College Sports
How BYU benefits from the upheaval in the business of college sports
The BYU athletic department budget has doubled in less than a decade during the greatest era of disruption of college sports in history, a university official told the Deseret News.
That rapid escalation is all part of a college sports revolution. First, the transfer portal let players freely move from school to school. Then the U.S. Supreme Court confirmed that schools could boost the scholarship benefits they provide to student-athletes.
Players also began to receive payments for the use of their name, image and likeness (NIL). And on July 1, college athletic departments began to do what once was unthinkable — directly share a fifth of their revenue with student-athletes.

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The transformation requires the constant attention of university leaders.
BYU President Shane Reese estimates that he spends more time on athletics — up to 15% of his schedule — than any of his predecessors.
He is BYU’s sheriff on this still-untamed frontier, what some have described as a wild, wild west in college sports.
“That is an accurate description,” said Reese’s deputy for sports, Advancement Vice President Keith Vorkink.
The original Wild West was dominated by tall tales. The two BYU leaders said in interviews with the Deseret News that the college sports version is no different. They countered what they say are false narratives in media reports and on social media about BYU contracts and NIL deals with athletes like basketball star AJ Dybantsa.
“When you hear that we’re the highest bidder, I can tell you and show you that we haven’t been the highest bidder in almost every instance, but we are in the game,” Reese said. “We’re going to be competitive. We’re going to be out there looking for the best kids that want to come play here and who will represent the university in tremendous ways.”
He said BYU’s board of trustees, which is made up of leaders of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, which sponsors the university, wants an athletic department that reflects the school’s educational and spiritual mission.
“We want to be really competitive on the field, on the court and on the pitch, but also grounded in who we are as a university,” Reese said. “Candidly, if we’re not going to be different than other institutions, we’re not going to be successful. Differentiators are what make people successful from a business perspective, and our differentiator is that we’re grounded in our spiritual mission and that we are going to try to do things differently.”
Reese, Vorkink and an athletic department official also described:
- Where BYU’s athletics revenue ranks nationally and within the Big 12.
- The athletic department’s major revenue streams.
- How the school will compensate student-athletes.
- How new rules for college sports finances affect BYU.
There’s more.
They also said BYU sports have thrived in the 2020s because of long-standing fiscal policy. They explained that one reason the program is well positioned for the rest of the decade is because, paradoxically, the school received only a partial share of conference revenue for the first two years in the Big 12.
What follows is a primer on both the financial state of BYU sports and the dawn of a new era in college sports business.
Big 12 revenue and BYU’s advantage
BYU football punched above its financial weight as an independent football team, competing against many power conference teams with far larger athletic budgets.
“BYU’s always prided itself on operating on a ‘Moneyball‘ concept, trying to make the most efficient use of the resources,” said Dallan Moody, senior associate athletic director for finance and strategy, referencing the book and movie of the same name.
“We were forced to, and it’s the culture of the church, as well, that every year you submit a balanced budget and live within your means, which is a position of strength.”
As the university vigilantly sought to join a power conference, the financial lift required to transition from football independence and from the West Coast Conference in other sports was staggering.
There was work to do. BYU does not reveal the size of its athletic budget.
Last year, one of the Big 12 leaders, Texas Tech, sported an athletic budget of nearly $129 million, according to the Associated Press. That’s likely less than half of Ohio State’s budget, which four years ago weighed in at $251 million, according to a USA Today database.
BYU needed membership in a power conference with a bigger TV contract to consistently compete. BYU finally joined the Big 12 on July 1, 2023, after disruption in other conferences.
The partial share BYU received the past two years was a boon on its own, but good reasons exist to suggest that the postponement of a full share was perfectly timed to benefit BYU.
It still comes with challenges.
The changes from the NCAA v House settlement
Two monumental changes took place simultaneously this month. July 1 marked the start of BYU receiving that full share of Big 12 revenue. On the same day, new rules went into effect that allow schools to share up to $20.5 million a year in sports revenue with student-athletes.
Revenue sharing is the result of a lawsuit filed by former Arizona State swimmer Grant House, who sued the NCAA and the five largest athletic conferences because of rules that prohibited him and other student-athletes from receiving NIL money that the free market would have generated for them.
The House settlement, signed by a federal judge, represented a new hurdle for BYU and the nation’s other universities.
“Those are resources and revenues that don’t exist,” Alabama athletic director Greg Byrne said to Congress about the $20.5 million.
BYU athletic department officials wondered, as the House negotiations proceeded, “how any athletic department will stay afloat, because it was such a huge number,” Moody said.
Suddenly, everyone needed to generate more revenue. Even schools with giant athletics budgets like Alabama and Texas have had to scramble to come up with new money.
Smaller schools that can’t generate an additional $20 million have cut sports and athletic department jobs to fund payments to student-athletes.
It’s even more complicated than that sounds, Vorkink said.
That’s because the House settlement also cuts into every athletic department’s budget. The settlement awarded $2.8 billion to student-athletes who competed between 2016 and 2024 without benefiting from their names, images and likenesses.
- The NCAA will pay over $1.1 billion of the damages.
- The Power Four conferences will pay about $664 million.
- The other 27 Division I conferences owe the remaining $990 million.
The NCAA is withholding revenue from schools to pay its share.
BYU is directly affected.
For example, the NCAA owes $40 million to the Big 12 for earning 20 “units” during the 2025 men’s basketball tournament. (A conference earns a unit every time one of its teams plays a game in the tournament.) To pay the damages it owes, the NCAA will begin to hold back some of the earned March Madness money, which schools had earmarked as part of their budgets, Vorkink said.
The surprising benefit for BYU

Here’s how the timing of the House settlement helps BYU.
BYU’s partial share of Big 12 revenues last year totaled $19 million. Its full share for the 2025-26 school year is expected to be at least $31.7 million, according to the Big 12.
“We had a good TV contract for an independent university for football with ESPN,” Vorkink said, “but it still pales in comparison to what we get by being a part of the Big 12.”
That additional $13 million the university will receive from the conference this year will go a long way toward funding BYU’s commitment to participate in sharing nearly the full $20.5 million in revenue with its student-athletes under the House settlement.
“We’re going to use new Big 12 revenues,” Vorkink said. “One of the benefits of not being a full-share Big 12 school is that we’ve been operating on a budget that anticipates less than a full share. So going into a full share now really helps us because that is money we had not already earmarked to something else.”
For many other schools, even the football titans, fans will bear much of the cost for revenue sharing with players. Many schools are raising the cost of tickets and concessions. Tennessee added a “talent fee” to the price of tickets. Clemson is the first school to add an athletic surcharge — $150 — to every student’s tuition bill, the Associated Press reported.
“We’ll generate some additional revenue from ticket price increases — not massive, but some,“ Vorkink said. ”And then we anticipate increases in corporate sponsorships. The combination of those will get us to wherever our rev share number ends up.”
The University of Utah is focusing on fundraising and increasing donations as the major factors for raising money to fund revenue sharing. The school announced in April it would drop its beach volleyball program.
“We are all-in on investing up to the maximum allowable in revenue share, which is approximately $20.5 million for 2025-26,” Utah athletic director Mark Harlan said in June.
How BYU ranks nationally and in the Big 12
The House settlement cleared the way for one of the biggest disruptions in college sports history. The NCAA was built more than a century ago on the principle that student-athletes had to be amateurs.
That once seemed engraved in marble, but changes have chipped away at amateurism for decades. For example, BYU fans will remember how a new rule allowed Danny Ainge to play professional baseball at the same time he starred as an amateur for the Cougar basketball team more than four decades ago.
Now schools are beginning to make direct payments to student-athletes under the revenue-sharing portion of the House settlement. That $20.5 million annual cap on those payments is derived by a formula: The cap equals 22% of the average amount of certain athletic revenues at the top 70 schools.
Do the math, and that means the average of those specific athletics revenues at P4 schools is $93.2 million.
“We’re in that neighborhood,” Vorkink said of BYU.
But an average is just that. He said some schools take in two to three times that much revenue. Some take in much less.
Don’t mistake that number for the actual size of the full athletics budget at BYU or any other P4 school, because the House revenue-sharing formula doesn’t call for sharing donations made by boosters, for example.
The BYU athletic department also is well-positioned in today’s financial climate because it does not go into debt to build facilities or fund sports, Vorkink said.
The growth of BYU’s budget
Moody, the senior associate AD, said BYU’s athletics budget has grown by 40% to 50% over the past three years.
Vorkink and Moody said the budget has doubled from what it was somewhere between five and 10 years ago.
“We’re getting Big 12-type television revenue, and our donors and sponsors have responded,” Moody said.
Moody says BYU is now on equal footing with its Big 12 peers.
“We’ll be in a very good position going forward against our competition in the Big 12, from a budget perspective. Our donations are comparable, our ticket sales, our sponsorships, and the TV money of course is similar because we all are receiving the same amount now.”
BYU’s chief revenue streams for sports are the Big 12 media contract, ticket sales, donations, corporate sponsorships and the Big 12’s NCAA men’s basketball tournament revenue, Vorkink said.
“The athletics budget has increased considerably over the last 20 years, but it’s even more pronounced since the announcement of joining the Big 12,” he said. “In addition to the revenues that come directly from the conference, we get more now from ticket sales and from corporate sponsors. Everything’s come up because the game sort of changed.”
Fans are willing to pay more for tickets to much better home football and basketball games because the quality of BYU’s schedule improved dramatically.
“Now LaVell Edwards Stadium is generating more revenue for a football game, the Marriott Center is generating more revenue for a basketball game, and we’re getting donors and corporate sponsors that want to be a part of this at levels they didn’t before,” Vorkink said.
What will BYU share with student-athletes?
BYU’s revenue-sharing plans call for spending close to the $20.5 million cap.
“There is a race for most schools to be at the cap,” Vorkink said. “We’re going to be a little under the cap, if nothing else for philosophical reasons. We don’t want our strategy to be about money and transactional. We want to be in the game but not at the top.”
The House settlement will divide backpay to student-athletes under a formula that will provide about 75% of the damages to football players because that sport generates most of the athletics revenue at most schools. Another 15-20% is earmarked for men’s basketball players with 5-10% reserved for women’s basketball players. Whatever is left would go to Olympic and non-revenue sports.
Most schools are expected to follow that formula for revenue sharing.
“Most institutions will distribute the revenue sharing according to the proportion of revenue the sports generate, which means that football will get the lion’s share,” Reese said. “We’re going to take an approach that has some of that flavor, but also distributes it so that all scholarship athletes will get some support from the university.”
Reese and Vorkink described five buckets of student-athlete compensation:
- The House settlement revenue share.
- Third-party NIL, which as its name indicates, does not involve BYU or its boosters.
- Scholarships.
- Alston payments, which are a new, additional form of education-related financial awards.
- Associated-entity NIL, which now must truly reflect fair compensation related to market value.
Let’s look into how each of these work through the prism of BYU’s top basketball recruit, AJ Dybantsa. It’s important to first understand that NIL in 2025 is much different than it has been the past few years.
BYU will fold much of what players had been receiving via NIL payments into revenue sharing payments, Vorkink said. It also will provide scholarships and Alston payments to student-athletes and be involved in associated-entity NIL, Reese and Vorkink said.
“All student-athletes will get some support from the university,” Reese said.
Here’s a look at what those payments will be, how they are changing and how BYU will juggle them, as well as how the process fits the school’s mission and philosophy, all through the lens of a player making the most of this new era.
BYU and AJ Dybantsa
Many college sports fans are still trying to understand NIL, which has rattled college sports since those payments began in 2021.
Dybantsa, who is expected to be a top pick in next year’s NBA draft, is a good example. Some outlets incorrectly reported that BYU’s incoming freshman basketball star received $7 million in NIL to play for the school. The Athletic reported in January that it was closer to $5 million.
BYU will never bring in student-athletes who only care about the highest bid, Reese and Vorkink said.
They rebutted narratives that BYU is outbidding everyone else for big-time players like Dybantsa.
“That’s not true, and it’s particularly not true in high-profile cases,” Vorkink said.
Alabama and North Carolina at least matched BYU’s offer, the Athletic reported.
“We’ve got to be competitive. We’ve got to be in the game,” Reese said, “but we can’t be the highest bidder.” Reese and Vorkink said they want BYU to find players who find a mutual fit at the school.
Egor Demin, who played for BYU last season and was selected No. 8 in the NBA draft, said he chose to play for the Cougars in part because he had turned to faith as a lonely teenager playing professionally for Real Madrid in Spain. BYU proved perfect for him.
Dybantsa said he chose BYU because he loved the idea of a school with fewer “distractions.”
“We want people to come here because they see value added,” Reese said. “There are some players that come because they see us as a distraction-free environment, and I think that’s a good reason to come. There are players that come here because they think that they’ll be made a better person, they’ll be strengthened.”
The two university leaders also addressed unfounded narratives that the church is funding payments to players or the athletic department.
“There are zero dollars that come from church appropriation to the athletic department,” Vorkink said.
“Since the athletic department was formed until today, for the entirety of our athletic department’s existence, no church funds have ever been spent on athletics,” Reese said.
“That’s true for the operational budget of the athletics department. It’s true for the facilities of the athletics department. It’s true for the NIL now. No church funds are spent on that,” he said. “It’s been our stance from the dawn of time. I never know where that narrative gets its legs, but there’s no question that nothing is further from the truth. We spend zero dollars on athletics that are church/tithing dollars.”
A dramatic change to NIL
The House settlement was a new earthquake for NIL.
“The settlement really wanted to go after the wild west of collectives,” Vorkink said of the organizations that sprang after the court ruling that created NIL payments. The collectives brokered payments to student-athletes supposedly related to marketing deals.
The House settlement’s solution to that unregulated market was to create a College Sports Commission to monitor revenue-sharing payments and NIL Go to police NIL payments. NIL Go may sound like a green light, but it really is a red light for unregulated payments — think NIL governance. Decisions will be made by the accounting firm Deloitte.
Dybantsa is an NIL leviathan and the perfect example of third-party NIL. He had a deal with Red Bull by the time he was a junior in high school. The company bought in early on the talent that makes him a possible No. 1 pick in next year’s NBA draft.
Third-party NIL like that is the natural outgrowth of a student-athlete’s popularity that leads to a company making a deal for the athlete to sponsor its products. It had nothing to do with his recruiting.
His latest contract is with Fanatics, signed last week just days after he was the MVP of the FIBA under-19 World Cup tournament, where he won a gold medal with Team USA.
As part of the deal, Dybantsa’s name and image will appear on special Topps basketball cards and he will earn money from jersey sales and other memorabilia. Fanatics, which has deals with the NBA’s last two No. 1 picks — Victor Wembanyama and Cooper Flagg — called it one of the company’s “most significant NIL deals ever.”
One outlet declared that Dybantsa’s deal with Fanatics/Topps “puts Dybantsa alongside global superstars like Lionel Messi and Shohei Ohtani.”
The third-party aspect of the deal meant it did not involve BYU or its NIL collective.
In fact, the Royal Blue Collective, the outfit that was arranging deals between businesses and BYU players, will largely go away if it doesn’t completely shut down as BYU folds most of its previous NIL activity into revenue sharing, Vorkink said. The majority of other collectives are also expected to go away as the payment landscape has moved in the new direction.
Associated-entity NIL deals are between a business with a tie to a university and one of its athletes. NIL Go is intended to review every deal over $600 to ensure that it doesn’t exceed “the fair range of compensation” related to market value, Moody said.
For example, Mountain America Credit Union is a longtime BYU sponsor. If it wanted a men’s basketball player to be the face of the credit union’s ads, it could enter an agreement to pay him, Vorkink said. Then that deal would go to the College Sports Commission and NIL Go.
“They will evaluate whether the amount represents fair market value,” Vorkink said.
Theoretically, NIL Go will reject payments beyond that value, and the wild west will have a marshal with a real spine.
“Everyone will be watching to see if the CSC has teeth,” Vorkink said. “If (for example) Mountain America sends in a contract to pay a player $10 million, the ruling should come back and say, ‘That’s way over market value.’”
The AJ Dybantsa deal
This is what the five revenue buckets will look like for Dybantsa.
BYU will make revenue-sharing payments to Dybantsa under the House rules. The NIL deals he signed with BYU’s collective before the House settlement went into effect will be grandfathered in. He will benefit from additional third-party NIL deals like the one with Fanatics. He could sign associated-entity NIL deals. He will receive a scholarship to cover tuition and room and board.
Finally, he will receive an Alston stipend from BYU.
Alston payments are named for another case in which the U.S. Supreme Court ruled that the NCAA had improperly restricted college athletes from receiving non-cash, academic-related compensation, such as laptops and internships.
Since that ruling in 2021, BYU and other schools have been allowed to provide annual benefits worth up to $5,980 to each student-athlete.
Many schools are abandoning Alston and will simply use revenue sharing to attract athletes, Vorkink and Moody said.
BYU remains all-in on Alston for important reasons.
A unique way BYU helps student-athletes
“We’re actually going to use this still as a tool, because under Alston we can tie things to our mission,” Vorkink said. “We’ll enhance up to the max of Alston payments for student-athletes around an academic piece, around a dress and grooming standards piece, around a career development piece. We’re going to still use this because it allows us to be distinctive.”
Reese also likes the idea of incentives for players centered on academics and the university’s mission.
“Those are principles we’ve tried to impute into our program,” he said.
GPA and progress toward graduation are part of the formula, Moody said.
“We even put a little bit of that award aside into an escrow account, so upon graduation they get the balance of what they earned,” he said.
A BYU athlete like football wide receiver Chase Roberts, then, may get bank deposits throughout the year.
Alston payments arrive on a semester basis, while room and board may come monthly. Scholarship funds will show up at the front end of a semester. Revenue sharing could come in three or more payments, at the beginning of a season, midseason or at the end, Moody said.
The bottom line for BYU is that, even though athletic departments now will pay student-athletes directly, the new rules hold promise for leveling the playing field, school leaders said.
“I think it’s going to be a strategic advantage for BYU,” athletic director Brian Santiago told BYUtv.

College Sports
Rome High Students Explore College Fair to Prepare for Life After High School
Rome High School has been known for academic progress for many years, so much so that when it came to have a college fair on campus recently, more than 50 colleges and universities showed up to recruit, including some schools that were more than 2,500 miles away.

The College fair was hosted in Rome High’s main gym and was full of tables from each college at the event. The colleges set up posters, brochures, and flags to display their mascots and information about their college.
Juniors and seniors came at different times. The seniors showed up first, followed by the juniors. Both groups stayed about 45 minutes. During their time, students walked around the gym, observing the tables set up, talking to the college representatives, and taking pamphlets the colleges offered.
Senior Jayden Perez said he hopes to major in nursing at Emory University, but is also looking at several other state schools, and enjoyed the college fair experience.
“This has given me an opportunity to get excited about college,” he said. “It also is a great opportunity to speak with real college professionals one-on-one.”
Andrew Hunsinger from the University of Vermont said he hopes to broaden the students’ horizons to schools in the Northeast and let them know about their possibilities outside of Rome.
“The main thing I want to bring to a place like Rome High School is to let students know that the Northeast is an option for them,” Hunsinger said. “Especially in Atlanta, a lot of people from the northeast are moving to the south, and we are trying to let students in places like Rome know about the opportunities that are available at universities like Vermont.”
While the students marveled at the number of schools in attendance, what they didn’t see was all the preparation behind the scenes to make the fair happen.
“I have been planning the college fair since June. I wrote a lot of emails and made phone contacts with a lot of these colleges,” Rome High School Counselor Melissa Holland said. “I am also able to reach out via SCOIR (the SCOIR College Network), and there is a way to invite colleges through the site, and I got a lot of interest that way.”
Junior Genesis Uzcategui said something she finds appealing about a college is if they are far from home, so she can go out and see the world for herself while studying ultrasound-radiology, her major.
¨I’ve looked at Warren Wilson, Toccoa Falls, Eckerd, and Florida Southern,” Uzcategui said.
Lilly Blanchard said she is a big Oregon football fan, so that college coming to Rome caught her attention. Some of the colleges that visited Rome really surprised these students.
“I’ve been on a tour at UAB (University of Alabama at Birmingham) and I’m applying early to Duke for neuroscience,” she said. She discussed wanting a college with a diverse, inclusive community. She is looking for a college with good education, good sports, and a good vibe.
The fair was a perfect place for many students to get an opportunity to learn about a lot of different schools.
“I don’t know exactly what college I want to go to, but I am interested in UGA or Emory,” Janna Nyguen, a junior, said. “I want to major in Premed. I want to go into the healthcare field.”
While the college fair afforded lots of options for students, Holland said it also aligns with Rome High School’s mission statement. For many students, this was a first-time experience to the exposure of different colleges and the idea of possible majors they can choose.
“The college fair is an extension of our mission statement, which is to make sure students graduate from Rome High School prepared for college or work,” she said. “I want the students to have an open mind and to be able to find out the opportunities that are out there and available to them. Some students may have in mind that they want to go to work, but through this they may see they want to go to college. An event like this offers them the chance to open their minds to other opportunities.”
Written by: Brighton Turner and Selah Marshall




College Sports
NHL rookies weigh in on NCAA, NHL rule changes, new uniforms
ARLINGTON, Va. — Attending the NHLPA rookie showcase puts into sharp relief how truly young these prospects are, especially within the context of hockey history.
Like when you hear Montreal Canadiens prospect David Reinbacher talk about modeling his game after Brock Faber, the Minnesota Wild defenseman who was runner-up for NHL rookie of the year in 2024. Or when Matthew Schaefer, the first overall pick in this year’s draft by the New York Islanders, talks about his coach Patrick Roy’s playing career like … well, like someone born four years (September 2007) after the Hockey Hall of Fame goaltender played his last game, in April 2003.
“Yeah, I mean, I heard he loves to win,” Schaefer said of Roy, who won four Stanley Cups, three playoff MVP awards and 551 games, which is third all time. “I heard he was really good back in the day. Everyone loves talking about him.”
Indeed.
Schaefer recalled going to the offices of Upper Deck, the collectible company that co-hosted the rookie showcase this week, and seeing glimpses of his new coach’s former life as a generational goaltender.
“There was just stuff of him all over. Seeing all the things. Seeing his goalie pads. That’s what really stuck out to me,” he said.
Roy is entering his third season coaching the Islanders and sixth season overall as an NHL coach. Schaefer said he has enjoyed their conversations in the offseason but is ready to see the training camp side of his new coach. “I think he’ll be on the ice doing a lot of drills and pushing us. So, I can’t wait to get pushed,” he said.
Schaefer was selected by the Islanders first overall after 73 games with the OHL Erie Otters over the past two seasons, where he proved to be an elite puck rusher and passer. He signed his NHL entry-level deal in August.
The Islanders haven’t been shy about marketing around Schaefer, including a ticket sales deal that incorporated his No. 48. But he isn’t taking anything for granted, whether it’s making the roster or playing down the lineup in his rookie season.
“You don’t just get stuff given to you, right? You’ve got to earn it. You’ve got to earn your spot. I still have to get my spot on the team and that’s what I’m going into camp to do,” he said.
If he makes the cut, Schaefer would easily be the youngest player on an Islanders roster that features over a dozen players over the age of 30. But Schaefer is comfortable with that age disparity. He has a brother who’s nine years older than him, which he said helps with the communication. But he also won’t hesitate to seek his older teammates’ guidance.
“I think it’s good for me to have an older group where they can help me along the way,” he said. “A lot of guys have been in the league for so long where any sort of advice they give me, I’m going to take it right away.”
That said, he knows there are some expectations for a player his age from his older teammates.
“Maybe I have to babysit [their kids] or something,” he said with a laugh. “I mean, I wouldn’t mind it.”
NCAA eligibility rules a ‘game changer’
Karsen Dorwart admits he’s a little jealous.
The Philadelphia Flyers prospect was signed as an NCAA free agent after playing three years at Michigan State. He grew up in Oregon, and was a huge fan of the Western Hockey League’s Portland Winterhawks.
“I always wanted to play in Portland. Growing up, watching those guys. It was just kind of decided it wasn’t the right path for me,” he said. “But if I was able to do both, I’m sure I would’ve.”
For decades, that opportunity wasn’t available to young players like Dorwart. The NCAA deemed anyone who played in the Canadian Hockey League ineligible for college hockey, because those junior leagues have players who have signed professional contracts with NHL teams, and because CHL players earned a monthly stipend.
That all changed last November when the NCAA Division I council voted to make CHL players eligible for NCAA Division I hockey starting this season. The council ruled players can compete in the CHL — comprising the WHL, Ontario Hockey League and Quebec Maritimes Junior Hockey League — without jeopardizing their NCAA Division I hockey eligibility, provided they aren’t “paid more than actual and necessary expenses as part of that participation.”
Players like Dorwart no longer had the binary choice of Canadian junior hockey or NCAA hockey. That has already led to one landscape-shifting moment in college hockey as Gavin McKenna — the consensus choice for first overall pick in the 2026 NHL draft — left the WHL Medicine Hat Tigers after three seasons to sign with Penn State University on an NIL deal “in the ballpark” of $700,000, a source told ESPN.
1:08
Top NHL prospect Gavin McKenna announces PSU commitment
Gavin McKenna joins “SportsCenter” to announce his official commitment to Penn State University.
“A guy like Gavin McKenna making that jump to go play college is a big step,” said Minnesota Wild defenseman Zeev Buium, who played at the University of Denver. “I think everyone gets better. You’re getting guys from everywhere and you can get anybody you want now. I just think it makes all of college hockey better.”
Toronto Maple Leafs defensive prospect Ben Danford said the NCAA’s eligibility ruling “changed the game for sure” for both college hockey and the CHL, where he played for the Oshawa Generals. “We’ll have to see what happens. I feel like maybe the OHL is going to become a bit younger,” he said.
Overall, the NHL prospects were most intrigued by the migration of players from Canadian juniors to the NCAA.
“I think NCAA is a hard league. It’s a physical league. So I’m really excited to see how those guys can adapt to it,” said St. Louis Blues forward Jimmy Snuggerud, who attended the University of Minnesota.
Dorwart thinks the eligibility rule change is great for NCAA hockey — even if for him it might have meant more time as a Winterhawk in Portland than as a Spartan at Michigan State.
“You’re getting all the best players in college now. I’ve got to meet some of the new CHL guys at Michigan State, and they’re super pumped and it’s just going to be great for everyone’s development,” he said. “But it’s something I’m jealous of. I think it would’ve been fun to play in my hometown growing up.”
The AHL ’19-year-old’ rule
Another significant change to player development is on the horizon — if the NHL and CHL can agree to it.
In the new NHL and NHLPA collective bargaining agreement, there is a provision for teams to loan one 19-year-old player to their AHL farm team without the requirement of offering that player back to their Canadian junior team first.
The current rules state that a player drafted from the CHL must be at least 20 years old or have played at least four full seasons in the CHL to be eligible for the AHL.
The new CBA kicks in next September. While other rule changes were fast-tracked for this season, the earliest the “19-year-old” rule would be implemented is the 2026-27 season, according to an NHL source. Again, that’s pending the NHL and CHL agreeing to amend the “mandatory return rule” for players.
“Honestly, I’ve been really curious about that rule,” said Berkly Catton, a 19-year-old center prospect for the Seattle Kraken who played for the WHL’s Spokane Chiefs. “Honestly, as of right now, all I can really do is go to camp, have a good camp and kind of force their hand. But that AHL rule would be really cool.”
Zayne Parekh of the Calgary Flames is happy that the AHL rule hasn’t been fast-tracked for this season.
Parekh, 19, is considered the Flames’ top prospect, and one of the better offensive defensemen on the rise in the NHL. He made his NHL debut at the end of last season, scoring a goal in his only game. The way he sees it, having the “mandatory return rule” puts a pressure point on Calgary to add him to this season’s roster.
“I think it’s nice not having it because they’re really going to give me a good look to make the NHL team,” he said. “Maybe it benefits me, maybe it doesn’t, but it all depends on my camp. The opportunity is there. It’s just about taking advantage of it.”
Parekh is exactly the kind of prospect the NHL is considering when seeking to change the “mandatory return rule.” He had 107 points in 61 games for the Saginaw Spirit last season, posting back-to-back 33-goal campaigns. Even if the Flames believe he’s not ready for a regular role in the NHL, having him dominate another season in juniors wouldn’t benefit him as much as playing against professional talent in the AHL.
“Sometimes you’ve done what you’re supposed to do in junior. That kind of middle ground could be nice if you need to develop a little bit more,” Catton said.
The Seattle prospect was reminded of the significant leap in competition when he attended Kraken training camp last season, which was one reason he focused on strength training in the offseason.
“These guys are men. It’s not a 16-year-old kid going into a puck battle. It’s a guy with kids and stuff, but you got to come out with the puck somehow,” Catton said.
NHL fit check
Every year, the NHLPA rookie showcase offers a first glimpse at NHL uniform redesigns for the upcoming season.
Fit checks at the @NHLPA and @UpperDeckSports rookie showcase:
Jimmy Snuggerud rocks the new @StLouisBlues jersey, Tij Iginla in new @utahmammoth gear and Zayne Parekh in a fake mustache. (The @NHLFlames have a beauty here btw.) pic.twitter.com/wA4xuVg0Ot
— Greg Wyshynski (@wyshynski) September 3, 2025
Snuggerud wore the new St. Louis Blues uniform, which brings back the original color scheme from their 1967 sweaters.
“They’re very blue,” Snuggerud said.
(Well, they are the Blues.)
Meanwhile, Tij Iginla was decked out in the rechristened Utah Mammoth’s new home uniform sporting their official team colors: Rock Black, Mountain Blue and Salt White. Iginla said he’s fond of the former Utah Hockey Club’s new logo, which combines a local mountain range, a mammoth head and U-shaped tusks.
“I really like it. I think it’s a super kind of fierce logo. One of the coolest ones in the league,” said Iginla, who was drafted sixth overall in 2024. “So super, super cool to be wearing it for the first time.”
Iginla followed the branding drama for his team over the past year, including when everyone around the NHL believed the team would be called the Utah Yeti.
“I thought Yeti would’ve been cool, but I like them both. I don’t think they could have went wrong,” he said. “I’m happy with the Mammoth.”
Designer Duck
Beckett Sennecke, 19, was drafted third overall by the Anaheim Ducks in 2024. The winger played last season for the OHL’s Oshawa Generals, tallying 86 points in 56 games.
He’s on track to become an NHL player. Perhaps then he’ll be the one who gets recognized at the airport instead of his mother.
Sennecke is the son of Candice Olson. In 1994, after playing for the Canadian national volleyball team, Olson began her own interior design firm in Toronto. Seven years later, she joined the booming home improvement television movement with her show “Divine Design,” which aired on the W Network in Canada and HGTV in the U.S. She would go on to host other shows and serve as a judge on HGTV’s reality competition show “Design Star” through 2011.
“She had a TV show back in the day called ‘Candice Tells All’ or something. She went in and redid the interior of houses and then made a TV show about it. I guess it was pretty popular back in the day,” Sennecke said.
Her fame as an HGTV star predated Sennecke’s formative years. Hence, his friends weren’t really cognizant that he had a celebrity mom.
“No, it was an older show. It was more like people at the airport coming up to her and are like, ‘Oh, it’s Candice!’ She gets that probably once or twice a year now,” he said.
Sennecke said he couldn’t help but have an aesthetically pleasing house while growing up: His father is an architect.
“It’s like a double whammy. If I don’t have a nice house … I don’t know,” he said. “But yeah, they did a good job for sure.”
So along with the pressure of making the NHL one day, there’s the added pressure of eventually buying his first house as the son of an architect and a former “Design Star” judge.
“I’m sure my mom will be all over the interior and stuff,” he said. “Especially the lighting. That’s her biggest thing. Whenever there’s bad lightning, she’s always disgusted with it.”
College Sports
No. 7 Wake Forest Set to Host Lipscomb

WINSTON-SALEM, N.C. – Looking to continue its unbeaten start to the 2025 campaign, the No. 7-ranked Wake Forest men’s soccer team is set to host Lipscomb at Spry Stadium Friday evening.
The match against the Bisons is slated for 7 p.m. and will be streamed live on ACC Network Extra with live stats available here.
Fan Information
Parking is encouraged in lots A, B, Q, W1 & W2. A complete parking map of campus is here.
Gates open one hour prior to kickoff for all home matches.
Season Ticket Information
2025 Wake Forest soccer season and single game tickets are on-sale now giving fans the opportunity to witness The Best Fan Experience In North Carolina from a number of unique seating options!
Adult season tickets start as low as $70 for general admission and $50 for youth while reserved chairbacks are $130 for fans and $110 for Wake Forest University faculty and staff.
Accessibility Information
Wake Forest Athletics strives to provide content at games, social media and on GoDeacs.com that is accessible to all people. In the continued effort to improve accessibility of the technology and digital content at tomorrow’s game, fans can access closed captions here for the public address announcer and in-venue content.
Wake Forest Athletics is always open to learning about new ideas and ways we can improve. Please report accessibility challenges, identify content you find inaccessible, or give us general feedback at pantagw@wfu.edu.
Quick Notes
- Wake Forest has only allowed one goal this campaign, which is tied for the fewest goals allowed through three games in the Muuss-era.
- Goalkeeper Jonah Mednard has conceded just once in his career with 287 total minutes in goal with two clean sheets. He holds a .889 save percentage and a .32 goals-against average.
- Wake Forest will look to start unbeaten through four matches for the sixth time under Muuss and for the first time since 2023.
- This will be the first-ever meeting between the two programs.
- The Demon Deacons enter the contest unbeaten in their last 15 matches at Spry Stadium with wins in seven of the last eight.
- The Deacs hold a 11-0-4 home record dating back to Aug. 25 of last year.
- Additionally, the Demon Deacons have yet to trail this season as they have led for 93 minutes.
- All four of the Deacs’ goals to open the season have come from four different players as Ryan Belal, Jeffrey White, Jose Perez and Tate Lorentz have all opened their accounts on the year.
- Earlier this week, the Demon Deacons landed No. 7 in the United Soccer Coaches’ preseason poll while also holding No. 6 spot in the TopDrawerSoccer College Soccer News polls.
- Wake Forest was picked to finish second in the ACC preseason poll and held the most first-place votes (5).
Scouting the Bisons
- Lipscomb is coming off of its first win of the campaign as it took down Mercer, 2-0, at home on Sunday and currently holds a 1-1-1 record headed into Sunday.
- Redshirt junior midfielder Levi Jones came off the bench and scored in the 68th and 75th minutes to defeat the Bears.
- Jones leads the team with five points as he also notched an assist on the 77th-minute equalizer against Memphis in the opener.
- The Bisons only bring back 18 percent (4-of-22) of their goal production from last season that saw Lipscomb post a 3-8-5 (1-4-2 ASUN) record.
- Only one returning player, Tyler Stinnett, scored multiple goals last season (two).
- The squad is made up of 13 newcomers to the squad with eight freshmen.
- The Bisons were picked to finish fifth in the ASUN Preseason Coaches Poll and received one first place vote.
- One of the newcomers is starting goalkeeper Alex Kara, who transferred in after two seasons with Indiana.
- He made six saves against Memphis and five against USF before earning his first-career clean sheet last time out against Mercer.
Last Time Out (vs. St. John’s)
- The No. 5 Wake Forest men’s soccer team remained unbeaten in 2025 as it battled St. John’s to a 0-0 draw Sunday evening at Spry Stadium.
- Wake Forest came out dominating play throughout the opening stages of the match and held possession for 65 percent of the first half. However, the two sides went into the halftime break knotted at 0-0 without either team able to score by the final whistle.
- In the 75th minute, it looked as if the Demon Deacons had taken a 1-0 lead off a Jeffrey White goal following a set piece just outside of the 18, but the decision was overruled by VAR.
- In goal, redshirt sophomore goalkeeper Jonah Mednard recorded his second-consecutive clean sheet. Despite only tallying one save, he snuffed out multiple potential chances for the visitors and limited the danger.
- For the third-consecutive match, Wake Forest went with a starting backline of junior Travis Smith, Jr., sophomores Mason Sullivan and Amoni Thomas, and graduate captain Cristian Escribano. The Demon Deacon defense excelled in limiting opportunities for the visitors and only allowed one shot on goal over the 90 minutes.
- This marked the second-straight contest in which the Deacs allowed just one shot on frame as Wake Forest has outshot opponents 42-to-30 through the first three matches of the season.
- Additionally, this marks the first time since Oct. 1-12 (four matches) of last year that the Demon Deacons recorded consecutive clean sheets.
- With the draw, the Demon Deacons are now unbeaten in their last 15 matches at Spry Stadium. Overall, the Deacs hold a 11-0-4 home record dating back to Aug. 25 of last year.
Battle Tested
- The Demon Deacons face one of the toughest schedules in the nation this season due to the strength of the ACC.
- Wake Forest has six opponents on the schedule that are currently ranked inside the top 20, including No. 1 Stanford, No. 3 Clemson and No. 10 Pitt.
- Of note, the ACC holds six spots in the top 10 of the United Soccer Coaches poll and seven in the top 15.
National Leader In Wins
- Named the fourth head coach in program history prior to the start of the 2015 season, Bobby Muuss‘ Demon Deacon squads have built on the longstanding and rich 45-year history of the program.
- Since 2015, Wake Forest’s 154 total wins ranks No. 1 nationally, seven more than any program and 11 more than any other ACC program. During that span, Wake Forest is also joined only by Indiana as the only Division I programs to have won at least 10 matches every season.
- Additionally, Wake Forest and Indiana are the only two programs of the 211 programs nationally to hold double-digit NCAA Tournament appearance streaks.
- Wake Forest also leads the nation in wins over the last quarter-century (359), 10 more than second-most Maryland.
Total Wins Since 2015
| Rank | Team | Total Wins Since ’15 |
| 1. | Wake Forest | 154 |
| 2. | Indiana | 148 |
| 3. | Clemson | 143 |
| 4. | Georgetown | 134 |
| 5. | Stanford | 130 |
Consecutive Seasons With 10+ Victories
| Rank | Team | Consecutive seasons with 10+ wins |
| 1. | Wake Forest | 13 |
| 2. | Indiana | 11 |
| 3. | Georgetown | 8 |
| T4. | Clemson, Missouri State, Marshall | 6 |
| 7. | Denver, Duke | 4 |
The Spry Advantage
- Since Muuss’ arrival in 2015, Wake Forest ranks No. 1 nationally in home wins (113), 17 more than any other program nationally.
- Over the last 10 seasons, the Deacs have won at least eight of their matches at Spry Stadium including a double-digit win total seven of those seasons.
- Wake Forest’s home winning percentage of 82.41 percent since 2015 also ranks third nationally, behind only Indiana and Denver.
Home Wins Since 2015
| Rank | Team | Total Home Wins Since ’15 |
| 1. | Wake Forest | 113 |
| T2. | Clemson | 96 |
| T2. | Indiana | 96 |
| 4. | Virginia | 89 |
| 5. | Georgetown | 85 |
Home Winning Percentage Since 2015
| Rank | Team | Home Winning Percentage Since ’15 |
| 1. | Indiana | 84.00% |
| 2. | Denver | 82.99% |
| 3. | Wake Forest | 82.41% |
| 4. | Clemson | 79.92% |
| 5. | Missouri State | 79.89% |
Consistent Threat In The Toughest Conference In The Country
- Recognized annually as the toughest soccer conference in the country from top to bottom, the ACC has placed the most teams in the NCAA Tournament each of the last 12 seasons and has had at least five teams earn a bid 24-straight seasons.
- During the 2024 NCAA Tournament, the ACC earned nine bids including seven national seeds.
- Wake Forest has received an NCAA Tournament bid 14-straight seasons, eight years more than any other ACC program.
| Rank | Team | Consecutive NCAA Tournament Appearances |
| 1. | Wake Forest | 14 |
| T2. | Clemson & Pitt | 6 |
| 4. | North Carolina | 5 |
| 5. | Duke | 4 |
| T6. | Virginia, Stanford & SMU | 3 |
Looking Ahead
- After Friday night’s match, Wake Forest will return to Spry Stadium for the last of its five-match home stand to open the season as it takes on Campbell on Tuesday night.
- The Demon Deacons will open conference play on the road at North Carolina on Friday, Sept. 12.
- The match against the Camels is slated for 6 p.m. and will stream live on ACCNX.
- This will mark the fifth-ever meeting between the two programs with the Demon Deacons leading the series, 4-0-0.
College Sports
Pitaro: ESPN willing to listen if other leagues seek to replicate NFL deal
ESPN has not ruled out future deals like the arrangement it recently struck with the NFL, but they would have to “make business sense,” network chairman Jimmy Pitaro said at an event Thursday.
Speaking at the BofA 2025 Media, Communications and Entertainment Conference, Pitaro said that ESPN’s deal with the NFL to acquire NFL Network and other assets in exchange for an equity stake was “unique” and occurred “at a unique moment in time.”
“Whether we would ever try to replicate this, I would say it’d have to make business sense … we’re always interested in ways to advance the business and, just as importantly, ways to serve the sports fan,” Pitaro said, “and so if someone comes to us and presents a compelling opportunity, we’re of course going to listen.”
Although the NFL would be a stakeholder in ESPN, the league is keeping its equity interests separate from how it thinks about distribution or the utilization of its rights. NFL EVP/media distribution Hans Schroeder said this week that the league will maintain “an arm’s length” in such negotiations. “It’s going to be fascinating to see what the NFL does with their opt out,” Pitaro said. “I think you know this, but in 2029, they have an opt out, and a year later, they have an opt out with us, so we’ll see how that plays out.”
Pitaro touted the network’s portfolio as the best in its history, but said it is never satisfied and will look at what makes sense for the business. When asked about a potential NFL international package, he said the network is “always interested in growing our business” and would “be interested in having the conversation.”
Beyond the NFL, ESPN and Major League Baseball were reported by The Wall Street Journal to be “closing in” on a three-year agreement worth $1.65 billion that would grant the company rights to include MLB.TV within the ESPN DTC streaming service, along with some local, in-market rights and a national package of games. Pitaro did not announce the completion of an agreement, but said he expects that the deals will “close relatively soon.” ESPN and MLB had agreed to a mutual opt out of their existing seven-year contract before the season, and the two entities have had conversations that Pitaro described as “healthy” and “positive.”
Over the last several years, ESPN has inked various media rights deals that have reportedly resulted in augmented fees being paid to sports leagues. The agreement with the NBA marks an increase of 75% in the annual media rights fee, moving to a reported $2.45 billion from $1.4 billion per year. The network also reached an extension of its media rights agreement with the College Football Playoff, signed a 10-year deal to broadcast SEC college football and men’s basketball games and reached a new eight-year agreement for NCAA championships.
“You’ve seen significant increases over the past several years,” Pitaro said. “I don’t have a crystal ball. I don’t know how sustainable this type of growth is. Again, you’re seeing big tech operate with discipline, which I think even a few years ago, a lot of people did not expect. I think a lot of people expected the big tech players to spend more aggressively, bid more aggressively than they have. But I’m not sure how we’re going to continue to see significant increases when there’s not a lot on the marketplace.”
College Sports
What is the Fastest Tennis Serve of All Time?
In this countdown, we look back at the fastest recorded tennis serves of all time.
Service speed remains a dominant feature in the modern game and can become a player’s trump card out on the court.
With players getting stronger and cutting-edge technology in tennis racquets making leaps and bounds, serves today are faster than ever.
We take a look at the fastest serves ever recorded by men and women out on the tennis court.
Men’s fastest tennis serve
Sam Groth – 263.4kph (163.7mph.)
Australian Sam Groth has the honour of having the fastest recorded tennis serve of all time.
The 6ft 4 Australian set the record during an ATP Open Challenger match in Busan, South Korea, in 2012 against Belarusian tennis player Uladzimir Ignatik.
Groths serve clocks in at a staggering 263.4kph (163.7mph).
Honorable mentions
Second Fastest Recorded Serve in Tennis
Albano Olivetti – 257.5 kph (160mph)
Frenchman Albano Olivetti holds the record for the second-fastest serve ever recorded. The French tennis pro also remains the second person to break the 160mph serve speed barrier.
Olivetti’s serve came in 2012 at the challenger level during the Internazionali Trofeo Lame Perrel–Faip.
Albano Olivetti holds the second-fastest record serve on the tour.
Third Fastest Recorded Serve in Tennis
John Isner – 253 kph (157.2 mph).
It would be hard not to include the American giant John Isner in this list. The 6ft 10 American is known best for his monster serves, which are delivered consistently throughout.
His monstrous serve is thanks in part to his stature. Isner clocks in as the third-tallest tennis player on the ATP behind the Croatian giant Ivo Karlovic and American young gun Reilly Opelka (both 6ft 11 inches). Ivo Karlovic currently holds the record for the fourth fastest recorded tennis serve.
Isner currently holds the third fastest serve in tennis. The Americans serve, clocking in at 253 kph (157.2 mph) during a 2016 Davis Cup tie against Bernard Tomic.
John Isner also holds the record for playing the longest match in Grand Slam history against Nicolas Mahut. During Wimbledon 2010, Isner beat Mahut in 5 sets: 6–4, 3–6, 6–7, 7–6, 70–68. The match lasted 11 hours and 5 minutes.
Isner’s serve is the fastest recorded serve in tennis, recognised by the ATP.
Fastest Tennis Serve Female
Georgina García Pérez – 220kph (136.7 mph)
Spaniard Georgina Garcia Perez holds the record for the fastest recorded tennis serve by a woman.
Perez clocked a serve of 200kph (136.7 mph) during the Hungarian Ladies Open in 2018.
Georgina Garcia Perez holds the record for the fastest serve by a female.
Why is it nearly impossible to hit a 160 mph tennis serve?
A considered calculation of stature, technique, coaching, mechanics and good old practice is said to make the perfect concoction for a fast serve.
A direct correlation has been proven between the height of a player and power during a serve. Therefore, it is no coincidence that the top servers of the game are all giants by nature.
The trajectory of a serve remains ever important. Players who are 6ft 7 or above have the ability to hit the ball with a downward trajectory, whereas those who are under that height are unable to do so.
Modern technology has also greatly aided in the incremental increase of server power over time. The changeover from wooden rackets to today’s modern racket is a huge factor in determining serve power. Advancements in string technology and racket materials also play a huge part in determining a fast serve.
Other mitigating factors include court conditions. Faster serves are much more likely to happen on a hard court and during hotter temperatures, where there is less resistance to air density, translating to faster speeds.
When you compare the fastest tennis serve with other sports, you can see how fast it is.
Fastest Football shot – 114 mph by David Hirst in 1996
Fastest Baseball pitch – 105.1 mph by Aroldis Chapman in 2010
Fastest Cricket Bowling speed – 100.2 mph by Shoaib Akhtar in 2003
What is the average tennis serve speed?
The average tennis serve speed differs between both men and women, as well as between pros and amateurs. Data shows us that for professional male tennis players, the average tennis serve speed is approximately 114 mph (on their first serve) and 93 mph (on their second serve).
For women, the average tennis serve speed clocks in at 98 mph (on their first serve) and 82 mph (on their second serve).
This data was recorded between 2002-2013, so bear in mind the average speeds have likely increased by a few miles per hour in the modern era, as racquet technology and athletes continue to evolve and adapt within the sport.
Check out Wired’s video, which covers the topic more in-depth.
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College Sports
No. 24 Pilots Welcome No. 17 Roos to Merlo Field for Ranked Matchup


PORTLAND, Ore. – Portland Pilots Men’s Soccer, ranked 24th in the nation, is ready for their first ranked matchup of the season against the Kansas City Roos. The two teams are set to play on Friday, Sept. 5 at 7 p.m. here at Merlo Field.
Tickets for Friday’s game are available at PortlandPilots.com/Tickets. A live stream is also available on ESPN+. Check PortlandPilots.com for links to the live stream and live stats.
MATCH INFORMATION
Opponent: #17/19/RV Kansas City Roos (2-0-2, 0-0-0 Summit)
Day: Friday
Date: Sept. 5, 2025
Time: 7 PM
Place: Portland, Ore.
Pitch: Merlo Field
Video: ESPN+
Stats: PortlandPilots.com
POR vs. UMKC
Overall Series: 0-0-0
H: 0-0-0 • A: 0-0-0 • N: 0-0-0
Last: N/A
PEEK INTO THE PORT
- The Pilots are a perfect 4-0 on the year, outscoring opponents 17-0 in these first four games. They are now ranked 24th nationally.
- They most recently earned a road win over the Wisconsin Badgers 1-0, their eighth win over a Big Ten team and 18th against a Power Four team since Nick Carlin-Voigt took over as head coach in 2016. They also beat the Siena Saints last week 4-0.
- David Ajagbe scored the game-winning goal for the Pilots against the Badgers. Highfield scored two goals against the Saints and Waggoner added another.
- The Pilots lead the nation in 10 different categories, including goals (17), assists (21), points (55), goals-against average (.000), shutout percentage (1.000), save percentage (1.000), points per game (13.75), goal differential (17) and assists per game (5.25)
- Several players are near the top of the nation statistically.
- Diego Rosas is tied with 10 players for first in the nation in assists at four. He posted two assists against Siena on Friday.
- David Ajagbe and Nicholas Dunbar also sit at second in the conference and 13th nationally in assists at three. Ajagbe’s seven points rank second in the WCC and 18th nationally.
- Joe Highfield is one of the top scorers in the nation, sitting at third in points (11), fifth in goals (four) and 11th in assists (three).
- Miguel-Angel Hernandez has yet to allow a goal in his three starts for Portland. He’s one of 14 players to not allow a goal.
- Portland is one of five teams to have started the season 4-0-0 and are the only team in the nation to have started 4-0-0 with four straight shutouts.
- Portland’s 4-0 start is the first time since 1988. It’s also the first time they’ve posted four straight shutouts to start a season since that year.
- The Pilots hold a 14-game unbeaten streak that stretches back to last season.
- This year, they were picked to finish third in the 2025 West Coast Conference Preseason Poll, with forward Joe Highfield and midfielder Efetobo Aror each making the preseason team.
- Highfield was the first Pilot to make the All-WCC First Team and the All-WCC Freshman Team in the same season since Benji Michel in 2016, scoring seven goals and adding three assists. His four goals and three assists against WCC opponents were the second most in the conference.
- Aror was drafted in the first round of the 2025 MLS SuperDraft this past year by the Colorado Rapids but chose to return. The WCC Freshman of the Year in 2023, he played in 10 matches with six starts, recording a goal and assist.
- Aror, along with Pilot newcomer David Ajagbe, was also named to the TopDrawerSoccer Top 100 players in the preseason, slotting in at 52nd. Ajagbe ranks 99th on the list.
- Ajagbe scored seven goals and added two assists with the Ohio State Buckeyes last season, who earned the top overall seed in the NCAA Tournament last year. Ajagbe made the All-Big Ten Freshman team and the TopDrawerSoccer Freshman Best XI Second Team.
- Last season, the Pilots were a dynamic offensive team, ranking second in the WCC in goals per game (1.78), total assists (44), total points (108), points per game (6.00) and assists per game (2.44). Their 2.44 assists per game ranked ninth nationally while their assist total ranked 14th.
- The Pilots also were in the top 50 nationally in points per game, (21st), total points (27th), goals per game (44th) and total goals (32, 46th).
- The Pilots return 16 players from last year’s roster while welcoming 16 newcomers. The incoming class ranks fifth nationally on TopDrawerSoccer.
- Of the 16 returners, Portland returns three players who earned All-WCC honors: Highfield, Miguel-Angel Hernandez (Second Team) and Diego Rosas (Honorable Mention).
- Hernandez played in seven matches last year, posting shutouts in three of those matches.
- Rosas led the Pilots in assists in his second season with the Pilots, posting eight assists. He was the third Pilot since 2017 to post at least three assists in a game, doing so against the LMU Lions.
- Nick Carlin-Voigt enters his 10th year as head coach of the Pilots. He has posted a 92-46-21 record during his tenure, having led Portland to the NCAA Tournament five times during that span.
- Carlin-Voigt was at the helm when the Pilots advanced to the Elite Eight in 2022, their first appearance that deep in the tournament since 1995.
ABOUT THE ROOS
- The Kansas City Roos are 2-0-2 on the year, most recently tying the Saint Mary’s Gaels 1-1 and beating the Northern Illinois Huskies 2-1.
- They are currently receiving votes in the latest Top 25 poll from United Soccer Coaches. They are 17th in the College Soccer News Poll and 19th in TopDrawerSoccer’s poll.
- The Roos were 14-5-3 overall and 5-2-1 in Summit league play. They won the Summit League Championship over the Denver Pioneers and then advanced to the Elite Eight of the NCAA Tournament.
- The Roos were picked second in the Summit League Preseason Poll, with Bryson Gosch and Jeremy Francou making the preseason team.
- Gosch tallied 1,776 minutes last year, earning honorable mention as well as All-Tournament honors. He scored the equalizing goal in the Summit League Championship against Denver.
- Francou scored four goals last year for Kansas City, including a goal in their first-round tournament game against the Saint Louis Bilikens.
- Ryan Pore is in his sixth year at the helm of the Roos. He is 35-33-22 in his six seasons with Kansas City.
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