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College Sports
President Trump reportedly considering executive order limiting NIL after meeting with Nick Saban
The latest complication in the ongoing fight over how college athletes should be paid could come straight from the pen of President Donald Trump. The president is considering an executive order regarding NIL payments after a meeting with former Alabama head football coach Nick Saban on Thursday night, according to the Wall Street Journal. Advertisement […]

The latest complication in the ongoing fight over how college athletes should be paid could come straight from the pen of President Donald Trump.
The president is considering an executive order regarding NIL payments after a meeting with former Alabama head football coach Nick Saban on Thursday night, according to the Wall Street Journal.
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Saban reportedly complained about NIL to Trump, who was in Tuscaloosa to deliver the University of Alabama’s commencement address, and said he believed the system has damaged college sports. However, the coach didn’t propose eliminating NIL but instead “reforming” it to address an allegedly uneven playing field.
Trump reportedly said he agreed with Saban and would look at drafting an executive order, directing aides to begin studying what such an order would say.
Sen. Tommy Tuberville, R-Ala., helped set up the meeting with the hope it could be a first step in changing NIL, as he said Wednesday:
“Hopefully we’ll get to sit down with Coach Saban. President Trump wants to help on this NIL. I don’t know how he can do it through an executive order. But possibly we can sit down and talk some insight of what Coach Saban thinks about it, what I think about it and we can come up with some sort of agreement because right now it’s in a tailspin.”
What would an executive order from President Trump mean for NIL?
If Trump follows through, an executive order would potentially upend years of legal fights involving the NCAA and various levels of government. The NCAA has had its restrictions on student-athlete income and transfers regularly struck down in court over the past five years, a process that is still ongoing.
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The modern college football landscape now features athletes who can transfer immediately and earn millions of dollars in money from boosters. That landscape could further change soon, as the House settlement, which would open the door for schools to directly pay athletes, is clearing its final legal hurdles.
With the executive order not even drafted, it’s impossible to tell how the NCAA, its schools and the legal system might react. The White House does not formally oversee college athletics, so an executive order would usually bear little weight, but a directive from Trump to either limit NIL payments or strike them down would draw attention for at least a couple of reasons.
Most of the changes in college athletics over the past five years have been built on the bedrock of decisions from the Supreme Court and other major courtrooms, and trying to reverse any of that would further escalate Trump’s attempts to subvert the authorities of courtrooms in the United States.
The Trump administration has also not been shy about threatening to pull federal funding from schools if they don’t comply with its wishes, most notably its restrictions on diversity programs and transgender policies.
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Nick Saban has railed against NIL for years
It’s not a surprise Trump and Tuberville found a notable anti-NIL voice in Saban.
Even by the standards of college football coaches, Saban has been withering in his disapproval of the system that shaped his final years at Alabama, though he has denied it was the reason for his retirement. He called for federal legislation to address the matter in 2022, among many comments that year pleading for something to change.
That outlook roped Saban into feuds with both Jimbo Fisher, then the head coach of Texas A&M, and Deion Sanders, then of Jackson State.
College Sports
A passion for ice hockey lands Rico Phillips in local sports hall of fame
Posted on May 18, 2025 By Harold C. Ford While many of Flint’s most notable athletes found success in basketball, football, baseball, and track and field, Rico Phillips found it in ice hockey. The son of an African American father and a German immigrant mother, Phillips grew up in Flint and graduated from Flint Southwestern […]

By Harold C. Ford
While many of Flint’s most notable athletes found success in basketball, football, baseball, and track and field, Rico Phillips found it in ice hockey.
The son of an African American father and a German immigrant mother, Phillips grew up in Flint and graduated from Flint Southwestern High School in 1987. In March, he was inducted into the Greater Flint African American Sports Hall of Fame
(GFAASHOF), making him one of just four Flint athletes feted in the sport of ice hockey between GFAASHOF and the Greater Flint Area Sports Hall of Fame. The honor also makes him the only African American with Flint hall of fame recognition specifically for ice hockey.
An East Village Magazine (EVM) review of 265 individuals and 15 teams in the GFAASHOF found only one other reference to ice hockey. Norman Graham Jr. was inducted in 2018, and while a sentence of his seven-paragraph tribute indicates he “was one of seven African-American children from Flint’s Southside to join the Greater Flint Hockey Association,” and that “he was selected team captain” and “the leading scorer on all but two of his teams,” the rest of the message notes Graham’s long list of track accomplishments.
Despite making history, in an interview with Phillips after his hall of fame induction, the star athlete noted that ice hockey was “the furthest thing” he believed he would ever participate in.
From floor to ice
Phillips recalled his first experience with hockey taking place in the gymnasium of Flint’s Lincoln Elementary School. That’s where he discovered that he enjoyed a game played with sticks used to shoot a puck or ball into a net.
“I really loved it,” Phillips said, adding that he had liked playing goalie.
But at home there was less hockey and more basketball, as his backyard featured a hoop in the driveway where the older neighborhood boys would come to compete.
“I was always the short guy,” Phillips remembered. “I never was really good at it.”
So, he volunteered to grab the whistle and referee those driveway basketball games – an experience that would serve him well in years to come as an on-ice hockey official.
Not being built for basketball isn’t what led Phillips to hockey, however. Instead, it was a bit of serendipity.
Phillips got his certification in first aid and CPR while in eighth grade, which led the head athletic trainer at Flint Southwestern High School (SWHS) to ask Phillips to be an assistant. Phillips immediately said yes.
“It was an opportunity to use hands-on skills,” he recalled. Plus, Phillips wanted to become a firefighter at the time, and he knew the experience and first aid-CPR training would be useful.
During his freshman and sophomore years at Southwestern, Phillips saw the hockey teams up close from his position as an assistant trainer.
“I knew there’s going to be some injuries so I get to hone my [first aid and CPR] skills,” Phillips recalled.
That experience as an assistant trainer for Southwestern’s ice hockey team turned out to be transformational. “I couldn’t believe the speed, the skill, the passion,” he said. “It was from there that I found my love for the sport.”
Phillips’ budding sideline interest led him to ask the ice hockey coach if he would teach him how to skate.
“He looked at me as if I was kind of crazy,” Phillips said, but the team’s assistant coach did end up working with Phillips, one-on-one, to teach him.
“That’s how I got on the ice,” Phillips said. “At first I was just grabbing the boards and holding onto them the whole time.”
After a short stint on the SWHS team during spring hockey season, Phillips came back for more.
“I don’t know why I came back to hockey after that [spring] season because I was getting the snot knocked out of me,” he said with a laugh.
In fact, Phillips recalled his dad saying to him, “You don’t want to play hockey; they get their teeth knocked out.”
A few years later, Phillips did, indeed, lose his front teeth playing hockey, but it didn’t much matter by then.
“I was having the time of my life,” he said.
“Go ref basketball where you belong”
During his junior year at SWHS, Phillips remarkably advanced to a head trainer position for all of Genesee County high school hockey.
In locker room conversations between periods, adult ice hockey officials convinced Phillips, still a senior in high school at the time, that he should become an on-ice referee. It would be challenging for certain, but he would be compensated for his time.
While the challenge of refereeing was expected to come from having to skate at the same speed as the players (and stop quickly, which Phillips had yet to learn to do well), the challenge would also prove to come from Phillips’ complexion in the nearly all-white world of ice hockey arenas.
“I would start hearing things from people in the stands,” he recalled. “Why don’t you go ref basketball where you belong?” was one such example.
White referees would insultingly remind him that a faceoff with a puck drop was not the same as a jump ball in basketball.
“I didn’t know how to accept it,” Phillips recalled of hearing such things from his colleagues.
Then, while officiating at the former IMA ice arena in Flint, 17-year-old Phillips admittedly blew a call. He was summoned to the bench by an angry coach, and once there, the team’s assistant coach called him a “n*****” and threatened to assault him in the parking lot after the match.
“It was a moment that shook me up,” Phillips remembered. “There was nobody that could support me; I refed the rest of the game in a fog.”
Ultimately, Phillips’ co-official (a white adult) skated over to the bench and threw the offending coach out of the contest.
After the match concluded, he offered Phillips advice that remains salient for him to this day: “Rico, either today you’re going to grow up or you’re going to stay a kid. You’re going to come across people that are racist in your life, and it’s how you’re going to deal with that racism that’s going to dictate how happy you are.”
His co-official reminded Phillips that he, Phillips, could’ve and should’ve thrown the offending coach out of the contest.
“But I had your back,” he said. “People will have your back.”
Even knowing he had allies on the ice, after the incident, Phillips considered leaving the sport that he’d grown to love.
Racism continued to taint his hockey experience, but he said he learned how to weather it over time.
Early on, Phillips said he used self-deprecating humor. “I was endearing because I would make people laugh,” he explained. But later, he realized that he was “normalizing bigotry,” and he’d had enough, saying to himself, “this shit ain’t funny no more; I’ve gotta stop joking.”
Adding to the hate he endured on-ice, Phillips also caught hell from his Black friends who didn’t understand his passion for ice hockey. “Why are you playing this white sport?” he remembers being asked.
Phillips struggled to explain to his friends the speed and skill of ice hockey.
“All they really knew about the sport is there was fighting,” he said.
Phillips eventually moved past the criticisms of his friends, though, noting, “I began to become proud I was the only Black person on the ice.”


Rico Phillips (back row, left) and members of FICYHP. (Photo by Savannah Edwards)
Flint Inner City Youth Hockey Program
Throughout his hockey career, Phillips came to realize that many of the participants in youth ice hockey were white and rather privileged. That’s what sparked the idea for a Flint Inner City Youth Hockey Program (FICYHP) to serve children of color. He said he longed to “influence young Black families … about how the sport is so great and offers so much.”
“Diversifying the sport is my goal,” Phillips explained. He hopes to help move ice hockey to a stage where a future Rico Phillips is not the only person of color to ref or play. “When that happens, racial slurs will begin to disappear from the sport,” he said.
FICYHP, established in 2010, now lists its mission “to introduce, teach how to ice skate and develop hockey skills to kids who would otherwise not have an opportunity to enjoy the sport” on its website’s home page.
With considerable pride, Phillips told EVM that 16 FICYHP graduates have gone on to play organized hockey at higher levels. In particular he referenced William Walker, who began playing FICYHP hockey at seven-years-old and was eventually
awarded a partial-ride scholarship at Michigan’s Adrian College.
“He’s furthering his education,” Phillips said. “There’s legacy there.”
Reflecting on his recent hall of fame induction, Phillips added that “legacy is important” to him as he grows older and passes his sport on to the next generation.
He said he hopes to be remembered as a giving person.
“It’s been my passion my entire life,” Phillips said. “I wanted to help.”
Phillips was inducted into the GFAASHOF on March 23 along with basketballers Thomas McGill, Anthony Pendleton, Demetrius Calip, and Evette Ott; tracksters Edward Taylor and Eugene Taylor; and baseballer Hershel Pritchard.
Team inductions included the 1984 and 1985 Flint Northwestern HS men’s basketball teams and the 1980 Beecher women’s basketball team.
This article also appears in East Village Magazine’s May 2025 issue.
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College Sports
Judge Dismisses Jury for Sexual Assault Trial of 5 Canadian Hockey Players
NEED TO KNOW An Ontario Superior Court judge dismissed the jury in the sexual assault trial of hockey players Michael McLeod, Dillon Dubé, Carter Hart, Cal Foote and Alex Formenton This dismissal came one day after a juror submitted a note to the judge on behalf of other jurors, calling out the defense attorneys for […]

NEED TO KNOW
- An Ontario Superior Court judge dismissed the jury in the sexual assault trial of hockey players Michael McLeod, Dillon Dubé, Carter Hart, Cal Foote and Alex Formenton
- This dismissal came one day after a juror submitted a note to the judge on behalf of other jurors, calling out the defense attorneys for their court behavior
- The defense attorneys denied all allegations
The judge presiding over the trial of five Canadian hockey players who are accused of sexual assault has dismissed the jury.
Ontario Superior Court Justice Maria Carroccia dismissed the jury on Friday, May 16, a day after one of the jury members submitted a note to the judge on behalf of other jurors, calling out the defense attorneys for their court behavior, according to CBC News, The Economic Times and ESPN.
The juror said in the note that two defense attorneys, identified as Daniel Brown and Hilary Dudding, appeared to “whisper to each other” and “laugh” as if they were discussing the juror’s “appearance,” which the jurors considered “unprofessional and unacceptable,” according to CBC News.
The two attorneys denied the allegations, per ESPN, and the defense stated that this was a “jury prejudice” and “needed to be resolved.”
Dilip Vishwanat/Getty
Justice Carroccia said she didn’t see any of this behavior and would have “stepped in” if she saw this. However, she concluded the jurors’ opinion of the defense could impact their impartiality when it came to the verdict, and that she would handle the high-profile case on her own.
Defense lawyer Daniel Brown — who is representing hockey players Michael McLeod, Dillon Dubé, Carter Hart, Cal Foote and Alex Formenton — told CBC News in a statement that the incident was “an unfortunate representation of just two attorneys talking amongst themselves.”
“No defense counsel would risk alienating a juror, and nothing could be further from the truth in this instance. While it is true that co-counsel will speak with one another from time to time during a trial, this is commonplace,” Brown said, per the outlet, “the very idea of counsel making light of a juror is illogical and runs directly counter to our purpose and function.”
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The defense attorneys for the hockey players did not immediately respond to PEOPLE’s request for comment on the latest trial development.
The five players were charged with the 2018 sexual assault of a then-20-year-old woman when they were members of Canada’s world junior hockey team. They have all pleaded not guilty to the crime.
The dismissal comes a few weeks after Carroccia declared a mistrial after a juror flagged that they were approached by Dudding at lunch and told them that she noticed them nodding their heads a lot during the prosecutor’s opening statement, per CBC News. Dudding reportedly denied this.
The judge initially deemed the incident “innocuous” but eventually declared it a mistrial after the hockey player’s defense attorneys argued that the jury was already perceiving them negatively. A new jury was then chosen.
The trial for McLeod, Dubé, Hart, Foote and Formenton will continue next week.
College Sports
Wilkes University awards over 700 degrees at 78th spring commencement
Wilkes University awarded more than 700 bachelor’s, master’s and doctoral degrees at its 78th spring commencement ceremonies on Saturday. The ceremony for graduate students receiving doctoral and master’s degrees was held at 10 a.m., while the ceremony for undergraduates receiving bachelor’s degrees was held at 3 p.m. Both ceremonies were held in the McHale […]

Wilkes University awarded more than 700 bachelor’s, master’s and doctoral degrees at its 78th spring commencement ceremonies on Saturday.
The ceremony for graduate students receiving doctoral and master’s degrees was held at 10 a.m., while the ceremony for undergraduates receiving bachelor’s degrees was held at 3 p.m. Both ceremonies were held in the McHale Athletic Center in the Simms Center on Main, in Wilkes-Barre.
The degrees conferred include approximately 279 bachelor’s, 341 master’s and 86 doctoral degrees.
David Hicks, director of the Maslow Family Graduate Program in Creative Writing, delivered the commencement address at the morning ceremony.
Hicks recently released a novel, “The Gospel According to Danny” (Vine Leaves Press, May 2025). He is also the author of a novel-in-stories, “White Plains,” several short stories and the children’s book “The Magic Ticket.”
Hicks is a first-generation college student and son of an immigrant parent. He earned his bachelor’s degree from Nazareth College of Rochester and his doctorate in American Literature from New York University.
Nancy Dee Georgetson of Sayre, Pennsylvania, provided greetings as a member of the class of 2025 during the 10 a.m. ceremony. Georgetson earned a doctor of nursing practice degree.
Eddie Day Pashinski ’67 delivered the commencement address for the afternoon ceremony and was awarded an honorary degree.
Pashinski serves as Pennsylvania State Representative and focuses on issues regarding quality education, affordable health care and commonsense tax reform. He is the majority chairman of the House Agriculture and Rural Affairs Committee and a board member of the Pennsylvania Health Information Exchange.
For 38 years, Pashinski taught music in the Greater Nanticoke Area School district. He continues to entertain local audiences as a musician. Pashinski graduated from Wilkes University with a bachelor’s degree in music education and has a master’s equivalency.
Kimberly Wheeler of Athens, Pennsylvania, provided greetings as a member of the graduating class during the 3 p.m. ceremony. Wheeler earned a Bachelor of Science degree on the way to completion of the doctor of pharmacy degree.
William R. Miller ’81, chair of the Board of Trustees, and Andrew Miller, professor of political science and chair of the Faculty Affairs Council, offered greetings at the morning and afternoon ceremonies.
College Sports
German Opera singer to perform with National Champion Brass Band on June 7th
Eric Fennell is firmly established as one of today’s leading international vocalists over a twenty-year career as an operatic lyric tenor and concert artist. Mr. Fennell will be the guest vocalist with award-winning Atlantic Brass Band at the Gettysburg Brass Band Festival on Saturday, June 7 at 5:00 p.m. His debut came in James Robinson’s production […]

Eric Fennell is firmly established as one of today’s leading international vocalists over a twenty-year career as an operatic lyric tenor and concert artist. Mr. Fennell will be the guest vocalist with award-winning Atlantic Brass Band at the Gettysburg Brass Band Festival on Saturday, June 7 at 5:00 p.m. His debut came in James Robinson’s production of La Bohème as Rodolfo at Glimmerglass Opera in New York. This led to roles during the next six seasons for New York City Opera, including Alfredo in La Traviata and Narraboth in Salomé. In 2009, he made his European debut singing Verdi’s Requiem for the Latvian National Symphony. Eric’s many concert appearances include tenor solos in Beethoven’s 9th Symphony for the National Chorale at Avery Fisher Hall, Tokyo City Orchestra, Cairo Symphony, and Buffalo Philharmonic Symphony.
A native of Pennsylvania, Eric’s first passion was ice hockey. He played for the Philadelphia Jr. Flyers through high school, and captained his team at Gettysburg College while earning a B.A. in Music. He continued his education at Boston University, earning an M.M. in Performance and a Professional Studies diploma as a member of the Opera Institute at B.U. Since 2010, Mr. Fennell has been a resident of Berlin, Germany. Mr. Fennell will perform di Capua’s “O sole mio,” “Torna surriento” by Ernesto de Curtis and Puccini’s “Nessun dorma” from his opera, Turandot.
Three-time National Champion Atlantic Brass Band is a premier volunteer performing ensemble in the greater Philadelphia and Southern New Jersey area as well as are artists-in-residence at Rowan University in Glassboro, NJ. Comprised of professional musicians, professors, educators, and community members, the band is committed to bringing the arts to the community through entertainment, educational collaborations, and fundraising efforts for local schools and charities. The band’s repertoire spans hymns, marches, orchestral transcriptions, pop music, and traditional brass band literature. The ABB has performed internationally with a tour of Italy, two tours of England, and an appearance at both NATO JFC Brunssum and the World Brass Band Championship in Kerkrade, Netherlands.
Salvatore Scarpa is Music Director & Conductor of Atlantic Brass Band. Sal is a retired member of the Rowan University faculty, where he was Director of Orchestras, and taught conducting, music theory, and music history. For many years he was also a member of the conducting staff of Philadelphia Ballet, Music Director & Conductor of Bel Canto Lyric Opera Company, a regular guest conductor for the Orvieto Festival of Strings (Italy), and a long-serving church musician. He is a graduate of Rowan University and the Eastman School of Music.
Eric relates that “I’m very excited about performing at the Gettysburg Brass Band Festival. Not only is it my debut at the festival, but it also provides an opportunity to collaborate with the renowned Atlantic Brass Band, as I enjoy collaborating with organizations outside the opera house. It is also a homecoming for me since I am a 1995 graduate of Gettysburg College! I consider myself very fortunate that the College encouraged me to pursue a career in music and I am still in close contact with many of my professors.”
The Gettysburg Brass Band Festival is in its 28th year and attracts some 4000 listeners annually to main stage performances at the United Lutheran Seminary and venues around the borough. Brass bands are the main feature of the festival that includes the poignant Taps Tribute on Saturday evening.
College Sports
UM's Skyleigh Thompson, MSU's Ben Perrin win 2025 AAU Little Sullivan Awards
MISSOULA — Stand up, Flathead Valley. Skyleigh Thompson and Ben Perrin, two athletes from northwestern Montana who competed at Montana and Montana State, were honored as the Montana AAU Little Sullivan Award winners at the Holiday Inn in Missoula on Saturday. Thompson, a Kalispell native and 2021 Flathead grad, was presented with the female Little Sullivan […]

Skyleigh Thompson and Ben Perrin, two athletes from northwestern Montana who competed at Montana and Montana State, were honored as the Montana AAU Little Sullivan Award winners at the Holiday Inn in Missoula on Saturday.
Thompson, a Kalispell native and 2021 Flathead grad, was presented with the female Little Sullivan Award. The 2023 Big Sky Conference offensive MVP, she helped the Montana Grizzlies women’s soccer team earn two Big Sky regular season titles, one tournament title and one NCAA tournament berth.
Montana forward Skyleigh Thompson dribbles downfield during the college soccer game between Montana and Colorado College at South Campus Stadium in Missoula on Friday, Aug. 16, 2024.
Perrin, a Kalispell native and 2019 Flathead grad, was honored with the male Little Sullivan Award. In 2024, the U.S. Olympic Trials qualifier helped the Montana State men’s track and field team win its first Big Sky outdoor title since 2005 by placing second in the 5,000 and third in the 10,000.
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Other men’s finalists were: Tommy Mellott, football, Montana State, Butte; Junior Bergen, football, Montana, Billings; and Weston Timberman, rodeo, Clarendon College (Texas), Columbus.
Other women’s finalists were: Katharine Berkoff, Olympic swimming, Missoula; Allie Olsen, volleyball, Utah, Great Falls; and Dani Bartsch, basketball, Montana, Helena.
Montana State’s Ben Perrin races to the finish during the Big Sky cross country championships at the University of Montana Golf Course, Friday, Oct. 27, 2023.
The Montana AAU handed out additional awards.
The Outstanding Contributor award went to Dave Bennetts. Billings’ Metra Park received the Outstanding Service award.
The AAU Outstanding Wrestler awards: Northeast, Angelina Escarcega, Poplar Wrestling Club, and Reece Graves, Sidney Wrestling Club; South Central, Kaitlyn Thorn, Big Game Wrestling Club, and Chris Acuna, Darkhorse Wrestling Club/ Montana Disciples; Southeast, Hayden Raemaker, Project Wrestling Club; and West, Tirza TwoTeeth, Ronan Wrestling, and Kale Baumann, North Montana Wrestling Club.
Montana USA Wrestling handed out other awards.
The Angie Buckley Award went to Kaitlyn Thorn. The Gordon Smith Award was given to Kale Baumann. The Marie Hatcher Award was presented to Jeff Anderson. Steve Komac and Matt Atwood took home the Coach’s Award. The Official’s Award went to Blake Love and Dave Bennetts. Gordon Smith, David Edington, and Gene Davis were chosen for the Hall of Fame.
The Montana AAU/USAW triple crown winners were announced.
The boys winners: 8U Cael Penrose, Oliver Heist-Levine and Connor Sweat; 10U Ry-den Garcia, Noah Hollamon, Saul Heist-Levine and Tavin Lamarr; 12U Aiden Gaarcia, Braeden Neil and Quinn Salois; 14U Joel Alves, Cuyler Clark, Zakary Acuna, Rafe Willson and Karter Whitish; 16U Aaron Schmitz; and 18U Christopher Acuna.
The girls winners: 8U Marley Seen and Khloe Alvarado; 10U Sadie Sweat; 12U Aubrey Mclaughlin, Brylee Janes and Leimana Fandrich; 14U Ashlyn McCann, Venyss Steingruber and Trinity Stoner;16U Araeya Nelson; and 18U Destiny Finley.
The inaugural Belt Series Champions were presented by Montana USAW.
The girls winners: 6U Kymber Fonger, 8U Braleigh Fonger, 10U Maybelle Larson, 12U Andreya Redfox, 14U Isabella Mikesell, 16U Araeya Nelson and 18U Kaelynn Vanderpool.
The boys winners: 6U Mickey Eckhardt, 8U Owen Hollman, 10U Noah Hollaman, 12U Archer Lusby, 14U Lavontae Morigeau, 16U Colten Conover and 18U Beaudry Payne.
Frank Gogola is the Senior Sports Reporter at the Missoulian and 406 MT Sports. Follow him on X @FrankGogola or email him at frank.gogola@406mtsports.com.
College Sports
SvoNotes: Blankenburg’s underdog story helps lift Blue Jackets
Justin Danforth is a player who has followed a similar path to Blankenburg.Undersized and overlooked by all the major junior programs coming out of his hometown of Oshawa, Ontario, he attended Sacred Heart University, then played in the ECHL, American Hockey League, Finland’s Liiga and finally the Kontinental Hockey League in Russia before signing with […]

Justin Danforth is a player who has followed a similar path to Blankenburg.
Undersized and overlooked by all the major junior programs coming out of his hometown of Oshawa, Ontario, he attended Sacred Heart University, then played in the ECHL, American Hockey League, Finland’s Liiga and finally the Kontinental Hockey League in Russia before signing with the Blue Jackets and making his NHL debut a season ago at age 28.
Sacred Heart has been a Division I hockey school since 1998-99, but the school located in Fairfield, Conn., has struggled to find success. The team has never made the NCAA tournament and has just seven winning seasons in D-I, and the year before Danforth arrived, the Pioneers won exactly two games.
To hear longtime head coach C.J. Marottolo tell it, Danforth was brought in to help turn around the program when he arrived in 2013-14.
“Scott McDougall, my assistant head coach, he found Justin,” Marottolo said. “I remember him saying, ‘He’s going to help change the culture of the program in how he works, how he attacks the game.’ What I remember most about Justin is every day, he wanted to get better, and he brought that work ethic on the ice, he brought that work ethic in the classroom. He just wanted to improve every day, and I think he’s probably still doing that today.”
Marottolo said those words Sunday evening at Madison Square Garden, as the entire Pioneers program made the 60-mile trip down to New York City to watch Danforth and the Blue Jackets take on the New York Rangers.
Unfortunately for everyone involved, Danforth was unable to play after suffering an injury in the game the night before against Pittsburgh. As the Blue Jackets announced yesterday, it turned out to be a torn labrum in his shoulder that will require surgery and a six-month rehab process, essentially ending his season.
It’s a huge setback for Danforth, who had settled in as the Jackets’ Swiss Army knife, capable of playing anywhere in the CBJ forward lineup and posting two goals in the team’s first six games.
“To put it bluntly, it sucks,” Larsen said of the injury. “Last year (at this time), he’s on his way to the minors, right? This year, can’t live without him.”
That Danforth has reached the point of being indispensable to the Blue Jackets is a testament to his work ethic, will and dedication — not to mention the four years of development that he received at Sacred Heart. When Danforth debuted with Columbus a season ago, he became the first Pioneer to play at in the NHL, and he continues to carry the Sacred Heart banner wherever he goes.
“I think it’s awesome,” Danforth said of bearing the standard for his college team. “Obviously I’m very grateful that it worked out the way it worked out. I think it helps the program bring guys in. There’s a lot of good hockey players at Sacred Heart. There are guys that are going to be playing pro hockey after they are done there. I think it helps pave the way for them and show that there’s a path. And also for NHL teams not to write off Sacred Heart.”
For Marottolo, the future is bright at Sacred Heart. The school has built a $70 million rink, the Martire Family Arena, that is set to open for varsity play in January, and the Pioneers have won three of their first four conference games this season. It also helps that the program’s most prominent alumnus is always a phone call or text away.
“That’s great that he has that Pioneer pride,” the coach said of Danforth. “He’s an inspiration to all of our players. He’s given our school a sense of pride from the administration on down to our team. It gives them the example that, hey, if you work hard and do it the right way and stay with it, maybe you’ll get that chance.
“There’s no question someone on our current team could be the next Justin Danforth, and that’s what we’re pushing for.”
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