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ProSpace Interiors owner hopes more local businesses choose NIL deals to support CMU athletes

Tim Harty, The Business Times Colorado Mesa University women’s basketball player Olivia Reed Thyne, left, and ProSpace Interiors owner and President Dave Huerkamp agreed to a Name, Image and Likeness deal that paid Reed Thyne to appear in a television commercial for ProSpace Interiors. Reed Thyne, an NCAA Division II All-American player and an Academic […]

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ProSpace Interiors owner hopes more local businesses choose NIL deals to support CMU athletes

Tim Harty, The Business Times

Colorado Mesa University women’s basketball player Olivia Reed Thyne, left, and ProSpace Interiors owner and President Dave Huerkamp agreed to a Name, Image and Likeness deal that paid Reed Thyne to appear in a television commercial for ProSpace Interiors. Reed Thyne, an NCAA Division II All-American player and an Academic All-American, is the first CMU athlete to be paid to be in a TV commercial, according to the university. Photo courtesy of ProSpace Interiors.

Having been mentored early in his working career by some prominent Grand Junction business and community leaders – Max Krey, Pat Gormley and Herb Bacon among them – Dave Huerkamp believes successful businesses should give back to the community that helped them succeed.

By no means does Huerkamp, owner and president of ProSpace Interiors, 634 Main St. in Grand Junction, consider himself in the company of the aforementioned hallowed trio. He acknowledged, “We’re a relatively small company.” But, he added, “I really believe in giving back and supporting the community.”

With that mindset, he finds places and causes in the Grand Valley to make donations. And, like Krey, Gormley and Bacon were, Huerkamp is a benefactor of Colorado Mesa University. He provides scholarships in the nursing program, the Davis School of Business and the athletics programs, estimating 10 students currently have scholarships funded by ProSpace Interiors, which sells, installs and repairs office furniture and designs office spaces.

Huerkamp is a fan of CMU athletics, and he recently provided his financial support in a new way: ProSpace Interiors paid Colorado Mesa University women’s basketball player Olivia Reed Thyne via a Name, Image and Likeness (NIL) deal to be in a ProSpace Interiors television commercial.

CMU Compliance Director Taya Baumgartner said it is the first NIL deal in which a Colorado Mesa athlete has been paid to do a TV commercial. Other CMU athletes have gotten NIL money, but usually in small amounts – $10 here, $20 there – through Opendorse, a company that specializes in NIL deals for student-athletes and partnered with CMU in February 2024.

Soon after the TV commercial with Reed Thyne began airing, Huerkamp got the feedback he hoped to hear, and it had nothing to do with ProSpace Interiors making money.

Of course, the reason for advertising is to ultimately make money, but Huerkamp had a more altruistic reason as well: Getting other businesses to see what CMU has to offer and in turn support the university, especially the athletic programs.

“I have already talked to at least a dozen other business owners that because of the deal that we did with Olivia, they’re interested in doing that, whether it’s women’s basketball or the football team or baseball or wrestling,” Huerkamp said. “I think it’s already opened up some of those doors. I’m pretty sure one of Olivia’s teammates is going to be getting something similar from another local business here in town, just because of what we did with Olivia.”

Colorado Mesa University women’s basketball player Olivia Reed Thyne sits in a chair at a desk in an office at ProSpace Interiors, which paid her through a Name, Image and Likeness deal to appear in a television commercial for the business. ProSpace Interiors, which opened in Grand Junction in 1970, sells, installs and repairs office furniture and designs office space, and owner Dave Huerkamp is a self-professed fan of Colorado Mesa sports. Photo by Tim Harty.

Many NCAA Division II athletes receive athletic scholarships, but at many universities, including Colorado Mesa, those tend to be partial scholarships. Huerkamp thinks Grand Junction businesses can help CMU athletes and their respective programs remain competitive in the Rocky Mountain Athletic Conference, where some schools are able to do more for their athletes.

“One of the reasons that I wanted to get a little bit of publicity related to this NIL deal was not only to let other business owners know or think about supporting student athletes, but the bigger thing is just being involved in athletic fundraising,” Huerkamp said. 

“Some of the other teams that Olivia and her teammates compete against all the time, those programs are fully funded, so they’re able to give out large scholarships to the entire team. CMU is still in the process of getting fully funded. I think they’re just barely over 50 percent.

“So, the bottom line is most of these student athletes, even if they are a scholarship student athlete at CMU, they’re not getting a 100 percent, full-ride scholarship. … This is really a way to support those student athletes, because they have to work so hard in school to keep up their grades and in athletics, to help them get through four years of school.”

Huerkamp said what he’s really hoping for, big picture, is business owners will help support CMU’s student athletes and athletic programs.

He thinks the support for the university will come back to those businesses that open their pocketbooks.

“Seriously,” Huerkamp said, “I got a call from a local business that was planning to get stuff from another company, and they called ProSpace, because they saw Olivia (in the TV commercial). They thought it was so awesome that we were doing a deal like this with a local student athlete, and they picked up the phone and called us instead of calling someone else.

“So, there is a very definitive, positive, business and marketing portion of this. It’s not just, ‘Oh, I like CMU, and I like women’s basketball.’ It’s a relationship, like the NIL deals were intended to work. And it’s kind of like (Division II) in general, it’s really the essence of college athletics, right? These kids do go to school, they do study.”

HEY, THIS IS REALLY EASY!

ProSpace Interiors owner and President Dave Huerkamp was surprised when he learned his business was the first to pay a Colorado Mesa University student athlete to be in a TV commercial.

Name, Image and Likeness deals have been around for several years, but Colorado Mesa is an NCAA Division II program for athletics, and where NIL really gets used – and big-dollar deals get done – is at the Division I level in the higher-profile sports.

Huerkamp hopes his distinction of being first with a TV-commercial NIL deal for a CMU athlete, All-American women’s basketball player Olivia Reed Thyne, serves as the first domino to fall. He thinks it will.

After the TV commercial aired, he said, “I’ve had a couple of people say, ‘Hey, that’s really awesome. How does that work?’ and, ‘Can I do that?’ Like, yeah, you can. I mean, it’s really easy.”

Actually, he added, “It’s amazingly easy. That’s the thing I was surprised about.

“Now, I did do quite a bit of research going into it as far as the NCAA rules and all that sort of stuff, because the last thing I wanted to do was create an issue for Olivia and her eligibility. But, yeah, there’s just a few little minor guidelines. Other than that, any business can connect with any student athlete or team that they want to help support and really work out any deal that’s agreeable to both parties. So, it’s pretty awesome.”

COMPLIANCE IS IMPORTANT

Helping make NIL deals easy, and compliant, is Colorado Mesa’s partnership with Opendorse, which markets itself as: “The best NIL deal marketplace for athletes to build and monetize their name, image, and likeness value.”

On its website, opendorse.com, Opendorse says under the heading of What We Do: “Opendorse is the leading athlete marketplace and NIL technology company, providing technology and services to the athlete endorsement industry. We serve the full lifecycle of supporting athletes: educating, assessing, planning, sharing, creating, measuring, tracking, disclosing, regulating, listing, browsing, booking, and more.

“Our industry-leading NIL solutions help athletes connect with advertisers, colleges, collectives, and supporters to understand, build, and monetize their brand value.”

The reason a partnership is necessary with Opendorse is because CMU can’t facilitate any deals for its student-athletes. That’s illegal.

“If the athlete is interested in an NIL deal, they have to put the work in to get those,” CMU Compliance Director Taya Baumgartner said. “We can’t say, ‘Oh, hey, we have this deal for you,’ and then set it up that way.”

Or a business can start the NIL talks.

“It’s a pretty simple process for the businesses’ side,” Baumgartner said. “They can either contact that athlete and propose a deal, or they can go on that marketplace that’s on the Internet for Opendorse and propose a deal through that to the athlete.

“But then from there, once they propose the deal, Opendorse just makes sure that they’re not breaking any rules.”

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Kevin Murphy Reinstated As Carroll Boys Swim Coach

It’s been an interesting six weeks in Carroll ISD.  In the latest of a series of staff and personnel moves, fifteen-time state champion coach Kevin Murphy has been reinstated as the boys head swim coach after it was announced in May that he had been reassigned within the district. In a 2017 interview, Murphy stated […]

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It’s been an interesting six weeks in Carroll ISD. 

In the latest of a series of staff and personnel moves, fifteen-time state champion coach Kevin Murphy has been reinstated as the boys head swim coach after it was announced in May that he had been reassigned within the district.

In a 2017 interview, Murphy stated he’d like to coach another ten years. It looks like he will get his wish. 

Of note, Murphy will no longer be the blanket head swim coach, as the role of girls head swim coach will go to Justin Pudwill, the Carroll ISD aquatics supervisor and head water polo coach. 

Murphy was reassigned along with head boys basketball coach David Markley a few weeks before the end of the 2024-25 school year. The decision sparked immediate concern from parents and supporters within the district, who couldn’t understand why Murphy, a Carroll ISD Hall of Fame coach, and Markley, one of the most successful boys basketball coaches in school history, were not being allowed back in their current roles. 

The external protests seemed to have worked: Markley was recently reinstated, and now Murphy will be back at Carroll, as well. 

The personnel moves haven’t been confined to only athletic coaches. It was announced at the beginning of May that longtime Carroll Senior principal Ryan Wilson and Carroll High School principal Christina Benhoff were not offered contract renewals following the expiration of their terms at the end of the 2025-26 school year. The district acknowledged that both Wilson and Benhoff were still under contract in CISD for 2025-26, but beyond that, renewals were never offered. 

Both principals were then offered and quickly accepted principal jobs in neighboring districts, with Wilson taking the principal job at Boswell High School in Eagle Mountain-Saginaw ISD, and Benhoff traveling down the road to Keller ISD to be principal at Timber Creek High School.





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Former Shepherd Hill track star Emma Sullivan’s journey reaches NCAAs

The six months Emma Sullivan spent recovering from a torn Achilles’ tendon were a time of worry, yes — “Will I ever be as good as I used to be?” the former Shepherd Hill Regional track and cross-country star wondered — but also a period of reflection, rediscovery and recovery. Sullivan missed most of her […]

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The six months Emma Sullivan spent recovering from a torn Achilles’ tendon were a time of worry, yes — “Will I ever be as good as I used to be?” the former Shepherd Hill Regional track and cross-country star wondered — but also a period of reflection, rediscovery and recovery.

Sullivan missed most of her junior indoor and outdoor track seasons at Kennesaw State, where she is now a senior, due to the injury and at one point questioned if she would run again.

“People don’t realize,” Sullivan said during a recent phone interview from Kennesaw’s Georgia campus, “that as a runner, all we’ve got is a pair of shoes and the road. I’m not on a soccer or a football field with 10 other people helping me out. It’s all on me every single time I step on the track. It’s a very beautiful thing when you’re at your peak, and it can be a very hard thing when you’re injured.”

Sullivan worked tirelessly at rehab, made lifestyle changes such as adding more protein to her diet, focused on her mental health and pushed forward with support of her family, friends and teammates.

“With their encouragement,” Sullivan said, “I decided, ‘I’m going to come back and be a better version of myself,’ and I really did work through that, and I’m thankful I was able to.”

On May 31, Sullivan secured her spot at the NCAA Division 1 Outdoor Track and Field Championships in Eugene, Oregon, by running a personal-best 2:01.71 in the 800 at the NCAA East First Rounds.

Sullivan will compete in the NCAA semifinals June 12.

“This has a little extra sweetness,” Sullivan said. “I always say I’m thankful, but this year, I am extremely thankful.”

Sullivan’s time ranks third in Kennesaw program history.

“I just believed in what my coach has been telling me,” Sullivan said, “‘Run with confidence. Have a little chip on your shoulder. You deserve to be there. It’s your day. Don’t let anyone take it away from you.’ That’s definitely something I used.

“It felt awesome to cross the finish line,” Sullivan said. “You put in so much time Monday-Friday practicing, lifting weights, doing all the small things to get better. Finally seeing that time was a surreal feeling.”

Shepherd Hill senior Emma Sullivan off to fast start

Sullivan’s PR was about 10 seconds faster than her best time at Shepherd Hill, where she was an eight-time T&G Super Team all-star in track and cross-country and the 2019 Hometeam Cross-Country Runner of the Year.

She calls or texts her former Shepherd Hill coaches, Nicole Fossas and Len Harmon, after every race.

“They did so much for me in high school,” Sullivan said. “I wouldn’t be here without them. I’m forever grateful for them and they know that.”

Sullivan began her college career at Jacksonville State, where she competed for two years. Her parents, sister and grandparents relocated to Florida when Sullivan enrolled at Jacksonville State. Her family now lives in Fort Pierce, Florida.

“They believe in me and love me so much,” Sullivan said.

Sullivan, whose hobbies include drawing and painting, graduated from Kennesaw State in December with a degree in interdisciplinary studies. She hopes to teach elementary school. She has one season of eligibility left in indoor and outdoor track, and she will return to Kennesaw next year for a “super senior” season as she called it.

Sullivan said she returned to full health late last summer, after months of rehab and physical therapy, and she had a good cross-country season, including a 27th-place finish at the Conference USA Championships.

Heading into the NCAAs, “I’ve never felt so strong,” she said. “I’m at the peak of my career, which is a very exciting thing.

“It’s hard when you’re injured in any sport,” Sullivan said. “Something you love is taken away. I don’t take anything for granted any more. Every race, good or bad, it doesn’t matter. Every day I can put my shoes on and go for a 12-mile run, I’m thankful.”

—Contact Jennifer Toland at jennifer.toland@telegram.com. Follow her on X, formerly known as Twitter, @JenTolandTG.



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Raven Athletics finishes in third place in 2024-25 Heart Commissioners Cup

KANSAS CITY, Mo. – This past week at the annual Heart Business Meetings held on the Graceland University campus in Lamoni, Iowa, Heart of America Athletic Conference Commissioner Nik Rule announced the final standings for the 2024-25 Heart Commissioners Cup. Benedictine Athletics finished in third place with a score of .715, just .001 points behind […]

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KANSAS CITY, Mo. – This past week at the annual Heart Business Meetings held on the Graceland University campus in Lamoni, Iowa, Heart of America Athletic Conference Commissioner Nik Rule announced the final standings for the 2024-25 Heart Commissioners Cup.

Benedictine Athletics finished in third place with a score of .715, just .001 points behind Park University in second place at .716 and .006 points behind 2024-25 Commissioners Cup winner MNU with a score of .721.

“This year’s finals standings show how competitive the Heart of America Athletic Conference remains,” said Benedictine Athletic Director Charlie Gartenmayer. “We are committed to remaining competitive within the conference every year and are excited to get back to work on winning the 2025-26 Commissioners Cup in August.”

MNU earned back-to-back Commissioner Cup wins, which is the highest finish in the standings for Park. Benedictine finished in second place last year and this year, won Heart titles in Football, Men’s Indoor Track, Women’s Outdoor Track, and Women’s Lacrosse. They also won Heart Tournament Championships in Volleyball, Women’s Basketball, and Women’s Lacrosse.

About the Heart Commissioners Cup:
The award, which will be presented by Commissioner Nik Rule to MidAmerica Nazarene this fall on campus, serves as a symbol of athletic excellence in conference-sponsored championships.

The 13 Heart schools earn points throughout the season contributing to the Commissioner’s Cup for their finish in the Heart sponsored sports of: men’s cross country, women’s cross country, women’s volleyball, football, men’s soccer, women’s soccer, women’s basketball, men’s basketball, men’s indoor track & field, women’s indoor track & field, men’s volleyball, men’s wrestling, women’s wrestling, cheer, dance, men’s bowling, women’s bowling, baseball, softball, men’s golf, women’s golf, men’s lacrosse, women’s lacrosse, men’s outdoor track & field and women’s track & field.

Each conference regular season champion for the following sports earned a maximum amount of points based on the amount of teams participating in that sport. Then that number is divided by the amount of teams participating in that sport:

Women’s volleyball, football, men’s soccer, women’s soccer, women’s basketball, men’s basketball, men’s volleyball, baseball, women’s lacrosse, men’s lacrosse, and softball.

For example: Women’s Soccer Regular Season, Missouri Valley earned 13 points out of 13 teams competing, and they earned a 1.00 percentage.

13/13 = 1.00 – Percentage (First Place)

12/13 = .92 – Percentage (Second Place)

The same formula was put in place for the following sports and their finishes by Heart teams in the respective Heart Conference Championships:

Men’s cross country, women’s cross country, men’s indoor track & field, women’s indoor track & field, men’s wrestling, women’s wrestling, cheer, dance, men’s bowling, women’s bowling, men’s golf, women’s golf, men’s outdoor track & field and women’s outdoor track & field.

For example: Cheer Heart Conference Champion, Grand View earned 10 points out of 10 teams competing, and they earned a 1.00 percentage.

10/10 = 1.00 – Percentage (First Place)

9/10 = .90 – Percentage (Second Place)

To compile the final list of the 2024-25 Heart Commissioner’s Cup Standings, each team’s percentage in each sport they compete in was added up and divided by the amount of total sports they compete in. Final results are an average cumulative Heart finish for each institution in every conference sport that they sponsor.

Behind MNU, Park and Benedictine in the final standings was CMU (.627), Mount Mercy (.624), Grand View (.602), Baker (.572), William Penn (.551), Missouri Valley (.473), Peru State (.417), Clarke (.416), Culver-Stockton (.405) and Graceland (.318).

Previous Commissioners Cup winners:
2024-25 MidAmerica Nazarene University
2023-24 – MidAmerica Nazarene University
2022-23 – Grand View University
2021-22 – Grand View University 
2020-21 – Grand View University
2019-20 – Central Methodist University
2018-19 – Benedictine College

www.ravenathletics.com | #UnleashGreatness | www.benedictine.edu



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Lewis and Hatfield Jackson Ready for the NCAA Track and Field& Field Championships

Story Links CAPE GIRARDEAU, Mo. – Luke Hatfield Jackson and Paden Lewis will compete at the 2025 Division One Outdoor Track and Field Championships in Eugene, Oregon. The championships will take place at the University of Oregon at Hayward Field, June 11-14. Both Hatfield Jackson and Lewis will compete on […]

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CAPE GIRARDEAU, Mo. – Luke Hatfield Jackson and Paden Lewis will compete at the 2025 Division One Outdoor Track and Field Championships in Eugene, Oregon. The championships will take place at the University of Oregon at Hayward Field, June 11-14.

Both Hatfield Jackson and Lewis will compete on Friday, June 13th. Hatfield Jackson will compete in the high jump at 4:30 p.m. PT and Lewis will compete at 4:40 p.m. in the discus throw.

At the regionals meet Lewis broke the SEMO discus record with a throw of 193′ 2″ to place 10th and Jackson cleared a height of 7′ 1.5″ for 12th.

The top eight athletes in each event will be rewarded with First Team All-American Honors. The next eight performers will earn Second Team All-American Honors.





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Princeton University

NCAA Outdoor Championships June 11-14 | Eugene, Ore.  Results | Schedule | ESPN+   PRINCETON, N.J. – Closing out an outstanding year, the Princeton women’s track and field team will send three Tigers to Eugene, Ore. for the NCAA Outdoor Championships on June 11-14.    Mena Scatchard will compete in the 1500m, Shea Greene will […]

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NCAA Outdoor Championships
June 11-14 | Eugene, Ore. 
Results | Schedule | ESPN+
 
PRINCETON, N.J. – Closing out an outstanding year, the Princeton women’s track and field team will send three Tigers to Eugene, Ore. for the NCAA Outdoor Championships on June 11-14. 
 
Mena Scatchard will compete in the 1500m, Shea Greene will compete in the javelin, and Georgina Scoot will compete in both the long jump and the triple jump. These three Tigers helped lead Princeton to its third all-time Triple Crown this year while reaching new heights and setting new records individually. 
 
Scatchard, the 2025 indoor NCAA runner-up in the mile, will make her third trip to NCAAs this academic year after competing in both the cross country and indoor track championships. Scatchard, the 2025 Ivy Champion in the 1500m, punched her ticket with a second place finish in her heat in the quarterfinals, clocking in at 4:08.34 to set a new Princeton record. Her time bested her own school record of 4:11.10, set in 2024. Scatchard holds seven records across the Princeton record books, also breaking the records in the 800m and 5000m this season.
 
Greene will make her second outdoor NCAA Championship appearance after breaking her own Ivy League record in the javelin with a throw of 56.91m/186-8″ at regionals. The achievement came just weeks after Greene claimed the Ivy record and the Ivy Championship title in the event at Outdoor Heps. 
 
Scoot will also make her second trip to Eugene, competing in both the triple jump and the long jump after winning the Ivy Championship title in both events this season. Scoot punched her ticket with a sixth-place 6.32m/20-9″ finish in the long jump and an eighth-place 13.04m/42-9½” finish in the triple jump at regionals. At Outdoor Heps, Scoot was named the Most Outstanding Field Performer of the Meet after setting new meet records in both the triple jump and the long jump as she won her titles. For her efforts, she was also named USTFCCCA National Athlete of the Week on May 12th. 
 
The Tigers are led by Head Coach Michelle Eisenreich, in her ninth year at the helm. This year’s Triple Crown marked the first since 2011 and first under Eisenreich’s leadership, capped off with an Outdoor Heps victory that saw the most points ever scored by a women’s team at the meet. 

 



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Assistant Coach, Volleyball in Rochester, MI for Oakland University

Oakland University is a nationally recognized doctoral university of high research activity located on 1,443 acres of scenic land in the cities of Rochester Hills and Auburn Hills in Oakland County, Michigan. The University has 142 bachelor’s degree programs and 138 graduate degree and certificate programs. Academics include programs in the College of Arts and […]

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Oakland University is a nationally recognized doctoral university of high research activity located on 1,443 acres of scenic land in the cities of Rochester Hills and Auburn Hills in Oakland County, Michigan. The University has 142 bachelor’s degree programs and 138 graduate degree and certificate programs. Academics include programs in the College of Arts and Sciences, School of Business Administration, School of Education and Human Services, School of Engineering and Computer Science, School of Health Sciences, School of Medicine and School of Nursing. As an anchor institution in southeastern Michigan, Oakland University is committed to building ongoing and collaborative relationships with the surrounding communities. Community and civic engagement enhances the lives of our students and has a positive impact on our broader community.



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