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GB Beach Sprint programme looking for J16s

GB Beach Sprint programme looking for J16s The first early identification opportunity is Sunday June 29th in Nottingham. Open to any rowers year 11 or younger, it will take place immediately after the GB France trial, meaning athletes involved in GB France can also take part. This early identification will involve racing in coastal boats […]

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GB Beach Sprint programme looking for J16s



GB Beach Sprint programme looking for J16s

The first early identification opportunity is Sunday June 29th in Nottingham. Open to any rowers year 11 or younger, it will take place immediately after the GB France trial, meaning athletes involved in GB France can also take part. This early identification will involve racing in coastal boats over distances between 250-500m to identify individuals who may be suited to the shorter sprint format.

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Tom Pattichis, GB Rowing Head Coach for Beach Sprints said: “With over a year and half until the Youth Olympic Games, we’ve identified an exciting opportunity in Nottingham, for young rowers currently involved in any rowing format, whether that be based on the river or coast, to get involved in Beach Sprints. Successful athletes could be selected to race at the 2025 Coupe event and potentially develop as a young Olympian.”

After the identification event in Nottingham, GB Rowing will invite a group of athletes to take part in a training camp in Bournemouth from 27-29 August, which will lead into competing at the British Beach Sprint Championships from 30-31 August. Following this, a selection event for the 2025 Coupe de la Jeunesse Beach Sprints will take place on Monday 1 September.
Athletes or parents wishing to find out more information can register interest below!
Register your interest here
No previous Coastal or Beach Sprint experience is required. Young rowers can become part of a development programme with the chance to race later in 2025 at Coupe de la Jeunesse Beach Sprints. The ultimate aim will be to qualify boats and represent Great Britain for the first time ever in the Beach Sprint format at the 2026 Youth Olympic Games in Dakar.
The GB Beach Sprint programme is looking to identify J16 rowers, to try this exciting new Olympic format this summer
The 2025 Coupe de la Jeunesse Beach Sprints is competed in La Linea, Spain from 31 October to 2 November. Tom Pattichis added: “Our intention is to select a team of J16 rowers to race at the Coupe, as a practice event in preparation for potential qualification and selection for the 2026 Dakar Youth Olympic Games.”
Credit: Anthony Benoit

College Sports

Five things you didn’t know about the Stanley Cup, ice hockey’s most iconic trophy

“The Stanley Cup is meant to be shared and enjoyed” It’s also had its share of misadventures: left on the side of a road after a flat tire, stolen by a fan mid-playoff, dented at dive bars and parades, and even delivered to the wrong house. In 1907, after winning the Stanley Cup, the Montreal […]

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“The Stanley Cup is meant to be shared and enjoyed”

It’s also had its share of misadventures: left on the side of a road after a flat tire, stolen by a fan mid-playoff, dented at dive bars and parades, and even delivered to the wrong house.

In 1907, after winning the Stanley Cup, the Montreal Wanderers accidentally left it at a photography studio, where the cleaner mistook it for a flower pot, took it home, and used it as a real rose bowl. It remained on her mantle for two months before anyone noticed it was missing.

It even caught on fire once, courtesy of the 1940 New York Rangers, who promptly put out the fire… by urinating in it.

But while the Cup has been fed beer, dog food, and baby formula, it is never left unsupervised. Since the 1980s, an official from the Hockey Hall of Fame, one of the so-called “Keepers of the Cup,” is always by its side, white gloves on, ready to intervene if things get too rowdy (and they do).

“It’s a trophy that doesn’t hide behind glass,” said Keeper of the Cup Mike Bolt.

“The Stanley Cup is meant to be shared and enjoyed. It’s out in the community every day, so accidents do happen. It’s [now 132] years old, there are a few knicks and bangs on it for sure.”

The Cup is also a symbol of hope and healing. It’s been carried to the summit of Colorado’s highest peak and into the frozen vastness of Nunavut, and comforted survivors in the wake of tragedy.

When the Chicago Blackhawks won in 2010, Brent Sopel brought it to a Pride Parade, and in 2022, Nazem Kadri became the first player to bring the Cup to a mosque.

In short: it’s the most well-travelled, well-loved, and wildly unpredictable guest at ice hockey’s victory party. From its humble beginnings as a silver rose bowl purchased by a British noble to its current role as hockey’s most coveted prize, the Cup has become a symbol of excellence, endurance, and a kind of joyful chaos that the sport can offer.

To this day, it doesn’t sit quietly in a case; it lives a full, unruly, and unforgettable life. With the 2025 champions soon to be crowned, the ice hockey world holds its breath to see what the Cup will be up to next.



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Syracuse Orange Reacts Results: Orange fans pick the top Cuse athletes of 24-25

This week we asked Syracuse Orange fans to vote for the top female and male athlete of 24-25. Both votes went as we expected-one close race and one very clear-cut winner. For the women, ice hockey goalie Allie Kelly edged out women’s lacrosse standout Emma Muchnick by a slim margin. Kelley finished her career as […]

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This week we asked Syracuse Orange fans to vote for the top female and male athlete of 24-25. Both votes went as we expected-one close race and one very clear-cut winner.

For the women, ice hockey goalie Allie Kelly edged out women’s lacrosse standout Emma Muchnick by a slim margin.

Kelley finished her career as the NCAA”s all-time leader in saves and will be a tough person to replace next year. Muchnick will get another chance at taking the top spot for new Orange HC Regy Thorpe.

On the men’s side, Kyle McCord pretended this contest was a Syracuse school passing record and obliterated it. The other guys didn’t stand a chance, no matter how well they did this year and it doesn’t take away from their accomplishments. Kyle was just that damn good in 2024.

Come back next week for another poll and check out FanDuel for your NBA Finals bets



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Major junior hockey development league makes a stop in Park City

Right as the Stanley Cup Finals are getting underway, some of the NHL’s potential next prospects are getting ready to take the ice in Park City.  From Friday through Sunday, the North American Hockey League’s Oklahoma Warriors will be making the Park City Ice Arena their home for one of their two pre-draft camps. The […]

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Right as the Stanley Cup Finals are getting underway, some of the NHL’s potential next prospects are getting ready to take the ice in Park City. 

From Friday through Sunday, the North American Hockey League’s Oklahoma Warriors will be making the Park City Ice Arena their home for one of their two pre-draft camps. The other camp was held last weekend in Hudson, Wisconsin. 

The NAHL is more or less the hockey equivalent of baseball’s single A. Most players make it to the Division 1 level, and some, the NHL. The UHSL is right above it in level but below Division 1 college hockey. 

Friday, prospects will check in and have general practices at the arena. Saturday, there will be specific skills exercises and scrimmages. Sunday, there will be further scrimmages and an all-star game to cap off the action. 

Warriors President and Director of Hockey Operations George Chalos, a Parkite, believes the players would love some fans in attendance. He also said he thinks the aspiring hockey players could greatly benefit from seeing this level up close, given it’s several notches above the high school level. Chalos used to help coach the Miners Red and also serves as an assistant for the University of Utah’s team. 

“This is a very, very high level,” Chalos said. “I brought this camp here to Park City because I’d like to give opportunities to the Utah kids.”

While hockey is growing in Utah, Chelos said kids at higher levels often have to leave the state to compete. 

Fellow Parkite Paul Wiczek took the ice for Oklahoma last season, and there will be several other Parkites and Utah-natives competing this weekend for potential draft spots. 

“We have a bunch of Park City kids,” Chalos added. “Eric Jacques. … Justin Bayers. … Fisher Hellman.”

There will be around 60 players coming from all across the country. The NAHL has 35 teams from all over the country. The legendary Patrick Kane sharpened his skills for two years in the league. 

Chalos encouraged fans to come out all three days. He did say however that the scrimmages and all-star game were likely to be fan favorites. 

The Warriors will complete their evaluations Sunday and are set to draft players Tuesday and Wednesday. 

“I don’t know if we’ll take them, but on our draft board are two Utah kids — Beau Blakely and Jack Bishop,” Chalos said. “My excitement levels are off the charts. … For any player or family that likes hockey, they should come this week.”

The camp is part of a trend of major hockey teams popping by Park City. The Utah Mammoth, then the Utah Hockey Club, stopped by the arena twice last summer and fall for prospect development and team practice camps. 

Chalos believes hockey is just starting to take off in Park City and across Utah. 

“I know the City Council has a big ambition about building possibly a two-sheet facility down the road,” said Chalos. “It’s my mission to help grow hockey in the state of Utah.”



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Old Dominion University’s Boyzie Hayes on Thriving During Crossover Season, Leading Departmental Growth

Old Dominion University’s Boyzie Hayes on Thriving During Crossover Season, Leading Departmental Growth From a small mid-major institution to a program on the rise that’s making some noise on the national scale, Old Dominion University has experienced an impressive transformation. Director of Video Operations Boyzie Hayes has witnessed this change first hand as a member […]

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Old Dominion University’s Boyzie Hayes on Thriving During Crossover Season, Leading Departmental Growth
































From a small mid-major institution to a program on the rise that’s making some noise on the national scale, Old Dominion University has experienced an impressive transformation. Director of Video Operations Boyzie Hayes has witnessed this change first hand as a member of the program since 2012.

At the 2025 SVG College Summit, Hayes serves up a look at his video-production infrastructure in the Sun Belt Conference, explains what it’s like to be part of this evolution in the athletics department, and how his crew adapts to the chaos of crossover season.

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A college hockey select team is set to play in the Spengler Cup

There hasn’t been a direct college presence in the world’s oldest ice hockey tournament since the early 1980s. That’s about to change. A select team of NCAA men’s hockey players will compete in the 2025 Spengler Cup, according to sources. The group will include players, coaches and staff members from Division I programs, both conference-affiliated […]

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There hasn’t been a direct college presence in the world’s oldest ice hockey tournament since the early 1980s.

That’s about to change.

A select team of NCAA men’s hockey players will compete in the 2025 Spengler Cup, according to sources.

The group will include players, coaches and staff members from Division I programs, both conference-affiliated and independents.

The tournament, which will hold its 97th edition in Davos, Switzerland, from Dec. 26 to Dec. 31, dates to 1923. Minnesota played in it in 1981 and North Dakota followed a year later but there hasn’t been an American-based team in the field since the AHL’s Rochester Americans in 2013.

A college select team’s participation now is possible only because of a 2024 NCAA bylaw change that carved out an exemption to rules prohibiting college players from competing for other teams during the academic year.

Now, men’s hockey athletes also can compete on a team representing College Hockey Inc. in the Spengler Cup.

“Allowing student-athletes to represent College Hockey Inc. will allow more student-athletes to engage in a historic, high-level competition in conjunction with a unique cultural experience without missing class time, as the competition occurs during winter break,” officials wrote in the rationale for the rule amendment, which was adopted by the NCAA Division I Council on June 26, 2024.

“While absences from regular-season intercollegiate competition are possible, such absences are expected to be minimal. Although the Spengler Cup offers prize money for participating teams, existing amateurism legislation would remain applicable.”

The college hockey select team’s logo and uniforms are still being developed, as is the framework for who’ll be on the coaching staff and invited to play. Last year’s tournament allowed team delegations to include 27 players and 12 officials.

The team will get an appearance fee from tournament organizers to cover expenses, according to sources.

HC Davos hosts the tournament and is one of the other five teams in the 2025 field. Team Canada fields a group typically made up of players from North American minor leagues and European pro leagues; former college players often take part.

Defending champion HC Fribourg-Gottéron of Switzerland is returning to the 2025 tournament along with HC Sparta Praha of Czechia and IFK Helsinki from Finland.

The tournament, which takes place Dec. 26-31 each year, includes 11 games over six days, and the recent format has guaranteed each team at least three games.

The 2024 format had two three-team pools, with round-robin play in each over the first three days. The top finisher in each pool advanced to the Dec. 30 semifinals to face the winners of Dec. 29 games between the second-place team from one pool and the third-place team in the other. The New Year’s Eve championship game wraps up the event.



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Is one more big move coming?

Gophers hockey typically doesn’t rebuild; they reload. That was put to the test this offseason as Minnesota was tasked with replacing its top five leaders in points from last season. Between two additions from the transfer portal and up to seven incoming freshmen, let’s take a look at what their roster could look like next […]

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Gophers hockey typically doesn’t rebuild; they reload. That was put to the test this offseason as Minnesota was tasked with replacing its top five leaders in points from last season. Between two additions from the transfer portal and up to seven incoming freshmen, let’s take a look at what their roster could look like next season.

*= incoming freshman, **= incoming transfer

Forwards

Minnesota’s biggest splash of the offseason is adding Ludtke from the transfer portal. He will join Lamb, Ziemer and Clark as the team’s top three returning leaders in points from last season. Mooney projects as a high 2025 NHL Draft pick, and he could be in line for a big role as a true freshman. The team has not officially announced which freshmen will make the jump from juniors, but early signs point towards Moe, Pritchard, Moore, Townsend and Kvasnicka rounding out their incoming class.

Related: Gophers an odd exception as CHL stars flock to NCAA hockey powers

Defense

If the Gophers make a late addition to the 2025-26 roster, it will likely be a defenseman. They carried nine defensemen last season, and they currently have only seven projected to be on next year’s squad. With Sam Rinzel off to the NHL, Thomas and Gruba will have big shoes to fill.

Goalies

Airey was solid for the Gophers last season, allowing 42 goals in 19 appearances. He finished the season with a 2.47 GAA and .900 save percentage behind Liam Souliere as the de facto No. 2. Minnesota went out and added Di Pasquo from Michigan State through the transfer portal, who should push Airey for the top spot in 2025-26.

Teams across the country are still adding players from the Canadian Hockey League (CHL), the United States Hockey League (USHL), and other avenues. The Gophers could still have at least one scholarship available. They will undoubtedly have a younger roster in 2025-26, but they could use one more big splash to round out their rotation. That’s something we’ll be watching for closely in the coming days and weeks.



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