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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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Jonathan “Jon” Ambrose MacDonald | Obituaries

Jonathan (Jon) Ambrose MacDonald, age 52, devoted father, son, brother, and beloved friend, passed away unexpectedly on Tuesday, July 8, 2025, in Carlsbad, CA. Born on October 27, 1972, in Boston, Massachusetts, to Michael John and Kathryn Mary (McFadden) MacDonald, Jon was raised in Madison, Wisconsin where he cherished his Midwest upbringing spending his winters […]

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Jonathan (Jon) Ambrose MacDonald, age 52, devoted father, son, brother, and beloved friend, passed away unexpectedly on Tuesday, July 8, 2025, in Carlsbad, CA.

Born on October 27, 1972, in Boston, Massachusetts, to Michael John and Kathryn Mary (McFadden) MacDonald, Jon was raised in Madison, Wisconsin where he cherished his Midwest upbringing spending his winters playing ice hockey and downhill skiing and summers water skiing at the family cabin in Minocqua, Wisconsin. Jon attended Our Lady Queen of Peace Catholic School and graduated from Edgewood High School in Madison in 1991. A highlight of his time at Edgewood was winning three Wisconsin Private School State Hockey Championships alongside his lifelong best friends as well as leading his team as captain his senior year. Jon continued his hockey career at Choate Rosemary Hall and at Union College before transferring to Boston College for his sophomore year. At BC, he dedicated himself to his studies, formed additional lifelong friendships, and graduated Magna Cum Laude in 1996. He went on to earn his JD from Duke University School of Law in 1999 and subsequently relocated to the San Diego area where he built a successful career in real estate law.

Above all, Jon’s greatest love and most cherished role was as a father to his four beautiful children: Sydney (17), Peter (15), Emily (15), and Benjamin (13), all of Carlsbad, CA. Jon is also survived by his devoted parents, Michael and Kathryn MacDonald of Madison, WI and Naples, FL; his sister, Michelle Eigner (Troy Eigner) of Edina, MN; his brother, Kevin MacDonald (Amy Ostendorf MacDonald) of Seattle, WA; as well as many nieces, nephews, aunts, uncles, cousins and friends.

Jon will be deeply missed and forever remembered for his kind heart, gentle smile, humble manner, and unwavering character by all who loved him.

A Mass of Christian Burial will be held on Saturday, July 26 at 11am with visitation at 10am at Our Lady Queen of Peace Catholic Church, 401 S. Owen Drive, Madison. A luncheon will follow at Nakoma Country Club 4145 Country Club Road, Madison.

Memorials may be made in Jon’s name to Our Lady Queen of Peace Catholic School, Edgewood High School or Boston College.

Please share your memories at www.cressfuneralservice.com

​COPYRIGHT 2025 BY CHANNEL 3000. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. THIS MATERIAL MAY NOT BE PUBLISHED, BROADCAST, REWRITTEN OR REDISTRIBUTED.



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World Junior Summer Showcase Starts Sunday at Ridder Arena

COLORADO SPRINGS, Colo. –  The 2025 World Junior Summer Showcase, which will include teams from the U.S., Canada, Finland and Sweden, begins Sunday (July 27) and runs through August 2 at Ridder Arena in Minneapolis.  The Showcase serves as an evaluation for athletes seeking to make their respective national teams for the 2026 IIHF World Junior Hockey Championship which will […]

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COLORADO SPRINGS, Colo. –  The 2025 World Junior Summer Showcase, which will include teams from the U.S., Canada, Finland and Sweden, begins Sunday (July 27) and runs through August 2 at Ridder Arena in Minneapolis. 

The Showcase serves as an evaluation for athletes seeking to make their respective national teams for the 2026 IIHF World Junior Hockey Championship which will take place Dec. 26, 2025, through Jan. 5, 2026, in Saint Paul and Minneapolis, Minnesota.

SHOWCASE FEATURES 11 GAMES

The World Junior Summer Showcase features 11 international games and tickets are available by clicking HERE. In addition, all games from the Showcase will stream live at USAHockeyTV.com.

“We’re excited to bring the World Junior Summer Showcase to Minnesota” said John Vanbiesbrouck, general manager of the U.S. National Junior Team and also assistant executive director of hockey operations for USA Hockey. “It provides us a great opportunity to evaluate our players, and is also a chance for fans to see so many of the future stars of the NHL.”

FABER, LaCOMBE TO SERVE AS ALUMNI AMBASSADORS

Brock Faber (Maple Grove, Minn./Minnesota Wild) and Jackson LaCombe (Eden Prairie, Minn./Anaheim Ducks) will be on the ice for select practices and also behind the bench for select games during the Showcase, serving as Alumni Ambassadors. Both Faber and LaCombe were part of the gold medal-winning 2021 U.S. National Junior Team in the IIHF World Junior Championship. LaCombe also helped Team USA win gold in the 2025 IIHF Men’s World Championship, only the second gold medal ever won by the U.S. in the event and first since 1933. Faber was part of the 2022 U.S. Olympic Men’s Ice Hockey Team and also played for Team USA in this past February’s 4 Nations Face-Off.

“We’re excited to have Brock and Jackson be around our players and staff,” said Bob Motzko(Austin, Minn.), head coach of the 2026 U.S. National Junior Team and also the head men’s ice hockey coach at the University of Minnesota. “They know what it takes to win on the international stage and I know our group will enjoy engaging with both of them.”

For the full Showcase schedule, click HERE.

NOTES: Tickets for the 2026 IIHF World Junior Championship are on sale now and can be purchased by click HERE. The event will be staged at the Xcel Energy Center, home of the NHL’s Minnesota Wild, and 3M Arena at Mariucci, home of the University of Minnesota men’s ice hockey team … The 2026 IIHF World Junior Championship will mark the 50th anniversary of the tournament … Team USA has won the last two gold medals in the World Juniors and has medaled in eight of the last 10 tournaments … A total of nine players from the gold medal-winning 2025 U.S. National Junior Team have an opportunity to return in 2026, including defenseman Logan Hensler (Woodbury, Minn./University of Wisconsin), Cole Hutson (North Barrington, Ill./Boston University) and Adam Kleber (Chaska, Minn./University of Minnesota Duluth), along with forwards Trevor Connelly (Tustin, Calif./Providence College), Cole Eiserman (Newburyport, Mass./Boston University), James Hagens (Hauppauge, N.Y./Boston College), Max Plante(Hermantown, Minn./University of Minnesota Duluth), Teddy Stiga (Sudbury, Mass./Boston College) and Brodie Ziemer (Hutchinson, Minn./University of Minnesota) … The 43 players invited by USA Hockey to the World Junior Summer Showcase include nine first-round NHL draft picks, 13 second-round choices and five third-round picks. All but three players have been drafted.





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UMaine men’s hockey schedule available but not officially released yet

The University of Maine men’s hockey schedule is now available for the coming season, though it has yet to be officially released by the school. The schedule was first reported by Eastern Maine Sports on Monday. A UMaine athletics official confirmed to the Bangor Daily News that the reported schedule is accurate at this point, pending unresolved […]

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The University of Maine men’s hockey schedule is now available for the coming season, though it has yet to be officially released by the school.

The schedule was first reported by Eastern Maine Sports on Monday. A UMaine athletics official confirmed to the Bangor Daily News that the reported schedule is accurate at this point, pending unresolved game contracts.

UMaine will open the season by hosting reigning Atlantic Hockey America regular season champion Holy Cross on Oct. 10-11. The Black Bears will play Colgate on Homecoming weekend on Oct. 24-25 and Lindenwood University on Dec. 13-14.

UMaine will open its 24-game Hockey East schedule by hosting NCAA runnerup Boston University on Oct. 31, Nov. 1. Arch-rival University of New Hampshire will be in Orono for a two-game series Dec. 5-6.

College hockey teams typically enter into game contracts with their opponents that outline terms for game details like team travel and accommodations, cancelation dates, responsibility for providing officials, and the allocation of game proceeds.

Schools may also enter into contracts with outside facilities that host games. UMaine will formally release its schedule once the unresolved contracts are finalized, the athletic department official said.

UMaine will travel for two-game series against two of Division I college hockey’s elite programs, Quinnipiac University and the University of Denver, as part of its 10 non-conference games. The Black Bears will also host Colgate from the ECAC, Holy Cross from Atlantic Hockey America and Division I independent Lindenwood from Saint Charles, Mo.

Lindenwood is in its fourth season as a Division I program after moving up from club status and will be playing UMaine for the first time.

ECAC powerhouse Quinnipiac, which has earned six consecutive NCAA Tournament appearances and won its first NCAA title in 2022-23, will entertain the Black Bears on Oct. 17-18 and Denver, which has averaged 31 wins the past four seasons and won national championships in 2023-24 and 2021-22, will host UMaine on Jan. 2-3.

UMaine swept Quinnipiac at Alfond Arena 2-1 and 6-5 in overtime last season and split 2-1 games with visiting Denver.

Quinnipiac was 24-12-2 last season. The Bobcats won the ECAC regular season title before losing to Cornell, 3-2 in overtime, in the ECAC tournament semifinals and to UConn, 4-1, in the NCAA’s Allentown Regional.

Rand Pecknold’s Quinnipiac team has gone 117-33-10 over the last four seasons.

Denver has reached the Frozen Four three times over the past four seasons. David Carle’s Pioneers went 31-12-1 last season, losing to National Collegiate Hockey Conference rival and eventual national champion Western Michigan 3-2 in double overtime in their Frozen Four semifinal.

UMaine is 12-9-1 all-time against Quinnipiac and 12-10 vs. Denver.

UMaine went 24-8-6 a year ago and won the Hockey East Tournament title for the first time since the 2003-04 season. UMaine also earned its second consecutive NCAA Tournament berth and that’s the first time th Black Bears have done that since the 2003-04 and 2004-05 seasons.

UMaine lost to Penn State 5-1 in the first round of the Allentown (Pa.) Regional.

This season, the Black Bears will play Boston University, Providence College, Vermont and UMass Lowell three times each and the other six Hockey East schools twice apiece.

UMaine is slated to play UMass Lowell in a Hockey East game at the Cross Insurance Arena in Portland on Wednesday, Dec. 10.

The Black Bears’ series against Holy Cross from Worcester, Mass. will be the first time the schools have met since the Black Bear shut out the Crusaders 7-0 on Oct. 18, 2003.

UMaine holds a 4-2 lead in the all-time series.

Holy Cross is coming off a 24-14-2 campaign, 19-5-2 in Atlantic Hockey America. Holy Cross lost to Bentley 6-3 in the AHA tournament championship game.

The Crusaders went 21-14-4 two years ago.

Colgate went 18-15-3 overall and, for the second straight season, went 13-7-2 in league play.

UMaine and Colgate have met four times over the past three seasons and each posted a win and tie in its home series.

Colgate leads the all-time series 8-6-4.

Lindenwood went 8-22-2 a year ago including road wins over Wisconsin, Nebraska-Omaha and Notre Dame. Eleven of the Lions’ losses were by one goal.

In Hockey East play, UMaine will travel for two-game series against UMass (Nov. 6-7), Boston College (Nov. 21-22), Providence (Jan. 9-10), UMass Lowell (Jan. 23-14) and Northeastern (Feb. 27-28) and one game at BU (Feb. 6) and at Vermont (March 7).

The Black Bears will host two-game series against BU (Oct. 31, Nov.1), Vermont (Nov. 14-15), New Hampshire (Dec. 5-6), UConn (Feb. 13-14) and Merrimack (Feb.20-21) and single games with Providence (Jan. 31) and the Portland game against UMass Lowell (Dec. 10).

UMaine will return seven of its top 10 scorers off last year’s team although top two point-getters Harrison Scott (18 goals, 17 assists) and Taylor Makar (18 & 12) have departed.

UMaine will return a veteran defense corps and All-Hockey East second team goalie Albin Boija.

The Black Bears will have 13 newcomers including five National Hockey League draft choices.



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Utah State Soccer Announces Amended 2025 Conference Schedule

LOGAN, Utah – Utah State soccer released an amended version of its conference slate for the 2025 season on Tuesday. The new schedule accounts for the addition of Grand Canyon, which will join the Mountain West as a full member this fall.  Utah State’s league schedule will remain the same as its previously announced slate, with […]

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Utah State Soccer Announces Amended 2025 Conference Schedule

LOGAN, Utah – Utah State soccer released an amended version of its conference slate for the 2025 season on Tuesday. The new schedule accounts for the addition of Grand Canyon, which will join the Mountain West as a full member this fall. 
 
Utah State’s league schedule will remain the same as its previously announced slate, with one exception — The Aggies’ previously scheduled home contest against San José State on Sunday, Oct. 12 will now be played on Sunday, Oct. 26, replacing the team’s previously scheduled home game against UNLV that day. 
 
All Mountain West teams will move from an 11-game conference ledger to a 10-game schedule, each playing regular season games against 10 of the league’s 13 schools. The 2025 Mountain West Soccer Championship will take place from November 2-8 in Boise, Idaho.  
 
2025 Fall Schedule

Date Opponent Location Time
Thur., Aug. 14 at Washington State Pullman, Washington 8 p.m.
Thur., Aug. 21 at Pacific Stockton, California 8 p.m.
Sun., Aug. 24 KANSAS LOGAN, UTAH 1 p.m.
Thur., Aug. 28 UTAH LOGAN, UTAH 7 p.m.
Sat., Sept. 6 at BYU Provo, Utah 6 p.m.
Thur., Sept. 11 WEBER STATE LOGAN, UTAH 7 p.m.
Sun., Sept. 14 at Texas Tech Lubbock, Texas 12 p.m.
Thur., Sept. 18 UTAH VALLEY LOGAN, UTAH 3 p.m.
Sat., Sept. 20 at Portland Portland, Oregon 8 p.m.
Thur., Sept. 25 COLORADO STATE* LOGAN, UTAH 7 p.m.
Sun., Sept. 28 WYOMING* LOGAN, UTAH 1 p.m.
Thur., Oct. 2 at Air Force* USAFA, Colorado 6 p.m.
Sun., Oct. 5 at Colorado College* Colorado Springs, Colorado 12 p.m.
Thur., Oct. 9 FRESNO STATE* LOGAN, UTAH 7 p.m.
Thur., Oct. 16 at New Mexico* Albuquerque, New Mexico 7:30 p.m.
Sun., Oct. 19 at San Diego State* San Diego, California 2 p.m.
Thur., Oct. 23 NEVADA* LOGAN, UTAH 7 p.m.
Sun., Oct. 26 SAN JOSÉ STATE* LOGAN, UTAH 1 p.m.
Thur., Oct. 30 at Boise State* Boise, Idaho 7 p.m.
Sun.-Sat., Nov. 2-8 MW Tournament Boise, Idaho TBA

*All times MT. Home matches listed in bold and all caps.
 
FOLLOW
Fans can follow the Aggie soccer program on Twitter, @USUSoccer, on Facebook at /USUSoccer and on Instagram, @USUSoccer. Aggie fans can also follow the Utah State athletic program on Twitter, @USUAthletics, Facebook at /USUAthletics and on Instagram, @USUAthletics.
 
-USU-

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Bornhoffer named head coach of women's soccer

Story Links LOUISVILLE, Ky. — After a highly successful tenure as an assistant coach at Northern Kentucky University, Steve Bornhoffer has been hired as the head coach of the Bellarmine University women’s soccer team, director of athletics Scott Wiegandt announced Tuesday. Bornhoffer spent 14 seasons (2011-24) as an assistant coach at Northern Kentucky and was on […]

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Bornhoffer named head coach of women's soccer

LOUISVILLE, Ky. — After a highly successful tenure as an assistant coach at Northern Kentucky University, Steve Bornhoffer has been hired as the head coach of the Bellarmine University women’s soccer team, director of athletics Scott Wiegandt announced Tuesday.

Bornhoffer spent 14 seasons (2011-24) as an assistant coach at Northern Kentucky and was on the ground floor of the Norse’s transition from the Great Lakes Valley Conference of Division II to the Atlantic Sun Conference of Division I, the same path Bellarmine took in its ascension to the NCAA’s highest level.

The bulk of Bornhoffer’s time with Northern Kentucky was spent in the Horizon League, where he helped guide the Norse to the 2016 conference tournament title — and first-ever appearance in the NCAA I Tournament — and the 2020 regular-season championship. NKU was a model of consistency with Bornhoffer on the sideline, earning a Horizon League Tournament berth in nine of the last 10 seasons while finishing third or higher in the league eight times.

“Steve is a highly skilled, highly accomplished D1 assistant who is fully prepared to lead a college program,” Wiegandt said. “In addition to the significant amount of team success he’s experienced and helped author, he possesses a vast knowledge of the region’s recruiting landscape. He also has familiarity with the ASUN from the early stages of his time at NKU.”

Bornhoffer joined Northern Kentucky as an assistant in 2011 and helped the Norse go out with a bang in their final season in D2 as the team finished 16-2-2, captured the GLVC regular-season championship (12-1-1) and advanced to the Midwest Region finals of the NCAA II Tournament.

Bornhoffer then helped Northern Kentucky navigate the reclassification process as the Norse entered D1 in 2012 and subsequently spent three seasons in the ASUN, where they were competitive from the get-go with a pair of six-win seasons followed by a nine-win campaign and push to the conference tournament semifinals.

From the moment it entered the conference with Bornhoffer onboard, Northern Kentucky was among the Horizon League’s elite. An 11-win season — the program’s first in double digits in D1 — was produced in the Norse’s introductory year in the league in 2015. In the next, the Norse piled up 13 victories while securing a landmark Horizon League Tournament title, which represented the first D1 championship in school history. Four years later, in 2020, NKU went unbeaten (7-0-1) in Horizon League play en route to a regular-season championship.

In total in Bornhoffer’s tenure as an assistant at Northern Kentucky, the Norse went 129-95-28 overall and a combined 77-41-15 in conference play, including 57-25-12 in the Horizon League. NKU amassed 10 or more wins six times in that span, with at least eight victories in 10 of the last 11 years. The Norse registered six Horizon League wins or more in seven of 10 seasons (largely in a 9-10 game conference format).

“I’m beyond thrilled to be named the next head women’s soccer coach at Bellarmine University,” Bornhoffer said. “I’m excited to lead the program going forward. I want to thank Scott Wiegandt, (Bellarmine President) Dr. (Susan M.) Donovan and the rest of the hiring committee for this amazing opportunity. We have the resources and people to take the program to the next level. I’m looking forward to starting with the team right away.”

Between the Horizon League and ASUN, Bornhoffer’s term with Northern Kentucky included an All-America accolade, nine All-Region honors, 10 postseason conference superlative awards, 28 All-Conference citations and 12 All-Freshman Team laurels. The Norse were showered with awards in their final D2 season (one All-American, Regional Player of the Year, GLVC Offensive Player of the Year, five All-Region honors, six All-GLVC accolades).

Bornhoffer preceded his stint at Northern Kentucky with eight seasons as the head coach of the Newport Central Catholic (Ky.) High School boys’ soccer team, where he was a two-time NKY Coach of the Year while posting a 90-52-17 record.

Bornhoffer was also a standout player at Northern Kentucky, starting all four years under Hall of Fame coach John Toebben and wrapping up his playing career in 1997 before serving as a graduate assistant coach for the NKU men. A team captain, he was twice named an All-Great Lakes Valley Conference and Academic All-GLVC honoree and was a recipient of the NKU Career Achievement Award in his senior year. He still ranks among the program’s all-time leaders in goals (37), points (87) and games played (83), and went on to play for the USL’s Cincinnati Riverhawks.

Bornhoffer earned a bachelor’s degree in physical education at Northern Kentucky. In addition to his high school and college background, he has over two decades worth of head-coaching experience in competitive club soccer.

For more coverage of Bellarmine athletics, follow BUKnights on X (formerly Twitter), Instagram and Facebook.
 
 

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College Sports

Women’s Hockey Releases Full 2025-26 Schedule

HANOVER, N.H. – On Tuesday, Head Coach Maura Crowell announced the Big Green’s complete 2025-26 schedule. Dartmouth will play 30 total games, eight nonconference games and 22 against ECAC Hockey opponents.   The Big Green will kick off the season on the road, facing nonconference opponent Holy Cross. Dartmouth and the Crusaders will play two […]

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HANOVER, N.H. – On Tuesday, Head Coach Maura Crowell announced the Big Green’s complete 2025-26 schedule. Dartmouth will play 30 total games, eight nonconference games and 22 against ECAC Hockey opponents.
 
The Big Green will kick off the season on the road, facing nonconference opponent Holy Cross. Dartmouth and the Crusaders will play two games, one on Friday, October 17 at 6 p.m. and the series finale on Saturday, October 18 at 7 p.m.
 
On Friday, October 24 and Saturday, October 25, Dartmouth will play its first home games and conference games of the season, welcoming Colgate and Cornell. The last time the Big Green hosted the Cornell Big Red, the two teams skated to a 2-2 tie with the then No. 6 ranked team in the country.
 
The following weekend, the women’s hockey team will head to North Country, taking on the Saint Lawrence Saints on Friday, October 31 at 3 p.m. and Clarkson on Saturday, November 1 at 3 p.m.
 
The Big Green upset the then No. 7 St. Lawrence Saints in the teams’ last meeting, as Dartmouth earned a 2-0 victory off the back of a 36 save shutout by Michaela Hesová.
 
Dartmouth will return home for their lone game at Thompson Arena in the month of November on Friday the 7th. The Big Green will host the Harvard Crimson at 3 p.m. before the men welcome the Colgate Raiders for the first doubleheader of the season. On Saturday, November 8th, Dartmouth and Harvard will complete the regular season home and home series at Bright Landry Hockey Center with a 3 p.m. puck drop.
 
The Big Green will remain on the road on Friday, November 14 and Saturday, November 15 for an ECAC Hockey and Ivy League matchups against the Brown Bears and Yale Bulldogs.  Friday’s game is set for 6 p.m. while Saturday’s game will begin at 3 p.m.

Dartmouth will spend its Thanksgiving in Minnesota, prepping for two games against the Minnesota State Mankato Mavericks. The two teams will faceoff on Friday, November 28 at 1 p.m. before playing the series finale on Saturday, November 29. The time for Saturday’s game is still to be announced.

 

After five games away from Thompson Arena, the Big Green will return to the comforts of home for four straight games, two conference games and two nonconference games. Dartmouth will host RPI and Union on Friday, December 5 and Saturday, December 6. Both games will be at 3 p.m. as the Dartmouth men will also play at home, facing off against Brown and Yale with 7 p.m. puck drops on Friday and Saturday.

 

The following weekend, Dartmouth will play nonconference opponents St. Anselm and St. Michael’s. The Big Green will look to make it two straight against the Hawks on Friday, December 12 at 3 p.m. after defeating them on the road, 9-1, in January. Stick around after the women’s game as the Big Green men will also play a nonconference game against Army.

 

On Saturday, December 13, the Big Green and Knights will face off for the first time in program history. Puck drop is set for 2 p.m.

 

Nonconference competition will continue and wrap up for the Big Green on Friday, January 2 and Saturday, January 3, playing a home and home series with the Vermont Catamounts. The two teams will play in Burlington at 6 p.m. on Friday with a 3 p.m. puck drop at Thompson Arena on Saturday.

 

Dartmouth will remain at Thompson Arena for two more games, welcoming Yale on Friday, January 9 at 3 p.m. and Brown on Saturday, January 10 at 3 p.m.

 

Over the next five weeks, the Big Green will wrap up conference play in the 2025-26 season, alternating weekends at Thompson Arena and on the road.

 

On Friday, January 16 and Saturday, January 17, Dartmouth will head to Quinnipiac and Princeton. The Big Green will faceoff with the Bobcats on Friday at 6 p.m. followed by the Tigers on Saturday at 3.

 

The next weekend, St. Lawrence and Clarkson make its way to Hanover. The matchup with the Saints is set for Friday, January 23 at 6 p.m. and the Big Green will play Clarkson on Saturday, January 31 at 3 p.m.

 

Dartmouth will wrap up the regular season series with the Cornell Big Red at Lynah Rink on Friday, January 30 at 6 p.m. and Colgate at Class of 1965 Arena on Saturday, January 31 at 3 p.m.

 

February will begin with the Big Green’s final regular season games at Thompson Arena. Dartmouth will host Princeton on Friday, February 6 at 6 p.m. and Quinnipiac on Saturday, February 7 at 3 p.m.

 

The 2025-26 regular season will conclude the weekend of Friday, February 13. Dartmouth will first play Union on Friday at 6 p.m. before closing the regular season against RPI on Saturday, February 14 at 3 p.m.

 

For more information on tickets or to put down your deposit for 2025-26 season tickets click here.

 



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