University of Miami pitching coach Laz Gutierrez (center) is one of several mental skills or performance directors who have earned doctorates from Grand Canyon University. (Photo by University of Miami) As a former major league baseball scout, Laz Gutierrez recognized that a player’s mental game is what separates most Division I college athletes. So when […]
University of Miami pitching coach Laz Gutierrez (center) is one of several mental skills or performance directors who have earned doctorates from Grand Canyon University. (Photo by University of Miami)
As a former major league baseball scout, Laz Gutierrez recognized that a player’s mental game is what separates most Division I college athletes.
So when he wanted to study why pitchers suffered from the yips – the sudden and unexplained loss of ability to execute certain skills, such as throwing the ball – he enrolled at Grand Canyon University.
Gutierrez, who spent five years as the mental skills coordinator for the Boston Red Sox and serves as the pitching coach and mental skills director at the University of Miami, is one of several current or former major league mental skills or performance directors who have earned doctorates from GCU.
St. Louis Cardinals performance coach Carl Kochan delivered a speech to his fellow online doctoral graduates in fall 2024. (Photo by Ralph Freso)
After being a part of five World Series championships with the San Francisco Giants and Los Angeles Dodgers, Carl Kochan was hired as director of performance for the St. Louis Cardinals in December, around the same time he graduated after successfully defending his doctorate, titled “The Longitudinal, Grounded Theory Study on Psychological Resilience and Professionals.”
Kellen Lee is in his third season as the mental skills coach for the Seattle Mariners, five years after earning his doctorate from GCU in 2020 and serving as a master resilience trainer/performance expert for the U.S. Army.
Chad Bohling, who is scheduled to earn his doctorate this year, is in his 21st season with the New York Yankees, currently serving as the senior director of organizational performance.
And Justin Su’a, who is on track to earn his doctorate from GCU next spring, was the head of mental performance for the Tampa Bay Rays for five years before starting the Performance Advisory Group, which assists coaches, players and executives in professional sports.
The groundswell of mental skills staffers in baseball over the last 20 years illustrates teams’ efforts to address their players’ well-being, as well as their physical tools.
Performance coach Carl Kochan was part of five World Series championship teams. (Photo by St. Louis Cardinals).
“Remember, this is a people-person industry,” Kochan said. “So before a player is ever an athlete, he’s a human being. So, really, making sure that we have that human connection is priority No.1.”
He added, “Ultimately, getting to know somebody and understanding what they value, versus balancing what the organization needs, both as a player and as a staff member – that’s the fine line that we get to walk every day. And then, oh, by the way, try to win baseball games, too.”
One of the biggest ingredients is trust, and it didn’t hurt that Gutierrez knew Chris Sale – the 2024 National League Cy Young Award winner with Atlanta – when Sale pitched at Florida Gulf Coast University and Gutierrez scouted the South Florida region for Boston.
Sale was drafted by the Chicago White Sox, but the two connected quickly after Sale was traded to Boston after the 2016 season, when Gutierrez already transitioned to the mental skills department.
“He’s an easy guy to talk to because he was in the game and knew both sides of the ball,” Sale said. “He knew how to get information out of people and make them feel comfortable, but he also knew the game and knew when was the right time to go about it.”
Cy Young Award winner Chris Sale credits Laz Gutierrez (pictured) as a mental skills coach with Boston. (Photo by University of Miami)
Before one of Boston’s off-days, Sale planned to fly to Naples, Florida, to visit his wife and three children and invited Gutierrez, who then could rent a car to drive about 100 miles to see his family.
“There might have been only 14 seconds of silence the entire time,” Sale recalled of the flight. “We spent the whole time talking about anything and everything. Laz is one of my guys.”
As a former strength and conditioning coach, Kochan sought ways to improve his craft and marveled at how mental skills coach and former major league pitcher Bob Tewksbury and sports psychologist/former minor league manager Derin McMains conveyed tough and easy conversations and getting players to view things in a different light while with the Giants.
That swayed Kochan to pursue his doctorate in hopes of understanding what makes players and coaches tick when faced with adversity on a daily basis.
Lee has worked with service members who were thinking about their family and with college student-athletes concerned about an examination, so he recognizes the importance of helping a player direct their focus toward the task at hand and remain fully present.
“Being able to control their focus and focus on essentially what they can control in the moment is a key skill, a key tool in their toolkit to be able to optimize performance in the moment,” said Lee, who played baseball at UC San Diego, served as director of baseball operations at Santa Clara University and taught mental skills and physical education at Presentation High School, an all-girls school in San Jose, California.
Seattle mental skills coach Kellen Lee worked with U.S. Army members.(Photo by Seattle Mariners)
Lee’s dissertation focuses on the mental component of injury rehabilitation.
“I just saw that particular subgroup of athletes could seriously benefit from just making sure that their mind is good, super confident going back into sport,” Lee said. “Because fear of injury is really common. Fear of like, ‘Oh no, like, am I going to be as good as I was before?’”
Lee’s sounding board includes wife Jaclyn, who is an athletic trainer in San Jose, and brother Korey, a catcher with the Chicago White Sox and his spring training roommate, thanks to the proximity of their spring facilities.
“I tell our players that I feel like I have the answers to the test, because my brother will tell me everything about what players are thinking about, what the pressure are at the high level, and I’m able to use some of those stories to connect what I spent years and years and years studying and understanding and being able to apply it in a very real way,” Lee said. “I’m using real-life examples coming directly from a player.”
Lee liked that GCU professors emphasized that he choose a topic he was passionate about, rather than be steered in a certain direction.
“I felt the power to be able to determine where I wanted to go and how I wanted to go about it,” he said.
GCU News senior writer Mark Gonzales can be reached at [email protected]
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How to Watch NCAA Outdoor Championships, Men’s Day 2: Live Stream College Track and Field, TV Channel
By Ben Verbrugge is a freelance sportswriter with a journalism degree from CSU Dominguez Hills. He is a member of the Los Angeles media and spends most of his time covering the NBA, NFL, and MLB. When not writing, he is either playing or watching sports. Ben Verbrugge Contributing Sports Network news article Based on […]
Ben Verbrugge is a freelance sportswriter with a journalism degree from CSU Dominguez Hills. He is a member of the Los Angeles media and spends most of his time covering the NBA, NFL, and MLB. When not writing, he is either playing or watching sports.
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The NCAA Outdoor Championships continue on Friday in Eugene, Oregon, at Hayward Field, and you can catch all the action with FuboTV.
Mason Mangum of California competes in the men’s long jump during the Pac-12 Track & Field Championship at Hayward Field on May 14, 2022 in Eugene, Oregon. Mason Mangum of California competes in the men’s long jump during the Pac-12 Track & Field Championship at Hayward Field on May 14, 2022 in Eugene, Oregon. Steph Chambers/Getty Images
How to Watch NCAA Outdoor Championships, Men’s Day 2
Date: Friday, June 13, 2025
Time: 8:00 PM EDT
Channel: ESPN2
Stream: Fubo (Try for free)
After the completion of six events on Wednesday, Minnesota leads the way going into Friday. 35 teams have scored points after the first day of competition and will look to add to their totals with the finals of most running events on Friday.
In the 100m qualifier on Wednesday, Auburn’s Kanyinsola Ajayi was the only runner to break the 10-second mark, running 9.92 seconds. Jelani Watkins and Jaiden Reid of LSU followed right behind with 10.02 times.
In the 200m qualifier, Auburn once again came out on top. Makanakaishe Charamba ran 19.94 seconds, with Jordan Anthony of Arkansas and Garrett Kaalund of USC both running 20.01.
In the 400m qualifier, Samuel Ogazi from Alabama ran 44.77 seconds, while Gabriel Moronta of South Florida ran 45.10, and William Jones of USC finished third with a qualifying 45.12 seconds.
In the 4X100m relay, Auburn ran 37.97 seconds, while South Florida ran 38.12 seconds and LSU ran 38.14 seconds. In the 4x400m relay, Arkansas and USC both ran sub-3:03 times, with the Razorbacks qualifying for the final with the fastest time of 3:02.53, while the Trojans ran 3:02.76 and Texas A&M ran 3:03.09.
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Eden Prairie completes epic comeback to capture first boys volleyball state title
Senior captain Hardhik “Avi” Kommalapati (center) and his teammates celebrate with the first-ever MSHSL boys volleyball state championship trophy Thursday night at St. Thomas’ Schoenecker Arena. The Eagles completed a stunning reverse sweep, overcoming a 2-0 set deficit to defeat Rogers 3-2 and claim the inaugural sanctioned title. Photos by Jeremy Peyer Down two sets […]
Senior captain Hardhik “Avi” Kommalapati (center) and his teammates celebrate with the first-ever MSHSL boys volleyball state championship trophy Thursday night at St. Thomas’ Schoenecker Arena. The Eagles completed a stunning reverse sweep, overcoming a 2-0 set deficit to defeat Rogers 3-2 and claim the inaugural sanctioned title. Photos by Jeremy Peyer
Down two sets to none in the inaugural Minnesota State High School League boys volleyball championship, the top-seeded Eagles stared down elimination.
“In our last timeout to end the third set, we talked about not giving up, getting one point at a time and trusting our team and skills,” head coach Steph Chapek said.
With a roaring crowd assisting, the Eagles engineered a stunning reverse sweep, winning the next three sets to seal Eden Prairie’s place in history Thursday night at St. Thomas’ Schoenecker Arena.
The Eden Prairie bench and crowd erupt after winning the pivotal third set, 27-25. The dramatic victory, in which the Eagles fended off two match points, shifted momentum and energized the team for their historic comeback from a two-set deficit.
The Eagles’ 21-25, 19-25, 27-25, 25-20, 15-9 victory over Rogers delivered the first-ever MSHSL-sanctioned title in boys volleyball, completing what Chapek called “one of the greatest matches I have been a part of in my whole playing and coaching career.”
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Head coach Steph Chapek rallies the team during a timeout.
The championship seemed unlikely after Rogers rallied from deficits to win the opening sets. But the Eagles found their rhythm midway through the third set behind senior Avi Kommalapati’s 19 kills and senior Gabriel Hernandez’s 16. The turning point came when Eden Prairie fended off two match points to steal the crucial third set 27-25.
“It was intense to defend off two match points, but winning that third set gave us the confidence boost we needed going into sets four and five,” Chapek explained. The dramatic swing fired up the loud Eden Prairie crowd that packed the arena.
“I was so excited to see all of the EPHS students come through and show up,” said senior captain Deion Lange. “Having them there made it more like a home game than anything else. It was not just the students who showed up, we had family, friends, and EPHS Staff all over the gym supporting us the whole game.”
Senior captain Deion Lange (left) celebrates a late point against Rogers as teammates look on. Lange helped lead the Eagles’ comeback from a two-set deficit to win the first MSHSL boys volleyball state championship.
The Eagles’ composure under pressure showed the chemistry built over years of playing together. They entered the tournament as the top seed, and even as Rogers kept battling back throughout the match, Eden Prairie stuck to their defensive game and stayed together as a team.
“We are a great team in all sense of the word team,” Chapek said. “The players genuinely like and care for each other on and off the court. The group has been playing together for a few years now and they know each other well. We don’t need to freak out when things get tough.”
The team culture stems from Chapek’s leadership approach, according to players. “Coach Steph has very high expectations for her team, always believing we can do better,” Lange said. “Her ability to coach all 16 players during practice, keeping everyone involved, shows why she is a true leader. Before each state tournament game, Coach Steph encouraged the team to do some form of bonding or hang out together. She understands how important strong team chemistry and good relationships on the court are.”
Senior captain Hardhik (Avi) Kommalapati focuses before delivering a serve during the state championship match. Kommalapati led the Eagles with 19 kills and earned All-Tournament Team honors.
Beyond the comeback victory, Chapek emphasized the moment’s broader significance.
“Our whole program is so grateful for the opportunities this season,” Chapek reflected. “It was so much work to get it sanctioned, and so many great people from the last four to five years helped build boys volleyball to this point. It’s such an honor to play this season – and to top it off with the state title is beyond special.”
Three Eagles earned All-Tournament Team honors: senior captains Hardhik (Avi) Kommalapati and Deion Lange, along with junior Ghauthamasankar Padmanaban.
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Butte Central names former Montana Tech volleyball standout Karina Mickelson as new head coach | Montana High School Sports
BUTTE, Mont. — Though the return of high school volleyball is still a couple months away, it’s fresh on the mind of Butte Central, who introduces a new face to lead their program this month–though, she’s hardly a new face to the city of Butte. Call it a sort of homecoming for Karina Mickelson, the […]
BUTTE, Mont. — Though the return of high school volleyball is still a couple months away, it’s fresh on the mind of Butte Central, who introduces a new face to lead their program this month–though, she’s hardly a new face to the city of Butte.
Call it a sort of homecoming for Karina Mickelson, the newest head coach of Butte Central volleyball. Though the California native has been a part of Butte since she started her All-Frontier Conference playing career at Montana Tech a decade ago, Mickelson considers a chance to coach as a significant step forward.
“It’s very special to be able to say, ‘Hey, I’m a coach and a big part of the community now,'” Mickelson said. “I played a small role at university. People look up to when you’re a player and everyone kind of knows you as that, but to be able to step into the coaching role, it’s really special.”
Mickelson has previously spent time coaching in Butte’s club volleyball ranks, but she also brings with her a rare experience, having most recently played professionally in the Czech Republic.
She plans on taking the lessons she learned abroad with her, including a unique take on teamwork.
“You have so many different cultures and languages and things, but you’re not so different at the end of the day,” Mickelson said. “To be a really good teammate on a team like that that has so many international and foreign player on it, it was probably the best part of it.”
As the Maroons rebuild off the heels of back-to-back single-win seasons, Mickelson hopes her team-building approach will return Butte Central to its former relevance.
“Fundamental skills number one, then just team bonding, the team experience,” Mickelson said. “These are high school girls. I had some of my favorite volleyball memories when I was in high school, so I’m looking forward to that being a thing.”
Mickelson’s first official practice as BC coach starts in August.
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Outstanding Female Athlete Award History
SPRINGFIELD – Missouri State women’s basketball standout Lacy Stokes (Mt. Vernon, Mo.) has been named as the recipient of the 2025 Missouri State Outstanding Female Athlete Award, announced by MSU Athletics on Friday (June 13). First awarded […]
SPRINGFIELD – Missouri State women’s basketball standout Lacy Stokes (Mt. Vernon, Mo.) has been named as the recipient of the 2025 Missouri State Outstanding Female Athlete Award, announced by MSU Athletics on Friday (June 13).
First awarded in 1981, the MSU Outstanding Female Athlete Award is presented annually to the university’s top female athletic performer, as voted by the head coaches of the MoState’s 13 women’s intercollegiate programs.
Stokes received MVC Defensive Player of the Year, All-MVC first team, MVC All-Defensive Team and MVC All-Tournament Team accolades this year while leading the Lady Bears in scoring (14.4 ppg), assists (148), steals (90), free throw percentage (.793) and minutes (34.8 mpg). She turned in the fourth-best season assist-to-turnover ratio in program history (2.114) and captured the program’s career record for assist-to-turnover (2.06). Likewise, she played the second-most minutes in a single-season in Lady Bear history and ranked inside the top 25 in NCAA Division I in steals (19th) and steals per game (23rd).
Stokes helped lead coach Beth Cunningham‘s team to a 26-9 overall record this season. The Lady Bears earned a share of the MVC regular-season title and earned a berth in the WBIT for the second straight year.
She is the 13th basketball player to earn this award and the fourth Lady Bear in eight years to be so honored, joining recent recipients Danielle Gitzen (2019), Alexa Willard (2020) and Brice Calip (2021).
Other finalists for MSU’s 2024-25 Outstanding Female Athlete Award were: Camielle Day (soccer), EllaRose Goser (acrobatics and tumbling), Allyson Larkin (beach volleyball), Olivia Rogers (track and field), Morgan Sprague (volleyball) and McKenzie Vaughan (softball).
UIL Legislative Council tables shot clock; alters baseball playoffs
WATCH: Tate Taylor sets the national record in the 100 meters Watch multiple angles of Northside Harlan’s Tate Taylor sets the national record in the 100 meters at the Texas UIL State Track & Field Meet. The University Interscholastic League once again tabled the biggest item on the docket during its annual summer Legislative Council. […]
WATCH: Tate Taylor sets the national record in the 100 meters
Watch multiple angles of Northside Harlan’s Tate Taylor sets the national record in the 100 meters at the Texas UIL State Track & Field Meet.
The University Interscholastic League once again tabled the biggest item on the docket during its annual summer Legislative Council.
The UIL’s Athletic Committee announced it would continue to study the addition of a shot clock for basketball and did not make a motion to implement the oft-discussed proposal.
The two most significant changes the council adopted were the move to make water polo a fully sanctioned sport after several years as a pilot program and a change to rules for Class 3A and 4A baseball playoffs through the state semifinals.
Class 5A and 6A baseball have been under a pilot program that stipulated all rounds of the playoffs through the state semifinals will be best-of-three series unless both coaches agree to a one-game playoff.
Beginning in the 2026 playoffs, that edict will include Class 3A and 4A. Previously, coaches that differed on length of series would flip to see if they would play one game or a series.
In addition to studying the proposal to add a shot clock, the Athletic Committee announced it would continue to study other proposals, notably: adding girls flag football, adding lacrosse, adding a mileage cap for playoff games and a proposal to change the soccer scrimmage structure.
Among the noteworthy proposals the committee denied or took no action on were a proposal to add Class 3A in soccer and a proposal to give district champions in all sports home-field advantage in the first round of the playoffs in every classification.
Fanatics Fest 2025 Details Include Celebrities and Athletes
There may be only one company that could get LeBron James, Tom Brady, Kevin Costner, Spike Lee, Jay-Z, Travis Scott, NBA star Victor Wembanyama, YouTuber Kai Cenat and dozens of other high-wattage names from the worlds of sports and entertainment under one roof: Fanatics, the sports merchandise, collectible and entertainment firm founded by Michael Rubin. […]
There may be only one company that could get LeBron James, Tom Brady, Kevin Costner, Spike Lee, Jay-Z, Travis Scott, NBA star Victor Wembanyama, YouTuber Kai Cenat and dozens of other high-wattage names from the worlds of sports and entertainment under one roof: Fanatics, the sports merchandise, collectible and entertainment firm founded by Michael Rubin.
And they want fans to come along too.
Fanatics is bringing back its flagship live event, Fanatics Fest, to New York City on June 20-22, and in addition to a metric ton of sports stars, the company is doubling down on artists and entertainers (hence the likes of Costner and Lee).
“It’s a heck of a challenge, I wouldn’t say it’s fun. Most of what we do is fun, I don’t consider this to be fun,” quips Rubin in an interview with The Hollywood Reporter, when asked about booking the stars that will congregate in the Jacob Javits Convention Center. “Look, what I will tell you is, there’s not another company in the world that could create Fanatics Fest, because putting it on the show is hard enough. But then, we’re going to have 300, 400 of the biggest athletes, celebrities, artists in the world come together. It’s really because of the broader partnerships that they have with Fanatics. Everyone coming here is someone that has a partnership with Fanatics, and that’s why they come.”
The event is stacked with programming, including live podcast and show tapings, including First Take with Stephen A. Smith, and guests that include NBA commissioner Adam Silver, NFL commissioner Roger Goodell, Ice Cube, and a slew of athletes. Panels that include athletes like Brady, James, Derek Jeter, Kevin Durant, the Manning brothers and others, and entertainers like Costner, Lee, Mark Wahlberg, Kenan Thompson and Keegan Michael-Key.
It is that mashup of sports and entertainment that Fanatics executives believe deliver the secret sauce for Fanatics Fest.
“In the past, athletes were up there talking about the game-winning hit, the game-winning drive. What we tried to do is bring culture, entertainment, even entrepreneurialism and sport, together, and mash it up in interesting ways,” says Lance Festerman, the CEO of Fanatics Events. “Even having these sorts of athletes and cultural icons on stage interacting in itself was pretty original. I think there was a lot we were proud of last year. And to Michael’s point, there’s a lot to be proud about this year with the content. I think the kind of creation and invention of this sort of an original platform was really cool. And I don’t think people had seen things like it before.”
“The content is 10 times better this year than last year,” Rubin adds. “It’s blow away great this year.”
One of the defining characteristics of Fanatics Fest is putting fans under the same roof as some of the most famous people in the world. As athletes join actors and musicians as global celebrities, the desire for fans to connect with them only grows more important.
That is reflected in the panels, photo ops and autograph signings, as well as events like the Fanatics Games, where athletes, creators, celebrities and fans compete head to head in skill-based challenges. And Fanatics will bring back the 40/40 Club, a temporary pop-up of Jay-Z’s infamous New York City hotspot, constructed inside the Javits Center, exclusively for the biggest stars and highest rollers … though fans are free to gawk from a distance.
“It’s for people that are really important to Jay and to us, and that really is the athletes, celebrities, artists that are there, and then our most important VIPs across Fanatics’ business,” Rubin explains. “It’s something that’s made to be highly curated. You know, there’s 100,000-plus people at Fanatics Fest, the people that come into 40/40 are measured in the hundreds.”
But the event is also Fanatics’ big bet on the experience economy, on connecting sports (and increasingly pop culture) fans in real life, not only with stars, but with each other.
“The fact is, you don’t have to get off your couch or leave your house for anything anymore, everything will come to you,” Festerman says. “Therefore, the impetus is on us to build something that is absolutely mind-blowingly cool and immersive and experiential … We know that Millennials, Gen Z, they want immersive experiences. They don’t want stuff, they want to feel something, they want a unique moment. And that’s what we’re doing, we’re building that moment that people can share on a mass level that is beyond the screen, and they feel something and they feel a connection to each other, to the content, to the celebrities, to the athletes.”