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CFP adopts new seeding model; MU loses key assistant, 2026 commitments

[embedded content] “College Football Connection” host Bradford Bruns weighs in on a straight-seeding model for the 2025 postseason and D-line guru Al Davis’ departure from Mizzou. 7

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CFP adopts new seeding model; MU loses key assistant, 2026 commitments

“College Football Connection” host Bradford Bruns weighs in on a straight-seeding model for the 2025 postseason and D-line guru Al Davis’ departure from Mizzou.

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Rheaume-Mullen out to ‘stand on his own’ with Sabres 

He’s also learned from his uncle, Pascal Rheaume, Manon’s younger brother. Pascal was an undrafted forward who played 318 NHL games with six teams through nine seasons from 1996-2006 and won a Stanley Cup with the New Jersey Devils in 2003. “The thing that sticks with me is, everyone does a lot, especially when you […]

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He’s also learned from his uncle, Pascal Rheaume, Manon’s younger brother. Pascal was an undrafted forward who played 318 NHL games with six teams through nine seasons from 1996-2006 and won a Stanley Cup with the New Jersey Devils in 2003.

“The thing that sticks with me is, everyone does a lot, especially when you get to older levels, and it’s about who’s going to do more,” Rheaume-Mullen said. “How are you going to get that extra advantage when there’s a day you feel like (garbage) or your legs are heavy. How are you still going to dominate and be the best player on the ice? So just all those little habits add up, too.”

Rheaume-Mullen started skating when he was around 18 months old. His mother took him on the ice in his skates and helmet, with a pacifier in his mouth and his blankie in his hand. He began taking full skating lessons at the age of 3.

“Ever since I can remember, I’ve been skating,” he said. “It’s just been my passion, and it’s a hobby for me, too. I love it.”

He was 10 years old when he decided he’d had enough of being in goal and wanted to be a skater. It was after The Brick Invitational Hockey Tournament in Edmonton. He didn’t play much and “it was so hard on him,” Rheaume said.

“He was like, ‘I never want to feel like this again.’ It just switched how much work he wanted to do, training as much as possible. He would be sometimes annoying me in the house because he would pretend to be skating and stickhandling. He just wanted to play and be better. He doesn’t like to not be good at something.”

He’d played some forward during his goalie years and enjoyed practicing more as a skater. Rheaume said she admitted it was a “big relief” when he stopped playing goalie.

“I think it saved my mom from having a heart attack because every game she’s watching my older brother, she gets super nervous, I can’t even talk to her,” Rheaume-Mullen said. “So she was pretty pumped when I switched.”

He left an impression on the Sabres at development camp, who saw “good, promising things” from him, according to Mair. Now he’s ready to carry what he learned there and from his first year in college into his sophomore season at Michigan.

“You can’t just skate and then work out and then do whatever you want after,” Rheaume-Mullen said. “It takes so much more than that to be a pro. I think that’s what NHL players are so good at. … That’s a big thing I’m going to take with me.”



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2025 World Junior Summer Showcase: 3 things learned on Day 1

MINNEAPOLIS — It wouldn’t come as too much of a shock if the top line for the United States in the 2026 IIHF World Junior Championship is a familiar one. James Hagens, the playmaking forward who was chosen No. 7 by the Boston Bruins in the 2025 NHL Draft, centered a line with left wing […]

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MINNEAPOLIS — It wouldn’t come as too much of a shock if the top line for the United States in the 2026 IIHF World Junior Championship is a familiar one.

James Hagens, the playmaking forward who was chosen No. 7 by the Boston Bruins in the 2025 NHL Draft, centered a line with left wing Teddy Stiga (Nashville Predators) and right wing Brodie Ziemer (Buffalo Sabres) in the opener for USA White during the World Junior Summer Showcase at Ridder Arena on Sunday.

If the trio sounds familiar, it should. The Stiga-Hagens-Ziemer line wreaked havoc on the opposition for USA Hockey National Team Development Program Under-18 team in 2023-24.

“It’d be nice playing with those guys but you’re not the coach and you don’t know what lines are going to be put together,” Hagens said. “What I liked about the line (with the NTDP) was there were no egos, just being able to go out there and play freely. We’re best buddies off the ice, so being able to have that connection where you could talk to a guy, could say something, it’s just awesome. That’s a huge part of hockey, and if you’re communicating with your linemates, it just makes it that much easier.”

They were up to their old tricks in a scrimmage against Finland, combining for five points, including two goals by Stiga, in a 5-2 victory.

“Obviously, playing with [Hagens and Ziemer] at NTDP was great and getting back out there with them today was really fun,” Stiga said. “Obviously, I play with James at Boston College, but Brodie is a guy I miss playing with. He’s just a dog out there, always going to give it his best.”

Here are three things learned Sunday:



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Sunday Chat with former Toledo Storm forward Nick Parillo

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Spartans shine in World Junior Summer Showcase victory for Team USA

USA beats Finland 5-2 in the first game of the World Junior Summer Showcase. Michigan State represented well, as incoming freshman Ryker Lee scores twice and assists on another, while sophomore forward Shane Vansaghi scores the game-winning goal in the third period. — Nathaniel Bott (@Nathaniel_Bott) July 27, 2025 A pair of Spartans played vital […]

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A pair of Spartans played vital roles for Team USA in Sunday’s World Junior Summer Showcase against Finland.

Future Spartans forward Ryker Lee scored a pair of goals and sophomore forward Shane Vansaghi netted the game-winner to help Team USA White top Finland, 5-2, in a World Junior Summer Showcase game from Minneapolis on Sunday. Team USA White once trailed 2-1 in the game but bounced back in the second half of the game to earn the victory.

Lee and Vansaghi are both expected to play key roles on the Spartans next season. Michigan State boasts a number of NHL talent on its 2025-26 roster, including both Lee and Vansaghi, and is considered a top five preseason team in the country entering next year.

Stay with Spartans Wire for additional updates from the World Junior Summer Showcase from Minneapolis this upcoming week.

Contact/Follow us @The SpartansWire on X (formerly Twitter) and like our page on Facebook to follow ongoing coverage of Michigan State news, notes and opinion. You can also follow Robert Bondy on X @RobertBondy5.





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How Many National Championships Will Penn State Win in 2025-26? (The Record Is 4)

Four. That’s the number of most national championships won by Penn State in a single school sports year. How much longer will that record last? Given the excitement about this coming Penn State sports season — set to kick off shortly, with soccer exhibition games at Jeffrey Field on Aug. 8-9 — it’s a number that many […]

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Four. That’s the number of most national championships won by Penn State in a single school sports year. How much longer will that record last?

Given the excitement about this coming Penn State sports season — set to kick off shortly, with soccer exhibition games at Jeffrey Field on Aug. 8-9 — it’s a number that many Nittany Lion fans hope…think…is in imminent jeopardy. Especially after what transpired on the field last season and off the field (and ice) this off-season.

The foundation: In 2024-25, Penn State won national titles in wrestling and women’s volleyball, and made the Final Four in football, men’s lacrosse and men’s hockey.

For wrestling head coach Cael Sanderson, it was his 12th national championship at Penn State. For Katie Schumacher-Cawley, it was her first national title as the PSU head women’s volleyball coach. As a player, she also won a national title in 1999, competing for coaching legend Russ Rose, who won seven nattys.

Two is good, three is better and four is best. The record four Penn State national titles came in 1979-1980, when PSU women’s teams in field hockey, fencing, gymnastics and lacrosse all won championships. The field hockey and lax teams won their titles just seven months apart. Both squads were coached by the late Gillian Rattray, who led PSU to five overall national championships from 1977-1981 (two in field hockey, three in lacrosse).

Twice in the past Penn State has won three national titles in one season. In 2007, PSU won championships in men’s gymnastics, women’s volleyball and fencing. And in 2014, Penn State won titles in wrestling, women’s volleyball and fencing. (Do you notice a pattern here?)

Penn State athletic director Pat Kraft, entering his fourth full season at Penn State, laid down the More Titles gauntlet when he was introduced as PSU AD on May 1, 2022: “We are 31 strong. Hear me again: We are 31 strong. And we are committed to winning national championships, conference championships. We will continue the tradition of winning.”

Kraft has five head coaches on his staff who have already won national titles in their time at Penn State: Sanderson (12); Randy Jepson, men’s gymnastics (3); Mark Pavlik, men’s volleyball (1); Erica Dambach, women’s soccer (1); and Schumacher-Cawley (1).

Pennsylvania State College won its first national championship back in 1921, a title earned by wrestling — who else? — as the Nittany Lions beat both Iowa and Indiana on the way to the title. (Penn State won its first NCAA wrestling title in 1953.)

NO. 1 BY SPORT

Overall, Penn State has won 84 national team titles — 49 in men’s sports, 22 in women’s sports and 13 in combined (all in fencing). A breakdown:

MEN: Wrestling (14), men’s gymnastics (12), soccer (11), boxing (5), cross country (3), football (2) and men’s volleyball (2).
WOMEN: Volleyball (8), lacrosse (5), fencing (3), gymnastics (2), field hockey (2), soccer (1), bowling (1).
COMBINED: Fencing (13).

Not counting wrestling, the last Penn State men’s team to win a national title was men’s volleyball in 2008. Other than volleyball and soccer (2015), the last Penn State women’s team to win a national title was lacrosse in 1989.

Plaques representing each championship team, except for football, are on display in the Penn State Athletics Administration Building, at the corner of East Park Avenue and Porter Road. The AAB is on the site formerly occupied by the Centre County-Penn State Visitors Center, adjacent to the Penn State Meat Lab. The NCAA plaques are replicas, and the pre-NCAA ones are generic trophies.

THE SEASON AHEAD

The promise of an historic sports season has already started. Football, women’s volleyball and women’s soccer are already in preseason. Wrestling is the perennial favorite in collegiate wrestling. And Nittany Lion hockey has garnered all kinds of offseason headlines — and flashy recruits, beginning with Gavin McKenna — since it participated in the Frozen Four for the first time in April.

Here’s a rundown of what should be the Penn State teams vying for a national title in 2025-26:

FOOTBALL: The Nittany Lions were ranked No. 1 for the first time in last week’s Big Ten Conference preseason poll. Myriad media outlets and college football experts have Penn State as the overall pick in all of college football. Among them: ESPN, Phil Steele, Joel Klatt, Mark Schlabach and Heather Dinich. 

In February, after Penn State finished 13-3 overall, made it to the Big Ten title game, won two College Football Playoff games, retained QB Drew Allar and hired defensive coordinator Jim Knowles, Kraft said the Nittany Lions are “close.”

“You don’t come to Penn State willy-nilly and say, ‘Let’s see what happens.’ We’re here to win national championships,” Kraft said, “and we’re going to do it the right way. Yeah, I’m committed. It takes everybody. … When it comes to football, we’re close. We’re going to keep going and keep going and keep going until we get to where we want to be.”

Two interesting financial nuggets from James Franklin’s most-recently published contract, should the Nittany Lions win the national championship:

  • “Win College Football National Championship Game – $800,000.”
  • National Championship Compensation Adjustment: In all years remaining in contract term [Dec. 31, 2021] following a National Championship, Supplemental Pay shall be increased per the contract by $800,000 (one time during term of the contract).”

WOMEN’S VOLLEYBALL: Schumacher-Cawley had Penn State back on the national stage last week when she accepted the Jimmy V Award for Perseverance at the ESPYS. Now, her team’s focus returns to the court. Penn State, which is ranked No. 2 in the preseason Big Ten rankings, returns starting setter Izzy Starck, who was the AVCA National Freshman of the Year and a second-team All-American; libero Gillian Grimes, who joined Starck on the All-Big Ten team; and Caroline Jurevicius, who made the Big Ten All-Freshman team.

WOMEN’S SOCCER: Last season under Dambach, Penn State advanced to the Elite Eight for the second year in a row, extending the nation’s longest streak of consecutive Sweet 16 appearances to eight. Dambach has six starters back, including goalkeeper MacKenzie Gress and forward Kaitlyn MacBean, who had a 34-point season, with 16 goals, in 2024.

WRESTLING. Cael Sanderson is still the head coach. Just as he was in 2011, 2012, 2013, 2014, 2016, 2017, 2018, 2019, 2022, 2023, 2024 and 2025. As Sanderson said the day he was hired by Penn State, on April 17, 2009: “My goal is to compete for the national championship every year. It’s real simple.”

MEN’S HOCKEY: DraftKings likes Penn State’s chances to win the national title in 2025-26. The betting site has Penn State 4-to-1 to win it all, followed by Boston University (8-to-1) and Michigan State (9-to-1). It’s a good bet.

It wasn’t enough that Guy Gadowsky took Penn State to one win from the national title game last spring. Or that the Nittany Lions had a 14-3-2 late-season stretch that included an OT loss to Ohio State in the Big Ten championship game. Or that incoming PSU freshman Jackson Smith was selected by the Columbus Blue Jackets with the 14th overall pick in the first round of the 2025 NHL Draft. What clinched it was when Guy also signed McKenna, the reigning WHL and CHL Player of the Year and the highest-rated recruit to choose NCAA hockey. McKenna is the consensus No. 1 pick in the 2026 NHL draft.

McKenna is thinking big: “You saw what Penn State did this year, making it to the Frozen Four. They’ve come a long way as a program and next year the goal is to win a championship with them.”

Guess who likes that? Pat Kraft, who said of McKenna: “We can’t wait to see him compete alongside this incredible group and help push our program to even greater heights.”

MEN’S LACROSSE: Head coach Jeff Tambroni is The (Unheralded) Man. Penn State went to the Final Four last spring for the second time in three years and the third time in six seasons. The Nittany Lions also beat eventual national champion Cornell, ranked No. 3 at the time, on the road in the regular season. (Tambroni coached Cornell to the national title game in 2009.)

ALSO CONSIDER: Men’s gymnastics, which won its first-ever Big Ten title and placed No. 5 in the nation last season; three-time AHA defending champion women’s hockey; and women’s lacrosse, whose new head coach, Kayla Treanor, took her previous school, Syracuse, to the semifinals twice and was associate head coach at Boston College in 2021, when BC won the national championship. Boston College’s athletic director that season? Pat Kraft.



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College Sports Is in Peril. President Trump and Republicans Are Trying to Save It.

Last week, President Donald Trump announced an executive order protecting college sports. This is an important step to end the pernicious assault on the industry by labor agitators and plaintiff attorneys.  But to truly save the industry, Trump should work with Congress to pass critical legislation to save college sports. The good news is that Rep. […]

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College Sports Is in Peril. President Trump and Republicans Are Trying to Save It.

Last week, President Donald Trump announced an executive order protecting college sports. This is an important step to end the pernicious assault on the industry by labor agitators and plaintiff attorneys. 

But to truly save the industry, Trump should work with Congress to pass critical legislation to save college sports.

The good news is that Rep. Gus Bilirakis, R-Fla., recently introduced the Student Compensation and Opportunity through Rights and Endorsements (SCORE) Act in the House of Representatives. This bill will empower governing bodies in intercollegiate athletics to regulate the industry by providing an exemption to antitrust legislation similar to that enjoyed by Major League Baseball since the 1920s. The bill recently advanced through committee and is on track for a full House vote.  

The SCORE Act is needed to prevent college sports from being sucked into a web of litigation that will ultimately threaten it with insolvency or, worse, become a unionized, for-profit, professionalized system that would be a shadow of its former self. The bill faces significant opposition from the Left, the legacy media, and special interests, who would prefer to see the pastime destroyed.

To understand how we got here, we need to rewind to the surging popularity of broadcast television in the latter part of the 20th century. Initially, this mode of dissemination was seen as a competitor to in-person attendance and was restricted by the NCAA. In response, the schools and conferences pursued legal action, ultimately leading to the landmark 1984 Supreme Court decision in NCAA v. Board of Regents of the University of Oklahomawhereby the NCAA was ruled to have violated antitrust rules. This disintermediated the NCAA from a lion’s share of college sports revenue and severely undermined its ability to act as an overriding regulator.

Today, we are witnessing name, image, and likeness (NIL) arrangements (essentially a form of sponsorship for college athletes), transfer portal activity, third-party agents, and conduct that is largely unfettered except through a patchwork of conflicting state laws.  

The alternative to an antitrust exemption would be for student athletes and colleges and universities to engage in collective bargaining arrangements, which presupposes an employer-employee relationship between the parties. While this option of fully professionalizing intercollegiate athletics is highly touted by leftists and labor activists, it carries substantial negative consequences that are not well understood.

First and foremost, it would eradicate the charitable status that college sports have enjoyed throughout their existence and severely reduce or eliminate the ability of revenue-generating sports to subsidize non-revenue sports. Further, the loss of 501(c)(3) status would prohibit athletics programs from soliciting tax-deductible donations that many programs use to balance their budgets. In addition, as W-2 employees, players would likely relinquish their lucrative NIL rights in exchange for a base salary that may barely cover tuition on an after-tax basis.

College sports is one of the dwindling number of institutions in this country that are uniquely American. As a form of entertainment, it is not only ingrained in the fabric of life in the United States, but it is also how hundreds of thousands of student-athletes finance their education in pursuit of the American dream. Trump and Republicans have an opportunity with the recent executive order and the SCORE Act legislation to ensure that this does not become another nostalgic relic of the past but rather persists for generations of students and fans to come.

Although it would be preferable for Democrats to work with Republicans to prevent the demise of college sports, the GOP cannot afford to wait for a wave of bipartisanship to wash over Washington.

Trump and Republicans should grab the bull by its horns and support the SCORE Act, which would unequivocally establish that student athletes are not employees of the schools and avoid a catastrophe that leaves everyone worse off—including the millions of Americans who cherish college sports and its traditions. 

We publish a variety of perspectives. Nothing written here is to be construed as representing the views of The Daily Signal.

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