College Sports
Surviving the Shift: Mountain West Navigates the NIL Era and Portal Era
Surviving the Shift: Mountain West Navigates the NIL Era and Portal Power Struggle By Roger Holien As college football barrels into a new era dominated by big-money NIL deals, free-flowing transfer activity, and a rapidly widening gap between Power Five (P5) programs and the rest, the Mountain West Conference (MWC) finds itself at a crossroads. […]

Surviving the Shift: Mountain West Navigates the NIL Era and Portal Power Struggle
By Roger Holien
As college football barrels into a new era dominated by big-money NIL deals, free-flowing transfer activity, and a rapidly widening gap between Power Five (P5) programs and the rest, the Mountain West Conference (MWC) finds itself at a crossroads.
Once seen as a feisty mid-major with dark horse potential, the MWC now faces a stark reality: adapting to the unfamiliar landscape—or risk becoming irrelevant.
The New Playing Field
In the wake of the NCAA’s policy shift in 2021 allowing student-athletes to profit from their name, image, and likeness, P5 programs have surged ahead, capitalizing on deep-pocketed donors, organized collectives, and brand-name exposure to lure top talent.
The transfer portal, once a backdoor to second chances, has become a revolving door, with teams losing and gaining new players each year.
The reality is no team will look the same each year, so as a fan, you had better enjoy the moment because the following year will be a completely different team in most cases.
It’s the reality of this day and age of NCAA college sports and for the average fan, they disdain it for the most part.
For Mountain West schools, that means building a program only to watch its best players leave for bigger stages.
“Recruit. Develop. Lose. Repeat,” lamented one MWC assistant coach anonymously. “We’re basically a farm system for the SEC and Big Ten.”
The Talent Drain
Take San Diego State, for example. The Aztecs have long been a model for consistent development, particularly on defense and special teams.
But in recent seasons, they’ve watched standout players leave for bigger NIL opportunities elsewhere.
Boise State, Fresno State, and Utah State have experienced similar heartbreaks—players who dominate on Saturdays in the MWC and then suit up the next year in a Power Five uniform.
The issue isn’t just losing talent. It’s the lack of leverage to keep it. While P5 schools are signing players to six-figure NIL deals, many Mountain West programs are still struggling to organize collectives or legally structure meaningful incentives for athletes.
Juggling Loyalty and Loss: MWC Coaches Face New Reality
For coaches in the Mountain West Conference, the job has never been harder—or more complicated.
The game plan used to be straightforward: recruit, develop, win. Now, it’s recruit, develop… and hope your best players don’t leave.
With NIL money and the transfer portal reshaping the college football landscape, Mountain West coaches are juggling roster instability, shifting loyalties, and constant re-recruiting of their own players.
“We’re not just coaching football anymore,” said one MWC head coach. “We’re managing careers, branding strategies, and weekly transfer rumors.”
Boise State has seen talented underclassmen bolt for SEC and Big Ten schools after breakout seasons.
At San Diego State, defensive standouts are now fielding NIL offers from national powerhouses before bowl season ends.
The new reality? Coaching in the Mountain West means being part strategist, part salesman, and part counselor. And every day, the clock resets.
Creative Solutions and Culture Play
That’s not to say the MWC is giving up by any means, the bigger the challenge, the bigger the reward, as they say in winner circles.
Some programs are leaning hard into culture, player development, and creative NIL strategies.
Boise State has launched its “HorsePower Collective,” aiming to pool community and alumni resources to fund athlete NIL opportunities.
San Jose State is emphasizing tech-industry partnerships in Silicon Valley to sweeten its NIL pitch.
“We can’t outspend USC or Texas,” said former head coach New Mexico coach Bronco Mendenhall in a recent interview, “but we can create a culture players want to be part of—and use NIL as a life-building tool, not just a paycheck.”
The reality is NCAA College coaches are learning to “Adapt or Die on the Vine” in dealing with young men being promised sizeable sums of money for high-value athletes and balancing old school language of being committed to a program.
In this writer’s opinion, the teams that will adapt the most are those who have a focused plan, resources that they can leverage and a huge component will be community involvement, the ones with a rapid fan base.
Conference Realignment Looms
Realignment continues to destabilize Group of Five (G5) leagues like the Mountain West. With the Pac-12’s collapse and the Big 12’s rapid expansion, MWC teams like San Diego State and Colorado State have flirted with upward mobility, hoping for a seat at the bigger table. Yet no official invitation has come.
In 2023, the MWC entered into a “football-only scheduling alliance” with Oregon State and Washington State—what some see as the first step toward a new hybrid league that could bring in TV revenue and visibility. But long-term stability remains elusive.
What the Future Holds
Looking forward, Mountain West schools are focusing on three key strategies:
1. Institutional NIL Investment: Organizing alumni collectives and securing regional sponsorships to make NIL sustainable and competitive.
2. Retention Through Relationships: Building strong player-coach bonds to minimize portal losses.
3. Media Visibility: Seeking better TV deals, streaming opportunities, and partnerships to increase exposure—essential for both recruiting and funding.
Ultimately, the Mountain West’s future will depend on its ability to embrace innovation, leverage local advantages, and retain identity amid the national arms race.
“We may not win the bidding wars,” said Boise State AD Jeramiah Dickey, “but we can win hearts, minds, and games—if we’re smart about it.”
Whether that optimism holds up in a world increasingly ruled by dollars and deals remains to be seen.
But one thing’s certain: the Mountain West isn’t backing down this is going to be interesting to say the least to see how all the Mountain West Conference teams fair in the next five to ten years.
College Sports
Benn ’25 represents Continentals on 2025 all-NESCAC women’s rowing team
Story Links 2025 NESCAC Women’s Rowing Awards Hamilton College’s Annika Benn ’25 (Arlington, Mass./Arlington HS) was selected for the 2025 New England Small College Athletic Conference (NESCAC) Women’s Rowing All-Conference Team on Friday, May 16 when the conference announced their end-of-season awards. Benn was […]

Hamilton College’s Annika Benn ’25 (Arlington, Mass./Arlington HS) was selected for the 2025 New England Small College Athletic Conference (NESCAC) Women’s Rowing All-Conference Team on Friday, May 16 when the conference announced their end-of-season awards.
Benn was one of 10 athletes on the second team. The 10-member squads are comprised of individuals from the conference’s eight teams and are based on each team’s finish at the NESCAC championships, which were held on May 11 at Lake Quinsigamond in Worcester, Mass.
Benn rowed in the fifth seat for Hamilton’s varsity eight in the 2025 NESCAC Women’s Championship, which doubled as the National Invitational Rowing Championships. She was also in the fifth seat for the Continentals’ top boat at the 2024 Head of the Charles Regatta on Oct. 20 when they finished 10th out of 34 entries in the women’s collegiate eights.
“Annika has worked hard to turn herself into a physical threat in the boat, and is a highly respected leader on the team,” Head Coach Anna Lindgren-Streicher said. “Her development arc over the course of her four years is an inspirational model for her teammates and future Hamilton rowers.”
Hamilton was ranked 12th in the Collegiate Rowing Coaches Association Division III Top 15 poll as of May 13, and was fourth in the final NCAA New York Region rankings.
College Sports
NHL Playoffs 2025: Stanley Cup schedule, bracket, scores, as Maple Leafs force Game 7 vs. Panthers
Anyone who thought the Toronto Maple Leafs were dead after three straight losses to the Florida Panthers may want to check that pulse again. Toronto went into South Florida Friday night and beat the defending champs at their own game with an impressive 2-0 win in Game 6. The Maple Leafs looked lost in a […]

Anyone who thought the Toronto Maple Leafs were dead after three straight losses to the Florida Panthers may want to check that pulse again. Toronto went into South Florida Friday night and beat the defending champs at their own game with an impressive 2-0 win in Game 6.
The Maple Leafs looked lost in a 6-1 loss in Game 5, and it was fair to question whether they had enough left in the tank to keep the series alive in Game 6. Instead, Toronto went into enemy territory and shut down a Florida offense that just hung a half-dozen goals on the scoreboard the last time out.
Perhaps most importantly for the Maple Leafs, Auston Matthews got the game-winning goal in the third period. He attacked the Panthers off the rush and ripped a wicked wrist shot through Sergei Bobrovsky to break a scoreless tie.
NHL Playoffs 2025: Auston Matthews powers Maple Leafs to Game 7, leads 3 Stars of the Night
Austin Nivison

That goal was Matthews’ first of the series, and it was a huge moment for the Toronto captain, who was facing a mountain of questions heading into Game 6.
Now, the Maple Leafs and Panthers will play a decisive Game 7 in Toronto on Sunday night. Before that, the Winnipeg Jets and Dallas Stars will play Game 6 on Saturday night, and the Stars have the chance to close out that series on home ice.
For the complete schedule and results for every matchup, follow along right here at CBS Sports.
Round 2
(1) Toronto Maple Leafs vs. (3) Florida Panthers
Game 1: Maple Leafs 5, Panthers 4 | Recap
Game 2: Maple Leafs 4, Panthers 3 | Recap
Game 3: Panthers 5, Maple Leafs 4 (OT) | Recap
Game 4: Panthers 2, Maple Leafs 0 | Recap
Game 5: Panthers 6, Maple Leafs 1 | Recap
Game 6: Maple Leafs 2, Panthers 0 | Recap
Game 7: Sunday, May 18 | 7:30 p.m. | at TOR | TNT/Max
Game 1: Hurricanes 2, Capitals 1 (OT) | Recap
Game 2: Capitals 3, Hurricanes 1 | Recap
Game 3: Hurricanes 4, Capitals 0 | Recap
Game 4: Hurricanes 5, Capitals 2 | Recap
Game 5: Hurricanes 3, Capitals 1 | Recap
(1) Winnipeg Jets vs. (2) Dallas Stars
Game 1: Stars 3, Jets 2 | Recap
Game 2: Jets 4, Stars 0 | Recap
Game 3: Stars 5, Jets 2 | Recap
Game 4: Stars 3, Jets 1 | Recap
Game 5: Jets 4, Stars 0 | Recap
Game 6: Saturday, May 17 | 8 p.m. | at DAL | TBD
*Game 7: Monday, May 19 | 7:30 p.m. | at WPG | ESPN
(1) Vegas Golden Knights vs. (3) Edmonton Oilers
Game 1: Oilers 4, Golden Knights 2 | Recap
Game 2: Oilers 5, Golden Knights 4 (OT) | Recap
Game 3: Golden Knights 4, Oilers 3 | Recap
Game 4: Oilers 3, Golden Knights 0 | Recap
Game 5: Oilers 1, Golden Knights 0 (OT) | Recap
Round 1
Game 1: Maple Leafs 6, Senators 2 | Recap
Game 2: Maple Leafs 3, Senators 2 (OT) | Recap
Game 3: Maple Leafs 3, Senators 2 (OT) | Recap
Game 4: Senators 4, Maple Leafs 3 (OT) | Recap
Game 5: Senators 4, Maple Leafs 0 | Recap
Game 6: Maple Leafs 4, Senators 2 | Recap
Game 1: Panthers 6, Lightning 2 | Recap
Game 2: Panthers 2, Lightning 0 | Recap
Game 3: Lightning 5, Panthers 1 | Recap
Game 4: Panthers 4, Lightning 2 | Recap
Game 5: Panthers 6, Lightning 3 | Recap
Game 1: Capitals 3, Canadiens 2 (OT) | Recap
Game 2: Capitals 3, Canadiens 1 | Recap
Game 3: Canadiens 6, Capitals 3 | Recap
Game 4: Capitals 5, Canadiens 2 | Recap
Game 5: Capitals 4, Canadiens 1 | Recap
Game 1: Hurricanes 4, Devils 1 | Recap
Game 2: Hurricanes 3, Devils 1 | Recap
Game 3: Devils 3, Hurricanes 2 (2OT) | Recap
Game 4: Hurricanes 5, Devils 2 | Recap
Game 5: Hurricanes 5, Devils 4 (2OT) | Recap
Game 1: Jets 5, Blues 3 | Recap
Game 2: Jets 2, Blues 1 | Recap
Game 3: Blues 7, Jets 2 | Recap
Game 4: Blues 5, Jets 1 | Recap
Game 5: Jets 5, Blues 3 | Recap
Game 6: Blues 5, Jets 2 | Recap
Game 7: Jets 4, Blues 3 (2OT) | Recap
Game 1: Avalanche 5, Stars 1 | Recap
Game 2: Stars 4, Avalanche 3 (OT) | Recap
Game 3: Stars 2, Avalanche 1 (OT) | Recap
Game 4: Avalanche 4, Stars 0 | Recap
Game 5: Stars 6, Avalanche 2 | Recap
Game 6: Avalanche 7, Stars 4 | Recap
Game 7: Stars 4, Avalanche 2 | Recap
Game 1: Golden Knights 4, Wild 2 | Recap
Game 2: Wild 5, Golden Knights 2 | Recap
Game 3: Wild 5, Golden Knights 2 | Recap
Game 4: Golden Knights 4, Wild 3 (OT) | Recap
Game 5: Golden Knights 3, Wild 2 (OT) | Recap
Game 6: Golden Knights 3, Wild 2 | Recap
Game 1: Kings 6, Oilers 5 | Recap
Game 2: Kings 6, Oilers 2 | Recap
Game 3: Oilers 7, Kings 4 | Recap
Game 4: Oilers 4, Kings 3 (OT) | Recap
Game 5: Oilers 3, Kings 1 | Recap
Game 6: Oilers 6, Kings 4 | Recap
College Sports
Kansas State University
CARLSBAD, Calif. – Sophomore Alenka Navarro and freshman Nanami Nakashima each tallied under-par rounds to lead the Kansas State women’s golf team during the opening round of the 2025 NCAA Championship on Friday at the par-72, 6,330-yard Omni La Costa Resort & Spa. The Wildcats recorded a first-round total of 1-over par 289 as […]

The Wildcats recorded a first-round total of 1-over par 289 as they are in seventh place in the 30-team field. K-State is one shot back of a tie for third place, while the Cats are two shots ahead of an eighth-place tie between Tennessee and Northwestern.
Navarro finished her first round at 2-under par 70 and is tied for 10th place, while Nakashima was one shot back and is tied for 17th.
“There were a couple of nervy moments starting out today, but we just hung in there,” head coach Stew Burke said. “We didn’t let it get away from us thanks to a couple of nice birdies toward the end. We are in a fairly good position. I am really proud of the effort today. Now, it’s all about getting some good rest. We were up at 4:45 a.m., having breakfast. We will be able to sleep in a little bit in the morning, make sure we have a good warm up and go again tomorrow.”
The Wildcats tied for third in the first round by carding 15 total birdies on a course that is averaging 4.69 strokes over par per player.
Navarro parred each of the first nine holes before her first birdie of the day on the par-4 11th. After a bogey on No. 15 to bring her score back to even, the Mexico City product birdied two of her final three holes – including a five-foot birdie putt on the final hole of the day – for her eighth under-par round of the season.
The sophomore finished the first round by tying for 11th in the 156-player field with 14 pars, while she is tied for first with only one bogey on the day.
Nakashima entered the NCAA Championship with momentum after a final-round total of 67 in the NCAA Lexington Regional. She used that momentum in the opening round as she birdied two of her first four holes. After running into trouble with consecutive bogeys on Nos. 7 and 8, the Kani, Japan, native was able to rebound with a birdie at No. 9 to close out the front at 1-under par. A bogey at No. 13 lowered her to even par before a birdie on No. 16 and pars on the final two holes put her in the clubhouse with her 11th under-par round of the year.
Senior Carla Bernat is tied for 27th place after a first-round score of even par. She bogeyed No. 4 but responded with birdies on three of her next four holes to make the turn at 2-under par. She got to 3-under par with a birdie on No. 10, but two bogeys and a double bogey – along with a birdie on No. 17 – made her 2-over par on the back. She finished the first round tied for seventh with five birdies.
Senior Sophie Bert went 4-over par 76 as she enters the second round in a tie for 98th place, while junior Noa van Beek is tied for 144th place at 8-over par 80.
Vanderbilt holds the 18-hole lead at 6-under par 282, two shots ahead of Oklahoma State. Bailey Davis of Tennessee is atop the individual leaderboard at 5-under par 67.
Kansas State starts its second round of the 2025 NCAA Championship with tee times beginning at 12:12 p.m. (PT) off the 10th tee, and the Wildcats will once again be paired with Oklahoma State and Vanderbilt. Live results can be followed on SCOREBOARD powered by Clippd.
College Sports
MEN’S SOCCER: Four years – Yale Daily News
Yale Athletics The eight members of the Yale men’s soccer class of 2025 started their collegiate careers with a bang and reached heights that no prior Bulldog class had seen before. In October 2021, a young Yale squad earned a 1-1 tie against the No. 3 ranked University of New Hampshire Wildcats, putting the college […]


Yale Athletics
The eight members of the Yale men’s soccer class of 2025 started their collegiate careers with a bang and reached heights that no prior Bulldog class had seen before.
In October 2021, a young Yale squad earned a 1-1 tie against the No. 3 ranked University of New Hampshire Wildcats, putting the college soccer world on notice. That year, TJ Presthus ’25, a first-year Yale defender, already earned an All-Ivy honorable mention. The following season, Yale once again came to play, securing a 2-1 road victory over No. 10 ranked University of West Virginia.
The next fall, in 2023, the team hit double digit wins and won the first-ever Ivy League Tournament Championship. The Bulldogs then defeated Bryant University in the opening game of their first NCAA Tournament. Presthus was named Ivy League Defensive Player of the Year in 2023, and Chris Edwards ’25 earned All-Ivy status both that year and in 2024.
“These seniors were inspirational both on and off the field,” midfielder Andrew Seidman ’26 said. “On the field, they were a key component for one of the most successful periods in Yale men’s soccer history, and off the field they were role models for all of us to follow.”
After the 2024 campaign, the senior class was honored with multiple awards. Jamie Orson ’25 took home the Jack Marshall Award for the member of the team who demonstrated the qualities of team spirit, loyalty and dedication. Quanah Brayboy ’25 and Edwards won the Walter Leeman Trophy for “sportsmanship and team play.” Presthus was recognized as the team’s most valuable player.
College Sports
Big Green Rowing Set for Championship Racing This Weekend
By: Justin Lafleur Story Links HANOVER, N.H. — It’s a big weekend for Dartmouth rowing, with the women’s team, along with the men’s heavyweight and lightweight teams in action for championship racing. Women’s Rowing – Saturday, May 17 and Sunday, May 18 Ivy League Championship Watch Live (Saturday) | Watch […]

HANOVER, N.H. — It’s a big weekend for Dartmouth rowing, with the women’s team, along with the men’s heavyweight and lightweight teams in action for championship racing.
Women’s Rowing – Saturday, May 17 and Sunday, May 18
Ivy League Championship
Watch Live (Saturday) | Watch Live (Sunday) | Live Results | Event Schedule
The Big Green head to Camden, New Jersey for the Ivy League Championship this weekend. Racing in the heats begin on Saturday at 4 p.m. with Sunday’s championship racing set to begin at 8 a.m. The Big Green most recently finished fourth overall at the Eastern Sprints, which included a varsity eight win over Columbia which helped propel them to No. 19 in the national rankings.
Men’s Heavyweight Rowing – Sunday, May 18
Eastern Sprints
Watch Live (Morning Session) | Watch Live (Afternoon Session) | Live Results | Event Schedule
Dartmouth heads to Lake Quinsigamond in Worcester to compete in the Eastern Sprints, facing the best teams in the East. The Big Green varsity eight has enjoyed an impressive season, standing unbeaten heading into a weekend that will face strong competition, which includes the entire Ivy League. Most recently, Dartmouth defeated Northeastern two weekends ago at home. The Big Green varsity four is ranked fourth nationally, only two points behind Harvard and 10 points ahead of Princeton.
Men’s Lightweight Rowing – Sunday, May 18
Eastern Sprints
Watch Live (Morning Session) | Watch Live (Afternoon Session) | Live Results | Event Schedule
The men’s lightweight rowing team will also be in action at Lake Quinsigamond, looking to build momentum from last time out — a varsity eight win at Columbia. The Big Green own dual wins over Yale for the Durand Cup and Columbia for the Subin Cup, with the varsity eight entering the weekend ranked No. 5 nationally.
College Sports
Falk College Sport Analytics Students Win Multiple National Competitions — Syracuse University News
David Falk (far left) speaks with students from the sport analytics program during their capstone poster presentations. “I think the Rolls-Royce of Falk College, undoubtedly, is the analytics program,” said David Falk, benefactor of the Falk College of Sport and Human Dynamics, to a room of senior sport analytics students and their families during their […]


David Falk (far left) speaks with students from the sport analytics program during their capstone poster presentations.
“I think the Rolls-Royce of Falk College, undoubtedly, is the analytics program,” said David Falk, benefactor of the Falk College of Sport and Human Dynamics, to a room of senior sport analytics students and their families during their capstone poster presentations. “We’ve won virtually every analytics competition for the last few years.”
That was certainly true during the Spring 2025 semester, when sport analytics students were victorious at multiple analytics and research competitions and presented findings at several highly regarded conferences around the country. Below is a recap of the semester’s highlights.
SABR Analytics Conference

Nathan Backman (left) won best student presentation at the SABR Analytics Conference.
Sport analytics students Owen St. Onge ’26, Payton Smith ’26, Andrew Diamond ’27, Jonah Soos ’25 and Jacob Kalamvokis ’27 won their room in the Diamond Dollars Case Competition, during which teams compete by preparing an analysis and presentation of a baseball operations decision similar to what a team’s general manager and staff would do in Major League Baseball.
Two students, Nathan Backman ’25 and Brett Cerenzio ’25, took part in the Society for American Baseball Research (SABR) Analytics Conference research competition, with Backman winning best student presentation for his research titled Baseball Cinematography: Using Open Source CV Algorithms to Track and Quantify Pitcher Mechanics.
Syracuse University Football Blitz
Sport analytics students won every room of the Football Blitz competition, including one room of entirely first-year students, while also being named winners of the overall competition.
The Football Analytics Blitz tasks students with a current football analytics prompt. They are given a week to put together a presentation for football analytics professionals. The competition brought together students from 25 different universities and judges from eight NFL teams.
The winning Falk College students were:
- Room 1: Charlie Maddux ’26, Jonah Soos ’25, Nathan Backman ’25, Austin Ambler ’26 and Zach Seidel ’26
- Room 2: Nick Wolfe ’27, Jameson Bodenburg ’27, Jacob Kalamvokis ’27 and Jessica Fackler ’27
- Room 3: Noah Bair ’28, Jimmy Roberto ’27, Carter Pointon ’28, Alex Percey ’28 and Braden Hines ’28
MIT Sloan Research Paper Competition
Research conducted by sport management major Alivia “Ava” Uribe ’25, a member of the University’s women’s soccer team, with sport analytics professors Justin Ehrlich and Shane Sanders about the location of penalty kicks won the Research Paper Competition at the prestigious MIT Sloan Sports Analytics Conference. Their paper won over thousands of entrants and six other finalists, and Uribe became the first female lead author in the conference’s 19-year history to capture the competition.
Connecticut Sports Analytics Symposium

From left, students Dan Griffiths, Danielle Napierski, Brett Cerenzio and Alivia Uribe at the Connecticut Sports Analytics Symposium
Sport analytics students Danielle Napierski ’26, Dan Griffiths ’26 and Brett Cerenzio ’25 were named runners-up in the Major League Baseball Data Challenge at the Connecticut Sports Analytics Symposium (CSAS).
Alivia Uribe ’25 and Shane Sanders also presented their penalty kick research at CSAS.
American Soccer Insights Summit
Sport analytics students Sebastian Bush ’27 and Theo Schmidt ’26 presented their work, Dual Dependency: Analyzing the Winger and Wingback Relationship, at the American Soccer Insights Summit.
NFLPA Analytics Case Competition
Sport analytics students Christopher Marfisi ’25, Evan Vassilovski ’25, Walker Oettl ’25 and Ryan Severe ’25 were named finalists for their work on the given prompt and traveled to Washington, D.C., to present their findings.
National Collegiate Sports Analytics Championships

Jonah Soos holds his trophy for winning the individual/undergraduate division at the National Collegiate Sports Analytics Championships.
Falk College student Jonah Soos ’25 won the undergraduate division individual championship, while the undergraduate team of Soos, Hunter Geise ’25, Piper Evans ’25 and Maddy Forster ’25 finished second in the team competition. Two graduate students, Andrew Odnoralov G’25 and Owen Brown G’25 , also competed—a first for representatives from the Falk College’s graduate programs.
At this event, students gave five-minute presentations based on analysis of provided data related to brands, teams and athletes. Judges chose a winner based on statistical analysis, data visualization, actionable insights, communication and integrity.
Cincinnati Reds Hackathon
Teams were tasked with modeling a projection system that predicted total plate appearances and batters faced for Major League Baseball players in the 2024 season based on their past data. Sport analytics students Dan Griffiths ’26, Ben Resnic ’26, Hunter Cordes ’26, Jared Weber ’27 and Josh Davis’27 won the Hackathon, with two other teams from the Falk College being named finalists.
To learn more about the college’s academic programs, experiential learning and career opportunities in sport analytics and sport management, visit the Falk College website.
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