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Nick Saban to co-chair President Trump’s planned commission on college athletics: Sources

Former Alabama head coach Nick Saban and Texas Tech board of regents chairman Cody Campbell would co-chair the commission President Donald Trump is interested in forming to examine the long list of issues facing college sports, a source briefed on the plans told The Athletic. The source said Trump is expected to be “very engaged” with […]

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Former Alabama head coach Nick Saban and Texas Tech board of regents chairman Cody Campbell would co-chair the commission President Donald Trump is interested in forming to examine the long list of issues facing college sports, a source briefed on the plans told The Athletic.

The source said Trump is expected to be “very engaged” with the commission because he sees the current state of college sports as an issue of national importance.

The New York Times and Wall Street Journal reported Trump was interested in weighing in with an executive order after the president spoke last week with Saban, who has expressed concern that college sports is being harmed by the big money pouring into it to compensate athletes with little regulation. Yahoo Sports first reported Wednesday that Trump is planning to create a presidential commission to examine a long list of issues facing college sports, from booster-funded payments and transfer rules to conference alignment and Title IX.

Campbell, who was elected chairman of the Texas Tech board of regents last month, is a former Red Raiders football player and one of the university’s most prominent donors. He is the co-founder and co-executive of Double Eagle Energy Holdings, an upstream oil and gas company based out of Fort Worth, Texas, which operates extensively in the Permian Basin region of West Texas. Campbell is also the co-founder of the Matador Club, an NIL collective that supports Texas Tech athletics, and he recently spearheaded the new $242 million south endzone project at Tech’s Jones AT&T Stadium, which overlooks Cody Campbell Field.

In February, Double Eagle sold a development for $4.1 billion, and in 2021, the company sold a previous development for $6.4 billion. Last month, Double Eagle announced a continued and expanded partnership with EnCap Investments, a prominent private equity company that specializes in the oil and gas industry. Campbell is a board member of Texas Public Policy Foundation and a distinguished fellow at the America First Policy Institute, the latter which has been integral to President Trump’s second-term policy agenda.

A presidential commission would typically dig into various aspects of an issue or enterprise and deliver a report suggesting possible solutions that could involve executive and legislative action. Earlier this month, Trump signed an executive order creating the Religious Liberty Commission.

A spokeswoman for Rep. Michael Baumgartner, a freshman Republican from Washington who recently put forth an expansive bill to reform college sports, said he welcomed Trump’s involvement.

“College sports is a highly subsidized public good and should be regulated like the public good it is. A presidential commission offers the chance to bring fiscal sanity; restore regional conferences and competitive balance; and protect the future of non-revenue and Olympic sports,” the spokeswoman said in a statement to The Athletic.

It’s unclear how a commission would impact the current developments in college sports, including a potential landmark agreement to settle a trio of antitrust lawsuits facing the NCAA and major conferences and establish for the first time a system of direct payments from schools to athletes.

The settlement awaits final approval from a federal judge, who ordered the defendants to tweak part of the agreement that sets new roster limits for NCAA Division I schools that opt into the deal.

College sports leaders and attorneys for the defendants remain confident the judge will sign off on the deal.

Even if the settlement is approved, college sports leaders have acknowledged that it will need the backing of federal legislation, which they have been, for years, lobbying Congress for.

Tom McMillen, the former Democratic congressman who for several years led an association of athletic directors whose schools compete at the highest level of Division I, praised Trump for getting involved.

“I give President Trump a lot of credit. This is a time to bring the best minds in college sports together, in higher education, and figure a model out,” said McMillen, who has known Trump for more than 50 years.

“He’s always had a big interest in sports. It really fits his kind of whole M.O.”

McMillen first called for a presidential commission on college sports more than a decade ago. He said that while there has been some progress toward a bipartisan bill in Congress, with Sen. Ted Cruz (R-Texas) and Sen. Cory Booker (D-N.J.) leading the efforts, presidential leadership could help prioritize the issue for Congress.

“I’ve always said you’re going to need a presidential push to get something done,” said McMillen, who was a star basketball player at Maryland, a longtime NBA player and member of the 1972 Olympic team.

He also recalled how a commission on Olympic Sports that was formed by President Gerald Ford in 1975 led to the Amateur Sports Act of 1978 and substantive reform that boosted the United States’ performance in subsequent games.

A commission on college sports could help lead to long-term reform without interrupting what is already in motion, McMillen said.

“Not gonna be overnight, but it could be very, very symbolic and very significant for higher ed and college sports, and for America,” McMillen said.

— Chris Vannini, Justin Williams and Sam Khan Jr. contributed to this story.

(Photo: Anna Moneymaker / Getty Images)





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How NIL, new NCAA landscape alter expectations for DT Eric Gregory, Bengals UDFAs

CINCINNATI — As the sixth and seventh round of the draft unfolded last month, the frustration level grew incrementally, pick by pick, for Arkansas defensive tackle Eric Gregory. He started 44 games in the SEC, after all. He posted his most productive season last year. He’s molded like an NFL defensive tackle prototype at an […]

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CINCINNATI — As the sixth and seventh round of the draft unfolded last month, the frustration level grew incrementally, pick by pick, for Arkansas defensive tackle Eric Gregory.

He started 44 games in the SEC, after all. He posted his most productive season last year. He’s molded like an NFL defensive tackle prototype at an athletic 6-feet-3, 319 pounds. He had draftable grades. What was happening?

Then, late that Saturday afternoon, the phone rang. It was a team with an upcoming pick. He answered, prepared for a conversation he’d remember for the rest of his life.

He got a sales pitch. A team calling to lure him in case he goes undrafted.

The phone rang again from a team with a pick. Another sales pitch. Then another.

“That was a little upsetting,” Gregory said, serving up an understatement the size of the chip on his shoulder. “I wanted to turn the phone off, but I knew I couldn’t.”

Instead, he turned on dad mode. In the most stressful moment, Gregory poured attention into his 1-year-old daughter, Aurora. That part was easy for the 24-year-old. Understanding how to handle setbacks and the perspective of what truly matters.

Gregory’s dealt with a quarter-century of adversity. His father recently died, and he moved from his hometown of Memphis in his senior year of high school to expand his profile at IMG Academy. He’s had to live with coaches in the process.

“I have been on my own for a long time, so I kind of grew up fast,” Gregory said. “With that type of stuff, you mature fast.”

So, when Bengals defensive line coach Jerry Montgomery called after a draft where his team, surprisingly, didn’t draft a single defensive tackle, Gregory realized the frustration of the day no longer mattered. Not for his career, not for his football future, not for his daughter or his son due in November.

“I knew immediately when I got off the phone with them,” Gregory said. “Going in, I was a little mad I didn’t get drafted. I felt like I should have been drafted. But the opportunities I have with the roster, I have a great opportunity to come in and produce right away.”

Welcome to the new landscape of college football and rookie expectations. Gregory might be a rookie feeling like a freshman again in the hallways of Paycor Stadium during minicamp, getting fitted for pads and finding his locker. But he’ll turn 25 the day before the Bengals’ home opener and is a grown man in every way.

Gregory played a whopping 61 games for the Razorbacks. He played against current teammates Joe Burrow and Ja’Marr Chase in the Battle of the Golden Boot in 2019. LSU won in a 56-20 rout, as they did against most teams that year, but Gregory shared the field. He’ll do it again six years later.

Every year brought a decision of whether to declare or stay. He stuck around, put on 90 pounds early in his career, changed positions from end to tackle and graduated. He could have come out last year, but NIL compensation kept him comfortable, and the extra COVID-19 year of eligibility gave him options.

“The plan is never to stay that long, but injuries come and life happens,” Gregory said. “Just like last year, I decided to come back, I had a baby. I didn’t want to be going through this new process right here with a newborn baby, so that’s why I decided to stay there last year. It definitely was hard to stay that long. You want to get out there and come in younger.”

Being 25 used to warrant a red flag next to a name on the draft board. That’s not the case anymore. The Bengals have four rookies who will turn 25 this year, including second-round linebacker Demetrius Knight Jr.

Scouts would prefer younger, of course, with second contract considerations and growth potential all part of the equation. But with so many older players around, there’s an increasing number of situations where age and maturity are an advantage, especially at positions where a team needs immediate impact.

That includes Knight, who drove for DoorDash after games to support his family while playing for Charlotte, then transferred to become a captain and play for an extra year at South Carolina. He’s spending OTAs lined up next to veteran Logan Wilson as a starting linebacker.

“It’s definitely an advantage at times,” Bengals director of college scouting Mike Potts said. “Obviously, you would like the guy that’s younger that has the same amount of experience … You take all the factors, but with a guy at that position that we want to come in and be a leader, part of the evaluation is the character and the makeup that he’s bringing to our team. I think the maturity and everything he brings off the field, as well as on the field, were all pluses across the board.”

Gregory arrives with six seasons of SEC football and life motivation already baked in as the Bengals seek immediate depth help at defensive tackle. The same goes for fellow undrafted defensive tackle Howard Cross, who played six seasons and 66 games at Notre Dame, including the last three under current Bengals defensive coordinator Al Golden. He turns 24 this summer and was a second-team All-American and team captain.

Gregory and Cross are older than five of the other 12 defensive linemen on the roster. The cumulative experience in football and life hits fast forward on rookie expectations in the eyes of head coach Zac Taylor.

“They’ve seen more, they have experienced maybe different coaching staffs,” he said, acknowledging Gregory had three defensive coordinators and five defensive line coaches in Fayetteville. “Like all of us, there is a maturity that takes over when you get older in life. For some of these guys, you can bank on that quality being beneficial for them and us. It gives a whole different perspective to people as they have kids and real commitments. Causes you to grow up quickly. Focus on, ‘Hey, this is my career, this is a tremendous opportunity.’ Some guys maybe see that more quickly as they get older in life than some of the younger guys who have talent and ability and are eager, but again, we all know that maturity can really help you in a lot of ways.”

As for the sales pitch Taylor and Montgomery gave Gregory and Cross, there weren’t many promises about the future. They focused on past examples. Linebacker Maema Njongmeta spent five years at Wisconsin before making last year’s team and playing a key role on special teams. Undrafted tight end Cam Grandy saw action on offense. Undrafted punter Ryan Rehkow won the job over a former draft pick, Brad Robbins. Back in Taylor’s first season in Cincinnati, he started undrafted rookie Damion Willis in his coaching debut, partially to send a message.

“If you are undrafted and want an opportunity to play football, come to Cincinnati. We are going to give you the same opportunity we give draft picks,” Taylor said. “We’ve shown that over the years.”

Nobody can say for sure whether Gregory will have a chance to contribute, whether on the practice squad or as a depth player. We’ll see this August.

That leads us back to the phone he wanted to throw in a lake on April 26. He quickly realized what Cincinnati could provide. He didn’t get caught up in the flash of bigger markets or perfect weather or slick sales pitches.

Gregory saw the past. He saw the path. He saw his daughter. Now, he recognizes his long journey uniquely positions him to take advantage of this spot.

“I don’t like to say it, because I was motivated (when I was younger), for sure, but especially last season, it was an extra boost in motivation,” Gregory said. “I have a young girl to support, and I want her to have a life better than what I had. It was definitely a huge motivation. I got another (child) on the way. Can’t ask for a better opportunity.”

(Photo: Kirby Lee / Imagn Images)





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‘Never seen a team more excited’ New Illinois women’s gymnastics coach preaching team pride

CHAMPAIGN, Ill. (WCIA) – Illinois women’s gymnastics promoted from within for its women’s gymnastics head coach opening. The Illini opted to promoting Josh Nilson after parting ways with previous head coach Nadalie Walsh. Nilson was the associate head coach for Illinois for the 2023-24 and 2025-26 years. Advertisement He does have head coaching experience. Nilson […]

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CHAMPAIGN, Ill. (WCIA) – Illinois women’s gymnastics promoted from within for its women’s gymnastics head coach opening.

The Illini opted to promoting Josh Nilson after parting ways with previous head coach Nadalie Walsh. Nilson was the associate head coach for Illinois for the 2023-24 and 2025-26 years.

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He does have head coaching experience. Nilson led the Temple women’s gymnastics program for five years, helping the Owls to three conference titles.

He hopes to instill a sense of pride in his athletes and fellow coaches.

“We need to take pride in Illinois,” Nilson told WCIA. “I think that’s something that’s been missing. People are here, they love the school. But in the past, the gymnastics program has been lacking that pride in the ‘Block I.’ I mean, it starts there. They need to understand who we are. This is a storied program that has struggled a little bit in the past, but it starts there.”

He hopes to have everyone on the same page, with that goal in mind, within his team.

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“Make the vision clear… Everyone on my team, everyone on my staff will all understand their role,” he said. “And that leads to success. We’re a penny stock. You want to pay attention to what’s about to happen here because we’ve got the administration backing us up. We’ve got the university backing us up. And I’ve never seen a team more excited.”

Nilson signed a five-year contract.

Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

For the latest news, weather, sports, and streaming video, head to WCIA.com.



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Retton, US gymnastics icon, arrested in WVa on suspicion of DUI | Sports

FAIRMONT, W.Va. — American gymnastics icon Mary Lou Retton faces a misdemeanor charge of driving under the influence following her arrest in her West Virginia hometown. Fairmont police stopped Retton on May 17 following a report about a person in a Porsche driving erratically. According to the criminal complaint, Retton smelled of alcohol and was […]

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FAIRMONT, W.Va. — American gymnastics icon Mary Lou Retton faces a misdemeanor charge of driving under the influence following her arrest in her West Virginia hometown.

Fairmont police stopped Retton on May 17 following a report about a person in a Porsche driving erratically. According to the criminal complaint, Retton smelled of alcohol and was slurring her words, and she failed a field sobriety test. Officers also reported observing a container of wine in the passenger seat.

Retton, 57, refused a roadside breath test and a blood test. She was released from custody after paying a $1,500 personal recognizance bond.

Her attorney listed in court records, Edmund J. Rollo of Morgantown, did not immediately respond to phone and email requests from The Associated Press seeking comment.

Retton was 16 when she became the first American female gymnast to win the all-around at the 1984 Los Angeles Olympics. She also won two silver and two bronze medals to help bring gymnastics into the mainstream in the United States.

In 2023, Retton’s family disclosed she was recuperating from a rare form of pneumonia that landed her in intensive care. Doctors found her oxygen levels dangerously low. Her medical team considered putting her on a ventilator as her conditioned worsened. Retton went on oxygen treatment and, after weeks in the hospital, improved enough to be sent home.


AP college sports: https://apnews.com/hub/college-sports

Copyright 2025 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed without permission.



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Men’s Golf Announces Team Awards

By: Callie Cyr Story Links HANOVER, N.H. – Bill Johnson Head Coach of Men’s Golf, Rich Parker, has announced the program’s annual team awards for the 2024-25 season.   Tyler Brand took home the Most Valuable Player award while Alex Gu received the Tommy Keane award for his dedication and hard […]

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HANOVER, N.H. – Bill Johnson Head Coach of Men’s Golf, Rich Parker, has announced the program’s annual team awards for the 2024-25 season.
 
Tyler Brand took home the Most Valuable Player award while Alex Gu received the Tommy Keane award for his dedication and hard work to the program and his nature of being an outstanding teammate. Colin Keith was honored as the team’s Rookie of the Year.
 
Brand played in 11 matches this season and recorded three first place finishes throughout. His first-place finishes came at the Columbia Autumn Invitational where he shot a -17, the Columbia Spring Invitational with a -1 and the ROAR-EE Invitational after shooting a -6. Brand’s top finish at the Columbia Autumn Invitational broke the tournament record and secured a nine-stroke victory over the second-place individual. At the Ivy League Championships, Brand finished tied for 18th and was named First Team All-Ivy. After his play in the month of September, he was named Ivy League Golfer of the Month. 
 
Gu, a two-time captain for the Big Green, played in nine tournaments this season. He finished tied for 10th at the Columbia Spring Invitational after shooting a +6 for his top finish of the season. Gu recorded a tied for 17th finish at the Glen Arbor Invitational with a +13. At his final Ivy League Championships, he placed 34th with a +21.  
 
Keith made his collegiate debut at the Temple Invitational and competed in 10 total tournaments in his first-year campaign. In his debut, he finished tied for 27th after shooting a +8. His top finish of the season came at the Columbia Autumn Invitational where he shot a -1 to finish 12th. He recorded a tied for 14th finish at the ROAR-EE Invitational with a +3. The first year competed at the Ivy League Championships and finished 32nd with a +19.
 



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Michigan State hockey star Isaac Howard wins another national award

A decorated season earned Michigan State star Isaac Howard yet another accolade. USA Hockey announced Howard as its Jim Johannson College Player of the Year on Tuesday, just days after Howard won a gold medal as a reserve for Team USA at the IIHF Men’s World Championship. Awarded since 1994 and renamed for the late […]

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A decorated season earned Michigan State star Isaac Howard yet another accolade.

USA Hockey announced Howard as its Jim Johannson College Player of the Year on Tuesday, just days after Howard won a gold medal as a reserve for Team USA at the IIHF Men’s World Championship.

Awarded since 1994 and renamed for the late USA Hockey executive Jim Johannson, the College Hockey Player of the Year award boasts a strong list of past winners, including Chris Drury, Johnny Gaudreau, Jack Eichel and Adam Fox. Howard is the fourth Spartan to win the honor, joining Mike York in 1999, Ryan Miller in 2001 and Jeff Lerg in 2007.

In April, Howard won the Hobey Baker Award as the top player in men’s college hockey, already named Big Ten Player of the Year and a first team All-American. He was the first Hobey Baker winner since Miller in 2001 and only the third in program history.

In his junior season, his second with Michigan State, Howard’s season was among the best in the country. He led the Spartans with 52 points (fifth in Division I), split evenly at 26 goals (third) and assists. He led the nation in points per game at 1.41.

Led by Howard, Michigan State won the Big Ten regular-season and tournament titles — the latter won by Howard’s goal in double-overtime —  and earned a No. 1 seed in the NCAA Tournament. That run ended short of expectations. It lost its first and only game in the single elimination tournament, 4-3 to Cornell.

Days before Howard won the Hobey Baker Award, his agent confirmed to The Detroit News that he plans to return to Michigan State this season. Negotiations with Tampa Bay — who drafted him 31st in the 2022 NHL Draft — fell through. Barring a trade of his NHL rights, Howard could enter next offseason as an unrestricted free agent when his rights expire Aug. 15, 2026.

Even with all the hardware he earned this season — a list that’s only growing with Tuesday’s addition — Howard said that he is chasing a bigger trophy this coming season.

“I want to win a national championship,” Howard said, standing on stage mere feet behind the trophy he’d just won. “I didn’t play to win a Hobey. I want to win a national championship. I think we’re gonna have the group to do it. It comes down to the Tournament at the end of the year. … We just gotta be ready and make sure (we don’t leave anything on the table).”

Howard and the Spartans embark on a revenge tour this fall. Howard and star goaltender Trey Augustine lead the charge, joined by a number of offseason reinforcements. Michigan State added defenseman Colin Ralph, a second-round pick of Buffalo, in the transfer portal before picking up commitments from Vancouver pick Anthony Romani and top European prospect Eric Nilson in recent weeks. After losing the pledge of defenseman Tyson Jugnauth of the WHL’s Portland Winterhawks, the Spartans added defenseman Travis Shoudy — brother of forward Tiernan Shoudy — from Ferris State.

And as the hardware keeps coming in for Howard, it’s clear what kind of star Michigan State is bringing back to lead the way.

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Bemidji State Soccer announces schedule for 2025 season

BEMIDJI — The Bemidji State women’s soccer team announced the dates and opponents of its 30th season Tuesday afternoon. The Beavers will play an 18-match regular season that begins on Friday, Sept. 5. Prior to the regular season start, the Beavers will play two scrimmages against College of Saint Benedict and St. Catherine University on […]

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Bemidji State Soccer announces schedule for 2025 season

BEMIDJI — The Bemidji State women’s soccer team announced the dates and opponents of its 30th season Tuesday afternoon. The Beavers will play an 18-match regular season that begins on Friday, Sept. 5.

Prior to the regular season start, the Beavers will play two scrimmages against College of Saint Benedict and St. Catherine University on August 20 and 24 before officially beginning the 2025 slate. The Beavers kick off the 2025 season on the road against regional opponents Missouri Western State and Northwest Missouri State on September 5 and 7.

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Bemidji State then travels west across Highway 2 to battle Minnesota Duluth for a nonconference match against the Bulldogs on Sept. 12.

The Beavers then begin the 15-match NSIC season and host their home opening weekend Sept. 19 and 21 to face Southwest Minnesota State and Sioux Falls.

BSU makes its first NSIC road trip to Augustana and Wayne State the following weekend before returning home to host Mary and Minot State on Oct. 3 and 5.

Bemidji State then travels to St. Cloud State and Minnesota State the following weekend before a home-and-away weekend against Minnesota Crookston (home) and Minnesota State Moorhead (away) on Oct. 17 and 19, respectively.

The Beavers then host Concordia-St. Paul and Winona State on Oct. 24 and 26 before their final road trip of the regular season, Oct. 31 and Nov. 2 to face Northern State and the new NSIC member, Jamestown.

Bemidji concludes the 2025 regular season at home by hosting Minnesota Duluth on Nov. 6.

The eight-team 2025 NSIC Women’s Soccer Tournament begins Nov. 10 with the top four teams hosting the first round matches. The highest remaining seed will then host the semifinal and championship matches on Nov. 14 and 16.

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Other times, this byline is used when a news story includes numerous authors or when the story is formed by aggregating previously reported news from various sources. If outside sources are used, it is noted within the story.

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