make no mistake, esports athletes can experience significant stress; and during the team’s post-season contests last fall, Kraus and Swiontek say, that stress was starting to take its toll.
“At the time, playoffs were occurring, finals were kicking up, and we were starting to see the wear and tear that some of this competitive stress was having on these players,” Swiontek said. He and Kraus both noticed this, and in response, the two began researching what practices they could implement to help their athletes before the start of the spring season.

The NCAA’s mental-health toolbox
As they discovered, not much has been written about mental health guidelines for esports, one of the newest competitive activities for college athletes. But the NCAA itself, Kraus and Swiontek learned, has a new and useful mental health mandate for all NCAA athletes.
And that’s why this spring, UND’s esports team implemented mental health training, in an effort to ease the burdens of competitive stress and academic pressure. (Editor’s note: Posters such as the ones shown with this story, which hang in UND’s esports spaces, are a part of that effort.)
Here’s how the American Council on Education’s Higher Education Today reported the NCAA’s action last July:
“The NCAA, in consultation with its Mental Health Advisory Group, has released a new edition of Mental Health Best Practices, which provides guidance to support student-athletes’ mental well-being,” Higher Ed Today reported.
“NCAA member institutions are required to offer resources and services consistent with the best practices, which go into effect Aug. 1, 2024.”
All college athletes experience stress and anxiety, of course. But for esports athletes, the sport adds a few key stressors all its own: For one thing, the teams compete in both the fall and spring, which means players don’t have much of an “off season” in which to decompress.
For another, in esports competitions, players are subject to sudden death, meaning they can be “killed” and removed from the game in an instant. So, all esports athletes know that each game is an utterly unpredictable situation, one where they might be left standing almost alone.
As an esports player once put it, “We game to escape stress, only to be stressed out over the game.”
In such an environment, the stress can be heightened. This past semester was no different, except there was a new effort taken by UND
Stress 101: How to cope in healthy ways
The NCAA’s Mental Health Best Practices guide “emphasizes the importance of making high-quality mental health care available to student-athletes,” Higher Education Today noted in its story.
“It also recognizes that the dual roles of student and athlete can entail both unique mental health risk and protective factors. For example, injuries increase student-athletes’ risk of mental health symptoms, while relationships with teammates can fortify mental health.”
Armed with this knowledge, Kraus and Swiontek got in touch with Michael Herbert, a research data analyst in University Analytics and Planning, and Michael Soward, a doctoral intern in Clinical Psychology at UND’s Counseling Center.
From there, the esports leaders learned that they would first need to establish a few things. For example, they needed a plan for how they were going to present this new idea to their athletes, plus a description of just what that idea would involve.
They decided to begin with a quick hands-on course at the beginning of the semester to introduce the athletes to the free resources that are available to them. Next came the CCAPS, or Counseling Center Application of Psychological Symptoms. This is a 10-minute mental health screening in which the athletes answer questions.

The screening can identify individuals who may be struggling with increased anxiety, depression, substance use and even suicidality.
“We’re able to identify those individuals who could benefit from additional support,” said Soward. “We report back to the coaches and let them know, and it then falls onto the coaches to reach out to those students.”
CCAPS offers other ways to identify what an athlete is going through, and one of these was introduced to the team captains at the start. It teaches how to start the conversation, how to engage team members about mental health and where teammates might be struggling, and how to identify those struggles in their teammates.
While Kraus is the head coach, there has been a big increase in athletes participating in esports; there are now close to 90 at UND. That means the team captains, given their closeness to the players, tend to be the most appropriate leaders to initiate these challenging conversations.
The program’s goal “is to nurture and keep all these athletes safe, especially in the mental health aspect,” Soward said.
From trial run to standard feature
While the spring conversations were a trial run for the program, team leaders were surprised by how many players took it seriously; in fact, they say, it was an overwhelming success. They were also surprised by how many athletes started watching out for one another after taking part in the training, the CCAPS element in particular.
“I’ve seen them become a lot more accepting,” said Kraus. “I’ve actually heard some students talk about it, especially when we were doing those tests.”
When asked what changes he hoped would result from this project, Swiontek said change wasn’t the goal. Instead, better awareness among the coaches and athletes was.
And if the team’s initial response to the project is any indication, that awareness seems likely to grow, through the fall esports season and beyond.
About the author:
A rising sophomore at UND, Vanessa Washington is an intern for UND Communications and UND Today.
Health
Fortnum & Mason, Ladbrokes, Beats, Bulldog and Huntsman
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