College Sports
Qatar says no final decision made on gifting Trump a jet to use as Air Force One
WASHINGTON — President Donald Trump reportedly is ready to accept a luxury Boeing 747-8 jumbo jet as a gift from the ruling family of Qatar during his trip to the Middle East this coming week, and U.S. officials say it could be converted into a potential presidential aircraft. The Qatari government acknowledged discussions between […]

WASHINGTON — President Donald Trump reportedly is ready to accept a luxury Boeing 747-8 jumbo jet as a gift from the ruling family of Qatar during his trip to the Middle East this coming week, and U.S. officials say it could be converted into a potential presidential aircraft.
The Qatari government acknowledged discussions between the two countries about “the possible transfer” of a plane to be used temporarily as Trump’s Air Force One, but denied that the jet “is being gifted” or that a final decision had been made.
ABC News reported that Trump will use the aircraft as his presidential plane until shortly before he leaves office in January 2029, when ownership will be transferred to the foundation overseeing his yet-to-be-built presidential library.
The gift was expected to be announced when Trump visits Qatar, according to ABC’s report, as part of a trip that also includes stops in Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates, the first extended foreign travel of his second term.
But hours after the news, Ali Al-Ansari, Qatar’s media attaché, said in a statement, “Reports that a jet is being gifted by Qatar to the United States government during the upcoming visit of President Trump are inaccurate.”
“The possible transfer of an aircraft for temporary use as Air Force One is currently under consideration between Qatar’s Ministry of Defense and the US Department of Defense,” the statement said. “But the matter remains under review by the respective legal departments, and no decision has been made.”
Meanwhile, administration officials, anticipating questions about the president accepting such a large gift from a foreign government, have prepared an analysis arguing that doing so would be legal, according to ABC.
The Constitution’s Emoluments Clause bars anyone holding government office from accepting any present, emolument, office or title from any “King, Prince, or foreign State,” without congressional consent.
One expert on government ethics, Kathleen Clark of the Washington University School of Law in St. Louis, accused Trump of being “committed to exploiting the federal government’s power, not on behalf of policy goals, but for amassing personal wealth.”
“This is outrageous,” Clark said. “Trump believes he will get away this.”
Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer poked fun at Trump’s “America first” political slogan.
“Nothing says ‘America First’ like Air Force One, brought to you by Qatar,” the New York Democrat said in a statement. “It’s not just bribery, it’s premium foreign influence with extra legroom.”
Air Force One is a modified Boeing 747. Two exist and the president flies on both, which are more than 30 years old. Boeing Inc. has the contract to produce updated versions, but delivery has been delayed while the company has lost billions of dollars on the project.
Delivery has been pushed to some time in 2027 for the first plane and in 2028 — Trump’s final full year in office — for the second.
Trump intends to convert the Qatari aircraft into a plane he can fly on as president, with the Air Force planning to add secure communications and other classified elements to it. But it will still have more limited capabilities than the existing planes that were built to serve as Air Force One, as well as two other aircraft currently under construction, according to a former U.S. official.
The official was briefed about the plane and spoke Sunday on the condition of anonymity to discuss plans that have not yet been made public.
The existing planes used as Air Force One are heavily modified with survivability capabilities for the president for a range of contingencies, including radiation shielding and antimissile technology. They also include a variety of communications systems to allow the president to remain in contact with the military and issue orders from anywhere in the world.
The official told The Associated Press that it would be possible to quickly add some countermeasures and communications systems to the Qatari plane, but that it would be less capable than the existing Air Force One aircraft or long-delayed replacements.
Neither the Qatari plane nor the upcoming VC-25B aircraft will have the air-to-air refueling capabilities of the current VC-25A aircraft, which is the one the president currently flies on, the official said.
ABC said the new plane is similar to a 13-year-old Boeing aircraft Trump toured in February, while it was parked at Palm Beach International Airport and he was spending the weekend at his Mar-a-Lago club.
Trump faced lawsuits for violating the Emoluments Clause during his first term, but those were ended by the Supreme Court in 2021, which found the cases moot because the Republican had left office.
Clark said the reported Qatari gift is the “logical, inevitable, unfortunate consequence of Congress and the Supreme Court refusing to enforce” the Emoluments Clause.
Trump’s family business, the Trump Organization, which is now largely run by his sons, Donald Trump Jr. and Eric Trump, has vast and growing interests in the Middle East. That includes a new deal to build a luxury golf resort in Qatar, partnering with Qatari Diar, a real estate company backed by that country’s sovereign wealth fund.
Qatar, which is ruled by the Al Thani family, is home to the state-owned airline Qatar Airways. The country also has worked to have a close relationship to Trump after he apparently backed a boycott of Doha by four Arab nations in his first term. Trump later in his term applauded Qatar.
Administration officials have brushed off concerns about the president’s policy interests blurring with family’s business profits. They note that Trump’s assets are in a trust managed by his children and that a voluntary ethics agreement released by the Trump Organization in January bars the company from striking deals directly with foreign governments.
But that same agreement allows deals with private companies abroad. That is a departure from Trump’s first term, when the organization released an ethics pact prohibiting both foreign government and foreign company deals.
White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt, when asked Friday if the president might meet with people who have ties to his family’s business, said it was “ridiculous” to suggest Trump “is doing anything for his own benefit.”
College Sports
Julian Lewis Opens Up On Why NIL Won’t Define His Colorado Legacy
Julian Lewis Opens Up On Why NIL Won’t Define His Colorado Legacy originally appeared on Athlon Sports. At just 17 years old, Julian Lewis already has a million-dollar NIL valuation, a high-profile flip from USC to Colorado, and the weight of Buff Nation’s future resting on his shoulders. But in his recent interview with USA […]

Julian Lewis Opens Up On Why NIL Won’t Define His Colorado Legacy originally appeared on Athlon Sports.
At just 17 years old, Julian Lewis already has a million-dollar NIL valuation, a high-profile flip from USC to Colorado, and the weight of Buff Nation’s future resting on his shoulders. But in his recent interview with USA Today, Lewis made one thing crystal clear: he came to Colorado to win football games, not Instagram followers.
Advertisement
In an era where high school athletes are cashing checks before they’ve taken a college snap, Lewis, reclassified from the 2026 class to arrive early in Boulder, seems focused on more than money.
“Football is my priority,” Lewis told USA Today’s Brent Schrotenboer. “I have a responsibility to myself, my teammates, and my university to become the best player that I can be.”
Lewis’ perspective is refreshingly grounded, and it’s likely a product of both his upbringing and his support system. He credits his father and team for managing his off-field business affairs, allowing him to focus on the game.
“He’s always reminding me that I have two jobs: QB and entrepreneur,” Lewis said.
Advertisement
That kind of maturity, paired with raw talent, is exactly what head coach Deion Sanders is banking on. And make no mistake, despite having to compete with seasoned transfer Kaidon Salter for the starting job, Lewis’ presence in the quarterback room is already raising eyebrows. The fact that he holds a $1.1 million NIL valuation, second only to top-rated offensive lineman Jordan Seaton is proof that the spotlight is already on him, even if he hasn’t taken a college snap yet.
But Lewis isn’t using NIL to fuel ego or flash. His involvement with Fanstake, a platform that empowers fans to support athletes through NIL, showcases a player who understands the business side of college sports but refuses to let it distract from his main mission.
“There are thousands of great athletes who came before us who didn’t have the opportunities today,” Lewis said. “NIL has nothing to do with my college career; football and NIL are two very separate things.”
Colorado Buffaloes quarterback Julian “JuJu” Lewis shows off his Darth Vader chain.Julian Lewis
For Colorado fans still unsure of what to expect from the high school phenom turned early enrollee, Lewis’ message should serve as reassurance: he’s not here for fame. He’s here to compete.
Advertisement
The Buffs’ quarterback competition in 2025 may be one of the program’s most anticipated in years. And whether Lewis starts Day 1 or takes the long route, one thing is certain: he’s already proving he’s more than just another five-star recruit.
For Buffaloes fans looking for the next leader, Julian Lewis might be the quiet storm worth betting on.
Related: Deion Sanders Cancels Speaking Engagement as Rumors Swirl
Related: Deion Sanders’ Son Says Fathers’ Return to Boulder Uncertain in Surprise Update
This story was originally reported by Athlon Sports on Jun 10, 2025, where it first appeared.
College Sports
Assistant Keith Fisher Named Head Coach at Lindenwood
Keith Fisher, a longtime Penn State men’s hockey assistant coach, is the new head coach at Lindenwood College. Fisher spent 13 seasons at Penn State with head coach Guy Gadowsky, with whom he also coached at Princeton. Fisher and Gadowsky have worked together for 20 years. “Lindenwood hired an excellent coach and an even better […]

Keith Fisher, a longtime Penn State men’s hockey assistant coach, is the new head coach at Lindenwood College. Fisher spent 13 seasons at Penn State with head coach Guy Gadowsky, with whom he also coached at Princeton. Fisher and Gadowsky have worked together for 20 years.
“Lindenwood hired an excellent coach and an even better person,” Gadowsky said in a statement. “Coach Fisher has been a great friend and a huge part of the success of the hockey programs at Penn State and Princeton. Penn State hockey, and me personally, will really miss Fish but we all look forward to seeing him build the Lindenwood hockey program with great integrity — just like him.”
Lindenwood College, located in St. Charles, Missouri, has sponsored varsity hockey since 2022. The program, which plays an independent schedule, finished 8-22-2 last season.
Fisher spent 13 seasons with Penn State men’s hockey, the last seven as associate head coach. Fisher was part of four NCAA Tournament appearances at Penn State, including the program’s first trip to the Frozen Four. Fisher also helped Penn State to Big Ten championships in 2017 and 2020.
Fisher won the Terry Flannagan Award in 2020 as the nation’s top assistant. He has coached three Big Ten players of the year, 12 all-conference players and two All-Americans.
“While Coach Fisher’s recent run to the Frozen Four speaks volumes, it’s his overall body of work that truly sets him apart,” Lindenwood Athletic Director Jason Coomer said in a statement. “He is widely respected across the college hockey landscape, and we couldn’t be more excited to have him behind the bench, guiding and developing our young men.”
Before joining Gadowsky’s staff at Penn State, Fisher worked with him at Princeton from 2005-11. During Fisher’s time at Princeton, the Tigers qualified for two NCAA Tournaments, and the 2009 team won a school-record 22 games. Fisher led Princeton’s recruiting initiative for Gadowsky.
Fisher has coached in the United States Hockey League, helping the Omaha Lancers to the 2001 Clark Cup title. He began his career on the coaching staff at St. Cloud State University, his alma mater. Fisher also played college hockey at Hibbing Community College.
“From the outset of our search, it was essential to find a leader who could elevate our program to the next level,” Coomer said in a statement. “Coach Fisher has been immersed in winning cultures throughout his career and has consistently helped young men grow and compete at the highest levels of the game.”
Penn State went 22-14-4 last season, finishing fifth in the USCHO.com college hockey poll, its highest final ranking in school history.
More Penn State Sports
College Sports
U.S. Soccer's new committee to evaluate NCAA soccer's future
Jeff KassoufJun 10, 2025, 02:13 PM ET Close Jeff Kassouf covers women’s soccer for ESPN, focusing on the USWNT and NWSL. In 2009, he founded The Equalizer, a women’s soccer news outlet, and he previously won a Sports Emmy at NBC Sports and Olympics. Open Extended Reactions U.S. Soccer announced on Tuesday a committee that […]

U.S. Soccer announced on Tuesday a committee that will evaluate and potentially overhaul the college soccer system.
The committee includes 18 members spanning stakeholders across the industry, from professional leagues and college soccer to the men’s and women’s games. They will recommend potential changes to college soccer – long viewed as an important but flawed development pipeline for the U.S. professional leagues – that could be implemented as early as next year.
“College soccer is integral to the fabric and future of our sport in this country,” U.S. Soccer CEO JT Batson said in a statement. “The individuals joining this group bring unique perspectives and expertise that will help us build a model where college soccer can thrive in a modern, connected system — all working collaboratively in service to soccer.”
UC Santa Barbara’s Manu Duah was the top pick in the most recent MLS draft, reaching a deal with San Diego FC. Photo by Eakin Howard/Getty ImagesEditor’s Picks2 RelatedNews of the committee’s formation comes at a transformative and uncertain time for college sports at large.Last week, a federal judge approved the terms of a $2.8 billion settlement that paved the way for colleges to pay student-athletes, a ruling that experts say will change college sports forever.
U.S. Soccer’s committee, called the “NextGen College Soccer Committee,” will be chaired by Dan Helfrich, principal at Deloitte Consulting and part of U.S. Soccer’s leadership advisory group.
Others involved from the professional game include Seattle Sounders and Seattle Reign co-owner Adrian Hanauer, Kansas City Current co-owner Angie Long, and executives from MLS, the NWSL and USL.
Representatives of top college programs are on the committee, as is Richard Motzkin, an executive at the player talent agency Wasserman.
The group is tasked with making recommendations for college soccer “to thrive in the rapidly evolving soccer ecosystem,” prior to the start of the academic year in the coming months and working with conferences and college programs “interested in these innovative solutions and opportunities.”
Changes to the college soccer system could be implemented beginning in the 2026-27 academic year. Critics of college soccer include prominent coaches and administrators within the game. They argue that the college game has not kept pace with modern soccer and fails to prepare players to be professionals.
The college game utilizes slightly different rules like clock stoppages and unlimited substitutions. But critics’ biggest point of contention is the short fall season that crams a couple dozen games into a few months.
A proposal to shift soccer from a fall sport to one that spans the full academic year — fall to spring with a winter break — dates back 25 years and picked up renewed momentum in 2022.
University of Maryland men’s soccer coach Sasho Cirovski led a group of Division 1 soccer coaches and executives interested in implementing what they called the “21st Century Model.”
The college game remains a particularly important pipeline in the women’s game. U.S. Soccer said in Tuesday’s news release that “the group’s work will consider both the men’s and women’s college games, recognizing that the models and solutions may differ between the two.”
U.S. Soccer formal involvement with college soccer is new.
The NextGen College Soccer Committee will also evaluate commercial opportunities for college soccer, which is of increasing importance in the NIL (name, image, likeness) era of college sports where athletes can be paid.
The federation said it would engage the NCAA and the USOPC for feedback. U.S. Soccer said it will begin outreach to college programs and conferences to gauge interest “in participating in the new opportunities or model(s).”
There are more than 50,000 college soccer players combined in men’s and women’s soccer across all three divisions.
There is an increasing number of female players bypassing college to turn professional as teenagers, but that pathway remains the exception rather than the rule.
U.S. Soccer’s announcement of a committee to evaluate college soccer comes as professional league attempt to figure out their own solutions.
MLS has MLS Next Pro for reserve teams, and USL has a formal academy system with its teams.
The NWSL recently announced vague plans to launch a second division for reserve teams as early as next year. U.S. Soccer said it would work its pre-professional youth members to consider their roles in potential solutions.
College Sports
Fisk gymnastics, nation’s first HBCU program, to shut down after 2026
The first HBCU to have a gymnastics program will participate in its last season in 2026. Fisk University, which began competing in January 2023, will discontinue its program after next season, the school announced last week. “Considerable challenges … to schedule competitions and build a robust recruiting pipeline,” were the reasons cited for the decision […]
The first HBCU to have a gymnastics program will participate in its last season in 2026.
Fisk University, which began competing in January 2023, will discontinue its program after next season, the school announced last week.
“Considerable challenges … to schedule competitions and build a robust recruiting pipeline,” were the reasons cited for the decision on the school’s website. Fisk competes in the HBCU Athletic Conference, and the sport isn’t sanctioned by the conference, resulting in those challenges.
“While we are tremendously proud of the history our gymnastics team has made in just three years, we look forward to focusing on our conference-affiliated teams to strengthen our impact in the HBCU Athletic Conference,” Valencia Jordan, Director of Fisk Athletics, said on the school’s website. “Fisk is grateful for the hard work, dedication and tenacity of its gymnasts, staff members, and coaches who made this program possible.”
The Tennessean has reached out to Jordan for comment.
Fisk University gymnastics had early success
Despite being new on the scene, Fisk’s gymnastics team has experienced some success.
Morgan Price of Lebanon became the first gymnast from an HBCU to win the all-around championship at the USA Gymnastics Women’s Collegiate National Championships in 2024. She repeated the feat in 2025.
“It feels good because of the hard work that has been put in,” Price said in a release after the first title. “Honestly, I didn’t know where I would place, but it was a pleasant surprise. I have heard from a lot of people so far. I am still trying to take all this in.”
Price, Allie Berkley, Aliyah Reed-Hammon, and Ciniah Rosby each earned first-team All-American honors for the 2025 season.
Paul Skrbina is a sports enterprise reporter covering the Predators, Titans, Nashville SC, local colleges and local sports for The Tennessean. Reach him at pskrbina@tennessean.com and on the X platform (formerly known as Twitter) @paulskrbina.
College Sports
$25M land sale advances mixed-use project at former Dowling campus
THE BLUEPRINT: Hampshire Venture Partners acquires 105 acres in Shirley for $25M 600,000 sq. ft. of warehouse space planned across three buildings 45 acres dedicated to Brookhaven for public park and rec center Project includes two ice rinks, open space, and reused facilities A New Jersey development firm has closed on its $25 million […]

THE BLUEPRINT:
-
Hampshire Venture Partners acquires 105 acres in Shirley for $25M
-
600,000 sq. ft. of warehouse space planned across three buildings
-
45 acres dedicated to Brookhaven for public park and rec center
-
Project includes two ice rinks, open space, and reused facilities
A New Jersey development firm has closed on its $25 million acquisition of 105 acres in Shirley to advance its industrial and recreational project for the site.
Hampshire Venture Partners LLC, an affiliate of Morristown, N.J.-based Hampshire Real Estate Companies, purchased the 104.73-acre site next to the Town of Brookhaven’s Calabro Airport that was formerly occupied by Dowling College‘s aviation school.
Hampshire plans to build nearly 600,000 square feet of speculative warehouse space in three buildings measuring 206,206 square feet, 183,750 square feet and 206,800 square feet on about 60 acres of the site that will be built in phases.


The developer is dedicating the remaining 45 acres to the Town of Brookhaven, including three existing athletic fields on the north side of the site, about 22 acres of mostly wooded open space and a $25 million, 81,250-square-foot recreation center with two ice hockey rinks that will be built by Ronkonkoma-based J. Petrocelli Contracting.
The plan includes demolishing the 72,000-square-foot former Dowling dormitory building but retaining 53,000 square feet of offices and classrooms and an airplane hangar for future reuse.
The former Dowling property had been owned by Triple Five Aviation Industries, a subsidiary of Edmonton, Alberta-based Triple Five Worldwide Group, which purchased it in May 2018 for $14 million as part of the college’s bankruptcy sale. Triple Five had planned to create an “industry-university research and development center for advanced transportation technology” at the site, but a Florida firm that was supposed to operate it backed out, according to a real estate source. The Town of Brookhaven Industrial Development Agency subsequently terminated the economic incentives it had approved for the proposed Triple Five project.
In another short-circuited plan, Triple Five affiliate Calverton Aviation & Technology LLC filed a lawsuit in Jan. 2024 against the Town of Riverhead for cancelling the developer’s $40 million purchase of 1,643 acres of the Enterprise Park at Calverton, where it planned to build a nearly 10 million-square-foot industrial park. The suit is still pending.
The Shirley site is zoned residential, but the Brookhaven Town Board will soon schedule a public hearing on changing the zone from residential to industrial for the 60 acres earmarked for warehouses and also for allowing the recreation building.
“We are enthusiastically looking forward to presenting our applications to the town board and the public very soon,” said attorney Christopher Kent, real estate development partner at the Farrell Fritz law firm, who is representing the project. “We are looking forward to our partnership with the town to develop the industrial portion and to dedicate the remainder of the land to the town for a town park that will include a hockey rink and over 20 acres of open space.”
John Durso, chief investment officer for Hampshire Real Estate Companies, said the development firm hopes to receive site-plan approval and begin construction by the end of the year.
College Sports
College Try
A new, experimental intercollegiate soccer model may be in place as soon as next year, part of a U.S. Soccer Federation plan to “integrate the college game more deeply” into the American player development system. In an embargoed news release Tuesday, U.S. Soccer announced the formation of what it calls the NextGen College Soccer Committee, […]


A new, experimental intercollegiate soccer model may be in place as soon as next year, part of a U.S. Soccer Federation plan to “integrate the college game more deeply” into the American player development system.
In an embargoed news release Tuesday, U.S. Soccer announced the formation of what it calls the NextGen College Soccer Committee, a group consisting of corporate and league executives, team owners and college sports administrators tasked with charting reforms in the college game.
U.S. Soccer set forth an aggressive timeline for the NCS Committee. The group will be called on to publish a “white paper” with recommendations for the both the men’s and women’s college game by the start of the upcoming academic year. Another focus will be to implement potential solutions with interested conferences and colleges during the 2026-27 school year, the U.S. Soccer release said.
As Sportico has reported, the sport’s national governing body has had discussions with the Big Ten and ACC since mid-2024 on ways to launch a pilot program for year-round men’s soccer.
“I think we are at a point in time where it behooves everybody to be open-minded about opportunities that make sense on a sport-by-sport basis,” Chad Hawley, the Big Ten’s senior vice president for policy, said in a telephone interview earlier this year.
U.S. Soccer, newly bolstered by contributions from billionaire donors, has been weighing a plan to invest millions of dollars annually into the initiative.
According to its most recent tax filing, the organization closed the 2024 fiscal year with $197 million in total revenue—a 32% increase over FY23. After expenses totaling $191 million, U.S. Soccer finished the year with a nearly $6 million surplus, marking its first positive fiscal outcome since FY18.
Prominent college coaches, for the better part of two decades, have pushed for changes in NCAA rules to allow intercollegiate soccer to stay relevant. Once a cornerstone of player development for U.S. Soccer’s men’s and women’s national teams, the college game has lost influence as top American soccer talent has chosen to come up through MLS and European club academies, turning professional before they’d even be eligible to play a college game. NCAA restrictions on practice time, as well as the compressed 12-week fall playing calendar, have hindered college coaches’ ability to attract serious young American players seeking year-round training and competition.
In response, some NCAA teams have relied on international players to fill out rosters, which has become a problem under Donald Trump’s immigration policies.
But college soccer programs, with their existing infrastructure and geographic diversity, could potentially still offer an alternate path for player development. If freed from some NCAA rules, the thinking goes, college programs could not only develop elite talent—catching late bloomers and players interested in furthering their education, while keeping the door open to turning pro—they could also help further the game’s overall growth.
Dan Helfrich, the former CEO of Deloitte Consulting, will chair the NCS group, which includes Bank of America executive David Tyrie; Warner Bros. Discovery VP Craig Barry; Seattle Sounders and Reign owner Adrian Hanauer, and KC Current co-owner Angie Long; Wasserman VP and longtime player agent Richard Motzkin; execs from MLS, the USL and the NWSL; the president of the University of Maryland; and athletic directors at Davidson, Penn State and Syracuse.
Notably absent from the list thus far: college coaches, many of whom—like Maryland’s Sasho Cirovski and North Carolina’s Carlos Somoano—have been the loudest voices clamoring for changes in their game.
However, U.S. Soccer said the NCS Committee “will formally engage other key stakeholders via insight groups—including college coaches and administrators” to provide feedback.
-
Professional Sports3 weeks ago
Jon Jones answers UFC retirement speculation as fans accuse champion of 'holding the belt …
-
Motorsports3 weeks ago
Why IHOP Rode With Dale Earnhardt Jr. In Amazon NASCAR Debut
-
NIL2 weeks ago
2025 NCAA Softball Tournament Bracket: Women’s College World Series bracket, schedule set
-
Health5 days ago
Oregon track star wages legal battle against trans athlete policy after medal ceremony protest
-
College Sports1 week ago
IU basketball recruiting
-
Professional Sports5 days ago
'I asked Anderson privately'… UFC legend retells secret sparring session between Jon Jones …
-
Youtube3 weeks ago
Ant greets A-Rod & Barry Bonds before Game 3
-
Rec Sports2 weeks ago
J.W. Craft: Investing in Community Through Sports
-
Rec Sports2 weeks ago
Scott Barker named to lead CCS basketball • SSentinel.com
-
Professional Sports5 days ago
UFC 316 star storms out of Media Day when asked about bitter feud with Rampage Jackson