Soccer
How senior Morgan Miller has elevated Iowa City Regina girls soccer in debut season
Nestled between the batting cages and the two-storied houses past school grounds, Morgan Miller and the Iowa City Regina girls soccer team is stationed on the practice field.Rocking a white “Tackle Cancer” football shirt and shorts paired with teal Nike cleats, with a bright orange swoosh, Miller awaited her turn in the passing drills.Reminiscent of […]

Nestled between the batting cages and the two-storied houses past school grounds, Morgan Miller and the Iowa City Regina girls soccer team is stationed on the practice field.Rocking a white “Tackle Cancer” football shirt and shorts paired with teal Nike cleats, with a bright orange swoosh, Miller awaited her turn in the passing drills.Reminiscent of her strides down the basketball court, Miller received the ball near the touchline and absorbed its momentum like a magnet attached to a refrigerator. She then slipped a pass to a teammate before she bolted downhill as her cleats dug into the dirt.Every movement is deliberate.The soccer pitch isn’t the same territory where Miller became the all-time leading scorer for Regina girls basketball.Need a break? Play the USA TODAY Daily Crossword Puzzle.
Yet in her debut season, the senior has injected the soccer team with a scoring touch. Miller has led the squad with nine goals with two assists.
Miller may be the newcomer on the team, but you wouldn’t know it by the way she has fit in. Backed by a culture of trust and kinship, she has transformed raw potential into real impact.
“I’m used to being a leader through basketball and I feel like that’s just a role I usually step into but also learning from my other senior teammates and trusting them that they are going to take leadership roles too,” Miller said. “I can kind of be on both sides of learning and also being a leader for underclassmen.”Miller hadn’t played organized soccer since about sixth or seventh grade. During her time away from the sport, she established herself as a record-breaking basketball star at Regina. During her senior season, she became the program’s all-time leading scorer and led the team to the state semifinals for the first time in program history.The decision to divide her time between basketball and soccer came after years of encouragement from Regina coach Ann Larew. With close friends on the team, Miller laced up her cleats and joined the soccer team as a fun experience before she heads out to Kirksville, Missouri, for college.Along the way, her competitive spirit naturally took over.The Truman State University basketball commit transformed into a top scoring option during Regina’s 7-3-2 campaign this season. Watch Miller on the field and you’ll see a forward and midfielder who isn’t afraid to tear past defenders and test opposing goalkeepers. Through 11 games, she has totaled 67 shot attempts with 45 shots on goal.“Morgan is a great athlete, she just brings a great sense of athleticism, and she is just at heart a competitor,” Larew said. “She just kind of raises the bar of that competitive spirit, and despite the fact that she doesn’t have a lot experience playing soccer, she’s just a naturally gifted athlete. She also has the mindset of whatever she puts her mind to that she can accomplish.”
Miller is still learning the ropes on the soccer pitch. But her background in basketball – including her vision, spacing and movement – has given her an edge. Aside from her natural talent, her upbeat energy and positive attitude have also elevated the team.“She kind of knows just how to see the field and take that basketball perspective and put it into soccer in a way … she’s really good at finding her teammates and getting those balls to her teammates, but then also she definitely knows when to take it yourself and make those shots,” said Regina senior Alison Brandt. “She just really brings that positive aspect to our team, and it’s been really great.”In her lone season with the team, Miller’s mindset is clear – leave it all on the field and do whatever it takes to lift the team. Spearheaded by 10 seniors, Miller believes the Regals have what it takes to make a deep postseason push.“I’d say our goal is definitely to make it as far as we can in postseason and keep working hard and win as many games as we can,” Miller said. “We have a lot of talent on our team, and I think that we can do good in the postseason, so I think that is definitely our goal.”
Marc Ray is the high school sports reporter for the Iowa City Press-Citizen. He can be reached at MARay@gannett.com , and on X, formerly Twitter, at @themarcszn.
College Sports
Former Huntington soccer player wins $500k in MrBeast challenge with Neymar
CAMPINAS, Brazil (WPTA) – Brazil native Higor Barbieri found a passion for soccer early in life. “Like every single Brazilian, I grew up playing soccer on the streets,” Barbieri said. That love for the game eventually led Barbieri on a journey to the United States, where he played college soccer and soon wound up in […]


CAMPINAS, Brazil (WPTA) – Brazil native Higor Barbieri found a passion for soccer early in life.
“Like every single Brazilian, I grew up playing soccer on the streets,” Barbieri said.
That love for the game eventually led Barbieri on a journey to the United States, where he played college soccer and soon wound up in 21Country.
“I went to a junior college and played decently there,” Barbieri said. “Then I got an offer from Huntington University. They gave me a scholarship and I went straight to Huntington,” he said.
After earning his master’s degree in 2024, following three seasons at Huntington, Barbieri thought the competitive thrill and pressure of the game might be behind him, until about two weeks ago.
“I got a message,” Barbieri said. “They were looking for a soccer player who speaks English, and I got selected.”
The message turned out to be a surprise invitation to compete in a MrBeast challenge. The popular YouTube channel, which averages millions of views per video, gives subscribers the chance to win thousands of dollars. This particular opportunity? A head-to-head challenge against world-famous Brazilian soccer star Neymar for a $500,000 prize.
“It was a huge surprise because he’s my favorite player,” Barbieri said. “Out of nowhere, I was sharing the pitch with him and about to challenge him.”
In the end, Barbieri won the goal-scoring competition and took home the $500k.
“I still think I’m living a dream and I don’t think it’s real,” Barbieri said. “It will definitely change my life. I don’t come from a wealthy family. My mom had to work two jobs during my whole childhood, and now I can literally change that and provide a better life for my family.”
All of it, Barbieri says, came thanks not only to luck and MrBeast’s generosity, but also to the skills he gained in 21Country.
“Huntington definitely prepared me for this challenge,” Barbieri said. “It was a great college. They prepared me not just physically and technically, but also mentally. There were a lot of mind games in that challenge, so I’m very grateful to Huntington University.”
To watch the whole challenge, click the link here. The video has over 92 million views and counting.
Copyright 2025 WPTA. All rights reserved.
College Sports
'EA College Football 26' hands
EA Sports After more than a decade without a college football video game, fans couldn’t wait to get their hands on “EA Sports College Football 25” after it launched last summer, making it the best-selling sports video game in history. The follow-up title, “EA Sports College Football 26,” will release July 10, and while there […]


After more than a decade without a college football video game, fans couldn’t wait to get their hands on “EA Sports College Football 25” after it launched last summer, making it the best-selling sports video game in history.
The follow-up title, “EA Sports College Football 26,” will release July 10, and while there is not nearly as much anticipation as last year, fans of the first game had plenty of things they wanted to see improved upon or added for this year’s game. On Thursday, I got a chance to play an early version of the game down at EA’s studios in Orlando, Florida, and spent nearly five hours digging into the new gameplay changes and updates the two major career modes: Dynasty and Road to Glory.
Below you can find a detailed account of my thoughts after some time on the sticks, but the overall feeling I left with was that they had genuinely improved the game — some areas more than others — and built on what was a solid foundation from their first year back making a college football video game.
Gameplay
I think the general takeaway from most folks that played last year’s game was that it was fun, but had room to grow and improve in terms of gameplay. After playing for a few hours (on an early version they promise will get even better), I am pleased to say they certainly made some big strides with the gameplay. It’s smoother, smarter and a few key elements that were lacking last year are much improved this year.
Presentation
EA Sports
We’ll start with presentation where they added a ton of stuff, including some iconic entrances that were missing from the first game — for example, Virginia Tech runs out to “Enter Sandman” and South Carolina has “2001: A Space Odyssey” and “Sandstorm.” The bands play a lot more songs, there are more songs that play over the PA that crowds sing along to, there are more mascots, they added a bunch of turnover celebrations, and teams have more varied and unique runouts that can change depending on how big the game is (with special presentations for night games) — with their real coaches in the front now that (most) coaches are in the game.
Metallica finally visits Virginia Tech’s Lane Stadium on tour, sets off Richter scale for ‘Enter Sandman’
Robby Kalland
Anyone that played the first game a bunch noticed that a lot of things were repetitive, and it certainly seems like that will be less of the case this year.
Defense
I’m shocked to be talking to you about defense because I have never really enjoyed playing video game football defense, largely because I’ve been terrible at anything other than line play. I have been a staunch “offensive coordinator mode” user of this game for a very long time, allowing super sim to handle the defense.
However, the two hours I played on this game were genuinely enjoyable and I felt defense was far more intuitive and less frantic than in the past. Physics-based tackling, which debuted in “Madden 25,” has come to EA CFB 26 and makes for a much better experience, as it’s been tuned really well to be a smoother function. Hit sticks are far less of a crap shoot, you can trip guys up and big defenders bring down small guys easier and small defenders struggle to bring down big guys.
I’m still not great in space (skill issue, not game issue), but they also have a new block shedding feature I loved that allows you to move a lineman with your left stick movement when engaged as a defender and still have an impact as both a pass rusher and run defender. They also have the option to choose different line stunts for every play in the playbook, allowing you to customize each play to throw some new wrinkles at the offensive line.
Running the dang ball
EA Sports
The weak point of last year’s game was running the football. I can’t tell you how many times I got mad because I’d be following my guard through a hole and he wouldn’t even consider blocking the safety in front of him and just run down field aimlessly and I’d get tackled. I’m thrilled to inform you that doesn’t happen anymore. The new blocking engine is fantastic and your linemen will make the right reads and right decisions within the scheme you’re running. That, plus the physics-based engine that means your big back can run through arm tackles by a DB means long runs that were nearly impossible to create between the tackles are now very much in play.
CPU AI improvements
The game is smarter than last year, which makes for a good challenge. Defenses will disguise blitzes and coverages until right before the snap, and they read tendencies much better than they used to. If you’re running inside zone a bunch, they might start going to an under front to take away that double team with the center and guard and slow you down. If you keep throwing drag routes and underneath stuff, they’ll adapt and try to take that away. This happens much faster the higher level you go, with Heisman mode being a very legitimate challenge — but one I didn’t find impossible — that will force you to vary not only your play calling, but where you’re going with the football on those plays.
Road to Glory
I think the game mode that felt the most vanilla last year was Road to Glory, and the big news for the mode this year is that they heard the complaints about starting in college and brought back the high school portion of the game. Not only that, they made it a legitimate recruiting process, which I found fun (and frustrating) to play. You once again pick your star level to start at, which impacts your attributes and ratings, but you have to try and maintain or improve on that star rating with your play on the field and get the offers you want — which was not easy.
I did a quick run through the high school portion starting as a 3-star QB and dropped to a 2-star. As a Dynasty guy mainly, I still am not used to the Road to Glory camera angle (even zoomed out), which played a role, but also, they do a good job of giving you the high school experience where both you aren’t that great and your teammates can be even worse. While frustrating throwing good passes that got dropped, it also made it feel real and made the successes even more fun.
The quick breakdown of the recruiting process is you pick 10 schools to be in your top 10 and play five weeks of a high school season. For each school you can see their depth chart and where you project, their other recruits on their recruiting board, the team’s coaching style and scheme fit for your archetype and more. From there, you have a “tape score” that you earn points toward with your play by hitting your goals, with some goals getting boosts for certain teams. You can also get a challenge goal from a specific team that can give you a big boost with that school.
Instead of playing full games, you pick four moments from a list before each game to play that have a basic goal worth 50 points and a bigger goal worth 200 or more. The better you do in hitting goals on those four drives you get each game, the more interested schools will get and once you meet their threshold, you’ll get a scholarship offer. You can commit at any time, but as you keep playing, if you do better, you can get more incentives and boosts to skills if you sign with that team as part of your offer — this feels like their way of doing NIL without NIL. However, if you play poorly you can lose incentives, and if they sign another player at your position the tape score threshold could jump up and you might lose your offer.
Finally, you narrow your list to a top three and get to do a hat ceremony if you haven’t already committed, and in the hat ceremony you can fake out a team and throw a hat off the table. That was pretty enjoyable.
EA Sports
I didn’t get any farther than that as we had limited time and I wanted to see as much of the game as I could, but I will say this portion of Road to Glory was quite fun and felt like being on the other side of Dynasty mode. We’ll have to see if they did enough to make the in-college portion more enjoyable and have more variance, but this was a much better starting spot for the mode.
Dynasty
Dynasty was the mode I spent the most time in, as did most folks who played the game, and for the most part they kept the main elements the same, which is a positive in my eyes. Their main focus on Dynasty this year seemed to be improving the user experience and providing more customization options so you can get an even deeper experience if you want it.
The big updates for recruiting that I could see were changes to the presentation of the recruiting board, most notably your team needs being at the top of the board rather than a separate page you have to toggle in and out of, which was a huge improvement. There is also more information in the main recruiting board screen, like where a prospect is in the process (top eight, top five, top three), a red dot when they’re ready for a visit and green and red flags for when you’ve moved up or down on their list. All of it allows you to see more information without having to go in and out of each recruit’s name and toggle through the various screens.
The other big change to recruiting is the time cost for scheduling visits is now no longer 40 hours for every recruit, but instead varies based on their proximity to your school and your pipelines. That allows small schools with fewer recruiting hours to more easily recruit local prospects, because a kid in your backyard only costs 10 or 15 hours instead of 40.
The trophy room is back along with rivalry trophies, bowl trophies and real awards — so, Doak Walker Award instead of Best Running Back — which is another element that makes the game feel more real.
Another interesting thing is the game and coaching carousel feels a little more lively with the actual coaches in the game. Not only are most of the 136 head coaches in the game, but a lot of real coordinators are as well. That means they all have attributes, traits and coaching levels (which now go above 50), which are fun to parse through, and you can choose to start your career as one of those coaches and pick up all of their skills from the jump. It’s also funny seeing things in the Staff Moves page like Dabo Swinney going to the NFL, which happened at the end of the first year of my quick Dynasty play through.
From a customization stand point, some things that didn’t quite make it into last year’s game that they wanted to add but weren’t able to get functioning properly for launch are in this year’s edition. Big ones include formation subs, protected rivalry games for custom conferences and being able to sim to any week of the season. In general, players are given more tools to customize the experience across the board, whether you want to have more or less control.
There’s also a change to wear-and-tear to expand it from a single game thing to an element that players carry with them over the course of a full season and career. That makes managing player usage even more challenging, but if you’re getting fed up with injuries happening too often you can also customize wear-and-tear impacts for various hit types with sliders.
Overall, it feels a lot like last year, with just a bit more going on and a better user interface. To me, that’s a win, because I enjoyed Dynasty mode in 25 and will be ready to sink some more hours into this one.
College Sports
U.S. U
ATLANTA – The U.S. Under-20 Men’s National Team will continue its preparation for the FIFA U-20 World Cup with an international camp from June 2-10 in Cairo, Egypt. Head coach Marko Mitrović’s 22-player squad will play Colombia on June 7 and face Egypt on June 10. Players born on or after Jan. 1, 2005 are age-eligible […]


ATLANTA – The U.S. Under-20 Men’s National Team will continue its preparation for the FIFA U-20 World Cup with an international camp from June 2-10 in Cairo, Egypt. Head coach Marko Mitrović’s 22-player squad will play Colombia on June 7 and face Egypt on June 10.
Players born on or after Jan. 1, 2005 are age-eligible for this year’s FIFA U-20 World Cup, set for Sept. 27-Oct. 19 in Chile. For this training camp, Mitrović called up 14 players born in 2005, six born in 2006 and two born in 2007.
Originally called up for the U-19 MNT’s camp in Marbella, Spain next week, defender Luca Bombino and forward Zavier Gozo will now join the U-20 MNT for the matches against Colombia and Egypt.
A total of 14 Major League Soccer clubs are represented on the roster, led by two players from Atlanta United. Six players are based abroad, with two plying the trade in Spain and one each coming Denmark, England, Germany and Portugal.
U-20 MNT ROSTER – JUNE TRAINING CAMP (CLUB; HOMETOWN)
Goalkeepers (2): Gavin Beavers (Brondby/DEN; Henderson, Nev.), Diego Kochen (FC Barcelona/ESP; Miramar, Fla.)
Defenders (8): Matai Akinmboni (Bournemouth/ENG; Upper Marlboro, Md.), Reed Baker-Whiting (Seattle Sounders; Seattle, Wash.), Luca Bombino (San Diego FC; Saugus, Calif.), Noah Cobb (Atlanta United; Chattanooga, Tenn.), Tate Johnson (Vancouver Whitecaps/CAN; Tampa, Fla.), Ethan Kohler (Werder Bremen/GER; Campbell, Calif.), Nolan Norris (FC Dallas; Fort Worth, Texas), Francis Westfield (Philadelphia Union; Philadelphia, Pa.)
Midfielders (6): Matthew Corcoran (Nashville SC; Dallas, Texas), Benjamin Cremaschi (Inter Miami; Key Biscayne, Fla.), Taha Habroune (Columbus Crew; Columbus, Ohio), Sergio Oregel Jr. (Chicago Fire; Chicago, Ill.), Brooklyn Raines (Houston Dynamo; Chicago, Ill.), Pedro Soma (FC Barcelona/ESP; Coconut Creek, Fla.)
Forwards (6): Luke Brennan (Atlanta United; Atlanta, Ga.), Kristian Fletcher (D.C. United; Bowie, Md.), Zavier Gozo (Real Salt Lake; Eagle Mountain, Utah), Peyton Miller (New England Revolution; Unionville, Conn.), Serge Ngoma Jr. (New York Red Bulls; North Plainfield, N.J.), Marcos Zambrano (Vitoria Guimaraes/POR; Gladwyne, Pa.)
LAST TIME OUT
Fourteen players return from the U-20 MNT’s March training camp in L’Albir, Spain where they defeated Mexico 3-0 and drew with 1-1 with Japan. The U.S. took control of the match against Mexico early thanks to a Luke Brennan goal three minutes into the match. Kristian Fletcher notched a brace to complete the scoring for the USA. Against Japan, the U.S. went down 1-0 in the first half but battled back to earn a 1-1 draw.
TICKET PUNCHED
Ten players on the June camp roster helped the USA secure its U-20 World Cup berth with a runner-up showing at the 2024 Concacaf U-20 Championship in Mexico: Luca Bombino, Noah Cobb, Zavier Gozo, Taha Habroune, Ethan Kohler, Nolan Norris, Sergio Oregel Jr., Brooklyn Raines, Pedro Soma and Marco Zombrano.
EXPERIENCE ON THE WORLD STAGE
A number of players already have represented the United States on some of the game’s biggest stages. Three players were a part of the U.S. roster at the 2023 FIFA U-17 World Cup in Indonesia, leading the squad to the knockout stage before a narrow defeat to eventual champion Germany: Matthew Corcoran, Habroune, and Soma.
In addition, three players helped the U.S. finish fourth at the 2023 PanAmerican Games, the USA’s best showing at the tournament since 1999: Norris, Oregel Jr. and Raines.
ADDITIONAL NOTES
- Midfielder Benjamin Cremaschi appeared in 20 of Inter Miami’s 23 games to start the season in MLS and the Concacaf Champions Cup, starting both legs of the club’s 4-0 aggregate victory against Cavalier FC in the Round of 16.
- Defender Francis Westfield has started in 13 of the Philadelphia Union’s 15 regular-season matches in 2025, notching a goal and an assist.
- After five training camps in 2024 for the 2005 age group, this is the third of 2025. Three players have appeared in all eight camps: Habroune, Kohler and Norris.
College Sports
Kirsty MacGregor to Join Women's Soccer Coaching Staff as Assistant
Story Links ADRIAN, Mich. — Adrian College Athletics is proud to announce the hiring of Kirsty MacGregor as the new Assistant Women’s Soccer Coach. MacGregor joins the Bulldogs and Head Coach Nathan Kronewetter‘s staff with a dynamic blend of collegiate playing experience and a growing coaching portfolio that positions her as a rising talent in the world […]


ADRIAN, Mich. — Adrian College Athletics is proud to announce the hiring of Kirsty MacGregor as the new Assistant Women’s Soccer Coach.
MacGregor joins the Bulldogs and Head Coach Nathan Kronewetter‘s staff with a dynamic blend of collegiate playing experience and a growing coaching portfolio that positions her as a rising talent in the world of collegiate athletics.
Originally from the United Kingdom, MacGregor brings a global lens to the program, having excelled both academically and athletically at Grace College, where she played on the Women’s Soccer team. Academically, MacGregor recently completed a dual degree—a Master of Business Administration (MBA) and a Bachelor of Science in Exercise Science with a focus on Nutrition and Fitness.
MacGregor’s coaching journey includes roles with Warsaw Wave U10s and U15s, where she has demonstrated a strong commitment to player development, sportsmanship, and leadership. Beyond coaching, MacGregor’s experience spans business and wellness, including a summer internship with DSM-Firmenich and research collaborations with the Grace College Center for Movement and Wellbeing. She also has certificates in Level 1 Soccer Coaching (UK), United Soccer Coaches 7v7, and in Social-Behavioral-Educational CITI Program. These experiences have enhanced her abilities in leadership, team-work, communication, and time management—assets she plans to bring to the Adrian College athletic and women’s soccer community.
MacGregor will begin to embark on her journey with Adrian College Women’s Soccer beginning next week.
College Sports
19 Colgan High athletes sign to play college sports
Aaliyah Thrash (sitting) will play basketball at Marymount University. Submitted photo Ariel Andrews (sitting) will play soccer at Bridgewater College. Submitted photo Bree Bridges (sitting) will play soccer at Syracuse University. Submitted photo Chloe Nelson (sitting) will play soccer at James Madison University. Submitted photo Corinne Orlando (sitting) will play field hockey at Roanoke College. […]

Aaliyah Thrash (sitting) will play basketball at Marymount University.
Ariel Andrews (sitting) will play soccer at Bridgewater College.
Bree Bridges (sitting) will play soccer at Syracuse University.
Chloe Nelson (sitting) will play soccer at James Madison University.
Corinne Orlando (sitting) will play field hockey at Roanoke College.
Elizabeth Yeboah-Kodie (sitting) will run track at Princeton University.
Ethan Riggle (sitting) will swim and dive at the Indiana University of Pennsylvania.
Hanah Sistrunk (sitting) will swim at the U. S. Air Force Academy.
Jared Mitchell (sitting) will cheer at Liberty University.
Jesse Owen (sitting) will cheer at James Madison University.
Jordyn Hern (sitting) will play softball at Longwood University.
Larry Copeland (sitting) will run track at the California University of Pennsylvania.
Malaci Duke (sitting) will run track at Marymount University.
Mariah Barksdale (sitting) will play basketball at Olive-Harvey College (Chicago, Ill.).
Matt Jensen (sitting) will swim at The College of New Jersey.
Mauli Hartford (sitting) will run track at Rutgers University.
Riley Owen (sitting) will cheer at James Madison University.
Sean O’Loughlin (sitting) will run track at the University of Lynchburg.
Skylar Johnson (sitting) will play volleyball at Virginia State University.
College Sports
Girls Academy club membership and conference alignment revealed for 2025
The Girls Academy has announced its club membership and conference alignment for the 2025-26 youth soccer season. Over 120 member clubs will be participating in the GA next season, spread across 12 total conferences and divisions across the country. Two of the conferences – the Midwest Conference and Mid-Atlantic Conference – will be split into […]


The Girls Academy has announced its club membership and conference alignment for the 2025-26 youth soccer season.
Over 120 member clubs will be participating in the GA next season, spread across 12 total conferences and divisions across the country. Two of the conferences – the Midwest Conference and Mid-Atlantic Conference – will be split into two divisions each. The Midwest will include and East Division and a West Division, while the Mid-Atlantic will be split into North and South.
See below for a look at the full breakdown of Girls Academy conferences. To view the conference map, click here.
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