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Released WWE Superstar Wants To Join AEW

Elayna Black, known to WWE fans as Cora Jade until her release on May 2, 2025, has stated her openness to joining All Elite Wrestling. The former NXT Women’s Tag Team Champion shared her thoughts on her future and AEW’s creative environment during a recent appearance on The Ariel Helwani Show. Black expressed a clear […]

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Released WWE Superstar Wants To Join AEW

Elayna Black, known to WWE fans as Cora Jade until her release on May 2, 2025, has stated her openness to joining All Elite Wrestling. The former NXT Women’s Tag Team Champion shared her thoughts on her future and AEW’s creative environment during a recent appearance on The Ariel Helwani Show.

Black expressed a clear interest in potentially working with AEW. “I would definitely be open to going to AEW. I loved my time there. I have a lot of friends there,” she said.

The former WWE star made a brief appearance on AEW Dark in 2020 as Elayna Black before signing with WWE. Her positive sentiment towards the promotion is also fueled by its creative approach.

“I watch all the shows. I love the fact that they have as much creative freedom as they do,” Black noted. She further explained her appreciation for AEW’s style.

More news: WWE News: Steve Austin Reveals Real-Life Vince McMahon Confrontation

She stated, “I’m so much for storylines and character, so I feel they are very creatively free in that way.” Black signed with WWE in early 2021 and quickly made a name for herself in NXT as Cora Jade.

She developed a rebellious “Generation of Jade” persona. She captured the NXT Women’s Tag Team Championship alongside Roxanne Perez, with whom she also had a memorable, intense feud after turning heel.

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LAS VEGAS, NEVADA – OCTOBER 11: A WWE logo is shown on a screen before a WWE news conference at T-Mobile Arena on October 11, 2019 in Las Vegas, Nevada. It was announced that WWE…
LAS VEGAS, NEVADA – OCTOBER 11: A WWE logo is shown on a screen before a WWE news conference at T-Mobile Arena on October 11, 2019 in Las Vegas, Nevada. It was announced that WWE wrestler Braun Strowman will face heavyweight boxer Tyson Fury and WWE champion Brock Lesnar will take on former UFC heavyweight champion Cain Velasquez at the WWE’s Crown Jewel event at Fahd International Stadium in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia on October 31.

Throughout her NXT tenure, she was involved in several prominent storylines and was considered a key part of the brand’s women’s division. Following her WWE departure, she has reverted to her Black ring name and has been actively preparing for the next chapter of her career.

She’s done so by launching an OnlyFans account and taking independent bookings as her 30-day non-compete period ended around June 1, 2025. Her comments about AEW signal a significant potential landing spot for the young star.

AEW may be the right landing spot for her, considering that she is still so young and could use the rival promotion as a launching pad for her career on a short-term basis. A one or two-year deal would be something she could use greatly to her benefit and perhaps make her way to WWE one day if she impresses enough.

More WWE News:

For more on WWE, head to Newsweek Sports.

College Sports

LSU baseball’s Kade Anderson wins 2025 College Pitcher of the Year Award

LSU baseball’s Kade Anderson was named the 2025 College Pitcher of the Year by Baseball America on Thursday. Anderson is a sophomore pitcher from Mandeville, La., who has started in both of his seasons for the Tigers. As a freshman, Anderson made appearances as the midweek starter and as a reliever on the weekends. Then, […]

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LSU baseball’s Kade Anderson was named the 2025 College Pitcher of the Year by Baseball America on Thursday.

Anderson is a sophomore pitcher from Mandeville, La., who has started in both of his seasons for the Tigers. As a freshman, Anderson made appearances as the midweek starter and as a reliever on the weekends.

Then, in his sophomore season, Anderson was called to the Friday night starter role, which he embraced and had a breakout season.

In the 2025 season, Anderson recorded a 3.18 ERA and a nation-leading 180 strikeouts across 119 innings. In 11 out of his 19 games, he recorded double-digit strikeouts.

When the stage got bigger, Anderson rose to the occasion as he allowed just one run and struck out 17 batters in the 16 innings he pitched during the College World Series.

He was named the tournament’s most outstanding player after securing LSU a win over Coastal Carolina with a complete-game shutout, just the third ever in the CWS finals history.

“His next pitch should be for some place in the Washington Nationals organization,” LSU head coach Jay Johnson said after the game. “There’s nobody closer to the major leagues than that right now.”

The Nationals hold the No. 1 pick in the 2025 MLB Draft, and Johnson thinks Anderson should be the first off the board. MLB Insider and former MLB scout Kiley McDaniel agrees.

In McDaniel’s most recent MLB mock draft, he named Anderson the first overall pick. According to MLB.com, Anderson is the No. 2-ranked prospect in the draft this year.



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House Settlement allows UMD hockey to increase scholarships – Duluth News Tribune

DULUTH — The Minnesota Duluth men’s and women’s hockey programs are planning to increase the amount of scholarships offered over the next three seasons, going from the equivalent of 18 full athletic scholarships in 2024-25 to 22 by 2027-28. UMD athletic director Forrest Karr said both teams will have the opportunity to offer up to […]

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DULUTH — The Minnesota Duluth men’s and women’s hockey programs are planning to increase the amount of scholarships offered over the next three seasons, going from the equivalent of 18 full athletic scholarships in 2024-25 to 22 by 2027-28.

UMD athletic director Forrest Karr said both teams will have the opportunity to offer up to 20 full scholarships starting in 2025-26, 21 in 2026-27 and 22 in 2027-28.

The move comes after the

approval of the NCAA v. House settlement,

which removed scholarship limits in NCAA Division I sports, but imposed roster limits. Hockey rosters are capped at 26 players.

“There is still work to be done. This thing can change, as we’ve seen, very quickly,” said Bulldogs men’s coach

Scott Sandelin.

“We have a good plan in place and we’re going to continue to work toward that. It benefits both our programs to try and stay competitive in the world we’re in.”

college hockey players and coaches

Minnesota Duluth coach Scott Sandelin, a member of the NCAA Division I men’s hockey committee, listens to a question April 11 during the NCAA Men’s Frozen Four at Enterprise Center in St. Louis.

Clint Austin / File / Duluth Media Group

In addition to increasing the amount of scholarships offered, the Bulldogs will begin paying out academic achievement awards to returning student-athletes and incoming transfers. Also known in college sports as

“Alston money,”

it follows a 2021 Supreme Court decision (NCAA v. Alston) that allowed schools to provide additional education-related benefits, including academic awards of up to $5,980 per year.

UMD is offering $3,000 per student-athlete in 2025-26. Karr said UMD hopes to increase the amount offered in the future. UMD’s academic achievement awards — which Karr said are treated like scholarships — will come from donations to the hockey programs via the University of Minnesota Foundation.

people at podium during press conference

Minnesota Duluth director of athletics Forrest Karr speaks during a press conference introducing Laura Schuler as the head coach of the Minnesota Duluth Women’s hockey program July 11, 2024, at Amsoil Arena in Duluth.

Clint Austin / File / Duluth Media Group

Many of the Bulldogs’ conference rivals are already offering Alston money, including

North Dakota in the NCHC

and the Big 10 schools in the WCHA.

“This investment is a vital step in attracting and retaining top-tier prospective student-athletes — individuals who excel not only in sport, but also in the classroom and in their communities,” UMD women’s coach Laura Schuler said. “By raising scholarship dollars and enhancing academic recognition, we are not only leveling the playing field, we are reaffirming our commitment to student success, well-being and the values that define our institution.”

people at podium during press conference

Laura Schuler speaks during a press conference introducing her as the head coach of the Minnesota Duluth Women’s hockey program July 11 at Amsoil Arena in Duluth.

Clint Austin / File / Duluth Media Group

The House settlement stems from a 2020 lawsuit in U.S. District Court. The NCAA and its five biggest conferences at that time — the Big 10, Atlantic Coast Conference, Southeastern Conference, Big 12 and Pac-12 — were sued over back pay for name, image and likeness licensing and revenue sharing from broadcast agreements.

A $2.75 billion settlement was formally approved by a federal judge on June 6. The settlement includes a revenue-sharing agreement and name, image and likeness back pay for former student-athletes who began competing in 2016. Terms of the settlement — including the lifting of scholarship limits and implementation of roster caps — go into effect on July 1.

Schools have until June 30 to either opt in or opt out of the settlement. Minnesota, Wisconsin and Ohio State in the WCHA and Arizona State in the NCHC are required to opt in as defendants. UMD had the option to opt in for its Division I sports,

and announced its intention to do so back in March.

Denver also announced it will opt in. North Dakota

was going to opt out

for 2025-26,

but is reconsidering.

Terms of the House settlement only apply to the Bulldogs’ Division I programs — men’s and women’s hockey. The other Division II sports are not impacted.

“We have been planning for the House settlement to be approved for over a year, and we are now able to move forward,” Karr said. “Any additional adjustments that we make in the future will be informed by changes being made at other WCHA and NCHC programs.”





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Funding of Olympic sports a bargaining chip as NCAA seeks antitrust help, AP sources say

Associated Press College sports leaders seeking antitrust and other protections from Congress have a potential bargaining chip: School assurances that they will provide funding for their increasingly imperiled Olympic programs, by far the biggest pipeline of talent for Team USA. Four people familiar with the talks told The Associated Press that lawmakers, mostly from the […]

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Associated Press

College sports leaders seeking antitrust and other protections from Congress have a potential bargaining chip: School assurances that they will provide funding for their increasingly imperiled Olympic programs, by far the biggest pipeline of talent for Team USA.

Four people familiar with the talks told The Associated Press that lawmakers, mostly from the Democratic side that will need to provide votes to help any legislation pass the Senate, have been approached by college sports experts and policy shapers to explore options in exchange for support of a bill that some Democrats oppose.

One of the clearest tradeoffs would be for an idea that enjoys bipartisan support: helping collegiate Olympic sports programs.

Those programs produce around three-quarters of U.S. Olympians at a typical Summer Games, but some are on uncertain footing in the wake of the $2.8 billion House settlement that clears the way for schools to begin sharing revenue directly with their athletes as early as next week. Most of that money will go to football and basketball — the moneymakers — in this new era of name, image and likeness payments to players.

The people who spoke to AP did so on condition of anonymity because of the still-evolving and uncertain nature of the talks. But it’s no secret that the NCAA and its biggest conferences are not convinced that the House settlement will end all their problems.

In the halls of Congress

The NCAA is lobbying for a bill that would supersede state laws that set different rules for NIL; ensure athletes do not get employment status; and provide limited antitrust protection. One key issue is the handful of lawsuits challenging the NCAA’s longstanding rule of giving athletes five years to complete four seasons of eligibility.

“I get why limited liability is a big ask,” NCAA President Charlie Baker said. “But when it comes to limited liability around basic rulemaking, the consequences of this for the next generation of young people if you play this thing out are enormous.”

In a sign of the difficulty the NCAA might have in getting legislation passed, Sen. Richard Blumenthal, D-Conn., who has played a large role in shaping policy for college sports, told AP that athletes “deserve real reform and independent oversight of college sports.”

“Congressional legislation must provide strong and enforceable protections for their health, safety, and economic rights and transparency to protect non-revenue-generating sports, rather than merely offering a blank check to the NCAA to return to the status quo,” Blumenthal said.

While the U.S. government is forbidden by law from funding Olympic teams, there is no such prohibition on government funding for universities and their sports programs. One idea would be for the bill to include promises of certain levels of funding for college Olympic sports programs — some of which could be raised through federal grants to help the schools offset the cost.

“It would depend upon what they have in mind,” Baker said when asked about the idea. “We’d be open to a conversation about that because those sports are important and they matter.”

The issue is complicated and funding sources are going to be under pressure: Over the next year alone, each D-I school is allowed to share up to $20.5 million in revenue with its athletes and there are extra millions being committed to additional scholarships – for instance, in the case of Michigan, $6.2 million. All those figures are increasing under terms of the settlement and the money has to come from somewhere.

Olympic sports in peril

As of late May, the U.S. Olympic and Paralympic Committee had tallied about 40 Olympic sports programs cut in Division I since the beginning of 2024 (but also 18 programs added) as schools prepare for the new financial realities.

Only three – the Virginia men’s and women’s diving programs and the Utah beach volleyball program – came from schools among the Power Four conferences that were co-defendants in the House case. Still, countless other teams have been reconfiguring their lineups with roster caps in place alongside unlimited scholarships, a combination that is forcing hard decisions.

Leaders inside the USOPC are optimistic that schools that generate the most talent – for instance, the 39 medals won by Stanford athletes at last year’s Paris Games would have placed the school 11th on the overall medal table – will retain robust Olympic sports programs and that Congress is on board with helping.

“We have no reason to believe that there’s not real alignment from all the parties, including members of Congress, who have indicated to us a very real concern for Olympic and Paralympic sport,” USOPC CEO Sarah Hirshland said.

Though a strictly partisan bill could pass the narrowly divided House, for it to become law it would need at least seven Democratic votes in the Senate to break a filibuster.

In 2023, Blumenthal and Sen. Cory Booker, D-N.J., teamed with Sen. Jerry Moran, R-Kan., to draft a bill that would have provided some antitrust protection in exchange for a number of guarantees, including the establishment of a health and safety trust fund for athletes who deal with long-term injuries from college sports.

Among the NCAA’s “core guarantees” put in place last year, schools are now required to cover medical costs for athletic-related injuries for at least two years after players leave school.

“One of the messages was ‘clean up your own house first, then come talk to us,’” Baker said of his conversations with lawmakers. “So we did some of the things that were aligned with some of the previous legislation.”

The big question is whether those moves, added to any guarantees for Olympic sports, would be enough to overcome Democratic reluctance to strip or limit legal rights of college athletes.

___

AP college sports: https://apnews.com/hub/college-sports




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A new era of Dickinson hockey begins behind the bench – The Dickinson Press

DICKINSON — The Dickinson Midgets mascot name is officially retired, and the Dickinson Mavericks will debut their new identity in the 2025-26 athletics season. For the boys hockey team, that new era includes a leadership change. Chad Miller has been named the next head coach of Dickinson High School’s boys hockey program, succeeding Kass Dvorak […]

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DICKINSON — The Dickinson Midgets mascot name is officially retired, and the Dickinson Mavericks will debut their new identity in the 2025-26 athletics season. For the boys hockey team, that new era includes a leadership change. Chad Miller has been named the next head coach of Dickinson High School’s boys hockey program, succeeding Kass Dvorak after two seasons.

“The best thing about it that I appreciate is that what we’re trying to build is going to stay intact. I like that there’s no disruption in that,” Miller said. “I know that some people appreciate changes here and there, but I feel like we got a good thing going. I think we’re on a good path right now and that’s what’s exciting.”

Miller’s coaching background within the organization was a key factor in his selection. He served as an assistant coach for DHS for four of the past six seasons and has long been involved in Dickinson’s youth hockey programs. That continuity appealed to Dickinson Hockey Director Dallas Kuntz.

DSC_4558.JPG

The Dickinson Midgets bench celebrate a goal.

Jacob Cheris / The Dickinson Press

“His experience, his knowledge of the game and he’s also going to bring accountability to the table too,” Kuntz said. “Chad was really good for me because he challenged me if I had an idea. He kind of played the devil’s advocate. Sometimes he disagreed with me a lot and I think that helped make me become a better coach and helped him become a better coach, just looking at the other side of things.”

After winning the program’s first Western Dakota Association title in 2023-24, the team had a difficult 2024-25 season. The Midgets finished second to last in the WDA with just nine points and only two conference wins. Miller views those struggles as part of a natural rebuilding phase. The team will return three players with experience from both the championship run and last season’s adversity: Frankie Montoya, Kacen Grol and backup goaltender Dallas Schmidt.

DSC_7407.JPG

The Dickinson Midgets boys hockey team huddles up prior to a game.

Jacob Cheris / The Dickinson Press

“It’s one of those things where I hope that the underclassmen that got to be part of the WDA championship team, they got to see that and they also got to see what happened last year,” Miller said. “I hope that they understand what it took two years ago to get to where they were and what transpired last year, whether it was in the locker room or on the ice. We’re telling those guys to be leaders this year.”

When the Mavericks hit the ice in November, Miller will emphasize two core principles: hard work and team unity.

“We are going to work hard. And if you are part of the team, you’re going to work hard,” Miller said. “I’m hoping that they’re going to be proud of something they accomplish, whether it’s the dry land training, whether it’s the tryouts at the beginning of the season. I want them to be proud of that. I want that locker room to have those guys get along. I want them to grow friendships throughout the year and honestly, whether they choose to play hockey after high school or not, I want them to be just better people.”

One specific area of focus will be improving play in the defensive zone, a consistent challenge last season. While only minor adjustments are expected in the forecheck and other systems, Miller emphasizes collaboration with his coaching staff in crafting a strategy that works.

“As a head coach, you don’t necessarily want to be the smartest person in the room. You want to surround yourself with the smartest people,” Miller said. “What I believed in, going with Dallas and with Kass too, is both of them always asked, ‘What do you think?’ It wasn’t their way, or my way, or whatever it was — there was a collective conversation. And sometimes we would disagree, sometimes we would agree, and that’s healthy.”

Jacob Cheris

Jacob Cheris covers a variety of high school and college sports. A graduate of Penn State University’s class of 2023, with a degree in broadcast journalism, he covered Penn State Men’s Hockey for three years. Jacob also covers Big Ten Hockey for College Hockey News.





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Gretchen Walsh Nominated for ESPY Award for Best College Athlete in Women’s Sports

The nominees have been announced for the 2025 ESPYS, and swimmer Gretchen Walsh received a big nod. The now-graduated Virginia Cavalier The ESPYS are the most significant sports award show in the United States hosted by ESPN and give awards from across sports and categories. While swimmers have been nominated, and won, awards in Athlete […]

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The nominees have been announced for the 2025 ESPYS, and swimmer Gretchen Walsh received a big nod. The now-graduated Virginia Cavalier

The ESPYS are the most significant sports award show in the United States hosted by ESPN and give awards from across sports and categories. While swimmers have been nominated, and won, awards in Athlete of the Year, Olympic athlete and Athletes with a Disability categories, they have been ominously absent from the Best Collegiate Athlete Awards in recent years.

The last swimmer to win the award was Missy Franklin in 2015, and the last swimmer nominated for the award was Katie Ledecky in 2018.

Walsh had arguably the best season of any collegiate swimmer in history.

The ESPYS first added Best College Athlete for Men’s Sports and Women’s Sports in 2002. From 2018-2021, they were combined into a single gender-neutral category, and then split back out into separate categories.

While Franklin is the only swimmer to ever win the award, swimmers have received nominations 8 times – mostly in the 2000s.

No male swimmer has ever been nominated. Collegiately, she won the maximum seven NCAA event titles and led Virginia to its 5th-straight NCAA Team Championship. She also finished her career with the maximum 28 All-America titles and 25 NCAA titles – including 9 individual titles. In the middle of the season, she won five titles at the Short Course World Championships. Across international and collegiate meets during her senior season of college, she set the first 13 World Records of her career in 323 days, a shorter timespan than any swimmer in history, set multiple American and NCAA Records, and generally dominated the season from start-to-finish.

She was also named the CSCAA Women’s Swimmer of the Year and the Honda Sport Award winner for swimming & diving.

She is nominated against Pitt volleyball player Olivia Babcock, North Carolina soccer player Kate Faasse, and USC basketball player JuJu Watkins. Of that group, only Walsh and Faasse won NCAA team titles in the 2024-2025 season.

An ESPN Nomination Select Committee chooses the nominees, and a public vote “helps to determine ESPY winners.” The 2025 awards show will be air on July 16 and be hosted by comedian Shane Gillis.

All-Time Swimming Nominees, Best College Athlete, Women’s Sports:

  • 2002 – Natalie Coughlin, Cal
  • 2003 – Natalie Coughlin, Cal
  • 2004 – Tara Kirk, Stanford
  • 2007 – Kara Lynn Joyce, Georgia
  • 2009 – Dana Vollmer, Cal
  • 2011 – Katinka Hosszu, USC
  • 2012 – Caitlin Leverenz, Cal
  • 2015 – Missy Franklin, Cal (Winner)
  • 2018 – Katie Ledecky, Stanford (open gender award)
  • 2025 – Gretchen Walsh, Virginia

All-Time Nominees By Sport, Best College Athlete in Women’s Sports

Through 2025 Nominations

All-Time Nominees By Sport, Best College Athlete in Men’s Sports

Through 2025 Nominations

All 2025 ESPY Nominees

BEST ATHLETE – MEN’S SPORTS‬

  • ‬‭Josh Allen – Buffalo Bills‬
  • ‬‭Saquon Barkley – Philadelphia Eagles‬
  • Shai Gilgeous-Alexander – Oklahoma City Thunder‬
  • ‬‭Shohei Ohtani – Los Angeles Dodgers‬

‭ BEST ATHLETE – WOMEN’S SPORTS‬

BEST BREAKTHROUGH ATHLETE‬

  • ‭Cooper Flagg – Duke Men’s Basketball‬
  • Chloe Humphrey – North Carolina Women’s Lacrosse‬
  • Ilona Maher – Rugby‬
  • ‭Paul Skenes – Pittsburgh Pirates‬

BEST RECORD-BREAKING PERFORMANCE‬

  • ‭Geno Auriemma – UConn Huskies
  • ‬Caitlin Clark – Indiana Fever
  • Kevin Durant – Olympic Basketball
  • Alexander Ovechkin – Washington Capitals

‭BEST CHAMPIONSHIP PERFORMANCE‬

  • ‭Simone Biles – 2024 Olympics Women’s All-Around‬
  • Stephen Curry – US Men’s Olympic BB team‬
  • Freddie Freeman – LA Dodgers – World Series MVP‬
  • Rory McIlroy – Wins first Masters title, completing career Grand Slam‬

BEST COMEBACK ATHLETE‬

  • ‭Gabe Landeskog – Colorado Avalanche‬
  • Suni Lee – Gymnast‬
  • Mallory Swanson – USWNT/Chicago Red Stars‬
  • Lindsey Vonn – Skiing‬

BEST PLAY‬

  • ‭Saquon Barkley’s backwards hurdle‬‭ – NFL (11/3/24)‬
  • Tyrese Haliburton Calls Game!!!‬‭ – NBA Game 1 NBA Finals‬‭ (6/5/25)‬
  • Sabrina Ionescu Logo 3 Game Winner‬‭ – WNBA Finals Game‬‭ 3‬
  • Trinity Rodman with the OT Goal to send USWNT to the semi-finals‬‭ – 2024‬‭ Olympics‬

‭ BEST TEAM‬

  • ‬‭Florida Panthers – NHL‬
  • Los Angeles Dodgers – MLB‬
  • New York Liberty – WNBA‬
  • Ohio State Buckeyes – NCAA Football‬
  • Oklahoma City Thunder – NBA‬
  • Philadelphia Eagles – NFL‬
  • North Carolina Tar Heels – NCAA Women’s Lacrosse‬
  • United States Women’s National Team – Soccer‬
  • University of Connecticut Huskies – Women’s Basketball‬

BEST COLLEGE ATHLETE – MEN’S SPORTS‬

  • ‭Cooper Flagg – Duke Basketball‬
  • Wyatt Hendrickson – Oklahoma State Wrestling‬
  • Travis Hunter – Colorado Football‬
  • CJ Kirst – Cornell Lacrosse‬

BEST COLLEGE ATHLETE – WOMEN’S SPORTS‬

  • ‭Olivia Babcock – University of Pittsburgh Volleyball‬
  • Kate Faasse – North Carolina Soccer‬
  • Gretchen Walsh – Virginia Swimming‬
  • JuJu Watkins – USC Basketball‬

BEST ATHLETE WITH A DISABILITY‬

  • ‭Noah Elliott – Snowboard‬
  • Ezra Frech – Track & Field‬
  • Tatyana McFadden – Track & Field‬
  • Grace Norman – Paratriathlete‬

BEST NFL PLAYER‬

  • ‭Josh Allen – Buffalo Bills‬
  • Saquon Barkley – Philadelphia Eagles‬
  • Lamar Jackson – Baltimore Ravens‬
  • Patrick Surtain II – Denver Broncos‬

‭BEST MLB PLAYER‬

  • ‭Freddie Freeman – Los Angeles Dodgers‬
  • Aaron Judge – New York Yankees‬
  • Shohei Ohtani – Los Angeles Dodgers‬
  • Tarik Skubal – Detroit Tigers‬

BEST NHL PLAYER‬

  • ‭Leon Draisaitl – Edmonton Oilers,‬
  • Connor Hellebuyck – Winnipeg Jets‬
  • Nikita Kucherov – Tampa Bay Lightning‬
  • Cale Makar – Colorado Avalanche‬

BEST NBA PLAYER‬

  • Giannis Antetokounmpo – Milwaukee Bucks‬
  • Shai Gilgeous-Alexander – Oklahoma City Thunder‬
  • Nikola Jokić – Denver Nuggets‬
  • Jayson Tatum – Boston Celtics‬

BEST WNBA PLAYER‬‭

  • Caitlin Clark – Indiana Fever‬
  • Napheesa Collier – Minnesota Lynx‬
  • Breanna Stewart – New York Liberty‬
  • A’ja Wilson – Las Vegas Aces‬

BEST DRIVER‬

  • Joey Logano – NASCAR‬
  • Álex Palou – IndyCar‬
  • Oscar Piastri – F1‬
  • Max Verstappen – F1‬

BEST UFC FIGHTER‬

  • Dricus Du Plessis‬
  • Merab Dvalishvili‬
  • Kayla Harrison‬
  • Islam Makhachev‬

BEST BOXER‬

  • Naoya Inoue‬
  • Claressa Shields‬
  • Katie Taylor‬
  • Oleksandr Usyk‬

BEST SOCCER PLAYER‬

  • Aitana Bonmatí – FC Barcelona/Spain‬
  • Christian Pulisic – AC Milan, US‬
  • Alexia Putellas FC Barcelona/Spain‬
  • Lamine Yamal – FC Barcelona/Spain‬

BEST GOLFER‬

  • Nelly Korda‬
  • Rory Mcllroy‬
  • Scottie Scheffler‬
  • Maja Stark‬

BEST TENNIS PLAYER‬





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IIHF World Junior Championships in Minneapolis-St. Paul

The International Ice Hockey Federation on Thursday released the schedule for the IIHF World Junior Championships being held Dec. 26-Jan. 5 in St. Paul and Minneapolis. The 29-game tournament for the world’s best players 20 and under will be played mostly at Xcel Energy Center in downtown St. Paul (Group A) and 3M Arena at […]

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The International Ice Hockey Federation on Thursday released the schedule for the IIHF World Junior Championships being held Dec. 26-Jan. 5 in St. Paul and Minneapolis.

The 29-game tournament for the world’s best players 20 and under will be played mostly at Xcel Energy Center in downtown St. Paul (Group A) and 3M Arena at Mariucci (Group B) on the campus of the University of Minnesota.

Group A, comprising the U.S., Sweden, Slovakia, Switzerland and Germany, will play its preliminary round games at the X. Group B (Canada, Czechia, Finland, Latvia and Denmark) will play preliminary contests at Mariucci. Each team in each group will play the others once and the top four will advance to the quarterfinals.

Semifinals and gold medal games will be played at Xcel Energy Center from Jan 4-5. Tickets for all games can be purchased at https://www.iihf.com/en/events/2026/wm20/static/64823/tickets.

SCHEDULE

At Xcel Energy Center

Dec. 26 — Sweden vs. Slovakia, noon; U.S. vs. Germany, 5 p.m.
Dec. 27 — Slovakia vs. Germany, 1 p.m.; U.S. vs. Switzerland, 5 p.m.
Dec. 28 — Sweden vs. Switzerland, 1 p.m.
Dec. 29 — Germany vs. Sweden, noon; Slovakia vs. U.S., 5 p.m.
Dec. 30 — Switzerland vs Germany, 1 p.m.
Dec. 31 — Switzerland vs. Slovakia, noon; U.S. vs. Sweden, 5 p.m.
Jan. 2-4 — Quarterfinals, TBD

At 3M Arena at Mariucci

Dec. 26 — Denmark vs. Finland, 2:30 p.m.; Czechia vs. Canada, 7:30 p.m.
Dec. 27 — Latvia vs. Canada, 3:30 p.m.; Denmark vs. Czechia, 7:30 p.m.
Dec. 28 — Finland vs. Latvia, 3:30 p.m.
Dec. 29 — Finland vs. Czechia, 2:30 p.m.; Canada vs. Denmark, 7:30 p.m.
Dec. 30 — Latvia vs. Denmark, 2:30 p.m.
Dec. 31 — Czechia vs. Latvia, 2:30 p.m.; Canada vs. Finland, 7:30 p.m.
Jan. 2-4 — Quarterfinals, TBD

Semifinals

Jan. 4, 3:30 p.m. / 7:30 p.m., Xcel Energy Center

Final

Jan. 5, 7:30 p.m., Xcel Energy Center



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