College Sports
Olympic Gold Medalist Benita Fitzgerald Mosley to Speak at the Falk College Convocation May 10 — Syracuse University News
At the 1984 Summer Olympics in Los Angeles, Benita Fitzgerald Mosley won the gold medal in the 100-meter hurdles by 4/100th of a second over the favorite, Shirley Strong from Great Britain. Olympic gold medalist and visionary executive Benita Fitzgerald Mosley says it has been her lifelong mission to help people win gold medals in […]


At the 1984 Summer Olympics in Los Angeles, Benita Fitzgerald Mosley won the gold medal in the 100-meter hurdles by 4/100th of a second over the favorite, Shirley Strong from Great Britain.
Olympic gold medalist and visionary executive Benita Fitzgerald Mosley says it has been her lifelong mission to help people win gold medals in business—and in life.
“My gold medal is the gift that keeps on giving,” Fitzgerald Mosley says. “I am forever grateful, so I want to pay that gift forward.”
To get there, Fitzgerald Mosley highlights five “Olympic rings” to help people achieve their goals: Have a good start, set high goals, run your own race, power through hurdles and have a strong finish.
“You have to ask yourself, why not me?’’ Fitzgerald Mosley says. “Why can’t I be the best in the world at what I do?”
From becoming the first African American woman to win the 100-meter hurdles at the 1984 Olympics to her current role as chief executive officer of Multiplying Good, Fitzgerald Mosley has persistently broken barriers and advanced the idea that sport has the power to inspire and change the world.
Her enormous impact as a results-oriented leader in the Olympic, non-profit, and corporate worlds is why Dean Jeremy Jordan asked Fitzgerald Mosley to be the keynote speaker at the Falk College of Sport and Human Dynamics Convocation at 12:30 p.m. May 10 in the John A. Lally Athletics Complex.
“Benita’s ‘why not me?’ message encourages us to challenge societal expectations and embrace our potential, while Multiplying Good is helping people bring about positive change and inspiring them to do more,” Jordan says. “The life lessons and insights that Benita will share May 10 will provide valuable inspiration to our graduates and all of us.”
Using Fitzgerald Mosley’s five Olympic rings, here is her remarkable story:
Have A Good Start
Fitzgerald Mosley often uses a quote from former American politician and motivational speaker Les Brown, who said, “You don’t have to be great to get started, but you have to get started to be great.”

After trying gymnastics and softball, Fitzgerald Mosley started running track in the seventh grade and soon became a star hurdler.
Fitzgerald Mosley’s parents, Fannie and Rodger Fitzgerald, were both educators and they encouraged Fitzgerald Mosley to get started in as many extracurricular activities as possible in their hometown of Dale City, Virginia. By participating in gymnastics, softball, majorettes and track, and learning the piano, violin, flute and piccolo, Fitzgerald Mosley discovered what she loved and was good at and where to focus her attention.
“They were very supportive and stood by me in every aspect of my life,” Fitzgerald Mosley says of her parents. “They celebrated my every achievement, large and small, and I loved to make them proud.”
While she became the first chair flute for the Gar-Field High School symphonic band, Fitzgerald Mosley says she wasn’t very good at softball and grew too tall to be a gymnast. But middle school physical education teacher, family friend and gymnastics coach Gwen Washington was also the coach of the track team and when it became obvious that Fitzgerald Mosley had outgrown gymnastics, Washington suggested she join the track team because she had seen Fitzgerald Mosley outrun the boys in gym classes.
“So I went out for the track team and started winning races from the very beginning,” Fitzgerald Mosley says. “It wasn’t until I was 12 years old and in the seventh grade that I even discovered my athletic prowess.”
Set High Goals
As a high school freshman sprinter and hurdler, Fitzgerald Mosley helped the track team win its fourth consecutive Virginia state championship. She was a teammate of senior Paula Girven, who represented the United States in the high jump in the 1976 Olympics and qualified for the team in 1980. Their high school track coach, Anne Locket, also led the girl’s gymnastics and basketball teams to state championships.

During a visit to Falk College in early April, Benita Fitzgerald Mosley met with students to share her experiences in the sport industry.
“Coach Locket said to me, ‘You know, you can be an Olympian someday just like Paula,’ and I looked at her like she was from Mars,” Fitzgerald Mosley says, smiling. “But having a coach believe in you and say that to a youngster at 14 years old, it set me up for great things to come.”
By 1980, Fitzgerald Mosley was 18 and already a track star—and an industrial engineering major—at the University of Tennessee, where she would become a 14-time All-American and four-time NCAA hurdles champion. Like Girven, she made the 1980 Olympic team but didn’t participate because the United States led a boycott of the 1980 Summer Games in Moscow to protest the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan.
Fortunately for Fitzgerald Mosley, she was still in college and had the benefit of having access to coaching, training equipment and the highest level of competition in college. This was a time when Olympic athletes were strictly amateurs who couldn’t make money off their athletic achievements, and many athletes who qualified for the 1980 Games, like Girven, weren’t able to return for the 1984 Games.
“At that point, people didn’t have these long careers spanning three and four and five Olympic Games that started with my generation because they started to allow us to make money while we were competing,” Fitzgerald Mosley says. “The two other hurdlers that were on the Olympic team with me in 1980 didn’t make it again in 1984, so that was their one and only chance to be an Olympian.”
For the complete story, please visit the Falk College website.
College Sports
UMaine hockey adds two more NHL draft picks to roster
The University of Maine men’s hockey team has added three players from Canada’s Major Junior Hockey Leagues, and two of them are National Hockey League draft choices. Center Jaden Lipinski was a fourth round draft choice of the Calgary Flames and the 112th overall player selected in 2023, and defenseman Luke Coughlin was a sixth round […]

The University of Maine men’s hockey team has added three players from Canada’s Major Junior Hockey Leagues, and two of them are National Hockey League draft choices.
Center Jaden Lipinski was a fourth round draft choice of the Calgary Flames and the 112th overall player selected in 2023, and defenseman Luke Coughlin was a sixth round pick (191st overall) by the Florida Panthers — also in 2023.
The other addition is defenseman Simon Motew.
The upcoming season will be the first in which players from Canada’s three Major Leagues will be eligible to play U.S. college hockey.
Players from the Quebec Maritimes Junior Hockey League, the Ontario Hockey League and the Western Hockey League had previously been deemed professionals in the eyes of the NCAA because they received monetary stipends. That disqualified them from playing U.S. college hockey.
But now all NCAA student-athletes are allowed to earn money from the addition of Name, Image, Likeness deals and, under a recent settlement, schools will be allowed to pay them directly.
Lipinski, Coughlin and Motew give the Black Bears a current total of six incoming Major Junior players as they join defensemen Jeremy Langlois and Loic Usereau and left winger Will Gerrior. And there could be more additions.
The 6-foot-4, 209-pound Lipinski registered 17 goals and 41 assists in 59 regular season games for the Vancouver Giants of the Western Hockey League this past season and added two goals and three assists in five playoff games.
The 20-year-old from Scottsdale, Arizona, appeared in 260 career games for the Giants and notched 68 goals and 124 assists.
According to the Elite Prospects 2023 NHL draft guide, Lipinski is a center with “mobility, point production and flashes of skill.”
The Elite Prospects guide says Lipinski “has a deep bag of skating skills, surveying the perimeter with heel-to-heel skating and separating from opponents with powerful cutbacks” and that he “combines handling and passing skill to hook pucks back into space or pulls pucks closer to his feet before releasing.”
Coughlin had four goals and 20 assists in 54 regular season games this season for Rimouski Oceanic in the QMJHL and had 15 goals and 68 assists in 188 career regular season games with the team.
According to the Elite Prospects guide, “with his loose hips and flexibility, Coughlin can easily shift his weight to launch himself around opponents and open up his skates to walk the blue line while facing his options.”
The draft guide describes him as a “fluid mover at the offensive blue line and a deceptive one, too. He uses his hip pocket handling and fake shots to keep defenders at bay and move the puck or find good lanes to fire in.”
Hip pocket handling is a technique which sees a player hold the puck close to their side, near their hip, which allows them to quickly pass, shoot or skate away with the puck.
The 22-year-old Motew, a native of Highland Park, Illinois, played Canadian college hockey for St. Francis Xavier this past season after his 212-game Ontario Hockey League career with the Kitchener Rangers.
The 6-foot, 183-pound Motew had three goals and 12 assists in 25 games for the Nova Scotia school after tallying 21 goals and 66 assists in his career for Kitchener.
The 2021 Elite Prospects NHL draft guide said Motew’s “hands and skating are very clean” and that he “explodes into gaps and is transitioning constantly” and “defends one-on-one situations relatively well, especially off the rush where he matches the speed of attackers and forces them to dump the puck before the blue line.”
UMaine went 24-8-6 this past season and won the Hockey East tournament for the first time since 2004. The Black Bears also qualified for the NCAA Tournament for the second consecutive season but were upset in the first round by regional host Penn State 5-1.
It was the first time since the 2005-06 and 06-07 seasons that UMaine earned back-to-back NCAA tournament appearances. UMaine has gone 47-20-8 during those two seasons.
They wound up seventh in the country in the final USA Hockey poll and eighth in the United States College Hockey Online poll.
UMaine will have to replace four of its top 11 scorers including outstanding veteran centers Harrison Scott, Nolan Renwick and Lynden Breen, along with two of its top six defensemen and its backup goalie.
College Sports
Duluth City Council may require landlords to inform tenants of rights – Duluth News Tribune
DULUTH — A trio of city councilors is proposing a new ordinance designed to better inform local renters of their tenant rights. Councilors Terese Tomanek, Roz Randorf and Lynn Marie Nephew have introduced a policy that would require local landlords to inform tenants of the rights and resources that are already available to them to […]

DULUTH — A trio of city councilors is proposing a new ordinance designed to better inform local renters of their tenant rights.
Councilors Terese Tomanek, Roz Randorf and Lynn Marie Nephew have introduced a policy that would require local landlords to inform tenants of the rights and resources that are already available to them to help resolve any issues that may arise with property managers.
But a local group called Duluth Tenants continues to push for
a new “right to repair” ordinance
that could give them an additional, potentially more robust tool to wield if a landlord fails to address basic maintenance requests in a timely fashion.
As proposed, the right-to-repair ordinance would empower tenants to notify a landlord of a maintenance issue, providing the property manager 14 days to address the problem or schedule a repair. If no action is taken within that time frame, a tenant would then have the right to hire a qualified third-party individual to execute the needed repair.
The tenant could then submit a receipt for the repair, requesting reimbursement or a commensurate reduction in rent — up to a maximum of $500 or half a month’s rent, whichever is greater.
Nationwide, more than 30 jurisdictions, including Chicago, have similar policies on their books. Nevertheless, Duluth could become the first Minnesota city to adopt such an ordinance, if the Duluth Tenants campaign proves successful.
Randorf has questioned the need for the “Right to Repair” policy, however, pointing to tenants’ ability to file a Rent Escrow Action or an Emergency Tenant Remedies Action through the courts, under existing law.
She suggested educating tenants of their rights would be more productive than creating new remedies.
Similarly, a “statement of purpose” statement accompanying the proposed council ordinance Randorf has co-sponsored asserts: “Providing tenants with clear and accessible information about their legal protections fosters transparency, accountability and community well-being.”
But the tenants union is not relying on the Duluth City Council alone to advance its cause.
The group’s volunteers have been knocking on doors throughout the community, and they already have gathered more than enough signatures to get the proposed ordinance placed on the ballot for a referendum vote come November. TakeAction MN Organizer DyAnna Grondahl said Duluth Tenants has a goal of collecting 5,600 signatures — about 2,000 more than required — and they’re less than 1,000 names away from that final target.
“We’re encouraged to see movement at the council level, but after thousands of conversations with renters and folks across the city, it’s clear that education alone isn’t enough,” Grondahl said. “Duluthians, renters and homeowners alike, are clear that passing the common-sense policy Duluth Right to Repair to ensure folks can get timely repairs in their units is the next step renters deserve.”
Randorf said she has remained in close contact with the tenants union and Grondahl.
“They are aware of all the work we are doing, in hopes that they will find it satisfactory to the ballot measure that they have been proposing, which we believe is systemically flawed,” Randorf said, pointing out that the council ordinance to be read for the first time Tuesday is just the first part of a larger councilor initiative to hold problem landlords accountable for not making needed repairs.
In a news release announcing the council’s efforts to enhance tenant rights, a second pending initiative also was laid out that could lead to the adoption of the International Property Maintenance Code to establish the minimum requirements landlords must meet in maintaining their properties.
Nephew warned that the proposed tenant union’s “right to repair” ordinance could create cash flow problems for organizations that provide critical affordable housing in the community, as repairs made under the new policy might not be eligible for grant reimbursements, making for a less sustainable funding model.
She also predicted that more landlords would shift away from long-term lease agreements and toward month-to-month leases that provide them with more flexibility but that also would come at the expense of housing stability for renters.
Randorf suggested that tenants might get over their heads in seeking repairs and could find themselves out on the street for jobs that unexpectedly snowball, putting them at odds with their landlords.
Nephew, Tomanek and Randorf all said they want to see landlords held to account, noting that the vast majority want to do right by their tenants.
For the small minority of landlords who don’t want to make timely needed repairs, they say the city can step up enforcement mechanisms and penalties. Toward that end, the council aims to convene a “study session” Tuesday evening with staff to discuss possible means to gain greater and stricter code compliance.
Tomanek said it is her hope that when people see the amount of work the council is investing, in consultation with trusted housing partners, “and they will see that we are putting forward a program that will help tenants in a very positive way,” making the right-to-repair policy proposal unnecessary.
But Grondahl said members of the Duluth tenants union remain unconvinced at present.
“Renters need real tools, not just information, to ensure their homes are safe and livable,” she said.
About the Duluth City Council
The Duluth City Council’s regular meetings are on the second and fourth Mondays of each month at 6 p.m., with agenda meetings at 5:15 p.m. each Thursday preceding a regular meeting, unless otherwise scheduled, at City Hall, Room 330. Meetings are also livestreamed and recorded for later viewing at duluthmn.gov/city-council/city-council-meetings-events/council-meeting-media.

District 1: Wendy Durrwachter
Represents: Duluth city precincts 1-7
Term expires: Jan. 3, 2028
Contact: 218-730-5700, Ext. 3, wdurrwachter@DuluthMN.gov

Represents: Duluth city precincts 8-13
Term expires: Jan. 5, 2026
Contact: 218-428-9195/218-730-5355, mmayou@duluthmn.gov

Represents: Duluth city precincts 14-19
Term expires: Jan. 3, 2028
Contact: 218-443-8364/218-730-5353, rrandorf@duluthmn.gov

Represents: Duluth city precincts 21-27
Term expires: Jan. 5, 2026
Contact: 218-730-5356, tswenson@duluthmn.gov

Clint Austin / 2024 file / Duluth Media Group
District 5: Janet Kennedy
Represents: Duluth city precincts 28-35
Term expires: Jan. 3, 2028
Contact: 218-341-6113/218-730-5357, jkennedy@duluthmn.gov

Represents: All Duluth city precincts
Term expires: Jan. 5, 2026
Contact: 218-730-5359, aawal@duluthmn.gov

Represents: All Duluth city precincts
Term expires: Jan. 3, 2028
Contact: 218-730-5352, aforsman@duluthmn.gov

At large: Lynn Marie Nephew, vice president
Represents: All Duluth city precincts
Term expires: Jan. 3, 2028
Contact: 218-730-5354, lnephew@duluthmn.gov

At large: Terese Tomanek, president
Represents: All Duluth city precincts
Term expires: Jan. 5, 2026
Contact: 218-216-9126, ttomanek@duluthmn.gov
Peter Passi covers city and county government for the Duluth News Tribune. He joined the paper in April 2000, initially as a business reporter but has worked a number of beats through the years.
College Sports
Inside Gymnastics Magazine | What to Know Heading into the 2025 European Championships
The 2025 European Gymnastics Championships are here! The competition will take place from Monday, May 26-Saturday, May 31. Here are five things to know heading into this year’s championships! When and Where to Watch The European Championships will be held in Leipzig, Germany! Fans can catch the last subdivision of both the women and men […]

The 2025 European Gymnastics Championships are here! The competition will take place from Monday, May 26-Saturday, May 31. Here are five things to know heading into this year’s championships!
When and Where to Watch
The European Championships will be held in Leipzig, Germany! Fans can catch the last subdivision of both the women and men qualifications, as well as all of the finals on Eurovision sport. The rest of qualification rounds will be streamed on Gymtv.online.
Mixed Team Debut
For the first time in European Championships history there will be a Mixed Team Final! One male and female gymnast from each federation will team up to form a mixed team. Women will compete on vault, balance beam and floor exercise, while the men will compete on floor exercise, parallel bars and vault. The gymnast with the highest total score across the three respective apparatuses in qualifying will be automatically selected to compete with the mixed team. The final will include 16 teams and will take place on Wednesday, May 28. Which country do you think will take the title?
Defending Champs Back in Action
At last year’s European Championships, the Italian women dominated the competition. Not only did they win team gold, they also took home titles on every event except vault. Olympic medalist Manila Esposito took home the gold medal in the All-Around, beam and floor. Esposito will be poised to match her 2024 results in 2025. So far in 2025 she has recorded a 55.750 in the All-Around, a 14.700 on beam and a 14.500 on floor. We can not wait to see Esposito’s exquisite form, execution and grace back on the European floor. Olympic gold medalist Alice D’Amato is the reigning European Champion on bars and will bring her signature difficulty to this year’s championships.
Superstars Take the floor
Many stars will be on display! World and Olympic Champion on uneven bars Nina Derwael is back and ready to showcase her smooth connections on the event! Olympic medalist Ray Zapata of Spain will compete and give fans a show on floor! Sabrina Maneca-Voinea and Olympic medalist Ana Barbosu will both compete for Romania! Missouri gymnastics rising sophomore Kaia Tanskanen will be competing for Finland just over a month after helping Mizzou to a historic third place finish at the NCAA National Championships. We are so excited that Kaia has decided to compete in college and elite gymnastics!
The Format
The format for the European Championships changes on a yearly basis! This year the team medals will be decided in conjunction with qualifications. Then there will be a Mixed Team Final and a Men’s and Women’s All-Around Final, followed by two days of event finals! Stay tuned to InsideGym.com and Inside Gymnastics across social media to not miss a minute of the action packed week!
College Sports
Wilkes-Barre City Council, residents clash over planned hotel project on Public Square
WILKES-BARRE — Several residents raised concerns over a proposed hotel and convention center project on Public Square during city council’s combined work session and regular meeting Thursday night. During the public comment session, resident Sam Troy said he was skeptical about the plan given that the developers tried and failed to complete the project […]

WILKES-BARRE — Several residents raised concerns over a proposed hotel and convention center project on Public Square during city council’s combined work session and regular meeting Thursday night.
During the public comment session, resident Sam Troy said he was skeptical about the plan given that the developers tried and failed to complete the project on the site initially proposed at the intersection of River Street and Market Street, where the Hotel Sterling once stood.
“So we’re stuck with that — with that eyesore for God knows, probably the rest of our lifetimes,” Troy said.
H&N Investments LLC purchased the former Hotel Sterling property from the city in 2018 and later announced plans to construct a Gateway Hyatt Place Hotel and Conference Center there.
However, it was announced on May 15 by the developers that the roughly $20 million project would be moving to the old Martz Trailways building at 46 Public Square instead.
During a press conference, developer Hysni ‘Sam’ Syla and project engineer George Albert explained that moving the hotel and conference center to a building that was already constructed would be more cost-effective.
Because of rising construction costs spurred by the COVID-19 pandemic, the project would have cost about $40 million if it remained on the Sterling Hotel site.
Mayor George Brown said he believed Syla may end up selling the property to a different developer. When the Times Leader spoke with Syla on May 15, he indicated that he wasn’t sure what he would do with the property, but new plans would be announced soon.
“Maybe it’s not his fault altogether, but I think it’s shameful what happened in that Sterling property,” Troy continued.
He also seemed skeptical of the project’s new location and questioned the developer’s available finances.
“How do we know [Sam Syla] is gonna come through with that?” Troy asked.
Almond Lane resident John Suchoski voiced similar concerns and asked council if they now felt it was wrong to approve Syla’s purchase of the property back in 2018.
“You didn’t go through and do your right research because they did not have the ability to build this property,” he said.
While he wants to be optimistic about the latested version of the project, Suchoski said that was difficult to do because it’s been in limbo for so long.
“I know everybody wants to be able to do that, and we want this down here, but do they have the actual ability to do it?” he asked.
Suchoski also criticized the council for its apparent removal of the reverter clause in the sales contract that would have allowed ownership of the property to revert back to the city under specific conditions.
“Like, now we have no control on what goes on that property,” he said. “It could be a gas station, it could be anything.”
Brown responded to these concerns by stating that the developers do have financing to complete the hotel project. He also pushed back against the notion that he was too optimistic about the project’s completion.
“Am I rosy about it? I’m very happy about it, okay? Because I see a very positive new hotel coming into the area that we don’t have. And that’s gonna be very competitive for us,” Brown said.
Additionally, Council Chairperson Tony Brooks, who was on council at the time, defended his decision to approve the sale of the property to Syla, saying he had a proven track record of success in the city.
Syla currently owns restaurants Cafe Tuscana and The Vault, among others.
“It’s completely understandable about everything else that happened with it, and I think you are absolutely correct. They didn’t have enough money. I wish we had a lot of rich people in Wilkes-Barre that could be developers and they would have egos to compete against each other. […] Sad to say, we don’t have that up in Wilkes-Barre,” Brooks said.
Council Member Bill Barrett pushed back again the idea that the city would have “no control” over what ultimately happened to the Sterling site.
“We all share the same concern about what’s going to become of the property, but it’s not going to be a gas station. It’s not gonna be a cigarette shop. There is zoning, there’s planning, all different safeguards to ensure that what someone does to the property is a good fit for the city of Wilkes-Barre,” Barrett said.
Huber Park improvements
In regards to agenda items, council voted to approve a resolution that would allow the city to apply for a Trails and Recreation Program (GTRP) grant in the amount of $250,000.00 from the Commonwealth Financing Authority of the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania for various improvements to Huber Park.
The park, often referred to as Mayflower Park, was officially renamed the Brian Grohowski Memorial Park in 2018.
Brown told council that if the city is approved for the grant, he hopes the park will be completely renovated, which includes installing new playground equipment and redoing the basketball court.
The field where the old baseball field used to be will remain green space, the mayor said, with the possible addition of some benches and fencing.
Brown also thanked Council Member Stan Mirin for championing the project and said they were both up at the park recently, speaking with residents.
Mirin said he believed the park hadn’t be updated since the 1990s.
Brown also gave an update construction at The Bog, off Dewey Lane. He expects work on the special needs playground portion of the project to be completed by the end of June.
Suchoski voiced his support for the Huber Park project and asked for more details regarding the planned improvements.
“I want, you know, I want that park fixed more than anybody,” he said. “I live right by it.”
Additional items approved include the second and final reading on an amendment to an ordinance that would raise fines for drivers who cut through parking lots to avoid waiting in traffic and the appointment of Jerome Dunn to the General Municipal Authority. His term will expire Dec. 31, 2028.
Possible community garden
During the public comment section, city resident Jamie Smith told council that he and a group of his neighbors presented a proposal on April 14 to the South Valley Land Bank, in hopes of acquiring a blighted property on 64 W. Ross St. to turn it into a perennial flower garden and outdoor youth education space.
While he knew the land bank had the final decision, he wanted to make council aware of his plans and ask for the city’s support. Smith also brought a group of residents along with him, who also support the project.
Brittany Stephenson shared her thoughts about the community garden with the Times Leader following the meeting.
“It’s a thoughtfully designed initiative that brings together environmental sustainability and educational opportunities,” her remarks read.
According to his website, Smith has been a resident of Pennsylvania since 2011 and founded the Social Fabric Collective in 2015, which is a nonprofit organization that provides professional photography equipment and education to school students.
“Jamie, I wanna say, I wanna thank you for investing in the city and all the work that you’re doing,” Brooks said.
Brown met with Smith and several other residents about the project following the meeting.
Smith told the Times Leader that he expects his proposal to be on the land bank’s June 11 agenda. That meeting will take place at 9 a.m. at the Earth Conservancy building in Ashley.
College Sports
Ben Waldrum appointed as head coach of Pitt women's soccer program
PITTSBURGH – University of Pittsburgh Athletic Director Allen Greene announced a coaching shift, in line with the professional soccer model, as Randy Waldrum has been named technical director of the Pitt Women’s Soccer program. The Panthers’ will now turn to Ben Waldrum, who has been on the Pitt staff for the past seven seasons including the past six as associate […]


PITTSBURGH – University of Pittsburgh Athletic Director Allen Greene announced a coaching shift, in line with the professional soccer model, as Randy Waldrum has been named technical director of the Pitt Women’s Soccer program. The Panthers’ will now turn to Ben Waldrum, who has been on the Pitt staff for the past seven seasons including the past six as associate head coach, to lead the program heading into the 2025 season.
“Randy [Waldrum] and his staff have done a tremendous job building the Pitt Women’s Soccer program over the past seven seasons,” said Greene. “As we look to continue to innovate and elevate women’s soccer in Pittsburgh, it became obvious that adopting a professional model with Randy assuming the role of technical director would be the best way to utilize his vast experience and success across the collegiate, professional, and international levels. Randy’s soccer acumen is unrivaled, and this new role will allow him to focus his energy on the technical and strategic direction of the program. He continues to be integral to the success of the Pitt Women’s Soccer program and will remain an ideal mentor to our new head coach Ben Waldrum.”
“As collegiate athletics continues to change it is important for our program to be prepared to adjust with it,” said Randy Waldrum. “Shifting my role to technical director will allow me to focus my attention on roster makeup, scouting, game planning, and all aspects of player development. I have seen this model have great success on the professional and international levels and am excited to be in position to mirror that here at Pitt. Ben [Waldrum] is well prepared to take on head coaching duties. He has a great passion for the game and has the energy, enthusiasm, and knowledge to lead the program. Pitt Women’s Soccer will continue to be a program on the rise in the ACC and on the national stage.”
The winningest coach in program history, Randy Waldrum led the Panthers to a 71-51-11 record with a pair of NCAA Tournament appearances over the past seven seasons. He engineered the four winningest seasons in program history including a 17-6-1 mark with an NCAA Elite Eight appearance in 2023. Waldrum concludes his NCAA Division I coaching career ranked in the top-20 overall with 470 victories.
Waldrum was appointed the head coach of the Nigeria Women’s Senior National Team, the Super Falcons, on Oct. 5, 2020, a role he served in addition to his coaching role at Pitt. He followed up his successful fourth season as head coach of the Panthers in 2021 by guiding Nigeria to a 1-0 win over Cameroon in the quarterfinals of the African Women’s World Cup of Nations (WAFCON) tournament in Casablanca in July 2022. The victory allowed the Super Falcons to secure one of four spots for the African nations in the 2023 Women’s World Cup in Australia and New Zealand. Waldrum also guided the Nigerian National Team, with former Pitt standout Deborah Abiodun, during the 2024 Paris Olympics. The appearance in the Olympic Games was Nigeria’s first in over 16 years.
Waldrum saw unprecedented success in his tenure at the helm of the perennial powerhouse Notre Dame women’s program. In his 14 seasons, he led the Fighting Irish to two national championships, capturing the College Cup title in 2004 and ’10. His teams won eight Big East Tournament titles and appeared in eight NCAA Final Four games in that span.
A two-time national coach of the year (2009 by Soccer America; ’10 by NSCAA), Waldrum was the first coach in NCAA history to lead a team to a national title in his/her first season with a program. He wrapped up his tenure at Notre Dame with a mark of 292-58-17 (.819).
Waldrum joined the Fighting Irish after beginning the women’s soccer program at Baylor, building the Bears into a threat in the Big 12 from scratch. In three seasons with Baylor, Waldrum guided the Bears to an overall mark of 46-14-3 after spending 1995-96 starting up the program. He was named the Big 12 and NSCAA Region Coach of the Year after a 15-5-1 record in 1998, as the Bears reached as high as 12th in the nation en route to a Big 12 Conference title.
Prior to his tenure at Baylor, Waldrum spent six seasons at the helm of the Tulsa program, serving as head coach for both the men’s and women’s programs from 1989-94. He led the men to a record of 66-33-6 and the women to a mark of 61-36-9.
In addition to his impressive resume in the NCAA, Waldrum also spent time in the National Women’s Soccer League (NWSL), becoming the head coach of the Houston Dash expansion team in January of 2014. In his three seasons with the Dash, Waldrum coached seven national team players who laced up with their respective countries in the Rio Summer Olympic Games, including Team USA members Carli Lloyd, Morgan Brian, and Pittsburgh native Meghan Klingenberg.
Waldrum also served as the head coach of the United States U-23 National Team from 2012-13, winning the Four Nations Cup in 2012 and ’13 as well as the Three Nations Cup in ’12. His international coaching resume also included a stint at the helm of the Trinidad & Tobago Women’s National Team from 2014-16.
RANDY WALDRUM BY THE NUMBERS
- Two-time NCAA Champion (2004, 2010)
- First coach in NCAA history to lead a team to the NCAA title in first season
- Three-time National Coach of the Year (1996, 2009, 2010)
- 470 career wins (top 20 all-time in NCAA history)
- 470-159-40
- 29 seasons with 10 or more wins
- Nine seasons with 20 or more wins
- Nine conference titles
- 18 NCAA Tournament Appearance
- Led Pitt to first NCAA Elite Eight in 2023
- 29 All-America selections
- Led Pitt to five consecutive winning seasons (longest stretch in program history)
- Led Pitt to program records in wins, ACC wins, home wins, points, goals and assists in 2023
RANDY WALDRUM COLLEGIATE COACHING STOPS
- Austin College (1982) – Men’s
- Texas Wesleyan (1988) – Men’s
- Tulsa (1989-94) – Men’s & Women’s
- Baylor (1996-98) – Women’s
- Notre Dame (1999-2013) – Women’s
- Pitt (2018-24) – Women’s
NEXT IN LINE
Ben Waldrum is ready to carry on the success the Pitt program has reached after working under the direction of his father for nearly 15 seasons, including the past seven at the University of Pittsburgh. He earned his start in collegiate coaching as an assistant coach and recruiting coordinator at Notre Dame (2003-08). With both Waldrums on staff, the Fighting Irish accumulated a record of 111-13-5 while winning the 2004 NCAA National Championship. He was a member of three NCAA College Cup appearances while at Notre Dame while also winning five Big East regular season titles and coaching five All-Americans during his time in South Bend.
“Ben [Waldrum] is well-prepared to take on the role of head coach of the Pitt Women’s Soccer program,” said Greene. “He has learned under a coaching legend in Randy Waldrum and will benefit from continuing to have him on the pitch as the technical director of Pitt Women’s Soccer. Ben is extremely passionate about growing the game, competing at a championship level, and helping our student-athletes maximize their opportunity at Pitt. We are excited to adopt this professional staffing model and look forward to watching Pitt Women’s Soccer continue to excel on the field, in the community, and in the classroom.”
“I am grateful for the opportunity to be the next head coach of the Pitt Women’s Soccer program,” said Ben Waldrum. “We have worked diligently over the past seven years to elevate this program and this shift to a professional staffing model is going to help us make the next jump. I have learned so much from Randy [Waldrum] throughout my career and we will continue to operate in sync with him as technical director of the program. We are excited about the roster we have put together for the 2025 season and are eager to get them all on campus to begin working towards another NCAA Tournament run.”
Waldrum has been instrumental in the elevation of the Pitt program as the Panthers have secured three of the largest and most talented recruiting classes in program history. The recruiting success has shown as Pitt has received 14 All-ACC honorees in the past seven seasons with four players (Deborah Abiodun, Landy Mertz, Sarah Schupansky, and Amanda West) earning NWSL contracts over the past three seasons.
He has also coached on the national level with the Trinidad & Tobago Women’s National Team (2014-16) and in the WPSL with FC Dallas (2015-18).
College Sports
Women’s Sailing in Fifth After First Day of Championship Racing
By: Rebecca Osowski Story Links After finishing fifth in the Eastern Semifinal of the Women’s Fleet Race National Championship, the Big Green moved onto championship racing, one of 18 teams to qualify for the final round. Dartmouth sailed in six races, posting 45 points to sit in fifth place after […]

After finishing fifth in the Eastern Semifinal of the Women’s Fleet Race National Championship, the Big Green moved onto championship racing, one of 18 teams to qualify for the final round.
Dartmouth sailed in six races, posting 45 points to sit in fifth place after the first day of racing.
The Big Green finished tenth in the first A Division race but began a steady climb back into the top five. Dartmouth finished sixth in the first B Division race before going on to finish ninth to put the Big Green in sixth.
In the third set of races, both boats finished in the top five. The A Division took third before the B Division sailed to second place, the highest Big Green finish of the day.
With the first day of racing concluded, the Big Green sit sixth points behind fourth place Stanford. Tulane leads the way with 27 total points, 20 in the A Division and seven in the B Division. Georgetown (38) and Brown (38) sit in second and third.
The Big Green hold a three point lead over sixth place MIT. Yale, who won the western semifinal sits in eighth place with 52 points, followed by Harvard with 54 points.
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