College Sports
Men’s golf opens NESCAC championship at Taconic Golf Club on April 25
Story Links 2025 NESCAC Men’s Golf Championship Central Live Scoring The Hamilton College Continentals travel to Taconic Golf Club in Williamstown, Mass., for the 2025 New England Small College Athletic Conference (NESCAC) Men’s Golf Championship, which begins on Friday, […]

The Hamilton College Continentals travel to Taconic Golf Club in Williamstown, Mass., for the 2025 New England Small College Athletic Conference (NESCAC) Men’s Golf Championship, which begins on Friday, April 25 at 11 a.m.
Williams College is the host of the 54-hole event that concludes on Sunday, April 27. The winner earns the conference’s automatic bid to the NCAA Division III championship.
Please click HERE for the Championship Central page, which includes a preview, information about how to buy championship gear and a complete list of tee times. Links for live scoring, championship records, past champions and much more are also available.
The first Hamilton player tees off at 12:40 p.m. on Friday. The Continentals have won four NESCAC titles — most recently in 2022 on their own Yahnundasis Golf Club course. Ramon Aroca Gonzalez ’26, who is ranked 33rd in NCAA Division III, leads Hamilton with a 72.12 stroke average for 18 holes. Brian Healy ’25 (76.27) and Will Whittaker ’25 (76.36) are playing in their last NESCAC championship.
College Sports
University of California, Los Angeles, Athletics
The UCLA gymnastics program announced the promotion of BJ Das from assistant coach to associate head coach. Das has been on the coaching staff since 2020 and has helped the Bruins earn three conference titles in the last three seasons, along with a 2025 NCAA runner-up finish. Das has been instrumental in the Bruins maintaining […]

Das has been instrumental in the Bruins maintaining their status as the best floor team in the nation. A professional dancer and choreographer, Das has choreographed two NCAA Championship floor exercise routines (Brooklyn Moors in 2025 and Jordan Chiles in 2023), four conference championship routines (Chae Campbell and Pauline Tratz in 2021 and Moors and Chiles in 2025) and seven routines that have scored perfect 10s (Gracie Kramer in 2020; Campbell in 2022 and 2024; Chiles in 2022, 2023 and 2025; and Moors in 2025). Das has also created multiple floor exercise routines that have gone viral, including two routines from Nia Dennis that each amassed over 11 million views just on X alone.
UCLA has finished the year ranked No. 1 in the nation on floor in three of Das’ six seasons as Bruin coach (2025, 2023 and 2020), and the Bruins will enter the 2026 season having scored 49+ in a school record 52 consecutive meets. Das’ floor squads have produced the school’s fourth-ranked floor score of all-time (49.800 twice in 2025 and once in 2020), the Big Ten’s highest floor score ever in a conference meet (49.800 at the 2025 Big Ten Championships), and UCLA’s highest-ever postseason floor score (49.7125 at the 2023 NCAA Semifinals).
“I am so excited to announce BJ’s promotion to Associate Head Coach,” said The R.C. Rothman UCLA Head Gymnastics Coach Janelle McDonald. “The dedication, passion and creativity that BJ brings to the gym each and every day helps instill a confidence and competitive belief in our student-athletes that can be seen and felt on and off the competition floor. She inspires us all to be authentically ourselves and to bring both art and joy into our process. This promotion is well-earned, and we are excited to see BJ continue impact our team and create more Bruin Magic in this role!”
Das first came to UCLA in 2020 as a volunteer assistant coach and has been an assistant coach since the 2023 season. In 2023, she was honored by the WCGA as the West Region Co-Assistant Coach of the Year. Also that season, the UCLA coaching staff was selected College Gym News’ Coaching Staff of the Year. Prior to joining the UCLA staff, Das was the volunteer assistant coach and choreographer at the University of Utah in 2019, when the Utes ranked in the Top 5 in the nation on floor exercise.
As a professional dancer, Das has performed live with Beyoncé, P!nk and Usher and toured with Avril Lavigne. Her music video credits include Beyoncé’s “Run the World (Girls)”, Ariana Grande’s “Baby I” and Justin Bieber/Nicki Minaj’s “Beauty and a Beat”. Das has also performed live at the 2019 Grammy Awards, the 2018 American Music Awards and on the “Ellen Show”, “The Voice” and “Late Show with James Corden”, among others. Additionally, she has choreographed for TV shows “GLOW”, “Fresh Off the Boat” and “The Masked Singer”, along with the Emmy Awards and Radio Disney Music Awards. She also served as an assistant choreographer for the Gold Over America Tour in 2021 and 2024. Her first Hollywood experience was as a gymnast on the movie “Stick It”.
Das earned her Bachelor’s degree in psychology from the University of Washington in 2006. She competed on the Husky gymnastics team for two years.
College Sports
DeSean Jackson compares college football to NFL free agency
Former NFL star DeSean Jackson is a few months from his first season as a head coach at HBCU Delaware State, but he’s already dealing with the way NIL is changing college football. “This process has been different for me. The reason why I say this, is I have some players coming in my office […]

Former NFL star DeSean Jackson is a few months from his first season as a head coach at HBCU Delaware State, but he’s already dealing with the way NIL is changing college football.
“This process has been different for me. The reason why I say this, is I have some players coming in my office asking like ‘coach, I want this amount of money and I’m going to the highest bidder,” Jackson said in a recent interview on the Up and Adams Show with Kay Adams.
The now 39-year-old former Cal Bears receiver tried to put himself in his players’ shoes, but he had a tough time.
“If I would have went into Nick Saban and Pete Carroll’s office back then and been like ‘I want this and I want that — they would have looked at me like you better get out of here.”
Yes, Jackson admits this is a different era.
“I honestly look at this era now as free agency. It’s almost like an NFL system. It’s like a farm system to the NFL,” Jackson said. “The NCAA, they’re going to have to figure this out. There’s no (salary) cap on it. Some schools are going to be able to pay these guys millions of dollars. And then some schools like us we don’t really have the resources — HBCU or black college — we don’t really have the resources to compete with Oregon or Alabama or al these other schools and we’re a Division I school.”
Jackson says that despite the lack of resources, he’s happy with the results he’s gotten at Delaware State. He says much of that is due to the relationships that he has.
“I may not be able to offer a million dollars. I may be able to offer $20k in NIL, but my name may be able to make up the rest of that money.”
DeSean Jackson is hosting a megacamp on June 7 that will feature former NFL star and Miami Hurricanes legend Clinton Portis. He also revealed that talks are on-going between Delaware State, Norfolk State and the Philadelphia Eagles to move the DSU-NSU game featuring Jackson coaching against Michael Vick.
“It may be a different date. We’re trying to work on a date,” Jackson said. “It may be Oct. 30. We’re trying to get that at Lincoln Financial Field. We’re trying to get that at the Eagles’ stadium.”
Jackson said that things are going great on Delaware State’s end and that they are waiting on Norfolk State to accept. No announcements have been made, though.
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College Sports
Holy Redeemer celebrates Class of 2025
Graduates stand and wait to turn their tassels to the left. Margaret Roarty | Times Leader Valedictorian Cole Taylor Bradley gives the farewell address. Margaret Roarty | Times Leader Graduates are seated during the ceremony. Margaret Roarty | Times Leader […]


Graduates stand and wait to turn their tassels to the left.
Margaret Roarty | Times Leader

Valedictorian Cole Taylor Bradley gives the farewell address.
Margaret Roarty | Times Leader

Graduates are seated during the ceremony.
Margaret Roarty | Times Leader

Bishop of Scranton Joseph Bambera offers closing remarks.
Margaret Roarty | Times Leader

Graduate Allison Frances Van Pelt sings the National Anthem.
Margaret Roarty | Times Leader

Graduates toss their caps in the air following their commencement ceremony.
Margaret Roarty | Times Leader
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WILKES-BARRE — Holy Redeemer High School celebrated is 18th annual commencement ceremony Wednesday at the F.M. Kirby Center for Performing Arts.
Graduates merited over $34,000,000 in scholarships and awards, with 89% of students planning to matriculate to colleges or universities.
Valedictorian Cole Taylor Bradley and Salutatorian Jenna Ann Pipan served as speakers, along with Rev. Philbert Takyi-Nketiah, Superintendent Kristen Donohue and Bishop of Scranton Joseph Bambera.
For more details on the ceremony, along with a full list of graduates, be sure to check out the Times Leader’s upcoming special graduation section.
College Sports
Huskies To Face BYU In Hall of Fame Series Boston
SPRINGFIELD, Mass. – The Naismith Basketball Hall of Fame announced on Thursday (May 29) that the UConn men’s basketball team will take part in the Hall of Fame Series Boston. The Huskies will take on BYU, a projected preseason top-10 team, at the TD Garden on Saturday, Nov. 15. The Huskies will return to the […]

SPRINGFIELD, Mass. – The Naismith Basketball Hall of Fame announced on Thursday (May 29) that the UConn men’s basketball team will take part in the Hall of Fame Series Boston. The Huskies will take on BYU, a projected preseason top-10 team, at the TD Garden on Saturday, Nov. 15.
The Huskies will return to the Hall of Fame Series for the second-straight season, taking down Gonzaga in the Hall of Fame Series New York on Dec. 14, 2024. Connecticut will also play in the Hall of Fame exhibition game for the second-consecutive campaign, taking on Boston College on Oct. 13.
UConn and BYU have squared off on the hardwood only once before. That meeting came in the First Round of the 2003 NCAA Tournament, when fifth-seeded Connecticut tipped 12-seed BYU by a score of 58-53. The Huskies were led by 20 points and eight rebounds from Emeka Okafor, while the Cougars got a game-high 21 points from Travis Hansen.
The return to the TD Garden for the Huskies will be their first appearance in Boston since the 2024 East Regional. UConn blew past San Diego State, 82-52, in the Sweet 16 then knocked off Illinois by a score of 77-52 in the Elite Eight in a win that included the historic 30-0 run. The Huskies last played a regular season game at the TD Garden on Dec. 1, 2007 against Gonzaga in The Hartford Hall of Fame Showcase.
Both teams appear as preseason top-10 teams in the ‘way-too-early’ polls for 2025-26. The Huskies return All-Conference performers Alex Karaban, a Massachusetts native, and Solo Ball along with BIG EAST Sixth Man of the Year Tarris Reed Jr. while welcoming in top-ranked classes both out of high school and the portal. BYU figures to be led by top returning scorer and First Team All-Big 12 pick Richie Saunders, No. 1 overall recruit A.J. Dybantsa and impact transfer Rob Wright III.
The BYU game is the latest domino in UConn’s usual non-conference gauntlet. Other announced matchups include home games with both Arizona (Nov. 19) and Texas (Dec. 12). Additional games will be announced in the coming weeks and months.
College Sports
Duluth East students qualify for national history competition – Duluth News Tribune
DULUTH — East High School students who qualified for the National History Day Contest showed off their projects Wednesday afternoon as part of a fundraiser for their upcoming trip to the competition. Every year, an estimated half-million students participate in History Day, a nationwide competition centered on the gathering and presentation of historical research. Only […]

DULUTH — East High School students who qualified for the National History Day Contest showed off their projects Wednesday afternoon as part of a fundraiser for their upcoming trip to the competition.
Every year, an estimated half-million students participate in History Day, a nationwide competition centered on the gathering and presentation of historical research. Only about 3,000 of the students make it to the national contest, hosted just outside Washington, D.C., at the University of Maryland. Four students from East will make the trip to College Park, Maryland, after earning top honors at the
Minnesota State History Day Contest.
“These students, they’ve prepared throughout the year with their projects,” said Catherine Nachbar, an East history teacher and adviser for the school’s History Day club. “It’s fantastic work that they’ve done. … Some of them have very emotional connections — through family members or their own experiences — to their projects this year, and that’s just been a very cool thing to see.”
Each year, participating students are given a theme to build their projects around. This year’s focus is on “Rights & Responsibilities” throughout history.
There are five categories: papers, performances, exhibits, documentaries and websites. During the contest, students are divided into junior sections for middle schoolers and a senior group for high school students. Excluding the research paper category, students also have the option to compete in group or individual categories.
Over 19,000 students began working on a history project this year across Minnesota, said Nachbar, though not all went on to the competition. Twelve East students entered the regional contest this year, and 10 moved on to state, hosted at the Minneapolis Convention Center on April 27. There, two individual projects and one group project from East qualified for the national contest June 8-12.
At each stage of the competition, students go through several rounds of judging and an interview. Using a rubric, judges look at alignment with that year’s theme, evaluate students’ understanding of their topic, and consider project presentation and student research. Only the top two projects at the state competition advance to nationals. This year, over 1,000 students competed in Minnesota’s state History Day competition. Across all categories and sections this year, 59 students from Minnesota qualified for the national competition.
“It’s a big deal on your resume,” said Nachbar. “It’s like a less than 1% chance to make it to nationals, when you look at the numbers. Just to go and compete is amazing, but for those students who go and place at the national level, it’s really something else.”
Margaret Johnson, a junior, placed second at nationals last year with a webpage she designed on the American Indian Religious Freedom Act of 1978. This year, she’ll be returning to College Park, Maryland, after taking first place at state, once again competing in the individual web page category.

Contributed / Duluth East High School
Johnson’s project this year focused on the history of mining and logging in the Boundary Waters Canoe Area Wilderness, with a detailed look at the impact of the Boundary Waters Wilderness Act of 1978.
“Prior to that act, there was a lot of pollution from logging and mining industries,” said Johnson. “But then the passage of that act banned mining and logging and other destructive things in the wilderness, and that made it a lot healthier and improved the lake water quality so that people, then, and today, and for future generations, would be able to hike and canoe in the wilderness without worrying about activities that would degrade the water quality and environment.”
Part of what students are judged on, Johnson explained, is their ability to demonstrate the short- and long-term effects of their research topics. Her project ties the 1978 legislation to current disputes around mining and logging near the Boundary Waters — something Johnson, an avid camper, is passionate about.
“I’ve really loved working on this, being involved in History Day has been such a great experience for me,” she said. “It’s helped me so much with research skills and writing and just talking to people. There’s so many connections that I’ve made because of History Day, and I’ll just forever be grateful for all the people that I’ve met. I had a great time in D.C. last year and I’m so excited to be going back.”
Johnson will be joined at nationals by sophomore Lyla Ronkainen and fellow juniors Analise George and Anja Erickson. Ronkainen took first place at state in the senior research paper category for her analysis of Wisconsin v. Yoder, a 1971 Supreme Court case that ruled in favor of religious exemptions to Wisconsin’s mandatory school attendance laws.

Contributed / Duluth East High School
George and Erickson also took first place in the group documentary category, with their film focused on mental health patients’ rights and the changes in how patients have been treated throughout history. Centered on President John F. Kennedy’s Community Mental Health Act of 1963, their documentary walks through the defunding of mental health programming under Ronald Reagan in the 1980s and the current ramifications those legislative repeals have for mental health patients.
Part of the motivation for their project came from the experiences of George’s great-grandmother, Erickson said, who was institutionalized in Minnesota.
“During that time, things like electric shock therapy were still used. It could all be pretty traumatic,” Erickson said. “We wanted to make sure that her voice could be heard, and that’s when we chose this format, versus something like a paper where it wouldn’t necessarily be her words and story as much.”

Contributed / Duluth East High School
A newcomer to History Day, Erickson didn’t have much experience with putting together a documentary, and neither did George. The project came with a pretty steep learning curve for both girls, said Erickson, but it’s also been really rewarding.
“It’s made me think more deeply about the way that we treat mental illness today in America,” said Erickson. “It’s not really something that has presented itself to me before, so I’ve never really taken the time to learn about it. And I think that’s one of the really cool things about History Day, is that you’re kind of forced to educate yourself more on something that maybe you wouldn’t have thought about before.”
All three projects were on display during the fundraiser at the Karpeles Manuscript Library Museum, with visitors able to stop in and check out History Day presentations and view the regular exhibits. It’s the third year the museum has hosted the fundraiser, with help from museum director Matt Sjelin, a former student of Nachbar’s.
“The mission of Karpeles is to inspire creativity and encourage learning, and so helping out with this is just such a good fit,” said Sjelin. “It’s a wonderful space, and it gives students the opportunity to show off the work they’ve been doing. It’s a great thing to be able to do for the community, and for Mrs. Nachbar.”
The National History Day contest is in its 51st year, but it’s possible the longstanding program could be going through some changes in the near future, due to recent funding cuts.
In early April, the Trump administration terminated a record number of grants from the
National Endowment for the Humanities.
Included in the canceled grants was $336,000 worth of funding to the
National History Day
program.
“The messaging that we’ve received from National History Day is that it is a substantial loss, and they are doing crowdfunding to gain back some of those funds,” said Sammi Jo Papas, head of National History Day in Minnesota. “The national contest this year will happen as planned … but beyond that, we have not received an update about what other funding opportunities they’re looking at.”
In some states, History Day is supported by funding from the NEH, but in Minnesota, the program is sponsored by the state historical society. The program operates on state support, donations and endowments for education, putting it in a relatively safe position after the recent cuts.
For the nationwide program and states that rely on state funding, Papas said there is likely going to be a discussion on how best to proceed during the board meeting that coincides with the national contest.
“Some of our other affiliates that also receive funding from NEH are also kind of looking to get through the national contest and then figuring out what things look like from there,” said Papas.
“We’re very fortunate. We have a solid level of support statewide, and a lot of that comes from our community and our teachers. It’s through their dedication that we’re able to have a successful program the way we do here.”
College Sports
Inside Gymnastics Magazine | United States National Team member, Ashlee Sullivan, commits to UCLA
“Everything happens for a reason” is what United States National Team member Ashlee Sullivan would tell herself at the beginning of her college recruitment journey. “I truly think what’s meant for you will come and just staying true to yourself and true to what you’re wanting,” Sullivan said. “I think everything happens for a reason, […]

“Everything happens for a reason” is what United States National Team member Ashlee Sullivan would tell herself at the beginning of her college recruitment journey. “I truly think what’s meant for you will come and just staying true to yourself and true to what you’re wanting,” Sullivan said. “I think everything happens for a reason, and where you’re meant to be will happen. I should even tell eight-year-old Ashlee that. I feel like it’s something that you learn later in life.”
In early May, Sullivan announced her commitment to UCLA after previously being committed to the University of Michigan. Sullivan will become a Bruin this fall, joining an already stacked freshman class, which includes fellow U.S. National Team members Nola Matthews and Tiana Sumanasekera. UCLA head coach Janelle McDonald is excited by Sullivan’s addition.
“We are excited to welcome Ashlee to Westwood,” said McDonald in a press release. “She has a world class skill set with dynamic, beautiful and exciting gymnastics that she is bringing to the team. Ashlee is an incredibly determined, hard worker who brings positive energy and passion into all she does. That enthusiasm and work ethic will fit right into the team culture we have built and the goals we have. I see Ashlee making an immediate all-around impact for us this coming season, and I am so excited for her to join our Bruin Family this fall.”
Sullivan matches the excitement that McDonald possesses. The legacy of UCLA gymnastics, the Olympics taking place there in 2028 and her future teammates attracted Sullivan to UCLA.
“The environment that they’ve been able to cultivate, I truly think it’s something special, and something that I feel like I can make my mark on and add to the culture and to the team,” Sullivan said. “I’m just so grateful for this opportunity. Who gets to say that they’ve had some of these universities reaching out to you and being able to choose where you think is best at your own free will. I think it’s definitely a very big moment in my life, and I’m embracing everything that’s going to come along with it.”
While the staff and location are all major perks of competing at UCLA, the group of athletes Sullivan will enter UCLA with thrills her the most.
“I could not express to you how much love I have for each and every one of them,” Sullivan said. “I’ve known them for quite a bit of time, and they’re just such amazing people that can build something, and not to mention, their gymnastics is phenomenal. So I’m very excited to go be a part of them, not only in the gym, but in the classroom and in the dorms.”
During Sullivan’s Sophomore year, she will be joined by her fellow Metroplex teammates Zoey Molomo and Michelle Pineda. Knowing that some of her current best friends will soon join her takes some of the sadness out of leaving Metroplex.
“Oh my gosh, I keep telling her [Molomo], like, you can’t get rid of me, I’m just so excited for her,” Sullivan said. “It’s a confidence booster, kind of knowing the girls that Janelle is recruiting and the staff is recruiting are such great powerhouses in gymnastics, but also have that team culture that we’re looking for to help cultivate. Whenever I was crying at my senior stuff, being like, ‘Oh, I’m going away,’ they’re like, ‘not for long, we’re gonna join you.”
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