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No. 24 Owls Sweep Golden Hurricane to End Regular Season

Next Game: vs. American Athletic Conference Tournament 5/9/2025 | 1 p.m. ESPNU May. 09 (Fri) / 1 p.m. vs. American Athletic Conference Tournament History TULSA, Okla. – The No. 24 Florida Atlantic softball team recorded their second straight shutout, concluding the 2025 regular season with a 6-0 victory over […]

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TULSA, Okla. – The No. 24 Florida Atlantic softball team recorded their second straight shutout, concluding the 2025 regular season with a 6-0 victory over Tulsa on Sunday.
 
In their 10th consecutive win, the back-to-back American Athletic Conference regular season champion Owls (44-9, 23-4) recorded their fifth conference series sweep of the 2025 campaign.
 
Junior Autumn Courtney pitched 4.2 innings and earned the win to move a league-best 23-2 on the season after allowing just four hits while striking out six Golden Hurricane (20-32, 8-19) batters. She then made way for the nation’s top closer in senior Ainsley Lambert, who picked up her 11th save.
 

For the ninth straight game, redshirt sophomore outfielder Kylie Hammonds reached base in the Owls’ first at-bat, this time from a single. FAU batters tallied two more hits, culminating in an RBI from junior third baseman Jesiana Mora.
 
After a scoreless second, junior catcher Chloe Yeatts put the Owls on the scoreboard again in the third with a hit to right field to score freshman second baseman Destiny Johns.
 

Mora drove in her second run of the afternoon in the top of the fourth inning for a 3-0 lead.
 
Checking in as a pinch hitter, sophomore Corin Dammeier recorded a walk to load the bases in the top of the fifth, but FAU could not bring home a runner to build on the advantage.
 

With one runner on base and two outs in the bottom of the fifth, Lambert entered to finish the job. Yeatts threw out the attempted steal to retire the side.
 
Johns logged her fourth hit of the day in the top of the sixth. Following a walk by Mora, Yeatts brought home both on the double to left. Sophomore Kiley Shelton then logged an RBI single to improve the score to 6-0. 
 
Lambert retired the final Golden Hurricane batters, not allowing a baserunner in her 2.1 innings of work.
 

 

 

  • Florida Atlantic finished a perfect 12-0 on the road in AAC play.
  • The Owls’ 44 wins in the regular season is the most by the team since 2016. 
  • Florida Atlantic had the most series sweeps among all AAC teams and won eight out of nine series in league play.
  • This marks the Owls’ second 10+ game winning streak of the season.
  • Yeatts’ 3 RBI puts her at 51 this season, most by a Florida Atlantic batter since the program’s first season in 1995.
  • Hammonds has reached base in 22 consecutive games and 49 out of 53 appearances in 2025.
  • Mora’s hitting streak is up to 13 games, most by an Owl this season.
  • Johns went 4-for-5 at the plate to become the third FAU player to tally four hits in 2025.
  • Lambert’s 11 saves leads Division I.
  • The Owls totaled 39 hits over the three games against Tulsa, their most in a three-game series on the season.

 

As the No. 1 seed, the Owls will have a double bye in the upcoming AAC Tournament in Tampa, Florida. They will next take the field in the semifinals on Friday, May 9 at 1 p.m. on ESPNU.
 
The Owls’ 2025 postseason is powered by Demand the Limits Injury Attorneys.
 

For the Owls’ complete schedule, click HERE. To follow the team socially, visit @fausoftball, or for the most up-to-date information, go to www.fausports.com.
 





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Super Football Conference and Accelerate Sports Ventures Launch SFC Network

The Super Football Conference—the largest high school football conference in the country—in collaboration with Accelerate Sports Ventures, one of the leading NIL strategy, revenue generation and, innovation advisory firms for colleges and high schools, announced the launch of the SFC Network, the official streaming home for premier high school football starting in New Jersey. Recognized […]

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The Super Football Conference—the largest high school football conference in the country—in collaboration with Accelerate Sports Ventures, one of the leading NIL strategy, revenue generation and, innovation advisory firms for colleges and high schools, announced the launch of the SFC Network, the official streaming home for premier high school football starting in New Jersey.

Recognized as one of the top high school football conferences in the nation, The SFC Network will stream coverage of New Jersey’s top-tier programs including, Bergen Catholic, Delbarton, Paramus Catholic, St. Joseph Regional, Don Bosco, Seton Hall Prep, St. Peter’s Prep, Pope John, DePaul, and others.

“We know how important New Jersey high school football is in our communities and can’t wait for our student-athletes, coaches, parents, alumni, and fans to experience the SFC Network,” says SFC President Tom Mullahey.

In partnership with the new venture with the Super Football Conference, Accelerate Sports Ventures will strategically advise the league by creating the operational engine behind the streaming platform. This includes securing corporate partnerships and investing capital as well as executing strategic branding and marketing efforts for the platform. In addition, Accelerate will also work with technology and production partners to deliver the highest quality production and customer experience.

“Now is absolutely the perfect time to launch the SFC Network,” says Doug Fillis, CEO of Accelerate Sports Ventures. “With the evolution of NIL and college football programs on the verge of revenue sharing, we must deliver a high-quality production so student-athletes in the SFC can take advantage of these new opportunities. The SFC Network and the high-quality content will not only help athletes find opportunities with NIL and revenue-sharing at the next level but also help players begin building their personal brands.”

The SFC and Accelerate have partnered with Varsity Media, a leading high school sports production company based in Long Island to produce each game. Hudl, the industry leader in sports technology, will act as the technology backbone of the platform for subscribers to watch on SuperFootballConferenceNetwork.com.  

“The game production that Varsity Media will deliver for SFC athletes will be outstanding. They bring a first-class reputation from the work they’ve done in Long Island and beyond,” the conference says. “Each game will feature professional announcers, multiple camera operators, a scoreboard, graphics, and a sideline reporter.”



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Men’s Soccer Announces 2025 Schedule

Story Links MORGANTOWN, W.Va. – The West Virginia University Department of Intercollegiate Athletics has announced the 2025 men’s soccer schedule.   Coming off winning the Sun Belt Regular Season and Tournament titles, the Mountaineers will play 17 regular season matches, including 10 at Dick Dlesk Soccer Stadium in Morgantown. WVU will […]

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MORGANTOWN, W.Va. – The West Virginia University Department of Intercollegiate Athletics has announced the 2025 men’s soccer schedule.
 
Coming off winning the Sun Belt Regular Season and Tournament titles, the Mountaineers will play 17 regular season matches, including 10 at Dick Dlesk Soccer Stadium in Morgantown. WVU will also play three exhibition matches before the season.
 

MSCO25 Sport Enhancement Fund 1920x300

The year gets started with a preseason match on the road at Georgetown, Aug. 8. The Mountaineers will then host Montgomery College, Aug.12, and Robert Morris, Aug. 16.
 
The Mountaineers officially open the season with two home contests, beginning with Manhattan on Thursday, Aug. 21 before playing host to LaSalle on Sunday, Aug. 24.
 
WVU will then hit the road for a matchup with perennial power Akron on Friday, Aug. 29 before returning home for a contest against 2024 NCAA Tournament team Gardner-Webb on Wednesday, Sept. 3. A road match at defending Atlantic 10 champion George Mason follows on Sunday, Sept. 7.
 
It is then three straight matches at DDSS for the Mountaineers as California Baptist comes to Morgantown on Friday, Sept. 12, James Madison on Friday, Sept. 19 for the Sun Belt opener, and High Point, the defending Big South champions, on Tuesday, Sept. 23.
 
West Virginia heads to Orlando to take on UCF on Sunday, Sept. 28, before returning home on Saturday, October 4, for a game against Georgia Southern. Another road conference game at Coast Carolina follows on Friday, Oct. 10.
 
The final non-conference match of the season occurs on Tue. Oct. 14 as the Mountaineers host American. WVU will then go back on the road for a Sun Belt contest at Georgia State on Saturday, Oct. 18.
 
Two more Sun Belt matchups follow on Wednesday, Oct. 22, at home against Old Dominion before heading to Lexington to take on Kentucky, Sunday, Oct. 26.
 
The Mountain State Derby is on Friday, Oct. 31 as Marshall comes to Morgantown. The regular season concludes on Tuesday, Nov. 4 on the road at South Carolina.
 
All dates, times and locations are subject to change. Information about tickets for the 2025 home slate, will be announced at a later date.
 
For more information on the Mountaineers, follow @WVUMensSoccer on Twitter, Facebook and Instagram.
 





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Softball Beats Baseball in College World Series Social Media

As college baseball’s best head to Omaha this weekend to play for the national title, data suggests that brands seeking players with the best marketing value may be watching the wrong College World Series. Athlete media network Opendorse compiled data from TikTok, Instagram, and X from the Top 13 NCAA Division I baseball and softball […]

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As college baseball’s best head to Omaha this weekend to play for the national title, data suggests that brands seeking players with the best marketing value may be watching the wrong College World Series.

Athlete media network Opendorse compiled data from TikTok, Instagram, and X from the Top 13 NCAA Division I baseball and softball teams based on rating percentage index (RPI) rankings from May 1, just before each sport’s College World Series. It found that softball not only has a marketing edge over baseball among younger demographics, but it’s drawing more attention on social media and bringing brands more value for their name, image, and likeness (NIL) sponsorship dollar.

“I truly believe, and the data backs us up, these female student athletes are the most effective media buy in sport right now,” said Opendorse CEO Steve Denton. “If I’m a marketer, I’m just not going to throw money at bad marketing. Their engagement metrics are higher, and viewership is growing.”

The total social media following for the top baseball teams still tilts in baseball’s direction, with its Top 13 teams drawing 2.3 million to softball’s 2.2 million. However, Louisiana State University softball tops all programs at 445,000 followers, ahead of LSU Baseball (342,000) and the heavy hitters at Arkansas (351,000). Other softball programs outpacing their baseball counterparts on social media included Tennessee (291,000) and Florida State (261,000).

The composition of those followers, meanwhile, varied wildly by sport. Opendorse found that 82% of softball’s social media followers were under 34, compared to 43% of baseball followers. Women make up 52% of softball’s followers, compared to just 17% for baseball.

With social media data already showing softball players more engaged and effective than baseball players—and continuing into the professional ranks with such efficacy that Major League Baseball has invested in Athletes Unlimited’s new women’s softball league—Opendorse sees an opportunity for brands.

NIL isn’t nothing

This data comes at a time when the divide between college baseball and softball broadcast audiences is narrowing, making softball an increasingly viable option for brands amid years of growth. With both softball and baseball College World Series shown on Disney channels including ESPN and ABC, softball saw its most-watched College World Series ever in 2025, averaging 1.3 million viewers per game—a 24% increase from a year earlier—including an average 2.4 million who tuned in to all three games of the final round.

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Mack Sutter to make decision June 26

Mack Sutter has set a date for his college commitment. The 6-foot-6, 225-pound Class of 2026 recruit from Dunlap will be holding a commitment ceremony on June 26. He’ll choose between his final four schools — Alabama, Illinois, Ole Miss or Ohio State. He’s completed four of his five official visits that started in April […]

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Mack Sutter has set a date for his college commitment.

The 6-foot-6, 225-pound Class of 2026 recruit from Dunlap will be holding a commitment ceremony on June 26. He’ll choose between his final four schools — Alabama, Illinois, Ole Miss or Ohio State.

He’s completed four of his five official visits that started in April and wrap next weekend. His visits included Illinois (April 11), Ole Miss (April 25), Ohio State (May 30), Penn State (June 6) and Alabama (June 20).

Sutter, a four-star tight end, is ranked as the No. 80 prospect nationally, sixth-ranked tight end and the No. 1 prospect in Illinois by 247Sports Composite.

The linebacker/receiver is a two-time selection to the all-Mid-Illini first team and Journal Star all-area team, picked for both in his sophomore and junior seasons.

Mack Sutter stats

As a junior, Sutter had 35 receptions for 505 yards and seven touchdowns for the Eagles, who finished 6-4 and made the Class 6A playoffs. Sutter filled in one game at quarterback, throwing for 119 yards. The four-star prospect also played linebacker with 29 tackles, six sacks, four forced fumbles and a pick-6.

As a sophomore, the quarterback/linebacker/wide receiver recorded 20 tackles and five tackles for loss as a linebacker. Sutter added 710 passing yards and eight touchdowns for the Eagles, who went 6-4 and lost in the first round of the Class 6A playoffs.



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Why women's volleyball is among four teams splitting Ohio State's NIL money in revenue sharing era

COLUMBUS, Ohio — Ohio State’s athletic department is going to share $18 million in revenue with its athletes during the upcoming fiscal year as part of the new era of name, image and likeness payments. That money will be split (not equally) across four sports: football, men’s basketball, women’s basketball and women’s volleyball. Why was […]

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Why women's volleyball is among four teams splitting Ohio State's NIL money in revenue sharing era

COLUMBUS, Ohio — Ohio State’s athletic department is going to share $18 million in revenue with its athletes during the upcoming fiscal year as part of the new era of name, image and likeness payments.

That money will be split (not equally) across four sports: football, men’s basketball, women’s basketball and women’s volleyball.

Why was volleyball selected as the fourth choice? The answer stems from multiple layers ranging from the national scale to the local level.

“We think with the attention that our program can receive, the Columbus market, volleyball as a booming sport, the Covelli Center is an amazing atmosphere — we thought volleyball could be a sport that could drive more revenue,” athletics director Ross Bjork said Thursday.

In Columbus, volleyball has had bright moments.

The Buckeyes have made 25 trips to the NCAA Tournament with a pair of runs to the Final Four (1991, 1994).

Under coach Jen Flynn Oldenburg, who has been at the helm since 2020, Ohio State has made three NCAA Tournament appearances — making the Sweet 16 in each of her first two seasons and an Elite Eight in 2022.

The city also has a professional team, the Columbus Fury. The franchise started as part of the Pro Volleyball Federation’s inaugural season in 2024 and is partly owned by Joe Burrow’s family.

“The sport is really popular,” Bjork said. “The Big Ten is a leader in women’s volleyball. We want to get better. Coach Jen is working on a plan to get us back on track.”

2024 Division I Women's Volleyball Championship

The Big Ten has won 13 national titles in women’s college volleyball since 1999.NCAA Photos via Getty Images

How much will Bjork have to invest in volleyball from the revenue sharing side?

He elected not to dive into specifics of how much of the $18 million will go toward each program. However, the range of what Big Ten teams will give toward volleyball is vast.

Some schools won’t include volleyball in revenue sharing. Others could devote more than $1 million, a source with knowledge of the situation told cleveland.com.

Many schools will be in the middle, giving around $500,000-$600,000.

The higher figures are a testament to the elite volleyball in the conference.

The Big Ten had nine teams make the NCAA Tournament last year. Two teams, Penn State and Nebraska, made the Final Four with the former winning the national title.

Since 1999, the Big Ten has won 13 national titles, which doesn’t include UCLA, Southern California and Washington winning four championships in that span.

The conference has an opportunity to continue growing the sport, which could lead to larger crowds, increased viewership and more revenue.

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Talk of power conferences taking over College World Series was premature

OMAHA, Neb. — Six conferences and an independent will be represented at the College World Series, and none of the teams were among the final eight in Omaha a year ago. In 2024, the SEC and ACC had four teams each in the CWS and all the talk was that college baseball would forevermore be […]

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OMAHA, Neb. — Six conferences and an independent will be represented at the College World Series, and none of the teams were among the final eight in Omaha a year ago.

In 2024, the SEC and ACC had four teams each in the CWS and all the talk was that college baseball would forevermore be dominated by the schools in those conferences that invest the most in the sport in scholarships, NIL and, starting soon, direct payments to players.

Someone forgot to tell that to Murray State, among others.

The CWS opens today with the Sun Belt Conference’s Coastal Carolina (53-11) playing the Big 12’s Arizona (44-19) in a rematch of the 2016 finals won by the Chanticleers. No. 8 national seed Oregon State (47-14-1), an independent until the Pac-12 ramps up again in 2026-27, meets the ACC’s Louisville (40-22) in the second game.

Saturday’s games match the Big Ten’s UCLA (47-16) against Missouri Valley Conference upstart Murray State (44-15) and an all-SEC battle between No. 3 Arkansas (48-13) and LSU (48-15).

Chanticleers coach Kevin Schnall was Gary Gilmore’s assistant in 2016, and he said he never believed a power conference takeover in baseball was inevitable. His team’s 23-game win streak is the longest in history by a team entering a CWS.

“Why has Coastal been so successful for 25 years? Well, Gary Gilmore was able to teach us how to assemble a roster,” Schnall said. “It’s not about putting together just the best players. You have to put together the best team. Sometimes money doesn’t always buy that.”

The money is about to get bigger. The House v. NCAA settlement will mandate roster limits, likely 34 in baseball, and allow schools to award as many scholarships as there are roster spots. Most programs are not expected to max out scholarships in baseball, but many will at least double the longstanding limit of 11.7.

Division I Baseball Committee chair Jay Artigues, athletic director at Southeastern Louisiana, said high-performing midmajors aren’t necessarily at a disadvantage because of how they tend to build their rosters. The outlook for them is not doom and gloom, he said.

“The Arkansases, the LSUs and the Georgias of the world, they’re going to have the premier 18-, 19-year-olds in the country, no question about it,” Artigues said. “They can’t get old because their 18- and 19-year-olds are signing (pro contracts) after that third year. Now where a mid-major can compete against them is having a good 22- or 23-year-old. You put a good 22-, 23-year-old against a really good 18-year-old, it evens the field.

“I think the midmajors that are having success are all older. You look at what Southern Miss did this year, they’re a fourth-, fifth-year team. That’s why they’re kicking the crap out of some P4 teams.”

Louisville coach Dan McDonnell said he thought at least one more ACC team would join his in Omaha, but he can’t help but be happy for Murray State to make it considering he played second base on the Citadel’s 1990 CWS team. It was his greatest baseball experience, he said, and as far as he’s concerned the more players who can experience the CWS, the better.

American Baseball Coaches Association executive director Craig Keilitz said the diversity of this year’s CWS field is good for the sport.

“I’m probably surprised as a lot of people as this proliferation of money has followed its way down, to say it might not be possible,” he said. “But I think it’s absolutely remarkable. I think it’s going to be interesting. I think it’s going to be highly watched and followed. I don’t think we could have scripted it any better.”

Four MLB.com projected first-round picks in the Major League Baseball amateur draft will be playing in Omaha: LSU left-handed pitcher Kade Anderson (1), Oregon State shortstop Aiva Arquette (3), Arizona outfielder Brendan Summerhill (16) and Arkansas shortstop Wehiwa Aloy (23).

The CWS is celebrating its 75th anniversary in Omaha, which landed what then was a lightly attended tournament in 1950 partly because city leaders promised to cover any cost overruns.

The CWS blossomed in the 1980s with the start of ESPN’s national coverage and moved from a dilapidated Rosenblatt Stadium to the 24,000-seat Charles Schwab Field in 2011. “Omaha” long has been a rallying cry for teams hoping to play for the national championship.

The city and NCAA have a contract that keeps the event in Omaha at least through 2035.



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