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Throwback to @Stephen Curry's first


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Adou Thiero is an explosive athlete and could be a second-round steal – Liberty Ballers

Before the 2025 NBA Draft, we’ll take an in-depth look at different prospects here at Liberty Ballers and try to figure out which players would be the best fit for the Sixers at Nos. 3 and 35. Next up in this series is Arkansas’ Adou Thiero. Arkansas star Adou Thiero had a breakout year in […]

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Adou Thiero is an explosive athlete and could be a second-round steal - Liberty Ballers

Before the 2025 NBA Draft, we’ll take an in-depth look at different prospects here at Liberty Ballers and try to figure out which players would be the best fit for the Sixers at Nos. 3 and 35. Next up in this series is Arkansas’ Adou Thiero.

Arkansas star Adou Thiero had a breakout year in the SEC during his junior season playing under John Calipari in Fayetteville after transferring in after two seasons at the University of Kentucky. Often viewed as and mocked as an early second-round prospect, I believe Thiero can return top-20 if not lottery value if he can develop in a couple of key areas.

Let’s take a look at what gives Thiero such significant upside as a potential legitimate two-way difference maker.

Profile

Stats (PER 40 Min):

21.9 PPG

8.5 REB

2.7 AST

2.4 STL

1.3 BLK

54.5% FG

60.5 TS%

25.6% 3PT (2.3 3PA)

68.6% FT (9.4 FTA)

Team: Arkansas

Year: Junior

Position: Forward

Height: 6’7 12 (In Shoes)

Weight: 218 lbs

Wingspan: 7’0

Born: May 8, 2004 (21 years old)

Hometown: Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania

Strengths

Athleticism

Thiero is a truly nuclear athlete even by NBA standards. Whether it’s blowing by defenders off the bounce with a lightning quick first step, skying through the air for gravity-defying slams, or seemingly coming out of the rafters to erase shot attempts, Thiero’s athleticism pops in basically every aspect. He was 46th in the country in total dunks with 45 made on the season despite only playing 27 games and only 51% of Arkansas’ total minutes on the season as he was limited with injuries. That is an astounding number for a 6-foot-7 wing.

Defense

Thiero is an excellent defensive playmaker posting 3.7 stocks per 40 Minutes, an outstanding level of defensive playmaking for a wing prospect.

Arkansas was significantly better on defense as a team with Thiero on the floor, good for 98 points per 100 possessions conceded with Thiero on and plummeted to 106.4 points per 100 conceded with him off the floor. Teams shot worse from all over the floor with his presence on the court. He is a force as a secondary rim protector and weakside shot blocker due to his 7-foot wingspan and special vertical athleticism. Thiero does a great job of contesting without fouling at the rim, at times walling up with two hands or swatting away shots emphatically.

His outlier quickness and quick hands coupled with his 6-foot-7, 218-pound frame makes him a stifling on-ball defender. Thiero plays with a relentless motor and always has to be accounted for as he is looking to jump passing lanes, chase down players for steals and deflections, and wreak havoc as an off-ball defender.

Driving/Rim Finishing

Over 55% of Thiero’s attempts at the rim were self-created and he finished over 58% of his rim attempts in the half court and 61.6% at the rim overall. His blur of a first step and grab-and-go ability in transition make him a difficult cover as a driver and play finisher especially when he gets a head of steam.

Thiero scored on 1.017 points per possession on his half court attempts this past season at Arkansas which puts him in the 82nd percentile, per Synergy. He also displays excellent floater touch which is a great counter to have to his driving and one that will be greatly needed — especially early in his career as he looks to improve as a jump shooter.

Thiero is also an outstanding weapon as a cutter off the ball where he ranked in the 97th percentile at 1.641 points per possession and finished 84% of his field goals on basket cuts.

Rebounding

Thiero has pulled down 8.7 rebounds per game per 40 minutes throughout his college career. During the 2024-2025 season with the Razorbacks, he put out an impressive 7.7 ORB%, a lot of those ending in put-back points for Thiero by way of layups and put-back dunks. We have seen how important extra possessions and rebounding are throughout the NBA playoffs. Thiero is a legitimate weapon on the glass from the forward spot.

Foul Drawing

Thiero posted a 69.2% free throw rate which is higher than any of the projected first-round prospects coming from the NCAA this season. Thiero uses his first step, strength, and creative rim finishing to apply constant pressure on the rim and get himself to the line at a high rate. This is an important trait for Thiero to help him bring offensive value and generate easy scoring opportunities.

Potential Swing Skill

Playmaking

Thiero’s 1.1 Ast/TO ratio is not going to jump off the page but as you dig deeper into the tape and his profile you will see that there is some untapped playmaking upside. Thiero was a point guard in his high school days as he was just 6-foot tall his junior season and that flashes at times throughout his college film as well. Thiero’s 14% assist rate is a solid number given his archetype. He has showed the ability to make passes on the move, throw skip passes with both hands, passes to rollers out of pick-and-roll, and hit quick extra passes to shooters and cutters as well.

There may be more there than we have seen to this point and improvements to either his handle or shooting could allow him to bend defenses more and leverage some of his passing chops as well.

Areas of Concern

Shooting

Thiero at this time is a complete project at as a shooter. He made just 21 threes in 72 games in his college career at a pedestrian 28.4% clip. Thiero also is a below average free throw shooter for his archetype shooting just 71.1% from the line in his career. While the form on his jumper does not seem to be broken, he has failed to knock it down with any kind of consistency or efficiency. Thiero’s floater touch, rim touch, and flashes of pull-up shooting from two give some optimism for his potential development as a shooter, but it is best to view it as a complete work in progress at this stage.

Overall

Adou Thiero is one of the most underrated prospects in the 2025 NBA Draft. His defensive impact, defensive versatility, S tier athleticism, elite play finishing capabilities, relentless motor, and intriguing ball skills make him a top-20 prospect in this class — with potential to be even more if he lands with the right team to utilize and find value in his current skillset while he looks to develop as a shooter.

Thiero’s shooting development will ultimately determine his ceiling while his other skills give him avenues to immediate role player value in the right system. Given the Sixers’ excess of perimeter shooting, Thiero could slot into a nice role as a transition scorer, driver, cutter, defender, and rebounder and he should be near the top of Sixers wish list early in the second round.

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College Sports

From humble beginnings, Rochester rowers make a big splash

Row, row, rowing boats is what the Rochester Rowing Club (RRC) is all about. But they don’t row gently down the stream. For the last 35 years, the rowing club has been using Silver Lake as a place to practice its perfectly synchronized strokes. ADVERTISEMENT The club was founded in 1990 by Bill Pavlicek, Doug […]

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Row, row, rowing boats is what the Rochester Rowing Club (RRC) is all about. But they don’t row gently down the stream.

For the last 35 years, the rowing club has been using Silver Lake as a place to practice its perfectly synchronized strokes.

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The club was founded in 1990 by Bill Pavlicek, Doug Burninger, Keith Laughman, Chris Chute and Jeff van Fossum. Pavlicek, who lived on the banks of Silver Lake, was the club’s first president. He recruited rowers and bought two mahogany racing boats from Columbia University in New York.

Since then, the RCC has expanded from racing in regional regattas in small numbers to including a junior rowing program and recruiting young rowers who have won at international competitions. In 2004, a team of four RRC women rowers including Cadence Nelson, Kristin Haraldsdottir, Megan Britson, Lucy Krusel, and coxswain Meg Flannery — coached by Bob Krentlerwon — won bronze at the U.S. Rowing Youth Nationals and won the Groton Cup at the Women’s English Henley regatta.

Currently, the RRC has a varsity and junior varsity team that is open to rowers in grades seven to 12. The junior varsity team practices three to four days a week while the varsity team practices five to six days a week throughout the year. The club also offers sessions in the summer for interested students and offers adults the chance to row recreationally or compete in regional regattas.

Rochester Rowing Club

Members of the Rochester Rowing Club, from left, Marieke Kietselaer, Abbey Holm, Josie Washnieski and Annika Bartucz, prepare their boat for practice Thursday morning, June 5, 2025, in Rochester.

Joe Ahlquist / Post Bulletin

“We are trying to build up our adult team and have seen an increasing interest in the past two years,” says former RRC president and current board member Binnur Taner. The club is unique in that it offers both junior and adult programs that allow student athletes to return and join after high school or college.

Taner’s children Ilkim and Biricik have both rowed for the Rochester Rowing Club. “The sport itself demands discipline and resilience, which are critically important for social development,” says Taner. “Over the past several years, our rowers have competed and received medals at many regattas. Just this year, we (sent) eight of our 10 varsity rowers to represent the club at this year’s National Youth Championship in Sarasota, Florida.”

The National Youth Championship took place on June 14-15, 2025, and the Rochester Rowing Club’s varsity quad placed seventh in the nation. The club’s second varsity quad placed also placed seventh in the B Final.

Michelle Vogl is the current head coach for the club. She attended the University of Minnesota and was part of its team in 2001.

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“I absolutely love being around, on, or in water,” she says. “I love how unique the sport of rowing is and how challenging it is.”

Vogl joined the club in April of 2023 and is part of the club’s adult team which has its own coach. She became the club’s head coach for its junior program in June of 2024. She currently has 10 rowers on the club’s varsity team and nine rowers on the junior varsity team.

Vogl’s team has competed at events from Minneapolis to Ohio and from Florida to Ontario. “I am thrilled that eight of our rowers qualified for nationals,” says Vogl. “We are small, but mighty.” This is the second year that the club has sent eight female rowers to nationals.

Rochester Rowing Club

Members of the Rochester Rowing Club, from left, Marieke Kietselaer, Abbey Holm, Josie Washnieski and Annika Bartucz, take off from the dock during practice Thursday morning, June 5, 2025, on Silver Lake in Rochester.

Joe Ahlquist / Post Bulletin

When Vogl prepares her rowers, she incorporates aerobic and anaerobic workouts, strength training, long rowing pieces to build stamina and short sprinted pieces to prepare for races. She says her rowers learn physical and mental endurance, pain tolerance and discipline. She says that rowing together in a boat also teaches team members how to work together as one unit. “I love helping the kids succeed and reach their goals,” says Vogl. “It is fulfilling to see their skills and confidence grow. It has also helped me to become a better rower myself.”

Sasha Ting is a 16-year-old and one of the club’s team captains. She joined the team when she was in eighth grade in 2021. “Some people might think there isn’t a lot to love about a sport that was originally used as a form of torture,” she says. What keeps her coming back is the sense of accomplishment. “When the boat’s moving together, and you can actually feel the power and glide of each stroke, it’s just a really cool feeling,” she says.

Ting is one of the rowers who competed at nationals. She competed in a quad boat along with Kara Garvey, Miriam Daire and Elyse LeQuire. Ting says that she and her teammates do a good job of balancing “competitiveness with actually enjoying the moment.”

LeQuire who is 17 years old, joined the club during the pandemic. “I was tired of sitting around,” she says, adding that “rowing is a unique sport that trains you physically and mentally, and it is super fun.” Though she says rowing requires grit, she also says the sport is inclusive. “This sport is accepting of everyone, and we work our hardest to make everyone feel included and like they belong.”

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“With my boat, we have had a long collective goal of qualifying for nationals, and we have that goal in mind with every practice,” says LeQuire. “It is such an amazing feeling, knowing that we earned it and worked for it.”

Abbey Holm, 17, is another team captain for the club. She started rowing in 2020 when she was just completing seventh grade and also qualified to compete at nationals. Though Holm says that rowing has taught her work ethic, time management and not giving up, it’s clear that it is also a source of humor and joy for her. “We have a good luck charm,” she says, “it’s a plastic goose we dressed up in bandanas, American girl fall sunglasses and jewelry, his name is ‘Jack’ (after our favorite goose at silver lake), and we take him to every regatta.”

Open communication and hard work are both required to make the RRC successful. As Ting puts it, “no matter how strong you are, the boat won’t move right unless everyone’s completely in sync.”

Rochester Rowing Club

Learn more about Rochester Rowing Club at

rrcmn.org.

More photos:

Rochester Rowing Club

Elyse LeQuire, a member of the Rochester Rowing Club, practices Thursday morning, June 5, 2025, on Silver Lake in Rochester.

Joe Ahlquist / Post Bulletin

Rochester Rowing Club

Elyse LeQuire, a member of the Rochester Rowing Club, takes off from the dock during a practice Thursday morning, June 5, 2025, on Silver Lake in Rochester.

Joe Ahlquist / Post Bulletin

Rochester Rowing Club

Kara Garvey, left, and Miriam Daire, both members of the Rochester Rowing Club, take off from the dock during a practice Thursday morning, June 5, 2025, on Silver Lake in Rochester.

Joe Ahlquist / Post Bulletin

Rochester Rowing Club

Members of the Rochester Rowing Club, from left, Marieke Kietselaer, Abbey Holm, Josie Washnieski and Annika Bartucz, practice Thursday morning, June 5, 2025, on Silver Lake in Rochester.

Joe Ahlquist / Post Bulletin

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College Sports

Kentucky native Taylen Kinney set for official visit to UK Basketball

Northern Kentucky native and 4-star point guard Taylen Kinney is set to take an official visit to the University of Kentucky beginning June 24, according to Sam Kayser of League Ready Kinney, a top-25 prospect in the class of 2026, currently plays for Overtime Elite (OTE) in Atlanta, Georgia. Known for his explosive first step, […]

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Kentucky native Taylen Kinney set for official visit to UK Basketball

Northern Kentucky native and 4-star point guard Taylen Kinney is set to take an official visit to the University of Kentucky beginning June 24, according to Sam Kayser of League Ready

Kinney, a top-25 prospect in the class of 2026, currently plays for Overtime Elite (OTE) in Atlanta, Georgia. Known for his explosive first step, playmaking ability, and leadership at the point guard spot, Kinney has become one of the most sought-after backcourt players in his class.

His connection to the Wildcats, however, runs deep.

The in-state standout previously made an unofficial visit to Lexington last year. Since then, the relationship between Kinney and Kentucky has only strengthened.

Earlier this spring, Pope, along with assistant coaches Jason Hart and Cody Fueger, made an in-home visit to meet with Kinney and his family. It was a clear signal that the Wildcats view Kinney as a priority target for their 2026 recruiting class.

Kinney’s upcoming official visit offers the staff a chance to build on their relationship and get a closer look at Pope’s vision for the program and the revamped facilities. It is also an opportunity for Kinney to connect with current players and get a feel for the atmosphere in Lexington.

For Kentucky, locking in an in-state star like Kinney would be a major win, and for Kinney, it’s another step in evaluating what could be a homegrown path to college stardom.

Follow us on Twitter and Facebook for more Kentucky Wildcats news. And as always, Go CATS!!!

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Professional Sports

'We'll move on'… Dana White sets definitive Jon Jones vs Tom Aspinall fight deadline

UFC CEO Dana White is prepared to move on from Jon Jones vs. Tom Aspinall. Fans have clamored for a UFC heavyweight title unification bout between Jon Jones and Tom Aspinall for almost two full years. After Aspinall earned the interim belt at UFC 295, Jones faced Stipe Miocic instead upon his return to the […]

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'We'll move on'… Dana White sets definitive Jon Jones vs Tom Aspinall fight deadline

UFC CEO Dana White is prepared to move on from Jon Jones vs. Tom Aspinall.

Fans have clamored for a UFC heavyweight title unification bout between Jon Jones and Tom Aspinall for almost two full years. After Aspinall earned the interim belt at UFC 295, Jones faced Stipe Miocic instead upon his return to the Octagon, defeating Miocic by TKO.

Since UFC 309 in November, Jones and Aspinall have been in talks with the UFC brass to make the title unification bout come to fruition. But Aspinall has appeared more eager to move forward with negotiations, as Jones has flip-flopped on potentially retiring over the last few weeks.

UFC CEO Dana White‘s patience is running thin to make Jones vs. Aspinall happen, amid several top contenders airing their disapproval of the uncertain heavyweight title picture.

Split image of Jon Jones preparing to fight at UFC 239 and Tom Aspinall preparing to fight at UFC 295.
Split image of Jon Jones preparing to fight at UFC 239 and Tom Aspinall preparing to fight at UFC 295. Credit: Sean M. Haffey/Chris Unger/Zuffa LLC via Getty Images

Dana White reverses course on ‘relax’ declaration as he shares Jon Jones vs. Tom Aspinall fight deadline

White has repeatedly guaranteed UFC fans that the Jones vs. Aspinall fight would happen, despite several ominous social media messages from both top heavyweights. But Aspinall recently shared he has a date and location for a heavyweight return fight, against Jones or another top contender for the undisputed title.

Amid growing pressure to act, White drew a line in the sand surrounding the ongoing Jones vs. Aspinall fight talks in his most definitive update yet.

In a recent appearance on The Jim Rome Show, White revealed his deadline for securing the Jones vs. Aspinall fight.

“We’ll see how this thing plays out over the next couple of weeks. If we can’t get this fight done, we’ll move on, quickly. We’ll have the answers in the next couple of weeks,” White said.

“Jon Jones has been an interesting human being to deal with since the day he got here. But I’ll say this about him: I wouldn’t be out here calling him the GOAT if Jon Jones didn’t want to fight people. He’s never said ‘I don’t like this fight for me, I don’t want to fight this guy’. Not one time.”

As of this writing, Jones nor Aspinall have publicly reacted to White’s comments. UFC 317 takes place in Las Vegas on June 28th, meaning an announcement regarding Jones, Aspinall, and the next heavyweight title fight could come before International Fight Week.

Jon Jones’s holdout made Tom Aspinall the UFC’s longest-reigning interim titleholder

Aspinall became the UFC’s longest-reigning interim titleholder earlier this year, and November will mark two years since his interim title knockout win over Sergei Pavlovich. Aspinall defended the interim heavyweight belt against Curtis Blaydes at UFC 304 last July.

UFC flyweight champion Alexandre Pantoja recently scolded Jones for stalling Aspinall’s career. Pantoja will take on Kai Kara-France in the UFC 317 co-main event later this month.

Since making the full-time move to heavyweight in 2020, Jones has fought just twice, including a vacant title win over Ciryl Gane at UFC 285. He vacated the light heavyweight championship belt after defeating Dominick Reyes at UFC 247.

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College Sports

Ten Wolverines Named CSC Academic All

ANN ARBOR, Mich. — Ten student-athletes from the University of Michigan were named to the 2024-25 Academic All-District At-Large Team, selected by College Sports Communicators on Tuesday afternoon (June 17). To receive the honor, student-athletes must have completed at least one year of classes and have at least a 3.50 cumulative grade-point average while hitting […]

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Ten Wolverines Named CSC Academic All

ANN ARBOR, Mich. — Ten student-athletes from the University of Michigan were named to the 2024-25 Academic All-District At-Large Team, selected by College Sports Communicators on Tuesday afternoon (June 17). To receive the honor, student-athletes must have completed at least one year of classes and have at least a 3.50 cumulative grade-point average while hitting various participation requirements.

Six female student-athletes were honored in Carly Bauman (women’s gymnastics), Katie Easton (rowing), Logan Roeder (rowing), Abby Tamer (field hockey), Leia Till (rowing) and Kasey Umlauf (water polo). On the men’s side, Josh Eernisse (ice hockey), Josh Heindselman (wrestling), Rithik Puri (men’s gymnastics) and Hunter Thomson (men’s golf) were honored.

Carly Bauman

Bauman ended the 2025 season as the NCAA Regional Co-Champion on uneven bars with a score of 9.950 after being named the Women’s Collegiate Gymnastics Association Northeast Regional Gymnast of the Year. The West Des Moines, Iowa, native was a first team All-Big Ten honoree for the second straight season and was a three-time Big Ten Specialist of the Week. Bauman won 14 individual event titles across three events and posted 19 scores of 9.900 or better in her fifth season.

Katie Easton

Easton’s Academic All-District honor is the second of her career, following three CRCA Scholar-Athlete and Academic All-Big Ten honors. She graduated this spring with a degree in public health. A team captain and program record-holder on the erg, Easton has been rowing in U-M’s 1V8 since the postseason of her freshman year and helped the boat place 12th at the NCAA Championships this year. The Melbourne, Australia, native is a three-time All-American and secured second-team honors in 2025. Her leadership and on-water contributions have been critical to U-M’s speed throughout her career, leading to her fourth Big Ten medal with the 1V8 in 2025. She has also been part of two Big Ten Championship teams at Michigan and is a three-time All-Big Ten honoree.

Logan Roeder

As coxswain, Roeder has helmed the 2V8 and 1V8 boats throughout her three years with the Wolverines while working toward her degree in psychology. Her first career Academic All-District honor in 2025 follows a season when she and her boatmates earned a bronze medal at the Big Ten Championships en route to an 11th-place national finish. The season earned Roeder honorable mention All-American recognition. As a member of the 1V8 through the entire 2025 season, Roeder’s leadership on and off the water has been vital to the success of the boat and team. The Chicago, Ill., native is a two-time CRCA Scholar-Athlete and Academic All-Big Ten honoree.

Abby Tamer

Tamer earned NFHCA All-America first-team honors and unanimous selection to the All-Big Ten first team after leading the Wolverines in scoring in 2024 with 38 points on career highs in goals (12) and assists (14). Tamer returned to the U-M lineup after redshirting the 2023 season while training with the U.S. women’s national team before representing Team USA in Paris, where she led the red, white and blue in scoring with two goals. Named the NFHCA’s 2024 Division I National Scholar-Athlete, she graduated this spring with a bachelor’s degree in applied exercise science and will pursue a master’s in sport management in 2025-26. She is a two-time Academic All-Big Ten honoree and has earned NFHCA Scholar of Distinction honors three times.

Leia Till

Till, a graduate student who transferred to U-M before the 2024-25 season from Virginia, made an immediate impact in the lineup while working toward her master’s degree in movement science. Rowing in the 1V8’s first four seats throughout the season, Till proved to be an important addition to the roster on its way to an 11th-place team finish at the NCAA Championships. She captured a bronze medal in her lone appearance at the Big Ten Championships. Till is a five-time CRCA Scholar-Athlete (four at Virginia, one at Michigan) and earned Academic All-Big Ten honors in her lone season as a Wolverine.

Kasey Umlauf

Umlauf is a graduate student who earned her master’s degree in human genetics after completing her bachelor’s degree in neuroscience. Umlauf started all 30 games for the Maize and Blue and tallied a career-high 22 goals in her final season in Ann Arbor. Umlauf was named to the CWPA All-Tournament team in 2025 and is a four-time Academic All-Big Ten honoree.

Josh Eernisse

A junior on the U-M ice hockey team, Eernisse played in all 36 games this season and had 11 points for the Wolverines. He has been named Academic All-Big Ten in both seasons that he was eligible and is a two-time recipient of the Carl Isaacson Award, a team award presented to the player with the highest scholastic average. A 2024 Big Ten Distinguished Scholar, Eernisse helped the Wolverines to the 2024 NCAA Frozen Four.

Josh Heindselman

Heindselman earned All-America honors for the first time in his collegiate career with a seventh-place finish at heavyweight at the 2024 NCAA Championships. He boasted a team-best 26-6 record despite joining the Wolverines at the semester and earned bonus points in 16 matches, including 12 technical falls, to rank among the national leaders. Having already earned a bachelor’s degree in biology and a master’s in health care law, Heindselman completed several classes in Michigan’s School of Social Work and will enroll in medical school back in his native Oklahoma this fall.

Rithik Puri

A senior on the men’s gymnastics team, Puri competed in nine of the team’s 10 meets. A biomedical engineering major, he helped lead the Wolverines to their fifth straight Big Ten championship and seventh NCAA championship. The Chicago, Ill., native finished sixth on the still rings at the NCAA Championships to earn All-America honors with his second-highest score of the season (13.966). Puri is a three-time Academic All-Big Ten honoree and a 2023 Big Ten Scholar of Distinction.

Hunter Thomson

A unanimous All-Big Ten first team and two-time All-America selection, Thomson concluded his U-M career as the program’s all-time scoring leader with a 71.53 average after breaking his single-season record with a 70.24 per-round average. He became the second Wolverine to lead the team in scoring average for four straight years. Thomson paced U-M in 13 of 14 events, including the final nine tournaments, and recorded 10 top-10 finishes, with seven in the top five. A PING All-Midwest regional selection, he won three individual titles, including the Canadian Collegiate Invitational (202, -14), the Boilermaker Invitational (203, -10) and the NCAA Urbana Regional (203, -10).

CSC Release

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The Kids In The Crowd" Documentary and Amazon Music Soundtrack Celebrating Band's 25 …

Prime Video Unveils “Simple Plan: The Kids In The Crowd” Documentary and Amazon Music Soundtrack Celebrating Band’s 25-Year Journey Available now, Amazon Music offers fans an exclusive early demo version of ‘I’m Just A Kid’ ahead of the soundtrack release. The soundtrack, featuring a new single and past hits from the band’s catalog, will be […]

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The Kids In The Crowd" Documentary and Amazon Music Soundtrack Celebrating Band's 25 ...

Prime Video Unveils “Simple Plan: The Kids In The Crowd” Documentary and Amazon Music Soundtrack Celebrating Band’s 25-Year Journey

Available now, Amazon Music offers fans an exclusive early demo version of ‘I’m Just A Kid’ ahead of the soundtrack release.

The soundtrack, featuring a new single and past hits from the band’s catalog, will be available alongside the documentary on July 8.

Culver City – June 16, 2025 – Today, Prime Video announced the launch date, trailer, and key art for Simple Plan: The Kids In The Crowd, an intimate documentary capturing the remarkable 25-year journey of Canadian punk rock fan-favorites, Simple Plan. The documentary launches July 8 on Prime Video in more than 240 countries and territories worldwide.

“We’re thrilled to share this first look at our documentary. The film captures our journey, struggles, and most memorable moments together. Creating it has been deeply meaningful, and sharing our story is the perfect way to celebrate our 25th anniversary,” said the band. “The Kids in the Crowd is about dreaming big and perseverance. It’s a story of friendship, brotherhood, and music’s transformative power. Our hope is that it encourages people to believe in themselves and inspires a new generation of kids to find their passion, follow their hearts, and maybe even start a band in their own garage or basement…just like we did!”

As a companion to the documentary, available now, Amazon Music is offering fans an exclusive early demo version of ‘I’m Just A Kid’, from the album, ‘No Pads, No Helmets… Just Balls’. The soundtrack full will launch with the documentary on July 8. The band is currently on their “Bigger Than You Think!” Headline Tour across North America, for more details visit here.

Simple Plan: The Kids In The Crowd offers an unprecedented look into the band’s journey from basement shows in Montreal to global stardom. The documentary chronicles the creation of hits like “Welcome to My Life,” “I’d Do Anything,” and “Perfect,” and examines the band’s continued impact as one of the most successful punk rock bands still selling out shows worldwide.

Fans will experience never-before-seen archival footage, along with new interviews with band members and celebrated icons of the punk rock community, including Mark Hoppus (Blink-182), Avril Lavigne, Dexter Holland and Noodles (The Offspring), and Fat Mike (NOFX).

The documentary is produced by Sphere Media with executive producers Bruno Dubé, Renaud Chassé, and Marie-Hélène Tremblay, and producer Samuel Sauvageau. Didier Charrette directs.

– END –

About Simple Plan

For more than two decades, SIMPLE PLAN has been one of the most culturally and commercially successful bands in rock. Their multi-platinum 2002 debut album, No Pads, No Helmets… Just Balls bore the smash singles “I’d Do Anything,” “I’m Just A Kid,” “Addicted” and “Perfect,” while subsequent hits “Welcome To My Life,” “Summer Paradise,” “Untitled (How Could This Happen To Me?),” “Shut Up!” and “What’s New Scooby-Doo?” have cemented their legacy as pop-punk legends. In all, the Montreal-formed quartet has sold over 10 million albums worldwide, captivated the main stages of the Vans Warped Tour and When We Were Young, performed at the 2010 Winter Olympics and with the Montreal Symphony Orchestra, sold out shows around the world and raised more than $3 million through the Simple Plan Foundation. Their videos have garnered more than a billion YouTube views, while their inescapable social media presence driven another billion views on the viral #ImJustAKid Challenge alongside videos from NSYNC, Ed Sheeran, Will Smith, and Venus and Serena Williams.

About Prime Video

Prime Video is a first-stop entertainment destination offering customers a vast collection of premium programming in one app available across thousands of devices. On Prime Video, customers can customize their viewing experience and find their favorite movies, series, documentaries, and live sports – including Amazon MGM Studios-produced series and movies Red One, Road House, The Lord of the Rings: The Rings of Power, Fallout, Reacher, The Boys, Cross, and The Idea of You; licensed fan favorites; Prime member exclusive access to coverage of live sports including Thursday Night Football, WNBA, and NWSL, and acclaimed sports documentaries including Bye Bye Barry and Kelce; and programming from partners such as Apple TV+, Max, Crunchyroll and MGM+ via Prime Video add-on subscriptions, as well as more than 500 free ad-supported (FAST) Channels. Prime members in the U.S. can share a variety of benefits, including Prime Video, by using Amazon Household. Prime Video is one benefit among many that provides savings, convenience, and entertainment as part of the Prime membership. All customers, regardless of whether they have a Prime membership or not, can rent or buy titles via the Prime Video Store, and can enjoy even more content for free with ads. Customers can also go behind the scenes of their favorite movies and series with exclusive X-Ray access. For more info visit www.amazon.com/primevideo.

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