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Mt. Ararat principal lays out plan to move forward from hazing ordeal

Amy Spelke, left, chair of the Maine School Administrative District 75 school board, and Heidi O’Leary, the district’s superintendent, listen to public comments on the investigation into the Mt. Ararat hockey team hazing incident on Thursday. Brianna Soukup/Portland Press Herald TOPSHAM — Before a crowd of parents and others gathered Thursday for the Maine School […]

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Amy Spelke, left, chair of the Maine School Administrative District 75 school board, and Heidi O’Leary, the district’s superintendent, listen to public comments on the investigation into the Mt. Ararat hockey team hazing incident on Thursday. Brianna Soukup/Portland Press Herald

TOPSHAM — Before a crowd of parents and others gathered Thursday for the Maine School Administrative District 75 school board meeting, Mt. Ararat High School Principal Chris Hoffman had a clear goal: Turn the page from a hazing ordeal that embroiled the school’s boys hockey team this winter.

“I’m nervous tonight,” he said. “It’s not the public speaking – I do that all the time – it’s that I want to get this right. I want our student athletes to know they have the support of their leaders and their community.”

Hoffman spent several minutes outlining the steps the district has taken and plans to take in a presentation entitled “Ensuring a Healthy, Supportive Athletic Culture at MTA.” It included extra training, more supervision, better communication and team building, and accountability.

He stressed that the process has only begun and he urged board members and those in the audience to work collaboratively in the coming months to ensure success.

Late last month, the school district released a two-page summary of what was learned during a monthslong investigation that began in early January — a pattern of student misconduct that “intended to embarrass or humiliate the target” and violated district policies. At least four students on the hockey team were subjected to hazing that was described as “physical aggression and/or intimidation” and “sexually inappropriate conduct.”

That summary did not include any recommendations for discipline or policy changes, but both SAD 75 Superintendent Heidi O’Leary and board Chair Amy Spelke said at the time that conversations would continue.

Prior to Hoffman’s presentation, during the public comment period before school board meeting, a handful of parents and community members spoke out harshly about the investigation.

Andrea Cram, of Bowdoin, whose son was on the team, said the way it was handled “shattered trust and inflicted real harm.” Cram went on to say that she believes the investigation was not neutral but “leading and manipulative.”

“Efforts to restore the program are appreciated, but they do not undo the damage,” she said.

Andrea Cram, whose son is on the Mt. Ararat hockey team, speaks about her dissatisfaction with the investigation into the hazing incident during public comments at a MSAD 75 school board meeting on Thursday. Brianna Soukup/Portland Press Herald

Margaret Schmoll, whose son is a student at Lisbon High School but plays on the Mt. Ararat hockey team, said she was “dumbfounded” by the investigation.

Like Cram, Schmoll said the investigation did not “paint the entire picture.”

“You had no interest in making it right or changing the false narrative that you created,” she said.

Hoffman, O’Leary and SAD 75 board members sat quietly during the public comments and didn’t engage with any speakers, many of whom stayed behind to hear the principal’s presentation.

The hazing allegations surfaced in January and represented the third high-profile case in Maine since 2021. Two senior players, along with head coach A.J. Kavanaugh and assistant coach Todd Ridlon, were suspended during the investigation, although O’Leary repeatedly emphasized that the move was not necessarily an indication of guilt.

Former Mt. Ararat boys hockey coach AJ Kavanaugh, seen here in a file photo from March 2022. Andree Kehn/Sun Journal

Kavanaugh resigned in February, long before the investigation was completed, and is now coaching a youth team based in Lewiston. Once he resigned, Kavanaugh was no longer part of the investigation. He has declined to speak to the Press Herald about the matter.

His resignation came after Mt. Ararat’s season came to an abrupt end following a game in which parents showed support for a suspended player by wearing matching shirts with his number on them. Some players put stickers on their helmets with the number as well. That public show of support during the team’s senior night devolved into reports of taunting and unsportsmanlike conduct from both adults and players, and it created what O’Leary called at the time “a highly charged and divisive environment on the ice, in the locker room, and in the stands.” She responded by canceling the rest of the season.

The investigation continued and eventually involved interviews with 31 individuals — including all members of the co-op team that includes players from SAD 75, as well as nearby Lisbon High School and Morse High School in Bath — and revealed a pattern of behavior that included “the use of homophobic language, intentional urination on teammates in the shower, humping teammates in the locker room while nude, taunting with sexually inappropriate gestures, and other degrading and unwelcome conduct.”

When the school district released the summary of the investigation’s findings, O’Leary and Spelke said a full report contained confidential information and therefore could not be released. The Press Herald requested the report via Maine’s Freedom of Access Act on the grounds that just because documents contain confidential information doesn’t mean they are exempt from public release. In many cases, sensitive information can simply be redacted. The district, in response to that request, said it “will be reviewing the investigative report with legal counsel to determine whether any portion constitutes a public record under FOAA.”

The controversy involving the Mt. Ararat ice hockey team comes on the heels of two other major hazing investigations involving a Maine high school sports team. Last fall, the Lisbon High School football team forfeited half its season after allegations of hazing surfaced. And in 2021, the Brunswick High School football team ended its season early after officials investigated claims of hazing.

High-profile cases of hazing have occurred in other states as well, including this month in upstate New York, where 11 high school students and members of the lacrosse team face criminal charges for hazing a younger player.

A 2020 study by Ohio University found that 47% of high school students say they experienced hazing in sports before they entered college.

The MSAD 75 school board listens to Ken Stockford speak during public comment at a meeting on Thursday. Stockford, whose son plays hockey for Mt. Ararat, asked the board to help ensure there is a season next year for his son’s senior year. Brianna Soukup/Portland Press Herald

Some hazing experts, like University of Maine professor Elizabeth Allan, the founder of the research group StopHazing, say more can be done to combat hazing.

“Schools are doing more than ever before to educate about it,” Allan told the Press Herald last fall. “But we still have a long way to go. … It’s easy to say ‘Oh, that’s not a problem here at our school.’ However, the research shows that it’s far more pervasive than people typically think.”

Hoffman said the district plans to partner with StopHazing to study team cultures and develop a plan to prevent problematic behaviors.

“I’m looking forward to working with Mt. Ararat to develop and implement recommendations based on the findings and their knowledge of school dynamics,” Allan said in an email.

The district also said it’s working to restore the hockey team to competition next year.

Because the team ended the season by forfeiting a game, it faces a two-year suspension under rules set by the Maine Principals’ Association. The district has appealed that decision and the appeal will be heard in early September. The last two teams that faced suspensions because of hazing incidents won their appeals.

If and when the Mt. Ararat hockey team returns to competition, though, it no longer will include players fromLisbon High School, O’Leary said in a letter to the community this month. The decision was mutual. Mt. Ararat still plans to invite players from Morse High School.

But some players from this year won’t return.

Jason MacDonald said his son, who will be a senior next year, has transferred to another school because of the ordeal. McDonald wasn’t surprised by any of the findings, and he was glad the investigation happened, but he found it lacking.

“My concern is that there is still no accountability for those in leadership positions,” he said. “There were people who knew about issues with this hockey team even before the season started, and they did nothing.”



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NE10 Announces “Moment of the Year” Fan Vote

Story Links NORTH ATTLEBORO, Mass. – Before looking ahead to the 2025-26 school year, the Northeast 10 is looking back, allowing fans to decide the Moment of the Year from the previous season in a social media vote on Instagram. Thirty two moments were selected by school sports information directors and […]

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NORTH ATTLEBORO, Mass. – Before looking ahead to the 2025-26 school year, the Northeast 10 is looking back, allowing fans to decide the Moment of the Year from the previous season in a social media vote on Instagram.

Thirty two moments were selected by school sports information directors and the league office and a bracket was created by a computer randomizer.  Starting June 10th, each weekday at noon two first round matchups will be posted on the NE10’s Instagram story.  Fans will be able to vote for their favorite of those moments, with the winners advancing to the next round.

The quarterfinals will begin on June 20th with the semifinals kicking in on June 26th.  The championship will be held on July 1st to decide the NE10 fan’s Moment of the Year.

The 32 moments are listed below in their opening round pairings.  Again, the bracket was created by computer randomization.


DAY 1: Kaylee Matsuda College World Series Walk-off vs. Saint Michael’s Soccer Wins Record
After being struck in the head by a pitch earlier in the game, Kaylee Matsuda delivered a walk-off, extra inning single to defeat Saginaw Valley State in an elimination game of the College World Series.

Saint Michael’s defeated D’Youville for the team’s 11th win of the season, a four-win improvement over 2023 and a new school record.  The Purple Knights advanced to the NE10 Quarterfinals.

DAY 1: FPU Sweeps the Steeplechase vs. St. Anselm Lacrosse Win over Adelphi
The Ravens made thier mark at the NE10 Outdoor Track & Field Championship, putting three members on the podium, led by All-NE10 performer Ryan Outerbridge.

St. Anselm knocked off defending national champion Adelphi in the regular season, earning its first win over the Panthers in school history and helping secure the second undefeated regular season in Hawks history.

DAY 2: FPU Baseball Advances to Supers vs. Cameron Belton is NCAA Runner-Up
Franklin Pierce baseball was one of the strongest teams in the NE10 all season, and after earning an at-large berth to the NCAA Regional as the No. 5 seed, the Ravens fought off elimination against Thomas Jefferson and beat the Rams twice to advance to (and host) the NCAA Super Regional.

Cameron Belton lost only three shot put competitions all season — two of them were NCAA Championships.  The SCSU star was third in the country during the indoor season and finished as national runner-up in the outdoor.  One of the best shot put athletes in the country, Belton was the indoor and outdoor NE10 Field Athlete of the Year.

DAY 2: Bentley Volleyball Advances to Final Four vs. McPherson Returns Pair of Blocks   
Bentley made history in the fall, becoming the first NE10 women’s volleyball team to advance to the national semifinals.  The Falcons did that by knocking off the previously undefeated No. 1 team in the country, Ferris State.

Shakeer McPherson did the unique twice this fall.  The Assumption special teamer returned a blocked kick for a touchdown … in consecutive weeks.  

DAY 3: Franklin Pierce Advances to the Final Four vs. AIC Upsets Assumption
Franklin Pierce got hot at the right time last fall, rattling off 11 straight wins to capture the NE10 Championship and advance to the National Semifinals.  The Ravens finished 20-4-1.

AIC knocked Assumption from NE10 title contention when Fatir Bell hauled in a TD pass with 15 seconds left to seal a win.

DAY 3: Assumption MBB Wins the Region vs. Saint Michael’s Softball Defeats Pace
Daeman entered the NCAA Championship as the No. 1 team in the nation, but Assumption was the team that left Buffalo with the trophy.  The Hounds captured their first men’s basketball regional title in 50 years before heading to Evansville.

Saint Michael’s became the only team in the NE10 to beat Pace en route to the Setters heading to the College World Series.  The Knights almost ended the Pace postseason early, toppling it during the opening matchup of the NE10 Championship with an early home run off Gisselle Garcia.  Pace bounced back to win the next game and advance.

DAY 4: Saint Michael’s Wins NE10 Ice Hockey vs. Bentley Heads to the Elite 8
The Purple Knights won the NCAA National Championship in 1999 — and about a quarter century later they reclaimed glory with the NE10 Championship, upsetting No. 1 St. Anselm in Manchester.

Bentley completed a near-perfect East Region run, toppling Holy Family in Waltham to win the East and advance to the Elite 8 for the 15th time in school history.  The win was also Bentley’s 29th straight.

DAY 4: Kurtis Henderson Wins SNHU an NE10 Title vs. AIC Clinches Division Title
SNHU was in a near literal dogfight with Pace in the NE10 Championship.  It came down to the wire and Kurtis Henderson hit the shot every child dreams of in their driveway — a three just before the buzzer to win the conference crown.

With the chance to host the NE10 Championship in the air, AIC faced New Haven in Springfield.  The Jackets allowed four runs in the top of the ninth inning to cough up the lead before Josh Formeta belted the walk-off homer in the bottom of the ninth.  Yeudy Ramirez also hit for the cycle in the game.

DAY 5: Kha’lil Eason Returns Pair of KOR for TD’s vs. St. Anselm Wins NCAA Title
Kha’lil Eason turned immediate heads this fall when he ran back two kickoffs more than 90yds each for a pair of touchdowns vs. Pace.

Maddy Davis scored in OT, knocking off the defending field hockey national champion Kutztown and delivering St. Anselm the school’s first NCAA title in any sport.

DAY 5: Bentley Breaks NCAA Record vs. New Haven Wins First NE10 Title
The Bentley men’s basketball team drained a three for the 1,000th straight game on November 23rd vs. CSI — yes, 1,000 straight games.  The Falcons are the first team in DII to eclipse the 1,000 game mark and hold the NCAA record.

New Haven women’s tennis knocked off defending champion Adelphi in a clean sweep to earn the team’s first NE10 title.

DAY 6: McAllistar Milne seals the NE10 Title vs. AIC Volleyball Winning 20 Straight
The Owls were pushed to the limit in the NE10 Championship, but Milne came to the rescue at the end, winning the 200m Butterfly in 1:51:27, edging out a pair of Adelphi swimmers, including the top seeded competitor in the field.  The win held off a surging Panther squad that was looking for its first NE10 title.

After getting off to a tough start against a tough non-conference slate, AIC found its groove and won 20 consecutive matches en route to an NE10 Championship.

DAY 6: Declan Landers Beats the Horn vs. Adelphi Soccer Advances in PKS
Pace men’s lacrosse forced overtime vs. Molloy in the NCAA Championship when a full-field pass found Declan Landers, who scored with no time remaining.

Who says you need to be an offensive player? Alba López Martínez, Adelphi’s reserve keeper, came off the bench to score the final PK against Bentley in the NE10 Semifinals and push the Panthers into the Championship round.

DAY 7: Adelphi Lacrosse Goes Back-to-Back vs. Amelia Freitas Throws a No-No
The Adelphi Panthers won their second straight NCAA National Championship when Kyle Lewis scored in OT to abolish the previously unbeated reign of No. 1 Tampa.

In a 14-0 win over AIC, Amelia Freitas tossed the first no-hitter in eight years for the Penmen.  Freitas was one batter away from a perfect game.

DAY 7: Assumption Field Hockey Goes Unbeaten vs. Tray Alexander Buzzer Beater
The Assumption Greyhounds barked back after falling in the NE10 Championship in 2023.  The Hounds knocked off eventual NCAA Champion St. Anselm at home in shutout fashion to claim the league crown.

Pace advanced to the NE10 Championship, but they would never have happened without Tray Alexander at the buzzer.  The NE10 Player of the Year knocked down a game-winner at the horn in the NE10 Quaterfinals after Assumption had tied the game with just six seconds remaining.  

DAY 8: Elizabeth Driscoll Sets St. Anselm Wins Record vs. SNHU Beats FPU
Elizabeth Driscoll was named National Goalie of the Year in women’s lacrosse, and for good reason.  Driscoll saved better than 50% of shots faced this season and earned her 36th career win, a St. Anselm record.

Franklin Pierce hadn’t lost a men’s soccer game in 63 tries — an NCAA DII record.  That ended when SNHU beat the Ravens, 4-2, in October.  The Penmen went on to win the NE10 Championship.

DAY 8: Albert Vargas SCSU Debut vs. Ryan Kakimseit Goes Unbeaten
Welcome to Division II.  Albert Vargas burried a buzzer beater to open the NCAA men’s basketball season and knock off CSI in his first game as a member of the SCSU Owls.

Ryan Kakimseit was named the Most Outstanding Performer at the 2025 NE10 Swimming Championship after winning ever race he entered.  The Panthers came in second as a team, the best finish in school history.
 


ABOUT THE NE10
The NE10 is an association of 10 diverse institutions serving student-athletes across 24 NCAA Division II sports. Together we build brilliant futures by embracing the journey of every student-athlete.

Each year, 4,500 of those student-athletes compete in conference championships in 24 sports, making the NE10 the largest DII conference in the country in terms of sport sponsorship. Leading the way in the classroom, on the field and within the community, the NE10 is proud of its comprehensive program and the experience it provides student-athletes.
 
Fans can subscribe via this link to follow NE10 NOW on FloSports this season.  The partnership between the NE10 and FloSports works to provide funds back to the athletic departments of the Northeast-10 Conference in support of student-athletes while promoting the league on a national platform.



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Alex Cooper Accuses Her College Soccer Coach of Sexual Harassment

“It was this psychotic game of, ‘You wanna play? Tell me about your sex life, I have to drive you to your night class, get in the car with me alone,’” she recalled. “I started trying to spend as little time as possible with her, taking different routes to practice where I knew I wouldn’t […]

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Alex Cooper Accuses Her College Soccer Coach of Sexual Harassment

“It was this psychotic game of, ‘You wanna play? Tell me about your sex life, I have to drive you to your night class, get in the car with me alone,’” she recalled. “I started trying to spend as little time as possible with her, taking different routes to practice where I knew I wouldn’t run into her. During meetings, I would try to sit as far away from her as possible, literally anything to not be alone with this woman.”

And while Cooper shared that she “felt so deeply uncomfortable” at the time, she felt ] she couldn’t speak out about the alleged abuse because she didn’t want to jeopardize her full-tuition scholarship.

“If I didn’t follow this woman’s rules,” she noted, “I was gone.”

And when she did attempt to provide university officials with written documentation of Feldman’s inappropriate actions, she alleged that they “dismissed” her allegations and did not investigate the matter.

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Danielle Marmer, Meghan Turner go from friends to rival GMs

“I think those three months were great for me to kind of come to terms with making a pivot that I had not anticipated,” Turner said. “It was one of the things that really got me through a difficult experience down at basic training.” A letter from Marmer arrived at a crucial time. In it, […]

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“I think those three months were great for me to kind of come to terms with making a pivot that I had not anticipated,” Turner said. “It was one of the things that really got me through a difficult experience down at basic training.”

A letter from Marmer arrived at a crucial time. In it, Marmer detailed for Turner all the decisions she had made in her first few months with the PWHL: staff hirings, the first few player signings and draft decisions, and the identity she wanted to create for her team.

“Joining the army at the ripe age of 29 is not an easy experience,” Turner said. “You’re used to your autonomy. And when she sent that to me, I was like, ‘This is amazing. I’m so excited.’ It reminded me of a world in which I had some freedom.”

Marmer’s goal in writing the letter wasn’t necessarily to convince her friend to make a career change, though that was part of it. Mainly, she wanted someone to share in her excitement about the future of women’s hockey.

“I didn’t know at the time how important [the letter] was to her,” Marmer said. “I would have written her more if I had known.”

After three months of mulling it over, Turner returned from basic training ready to take the leap.

She talked it through with her wife, Alexis, and left her stable job at PwC to become Marmer’s assistant general manager with PWHL Boston (now the Boston Fleet), a position she held through the league’s first two seasons while remaining an active member of the Army National Guard.

When the league announced it would expand to Seattle and Vancouver, PWHL executives asked Marmer and the five other general managers if there was anyone they would recommend to take the reins for the new teams. In Marmer’s mind, Turner was not only the obvious choice, but the only choice.

“They were like ‘Great, glad you said that, because we were going to talk to her anyway,’ ” Marmer said.

Within weeks, Turner was named the inaugural GM of PWHL Seattle — a step Marmer said felt inevitable after playing and working with Turner for the better part of a decade.

“I couldn’t be more excited for her,” Marmer said. “She’s going to do a phenomenal job. She’s incredibly bright, she’s organized, she’s a great leader. She’s culture driven. She’s going to have something really special in Seattle.”

Danielle Marmer (second from left), coach Courtney Kessel (second from right), and Meghan Turner (right) pose with draft pick Hadley Hartmetz at the 2024 PWHL Draft.Courtesy of The Boston Fleet

For years, when a young Marmer got in the car after youth hockey games and tryouts, she and her father broke down her performance before the conversation inevitably turned to his favorite player to watch: No. 12 on the New Hampshire team, Meghan Turner.

Marmer couldn’t fault her father for that. Turner, with quiet confidence and undeniable skill, was the young Marmer’s favorite player to watch, too.

Turner was one of the best players in her age group in New Hampshire, and Marmer was performing similarly in Vermont, so their paths crossed regularly on the youth hockey circuit. They each attended top boarding schools — Marmer at Loomis Chaffee in Connecticut and Turner at Philips Exeter in New Hampshire — before their paths crossed again at Quinnipiac University.

The pair became fast friends.

“Meghan became such a great hockey player because she believed in herself in a different way than I did,” Marmer said. “The thought of embarrassing herself wasn’t something that stopped her from trying to be great.”

Meghan Turner (center, facing the camera) and Danielle Marmer (behind her) celebrate winning the 2016 ECAC Championship.Courtesy of Quinnipiac University

Turner worked her way up to play on the top line and served as an assistant captain for the Bobcats. She earned her B.A. and M.B.A. in four years, then began a career in consulting.

On top of working 55 hours per week at PwC, Turner played professional hockey, first for the CWHL’s Worcester Blades and later the PWHPA. She’d often leave her house at 7 a.m., work a full day before heading to practice, then return home around 10 p.m. and keep working until late into the night.

But after a few years, the game started getting faster, her responsibilities at work and with her family grew, and Turner couldn’t keep up. She hung up her skates in 2022.

Around the same time, Marmer, who had just taken a job in scouting and player development for the Bruins, came to live with Turner and her wife. The timing was serendipitous, and the pair picked up right where they had left off at Quinnipiac — staying up late into the night to talk about the game they both loved.

“I was happy to be talking hockey again, and it was cool to be a bit of a fly on the wall and learn from her how the player development world works in the NHL,” Turner said.

Those conversations were equally enlightening for Marmer.

“I always thought in those moments, ‘You should be doing this,’ ” Marmer said.

That thought lingered in the back of Marmer’s mind throughout the year she worked with the Bruins, and in 2023, while she weighed the decision to jump ship to an upstart league, a mentor within the Bruins organization posed a question:

It’s a tough job, and you can’t go at it alone, so who are you going to take with you who you trust with your life?

“Meghan’s name immediately popped into my head,” she said. “There was no other option.”


Emma Healy can be reached at emma.healy@globe.com or on X @ByEmmaHealy.





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Colleges Are Now Allowed to Pay NCAA Athletes Directly After Ju…

Source: Isaiah Vazquez / Getty Colleges Are Now Allowed to Pay NCAA Athletes Directly After Judge Approves Settlement The NCAA’s amateurism model has officially been reshaped. On Friday, U.S. District Judge Claudia Wilken gave final approval to a $2.8 billion settlement in the House v. NCAA case, marking a monumental turning point in college sports history. Starting […]

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NCAA Division III Men's Golf Championships
Source: Isaiah Vazquez / Getty

Colleges Are Now Allowed to Pay NCAA Athletes Directly After Judge Approves Settlement

The NCAA’s amateurism model has officially been reshaped.

On Friday, U.S. District Judge Claudia Wilken gave final approval to a $2.8 billion settlement in the House v. NCAA case, marking a monumental turning point in college sports history.

Starting July 1, NCAA Division I schools will be permitted to compensate athletes directly, forever altering the dynamic between collegiate athletics and the business of sports.

For the first time, athletes will receive direct payments from their schools.

RELATED | Top 20 College Athletes With The Highest NIL Valuations

RELATED | Top 20 Female College Athletes With The Highest NIL Valuations

These funds are guided by a salary cap, initially set at $20.5 million per school, which will increase over the next decade.

This cap represents 22% of total revenue from sources such as ticket sales, broadcasting, and sponsorships.

Most of these funds will likely go to sports that generate the most revenue, including football and basketball, though schools will have flexibility in how they allocate this money.

Beyond paying current athletes, the settlement includes a substantial $2.8 billion damages pool to compensate former athletes who played from 2016 to 2024 and were ineligible for name, image, and likeness (NIL) earnings during their careers.

The settlement not only allows schools to pay athletes but also introduces new structures to monitor and enforce these payments.

The College Sports Commission, a new enforcement body, will oversee compliance, ensure salary caps are respected, and review NIL contracts for fairness.

Deloitte will manage an NIL clearinghouse to vet endorsement deals and curb inappropriate financial arrangements, such as booster-backed contracts designed to bypass team salary caps.

This decision has brought college sports into what some are calling a “professionalized framework.”

For decades, athletes were restricted to scholarships and modest benefits while schools raked in billions from game-related revenues.

Now, student-athletes will receive a share of these profits, aligning their compensation more directly with the value they generate for their institutions.

NCAA President Charlie Baker praised the decision, calling it:

“a huge step forward for college sports.”

However, this isn’t the end of the transformation.

The move sets the stage for further discussions around creating a more sustainable regulatory structure, potentially involving federal legislation to address outstanding legal challenges.

While historic, the agreement isn’t without obstacles.

The introduction of salary caps and formal compensation frameworks may invite future lawsuits, especially around Title IX compliance and the fairness of enforcement practices.

Additionally, some worry the changes will widen the divide between wealthy programs and smaller schools that may struggle to meet financial expectations.

The settlement also raises questions about the future role of NIL collectives, as schools begin to manage payments in-house.

Critics argue that overly stringent regulation of NIL deals could spark further litigation.

The NCAA settlement is a groundbreaking achievement, promising to improve athletes’ lives while modernizing an outdated system.

However, as college sports leadership navigates this uncharted territory, the coming years will undoubtedly present additional tests and opportunities for reform.

For now, though, athletes and advocates alike can celebrate the long-awaited recognition of their contributions to the multi-billion-dollar industry of college sports.



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5 things you may have missed this week | City News

Here are five top stories you may have missed this week. Downtown Athens hosts annual PrideFest Hundreds gathered downtown for Athens’ annual PrideFest that was held on Saturday. The event was held to celebrate the LGBTQ+ community in Athens. Attendees from all over the state visited vendors, booths and shows before watching the large parade […]

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Here are five top stories you may have missed this week.

Downtown Athens hosts annual PrideFest

Hundreds gathered downtown for Athens’ annual PrideFest that was held on Saturday. The event was held to celebrate the LGBTQ+ community in Athens. Attendees from all over the state visited vendors, booths and shows before watching the large parade that began at 5 p.m. PrideFest, originally scheduled to run till 10 p.m., ended early in the evening due to inclement weather. 

Read more about PrideFest here.  

UGA 2025 football schedule times announced

The University of Georgia released its full 2025 football season schedule. The schedule sees the Bulldogs playing in seven home games, three away games and two neutral site games. 

The Bulldogs will face off against Marshall at Sanford Stadium in the team’s season opener on Aug. 30 at 3:30 p.m. 

Read more about the schedule release here.

Athens advocate Tim Denson announces campaign for ACC mayor

Tim Denson, advocate and public servant, announced his campaign for Athens-Clarke County mayor. Denson previously served as District 5 commissioner from 2019 to 2022 and was former president and organization coordinator of the advocacy group Athens for Everyone.

The Athens-Clarke County mayoral election is in May 2026.

Read more about Denson’s campaign announcement here

Rock Lobsters name Garrett Rutledge as new head coach

The Athens Rock Lobsters announced that Garret Rutledge will be the team’s new general manager of hockey operations and head coach for next season. Rutledge will replace Steve Martinson who announced his departure to return to the Allen Americans of the ECHL.

Rutledge was previously named the 2023 Federal Prospects Hockey League Coach of the Year after leading the Carolina Thunderbirds to a division title. 

Read more about Rutledge’s hire here and an in-depth interview with Rutledge here

Benjamin Ayers appointed UGA provost following S. Jack Hu’s departure

Benjamin Ayers, dean of the C. Herman and Mary Virginia Terry College of Business, will become the University of Georgia’s senior vice president for academic affairs and provost, UGA President Jere W. Morehead announced on May 29.

Ayers will fill the position previously held by S. Jack Hu who stepped down to become chancellor of the University of California, Riverside. 

Read more about Ayers’ appointment here.



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Penn State NIL Collective to Host Fundraising Event in Pittsburgh Before U.S. Open

Happy Valley United, Penn State’s official NIL collective, will host its next fundraising event this week with a distinctly Pittsburgh feel. Penn State football coach James Franklin will headline the event that features a very Pittsburgh-centric group of guests, notably former Nittany Lions defensive coordinator Tom Bradley. The collective will host its latest “We Are” […]

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Happy Valley United, Penn State’s official NIL collective, will host its next fundraising event this week with a distinctly Pittsburgh feel. Penn State football coach James Franklin will headline the event that features a very Pittsburgh-centric group of guests, notably former Nittany Lions defensive coordinator Tom Bradley.

The collective will host its latest “We Are” benefit Wednesday night at Fox Chapel Golf Club in Pittsburgh. Guests can mingle and interact with current and former Penn State coaches and players on the eve of the U.S. Open at nearby Oakmont Country Club. In fact, auction items include four tickets to a U.S. Open practice round and rounds of golf in July with former Nittany Lions Michael Mauti or Christian Hackenberg.

Among the notable guests is Bradley, the longtime Penn State assistant who returned to Beaver Stadium in 2023 for the first time in more than a decade. Penn State welcomed back Bradley as an honorary co-captain for its 2023 season-opener against West Virginia. Bradley now will appear on behalf of Happy Valley United to benefit the Penn State collective’s fundraising efforts.

The guest lists also includes current staff members Terry Smith, the team’s associate head coach and cornerbacks coach; special teams coordinator Justin Lustig; senior defensive analyst Greg Gattuso and assistant quarterbacks coach Trace McSorley.

Former players scheduled to attend include Pat Freiermuth, Chuck Fusina, Mike Hull, Miles Dieffenbach and Brandon Short. Tickets are $200 per person and $300 per couple. There’s also a $100 “young professionals” rate. The event runs from 7-9 p.m., with a private sponsors reception featuring players and coaches from the 2025 team before the event.

For more information, visit the Happy Valley United website.

James Franklin talks “transformational”

This has been a theme of the Penn State coach during the NIL era. Franklin continues to drive home the point that he wants Penn State to be a “transformational” program rather than a “transactional” one. What does Franklin mean by that? He explained during a recent media session in State College.

“We’re one of a handful of programs that are still holding on to [where] we want it to be as transformational an experience as possible,” Franklin said. “I think that aligns with Penn State and what our values are and how we want this program to be run. That’s something that was always very important to me. But it was also very obvious to me coming to Penn State that that was something that’s very important to our alumni and very important to this community and very important to our lettermen.

“So we are fighting, scratching and clawing to balance those two things. There’s an aspect that you have to embrace the evolution of college football. But you don’t have to abort what your values are and and how you still want it to go. And I think there’s a way that you can really blend the both, so that
the kid, the family, the program, the university, you can still really provide a similar experience than we always have.”

Penn State football hires new director of external operations

Tristin Iannone returns to Penn State as the program’s new director of external operations. Iannone replaces Destiny Rodriguez, a longtime Penn State staff member who recently accepted a position with the New York Jets.

Iannone is a familiar face at the Lasch Football Building. A 2019 Penn State graduate, Iannone was an operations assistant on Franklin’s staff for one year. He left with former offensive coordinator Ricky Rahne, who became the head coach at Old Dominion. Iannone held a variety of positions at Old Dominion in operations and recruiting for the past four years.

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