College Sports
Michigan State’s Isaac Howard named USA Hockey’s college player of the year
EAST LANSING, Mich. – The accolades keep rolling in for rising senior Isaac Howard following a historic 2024-25 campaign, who was announced as the recipient of USA Hockey’s Jim Johannson College Player of the Year award on Tuesday. Howard is the fourth Spartan to earn this distinction, following in the footsteps of Jeff Lerg (2007), […]

EAST LANSING, Mich. – The accolades keep rolling in for rising senior Isaac Howard following a historic 2024-25 campaign, who was announced as the recipient of USA Hockey’s Jim Johannson College Player of the Year award on Tuesday. Howard is the fourth Spartan to earn this distinction, following in the footsteps of Jeff Lerg (2007), Ryan Miller (2001), and Mike York (1999). He’ll be officially recognized during the USA Hockey President’s Award Dinner on Friday, June 6 in Denver.
Howard previously became the program’s third all-time recipient of the Hobey Baker Memorial Award after delivering a career-best 26 goals and 52 points across Michigan State’s 37 games. He ranked first nationally in points per game (1.41), was third in goals per game (0.70), and finished No. 23 in assists per game (0.70). In addition to being named a First Team AHCA All-American, Howard earned Big Ten Player of the Year, Big Ten Tournament Most Outstanding Player, and First Team All-B1G.
The Jim Johannson College Player of the Year award was first established in 1994 and recognizes the accomplishments of the top American-born player in NCAA Division I men’s college hockey. In 2019, the award was renamed in honor of Johannson, who won a national championship while playing at the University of Wisconsin and spent two decades as an executive at USA Hockey.
Howard is fresh off a gold medal at the 2025 IIHF Men’s World Championships in Stockholm, Sweden. The Hudson, Wis. native was named to the U.S. Hockey Men’s National Team in April, contributing an assist across four appearances in pool play in addition to an assist in an exhibition against Germany. Alongside Michigan State head coach Adam Nightingale, who served as an assistant coach on Team USA, the pair helped the United States bring home its first gold medal at the World Championships since 1933.
Subscribe to our News 10 newsletter and YouTube page to receive the latest local news and weather. Looking to hire people, or grow your business through advertising? Gray Digital Media is your one-stop marketing solution. Learn more.
Copyright 2025 WILX. All rights reserved.
College Sports
Stanley Cup Final: Panthers, Oilers break out into major brawl amid Florida’s 6-1 win
The Florida Panthers took a 2-1 series lead with a 6-1 win over the Edmonton Oilers in Game 3 of the Stanley Cup Final on Monday night. However, the blowout result came with some additional entertainment halfway through the third period, when a major brawl broke out between the two teams involving all 10 players […]

The Florida Panthers took a 2-1 series lead with a 6-1 win over the Edmonton Oilers in Game 3 of the Stanley Cup Final on Monday night.
However, the blowout result came with some additional entertainment halfway through the third period, when a major brawl broke out between the two teams involving all 10 players on the ice.
Advertisement
The melee appeared to begin with 9:33 remaining in the third period when Oilers center Trent Frederic cross-checked the Panthers’ Sam Bennett, breaking his stick in the process. Florida’s A.J. Greer and Edmonton’s Mattias Ekholm then mixed it up, followed by the Panthers’ Nate Schmidt and Oilers’ Connor Brown sparring. Defensemen Dmitry Kulikov and left winger Viktor Arvidsson also joined in fisticuffs.
However, the true standouts of this battle were Panthers winger Jonah Gadjovich and Oilers defenseman Darnell Nurse. Neither of these combatants went to the ice as they kept hold of the other’s neck and sweater, locked in a violent dance, looking for an opening to land a punch.
Plenty of overhands and uppercuts were landed by each player as the Panthers fans cheered. Yet rather than try to separate Gadjovich and Nurse, officials let the fighters tire each other out until they couldn’t manage any more punches.
Advertisement
After tensions settled and play resumed with a 5-on-4 Florida power play, Gadjovich, Nurse, Greer, Bennett, Ekholm and Frederic were each given 10-minute misconduct penalties, removing them from the remainder of the game. Edmonton’s Evander Kane was also issued a 10-minute misconduct for slashing Carter Verhaeghe — after he was slashed by the Oilers’ Evan Bouchard.
Yet the fighting wasn’t finished. Edmonton’s John Klingberg and Florida’s Matthew Tkachuk went at it from there, with Jake Walman joining in to help his Oilers teammate. That resulted in Walman drawing roughing and unsportsmanlike conduct penalties, which ended his night and gave Florida a 5-on-3 power play. But not before the Oilers’ Kasperi Kapanen and Panthers’ Eetu Luostarinen also mixed it up.
The Panthers scored on the 5-on-3 to boost their lead to 6-1.
Advertisement
If the Oilers were hoping to take out some frustrations on Florida and try to intimidate them for the remainder of the series, that doesn’t appear to have worked at all. Edmonton also tried to start a fight at the end of the first period with the Panthers already ahead 2-0.
Again, that tactic accomplished nothing for the Oilers. Trying to out-tough the Panthers failed and made Edmonton looked outmatched.
Brad Marchand, Sam Reinhart, Aaron Ekblad, Evan Rodrigues, Verhaeghe and Bennett scored for Florida. On the Oilers’ side, Corey Perry scored the lone goal.
Game 4 of the Stanley Cup Final is scheduled for Thursday at 8 p.m. ET. Will there be more fisticuffs or did both teams get all of that fighting out of their systems? Perhaps the Oilers will also remember that they’re supposed to be playing for a championship.
College Sports
How Mount’s Christian Semetsis became a high-end skater
Christian Semetsis broke out with Mount St. Charles this past winter. (Brian Kelly/NEHJ) Day 1 of the U.S. National Team Development Program’s Evaluation Camp in March was a practice session, scheduled before a grueling run of games over the next four days, which helped decide the final U-17 roster. The 40 players invited were split […]


Christian Semetsis broke out with Mount St. Charles this past winter. (Brian Kelly/NEHJ)
Day 1 of the U.S. National Team Development Program’s Evaluation Camp in March was a practice session, scheduled before a grueling run of games over the next four days, which helped decide the final U-17 roster. The 40 players invited were split into groups of forwards and defensemen. Members of the latter started blasting shots from the point, eager to prove themselves in the biggest job interviews of their lives.
Then there was Christian Semetsis.
“Barely lifting the puck off the ice,” he said.
The left shot from Mount St. Charles was nursing a particularly nasty sprained left wrist he’d suffered in the Northeast Pack playoffs in February when he arrived in Plymouth, Mich. It was killing him. His shot wasn’t the only problem — he couldn’t hit anybody, either, and even the push-ups during off-ice training sessions hurt.
College Sports
NC State Football’s Corey Coley Jr. Denied Bid to Play Fifth Season
A federal judge has denied NC State cornerback Corey Coley Jr.’s attempt to play a fifth season of Division I , reasoning that NCAA eligibility rules aren’t subject to antitrust scrutiny and that even if antitrust law applied Coley’s bid would be nixed. In an order issued last Friday, U.S. District Judge James C. Dever […]

A federal judge has denied NC State cornerback Corey Coley Jr.’s attempt to play a fifth season of Division I , reasoning that NCAA eligibility rules aren’t subject to antitrust scrutiny and that even if antitrust law applied Coley’s bid would be nixed.
In an order issued last Friday, U.S. District Judge James C. Dever III sided with the NCAA and rejected Coley’s motion for a preliminary injunction.
Coley is part of a growing group of college athletes who seek to extend their NCAA eligibility on account of NIL opportunities. This group has experienced mixed results in different courts across the country. As Sportico explained, the newly approved House settlement will make staying in school even more enticing given that some athletes will receive shares of revenue.
Coley, who played at Trinity Christian Academy in Jacksonville, Fla., began his college career in 2021 by enrolling at the University of Maryland. Coley expected to redshirt in his freshman year, which would have made him eligible to play through the 2025 season. However, injuries in the Terrapins’ secondary elevated Coley on the depth chart and into the lineup.
Coley played three years at Maryland, during which he battled a knee injury. In 2023, Coley learned of the death of his uncle, who had played a “vital role” in his life. According to Coley’s complaint, the death had a profound and devastating impact on the young player. “Being far away from home made Coley’s grief from this death almost unbearable,” the complaint asserted, “and left him feeling isolated, helpless, distracted and unmotivated, which again, affected his performance both on and off the field.”
Coley transferred to NC State for his senior year. However, the season didn’t go as planned. Coley said he “endured mental health struggles” and suffered a season-ending injury in his sixth game of the season.
Coley and NC State applied to the NCAA for a hardship waiver, which if granted would have made Coley eligible this fall. The application cited Coley’s “collective struggles, both mentally and physically, through his collegiate career.” In February, the NCAA denied the application. Coley, who expects to earn his degree from NC State by the end of 2025, then sued the NCAA.
Like other athletes, Coley argues that the NCAA restricting eligibility to four seasons in five years violates antitrust law. He asserts that by denying his eligibility, the NCAA will deprive him of “substantial NIL compensation.”
Coley’s case is based in part on an expansive interpretation of the U.S. Supreme Court’s decision in NCAA v. Alston (2021). Although Alston is often linked by media to name, image and likeness, which derives from the right of publicity, NIL didn’t appear once in the ruling. That’s because the case concerned an altogether different topic: the compatibility of NCAA rules regarding education-related expenses with antitrust law. Alston clarified that NCAA compensation rules are subject to ordinary—and not deferential—scrutiny under antitrust law.
Coley, and others, argue that Alston makes NCAA eligibility rules subject to ordinary antitrust scrutiny—and that eligibility rules illegally restrain the labor market of D-I college football players. That interpretation of Alston has helped Vanderbilt quarterback Diego Pavia and Rutgers safety Jett Elad thus far succeed in their cases against the NCAA to keep playing. But judges reviewing other eligibility cases have rejected this interpretation as construing Alston beyond its actual words.
Dever endorsed a more literal interpretation of Alston. He wrote that Alston tackled NCAA rules regarding education-related benefits, but that those rules reflect only a “narrow subset” of compensation rules.
The judge added that the relationship between NCAA eligibility and the ability to sign NIL deals does not convert eligibility rules into compensation rules. He cited cases holding for the proposition that eligibility rules aren’t subject to antitrust scrutiny, which governs commercial dealings. Eligibility rules fundamentally concern which college students can play a sport in accordance with academic and other university objectives.
Dever also suggested that if NCAA eligibility rules violated antitrust law because they restrain NIL opportunities, that would “compel” a “nonsensical outcome.” The judge reasoned that there are numerous NCAA rules that “could potentially affect a player’s ability to earn NIL compensation” and that could be deemed violative of antitrust law under Coley’s test. Those rules concern such topics subject as:
- Minimum academic requirements.
- Prohibition of the use of illegal drugs.
- Prohibition of sports wagering.
- Disciplinary proceedings that could result in suspension or expulsion.
- Ethical standards.
Dever also criticized the evidence presented by Coley regarding whether the eligibility rules have a sufficiently anticompetitive effect on the labor market of D-I football players to run afoul of antitrust law. The evidence presented concerned Coley’s NIL earning potential but said “nothing about a substantial anticompetitive effect on the labor market as a whole.” The judge added that “anecdotal experiences” of college football players do not rise to the level of evidence needed.
The denial of a preliminary injunction does not end the case. However, given that litigation can take months or longer and given that Coley wants to play this fall, Dever’s ruling deals a major blow to Coley’s chances to be eligible for the 2025 season. The cornerback can appeal Dever’s order to the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit.
In a written statement, an NCAA spokesperson said the NCAA “appreciates that the court’s ruling will allow the litigation to proceed its normal course, and we are confident that the underlying rationale for the rules and benefits to current and future student-athletes will be evident.” The spokesperson also said that, in the NCAA’s view, “the rules for years of eligibility, along with other rules, are designed to help ensure competition is safe and fair, aligning collegiate academic and athletic careers to provide high-level opportunities and benefits to current and upcoming student-athletes.”
College Sports
2-time Olympian Jordan Chiles shows up courtside for Valkyries-Sparks OT thriller
The post 2-time Olympian Jordan Chiles shows up courtside for Valkyries-Sparks OT thriller appeared first on ClutchPoints. The energy at Crypto.com Arena was already electric on Monday night, but the crowd buzzed louder when two-time Olympic gold medalist Jordan Chiles took her seat courtside. The WNBA delivered one of its most thrilling games of the […]

The post 2-time Olympian Jordan Chiles shows up courtside for Valkyries-Sparks OT thriller appeared first on ClutchPoints.
The energy at Crypto.com Arena was already electric on Monday night, but the crowd buzzed louder when two-time Olympic gold medalist Jordan Chiles took her seat courtside. The WNBA delivered one of its most thrilling games of the season, and Chiles was there for every moment.
The Golden State Valkyries pulled off a dramatic 89-81 overtime win over the Los Angeles Sparks. Janelle Salaun led the Valkyries with 21 points and 8 rebounds, while Kayla Thornton drilled a clutch three-pointer with 38 seconds left in the extra period. The Sparks had their own firepower with Kelsey Plum dropping 24 points, but it was not enough to hold off Golden State’s late surge.
Advertisement
This game marked a critical point in the season series. The Valkyries now lead 2-1 over the Sparks, continuing their strong form after victories on opening night and today. With both teams battling for playoff positioning, the intensity on the floor was matched by the energy in the stands.
Sitting just a few feet from the court, Jordan Chiles soaked it all in. Known for her electric floor routines and steady presence on the U.S. gymnastics team, Chiles brought her champion spirit into the basketball arena.
She smiled, waved at fans, and stood up during key plays, clearly locked into the action. Her appearance sent a powerful message about the rise of women’s sports and the respect athletes across disciplines have for one another.
Chiles is no stranger to pressure or big stages. She helped Team USA win silver in Tokyo and followed it up with a gold medal performance in Paris in the team competition. Outside of Olympic glory, she has competed at the highest levels in NCAA gymnastics for UCLA, becoming a fan favorite and a role model for young athletes across the country.
Advertisement
Her presence at the game was more than a photo opportunity, it was a show of support that spoke volumes. As women’s basketball continues to grow in viewership and influence, the support of figures like Chiles helps push it further into the spotlight. It reminds fans and fellow athletes that excellence, commitment, and excitement exist in every corner of sport.
The game itself was a showcase of that excellence. It was fast, physical, emotional, and unpredictable. Every possession mattered. Every shot had weight. Jordan Chiles was right there for it all, her presence amplifying the moment and reminding everyone that greatness always recognizes greatness.
Related: Week 3 WNBA power rankings: Lynx, Liberty soar as others struggle to launch
Related: Top contenders in WNBA Commissioner’s Cup race
College Sports
Inside Gymnastics Magazine | “It was always Oklahoma for me.” OU’s Elle Mueller Reflects and Looks Forward
Oklahoma’s Elle Mueller put on a SHOW every time she stepped on the floor during her freshman debut. Her musical interpretation, storytelling, larger-than-life choreography, and performance quality were stellar—creative, artistic, passionate—and it seems she’s got the college game very much in the palm of her hand. The choreography and the music, “You Don’t Own Me” […]

Oklahoma’s Elle Mueller put on a SHOW every time she stepped on the floor during her freshman debut. Her musical interpretation, storytelling, larger-than-life choreography, and performance quality were stellar—creative, artistic, passionate—and it seems she’s got the college game very much in the palm of her hand.
The choreography and the music, “You Don’t Own Me” performed by Harley Quinn, suited Mueller perfectly. And together with OU head coach KJ Kindler, who gave her the confidence to embrace every note of music and perform, Mueller, like many of us, isn’t quite ready to let this routine go.
“I guess I need to start looking for new music!” she told us.
The routine was the one she’s waited for her entire career so far to perform, she said. So it’s totally understandable that while she’s excited to top it, she’ll always remember it as very special, beginning with the first moments she worked with Kindler to create it and discovering a different side of herself as an artist.
“Going back to Twin City Twisters, we had a dance coach that we would work with two, three times a week, and she was super chill. She would just bring out different dances in us, have us work on our facial expressions,” Mueller said. “I think that opened me up to the artistry.
“You’ve always seen KJ’s floor routines, and you’re like, ‘Oh, my gosh, I want one of my own!’ Just seeing her embody that character and who she wanted me to be allowed me to perform it. I embodied Harley Quinn because that’s where my music is from. It’s a routine style I’ve always wanted to do, so I took the chance and ran with it.”
Having her teammates just feet away and living every step of the routine with her week after week brought Mueller joy and confidence. Along the way, she grew from rookie to veteran overnight.
“It was incredible,” Mueller said of her teammates’ support during her routine and throughout the season. “It really allowed me to get into my routine more and just do it for them because those are the people that I’m doing it for. You no longer do it for yourself; you do it for your team. That just gave me a little reminder of just how much support I really have.”
Described by Aly Raisman on air as “breathtaking,” our photographer, Lloyd Smith, captured Mueller’s routine during Four On the Floor, where she once again captivated the audience—her teammates included.
See below for more of our chat with Mueller following the NCAA Championships in April, where OU took its seventh national title.
College Sports
College football's top RB rooms
Outstanding seasons from Philadelphia’s Saquon Barkley and Baltimore’s Derrick Henry sparked discussion about the “return of running backs” during the 2024 NFL season. While there has long been an existential crisis surrounding the position at the pro level, the importance of running backs has remained steady in college football. They might not win the Heisman […]

Outstanding seasons from Philadelphia’s Saquon Barkley and Baltimore’s Derrick Henry sparked discussion about the “return of running backs” during the 2024 NFL season. While there has long been an existential crisis surrounding the position at the pro level, the importance of running backs has remained steady in college football.
They might not win the Heisman Trophy as often as they used to — thanks to the rise of passing offenses — but the position remains essential. If you look at the best teams in the country each year, you might find a team without an elite quarterback. Nearly all of them, however, have stars at running back.
So, which teams have the best running back rooms heading into the 2025 season? Considering all that, it should come as no surprise that the list is made up almost entirely of teams hoping to make noise in the postseason.
Last year, I listed Penn State as an Honorable Mention and received plenty of heat for it. Consider this an apology of sorts to Nittany Lions fans. Both Nicholas Singleton and Kaytron Allen eclipsed 1,000 yards last season, leading Penn State on a run to the College Football Playoff semifinals.
Both had the chance to leave for the NFL following the season but opted to return to make another run at a Big Ten and national title with the Nittany Lions. Their presence is one of the primary reasons so many are high on Penn State entering the season.
Speaking of things I caught heat for: last year I also said Notre Dame running back Jeremiyah Love was the best running back in the country at a time when Ashton Jeanty was en route to a second-place finish in the Heisman race. I stand by it still. He wasn’t the same workhorse in the Notre Dame offense because he didn’t have to be, but it’s his skill and talent that excite me so much. If you don’t believe me, ask Google.
The reason Love doesn’t need to be a workhorse is because the Irish have Jadarian Price, who rushed for 746 yards and seven touchdowns last season. They also share the load with Aneyas Williams and Kedren Young, who both impressed as freshmen last season. It’s a deep and talented room. The room may be too deep to allow Love to garner serious Heisman consideration, but I still won’t rule it out.
A couple of weeks ago, on the Cover 3 Podcast, we were trying to figure out who the Group of Five Star would be now that Ashton Jeanty was gone. The first name that came to my mind was Tulane running back Makhi Hughes, only to remember Hughes had transferred to Oregon. Such is life as a G5 program these days, but their loss is Oregon’s gain!
Hughes rushed for 1,401 yards and 15 touchdowns last year and looked impossible to tackle at times. He’ll now be the head Duck at the RB spot, but he’ll be spelled by Noah Whittington (540 and 6) and Da’Jaun Riggs.
I originally had Texas third, but knocked them down a spot due to the uncertainty surrounding C.J. Baxter. Baxter missed all of last season after tearing the LCL and PCL in his right knee, and while I’m anticipating he should be fully healthy this year, you never truly know how a knee injury will heal until you see it in action.
That said, Baxter is extremely talented and could prove to be the best back in the country. The beauty for Texas is, even if he’s capable of it, he doesn’t have to be because the Longhorns still have Quintrevion Wisner (1,064 yards rushing and 5 TD) and Jerrick Gibson (377 yards and 4 TD), who gained a lot of snaps following Baxter’s injury last year. There are a lot of good options in Austin.
Louisville is the only team in my top five I don’t consider a title contender, but I do believe the Cardinals are a sneaky playoff option — in part because of what should be an outstanding run game. At this time last year, I couldn’t have told you much about Isaac Brown, and why would I? He was a three-star freshman, checking in at 5’9 and 180 pounds. It did not take long to notice him on the field, though!
Brown rushed for 1,168 yards last year, averaging 7.1 yards per clip. And that wasn’t even the highest YPC on the team, as his backup, Duke Watson, averaged 8.9. This is an explosive duo capable of housing it from anywhere, making the Louisville offense dangerous. In an ACC with plenty of question marks outside Clemson and maybe Miami, these two could help lead the Cards to an outstanding season.
Honorable Mention
- Georgia (Nate Frazier, Josh McCray, Roderick Robinson, Cash Jones)
- Minnesota (Darius Taylor, A.J. Turner, Cam Davis)
- Oklahoma (Jaydn Ott, Jovantae Barnes, Xavier Robinson)
- Texas A&M (Le’Veon Moss, Amari Daniels, Rueben Owens, EJ Smith)
-
Professional Sports3 weeks ago
Jon Jones answers UFC retirement speculation as fans accuse champion of 'holding the belt …
-
Motorsports3 weeks ago
Why IHOP Rode With Dale Earnhardt Jr. In Amazon NASCAR Debut
-
NIL2 weeks ago
2025 NCAA Softball Tournament Bracket: Women’s College World Series bracket, schedule set
-
Health5 days ago
Oregon track star wages legal battle against trans athlete policy after medal ceremony protest
-
College Sports1 week ago
IU basketball recruiting
-
Professional Sports5 days ago
'I asked Anderson privately'… UFC legend retells secret sparring session between Jon Jones …
-
Youtube3 weeks ago
Ant greets A-Rod & Barry Bonds before Game 3
-
Rec Sports2 weeks ago
J.W. Craft: Investing in Community Through Sports
-
Rec Sports2 weeks ago
Scott Barker named to lead CCS basketball • SSentinel.com
-
Professional Sports5 days ago
UFC 316 star storms out of Media Day when asked about bitter feud with Rampage Jackson