Sports
Records fall and reigning champions repeat at Region IV track and field championship
Dimond’s Nevaeh Watkins clears 5′ 8″ in the high jump during the Cook Inlet Conference Region Championships on Friday, May 23, 2025 at Dimond High in Anchorage. Watkins set a new CIC record of 5′ 7.25″, and then went on to beat that with a height of 5′ 8″. (Loren Holmes / ADN) The 2025 […]


The 2025 Region IV track and field championship took place over the weekend at Dimond High School, starting on Friday and wrapping up Saturday.
Among the top athletes from the Cook Inlet Conference who squared off with bids to compete in next week’s state meet were a pair of Lynx teammates who were right at home.
Senior Sarah Dittman and sophomore Nevaeh Watkins were able to successfully defend their region titles by jumping to new heights and distances.
On Friday, Watkins won the girls high jump for the second year in a row with a meet record and personal-best mark of 5 feet, 8 inches.
“I’ve been practicing a lot for high jump recently,” she said. “Every Monday, I practice with my coach and I think it’s really paid off so far.”
After failing to clear the record-breaking height on her first two attempts, she made an adjustment and made sure that the third time was the charm.
“My coach told me what I had to do to fix everything and I did it,” Watkins said.

On Saturday, Dittman was the first of two long jumpers to achieve the same feat as she broke her own meet record set last year — not once but twice between the prelims and finals — culminating with a first-place mark of 18-04.
“I was a little worried because I hadn’t (recorded a personal best) since the IceBreakers before the season started, but I came in today with great weather, my coaches were really excited and I was really excited,” she said.
Dittman felt the pressure of being the defending region champ but didn’t let it weigh her down as she soared to new heights.
“I broke it by three-quarters of an inch and I was like, ‘Oh that’s not enough,’ ” she said. “I just focused on my fundamentals.”
State track will also take place on her school’s home turf, and she feels like that gives her an advantage.
“I run here every day, and now that I’ve learned how to jump from the further board, that’s a big confidence booster because that was my issue last year,” Dittman said.

The two friends and teammates also competed against each other in the girls 100-meter hurdles in a tight race that went down to the wire. Watkins (15.56) pulled just ahead at the very end after Dittman (15.61) had led for most of the race.
“It was really a mental battle, honestly,” Watkins said. “I could see that she was ahead of me, so I kept pushing myself and pushing myself to go a little faster.”
Securing back-to-back titles has filled her with not only confidence moving forward but also a “lot of hope of what is to come” at both the state meet next week and nationals later this year.

Other top takeaways and highlights from regions
Dittman wasn’t the only long jumper who made history on Saturday. In the boys division, Ariel Sanchez of West bested the region meet record with his first-place mark of 23-3/4. That’s longer than the current state meet record, which he could break with a repeat performance next weekend.
He pulled his hamstring during his second jump at last year’s regions and qualified for state with a second-place finish but couldn’t compete due to the injury.
“It feels good because last year before I pulled (the hamstring), A’Lante (Owens-Player) jumped 22-10 and that pushed me to jump farther than him and that’s when I pulled my hamstring,” Sanchez said. “Coming to this meet this year knowing I had the ability to beat him and I did today, it just feels good.”
In the offseason, the two-sport star who also stood out on the gridiron for the Eagles spent more time in the weight room building up his body.
“I’m going to try to break the record I just jumped today next week,” Sanchez said.

Another first-time region champion who outshined his competition was Chugiak sophomore Benjamin Hiestand, whose first-place mark of 164-8 in the boys discus was nearly 20 feet farther than the runner-up.
“It feels good to have a good mark out there and have a good first season here in Alaska,” Hiestand said. “I was calm, pretty confident and expected to win. I wanted to have a good mark out there and make a statement for states.”
Hiestand moved up here from Mountain Home, Idaho, because his mother is in the Air Force. He was one of the top throwers in his previous state, finishing fifth as a freshman at state where the winning mark was about 200 feet. While he hasn’t come close to that impressive mark yet, he is working toward it as his current personal best is 169-11.

For the second year in a row, the 3200 and 1600 meter races were swept by the same person. On the girls side, Chugiak’s Hannah Shaha won Friday’s 3200 in a time of 11:29.79 and Saturday’s 1600 in 5:16.57.
“This was my goal and I just feel so happy to accomplish it,” she said.
Bettye Davis East’s Rosie Conway was hot on Shaha’s heels for most of the race but couldn’t quite close the distance as she finished second with a mark of 5:17.32.
“I never know where she is, so I kind of was looking at my coach just to kind of gauge how far she was, but I definitely just had the foot on the gas the whole time because I did not want her to come get me right at the end,” Shaha said.

Shaha’s confidence heading into state is soaring and she looks forward to competing against the other elite endurance runners next week.
Meanwhile, in the boys division, South’s Vebjorn Flagstad cruised to victory in both distance events with first-place times of 9:39.08 in the 3200 and 4:26.81 in the 1600.
“This season has been a little up and down compared to last year,” he said. “Last year, I felt was like a breakout year for me. I kind of surprised myself and I was kind of the underdog a little bit, so this year I had more pressure coming into it. I’m just glad I was able to keep it going.”

Flagstad has been working on maintaining his top pace in recent workouts, and it paid off on Saturday as he was able to widen the gap between himself and the other runners on the final two laps.
“I didn’t want it to slow down (on the) second lap so I just tried to keep it going smooth,” he said. “The third lap is where you always die, so I really tried to push that one and then the last lap you’re just sprinting.”

Pulling off a successful title defense “definitely boosts” his confidence heading into the state meet next week.
“I hadn’t really been racing that good in The Dome and inside, so putting down some good times is going to help my confidence,” Flagstad said.
The reigning region champions in the 100-meter races pulled off successful title defenses as well. Chugiak’s Jihsana Williams repeated as the girls champion with a first-place time of 12.42. West’s Beckett Stolp did the same for the boys by narrowly crossing the finish line ahead of the field with a mark of 11.19.

Region IV Track and Field Championships
Girls
Team Scores
1. Chugiak 172.5; 2. Dimond 155; 3. South 73; 4. West 61; 5. East 56.5; 6. Service 44; 7. Bartlett 9; 8. Eagle River 7.
3200 Meters Finals
1. Hannah Shaha 11:29.79, Chugiak
2. Rosie Conway 11:37.33, East
3. Madeleine Lojewski 11:43.02, East
4. Ellie Stull 11:44.76, Dimond
5. Fiona Selvik 11:49.99, Service
Shot Put Unified Finals
1. Emi Hamazaki 18′07.00, East
2. Amira Smith 12′04.25, Dimond
3. Paisley Price 12′02.50, Chugiak
4. Anna Stewart 11′11.00, Chugiak
5. Gianna Fraize 9′09.00, Chugiak

Shot Put 4kg Partners Finals
1. Aniyah Smalley25′00.75, East
2. Emmalee Griffin 24′01.00, Chugiak
3. Schumacher Heidi 22′07.25, Service
4. Dylenn Donovan 22′00.75, Chugiak
5. Azalea Daugherty 20′11.00, Chugiak
Discus 1kg Finals
1. Alessa Scott 116′02.00, Dimond
2. Mona Koko 109′09.00, West
3. Ailafo Fautanu 101′04.00, Dimond
4. Adelaide Masimer 91′09.00, Eagle River
5. Avery Wilson 91′06.00, Chugiak
High Jump Finals
1. Nevaeh Watkins 5′8.00, Dimond
2. Autumn Larson 5′1.00, Chugiak
3. Elliette Svencer 4′10.00, Chugiak
4. Lola Poitevin 4′8.00, East
4. Kaitlyn Farr 4′8.00, Chugiak
Long Jump Unified Finals
1. Emi Hamazaki 8′07.50, East
2. Anna Stewart 7′00.25, Chugiak
3. Paisley Price 5′05.25, Chugiak
4. Amira Smith 5′00.75, Dimond
5. Katie Tracy 3′04.75, Chugiak
Long Jump Partners Finals
1. Anna Burrup 13′02.75, Chugiak
2. Azalea Daugherty 12′08.75, Chugiak
3. Cadence Johns 12′01.00, Chugiak
4. Dylenn Donovan 11′07.25, Chugiak
5. Emmalee Griffin 11′05.00, Chugiak
Triple Jump Finals
1. Avrey Campbell 34′03.25, Dimond
2. Izabela Sullivan 34′02.50, West
3. Sofia Zaccanti 33′02.00, East
4. Maya Tirpack 33′01.50, South
5. Darby D’Amico 32′08.25, South

Boys
Team Scores
1. Chugiak 115; 2. South 106; 3. Bartlett 73.5; 4. Dimond 62.5; 5. East 57; 6. West 56; 7. Eagle River 54; 7. Service 54.
3200 Meters Finals
1. Vebjorn Flagstad 9:39.08, South
2. Katahdin Staples 9:46.43, East
3. David Penfield 9:58.82, Chugiak
4. Jaxon Henrie 10:09.07, South
5. Kohen Galloway 10:20.62, Chugiak
Shot Put – 12lb Finals
1. Deuce Alailefaleula 53′02.75, Bartlett
2. George Lane 48′00.25, East
3. Benjamin Hiestand 47′05.25, Chugiak
4. Tyler Cage 46′04.75, Chugiak
5. Julian Jones 45′02.00, South
Shot Put Unified Finals
1. Norbert Keyes 29′07.00, Service
2. Lansen Ray-Davis 21′04.25, East
3. Aiden Zamora 21′03.00, Service
4. Noah Zamora 21′02.75, Service
5. Christopher Jemison 20′03.50, East
Shot Put – 12lb Partners Finals
1. Karl Hoeft 34′05.75, East
2. Maximus McFall 27′09.50, Chugiak
3. Jarrett Jackson 27′03.25, Dimond
4. Carter Pyne 26′04.75, East
5. Raylon Ulroan 25′03.00, Service
High Jump Varsity – Finals
1. Ariel Sanchez 5′10.00, West
2. Cameron Anderson 5′8.00, Service
3. Kevan Henderson 5′8.00, Service
4. Jaxon Henrie 5′6.00, South
5. Kahliel Bernard-Alli 5′4.00, Bartlett
Long Jump – Unified Finals
1. Christopher Jemison 11′05.75, East
2. Noah Zamora 11′03.50, Service
3. Lansen Ray-Davis 10′04.25, East
4. Norbert Keyes 10′01.50, Service
5. Jay Main 9′10.75, Service
Long Jump Partners Finals
1. Ian Johns 16′05.50, Chugiak
2. Aiden Lardner 16′04.00, East
3. Jacob Wahlman 14′11.75, Service
4. Raylon Ulroan 14′09.25, Service
5. Maximus McFall 14′08.75, Chugiak
Triple Jump Varsity Finals
1. Isaiah Douyon 43′11.00, South
2. Elijah Adams 41′04.50, Eagle River
3. Tyler Drake 41′02.75, Bartlett
4. Corde Bates 41′02.75, Dimond
5. Solomon Johnson 41′01.00, South
Sports
Schluer, Zalunardo are Sierra’s top all-around senior athletes
Collins Schluer and Taylor Zalunardo pride themselves as multi-sport athletes, but they did not envision themselves standing out in sports they had never played until they were upperclassmen at Sierra High. A longtime baseball player, Schluer picked up water polo going into his junior year of high school and went out as the nation’s leading […]

Collins Schluer and Taylor Zalunardo pride themselves as multi-sport athletes, but they did not envision themselves standing out in sports they had never played until they were upperclassmen at Sierra High.
A longtime baseball player, Schluer picked up water polo going into his junior year of high school and went out as the nation’s leading scorer while leading the Timberwolves to their best season.
Meanwhile, Zalunardo, who grew up with hoop dreams, joined Sierra’s fledgling flag football program at the start of her junior year and helped spearhead many first-ever moments, including a Valley Oak League championship and postseason victory this past fall.
Both believe that their experiences in other disciplines helped them not just pick up these new sports but excel in them.
Sierra recognized them as the latest Timberwolves to earn the Senior All-Around Athlete Award. Their names will be included on banners honoring all previous recipients of the award. On Wednesday, Sierra administrators gathered in the quad area on campus to honor Schluer and Zalunardo. Athletic Director Les Wheeler presented them with commemorative t-shirts and lifetime passes to regular-season sports events at Sierra.
“Anytime you walk into the gym, I want you to look up at that banner, see your names and know that you always have a home here,” Wheeler said.

Schluer started out playing football in the fall but decided to give water polo a shot after his sophomore year. He also played varsity basketball and baseball, earning all-league honorable mention in each.
“It’s a great accomplishment,” Schluer said of earning Senior All-Around Athlete. “Ever since my seventh-grade year, when my sister (Lela) was here, I saw it up in the gym, and I was like, ‘Yeah, that’s something I could do.’
“It means a lot to me, because I’m not like a lot of people who specialize in one sport. It means that I’m able to face whatever anywhere, in the pool, or the court or on the field. I would say it’s a great accomplishment, and that’s something that you work hard for and it finally pays off.”
With his long frame at 6 feet, 3 inches and a cannon for a left arm, Schluer was a natural in the pool and earned two All-VOL first-team selections.
This past season, he racked up 288 points which included 226 goals — both nation-leading totals, according to stats submitted to MaxPreps. The Timberwolves finished with a program-best 16-15 overall record and downed Beyer 14-9 for their first Sac-Joaquin Section playoff win. Schluer accounted for six goals and four assists.
“Definitely helps having an athletic background and playing a bunch of sports growing up,” Schluer said. “And our coaches here are pretty good. They were able to teach me well. I think genetics helps a lot, being tall and playing baseball.
“I would say it was mainly coaching, because I had no clue what I was doing I didn’t know anything about the sport and the different positions. I thought of it as soccer in water. It turns out there’s so much more to the sport.”
Schluer is heading to the University of Alabama, where he will join his older sister. Although academics will be his focus, he may continue playing water polo there at some level.
Zalunardo helped Sierra’s girls basketball team qualify for the playoffs in all three of her varsity seasons. The scrappy guard was named to the VOL All-Defensive Team as a senior. She also played softball her junior and senior years.
It was on the gridiron where Zalunardo truly shined, and she got to do so with her family. Father Chris Zalunardo has coached the team since flag football became a sanctioned sport by the California Interscholastic Federation starting in the fall of 2023, and younger sister Tessa joined as a freshman quarterback for the Timberwolves’ historic 2024 run.
“I never thought I’d be playing football,” Taylor Zalunardo said. “I’m very thankful for the opportunities that I’ve had here and thankful for all the support I’ve had, as well.”
Although Sierra went 4-10 in its inaugural flag football season, Zalunardo was named All-Tri-City Athletic League Defensive Player of the Year and was among the leading tacklers in the SJS with 72 overall. She also had four interceptions and was a key contributor on offense with 788 rushing yards, 249 receiving yards and three touchdowns.
With city rivals Manteca and East Union establishing their flag football programs last fall, the VOL had enough of its own members to support the sport.
The Timberwolves are the first VOL flag football champions, going 11-1 and 19-6 overall. They routed Weston Ranch 60-0 in their first postseason contest.
Zalunardo was ultra-productive, once again, finishing with the 10th-most flag pulls in the nation with 172. The linebacker added five interceptions and a team-high 20 pass deflections, while contributing 1,081 yards from scrimmage and 10 touchdowns on offense.
Zalunardo is taking her talents to Simpson University in Redding, where she’ll help build another flag football program from scratch.
“My main sport was definitely basketball — I’ve played it for eight years now,” Zalunardo said. “It’s a hard transition (to focus solely on flag football), because I was like, ‘No way I’m going to love something more than basketball.’ And then I started football and just really fell in love with it, and I’m really excited to play at the next level.”
A multi-sport athlete at heart, Zalunardo may not be ready to give up on basketball, just yet. She may try to earn a spot on the Simpson basketball team as a walk-on.
“It’s a great honor,” Zalunardo said of earning Sierra’s highest athletic award. “I wanted it ever since my freshman year. When I first saw the names up there, I asked who those people are, and they said they’re the best all-around athletes who took the time in the classroom and performed on the field or the court. I was like, ‘I want to be one of those people,’ so I just pushed myself to become an all-around athlete. I’m very honored to receive this, as well.”

– photo by JONAMAR JACINTO/The Bulletin
Sports
Unverdorben to Lead Pitt-Bradford Women’s Volleyball
Bradford, Pa. – The University of Pittsburgh at Bradford has hired Kelly Unverdorben, longtime successful head coach at Portville (N.Y.) High School, as the sixth head coach of the women’s volleyball program since joining the NCAA in 1999. “I am very pleased to announce the hiring of Kelly Unverdorben as the leader of our women’s volleyball program,” said athletic […]

Bradford, Pa. – The University of Pittsburgh at Bradford has hired Kelly Unverdorben, longtime successful head coach at Portville (N.Y.) High School, as the sixth head coach of the women’s volleyball program since joining the NCAA in 1999.
“I am very pleased to announce the hiring of Kelly Unverdorben as the leader of our women’s volleyball program,” said athletic director Bret Butler. “She brings invaluable amounts of experience, success, and knowledge of the game that will return this program to its rightful place, playing for championships.”
Unverdorben brings a wealth of volleyball coaching experience to Pitt-Bradford. For the past 11 years, she has created a dynasty at her alma mater, Portville High School. Unverdorben led the Portville Panthers to eight New York State Class C titles and 305 wins. At Portville, more than 65% of players continue playing volleyball in college, more than 15 times the national average.
She also won a Class D State Championship at Ellicottville, N.Y., in 2012-13, where the Eagles were 35-2-3 in her two seasons at the helm. She has also been named the AVCA Regional Coach of the Year three times.
In addition to her success in the scholastic ranks, Unverdorben founded Octane Club, one of the largest volleyball clubs in Western New York. The club has sent numerous teams to the national indoor club volleyball tournament.
She started its offshoot, OC Beach Volleyball Club, with her daughter, Brooke, and her playing partner Beth Miller, who was the 2018 New York State Gatorade Player of the Year. The club has more than 200 participants and has sent 30 teams to nationals.
“It is very difficult to leave my alma mater, Portville, and the program that we have built there, but joining Pitt-Bradford and its beautiful, welcoming campus is very exciting,” Unverdorben said. “I can’t wait to work with the student-athletes to get this program back to competing for championships.”
Unverdorben replaces Mark Lucas, who has moved to Ithaca College to serve on their coaching staff.
Sports
M-A’s Class of 2025 bids farewell with uniquely personal send-offs
A graduate high fives a friend after receiving their diploma at the graduation ceremony at Menlo-Atherton High School on Friday, June 6, 2025. Photo by Tâm Vũ Outgoing seniors shared heartfelt stories — tied to current hot button issues — before they walked across the stage with nearly 500 other graduates to accept their diplomas […]


Outgoing seniors shared heartfelt stories — tied to current hot button issues — before they walked across the stage with nearly 500 other graduates to accept their diplomas Friday, June 6, at Menlo-Atherton High School. The ceremony, held on Coach Parks Field, marked the Atherton high school’s 74th commencement.
One student speaker, Rose Klingsporn, talked about their personal growth from freshman to senior year, including coming out as transgender.
“I didn’t really know anything about myself, and with the turbulent political and social climate around trans people at the time, I tended to keep to myself,” said the graduate. “I allowed myself to morph from a scared freshman to one of the cool seniors I had so admired. This year, I was the drummer for the spring musical, ‘Hadestown,’ and I made real, tangible connections to other students at every grade level.”
Another graduate, Wilder Perez Sanchez, detailed his 26-day journey to East Palo Alto from Guatemala at age 16 to pursue a better education. He also spoke about working 48 hours between two restaurant jobs while in high school to support his family. He said he never imagined graduating from high school in the U.S.
“When I had to learn English, I wasn’t really sure if I was smart,” he said. “I didn’t know if I could actually learn a different language. But I did it with a lot of practice, effort and support. If you have come to this country recently and you still feel lonely, my advice is to ask for help. This friendly M-A community will support you. Be kind to others, especially while you’re getting used to your life here.”
During the ceremony, Principal Karl Losekoot presented an honorary diploma to the sister of Dylan Scirpo. Dylan, 17, was an M-A student and water polo player who died shortly before the start of his senior year in 2024. Losekoot also presented the family with Dylan’s framed water polo cap.
Losekoot encouraged students to “dream of a problem you want to solve, or dream of something you want to learn.”
“Perhaps you want to learn how to use artificial intelligence, or figure out how artificial intelligence can improve education. Perhaps you want to learn how to write, or use your writing to help people. Our world needs big dreams now,” he said.
Graduates Isabel Zohar and William Knox performed “The Way I Am” by Ingrid Michaelson.
Superintendent Crystal Leach and Sathvik Nori, president of the Sequoia Union High School District Board of Trustees, were also in attendance.
Check out this year’s list of Menlo-Atherton High School graduates and read our interview with Yandel Hernandez, one of the graduating seniors.
For all of our graduation coverage, go to our central graduation page.
Watch a video of the ceremony here:
Sports
Cardinals Sign Zach Plesac To Minor League Deal
Zach Plesac is back in affiliated ball. The Cardinals announced that they’ve signed the righty to a minor league deal and assigned him to Triple-A Memphis. Plesac had spent the past couple months pitching in the Atlantic League for the Long Island Ducks. Plesac pitched well in the independent ranks. He turned in a 2.84 […]


Zach Plesac is back in affiliated ball. The Cardinals announced that they’ve signed the righty to a minor league deal and assigned him to Triple-A Memphis. Plesac had spent the past couple months pitching in the Atlantic League for the Long Island Ducks.
Plesac pitched well in the independent ranks. He turned in a 2.84 ERA with a 22% strikeout rate over seven starts. His stuff was sharp enough for the Cardinals to view him as a viable depth starter. Plesac needed to pitch his way back to affiliated ball after a rough 2024 season with the Angels. He only made three MLB starts and was blitzed for 11 runs across 12 innings. Things didn’t go much better in Triple-A, where he allowed a 5.69 ERA through 99 2/3 frames spanning 18 appearances.
It has been a while since Plesac was an effective starter. He was brilliant for Cleveland during the shortened 2020 season, turning in a 2.28 ERA over eight outings. That came against a generally weak slate of lineups with teams playing a limited schedule, though, and the former 12th-round pick wasn’t able to build off it. He owns a 4.86 ERA in 58 MLB appearances since that season.
St. Louis has had the best rotation health of any team this year. They’ve only used six starters. Sonny Gray, Miles Mikolas, Matthew Liberatore, Andre Pallante and Erick Fedde have each taken all 12 turns. Steven Matz briefly joined the group when they used a six-man rotation to navigate a busy part of the schedule. He started twice and is now back in the bullpen.
They have another hectic stretch coming up, as they only have one off day (on June 16) for the remainder of the month. That could lead them to go back to a six-man rotation. Liberatore also left yesterday’s outing a little early with general fatigue, though there’s no indication it’ll impact his ability to make his next start. John Denton of MLB.com suggested this week that pitching prospect Michael McGreevy could be recalled as soon as this Sunday to fill out the staff — presumably with Matz staying in the bullpen. If that’s how things play out, Plesac can backfill the Triple-A rotation.
Sports
Florida Atlantic University Athletics
BOCA RATON, Fla. – Florida Atlantic women’s basketball Head Coach LeAnn Freeland added another skilled guard to the 2025-26 squad on Friday with the addition of Michiyah Simmons from South Alabama. Simmons, from Pompano Beach, Florida, arrives in Paradise after three seasons at South Alabama. “Michiyah is coming home to South Florida,” expressed […]

Simmons, from Pompano Beach, Florida, arrives in Paradise after three seasons at South Alabama.
“Michiyah is coming home to South Florida,” expressed Coach Freeland. “She was a highly successful player at Blanche Ely High School and Somerset Prep, winning three state titles during her prep career. She’s a dynamic guard who can play the point or shooting guard and is a high-energy defender on the ball. With her three years of experience on the court at South Alabama and her competitive spirit, we expect her to have a high impact on our program. Our coaching staff is excited to announce Michiyah is an Owl!”
This past season, Simmons played in 28 contests, making three starts for the Jaguars. The junior averaged 7.5 points per game and collected 2.8 rebounds per contest, in addition to 37 assists and 21 steals. Simmons recorded 10 double-figure scoring performances, scoring a career-best 22 points, including a career-high nine made field goals at Charleston Southern. Defensively, she tied a career-best eight boards vs. Faulkner and tied a career-high three steals at Georgia State.
In 2023-24, Simmons appeared in all 32 contests and made 19 starts during her sophomore season for the Jaguars. She averaged 9.3 points and 2.9 rebounds in 23.8 minutes per contest, in addition to adding 67 assists and 25 steals. Simmons posted 15 double-figure performances with a pair of 20-point games, including a season-high 21 points, with a trio of 3-pointers and eight free throws vs. Troy. She also tallied a career-high six assists vs. Texas State and knocked down a season-best eight field goals against Coastal Carolina during the opening round of the Sun Belt Conference Tournament.
During her freshman season, Simmons made 25 appearances and eight starts for the Jaguars. She recorded 5.8 points and 2.7 boards per contest and added 33 assists and 13 steals. Simmons posted five double-digit performances, recording a season-high 18 points at Southern Miss and against ULM. Defensively, Simmons collected a career-best eight rebounds in her second collegiate game at Auburn.
SEASON TICKET PACKAGES
Season tickets are now available for $80 and can be purchased here. For courtside season ticket seating, join the 2025-26 waitlist here. Season ticket renewals are also live, current women’s basketball season ticket holders can renew today by clicking here or calling the Florida Atlantic ticket office at 1-866-FAU-OWLS.
FOLLOW THE OWLS
For updates, follow @FAUWBB_Hoops on X and @FAUWBB on Instagram, or like Florida Atlantic Women’s Basketball on Facebook.
Sports
NCAA House Settlement alters college athletics landscape, marks beginning of new era – BG Falcon Media
Universities are now allowed to begin paying their student-athletes directly, altering the current collegiate landscape and marking the beginning of a new era in college athletics. On Friday night, 75-year-old California Northern District Judge Claudia Wilken approved the deal between the NCAA, its Power 4 conferences (SEC, Big Ten, Big 12 and ACC) and lawyers […]

Universities are now allowed to begin paying their student-athletes directly, altering the current collegiate landscape and marking the beginning of a new era in college athletics.
On Friday night, 75-year-old California Northern District Judge Claudia Wilken approved the deal between the NCAA, its Power 4 conferences (SEC, Big Ten, Big 12 and ACC) and lawyers representing all Division I athletes. The House v. NCAA settlement ends three separate federal antitrust lawsuits, which all claimed the NCAA was illegally limiting the earning power of college athletes.
“Despite some compromises, the settlement agreement nevertheless will result in extraordinary relief for members of the settlement classes. If approved, it would permit levels and types of student-athlete compensation that have never been permitted in the history of college sports while also very generously compensating Division I student-athletes who suffered past harms,” Wilken said as part of the 76-page opinion.
The House settlement will pay thousands of former athletes who played from 2016 to 2024 $2.8 billion in back pay for lost name, image and likeness (NIL) compensation.
Although paychecks can begin to be distributed from schools to athletes on July 1, the official start of the settlement implementation takes effect immediately.
“This is new terrain for everyone…Opportunities to drive transformative change don’t come often to organizations like ours. It’s important we make the most of this one,” NCAA president Charlie Baker said in a statement released Friday night. “We have accomplished a lot over the last several months, from new health and wellness and academic requirements to a stronger financial footing. Together, we can use this new beginning to launch college sports into the future, too.”
Every school is permitted, but not required, to share up to a certain amount of revenue annually with its athletes. According to the settlement agreement, this cap is calculated by taking 22% of the average of certain power school revenues — most notably ticket sales, television earnings and sponsorships.
The cap in the first year — July 2025 through June 2026 — is projected to be $20.5 million.
While the 22% cap will remain the same throughout the 10-year settlement agreement, the cap money figure will rise based on built-in escalators, with a 4% increase in the second and third years, scheduled recalculation after each third year and additional cash flows into athletic departments.
A new non-NCAA enforcement entity, an LLC mainly managed by the power conferences, will oversee and enforce rules related to the revenue-share concept.
The company, College Sports Commission, will be headed by a CEO and a head investigator for enforcement matters. The organization announced the hiring of MLB executive Bryan Seeley as its CEO on Friday night.
The commission will be required to ensure that schools remain under the cap and that third-party NIL deals with athletes are not booster-backed deals that have been prevalent over recent years. An enforcement staff is also expected to be hired to investigate and enforce rules related to cap circumvention, tampering and other subjects and will be required to levy stiff penalties.
Another aspect of the agreement is a Deloitte-run NIL clearinghouse that will have to approve all third-party NIL deals of at least $600 in value. The “NIL Go” clearinghouse will use a fair market value algorithm to create compensation ranges for third-party deals.
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