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Helping Coaches Provide Learning Opportunities for Student-Athletes

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The premise of the education-based athletics philosophy is to go beyond winning and to help students gain lifelong values and qualities. In order to accomplish this goal, it is incumbent upon athletic administrators to establish the standards and to help their coaching staff to consider and provide educational learning opportunities for student-athletes.

Missy Townsend, athletic director at Prescott (Arizona) High School, said, “We are intentional about supporting our coaches in fostering lifelong values and qualities through our Student-Athlete Student Leadership Team (SALT) workshop. This includes guest speakers, interactive sessions on leadership, accountability and team dynamics to develop skills essential for success beyond sports.

“We provide our coaches with access to curriculum materials to be used in team meetings and practice sessions. These topics would include integrity, respect, perseverance and responsibility. In addition, we encourage the use of an athlete abuse prevention curriculum developed by Childhelp, and this helps students recognize unhealthy behavior, understand their rights, and learn how to seek help when needed.”

In like fashion, Doug Marchetti, athletic director at Norwalk (Connecticut) High School, said, “Our league offers a Student Leadership Conference to kick off each of the three seasons. This provides our student-athletes to hear messages related to communication, respect, sportsmanship and accountability that they can incorporate into their lives and team activities. This has dramatically changed our culture and behavior for the better, and it is also fully embraced and cultivated by our coaching staff.”

At Ellensburg (Washington) High School, Athletic Director Cole Kanyer said “I constantly encourage coaches to pursue learning opportunities that they think are valuable. As the saying goes, ‘a rising tide lifts all boats,’ and as coaches grow and develop, they additionally provide educational opportunities for their student-athletes. I subscribe to a number of leadership email threads and I share them with our coaches, and I provide links to articles dealing with hazing, mental health and communication.”

Townsend added, “I make it a priority to provide our coaches with meaningful resources – links and articles – for our coaches to create teachable moments with their student-athletes. I often pull a relevant article or quote from NFHS High School Today and the NIAAA Interscholastic Athletic Administration magazines.”

“I am an avid reader and I always find some ‘nuggets’ to share with our coaches – many times on a daily basis,” Marchetti said. “Occasionally, this will open a discussion, but on other occasions it becomes a ‘for your information’ and something that you may want to use with your team.”

Travis Seese, athletic director at Athens Drive High School in Raleigh, North Carolina, said “At our leadership workshop we include a guest speaker who focuses on life skills, and then we have alumni offer their words of wisdom. The main goal of our athletic program is to help every kid become the best version of themselves. This doesn’t mean simply becoming the best athlete, but rather the best person they can become. And our coaches totally buy in to this objective.”

When it comes to sportsmanship, Seese spends time during his annual coaches meeting empathizing.

“All eyes are on our coaches and athletes all the time,” Seese said. “Coaches are, and need to be, held to a higher standard. Sportsmanship starts with them, and how they react will influence their athletes and fans.”

Kanyer also taps into the mental performance of student-athletes with respect to a coach’s possible emotional response in a game.

“When coaches get worked up at a perceived bad call, their athletes also tense up and perform with a degree of more pressure,”

Kanyer said. “This is where I can later pull the coach aside and help the coach see the effect of the coach’s behavior on their athletes as well as possibly displaying poor sportsmanship.”

Community service projects offer an opportunity to give back and contribute to the welfare of an organization, individual or worthwhile cause. With these initiatives, student-athletes can also enhance their leadership and organizational skills. Townsend said, “These hands-on experiences not only give student-athletes a chance to give back, but they also demonstrate the powerful impact it can have on character development and team unity.”

As with many aspects of education-based athletics, it isn’t always easy to determine if or how successful you may have been.

“The praise that pours in from parents and community members at the conclusion of an event or project is declarative evidence that what we are doing is extremely worthwhile,” Kanyer said. “Of course, I share this with our coaches and teams.”

“Many of our coaches were born and raised in the Norwalk community – this is their home,” Marchetti said. “When you add in outstanding support from our administration and staff members, we have a great foundation, and the reaction is always exceedingly positive. We know that we’ve been successful. But it is a little more difficult to determine success in other areas, but I try to be observant.”

Marchetti also hosts workshops dealing with the perils of social media, the NCAA Eligibility Center, student leadership, among others, and these initiatives help his coaches to assist their parents.

To emphasize and promote the educational aspect within their program, Seese added an Athletic Honor Society which has helped to establish a positive, education-based culture throughout the department.

At the school’s All-Sports Awards Night, in addition to presenting normal team awards, all-conference selections, and other associated honors, Seese announces the “We are Athens Drive Team” which recognizes the best individuals associated with the program who emulate outstanding character and leadership.

At Ellensburg High School, Kanyer recognizes an “Athlete of the Week.” The individual does not need to be a varsity athlete, starter or captain, but they have to have done something notable under one of the school’s core values. He said this is how we can celebrate this individual and inspire others.

“We believe it is essential to recognize and celebrate student-athletes who exemplify leadership, sportsmanship, integrity, and other core values of education-based athletics,” Townsend said.

“This is done in a variety of ways from weekly communication on social media, during community events, on our website and during awards programs. We consciously send a strong message that who you are off the field is just as important, or more so, as how you perform on it.”

Dr. David Hoch is a former athletic director at two high schools in Baltimore County (Maryland) for 16 years. He has 24 years of experience coaching basketball, including 14 years on the collegiate level. Hoch, who has a doctorate in sports management from Temple (Pennsylvania) University, is past president of the Maryland State Athletic Directors Association, and he formerly was executive director of the Maryland State Coaches Association. He has had more than 800 articles published in professional magazines, as well as four textbook chapters. Dr. Hoch is the author of five books: Coaching within the Education-Based Athletics Concept; The Parents’ Guide to Education-Based Athletics; Leading an Education-Based Athletic Program; A Lifetime of Memories from Education-Based Athletics: Humorous, Inspirational and Occasionally Sad; and Refocusing on Education-Based Athletics – A Call to Action. Hoch is a member of the NFHS High School Today Publications Committee.



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Rec Sports

Refugee-Focused Youth Sport Initiatives : Moving for Change

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Chinese sportswear manufacturer ANTA Group has announced the continuation of its three-year philanthropic alliance, known as the ‘Moving for Change’ partnership, with the United Nations Refugee Agency (UNHCR). This follows an initial phase in which the corporate entity contributed $1.5 million in financial aid and over 1.2 million units of apparel and sporting goods to displaced youth populations in several African nations.

The ‘Moving for Change’ corporate social responsibility initiative is designed to support UNHCR’s Sports for Protection programming and Primary Impact education initiative. The first focuses on utilizing structured sports activities for child protection and psychosocial support, while the second aims at sustaining primary education in refugee settings by funding teachers and essential learning materials.

ANTA Group reports that these combined efforts have reached an estimated 300,000 children and adolescents to-date.

Image Credit: UNHCR/Eric Bakuli



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California orders Tahoe Truckee schools to leave Nevada sports over transgender athlete dispute

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The California Department of Education is requiring the Tahoe Truckee Unified School District to follow state law in another clash over transgender athletes in youth sports in the state. 

Currently, student-athletes in Tahoe Truckee Unified play sports in Nevada because of how close they are. But Nevada now bans transgender athletes in girls’ sports, which is against California state law. 

So after decades of playing in Nevada, California’s Department of Education is requiring the Tahoe Truckee Unified School District to compete in California to comply with state laws that allow student athletes to compete based on their gender identity.

David Mack is the co-founder of Tahoe Pride and describes the new youth sports divide in the Tahoe region.

“So no one’s happy, it’s really sad, it’s quite tragic in that way,” Mack said. “People feel really upset that the school moved so fast on this. They feel blindsided, they feel not listened to, and then other people, like the trans kids, are getting steamrolled over like they’re not recognized in this argument.”

Nevada state lawmakers passed a law in April requiring a mandatory physical signed by a doctor to deem the athlete male or female based on their birth sex. 

“This is a politically manufactured issue to try to divide people,” Mack said. 

The Tahoe Truckee Unified School District is responding to the California Department of Education with a solution that the district legally join the California Interscholastic Federation in 2026, but continue to play in the Nevada Interscholastic Activities Association through 2028.

When asked if transgender athletes would be able to compete while operating in the NIAA, the district said it’s “still in the early stages of this transition, and many details are still being developed.”

In an October letter addressed to the California Department of Education, the school district’s attorney, Matthew Juhl-Darlington, said the Tahoe Truckee Unified is “not aware of any transgender youth who have expressed interest in participating in its 2025-2026 athletic programs.”

“While the NIAA recently updated its polices to define ‘male’ and ‘female’ based on sex assigned at birth and not as reflected in an individual’s gender identity, as required under California law, the District is interpreting and implementing this policy in a manner consistent with California’s legal requirements,” Juhl-Darlington said in the letter. 

California Republican Rep. Kevin Kiley is opposed to the state order, arguing the weather conditions in Tahoe need to be considered.

“So in order to compete in a California league, you have to deal with this snowy weather and the travel dangers and so forth,” Kiley said.

The school board was expected to explain its solution to both join California’s CIF while playing in the NIAA through 2028 to parents and students Wednesday night at a board meeting.

So far, the California Department of Education has not said if it will accept this as a solution.



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Quincy University on probation after allowing over 100 ineligible students to participate in sports

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QUINCY (WGEM) – Quincy University has to pay a $5,000 fine and spend two years on probation after the NCAA issued sanctions tied to more than 120 ineligible student-athletes who were allowed to play for the school.

The problem first surfaced in August 2024 when staff preparing the men’s and women’s soccer roster lists discovered three players had not received the required amateurism certification. That same day, another school alerted QU’s athletics office that a transfer student from Quincy also lacked the certification. The athletic office then launched a broader review.

What began as a handful of missing documents quickly grew. The department found potential eligibility problems for 95 student-athletes during the 2022-23 and 2023-24 school years. In November 2024, the department self-reported the findings to the NCAA and cooperated with an investigation.

The NCAA report names former Assistant Director of Athletics for Compliance Taylor Zerbe as central to the violations. Zerbe admitted to changing 74 student-athletes’ eligibility certifications and told investigators she felt overwhelmed by the workload. According to the report, she did not raise those concerns with her supervisor. Zerbe also admitted to knowing some athletes were ineligible when she altered their certification. She was not employed by QU when the problems were discovered.

QU’s internal review reached back to the 2021-22 school year, which coincided with Zerbe’s employment. That review uncovered additional violations. Overall, the NCAA says Zerbe falsified eligibility squad lists and that QU improperly certified 121 student-athletes across 17 sports.

The report details several consequences for those athletes: 93 practiced beyond the allowable 45-day period, 78 competed when they were not eligible, and 26 received financial aid while ineligible. The university also allowed 27 student-athletes to compete before their eligibility was formally reinstated, and two transfer student-athletes competed despite not meeting transfer eligibility rules.

QU and the NCAA agreed to a set of penalties intended to correct the system and increase transparency. In addition to the $5,000 fine and two-years probation, the school must tell prospective student-athletes in writing that the program is on probation and disclose the violations.

  • Vacate any wins, records or participation that involved ineligible student-athletes from the time those athletes became ineligible until they were reinstated.
  • Prevent head coaches from counting wins from games where ineligible athletes competed toward milestone totals (for example, a coach’s 100th win).
  • Allow individuals who were eligible to keep any personal records or awards they earned.
  • Undergo a comprehensive external review of certification and eligibility procedures during the probation period.

The NCAA report contains the full list of prescribed penalties.

Regarding Zerbe, the NCAA has barred her for two years from working at a member institution in any role that involves eligibility certification responsibilities.

QU declined on-camera interviews, but Athletic Director Josh Rabe told WGEM the university acted with integrity by self-reporting and taking steps to address the problem. Rabe said the department has tightened procedures and added what he called “a double-check to check the double-check.”

QU released the following statement:

Below is the full case summary:



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Rep. Kim Hicks – Rochester DFL Legislators to Take Action on Rochester Sports Complex

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PRESS RELEASE

Minnesota Legislature

Rochester Delegation

  

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

December 18, 2025  

HOUSE CONTACT:  Marlee Schlegel  

651-296-9873 or marlee.schlegel@house.mn.gov  

SENATE CONTACT: Jack Vinck

651-440-5056 or jack.vinck@mnsenate.gov 

  

Rochester DFL Legislators to Take Action on Rochester Sports Complex

Rochester, Minn – On Monday, Rochester Mayor Kim Norton vetoed the city council’s plan for a $65 million sports complex that is not reflective of the ballot initiative that funded the project in 2023. The city council is expected to overturn the Mayor’s veto at their December 22nd meeting. 

In response, the DFL Rochester delegation intends to introduce legislation to revoke authorization of the Local Option Sales Tax they previously passed into law to fund the project. The delegation released the following statement:

“Rochester residents deserve to get what they paid and voted for. The updated plan for the sports complex no longer serves the best interests of Rochester residents. Rather, it serves a narrow set of special interests and ignores the community’s need for indoor recreation space — the very reason voters approved the project in the first place.

“Both as legislators who passed the legislation that allows the complex to be funded by the Local Option Sales Tax, and as voters who were excited to support the community-oriented initiative, we feel deceived. The changes made to the project to eliminate the indoor portion of the complex also eliminates the reason that many Rochester residents supported the project.”

Not long after the ballot approval of the complex, a new cost assessment was completed. Updated estimates came back at $120 million, nearly twice the cost of the initial $65 million proposal approved by voters.

“It’s unclear to us how such an expensive oversight was made on cost — and it’s equally unclear why the city council has chosen to prioritize the outdoor complex over the part of the project that won community support in the first place. Whatever the reason, the city council should either find a way to deliver on what voters approved or bring these significant changes back to the ballot. 

“As legislators, we urge the Rochester council to change course and return to the original goal of meeting residents’ needs for indoor recreational space. After many conversations with stakeholders and community members, it is clear to us that as proposed, the project now falls outside of the parameters outlined in the original use of funds request. If the city council does not change course, we plan to introduce legislation to revoke authorization to use Local Option Sales Tax funds for the project. We remain committed to meeting the needs of our community and seeing that the residents of Rochester get what they’ve voted for, and we remain willing to work with the city council toward that goal.

“We want to see this project fully realized in a form that serves the entire community, as we were all assured it would.”

The DFL Rochester Delegation includes Senator Liz Boldon (DFL—Rochester), Representative Kim Hicks (DFL—Rochester), Representative Tina Liebling (DFL—Rochester) and Representative Andy Smith (DFL—Rochester).

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Tree collapses onto 2 young children waiting for school bus

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TWIN FALLS, Idaho (KMVT/Gray News) – Two children in Idaho are critically injured after a tree fell on them while they were waiting for the school bus.

The Twin Falls County Sheriff’s Office said high winds caused rotten trees to fall on power lines before collapsing on the children.

The kids, both under the age of 10, and an older sibling were waiting outside for their bus when the tree collapsed. According to the sheriff’s office, the older sibling was not injured.

Aaron Hudson, the Twin Falls fire deputy chief, told KTVB first responders had to first get the kids out from the tree and downed power lines before they could prepare them for transport.

The sheriff’s office said one of the children was taken to the hospital by ambulance, while the other was airlifted.

According to Hudson, the weather conditions caused difficulties during transport. He said that it prevented the helicopter from going any further than the local hospital.

The family of the children has started a GoFundMe to help cover medical expenses.



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Huskers year-end report shows concession sales up 75%, shares volleyball reseating data

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LINCOLN, Neb. (KOLN) – Athletic Director Troy Dannen reflected on another year of Nebraska Athletics, sharing highlights and achievements of the men’s and women’s sports teams and hinting at what’s to come.

In competition, Huskers excelled in multiple sports:

  • Nebraska volleyball team just completed a remarkable 33-1 season
  • Wrestling finished as the national runner-up as a team and two Husker wrestlers won individual national championships
  • Softball made an NCAA Super Regional appearance
  • Football earned a second straight bowl berth
  • Both basketball teams are undefeated and ranked in the AP Top 25.

This year, student-athletes set a school record with a 3.464 GPA, led the Big Ten Conference with 117 fall Academic All-Conference selections and once again posted a Graduation Success Rate over 90%, among the best in the nation. Dannen said they also made a positive impact in Lincoln and surrounding communities through their volunteer work.

Alcohol and food sales at Husker venues

The start of alcohol sales at all on-campus venues and the addition of new food options resulted in an increase of 75% in total concession revenue compared to last year, Dannen said.

“More than 313,000 alcoholic beverages were served and new food options were added to the menu, resulting in an increase of 75% in total concession revenue compared to last year,” Dannen said.

The introduction of alcohol sales came with concerns about the impact on fan behavior, but Dannen said it remained consistent with the previous five years.

John Cook Arena reseating

The John Cook Arena reseating process planned for 2026 has drawn criticism from longtime season ticket holders.

Dannen said the athletic staff has developed a plan that ensures that season-ticket holders in 2025 will be guaranteed season-tickets next year.

Dannen said 10% of current season-ticket holders did not use their tickets this year but rather sold those tickets through secondary markets. Those tickets, originally purchased for a total of $600,000 by those ticket holders, were then resold for a total of $3.2 million on the secondary market. Ticket use for this purpose is strictly prohibited.

The accounts that resold the entirety of their tickets will be excluded from the ability to purchase season-tickets in 2026, Dannen said.

1890 Nebraska winding down operations

With the implementation of the House settlement, 1890 Nebraska, Husker Athletics’ NIL collective, has begun winding down its operations.

“Hundreds of Husker fans donated millions of dollars over the past 24 months to support NIL for our student-athletes, as the rules at the time permitted,” Dannen said the in the letter.

The House settlement now prohibits much of what 1890 Nebraska provided, but in turn allows the university to share $20.5 million directly with student-athletes as they pay to license their NIL rights.

The five sports primarily supported by the collective include the Nebraska wrestling team, football team, two basketball teams and the volleyball team.

Facility upgrades

Several Nebraska athletic facilities saw enhancements including the completion of the track and field complex, along with new facilities for golf, rifle, swimming and diving and bowling.

In 2026, the athletics department is planning to renovate the softball and baseball clubhouses. Dannen said they are also looking forward to expanding the Devaney Center.

Entertainment

Three shows have been scheduled to take place inside Memorial Stadium next year. Zach Bryan will perform on April 25, the Savannah Bananas on June 13 and The Boys from Oklahoma on Aug. 22.

“Our plan is to continue to utilize our facilities for outside events to bring new events to our spaces and to help drive entertainment options in Lincoln,” Dannen said.

Due to anticipated construction, Nebraska Athletics will hold off on booking events for Memorial Stadium in 2027.

The athletics department is expecting to make two “big announcements on the Husker women’s sports front” early next year that will have a tremendous impact on its female student-athletes.

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