College Sports
Men's Soccer Releases 2025 Schedule
Story Links SAN FRANCISCO, Calif. – Head coach Chris Brown and the University of San Francisco men’s soccer program officially released its schedule for the upcoming 2025 season today. “We’re eager to kick off the 2025 season with a roster full of talented and determined student-athletes – both returning and new,” said Brown. “After a […]


SAN FRANCISCO, Calif. – Head coach Chris Brown and the University of San Francisco men’s soccer program officially released its schedule for the upcoming 2025 season today.
“We’re eager to kick off the 2025 season with a roster full of talented and determined student-athletes – both returning and new,” said Brown. “After a strong second place finish last year, the team is hungry to take the next step. Every single game on our schedule will be a battle, and we’re ready to embrace the challenge. We’re excited to defend Negoesco Stadium and continue to build our reputation as a tough team to visit in the WCC. We believe our demanding nonconference slate will prepare us for another competitive conference season. We hope to see everyone out at Negoesco this coming fall!”
Brown enters his fifth season at the helm of the green and gold after finishing 7-6-4 (5-1-2 WCC) in 2024. Notably, San Francisco’s conference record helped the Dons secure a second-place finish in the WCC, the highest finish in the conference for the program since the Dons won the WCC title in 2017.
Notably, San Francisco returns offensive firepower in WCC All-Conference Second Team selections Isaiah Easley (4 goals) and David Raphael (4 goals) as well as WCC All-Freshman Team selection Brayden Beason (5 goals).
The 2025 schedule features 19 total matches – two exhibitions, eight home matches and eleven road matches. Beginning against local opponents, San Francisco will start their new season with an exhibition at Stanford on Aug. 10 before returning home to the Hilltop to take on San José State in an exhibition at Negoesco Stadium on Aug. 16. Following the matchup with the Spartans, San Francisco will host UC Davis in its regular season opener on Aug. 21.
Shortly thereafter, USF will travel to Big Ten champion Indiana for a matchup in Bloomington on Aug. 24 before returning to the Bay Area for a battle at California on Aug. 28.
Moving into September, San Francisco will welcome CSU Bakersfield for a Labor Day showdown on Sept. 1. Subsequently, the Dons then head back out on the road for matches at San José State (Sept. 4) and Cal Poly (Sept. 11). Across the next three weeks, the green and gold will host Sacramento State on Sept. 15 followed by their West Coast Conference opener against Oregon State in San Francisco on Sept. 27.
Looking at October, San Francisco will begin the month on the road at San Diego on Oct. 4 before squaring off against Gonzaga at home on Oct. 10. USF will then remain in Northern California for road matches at Pacific (Oct. 15), Santa Clara (Oct. 19) and Stanford (Oct. 22). Closing out the month, LMU treks to the Hilltop for an afternoon matinee on Oct. 26.
Wrapping up the year, San Francisco will play at Portland on Nov. 1 prior to hosting their final regular season home match on Nov. 8 against Saint Mary’s. Finally, USF will conclude with a road match at new conference member Seattle U on Nov. 14.
The full 2025 San Francisco men’s soccer schedule can be viewed here. Tickets for San Francisco men’s soccer are now also on sale and available to purchase here. Season ticket packages are available and include all home matches for both men’s and women’s soccer. Please contact the San Francisco Athletics Ticket Office at (415) 422-2873 or usftickets@usfca.edu to purchase season ticket packages.
For updates and more information on the San Francisco men’s soccer program, be sure to follow @USFDonsMSoccer on Twitter, @USFDonsMenssoccer on Instagram and @USFDonsMSoccer on Facebook.
The University of San Francisco Athletics Department would like to acknowledge and thank our sponsor – Bauer’s IT – for their continued support of San Francisco Athletics. Interested in sponsoring the Dons? Please contact Frank Allocco, the Executive Senior Associate Athletics Director of External Relations, at fallocco@usfca.edu or at (415) 422-4561.
College Sports
Hockey Canada trial live updates: Judge does not find complainant’s evidence ‘either credible or reliable’
By Katie Strang and Dan Robson All five defense teams were given the chance to put forth final reply submissions and focused on a variety of aspects of the case. David Humphrey, attorney for McLeod, argued that the Crown was manipulating evidence, distorting the timeline and jettisoning arguments that were inconsistent with their arguments. Riaz […]

By Katie Strang and Dan Robson
All five defense teams were given the chance to put forth final reply submissions and focused on a variety of aspects of the case.
David Humphrey, attorney for McLeod, argued that the Crown was manipulating evidence, distorting the timeline and jettisoning arguments that were inconsistent with their arguments.
Riaz Sayani, Hart’s attorney, largely focused on what he argued was the Crown’s misapplications of law, including invoking trauma principles for circular reasoning and “bootstrapping” information to augment their case.
Hilary Dudding, attorney for Formenton, argued that myth-based stereotypes should not be applied to defense arguments, nor for Crown positions. She cautioned the judge against accepting false binary propositions and to instead allow for the possibility that a woman could be enthusiastic and consenting within the environment the defense describes without it being characterized as “bizarre” or “odd.”
Lisa Carnelos, attorney for Dubé, addressed the contact her client had with E.M.’s buttocks, calling it “playful” and arguing that the “Crown has not disproved that she was consenting.”
“It was playful, possibly foreplay,” Carnelos said. “And in no way looked to be harmful or with the intention to be abusive.”
Julianna Greenspan, who represents Foote, took aim at the Crown, criticizing what she said was an earlier suggestion that further evidence exists that was not permitted to be considered in court. Without a jury, those documents are available to the public. “That was a factually wrong and unfair comment to make,” Greenspan said.
She also took issue with a slide shown earlier in the day that indicated there was “no evidence from Callan Foote.” Had this still been a jury trial, Greenspan said, she would have called for mistrial, even at this late stage — calling the slide “illegal.”
“It runs contrary to the Canada Evidence Act, which states failure of the accused to testify shall not be made the subject of comment by counsel for the prosecution,” Greenspan said.
She further suggested that the slide was purposefully included to influence the media.
“Everyone in this courtroom knows the attention in this case has garnered from the media and public,” Greenspan said. ”The Crown, I submit, has throughout this trial been preoccupied with litigating the public opinion through the media. This is an upsetting final example on behalf of my client.”
College Sports
NIL promises made to recruits, now coaches wait for key decision to learn whether they can keep them
LAS VEGAS — Next week, college football coaches can put the recruiting promises they have made to high school seniors on paper. Then the question becomes whether they can keep them. Uncertainty over a key element of the $2.8 billion NCAA antitrust settlement that is reshaping college sports has placed recruiters on a tightrope. They […]

LAS VEGAS — Next week, college football coaches can put the recruiting promises they have made to high school seniors on paper.
Then the question becomes whether they can keep them.
Uncertainty over a key element of the $2.8 billion NCAA antitrust settlement that is reshaping college sports has placed recruiters on a tightrope.
They need clarity about whether the third-party collectives that were closely affiliated with their schools and that ruled name, image, likeness payments over the first four years of the NIL era can be used to exceed the $20.5 million annual cap on what each school can now pay players directly. Or, whether those collectives will simply become a cog in the new system.
Only until that issue is resolved will many coaches know if the offers they’ve made, and that can become official on Aug. 1, will conform to the new rules governing college sports.
“You don’t want to put agreements on the table about things that we might have to claw back,” Ohio State coach Ryan Day explained at this week’s Big Ten media days. “Because that’s not a great look.”
No coach, of course, is going to fess up to making an offer he can’t back up.
“All we can do is be open and honest about what we do know, and be great communicators from that standpoint,” Oregon’s Dan Lanning said.
Aug. 1 is key because it marks the day football programs can start sending written offers for scholarships to high school prospects starting their senior year.
This process essentially replaces what used to be the signing of a national letter of intent. It symbolizes the changes taking hold in a new era in which players aren’t just signing for a scholarship, but for a paycheck, too.
Paying them is not a straightforward business. Among the gray areas comes from guidance issued earlier this month by the newly formed College Sports Commission in charge of enforcing rules involved with paying players, both through the $20.5 million revenue share with schools and through third-party collectives.
The CSC is in charge of clearing all third-party deals worth $600 or more.
It created uncertainty earlier this month when it announced, in essence, that the collectives did not have a “valid business purpose.” if their only reason to exist was ultimately to pay players. Lawyers for the players barked back and said that is what a collective was always met to be, and if it sells a product for a profit, it qualifies as legit.
The parties are working on a compromise, but if they don’t reach one they will take this in front of a judge to decide.
With Aug. 1 coming up fast, oaches are eager to lock in commitments they’ve spent months, sometimes years, locking down from high school recruits.
“Recruiting never shuts off, so we do need clarity as soon as we can,” Buckeyes athletic director Ross Bjork said. “The sooner we can have clarity, the better. I think the term ‘collective’ has obviously taken on a life of its own. But it’s really not what it’s called, it’s what they do.”
In anticipating the future, some schools have disbanded their collectives while others, such as Ohio State, have brought them in-house. It is all a bit of a gamble. If the agreement that comes out of these negotiations doesn’t restrict collectives, they could be viewed as an easy way to get around the salary cap. Either way, schools eyeing ways for players to earn money outside the cap amid reports that big programs have football rosters worth more than $30 million in terms of overall player payments.
“It’s a lot to catch up, and there’s a lot for coaches and administrators to deal with,” Big Ten Commissioner Tony Petitti said, noting the terms only went into play on July 1. “But I don’t think it’s unusual when you have something this different that there’s going to be some bumps in the road to get to the right place. I think everybody is committed to get there.”
Indiana coach Curt Cignetti, whose program tapped into the transfer portal and NIL to make the most remarkable turnaround in college football last season, acknowledged “the landscape is still changing, changing as we speak today.”
“You’ve got to be light on your feet and nimble,” he said. “At some point, hopefully down the road, this thing will settle down and we’ll have clear rules and regulations on how we operate.”
At stake at Oregon is what is widely regarded as a top-10 recruiting class for a team that finished first in the Big Ten and made the College Football Playoff last year along with three other teams from the league.
“It’s an interpretation that has to be figured out, and anytime there’s a new rule, it’s how does that rule adjust, how does it adapt, how does it change what we have to do here,” Lanning said. “But one thing we’ve been able to do here is — what we say we’ll do, we do.”
College Sports
NBCSN, again? NBCU reportedly eyeing new sports cable network
Nearly four years after shutting down NBCSN, and months after setting in motion the jettisoning of USA Network, Comcast is reportedly eyeing the launch of a new cable sports network to complement Peacock. Comcast-owned NBC Universal is in early discussions on the launch of a potential sports cable network that would carry events that are […]

Nearly four years after shutting down NBCSN, and months after setting in motion the jettisoning of USA Network, Comcast is reportedly eyeing the launch of a new cable sports network to complement Peacock.
Comcast-owned NBC Universal is in early discussions on the launch of a potential sports cable network that would carry events that are streamed exclusively on Peacock, Joe Flint of The Wall Street Journal reported Wednesday. The channel could launch as soon as this fall, ahead of the debut of NBC’s new NBA package.
Per Flint, the intention is not for the channel to compete with Peacock but to complement the streaming service by making its content available to those who are reluctant to leave the cable bundle.
Accordingly, the channel would be only exist on specialty tiers — like the DIRECTV “MySports” bundle launched earlier this year — rather than the basic cable packages that include the likes of ESPN.
The decision to create an entirely new cable network is perhaps a circuitous route to what has become a regular occurrence, the inclusion of direct-to-subscriber streaming services in specialty cable tiers. Peacock itself is already available for no extra fee as part of Charter’s Spectrum TV Select package. ESPN+ is also available to some Charter and DIRECTV subscribers free of charge (and the ESPN direct-to-subscriber app will be as well, though that is fairly redundant given it consists of channels already available through the cable bundle).
Peacock this year is raising its monthly price from $8 to $11/mo ahead of its first season carrying NBA games. The NBA package — which at $2.5 billion/year will cost NBCU more each season than its Sunday Night Football package (at least until the NFL renegotiates, as expected, by the end of this decade) — is perhaps the highest-stakes addition to the streamer’s line-up, given the sheer tonnage of exclusive games (50 per season in the regular season, plus up to 14 in the playoffs).
As previously noted, NBC in 2021 shut down its cable sports channel NBCSN, which originated as the Comcast-owned OLN. NBCSN programming then shifted to USA Network, which Comcast is spinning off into a new company (“Versant”). After that spinoff — which also includes Golf Channel and CNBC, which regularly carry NBC Sports programming — the only cable channel of any kind under the Comcast umbrella will be Bravo.
College Sports
– ESPN 98.1 FM / 850 AM WRUF
Florida Gators gymnast Kaylee Bluffstone is congratulated for her floor exercise. The Florida Gators hosted Iowa State, NC State and LIU at Exactech Arena at The Stephen C O’Connell Center in Gainesville, FL on Friday, March 15, 2024. [Doug Engle/Gainesville Sun] David Lopez […]
Florida Gators gymnast Kaylee Bluffstone is congratulated for her floor exercise. The Florida Gators hosted Iowa State, NC State and LIU at Exactech Arena at The Stephen C O’Connell Center in Gainesville, FL on Friday, March 15, 2024. [Doug Engle/Gainesville Sun]
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College Sports
Sitz Earns Multiple Medals At World University Games
Story Links RHINE-RUHR, Germany (SMU) – SMU men’s swimmer Kristaps Mikelsons and All-American diver Luke Sitz wrapped up their campaigns at the FISU World University Games in Rhine-Ruhr, Germany, on Wednesday. Sitz secured two medals for Team UniUSA. The sophomore earned a bronze medal in the men’s 3-meter springboard, with a score of 429.75 on July 18. […]


RHINE-RUHR, Germany (SMU) – SMU men’s swimmer Kristaps Mikelsons and All-American diver Luke Sitz wrapped up their campaigns at the FISU World University Games in Rhine-Ruhr, Germany, on Wednesday. Sitz secured two medals for Team UniUSA.
The sophomore earned a bronze medal in the men’s 3-meter springboard, with a score of 429.75 on July 18. Breaking a 28-year drought, Sitz’s podium finish was the first medal for Team UniUSA on 3-meter springboard since 1997.
On Wednesday, Sitz picked up another piece of hardware, claiming a silver medal on the men’s synchronized 3-meter springboard. The U.S. pair of Sitz and Indiana University’s Joshua David Sollenberger earned a 380.34 total.
In his final event, Sitz fell just short of medaling in the mixed team (3-meter/10-meter), placing fourth with a 393.50.
Representing Latvia, Mikelsons also competed in Rhine-Ruhr. Mikelsons participated in four individual events: 100m breast, 200m IM, 200m breast and 50m breast.
In the 100m breast, Mikelsons posted a time of 1:02.16. After advancing to the 200m IM semifinals, he registered a time of 2:02.43 to place 15th overall.
The junior touched the wall at 2:16.58 in the 200m breast, leading his heat. Finally, in the 50m breast, Mikelsons recorded a 28.73.
Mikelsons also took part in two relays, finishing in 3:29.62 in the men’s 4x100m free relay and 4:04.29 in the mixed 4x100m medley relay.
College Sports
BYU's Lynette Hernaez
KEY POINTS Veteran BYU goalkeeper Lynette Hernaez is expected to be a pivotal leader on the 2025 women’s soccer squad. Hernaez joined The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints while still a teen in California. Prior to joining the Cougars in Provo, Hernaez served a mission in the Salt Lake area. Pioneers come in […]

KEY POINTS
- Veteran BYU goalkeeper Lynette Hernaez is expected to be a pivotal leader on the 2025 women’s soccer squad.
- Hernaez joined The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints while still a teen in California.
- Prior to joining the Cougars in Provo, Hernaez served a mission in the Salt Lake area.
Pioneers come in all shapes and sizes — and some even wear soccer cleats.
BYU’s veteran goalkeeper Lynette Hernaez can be multi-classified: An elite DI athlete. A returned missionary. A beach-loving California girl. And, most recently, a new bride.
Hernaez is also a pioneer, although it’s doubtful she thinks of herself as one.
But as Latter-day Saint leader President Thomas S. Monson often taught, a pioneer is “one who goes before — to prepare or open the way for others to follow.”
For the past several years, Hernaez has pioneered and blazed her own unexpected personal path — and she’s invited others to follow.
The Corona, California, native is now days away from commencing her junior soccer campaign at BYU.
She was once the “youngster” on the field after being called into service as a freshman for a 2023 Cougar squad that stunned powerhouse North Carolina in the NCAA Tournament and advanced to the Final Four.
But now Hernaez is one of the team’s veterans. She’s expected to be a leader on a squad rostering almost 20 underclassmen.
The young Cougars will likely find confidence in both her steadiness in goal — and by the pioneer-like courage she has demonstrated outside the lines.
“We’re still a young team — and Lynette will have more experience than most,” said BYU soccer coach Jennifer Rockwood. “So we will rely on her … just knowing we have someone in goal that can communicate and organize.”
BYU: A faith-based recruitment
There are myriad reasons why today’s college-bound athletes choose one school over another during their recruitment.
For many, it’s the promise of playing time.
Others are hunting for dollars and big NIL payments.
And some student-athletes are likely selecting schools that will advance their professional careers once their playing days are over.
But Hernaez’s decision to become a Cougar is a bit unusual.
“I was taught by missionaries for The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints a few years ago — and they inspired me to come to BYU,” she noted in her online bio.
Yes, Hernaez was eager to compete for a top-end NCAA program. And yes, she was anxious to lock up a starting spot between the pipes. But soccer, Hernaez told the Deseret News, was always a secondary consideration in selecting BYU.
“It was because of faith. I had a desire to keep learning and growing in my faith — and I felt like I could get that at BYU.”
Given her current connection to all things BYU, it’s surprising that just a few years ago, Hernaez had no clue that the institution was a Latter-day Saint-sponsored school headquartered in Provo.
“I honestly thought it was a school in the South,” she said, laughing.
In fact, she wasn’t even sure what a Latter-day Saint was.
Hernaez grew up in soccer-crazy Southern California, competing for and against some of the country’s best clubs.
In an interview shortly after returning from her mission, Hernaez recalled her church conversion:
During her junior year of high school, Hernaez learned that a close friend and teammate did not play on Sundays for religious reasons. Her friend was a member of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints.
“I told her ‘Oh, that’s cool’ — I had never heard about (the church) before,” recalled Hernaez. “But I didn’t really ask too many questions.”
Later she discovered that several other friends were also Latter-day Saints.
“I had a desire to learn so much more about their religion.”

Soon she was joining them at church activities — but admits feeling initially hesitant about meeting with the full-time missionaries.
“Then after a year of going to all these church activities, I realized how awesome these people were … and that I wanted to be taught more.
“So I asked my friends to introduce me to the missionaries.”
Hernaez initially had questions about the Book of Mormon — but also realized that reading its chapters made her happy. Soon she was noticing improvements in interactions with her family — and positive things were happening at school and in soccer.
“I couldn’t deny what I was feeling and how it was making a big difference in my life.”
Hernaez approached her parents about being baptized. They asked her not to rush her decision and delay joining the church until she turned 18.
“On the day I turned 18,” she said, “I woke up and the first thing I did was call my bishop to schedule my baptism.”
Joy ministering to others
Hernaez committed to play at Washington State University during her sophomore year of high school.
She arrived in Pullman in 2020, just two months after her baptism. She was far from family and friends. “I really had to rely on my faith and make new friends in my new Young Single Adults ward and try and get adjusted to the church.”
She loved her new soccer teammates and school. “But it was also kind of overwhelming because I felt like a new church member that still needed guidance.”
While in Pullman, Hernaez continued meeting with the Latter-day Saint missionaries.
And soon she was inviting others to learn about the church. Her roommate began meeting with the missionaries — and Hernaez joined in the discussions.
“I was now being the teacher instead of one being taught.”
She found joy sharing her faith with others. Stepping away from college soccer for a time to serve a full-time mission seemed the next logical step in her faith journey.
“I decided to take a leap of faith and do it,” she said.
Her full-time mission call soon arrived: The Salt Lake City South Mission — just a short drive from BYU.
Saying goodbye to Washington State
Hernaez remains grateful for a Washington State coaching staff that wanted the best for one of their highly recruited players — even if it meant saying goodbye.
The Cougar coaches in Pullman immediately supported her decision to serve a mission and promised to hold her scholarship at Washington State.
“Then I got a second prompting from Heavenly Father telling me to try for BYU,” said Hernaez.
She spent a week finding the courage to ask her coaches about transferring to Provo.
“My (Washington State) coach told me that I had proven to them that this was about faith — and that I was on a faith journey,” she said. “They wanted to help me.”
The Washington State coaches reached out to Coach Rockwood. The veteran BYU coach was eager to add another talented keeper to her roster.
“I feel very blessed and lucky for that situation,” said Hernaez.
Hernaez was not on Rockwood’s recruit radar — but the coach knew that the goalkeeper was rostered on a high-quality program at Washington State.
“So although I had never watched her play or train, I just felt after talking to Lynette, and listening to her story, that she was someone that we wanted after she served her mission,” said Rockwood.
Missionary service in ‘the 801′
Hernaez, laughing, said she’s always asked about her reaction being called to missionary service so close to BYU. “I was actually very excited to be called to Utah because it was a perfect place for me to keep growing and keep learning.”
Yes, she added, the Beehive State is home to Latter-day Saint headquarters and millions of church members. And she initially thought everyone in Utah “was perfect” and may not require gospel ministering.
“But Heavenly Father wanted me to learn that no one is perfect and that everyone needs the Savior.”
Missionary labor in Salt Lake County also equipped Hernaez with tools that are serving her well now as a third-year Cougar goalkeeper.
“My mission taught me to trust in the Lord, trust in his plan and trust in his timing,” she said, adding that she makes daily efforts to build her relationship with Christ — “because he’s already put in that effort for me.”
She was serving in the Salt Lake area in 2021 when BYU made it to the NCAA finals, so she could not avoid the local soccer buzz — and imaging her own fast-approaching days in a Cougar blue uniform.
Returning to DI play — and trusting the process
After completing her mission and enrolling at BYU, Hernaez began the physical and mental adjustment to again become a DI goalkeeper.
It wasn’t easy.
“My body wasn’t used to getting hit by a ball anymore. It wasn’t used to diving on the ground anymore. For six months, I was covered, head-to-toe, with bruises. I was constantly sore.”
But, once again, mission lessons taught her to trust the process — and to trust in herself. Just weeks into her freshman season she got the starting nod against Baylor.
She battled jitters. “But I remember telling myself, ‘I know what I’m doing. I have played this sport for so long. I remember how to play soccer. I am confident I can do this’.”
BYU defeated Baylor 4-0 — and Hernaez has been the Cougars’ starting goalkeeper ever since.
2025: A goalie’s memorable year
After ending the 2024 campaign with a loss to Santa Clara in the first round of the NCAA tournament, Hernaez and her teammates are eager for a deep run in the Big 12 and NCAA tournaments in 2025.
“I feel very confident going into the season,” she said. “ I’m grateful for the girls that we have right now. This team is super unique. It’s very young — but young players bring energy.
“They’re very excited to come out and play. They are such hard workers who are willing to fight for the ball when they lose it — and then ready to go to goal and score.”
2025 has already proven unforgettable for Hernaez. A few weeks ago she married Mark Bryant, a thrower on the BYU track & field team.
The two met in a BYU training room — and as all good athletes/missionaries know, fortune favors the bold.
“I asked one of his teammates if he could help set Mark and I up. Later on, Mark ended up getting my phone number and asking me out.”
A family studies major, Hernaez plans to eventually become a high school teacher and coach soccer.
But she would jump at a chance to follow several of her former BYU teammates and play in the pro ranks following graduation.
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