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The board decision that sent the MLB, NFL unions into controversy

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The board decision that sent the MLB, NFL unions into controversy

Last June, eight members of the board of directors for a licensing group called OneTeam Partners, which is co-owned by the players unions for five major sports leagues, signed a resolution that would have included the member unions in a plan to receive “profits units.” Those units, like traditional equity, could be turned into cash if the company did well.

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It was a move that raised alarms within at least one of the unions.

By late 2024, an official at the National Football League Players Association had repeatedly raised concerns that implementing the plan could mean that labor officials serving on OneTeam’s board of directors — including the head of the NFL players union, Lloyd Howell Jr., and the leader of the Major League Baseball players union, Tony Clark — were attempting to make a change that could lead to their own financial gain, potentially at the expense of union members.

The resolution, which was obtained by The Athletic, called for any eventual payouts — made through what is known as a senior employee incentive plan (SEIP) — to go to the unions the board members hail from. The resolution also directly acknowledged the possibility that the unions could then grant that money to their board members.

“The explicit goal throughout the process was to financially enrich the individuals who serve on the OTP Board as labor organization representatives,” the NFLPA official wrote to lawyers in a communication criticizing the plan, which was reviewed by The Athletic. “… the idea was to pay the money into the unions, then the individuals.”

In a statement to The Athletic, OneTeam said that though the plan was considered, it was ultimately abandoned.

“In early 2024, OneTeam initiated an exploratory review to determine whether the company could lawfully offer incentive-based compensation to current and prospective Board members,” OneTeam Partners said. “This exploratory effort was part of a broader initiative to assess strategies for attracting high-caliber, independent talent.

“Following the legal advice of a labor law expert, it was determined that the best practice, if implemented, was to make grants to the respective players associations. In so doing, any future payments would be governed by each union’s player-approved bylaws, policy, and governance frameworks.

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It added: “To be unequivocally clear: no OneTeam board member, nor any union employee, was directly or indirectly granted equity in OneTeam, holds equity in OneTeam or is a participant in its SEIP and any claim to the contrary is simply misinformed and false.”

Federal authorities are conducting an investigation related to OneTeam Partners and union officials. The full scope of the probe, which is being run out of the Eastern District of New York, is unclear. The Eastern District of New York declined to comment.

Five major sports unions hold stakes in OneTeam, the two largest belonging to the NFLPA and the Major League Baseball Players Association, which together own two-thirds of the company, according to people briefed on the business structure who requested anonymity because they were not authorized to speak publicly. The NFLPA has 44 percent, the MLBPA 22 percent.

The unions representing players in Major League Soccer, the U.S. Women’s National Soccer Team and the Women’s National Basketball Association own much smaller shares in OneTeam: 3.3 percent for MLS, .3 percent for the USWNTPA, and .2 percent for the WNBA, according to one of the people briefed on the structure.

Early this month, the FBI started calling MLB and NFL players or their representatives. Prosecutor David Berman is heading the federal investigation, said people briefed on its process who were not authorized to speak publicly.

With a federal investigation underway, the NFLPA has retained outside counsel separate from the outside lawyers retained by its executive director, Howell. Howell’s lawyer did not reply to requests for comment. “We’re guided by our responsibility to our members in everything we do and we will continue to fully cooperate with the investigation,” the NFLPA said in a statement to The Athletic.


MLBPA head Tony Clark was one of the forces behind the creation of OneTeam. (Sean M. Haffey / Getty Images)

The MLBPA declined to comment Friday. That union too has retained outside counsel separate from its leader, Clark. His attorney did not return requests for comment.

The NFLPA official who voiced concern about the incentive plan wrote that they were concerned about the potential for various conflicts of interest. The official argued internally that the change to the plan could dilute the players’ existing stakes, which they held via their unions. The official also questioned whether the players were informed of how their financial interests might be affected.

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The NFLPA official’s email with lawyers shows talk of changing OneTeam’s SEIP dated to 2023, when a new CEO took over. In March 2024, OneTeam asked outside counsel whether there would be any issues granting union officials on its board participation in a SEIP, according to the same email. In response, the official wrote, the law firm flagged concerns regarding the National Labor Relations Act were any units to be granted directly to union board members.

Plans like SEIP are common in the business world. Companies use them to reward and lure top leaders, and the programs often grant traditional shares in a company. Private companies in particular will often grant something that operates similarly to shares but is not traditional equity, according to Chris Crawford, managing director for the executive compensation practice at the firm Gallagher.

“It’s not a publicly traded, readily tradable environment,” Crawford said. “It gets into these third-party transactions that get a little bit messy. The most common is by a generic term called ‘phantom stock.’”

Hence OneTeam’s use of “profits units.”

But ultimately, OneTeam is not a common business because it is largely owned by unions. Union officials have legal obligations to their members and their members’ interests, and most unions don’t have for-profit arms with the overlay of those governance concerns.

“The labor organizations’ representatives on the OTP Board are there as FIDUCIARIES representing their union members’ direct ownership interests in the Company — their legal duties are not to the Company generally, but rather their union members’ ownership in the company,” the NFLPA official wrote in the email to lawyers.

The union officials have their positions on OneTeam’s board because of their union roles, positions for which they are already compensated. Howell was paid $3.6 million by the NFLPA for the 12 months from March 2024 through February 2025, according to the union’s annual disclosure filed with the Department of Labor. Clark was paid $3.5 million for the 2024 calendar year, per the baseball union’s filing.

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The NFLPA has four seats on OneTeam’s board, and the MLBPA has three seats. Both Howell’s and Clark’s signatures appear on the resolution to change OneTeam’s senior employee incentive plan.

The unions representing players in MLS, the USWNT and the WNBA share one seat on the board that rotates. Only the signature of Becca Roux, the head of the USWNTPA, appears on the resolution from last year.

Roux, as well as Bob Foose, head of the MLSPA, and Terri Jackson, head of the WNBPA, have hired Steve McCool of McGuireWoods as outside counsel.

“I notified the prosecutor in New York that I represent a number of OTP board members,” McCool said by phone Friday. “My clients have no cause for concern and they are available to answer any questions the government may have about this matter.”

Outside investors own the remaining 30 percent of OneTeam that is not owned by unions.

The SEIP resolution called for the NFLPA to receive 44 percent of the new plan units available to the board, and the MLBPA 33 percent. The other three unions were in line to receive 3.7 percent each. The outside investors on the board were not going to receive any new incentive units, the resolution said.

Such an arrangement has the potential to create at least the appearance of a conflict of interest, according to Lee Adler, a labor lawyer with no involvement in the matter who has long worked as counsel to unions.

“Is there something in that set of criteria for the incentive that might have some influence on how or what the union officials who sit on the board actually end up … legislating (at OneTeam)?” asked Adler, a lecturer at the Cornell University School of Industrial and Labor Relations.

NFLPA employees said at a meeting in November 2024 that they expected payments via SEIP would be $200,000 to $300,000, the NFLPA official wrote in the email.

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Sports unions have moved aggressively to capitalize on their players’ branding rights. The MLBPA and NFLPA were among the founders of OneTeam in 2019. Both unions already had for-profit arms that handled licensing business, and those arms still exist today. But they were betting that a company with aggregated rights would have greater leverage.

The venture has been a boon not only for the unions but also for the private equity investors who partnered with them. RedBird Capital cashed out its 40 percent stake in 2022, when the company had a $1.9 billion valuation.

The windfalls from name, image and licensing rights carry a slew of gains for athletes, including bolstering traditional labor objectives like collective bargaining. The NFLPA reported about $101 million in revenue from OneTeam from early 2024 into 2025, and the MLBPA about $45 million for 2024. But both the baseball and football unions have been wrapped up in public controversy this year over, in part, OneTeam.

Late last year, an anonymous complaint filed with the National Labor Relations Board levied allegations at Clark, including concerns over equity from OneTeam. The football union, where internal complaints had already been lodged, then brought on an outside firm, Linklaters, to conduct a review.

The NFLPA has not publicized that firm’s findings. But in March, in an email reviewed by The Athletic, Howell notified OneTeam’s board of directors that Linklaters found the NFLPA and OneTeam had been in compliance.

(Top photo of Lloyd Howell Jr.: Sean Gardner / Getty Images)

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Mara Štiglic Named Mountain West Offensive Volleyball Player of the Week

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LOGAN, Utah – Utah State volleyball outside hitter Mara Štiglic has been named the Old Trapper Mountain West Offensive Volleyball Player of the Week the conference announced on Monday.

Štiglic led Utah State with a .400 hitting percentage while recording 29 total kills in a pair of wins at San Diego State (3-1) and UNLV (3-0). The sophomore from Rijeka, Croatia, averaged 4.14 kills per set for the week and added two aces, six digs and four blocks. Štiglic tied for the team lead with 13 kills against the Aztecs, hitting .355 on 31 total attempts and adding three blocks. Against the Rebels, Štiglic posted 16 kills on 29 attempts for a .448 hitting percentage, also adding two aces. In the third set, Štiglic had a team-high eight kills to help seal the win. Of 60 total attempts during the week, Štiglic recorded only five hitting errors. 

It is Štiglic’s second time this season and in her career earning Player of the Week honors. She previously earned the award after totaling 46 total kills to help USU to wins against Utah Valley and Weber State plus a spirited effort against then-No. 16 BYU, averaging 4.18 kills per set for the week.

Štiglic is the first Aggie to receive multiple awards from the MW this season. Utah State has had six different players receive a weekly award from the conference this season.

PREVIOUS AGGIES TO RECEIVE PLAYER OF THE WEEK THIS SEASON

Sept. 2 – Tierney Barlow, Sr., MB – Offensive Player of the Week

Sept. 22 – Mara Štiglic, So., OH – Offensive Player of the Week

Sept. 29 – Lauren Larkin, R-Fr., MB – Freshman of the Week

Oct. 6 – Kaylie Kofe, So., S – Offensive Player of the Week

Oct. 13 – Kendel Thompson, Jr., L/DS – Defensive Player of the Week

Oct. 27 – Loryn Helgesen, So., OPP – Offensive Player of the Week

Up Next

The Aggies return home for a pair of crucial matches versus teams currently in Mountain West Tournament position. Utah State will first host second-place Colorado State on Thursday, Nov. 6, at 6 p.m., before facing Wyoming, who currently sits third in the conference standings, on Saturday, Nov. 8, at noon.

Season tickets, mini-plans, and single-game tickets are on sale now and can be purchased here or by contacting the USU Ticket Office at 435-797-0305.

Fans can follow the Aggie volleyball program on Twitter, @USUVolleyball, on Facebook at /USUVolleyball or on Instagram, @usuvolleyball. Aggie fans can also follow the Utah State athletic program on Twitter, @USUAthletics, Facebook at /USUAthletics and on Instagram, @USUAthletics.

 – USU –



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Ohio high school volleyball OHSAA state tournament brackets, schedule

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Ohio high school volleyball OHSAA state tournament brackets, schedule



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Rose Coats Named Solomon Eye Physicians & Surgeons Terp of Week

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COLLEGE PARK, MD — Each week during the 2025-26 season, a Maryland student-athlete who has shown excellence on and off the playing field will be selected as the Solomon Eye Physicians & Surgeons Terp of the Week.

This week’s Terp of the Week is junior Rose Coats of the women’s cross country team – her third time earning the honor this season and the sixth time overall in her career. 

With a 10th-place individual finish, Coats became the Terps’ first-ever All-Big Ten First Team performer as she led Maryland at the Big Ten Championship last week hosted by Michigan State.

The last time the Terps had an All-Conference performer in cross country was in 2017 when Alexandra Lucki placed 12th to earn All-Big Ten honors. Coats is the 10th all-conference performer in Maryland’s cross country program history, but is the first ever to receive All-Big Ten First Team honors.

Coats crossed the line first for the Terps in 10th out of 165 runners. She completed the 6k course with a time of 20:14.2, significantly improving her performance by eighteen spots from last year’s Big Ten Championships.

Coats and the Terps will be back in action on Friday, November 14 as they travel to Bethlehem, PA for the NCAA Mid-Atlantic Regional Championship meet hosted by Lehigh.



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What you need to know about Iowa’s high school volleyball state tournament

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AUTO GROUP. THE PINNACLE OF HIGH SCHOOL SPORTS. THE STATE TOURNAMENT TUESDAY NIGHT IOWA HIGH SCHOOL VOLLEYBALL TEAMS PUT IT ALL ON THE LINE TO CLAIM THEIR SPOT. REGIONAL FINALS FOR FIVE-A. FOUR A AND THREE A. LET’S START YOU OUT WITH DCG HOSTING ADM COACH MEG JACKSON AND DCG CONTROL THIS ONE THE WHOLE WAY. LET’S TAKE YOU TO MATCH POINT MAGGIE. LIFECARE GETS IT DONE. THEY WIN THAT SET 2511. AND SWEEP. ADM. DCB PUNCHES THEIR TICKET FOR THE FIRST TIME SINCE 2020. AND THERE’S THE MOMENT THEY’VE BEEN WAITING FOR THE REGIONAL CHAMPIONSHIP BANNER IS THERE. THEY NOW HAVE A SHOT AT THEIR FIRST STATE TITLE IN SCHOOL HISTORY NEXT WEEK IN CORALVILLE. PELLA LOST THE FOUR A STATE CHAMPIONSHIP MATCH A SEASON AGO. THEY’LL GET THEIR SHOT AT REDEMPTION. THEY BEAT WAVERLY-SHELL ROCK THREE ONE TO QUALIFY FOR STATE FOR THE SECOND STRAIGHT YEAR. FOR A PLAYER OF THE YEAR FROM LAST YEAR, KATIE SCHECKEL AND COMPANY ARE HEADED BACK TO STATE. NORWALK IS BACK TO STATE AS WELL. THEY LOST THE REGIONAL FINAL LAST SEASON, BUT NOT TONIGHT. THIS TIME THEY WON IT IN A SWEEP THREE ZERO OVER BALLARD OF THE FOUR REGIONAL FINAL. FIRST TIME THEY’VE WON A REGIONAL AT HOME. SECOND EVER TRIP TO STATE. CONGRATS TO NORWALK. PARTY OVER THERE. AND POWERHOUSE CENTENNIAL IS BACK AS WELL. THEY WILL RAISE THE BANNER ADVANCING TO STATE FOR THE SIXTH STRAIGHT YEAR AFTER A SWEEP OF SOUTHEAST POLK. THE JAGS, CHASING THEIR FIRST TITLE SINCE 2018. ANKENY WILL ALSO BE THERE IN CORALVILLE NEXT WEEK, COMPETING FOR A STATE TITLE. THEY GET THE BANNER AS REGIONAL CHAMPS FOR THE EIGHTH YEAR IN A ROW BY SWEEPING KENNEDY. THE REGIONAL FINALS WILL CONTINUE TOMORROW NIGHT WITH ONE

Iowa high school volleyball: Schedule, results and more from state tournament

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Updated: 4:42 PM CST Nov 3, 2025

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The Iowa high school volleyball state tournament kicked off Monday at the Xtream Arena in Coralville. Action runs through Thursday, when all five classes have their championship matches. Tickets cost $17 plus fees online or are a flat fee of $15 at the Xtream box office.Here’s what you need to know about state volleyball.Spectator informationLocation: Xtream Arena, 200 E. 9th St. CoralvilleAdmission: Online tickets are $17 per person and include the price of parking. Tickets cost $15 at the box office. Anyone kindergarten-aged or older needs a ticket.State tournament livestreamsClick here to watch livestreams of state tournament matches.Quarterfinal matchups and resultsCLASS 5A MONDAYCourt 1: No. 1 Waukee Northwest 25-25-25, No. 8 Indianola 17-16-12Court 1: No. 4 Dowling Catholic vs. No. 5 Ankeny, 2 p.m.Court 2: No. 2 Ankeny Centennial 25-25-25, No. 7 Iowa City West 23-17-23Court 2: No. 6 West Des Moines Valley 13-25-23-25-15, No. 3 Pleasant Valley 25-21-25-20-13CLASS 4A MONDAYCourt 1: No. 1 Clear Creek Amana vs. No. 8 Sergeant Bluff-Luton, 4 p.m.Court 1: No. 4 Dallas Center-Grimes vs. No. 5 North Scott, 6 p.m.Court 2: No. 2 Sioux Center vs. No. 7 Marion, 4:25 p.m.Court 2: No. 3 Pella vs. No. 6 Norwalk, 6:25 p.m.CLASS 3A TUESDAYCourt 1: No. 1 Western Christian vs. No. 8 Mount Vernon, 10 a.m.Court 1: No. 4 Cherokee vs. No. 5 Humboldt, noonCourt 2: No. 2 Davenport Assumption vs. No. 7 Mid-Prairie, 10:25 a.m.Court 2: No. 3 Red Oak vs. Kuemper Catholic, 12:25 p.m.CLASS 2A TUESDAYCourt 1: No. 1 Denver vs. No. 8 Wapsie Valley, 2 p.m.Court 1: No. 4 Grundy Center vs. No. 5 Beckman Catholic, 4 p.m.Court 2: No. 2 Dike-New Hartford vs. No. 7 Aplington-Parkersburg, 2:25 p.m.Court: No. 3 Hinton vs. No. 6 Iowa City Regina, 4:25 p.m.CLASS 1A TUESDAYCourt 1: No. 1 St. Ansgar vs. No. 8 East Mills, 6 p.m.Court 1: No. 4 Dunkerton vs. No. 5 BCLUW, 8 p.m.Court 2: No. 2 Janesville vs. No. 7 Gladbrook-Reinbeck, 6:25 p.m.Court 2: No. 3 North Tama vs. No. 6 Sidney, 8:25 p.m. Semifinal scheduleCLASS 5A WEDNESDAYCourt 1: Waukee Northwest vs. Ankeny, 10 a.m.Court 2: Ankeny Centennial vs. West Des Moines Valley, 10:25 a.m.CLASS 4A WEDNESDAYCourt 1: Matchup TBD, noonCourt 2: Matchup TBD, 12:25 p.m.CLASS 3A WEDNESDAYCourt 1: Matchup TBD, 2 p.m.Court 2: Matchup TBD, 2:25 p.m. CLASS 2A WEDNESDAYCourt 1: Matchup TBD, 4 p.m.Court 2: Matchup TBD, 4:25 p.m.CLASS 1A WEDNESDAYCourt 1: Matchup TBD, 6 p.m.Court 2: Matchup TBD, 6:25 p.m.Championship schedule ThursdayCLASS 5A : Matchup TBD, 10 a.m.CLASS 4A: Matchup TBD, 12:15 p.m.CLASS 3A: Matchup TBD, 2:30 p.m.CLASS 2A: Matchup TBD, 4:45 p.m.CLASS 1A: Matchup TBD, 7 p.m.

The Iowa high school volleyball state tournament kicked off Monday at the Xtream Arena in Coralville. Action runs through Thursday, when all five classes have their championship matches.

Tickets cost $17 plus fees online or are a flat fee of $15 at the Xtream box office.

Here’s what you need to know about state volleyball.

Spectator information

Location: Xtream Arena, 200 E. 9th St. Coralville

Admission: Online tickets are $17 per person and include the price of parking. Tickets cost $15 at the box office. Anyone kindergarten-aged or older needs a ticket.

State tournament livestreams

Click here to watch livestreams of state tournament matches.

Quarterfinal matchups and results

CLASS 5A MONDAY

  • Court 1: No. 1 Waukee Northwest 25-25-25, No. 8 Indianola 17-16-12
  • Court 1: No. 4 Dowling Catholic vs. No. 5 Ankeny, 2 p.m.
  • Court 2: No. 2 Ankeny Centennial 25-25-25, No. 7 Iowa City West 23-17-23
  • Court 2: No. 6 West Des Moines Valley 13-25-23-25-15, No. 3 Pleasant Valley 25-21-25-20-13

CLASS 4A MONDAY

  • Court 1: No. 1 Clear Creek Amana vs. No. 8 Sergeant Bluff-Luton, 4 p.m.
  • Court 1: No. 4 Dallas Center-Grimes vs. No. 5 North Scott, 6 p.m.
  • Court 2: No. 2 Sioux Center vs. No. 7 Marion, 4:25 p.m.
  • Court 2: No. 3 Pella vs. No. 6 Norwalk, 6:25 p.m.

CLASS 3A TUESDAY

  • Court 1: No. 1 Western Christian vs. No. 8 Mount Vernon, 10 a.m.
  • Court 1: No. 4 Cherokee vs. No. 5 Humboldt, noon
  • Court 2: No. 2 Davenport Assumption vs. No. 7 Mid-Prairie, 10:25 a.m.
  • Court 2: No. 3 Red Oak vs. Kuemper Catholic, 12:25 p.m.

CLASS 2A TUESDAY

  • Court 1: No. 1 Denver vs. No. 8 Wapsie Valley, 2 p.m.
  • Court 1: No. 4 Grundy Center vs. No. 5 Beckman Catholic, 4 p.m.
  • Court 2: No. 2 Dike-New Hartford vs. No. 7 Aplington-Parkersburg, 2:25 p.m.
  • Court: No. 3 Hinton vs. No. 6 Iowa City Regina, 4:25 p.m.

CLASS 1A TUESDAY

  • Court 1: No. 1 St. Ansgar vs. No. 8 East Mills, 6 p.m.
  • Court 1: No. 4 Dunkerton vs. No. 5 BCLUW, 8 p.m.
  • Court 2: No. 2 Janesville vs. No. 7 Gladbrook-Reinbeck, 6:25 p.m.
  • Court 2: No. 3 North Tama vs. No. 6 Sidney, 8:25 p.m.

Semifinal schedule

CLASS 5A WEDNESDAY

  • Court 1: Waukee Northwest vs. Ankeny, 10 a.m.
  • Court 2: Ankeny Centennial vs. West Des Moines Valley, 10:25 a.m.

CLASS 4A WEDNESDAY

  • Court 1: Matchup TBD, noon
  • Court 2: Matchup TBD, 12:25 p.m.

CLASS 3A WEDNESDAY

  • Court 1: Matchup TBD, 2 p.m.
  • Court 2: Matchup TBD, 2:25 p.m.

CLASS 2A WEDNESDAY

  • Court 1: Matchup TBD, 4 p.m.
  • Court 2: Matchup TBD, 4:25 p.m.

CLASS 1A WEDNESDAY

  • Court 1: Matchup TBD, 6 p.m.
  • Court 2: Matchup TBD, 6:25 p.m.

Championship schedule Thursday

  • CLASS 5A : Matchup TBD, 10 a.m.
  • CLASS 4A: Matchup TBD, 12:15 p.m.
  • CLASS 3A: Matchup TBD, 2:30 p.m.
  • CLASS 2A: Matchup TBD, 4:45 p.m.
  • CLASS 1A: Matchup TBD, 7 p.m.



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Welcome to Razorback Nation, Tusk VII

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Born on September 17, 2025, in Dardanelle, Arkansas, Tusk VII arrived weighing 2 pounds, 8 ounces and measuring 12 inches long. The proud son of Tusk VI, the University of Arkansas’ beloved live mascot, this little Razorback is already carrying on a cherished tradition that spans generations.

Tusk VII will spend the next year at home on the Stokes Family Farm in Dardanelle, growing and learning from his father before officially taking over mascot duties in 2026. The Tusk lineage has long been a proud part of Razorback history, representing the strength, spirit, and pride of the University of Arkansas.

Tusk VI and Tusk VII are cared for by members of the Stokes family, who have faithfully overseen the live mascot program since it began in 2006. The care and daily work at the Tusk Farm are shared by Julie Stokes, Abbey Stokes-Hess and her husband Tanner, Chip Stokes and his wife Lori, along with their children Colt and Caroline.

Fans who wish to support the live mascot program can donate to the Tusk VI Fund, which helps provide for the daily care and feeding needs of both Tusk VI and Tusk VII. In addition, your contributions will help create a legacy program to guarantee the longevity of the Razorback live mascot program. Click here to give today.



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Volleyball’s Martin Named BIG EAST Offensive Player of the Week

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OMAHA, Neb. — Senior outside hitter Ava Martin has been named BIG EAST Offensive Player of the Week after a record-setting performance in Creighton Volleyball’s win over Marquette on Saturday.

Martin averaged 5.25 kills, 1.75 digs and 0.38 aces per set while hitting .438 as Creighton defeated DePaul and Marquette last week.

The Overland Park, Kan., native had 12 kills, four digs and an ace on Friday, hitting .375 in a 3-0 sweep vs. DePaul and moving past Olympian Taryn Kloth for fifth on CU’s all-time kills list.

She followed that up with a career-high 30 kills on .464 hitting in a come-from-behind 3-2 win vs. Marquette, adding 10 digs for her second double-double of the fall. Martin’s 30 kills tied a D.J. Sokol Arena record and were tied for third-most in Creighton history at any site. It was her 18th straight match with 10 or more kills and 17th contest in a row that Martin has led or tied for the team-lead in kills.

This is the fourth time this season that Martin has won BIG EAST Offensive Player of the Week acclaim, also doing so on Sept. 22, Oct. 6 and Oct. 27, and eighth time in her career. Since Creighton joined the BIG EAST 13 seasons ago, only Norah Sis (9 times) has been recognized more as BIG EAST Offensive Player of the Week among Bluejays.

Martin’s teammate, Annalea Maeder, was named to the league’s honor roll after ranking second in the BIG EAST last week in both assists (11.00) and aces (0.75) per set last week.

 Winners of 14 straight matches, No. 12 Creighton (19-5, 12-0 BIG EAST) is back in action on Friday at 7:30 p.m. when it hosts Villanova to open its final homestand of the season.



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