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Mack Brown wants rule for athletes stay in school two years before transferring

Former North Carolina head coach Mack Brown is still on board with the NCAA transfer portal, but not the free for all. He wants kids to be in school for two years before opting to look elsewhere. For that to be a rule, you’d have to massively change the process of transferring. Brown argued athletes […]

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Mack Brown wants rule for athletes stay in school two years before transferring

Former North Carolina head coach Mack Brown is still on board with the NCAA transfer portal, but not the free for all. He wants kids to be in school for two years before opting to look elsewhere.

For that to be a rule, you’d have to massively change the process of transferring. Brown argued athletes staying at a school for two years allows them to work into a starting role, finish their basic studies, or do the latter and realize they’ll have a better athletic opportunity elsewhere.

As of now, football players for instance, some can transfer in the winter window but then transfer again roughly three or so months later in the spring window. It’s something Brown isn’t fond of.

“This would be hard, you’ve got to look at it through Congress,” Brown said on Sirius XM. “But I really think kids should stay two years at a school when they get there, because they get mad as a freshman, they want to transfer. And that’s not right. We’re allowing kids not to have to work for something anymore. And if the stat I was given a few years ago, guys, is if you transfer once, you’ve got a 63% chance to graduate, because your classes won’t transfer. We’ve got kids transferring four or five times, they’re not going to graduate, and then they’re not going to get jobs, and then there could be mental health tied to it at the end. 

“We’re not treating some of these kids fairly by allowing them the freedom to transfer anytime they want, and then maybe after that we go back through we had you transfer once, because I like the transfer rule. We had kids that couldn’t play, so if we made a poor decision, the kid couldn’t play, he should have a right to transfer. but you’d like to think, after two years, he’s getting ready to go into his major, he’s gotten rid of all the basic studies. He understands who he is better. He’s got two years, he’s got some film available, it would be easier to transfer up to that after that second year.”

On the surface, Brown’s idea makes some sense in regards to transfers. But, in the event of coaching changes, the can of worms is opened again. Players are free to work elsewhere. 

Having credits transfer over is another difficulty and it could be worse with multiple transfers, but having an athlete stay in a school for two seasons could erase basics from one institution but not another, limiting options.

It’s safe to say Brown isn’t a fan of constant transfers and he’s not alone there. But there will have to be intricate rule changes in order to make this a reality.

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The Hardest Parts are the Unknowns and 'What

The personal story is intended for informational purposes only. The National Blood Clot Alliance (NBCA) holds the rights to all content that appears on its website. The use by another organization or online group of any content on NBCA’s website, including patient stories that appear here, does not imply that NBCA is connected to these […]

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The Hardest Parts are the Unknowns and 'What

The personal story is intended for informational purposes only. The National Blood Clot Alliance (NBCA) holds the rights to all content that appears on its website. The use by another organization or online group of any content on NBCA’s website, including patient stories that appear here, does not imply that NBCA is connected to these other organizations or groups or condones or endorses their work. Please contact
info@stoptheclot.org with questions about this matter.

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A Tick Researcher’s Tips for Staying Safe Outdoors

This story was first published on June 7, 2019 The rise of Lyme disease cases in Pennsylvania has been alarming. There were 10,000 in 2018, and that’s more than in any other state. The illness can cause flu-like symptoms and a rash in its early stages, and if left untreated, more serious health issues like […]

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A Tick Researcher's Tips for Staying Safe Outdoors

This story was first published on June 7, 2019

The rise of Lyme disease cases in Pennsylvania has been alarming. There were 10,000 in 2018, and that’s more than in any other state. The illness can cause flu-like symptoms and a rash in its early stages, and if left untreated, more serious health issues like arthritis and nervous system disorders.

The best way to avoid Lyme disease is to avoid infected ticks which carry the bacteria that causes it.

So, The Allegheny Front’s Kara Holsopple arranged to meet an outdoor enthusiast who is serious about prevention. Jill Henning is an associate professor of biology at the University of Pittsburgh at Johnstown. She loves to be outside, whether she’s hiking with her young son, running, or just sitting on the grass.

Henning met up with Holsopple at the head of one of the trails on the rural campus for a hike, and to talk about preventing tick bites. Henning brought a backpack that belongs to her son. It contains all of the things you need for a hike: snack mix, a rattlesnake guide, a whistle. On the outside are the characters of the latest Avengers movie, and Henning said it was also treated with a product called permethrin.

LISTEN to their conversation


Kara Holsopple: What is permethrin?

Jill Henning: It’s based off of the chrysanthemum flower. It doesn’t necessarily repel ticks. It doesn’t keep them from getting on you. But once they do get on you, it creates something that we scientists like to call hot foot syndrome. So if you think about a human touching stove, you have that reflex to retract. Ticks will get on the clothing [treated] with permethrin, and then climb so far and release themselves. They’ll fall off of you.

KH: So we’re heading out. What would be the first thing you would do to prepare yourself?

JH: There are lots of products available to treat your clothing. I’d recommend permethrin-based products, although you can use essential oils like eucalyptus, lemongrass, thyme, rosemary and lavender.

There’s DEET, which I don’t recommend, only because it’s a known carcinogen.

Yes, ticks are a problem, but I don’t think you should let that bother you to the point where you don’t go outside.

What I do is treat my clothing outside, or spray them in a ventilated area, and then hang them to dry. That lasts for a few washes, so you don’t have to continually treat.

When my son was younger, I used a bandana. I would tie it around him, because I couldn’t treat his clothing. Anyone under three, it isn’t a good idea to use that kind of stuff.

I usually always wear long pants, even if it’s warm.

KH: You’ve got long socks on.

JH: I do, all the way up to my knees. Just in case they get on, the ticks will climb the sock, and it’ll take a little while to get to your skin.

KH: So we’re here at the trailhead. What happens here?

JH: If you’re using something essential oil-based, if you’re using something that you made yourself, there’s a good chance that you should apply it on a more regular basis. So for example, apply it right before you leave, and maybe an hour or so into it.

It’s best to walk in the center of the trail. Ticks like to attach themselves to long grasses, or in the brushy areas.

Actually, when I hike, I use a lavender-based deodorant, because ticks are likely to go to the armpits, the belly button, in between your legs, and behind your knees. It’s just an added layer of protection.

So while you’re hiking,

  • It’s important to know where you’re at, and it’s best to walk in the center of the trail. Ticks like to attach themselves to long grasses, or in the brushy areas.
  • They use the top two legs of their eight legs to sense for carbon dioxide, for their next victim, so to speak. They’ll use those to attach to you as you walk by.
  • Ticks are attracted to carbon dioxide, so the more that you hike, the more that you’re going to respire, and your heart rate will go up. The more CO2 you’re releasing, the better target you are.

KH: What if you’re not walking on a trail, or you have to cross over a meadow? What should you look out for?

JH: So there’s vegetation called Japanese barberry. It’s an invasive species, and that has been known to attract ticks.

The other thing that you need to worry about in a field like this would be the white-footed deer mouse, which is actually where ticks acquire the pathogen from. Their bedding is in places like this.

The best thing to do is just go through the field, make sure that you had your repellents on, and then check yourself for ticks on the other side.

KH: Which tick causes Lyme disease in people?

JH: The tick we’re referring to mostly is the black-legged tick, or its scientific name is Ixodes scapularis. It’s also known as the deer tick. It’s black at the top, and then below that is brown.

The ecology of this particular pathogen is that the deer ticks will lay their eggs on the deer, and they fall off. Then they’ll get into the white-footed deer mouse bedding areas. The larval stages and the nymphal stages will feed on the white-footed deer mouse, and that’s usually where they acquire the bacteria.

So then, that tick will move to a deer as an adult, and that’s where they’ll complete their life cycle. You can see a couple deer trails, if you look right there. You can see where they’ve walked through, because they tend to walk in single file line.

So I would avoid that [deer] path if I were to be hiking here.

KH: Tell me a little bit about your research. I know that you looked at the prevalence of Lyme disease and ticks in Pennsylvania.

JH: Some students from Pitt-Johnstown and I did a study in six counties in the southwestern region of the Game Commission lands here in Pennsylvania, and we found that one in three ticks carry the Lyme pathogen. We are collecting ticks again to redo that study, but what we’re seeing is that it’s holding.

One in three ticks carry the Lyme pathogen.

KH: It’s early June. When are ticks most likely to jump on you?

Laurel Highlands Hiking Trail. Photo: Reid R. Frazier

JH: Now. Between April and September, so the warmer months of the year are typically when you see individuals getting bitten by ticks. Although ticks can bite you at any time of the year.

Because people are out in more force in the warmer months, that’s when they’re more likely to be exposed.

But in the lifecycle of the tick, they can bite you at the nymphal stage, or in the adult stage. The very small nymphs are the ones that are typical typically difficult to see.

In my Avengers backpack, I carry a magnifying glass so that I can see if that’s a mole or if that’s a tick.

KH: What are some of the misconceptions that the public has about ticks and Lyme disease?

JH: I do a lot of community outreach with various different organizations, and one of the questions that I get often that surprises me is that they ask if spiders carry Lyme disease. I think that misconception is because ticks are arachnids, and when people hear the word arachnid, they tend to think “spider.” Spiders are not vectors. They do not transmit Lyme disease.

Individuals will have a flu-like or cold illness, fever, chills, and a little bit of tiredness or muscle pain and soreness.

Another misconception is that most people know that if they’re bitten by a tick, they get the characteristic bull’s eye rash, which is referred to as erythema migrans in medical terminology. But actually, only 70 percent of individuals who are bitten by a tick where that tick happens to transmit the Lyme pathogen will show that particular bull’s eye rash.

So it’s better to think about the symptoms that the body produces, other than that bull’s eye rash. For example, individuals will have a flu-like or cold illness, you’ll have fever, chills, and a little bit of tiredness or muscle pain and soreness. Some people will mistake that as a summer cold.

If you’ve been outside somewhere that you think is a high prevalence area for ticks, you should consider that Lyme disease could be something that’s happening.

KH: So we’re at the end of our hike, and we’re getting into a car or we’re going home. What should we do now?

JH: That’s a great question. A lot of people forget about that part.

If you’re unsure about how to pull the tick out, I would suggest spending the three dollars and buying the tick removal tool.

Yes, ticks are a problem, but I don’t think you should let that bother you to the point where you don’t go outside. There are lots of things that you can do to prevent getting Lyme disease, and even if you do get bitten by a tick, you can easily treat yourself by seeing your primary care physician.

So go outside. Just do it smart.

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Sports psychiatrist explains effect of heckling following incident involving Ketel Marte

PHOENIX (AZFamily) — Earlier this week, Arizona Diamondbacks star Ketel Marte was brought to tears by a heckler who reportedly made comments about his late mother during the team’s game against the Chicago White Sox. According to MLB.com, the spectator made a derogatory remark about Marte’s mother, who passed away in a car accident in […]

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Sports psychiatrist explains effect of heckling following incident involving Ketel Marte

PHOENIX (AZFamily) — Earlier this week, Arizona Diamondbacks star Ketel Marte was brought to tears by a heckler who reportedly made comments about his late mother during the team’s game against the Chicago White Sox.

According to MLB.com, the spectator made a derogatory remark about Marte’s mother, who passed away in a car accident in 2017.

Arizona’s Family spoke to sports psychiatrist Brook Choulet, M.D., about the effects inappropriate comments have on athletes’ mental health. She says this incident is a reminder that athletes are people, too, while viewers may sometimes see them just as performers.

“Because we’re watching them on TV, you forget and you lose touch that they go through a lot of the same things that we go through, stress, anxiety, family challenges. So to see this is such a human display of that person behind the sport,” she said.

D-backs manager Torey Lovullo consoled Marte after the fans’ outburst. Choulet explained this culture shift between coaches and players in today’s game versus years past.

“Before, it’s like suck it up, you know, just move on, focus on next play mentality, and now we’re really seeing coaches treating them as humans, too, beyond their sport,” she explained. “That’s the biggest thing I talk to athletes about is their identity is often tied to their sport. So when we can separate that athlete from the sport and see them and treat them as a person, I love to see that.”

Following the incident, many have shown support for the Diamondbacks and Marte, including the White Sox displaying a sign that read, “Baseball is family. The White Sox community supports Ketel Marte.”

Officials confirmed the heckler was banned from all Major League Baseball stadiums.

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California violated Title IX in transgender athlete clash, Education Department says

WASHINGTON — The Trump administration has found that the California Department of Education and the state’s high school sports federation violated civil rights law by allowing transgender girls to compete on girls sports teams. The federal Education Department announced the finding Wednesday and proposed a resolution that would require California to bar transgender women from women’s sports and strip […]

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California violated Title IX in transgender athlete clash, Education Department says

WASHINGTON — The Trump administration has found that the California Department of Education and the state’s high school sports federation violated civil rights law by allowing transgender girls to compete on girls sports teams.

The federal Education Department announced the finding Wednesday and proposed a resolution that would require California to bar transgender women from women’s sports and strip transgender athletes of records, titles and awards. It’s the latest escalation in the Republican administration’s effort to bar transgender athletes from women’s sports teams nationwide.

If California rejects the proposal, the Education Department could move to terminate the state’s federal education funding.

“The Trump Administration will relentlessly enforce Title IX protections for women and girls, and our findings today make clear that California has failed to adhere to its obligations under federal law,” Education Secretary Linda McMahon said. “The state must swiftly come into compliance with Title IX or face the consequences that follow.”

Title IX is a 1972 law forbidding sex discrimination based in education.

California education and sports officials did not immediately respond to requests for comment Wednesday.

Federal officials opened an investigation into the California Interscholastic Federation in February after the organization said it would abide by a state law allowing athletes to compete on teams consistent with their gender identity. That followed an executive order signed by President Donald Trump that was intended to ban transgender athletes from participating in girls and women’s sports.

In April, McMahon’s department opened an investigation into the California Department of Education over the same issue.

Both investigations concluded that state policies violated Title IX. The administration has been invoking the law in its campaign against transgender athletes, launching scores of investigations into schools, colleges and states. It’s a reversal from the Biden administration, which attempted to expand Title IX to provide protections for transgender students. A federal judge struck down the expansion before Trump took office in January.

The administration’s proposed resolution would require California to notify schools that transgender athletes should be barred from girls athletic teams and that all schools must “adopt biology-based definitions of the words ‘male’ and ‘female.’ ” The state also would have to notify schools that any conflicting interpretation of state law would be considered a violation of Title IX.

Athletes who lost awards, titles or records to transgender athletes would have their honors restored under the proposal, and the state would be required to send personal apology letters to those athletes.

A similar resolution was offered to Maine’s education agency in a separate clash with the administration over transgender athletes. Maine rejected the proposal in April, prompting a Justice Department lawsuit seeking to terminate the state’s federal education funding.

Under federal guidelines, California’s education office and the sports federation have 10 days to come into compliance or risk enforcement action.

The federation separately tested a pilot policy at a state track meet in May, allowing one extra competitor in three events featuring high school junior AB Hernandez, who is transgender. The organization announced the change after Trump took to social medial to criticize Hernandez’s participation. The Justice Department said it would investigate Hernandez’s district and the state to determine whether Title IX was being violated.

The Associated Press’ education coverage receives financial support from multiple private foundations. AP is solely responsible for all content. Find AP’s standards for working with philanthropies, a list of supporters and funded coverage areas at AP.org.



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Florida assault survivor shares hope for change with new mental health law

Governor Ron DeSantis signed Senate Bill 168, the Tristin Murphy Act to tackle mental health issues and prevent crime. JACKSONVILLE, Fla. — A new law signed today by governor Ron Desantis is aimed at tackling mental health issues and preventing crime. Senate Bill 168, also known as the Tristin Murphy Act, will provide counties with […]

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Florida assault survivor shares hope for change with new mental health law

Governor Ron DeSantis signed Senate Bill 168, the Tristin Murphy Act to tackle mental health issues and prevent crime.

JACKSONVILLE, Fla. — A new law signed today by governor Ron Desantis is aimed at tackling mental health issues and preventing crime.

Senate Bill 168, also known as the Tristin Murphy Act, will provide counties with the resources to create mental health programs for certain offenders, instead of sending them straight to jail. 

First Coast News first introduced you to a woman, who is asking to not be identified for safety reasons, back in May.

“It’s one of those scenarios that you never think would happen to you,” she said.

She and her friend were attacked by a man while walking along the Southbank Riverwalk near the friendship fountain.

The man was arrested and police identified him as Talmadge Billingslea Jr. He has a long history of stalking, violence and making racially motivated statements.

The women shared their story in hopes of getting Billingslea and other offenders help.

“He needs mental help and until you solve the base problem, jail is not going to do anything. It doesn’t seem like a solution to me,” the woman said.

Florida lawmakers are now trying to solve this problem.

On Wednesday, the Governor signed Senate bill 168, the Tristin Murphy Act, which allows counties to establish misdemeanor mental health programs and pretrial felony programs to prevent people who are mentally ill from being incarcerated.

“We don’t think putting them in jail is always going to fix those problems, and people need to be held accountable, but you also need to provide support that will address the problem,” said Governor Desantis.

The bill will also require emergency responder training and mental health evaluations for people with a history of incompetency before they are released on probation and return to society.

“I’m hoping that the bill helps them get the help they need and gets off the streets eventually and maybe into getting a job and living on their own. It’s a start and I think that’s great,” said one victim. 

Talmadge Billingslea Jr. is still behind bars with a bond set at $19,000.

He makes his next court appearance on July 8.

RELATED: ‘Is it going to take murder?’: Two Jacksonville women attacked in the middle of the day

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McDonald named volleyball assistant coach

Story Links SLIPPERY ROCK, Pa. – Raquel McDonald will join the Slippery Rock University volleyball program as an assistant coach, head coach Dylan Lasher announced Wednesday. “We’re very excited to have Raquel join our program,” said Lasher. “She will bring a great deal of energy, work ethic and commitment to SRU. Raquel’s passion, successful playing career […]

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SLIPPERY ROCK, Pa. – Raquel McDonald will join the Slippery Rock University volleyball program as an assistant coach, head coach Dylan Lasher announced Wednesday.
 
“We’re very excited to have Raquel join our program,” said Lasher. “She will bring a great deal of energy, work ethic and commitment to SRU. Raquel’s passion, successful playing career and coaching ability will be extremely beneficial to our players, staff and community.”
 
McDonald comes to The Rock after spending two successful seasons on Lasher’s staff at Thiel College.
 
“I’m looking forward to starting this new chapter at Slippery Rock University and am excited for the opportunity to grow, contribute, face challenges and work alongside a great team,” said McDonald. “Let’s get to work!”
 
During her time at Thiel, McDonald assisted in all facets of the volleyball program and helped Lasher turn around the Tomcats’ women’s team that after going just 3-22 in 2023 compiled an impressive 17-9 record in 2024.
 
The 2024 season not only marked the second-highest victory total inside the Thiel women’s program since 2012, The 14-win improvement from 2023 to 2024 was the second-best year-to-year improvement among all 419 NCAA Division III women’s volleyball programs last fall.
 
McDonald was also an assistant for the Thiel men’s program which concluded its 2025 season with a 22-7 record that included a perfect 12-0 showing in the Presidents’ Athletic Conference, a PAC Tournament championship and an NCAA Tournament berth.
 
Prior to embarking on her coaching career, McDonald was a standout middle blocker for Thiel from 2019-22. Over 95 career matches, McDonald totaled 208 blocks, 660 kills and a .247 attack percentage while being named an All-PAC honoree on three occasions in addition to earning a spot on the College Sports Communicators Academic All-America Team as a senior.
 
McDonald, who ranks second in Tomcat program history in career attack percentage and ninth in total blocks, graduated from Thiel with her bachelor’s in cognitive psychology, sociology and criminal justice while minoring in Spanish. She is currently finishing her master’s in special education from SRU. 

Outside of volleyball, McDonald has served as a Behavioral Health Technician at George Junior Republic, taught Spanish at Kennedy Catholic High School and was the Director of Student Services at the William Penn Academy.
 
A native of Syracuse, New York, McDonald officially began her new role at SRU this week.
 
The Slippery Rock volleyball team opens its 2025 season 3 p.m. Sept. 3 against Elizabeth City State University at the Fairmont State Classic.

To stay up to date with all that happens at The Rock, follow our official Athletic Communication accounts on ‘X’ (formerly Twitter, @Rock_Athletics), Facebook (RockAthletics) and Instagram (RockAthletics).

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