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D2 Soccer Camp set for June 16

D2 Soccer Camp set for June 16-20 at Thompson High School Published 5:01 pm Friday, May 30, 2025 The Dynamic Development Soccer Camp is set to return to Thompson High School from June 16-20 as Dan DeMasters and his team of high-level coaches prepare to train the next generation of D2 campers. (File) By ANDREW […]

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D2 Soccer Camp set for June 16

D2 Soccer Camp set for June 16-20 at Thompson High School

Published 5:01 pm Friday, May 30, 2025

By ANDREW SIMONSON | Sports Editor

ALABASTER – One of the most popular soccer camps in the Birmingham area is back and bigger than ever as Dan DeMasters prepares to host the Dynamic Development (D2) Soccer Camp once again.

The 12th edition of the camp will run from June 16-20 at Thompson High School. It is open to kids from ages 5-12 and will go from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. on Monday through Thursday and 9 a.m. to noon on Friday. Half-day options are available for younger campers.

In addition, the ever-popular parents’ night will return on Thursday from 6 to 7:30 p.m. where kids play against their parents.

DeMasters will bring his experience as a former college soccer player as well as a successful high school coach to the camp. Most recently, he helped Thompson win its first girls soccer playoff game since 2013. He also won three-straight state championships as the Oak Mountain boys soccer coach from 2015-2017.

Last year’s edition brought out 188 kids to learn from a wide variety of coaches, from DeMasters’ staff with Thompson girls soccer to former college and current high school coaches like Oak Mountain’s David DiPiazza and Homewood’s Shaun McBride to current college soccer players who came to D2 Camp as kids.

“You get people like that (former college coaches), you get younger adolescents from like 18 to 22-year-olds that play in college and they’re the ones that the kids kind of look up to and they’re their heroes and then you mix in some of the camp alumni that have grown up that are coming to work at camp and mixed in with some of the Thompson crew that kind of understands the culture that we’re creating here in our program, all of that just encompasses together ,and we just try to create the best experience and we try to do the best we can,” DeMasters said.

Campers can expect to play games like World Cup, Baby World Cup, 3-on-3 and other competitions for awards. They will also learn essential soccer skills that they can put to use in their personal game.

Over the past decade-plus that the camp has run, it has become a beloved and important part of soccer development in Birmingham. Some of the most successful soccer players from Birmingham over the last few years cut their teeth at D2 Camp growing up and now play in college and even coach at the camp.

For DeMasters, seeing their growth as players and people is the most rewarding thing about running the camp year after year.

“A lot of those Oak Mountain boys that had such a successful season, they came through camp, and though it was a very small sliver, it was cool to see them have success and they grow up and now they’re men going off to college,” DeMasters said. “Some of my girls that were seniors this year, like one of my captains was like the bubble blowing champion, and she’s become such a fantastic soccer player, but you remember those things and you see pictures of them, and now my daughter is coming to camp and I think one of the girls that was at the very first camp ever at Oak Mountain, she was five years old, now she’s graduating from Oak Mountain and she’s working the camp this year, so it’s cool. It’s a really fulfilling thing. That’s sort of why you do it.”

The camp has evolved over the years to grow in size and scale, and while some faces that DeMasters is grateful for like Oak Mountain assistant coach Keegan McQueen are no longer part of the camp, he is excited to see the kids continue to develop and use the week to improve as players.

“As I’m getting older and you’re seeing the kids getting better and developing, it’s only a week of the year so you don’t think that you have an impact because one week out of 52 weeks of the year, you’re just thinking it’s a week of fun and gets the kids to kind of be in a different atmosphere, but I think when you see the kids developing each and every year, they’re getting taller and stronger and like just striking the ball better, that’s a very satisfying thing and rewarding thing I think as a coach,” DeMasters said.

Registration is open online at Dynamicdevelopmentcamps.com, and the cost to attend the regular camp is $230. A special Elite Group for 10-to-12-year-olds who want to receive high level training is available for $250.

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College Soccer

CHARLOTTE, N.C. — Marley Krach, a former Woodlands Highlander Soccer standout, was awarded the Big South’s Christenberry Award for her excellence in academics that go alongside her athletic prowess. The Christenberry Award is given out to one female and one male student-athlete per institution per year. These athletes had to be nominated by their respective […]

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College Soccer

CHARLOTTE, N.C. — Marley Krach, a former Woodlands Highlander Soccer standout, was awarded the Big South’s Christenberry Award for her excellence in academics that go alongside her athletic prowess.

The Christenberry Award is given out to one female and one male student-athlete per institution per year. These athletes had to be nominated by their respective schools through the rigorous criteria of being the graduating student-athlete with the highest GPA.

Krach cut due to attaining a 4.0 GPA while working toward her biology degree, in addition to the tough time spent on the soccer field. Krach’s role as a midfielder and defender saw her take valuable minutes during her nearly 20-game senior season. 

The continued success of Krach’s academic career spans back to her time spent since first joining the Radford program. With each passing semester, Krach has been named to the Dean’s List, highlighting the never-ending balance of her student-athlete journey.

Krach now joins the 11 other recipients of the prestigious award for the 2024-25 athletic season, making one more mark before she departs the collegiate ranks.

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WKU Soccer Signs Two Transfers

BOWLING GREEN, Ky. – WKU Soccer has announced two new additions to the 2025 roster in transfers Mia Riddick and Torrie Grant-Clavijo. Riddick comes to The Hill from Arkansas and Grant-Clavijo comes from St. Bonaventure. “We are excited about our additions during this transfer window,” said head coach Jason Neidell. “Torrie and Mia will be great […]

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WKU Soccer Signs Two Transfers

BOWLING GREEN, Ky. – WKU Soccer has announced two new additions to the 2025 roster in transfers Mia Riddick and Torrie Grant-Clavijo. Riddick comes to The Hill from Arkansas and Grant-Clavijo comes from St. Bonaventure.
 
“We are excited about our additions during this transfer window,” said head coach Jason Neidell. “Torrie and Mia will be great additions to the team in the classroom, in the locker room, and most importantly on the field. Both have strong soccer pedigrees and significant college experience under their belt. We cannot wait for them to join the rest of the squad soon. The best is yet ahead for this Hilltopper group, and we cannot wait to get started!”
 
Mia Riddick
Roswell, Ga. | Arkansas | Roswell High School | Redshirt-Junior | Goalkeeper | 6-0
In high school, Riddick led her team to a regional championship and a finals appearance in the GHSA championship in 2022. She allowed no goals during regional play during that season. She was named to the All-Region First Team twice and earned Region Player and Goalkeeper of the Year in 2022. She was also named to the All-State Team that season.
 
At the club level, she played with UFA for three years. In 2021, she led to the team to a ECNL Final Four appearance and a No. 4 national ranking. She was named a Top Drawer Soccer National Tournament Standout and was ranked as the No. 1 goalkeeper in her class in Georgia.
 
Torrie Grant-Clavijo
Toronto, Ontario, Canada | St. Bonaventure | North Toronto Collegiate Institute | Sophomore | Midfielder/Forward | 5-1
At St. Bonaventure, Grant-Clavijo started in 13 matches while playing in all 16 games for the Bonnies. She scored her first collegiate goal against Rhode Island on Oct. 17. She notched two assists on the season, one against VCU on Sept. 29 and another against Richmond on Oct. 24.
 
In high school, Grant-Clavijo played and started in every game and was one of the team’s leading goal scorers and assists contributors. On the club side, she played with WNY Flash ECNL for two years.
 
How to follow the Hilltoppers: For complete information on WKU Soccer, visit WKUSports.com or follow the program via social media @WKU_Soccer on X and Instagram and @WKUSoccer on Facebook.
 
 

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Houston Dash Transfer Forward Diana Ordóñez to Tigres UANL Femenil

HOUSTON (May 30, 2025) – The Houston Dash transferred forward Diana Ordóñez to Tigres UANL Femenil for an undisclosed transfer fee, both teams announced today. Ordóñez appeared in 44 games for the team in the regular season and scored eight goals. She scored an additional two goals for the Dash last year in the NWSL […]

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Houston Dash Transfer Forward Diana Ordóñez to Tigres UANL Femenil

HOUSTON (May 30, 2025) – The Houston Dash transferred forward Diana Ordóñez to Tigres UANL Femenil for an undisclosed transfer fee, both teams announced today. Ordóñez appeared in 44 games for the team in the regular season and scored eight goals. She scored an additional two goals for the Dash last year in the NWSL x LIGA MX Femenil.

“We’re grateful for everything Diana brought to the organization — her commitment, professionalism and presence both on and off the field,” President of Women’s Soccer, Angela Hucles Mangano said. “We wish her nothing but success moving forward as she transitions to a new chapter that will facilitate new opportunities for her personal and professional development.”

The team acquired the Mexican international following a trade with the North Carolina Courage prior to the 2023 NWSL Draft. Ordóñez scored 11 goals for the Courage in her rookie season. The Courage drafted Ordóñez with the sixth overall pick in the 2022 NWSL Draft.

“I’m incredibly thankful for my time with the Houston Dash and the NWSL. The city of Houston, its community and my teammates have meant so much to me,” Ordóñez said. “Debuting as a professional in this country has been a dream come true, and I am grateful for every experience. I’m looking forward to what lies ahead.”

Ordóñez played college soccer at the University of Virginia and finished with 62 appearances. She scored 45 goals for the Cavaliers throughout her career and that was the third highest mark in program history.

At the international level, Ordóñez competes for the Mexican Women’s National Team. She scored in her debut on April 9, 2022, in a victory over Anguilla. More recently, she helped Mexico reach the semifinals of the inaugural Concacaf W Gold Cup in 2024.

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Former Huntington soccer player wins $500k in MrBeast challenge with Neymar

CAMPINAS, Brazil (WPTA) – Brazil native Higor Barbieri found a passion for soccer early in life. “Like every single Brazilian, I grew up playing soccer on the streets,” Barbieri said. That love for the game eventually led Barbieri on a journey to the United States, where he played college soccer and soon wound up in […]

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Former Huntington soccer player wins $500k in MrBeast challenge with Neymar

CAMPINAS, Brazil (WPTA) – Brazil native Higor Barbieri found a passion for soccer early in life.

“Like every single Brazilian, I grew up playing soccer on the streets,” Barbieri said.

That love for the game eventually led Barbieri on a journey to the United States, where he played college soccer and soon wound up in 21Country.

“I went to a junior college and played decently there,” Barbieri said. “Then I got an offer from Huntington University. They gave me a scholarship and I went straight to Huntington,” he said.

After earning his master’s degree in 2024, following three seasons at Huntington, Barbieri thought the competitive thrill and pressure of the game might be behind him, until about two weeks ago.

“I got a message,” Barbieri said. “They were looking for a soccer player who speaks English, and I got selected.”

The message turned out to be a surprise invitation to compete in a MrBeast challenge. The popular YouTube channel, which averages millions of views per video, gives subscribers the chance to win thousands of dollars. This particular opportunity? A head-to-head challenge against world-famous Brazilian soccer star Neymar for a $500,000 prize.

“It was a huge surprise because he’s my favorite player,” Barbieri said. “Out of nowhere, I was sharing the pitch with him and about to challenge him.”

In the end, Barbieri won the goal-scoring competition and took home the $500k.

“I still think I’m living a dream and I don’t think it’s real,” Barbieri said. “It will definitely change my life. I don’t come from a wealthy family. My mom had to work two jobs during my whole childhood, and now I can literally change that and provide a better life for my family.”

All of it, Barbieri says, came thanks not only to luck and MrBeast’s generosity, but also to the skills he gained in 21Country.

“Huntington definitely prepared me for this challenge,” Barbieri said. “It was a great college. They prepared me not just physically and technically, but also mentally. There were a lot of mind games in that challenge, so I’m very grateful to Huntington University.”

To watch the whole challenge, click the link here. The video has over 92 million views and counting.

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'EA College Football 26' hands

EA Sports After more than a decade without a college football video game, fans couldn’t wait to get their hands on “EA Sports College Football 25” after it launched last summer, making it the best-selling sports video game in history.  The follow-up title, “EA Sports College Football 26,” will release July 10, and while there […]

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'EA College Football 26' hands

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EA Sports

After more than a decade without a college football video game, fans couldn’t wait to get their hands on “EA Sports College Football 25” after it launched last summer, making it the best-selling sports video game in history. 

The follow-up title, “EA Sports College Football 26,” will release July 10, and while there is not nearly as much anticipation as last year, fans of the first game had plenty of things they wanted to see improved upon or added for this year’s game. On Thursday, I got a chance to play an early version of the game down at EA’s studios in Orlando, Florida, and spent nearly five hours digging into the new gameplay changes and updates the two major career modes: Dynasty and Road to Glory. 

Below you can find a detailed account of my thoughts after some time on the sticks, but the overall feeling I left with was that they had genuinely improved the game — some areas more than others — and built on what was a solid foundation from their first year back making a college football video game. 

Gameplay

I think the general takeaway from most folks that played last year’s game was that it was fun, but had room to grow and improve in terms of gameplay. After playing for a few hours (on an early version they promise will get even better), I am pleased to say they certainly made some big strides with the gameplay. It’s smoother, smarter and a few key elements that were lacking last year are much improved this year. 

Presentation


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We’ll start with presentation where they added a ton of stuff, including some iconic entrances that were missing from the first game — for example, Virginia Tech runs out to “Enter Sandman” and South Carolina has “2001: A Space Odyssey” and “Sandstorm.” The bands play a lot more songs, there are more songs that play over the PA that crowds sing along to, there are more mascots, they added a bunch of turnover celebrations, and teams have more varied and unique runouts that can change depending on how big the game is (with special presentations for night games) — with their real coaches in the front now that (most) coaches are in the game. 

Metallica finally visits Virginia Tech’s Lane Stadium on tour, sets off Richter scale for ‘Enter Sandman’

Robby Kalland

Metallica finally visits Virginia Tech's Lane Stadium on tour, sets off Richter scale for 'Enter Sandman'

Anyone that played the first game a bunch noticed that a lot of things were repetitive, and it certainly seems like that will be less of the case this year. 

Defense

I’m shocked to be talking to you about defense because I have never really enjoyed playing video game football defense, largely because I’ve been terrible at anything other than line play. I have been a staunch “offensive coordinator mode” user of this game for a very long time, allowing super sim to handle the defense. 

However, the two hours I played on this game were genuinely enjoyable and I felt defense was far more intuitive and less frantic than in the past. Physics-based tackling, which debuted in “Madden 25,” has come to EA CFB 26 and makes for a much better experience, as it’s been tuned really well to be a smoother function. Hit sticks are far less of a crap shoot, you can trip guys up and big defenders bring down small guys easier and small defenders struggle to bring down big guys. 

I’m still not great in space (skill issue, not game issue), but they also have a new block shedding feature I loved that allows you to move a lineman with your left stick movement when engaged as a defender and still have an impact as both a pass rusher and run defender. They also have the option to choose different line stunts for every play in the playbook, allowing you to customize each play to throw some new wrinkles at the offensive line. 

Running the dang ball 


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The weak point of last year’s game was running the football. I can’t tell you how many times I got mad because I’d be following my guard through a hole and he wouldn’t even consider blocking the safety in front of him and just run down field aimlessly and I’d get tackled. I’m thrilled to inform you that doesn’t happen anymore. The new blocking engine is fantastic and your linemen will make the right reads and right decisions within the scheme you’re running. That, plus the physics-based engine that means your big back can run through arm tackles by a DB means long runs that were nearly impossible to create between the tackles are now very much in play. 

CPU AI improvements 

The game is smarter than last year, which makes for a good challenge. Defenses will disguise blitzes and coverages until right before the snap, and they read tendencies much better than they used to. If you’re running inside zone a bunch, they might start going to an under front to take away that double team with the center and guard and slow you down. If you keep throwing drag routes and underneath stuff, they’ll adapt and try to take that away. This happens much faster the higher level you go, with Heisman mode being a very legitimate challenge — but one I didn’t find impossible — that will force you to vary not only your play calling, but where you’re going with the football on those plays. 

Road to Glory

I think the game mode that felt the most vanilla last year was Road to Glory, and the big news for the mode this year is that they heard the complaints about starting in college and brought back the high school portion of the game. Not only that, they made it a legitimate recruiting process, which I found fun (and frustrating) to play. You once again pick your star level to start at, which impacts your attributes and ratings, but you have to try and maintain or improve on that star rating with your play on the field and get the offers you want — which was not easy. 

I did a quick run through the high school portion starting as a 3-star QB and dropped to a 2-star. As a Dynasty guy mainly, I still am not used to the Road to Glory camera angle (even zoomed out), which played a role, but also, they do a good job of giving you the high school experience where both you aren’t that great and your teammates can be even worse. While frustrating throwing good passes that got dropped, it also made it feel real and made the successes even more fun. 

The quick breakdown of the recruiting process is you pick 10 schools to be in your top 10 and play five weeks of a high school season. For each school you can see their depth chart and where you project, their other recruits on their recruiting board, the team’s coaching style and scheme fit for your archetype and more. From there, you have a “tape score” that you earn points toward with your play by hitting your goals, with some goals getting boosts for certain teams. You can also get a challenge goal from a specific team that can give you a big boost with that school. 

Instead of playing full games, you pick four moments from a list before each game to play that have a basic goal worth 50 points and a bigger goal worth 200 or more. The better you do in hitting goals on those four drives you get each game, the more interested schools will get and once you meet their threshold, you’ll get a scholarship offer. You can commit at any time, but as you keep playing, if you do better, you can get more incentives and boosts to skills if you sign with that team as part of your offer — this feels like their way of doing NIL without NIL. However, if you play poorly you can lose incentives, and if they sign another player at your position the tape score threshold could jump up and you might lose your offer. 

Finally, you narrow your list to a top three and get to do a hat ceremony if you haven’t already committed, and in the hat ceremony you can fake out a team and throw a hat off the table. That was pretty enjoyable. 


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I didn’t get any farther than that as we had limited time and I wanted to see as much of the game as I could, but I will say this portion of Road to Glory was quite fun and felt like being on the other side of Dynasty mode. We’ll have to see if they did enough to make the in-college portion more enjoyable and have more variance, but this was a much better starting spot for the mode. 

Dynasty

Dynasty was the mode I spent the most time in, as did most folks who played the game, and for the most part they kept the main elements the same, which is a positive in my eyes. Their main focus on Dynasty this year seemed to be improving the user experience and providing more customization options so you can get an even deeper experience if you want it. 

The big updates for recruiting that I could see were changes to the presentation of the recruiting board, most notably your team needs being at the top of the board rather than a separate page you have to toggle in and out of, which was a huge improvement. There is also more information in the main recruiting board screen, like where a prospect is in the process (top eight, top five, top three), a red dot when they’re ready for a visit and green and red flags for when you’ve moved up or down on their list. All of it allows you to see more information without having to go in and out of each recruit’s name and toggle through the various screens. 

The other big change to recruiting is the time cost for scheduling visits is now no longer 40 hours for every recruit, but instead varies based on their proximity to your school and your pipelines. That allows small schools with fewer recruiting hours to more easily recruit local prospects, because a kid in your backyard only costs 10 or 15 hours instead of 40. 

The trophy room is back along with rivalry trophies, bowl trophies and real awards — so, Doak Walker Award instead of Best Running Back — which is another element that makes the game feel more real. 

Another interesting thing is the game and coaching carousel feels a little more lively with the actual coaches in the game. Not only are most of the 136 head coaches in the game, but a lot of real coordinators are as well. That means they all have attributes, traits and coaching levels (which now go above 50), which are fun to parse through, and you can choose to start your career as one of those coaches and pick up all of their skills from the jump. It’s also funny seeing things in the Staff Moves page like Dabo Swinney going to the NFL, which happened at the end of the first year of my quick Dynasty play through. 

From a customization stand point, some things that didn’t quite make it into last year’s game that they wanted to add but weren’t able to get functioning properly for launch are in this year’s edition. Big ones include formation subs, protected rivalry games for custom conferences and being able to sim to any week of the season. In general, players are given more tools to customize the experience across the board, whether you want to have more or less control. 

There’s also a change to wear-and-tear to expand it from a single game thing to an element that players carry with them over the course of a full season and career. That makes managing player usage even more challenging, but if you’re getting fed up with injuries happening too often you can also customize wear-and-tear impacts for various hit types with sliders. 

Overall, it feels a lot like last year, with just a bit more going on and a better user interface. To me, that’s a win, because I enjoyed Dynasty mode in 25 and will be ready to sink some more hours into this one. 

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