College Sports
Middlebury Claims Fifth In LEARFIELD Directors’ Cup
The Panthers finished inside the top-10 of the final LEARFIELD Directors’ Cup Standings for the 20th year in a row. Story Links Middlebury College claimed fifth place in the 2024-25 LEARFIELD Directors’ Cup Final Standings. The Panthers amassed 971.75 points, their most since earning third with 1,000.50 in the 2021-22 campaign. It […]

The Panthers finished inside the top-10 of the final LEARFIELD Directors’ Cup Standings for the 20th year in a row.
Middlebury College claimed fifth place in the 2024-25 LEARFIELD Directors’ Cup Final Standings. The Panthers amassed 971.75 points, their most since earning third with 1,000.50 in the 2021-22 campaign. It is the 20th-consecutive year that Middlebury has grabbed a top-10 finish in the final standings. Emory earned its first cup with 1,198.75 points. Johns Hopkins (1,147) and Tufts (1,069) rounded out the top three.
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The Panthers secured 200 of their points from two NCAA Championships. The field hockey team earned its seventh-straight crown with a 2-1 victory over the Jumbos in the title tilt. The women’s lacrosse program closed the season with its 11th championship in program history and fourth in a row.
Middlebury had four teams reach the NCAA Tournament alongside the field hockey squad in the fall, earning the second-most points across Division III (348). Men’s soccer advanced to the national semifinals for the first time since 2007 before falling 2-1 to eventual national champion Amherst. The squad finished 17-2-4, one victory behind the program record of 18 set by the 2007 NCAA Champion team. Volleyball put together a magical run, claiming its sixth NESCAC championship and its first NCAA Regional Final in 14 years. The women’s cross country team finished 22nd at the national meet to tally 52 points, while the men’s cross country program claimed 25th to post 49 points in the standings.
The Panthers had four teams secure points during the winter. Women’s ice hockey defeated Nazareth in the quarterfinals before falling to Amherst in the national semifinals. The Middlebury alpine and nordic ski programs combined for their best NCAA finish in 17 seasons with a sixth-place effort that earned 72 points. Bradshaw Underhill tallied two top-six finishes to grab All-American honors. Women’s swimming and diving closed the scoring by securing 42 points, headlined by an All-American swim in the 50-yard freestyle by rookie Anna McGrew.
Middlebury claimed 426.75 points in NCAA competition in the spring over seven sports. Women’s golf had a banner season with its first NESCAC crown and a share of sixth in the NCAA Championship for 72.75 points. The finish is the highest in program history. Men’s tennis grabbed its 12th conference championship and advanced to the NCAA Regional Finals. Under first-year head coach Olivia Leavitt, women’s tennis finished 10-0 in conference action en route to their initial NESCAC Title and a spot in the regional finals. Men’s lacrosse earned 50 points after making their 20th trip to the NCAA Tournament. Baseball grabbed its third conference championship in the last four seasons and reached the regional round before falling 4-3 to Cortland. The women’s track and field team closed out the point total with 38.5, headlined by two All-American First-Team honors by Audrey MacLean in the 3,000 steeplechase and 5,000.
College Sports
Canes Sign Tyson Jost To One-Year Contract
RALEIGH, N.C. – Eric Tulsky, General Manager of the National Hockey League’s Carolina Hurricanes, today announced that the team has signed forward Tyson Jost to a one-year, two-way contract. The deal will pay Jost $775,000 on the NHL level or $300,000 in the American Hockey League (AHL), with a guarantee of at least $600,000. “Tyson […]

RALEIGH, N.C. – Eric Tulsky, General Manager of the National Hockey League’s Carolina Hurricanes, today announced that the team has signed forward Tyson Jost to a one-year, two-way contract. The deal will pay Jost $775,000 on the NHL level or $300,000 in the American Hockey League (AHL), with a guarantee of at least $600,000.
“Tyson was able to contribute to our organization in a number of different ways last year, and we’re happy to keep him here,” said Tulsky. “He’s extremely well-liked and hard-working and capable of playing a number of different roles in the lineup.”
Jost, 27, appeared in 39 regular-season games for the Hurricanes in 2024-25, totaling nine points (4g, 5a). He also played 14 games in the AHL with Chicago, scoring four goals and adding five assists (9 points). Selected by the Avalanche in the first round, 10th overall, of the 2016 NHL Draft, Jost has registered 149 points (61g, 88a) in 495 career NHL games with Colorado, Minnesota, Buffalo and Carolina. The 5’11”, 187-pound forward has also tallied 30 points (13g, 17a) in 52 career AHL games with San Antonio, Colorado, Rochester and Chicago.
Prior to turning professional, Jost posted 35 points (16g, 19a) in 33 NCAA games with North Dakota during his lone season of college hockey in 2016-17. The St. Albert, Alta., native has represented Canada at the 2017 IIHF World Junior Championship, and two IIHF World Championships (2018-19), winning silver in 2017 and 2019.
College Sports
OSU’s Jeremiah Smith Signs Adidas Sponsorship Contract Ahead of 2025 CFB Season
After taking the college football world by storm as a true freshman last season, Jeremiah Smith is cashing in on his fame with an endorsement deal from Adidas. Adidas announced on Wednesday that the Ohio State star has joined its family of athletes. Nike, which has a sponsorship deal with the Buckeyes, offered Smith his […]

After taking the college football world by storm as a true freshman last season, Jeremiah Smith is cashing in on his fame with an endorsement deal from Adidas.
Adidas announced on Wednesday that the Ohio State star has joined its family of athletes.
Nike, which has a sponsorship deal with the Buckeyes, offered Smith his own NIL deal.
Per The Athletic’s Manny Navarro, Smith turned down Nike’s proposal in favor of the offer from Adidas.
“I’ve been wearing Adidas since I was a young kid, 11, 10 years old,” Smith told Navarro of his decision. “To be a part of the brand is something special.”
Financial details of Smith’s deal with Adidas are unknown at this time.
Per On3.com, Smith is the most valuable non-quarterback in college sports with a $4.2 million NIL valuation. The only players ranked ahead of him are Arch Manning ($6.8 million) and Carson Beck ($4.3 million).
Smith, the No. 1 overall recruit in the 2024 freshman class, originally committed to Ohio State in December 2022. He broke multiple Buckeyes receiving records in his first season, including receiving yards by a freshman (1,315) and most touchdown catches in a season (15).
The 19-year-old also dominated throughout the College Football Playoff to help Ohio State win the national title. He recorded 381 yards and five touchdowns on 19 catches in four playoff games.
In addition to his status as arguably the best receiver in college football, Smith boosted his profile in May when he was revealed as a cover athlete, along with Alabama’s Ryan Williams, for EA Sports’ College Football 26 game.
Even though he can’t enter the NFL draft for two more years, Smith showed so much ability as a true freshman that ESPN’s Jake Trotter noted prior to this year’s draft that several pro scouts said he would have been a top-five pick in 2025 if he were eligible.
Smith and the Buckeyes will kick off the 2025 season in a marquee matchup with Texas at Ohio Stadium on Aug. 30. These two teams met in the College Football Playoff semifinal in January, with Ohio State earning a 28-14 win.
College Sports
This is the week college sports become pro sports
It would be naive to say major college sports have retained their aura of pure amateurism without creeping toward professionalism in recent decades. TV contracts have ballooned. Coaches’ salaries have swelled. The whole production of college sports has felt more professional. Name, image and likeness (NIL) has been a game-changer that puts money in athletes’ […]
It would be naive to say major college sports have retained their aura of pure amateurism without creeping toward professionalism in recent decades.
TV contracts have ballooned. Coaches’ salaries have swelled. The whole production of college sports has felt more professional. Name, image and likeness (NIL) has been a game-changer that puts money in athletes’ pockets.
At any of those points along the way, you might have felt like college sports crossed a threshold. But for me, the real tipping point was the approval of the House settlement that authorizes actual revenue-sharing for athletes.
Straight payments from schools to athletes — up to $20.5 million per school this year — are different from anything else that has come before.
Better players on revenue-generating teams will earn considerable six-figure salaries. Administrators will manage the money in a way similar to how a pro team manages a salary cap.
Tuesday was the first day those payments could be made to athletes.
This is where the rubber hits the road — or, more specifically, where the money hits the bank accounts.
College Sports
Cole Hutson on what he’s majoring in at Boston University: ‘Hockey’
ARLINGTON, VA — Defenseman Cole Hutson may be preparing for his sophomore year of college, but his focus is firmly on the ice. Asked about his major at Boston University, Hutson had a simple answer. “Hockey,” he joked. Given Hutson’s on-ice performance last season, he’s passing with flying colors. After the Capitals selected him 43rd […]

ARLINGTON, VA — Defenseman Cole Hutson may be preparing for his sophomore year of college, but his focus is firmly on the ice. Asked about his major at Boston University, Hutson had a simple answer.
“Hockey,” he joked.
Given Hutson’s on-ice performance last season, he’s passing with flying colors. After the Capitals selected him 43rd in the 2024 NHL Draft, he recorded 48 points (14g, 34a) in 19 games as a freshman at BU, winning the Tim Taylor Award as the NCAA’s rookie of the year and leading all first-year skaters in scoring.
Hutson acknowledged Wednesday that transitioning to the NCAA wasn’t easy, though he ultimately found success.
“I think it was obviously really tough on me,” he said. “It was a big adjustment, for sure, from the USHL. Just older guys that are more physical coming after you every night. That wore and tore on me every day, as it should. Just did what it takes to get to the next level, and it made me a lot better.”
One of the turning points, in his assessment, was playing for Team USA at World Juniors. Hutson was arguably the team’s best player, becoming the first defenseman in tournament history to lead the all players in scoring with 11 points (3g, 8a) in 7 games.
Hutson pointed to Capitals rookie Ryan Leonard as someone he particularly benefitted from playing with at the tournament.
“I think just obviously playing with all those unbelievable players that were there (gave me confidence),” he said. “Just them reading the same plays that I was and just reading off each other really well. I think playing with a guy that is here right now, Ryan Leonard, he changes the tempo of games, and playing with a guy like that can help your team win games just like that.”
After his season ended with a loss in the NCAA National Championship game, Hutson found himself rooting against the team that had drafted him just months before. His brother Lane, who won the Calder Trophy in his rookie season with the Montreal Canadiens, matched up against the Capitals in the NHL playoffs.
So when the series moved to Montreal for Game 3, Cole made the trip to cheer him on, complete with a Canadiens-themed sweater.
His fashion choices earned some lighthearted backlash in DC — head coach Spencer Carbery joked that the sweater was “terrible” — but Hutson pointed out that the Capitals weren’t the ones who ponied up for the seats.
“I know a lot of the fans saw me in a Habs sweater. (I) took a lot of crap from the staff and management here, but what I told them is ‘He bought me the ticket, so I’ve got to cheer for him in his seats,’” he said.
Next time, however, Hutson hopes he won’t need a ticket.
“If that series comes back around, hopefully I’m playing in it,” he said.
But Hutson doesn’t feel ready to jump to the NHL just yet. He showed plenty of scoring talent last season, but he plans to work on his defensive game next year to balance out his play.
“Just rounding out my game, being super mature (on) both sides of the puck,” he said of his goals. “I think taking care of the defensive side before I jump for the offensive part of the game — even though it’s a lot more fun than the defensive side — that’s where you’re going to need (to improve) to make it to the next level.”
Beyond just his development goals, Hutson is plenty happy to spend another year at school. He told reporters that his plan was always to play at least two seasons at BU, maybe even three or four if he’s enjoying himself. His freshman year experience only reinforced that belief.
“I had such a fun first year, and it’d be stupid not to go back,” he said.
And if he can continue what he started last year, Hutson’s sure to get an A+ in hockey.
College Sports
Golf influencer Grace Charis talks feeding into ‘golf girl’ role, balancing tournament play and social media content
Grace Charis has made a name for herself in the golf world, becoming a top influencer with over eight million combined followers on social media. And the 22-year-old has done this without being a pro golfer. Charis posts videos of her golfing mixed in with content that some would call a little spicy for social […]

Grace Charis has made a name for herself in the golf world, becoming a top influencer with over eight million combined followers on social media. And the 22-year-old has done this without being a pro golfer.
Charis posts videos of her golfing mixed in with content that some would call a little spicy for social media. On3 recently caught up with Charis and asked if she intended to become a golf influencer when she took up the sport during the COVID-19 pandemic.
“Not necessarily. It just compounded,” Grace Charis told On3. “So, it took off, it did well, and I just kept posting, and so I was cycled into this niche. And people just would see me as that. So it’s almost like I got stuck into it, but I really enjoyed it. I think it has to do with people’s view on me being the golf girl, but also me feeding into that. So I wasn’t against it.”
Charis has 3.7 million followers on Instagram, three million followers on TikTok, one million followers on X/Twitter and 1.5 million subscribers on her YouTube channel. She believes people enjoy her content for multiple reasons.
“I’m pretty positive and happy, and I’m in a good space outside. It’s usually a beautiful scene, or it’s an interesting hole, or there’s something captivating about my content,” she explained. “So, I think people are just engaged with what I’m doing. Because I’ll do some cool stuff.”
Grace Charis competed in Spain last month
Charis enjoys making content, but she continues to grow as a golfer by competing in more tournaments. Last month, Charis competed in Spain at the Tenerife Women’s Open. Later this month, Charis will compete in a tournament that is “on the border of Texas and Arkansas,” two hours from where she lives in Dallas, she said.
But does Charis have a hard time balancing preparing for tournaments and putting out engaging content? “That’s interesting you bring that up, because it has been, a lot of times when I compete, I can’t think of anything besides competing and learning the course, and making sure that I’m in the right headspace,” she said. “But I think over time, because you get very locked in on that, but over time, I’m also just trying to have fun out there.
Will Grace Charis make the jump to pro?
“…… You want to stay focused and not have some kind of video take you out of your headspace there. But if there’s something interesting, I’m like, “No, this is too cool to not document. I have to.” It’s part of my nature, try and share that.”

Charis’s success as an influencer has led to her launching an apparel line called Dialed Golf. When talking about the company, Charis said, “I just wanted a golf brand that reflects who I am as a person, where the performance meets personality. And I think my company, Dialed Golf, is reflective of that. There’s a lot of creativity and comfort. So, the performance wear, everything on there is just comfortable, well-made.”
Charis seems to be in a good spot in her career. And when it comes to her future in the sport, Charis is not ruling out a plan to go pro.
“I do like tournament golf. I don’t see myself quitting anytime soon,” Charis said. “It’s been good for me as a person, just in general. So, I can see myself just keep playing. And if the low rounds come and I have the opportunity to go pro, that would be amazing. But just playing as many tournaments as I can, trying to make cuts, trying to make a little bread out there, would be great.”
College Sports
Attorney General Jackley Seeks Public’s Assistance in Investigation of Former Rapid City Gymnastics Coach
Attorney General Jackley Seeks Public’s Assistance in Investigation of Former Rapid City Gymnastics Coach PIERRE, S.D. – South Dakota Attorney General Marty Jackley announces the South Dakota Division of Criminal Investigation (DCI)’s Internet Crimes Against Children (ICAC) Task Force seeks the public’s assistance in the investigation of a former Rapid City Gymnastics Coach who faces […]

Attorney General Jackley Seeks Public’s Assistance in Investigation of Former Rapid City Gymnastics Coach
PIERRE, S.D. – South Dakota Attorney General Marty Jackley announces the South Dakota Division of Criminal Investigation (DCI)’s Internet Crimes Against Children (ICAC) Task Force seeks the public’s assistance in the investigation of a former Rapid City Gymnastics Coach who faces federal Child Pornography charges.
Hayden Sengua, 25, has been indicted on multiple counts involving Receipt of Child Pornography and Possession of Child Pornography. Sengua worked at Just Jymnastics in Rapid City until May 2024, when his employment was terminated. He previously worked as a gymnastics coach in Oregon.
Sengua is alleged to have possessed images and videos of children in the Rapid City area whom he may have coached. The defendant is presumed innocent under the U.S. Constitution.
“We are asking members of the public, whose children have been coached by the defendant to contact us with any pertinent information,” said Attorney General Jackley. “We need to determine if any more local children may have been exploited and ensure they receive necessary care and attention.”
People with information about this case can contact the DCI at 605-394-2258.
The investigation is being conducted by the South Dakota Division of Criminal Investigation (DCI) – Internet Crimes Against Children Task Force and the Pennington County Sheriff’s Office.
The U.S. Attorney’s Release on the case can be found here:
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