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Character, Passion and Dedication Define Dan Muse’s Path to Pittsburgh

Muse winning at all levels where he has been a head coach helped separate him in the Pittsburgh’s search. So did his consistent success coaching special teams in the NHL. In Nashville, Muse ran the penalty killing unit, which ranked fourth in the NHL over his two full seasons (2017-19) with the club. “He’s just […]

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Muse winning at all levels where he has been a head coach helped separate him in the Pittsburgh’s search. So did his consistent success coaching special teams in the NHL.

In Nashville, Muse ran the penalty killing unit, which ranked fourth in the NHL over his two full seasons (2017-19) with the club.

“He’s just so detailed, and for a player like me who wants to know everything, I loved it,” said Bonino, a key part of that group. But sometimes, it was almost too much information. So, one time, after a PK meeting that lasted 20-plus minutes ahead of a game against the Bruins, Bonino approached Muse.

“I went up to him and said, I almost forgot what you said at the beginning, because he had so much information to share with us after watching hours and hours of video,” Bonino said. “I think that does translate to success. I think even just telling him that as a player, he’s like, okay. I get it. And he would tailor it more to a way that the guys could get the information, but in maybe a shorter time frame.”

While Muse was happy to do that, he was also happy to talk about the PK with Bonino at length on their own time.

“I always loved that about Muser,” Bonino said. “Because it’s something I was really passionate about… and I liked his ability to want to talk about it. You run into some coaches where it’s their way or the highway. And I felt with him, if something wasn’t working, he wanted to know what we think.”

Now, in Pittsburgh, Muse won’t just be overseeing special teams – he’ll be running the whole show. It’s something Muse has been quietly working towards since moving into coaching following the end of his four-year playing career at Stonehill College, a Division III school.

“I know when he came to work for us (at USA Hockey), one of the questions was, what is your long-term goal? And it was to be a head coach in the NHL,” Monoghan said. “A lot of guys that are coming from a non-traditional background that didn’t play in the NHL – hell, he didn’t even play Division I college, right? – would not even try to set that goal, but he set it, and he had a confidence level with it.

“He’s a self-made coach who has the utter respect of everybody he works with.”



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Jessica Remm of Alfred University Named to 2025 CSC Softball Division III Academic All-America Team

Softball | 6/17/2025 12:02:42 PM Story Links 2025 College Sports Communicators Softball Academic All-America Teams Junior outfielder Jessica Remm of Alfred University was named to the 2025 College Sports Communicators (CSC) Academic All-America® Softball NCAA Division III Team, which recognizes the nation’s top student-athletes […]

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Softball | 6/17/2025 12:02:42 PM

Junior outfielder Jessica Remm of Alfred University was named to the 2025 College Sports Communicators (CSC) Academic All-America® Softball NCAA Division III Team, which recognizes the nation’s top student-athletes for their combined performances on the field and in the classroom. Remm was a first team selection.
 
The 2025 Academic Academic All-America® Softball Teams, selected by College Sports Communicators, recognize the nation’s top student-athletes for their combined performances on the field and in the classroom. The CSC Academic All-America® program separately recognizes honorees in four divisions — NCAA Division I, NCAA Division II, NCAA Division III and NAIA. In order to be eligible for both All-District and All-American consideration, student-athletes must be at least a sophomore academically, hold a 3.30 cumulative GPA or above and be a starter or important reserve for their respective teams.

Remm, who has a 3.93 grade-point average as an poltical science major capped off an incredible season in 2025. Remm earned Division III All-America honors as a second team selection this season as well as the 2025 Empire 8 Defensive Player of the Year and earned All-E8 first team honors.

 

Remm had a standout season, finishing the regular season and Empire 8 Championships with a perfect, 1.000 fielding percentage. She was named the Empire 8 Co-Player of the Week twice and Saxon of the Week five times. At the end of the regular season, Remm broke the single season record for RBI at SUNY Poly with her 55th and continued to add to it to where she broke the Empire 8 record, held by Laura Remia of Ithaca College in 2001 with 63 RBI, recording her 65th on Saturday afternoon to help the Saxons go undefeated in the Empire 8 Championship Tournament with a win over St. John Fisher University. Her game-winning home run also clinched her the AU and Empire 8 record for single season runs scored, surpassing Thompson and her record of 56 runs scored in 2015. Remm then added two more RBI in the NCAA Regional Tournament held at Christopher Newport University with a two-run home run against Regional Champion, Randolph-Macon. Remm finished the season with a .462 batting average, recording 67 hits, one shy of the AU school record

 

The Division II and III CSC Academic All-America® programs are partially financially supported by the NCAA Division II and III national governance structures to assist CSC with handling the awards fulfillment aspects for the 2024-25 Divisions II and III Academic All-America® programs. The NAIA CSC Academic All-America® program is partially financially supported through the NAIA national office member.

 

ABOUT THE EMPIRE 8 CONFERENCE

The members of the Empire 8 Conference are committed first and foremost to the pursuit of academic excellence and the league is regarded as an outstanding NCAA Division III conference. The membership has distinguished itself among its peer group for its quality institutions, spirited and sportsmanlike competition, outstanding services and highly ethical policies and practices. Its commitment to serve the educational needs of its student-athletes is the hallmark of the E8. For more on the Empire 8 visit www.empire8.com.

 

EMPIRE 8 SOCIAL MEDIA

YouTube – Facebook – Twitter – Instagram





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Denver’s Hebinck, Mundell Land CSC Academic All-District Honors

Story Links DENVER – University of Denver gymnasts Mia Hebinck and Rylie Mundell earned 2025 CSC Academic All-District Women’s At-Large Team recognition, College Sports Communicators announced on Tuesday.   The CSC Academic All-District Teams honor the top student-athletes in the nation based on their combined athletic and academic performances.   […]

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DENVER – University of Denver gymnasts Mia Hebinck and Rylie Mundell earned 2025 CSC Academic All-District Women’s At-Large Team recognition, College Sports Communicators announced on Tuesday.
 
The CSC Academic All-District Teams honor the top student-athletes in the nation based on their combined athletic and academic performances.
 
Hebinck completed her bachelor’s degree in biochemistry in fall 2024 and began working towards her master’s degree with a certification in healthcare management during winter quarter while the gymnastics team was in season. She holds a 4.00 GPA in her graduate studies and is applying to medical school. During the 2025 season, she competed in all but one meet and won three bars titles on her way to earning two Big 12 Event Specialist of the Week nods.
 
Mundell completed her bachelor’s degree in physics in June 2024 before beginning a graduate program in global information system for the 2024-25 academic year. She, like Hebinck, holds a 4.00 GPA in her post-graduate work. In 2025, she ended her stellar collegiate career as an individual bars qualifier to the NCAA National Championships and tied for No. 24 overall on the event. She won a total of eight titles during the 2025 season including four on bars, moving her to No. 4 in Denver history for most career wins on the event (19).

Additionally, Mundell was named a finalist for the CSC Academic All-America Team, which will be announced on July 8. Mundell earned third-team Academic All-America honors in 2023.

 

This is the second year in a row that Hebinck and Mundell were named to the women’s at-large team. Mundell has now been named to the Academic All-District Team in each of the last three years.

 

TICKETS:

Season ticket renewals and deposits for the 2026 University of Denver gymnastics season are now on sale and can be purchased online, by calling 303-871-4625 or by visiting the Ritchie

 

Denver’s Home for College Sports

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Follow @DU_Pioneers and @DU_Gymnastics on Twitter.

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Two Miami Hockey Student-Athletes Named Academic All-District

Story Links OXFORD, Ohio— Miami University forwards Christophe Fillion and Blake Mesenburg were recognized as Academic All-District today by College Sports Communicators.   Fillion, a graduate student from Sherbrooke, Quebec, put up 10 points (4-6-10) in 34 appearances for the RedHawks this season. He produced a 3.53 graduate GPA while pursuing a […]

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OXFORD, Ohio— Miami University forwards Christophe Fillion and Blake Mesenburg were recognized as Academic All-District today by College Sports Communicators.
 
Fillion, a graduate student from Sherbrooke, Quebec, put up 10 points (4-6-10) in 34 appearances for the RedHawks this season. He produced a 3.53 graduate GPA while pursuing a Master’s degree in Entrepreneurship and Emerging Technology from Miami’s College of Creative Arts.
 
Mesenburg, a junior from Orono, Minn., collected seven points (4-3-7) and played in 34 games this season while serving as an assistant captain for the Red and White. Mesenburg holds a 3.77 GPA as a Finance/Accountancy major in the Farmer School of Business and is a three-time NCHC Distinguished Scholar-Athlete.

The complete list of CSC Academic All-District honorees is available here.

 



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Here’s how much Mizzou has spent in NIL money for athletes

COLUMBIA, Mo. — The University of Missouri athletics department has spent more than $31 million on name, image and likeness compensation for its athletes during the past year, according to financial records. Mizzou’s NIL spending reflects the university’s push to compete in football and men’s basketball under the terms of a modern college sports landscape […]

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COLUMBIA, Mo. — The University of Missouri athletics department has spent more than $31 million on name, image and likeness compensation for its athletes during the past year, according to financial records.

Mizzou’s NIL spending reflects the university’s push to compete in football and men’s basketball under the terms of a modern college sports landscape that has spawned a lucrative market for athletes.

The records show that nearly two-thirds of the money in 2024 went to football players and about a fourth to men’s basketball. The remainder was split among baseball, women’s basketball and lower-profile programs.

MU’s spending in the past month alone shows how the school has tried to take advantage of a disruption in the NIL market, distributing an influx of cash to athletes before the landmark House v. NCAA settlement takes effect soon and imposes a de facto salary cap.

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Missouri’s athletics director, Laird Veatch, has declined to specify how his department will share $18 million of revenue with athletes under the terms of that settlement. But Mizzou’s NIL spending breakdown provides a window into how it has distributed money to this point and how it may share revenue with athletes moving forward.

The Post-Dispatch compiled Mizzou’s spending through a series of invoices sent to the athletics department from Every True Tiger Brands LLC, the collective-turned-marketing agency that runs the school’s NIL operation. The athletics department turned the money over to Every True Tiger to distribute to athletes. The Post-Dispatch obtained the invoices, dating back to Sept. 1, 2023, through an open records request.

The invoice figures represent 90%-95% of all the NIL compensation Mizzou athletes receive, Brad Larrondo, the CEO of Every True Tiger, told the Post-Dispatch.

What they don’t capture is deals with third parties — such as football wide receiver Luther Burden III’s ad campaign with clothing brand Nautica or men’s basketball guard Caleb Grill’s TV commercial for a Columbia law firm — because they’re independently arranged.

NIL data points are typically murky and often exaggerated, making the clarity of Mizzou’s figures unique within college sports.

MU was billed more than $31.7 million by Every True Tiger from July 1, 2024, to date, a span that roughly aligns with both a sports and fiscal year. The number of athletes receiving NIL benefits varied month to month, ranging from 155 to 65, with an average of 125.

Every True Tiger is not quite like the collectives used to generate and distribute NIL funds at most schools. It is a self-described “marketing and branding agency” tethered to Mizzou, allowing the school to funnel NIL money to its athletes. The funds are listed in the invoices as “talent fees.”

The $31.7 million tally includes a 2024 football season in which the Tigers went 10-3 and a men’s basketball campaign that saw Mizzou return to the NCAA Tournament. It also includes spending on transfers for both teams’ upcoming seasons.

Because NIL nationwide is so murky, it’s not possible to compare Missouri’s spending with that of similar universities, whose figures are not available or have not been reported.

The NIL landscape will undergo a drastic change on July 1, when the settlement with the House takes effect. Major athletic programs, including Missouri, will share $18 million of revenue directly with their athletes each year. Previously unregulated NIL deals will now have to come from third parties and receive approval from a nationwide clearinghouse to ensure that they fall within an established range of fair values.

As such, Mizzou’s NIL operation will look different moving forward.

Spending flurry before July 1

Of the roughly $31.7 million spent on NIL in the last year, nearly $10.3 million came earlier this month — just weeks ahead of the House settlement’s effective date.

Mizzou has sent just shy of $25 million to Every True Tiger so far in 2025, more than doubling the school’s $12.4 million spent across all of 2024. The last six months of invoices were the six most lucrative of the 22 obtained by the Post-Dispatch.

Mizzou’s NIL spending by month

Month Every True Tiger invoice total
Sept. 2023 $881,446
Oct. 2023 $789,046
Nov. 2023 $825,846
Dec. 2023 $848,313
Jan. 2024 $767,584
Feb. 2024 $824,700
March 2024 $754,200
April 2024 $662,233
May 2024 $991,250
June 2024 $1,619,400
July 2024 $940,900
Aug. 2024 $876,900
Sept. 2024 $1,871,900
Oct. 2024 $902,400
Nov. 2024 $950,850
Dec. 2024 $1,211,500
Jan. 2025 $4,647,950
Feb. 2025 $1,919,100
March 2025 $2,332,150
April 2025 $2,185,950
May 2025 $3,592,850
June 2025 $10,279,300

This practice of “front-loading” deals with athletes, believed to be common across major college sports, allowed MU to provide extra compensation to athletes signed for next season before it is restricted by the settlement’s revenue-sharing cap.

Starting July 1, schools will be limited in how much revenue they can share with athletes, and external NIL deals will be subject to increased scrutiny. In the meantime, athletic departments like Mizzou’s have taken the closing months of the NIL free-for-all to give a rising amount of money to athletes competing in 2025-26 — and continually up the ante to keep pace with others doing the same.

“As we were all anticipating this coming, we all recognize that we needed to best position ourselves,” Veatch said of the front-loading practice. “Like you can see, we were aggressive in that approach. I don’t feel like it’s necessarily inconsistent with a lot of those schools out there.”

“It was an absolute necessity,” Larrondo said. “That was the standard you were trying to meet. … We weren’t uncommon in that.”

Every True Tiger’s 2025 invoices haven’t broken down spending by sport. But it’s likely that football players who signed deals in the winter and men’s basketball players who signed in the spring have received a significant portion of the compensation they’re due already — months before their seasons start.

What each sport received

In 2024, Mizzou sent about $12.4 million to Every True Tiger. Just under $8 million, or 64.3%, went to football. Men’s basketball received $2.9 million, or 23.5%.

Baseball received $488,500, or 3.9% — the third-most of any program. Women’s basketball received the fourth-most, at $348,100 or 2.8%.

Softball (1.5%), wrestling (1.2%) and track and field (1.1%) were the only other programs to receive more than 1% of the total spending.

Mizzou’s 2024 NIL spending by sport

Team 2024 Every True Tiger Invoice Amounts Percentage of All 2024 Invoices
Football $7,956,034 64.3%
Men’s basketball $2,907,583 23.5%
Baseball $488,500 3.9%
Women’s Basketball $648,100 2.8%
Softball $189,150 1.5%
Wrestling $146,950 1.2%
Track and Field $140,000 1.1%
Gymnastics $97,000 0.8%
Volleyball $40,000 0.3%
Golf $30,000 0.2%
Soccer $20,500 0.2%
Tennis $10,000 <0.1%
Total $12,373,817

The records do not detail which athletes within those programs received the money. And for 2025 spending, the invoices did not break down how the money was distributed by sport.

The NIL breakdown is not a perfect science. Looking at the 2024 calendar year, for example, it encompasses one football season but parts of two basketball seasons.

Still, it’s something of a baseline and the clearest possible view into which sports were NIL priorities.

While it’s not yet clear how Mizzou’s spending trend will carry over into the revenue-sharing era, expenditures on football and men’s basketball clearly spiked during transfer portal windows, as the programs acquired new players and signed current players to new deals.

In January 2024, when the football program signed most of its transfers for that year, it was the only sport included on that month’s Every True Tiger invoice. MU jumped from spending about $561,000 on football in NIL in December 2023 to about $767,600 in January before dipping back down to $420,000 in February.

In May, while most of the nearly $3.6 million spent on NIL across the athletics department wasn’t broken down by sport, the tail end of the men’s basketball transfer portal cycle was marked by two players receiving a combined $170,000 that month — seemingly on top of what the team had planned to distribute.

Future of Mizzou and NIL

NIL spending is about to change dramatically just a few years after it began. Mizzou will share the $18 million in revenue, plus add about $3 million in new athletics scholarships — $2.5 million of which will count toward the overall House settlement cap of $20.5 million.

Every True Tiger will still exist, in part to help with revenue-sharing cap management but also to help arrange third-party NIL deals that will allow athletes to earn more than what they get from their school. It’s a process that will include collaboration with Learfield, which holds MU athletics’ multimedia rights.

“That’s a lot of what we’re talking about internally, with Brad Larrondo, with ETT, but also with Learfield,” Veatch said. “How do we all come together to help facilitate those deals at a high level? One of the kind of operational advantages we’ll continue to have is (that) Brad and our ETT program, they have such good relationships directly with student-athletes. They’re able to facilitate those revenue share contracts, and at the same time, they can be front-line in terms of fulfilling all those things with student-athletes, coordinating with them.”

Local and regional businesses will be vital, too, if they can sign Missouri athletes to the kind of third-party deals that will be approved by NIL Go, the clearinghouse.

With internal spending on athlete compensation now capped, Missouri will look for money to come in from the outside.

“We’re going to need our businesses, our sponsors to really embrace that as part of the new era,” Veatch said. “It’s going to be on us, as athletic departments, (and) Learfield, as our partner, to continue to integrate those types of opportunities in meaningful ways for sponsors. … I see that as the next area of innovation and where we can really help try to give our sports and our programs another competitive leg up.”

Mizzou women’s basketball coach Kellie Harper speaks at her introductory press conference on Monday, March 31, 2025, in Columbia, Missouri. (Video by Mizzou Network, used with permission of Mizzou Athletics)

Ethan Erickson | Post-Dispatch




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Alex Cooper's sexual harassment claims met with strong response from former BU players

Boston University’s soccer players are backing the team’s former longtime soccer coach, Nancy Feldman, after Alex Cooper made damning allegations against her. Cooper, host of the popular “Call Her Daddy” podcast, claimed in a Hulu documentary that Feldman sexually harassed her and alleged that school officials ignored her when she brought it to their attention. […]

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Alex Cooper's sexual harassment claims met with strong response from former BU players

Boston University’s soccer players are backing the team’s former longtime soccer coach, Nancy Feldman, after Alex Cooper made damning allegations against her.

Cooper, host of the popular “Call Her Daddy” podcast, claimed in a Hulu documentary that Feldman sexually harassed her and alleged that school officials ignored her when she brought it to their attention.

Ninety-nine former Terriers stars came forward as a “united group” to share their own experiences with Feldman, who retired after in April 2022.

They said as a group that they “categorically never felt unsafe,” according to a letter obtained by TMZ.

Alex Cooper told her story in a bombshell Hulu Documentary. Getty Images

“We were never at risk of or witness to inappropriate behavior or anything that could be characterized as sexual harassment,” the letter read.

“As a leader, she approached every day with professionalism, making decisions in service of the success of the team. [Feldman] has remained an important part of our lives, and we shall stand by her.”

Cooper claimed that Feldman asked inappropriate questions about her love life in the mid-2010s, and she alleged that she was benched for not disclosing certain intimate information.

Her family then approached school officials over the matter, but nothing came of it.

“I felt a lot of anger — anger at my coach, anger at my school, and anger at the system that allowed this to happen,” Cooper said in the doc.

Alex Cooper shows off a soccer jersey with her name on it prior to a match between Bay FC and Angel City FC. NWSL via Getty Images

Cooper claims that she considered filing a lawsuit over the alleged harassment but ultimately chose not to.

Boston University released a statement last week denying any wrongdoing.

Alex Cooper (l) during her Boston University days. @alexandracooper/Instagram

“Boston University has a zero-tolerance policy for sexual harassment,” the statement read. “We have a robust system of resources, support and staff dedicated to student wellbeing and a thorough reporting process through our Equal Opportunity Office.

“We encourage members of our community to report any concerns, and we remain committed to fostering a safe and secure campus environment for all.”

Former Boston women’s soccer coach Nancy Feldman. @terrierwsoc/Instagram

Cooper was a midfielder for Boston University from 2013-15 and has since become one of the most popular podcasters in the country.

Her Unwell Network and “Call Her Daddy” podcast vaulted her into stardom since her departure from Barstool Sports in 2021.

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Bentley Achieves Third Highest Ever Ranking in Learfield Cup and Best in 15 Years

Story Links WALTHAM, Mass. – The Bentley athletic department achieved its third highest ever ranking in the Learfield Division II Directors’ Cup as the final standings for the 2024-25 academic year were released. Learfield Cup Standings The Learfield Directors’ Cup is administered by the National Association of Collegiate Directors of Athletics. […]

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WALTHAM, Mass. – The Bentley athletic department achieved its third highest ever ranking in the Learfield Division II Directors’ Cup as the final standings for the 2024-25 academic year were released.

Learfield Cup Standings

The Learfield Directors’ Cup is administered by the National Association of Collegiate Directors of Athletics. The stated goal is a “program that honors institutions maintaining a broad-based program, achieving success in many sports, both men’s and women’s, in which all sports that the NCAA, NAIA or Two-Year College sector offers a championship, along with FBS football, and all student-athletes that compete in those sports, are treated equally.”

A breakdown of the scoring system can be found at the following link: Learfield Cup

Bentley earned 346 points to finish 56th in the standings out of 259 Division II programs. In addition to it being the department’s third highest ever finish, it’s the Falcons’ best since 2010-11. It was the second highest ranking in the NE10 this year.

Volleyball led all Bentley teams with 83 points after they won the East Region championship and advanced to the Final Four. Women’s basketball was next with 73 points with an NE10 championship and an Elite Eight appearance.

Softball, hockey, women’s soccer, men’s and women’s cross country and men’s lacrosse, all of which made NCAA appearances, added to Bentley’s points tally.



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