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College Sports

Understanding Mizzou’s process in the revenue sharing world

The brand new world of college athletics is two weeks away. On July 1, the revenue sharing era begins. For the first time, major college athletic departments will be providing direct payments to their student athletes. This is all a result of the House settlement ten days ago. Athletic directors and coaches across the country […]

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The brand new world of college athletics is two weeks away. On July 1, the revenue sharing era begins. For the first time, major college athletic departments will be providing direct payments to their student athletes.

This is all a result of the House settlement ten days ago. Athletic directors and coaches across the country have weighed in on the situation both prior to and since the ruling. But the most pivotal people in the new era might not be those at the forefront. They may very well be people most fans have never even heard of. They’re the people running the third-party agencies in charge of negotiating and signing the contracts with athletes both in terms of revenue sharing and name, image and likeness deals.

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Revenue sharing debates heat up, BC linked with intriguing German skater

Perhaps the most interesting piece of information to come up surrounding the BC Men’s Hockey program these past couple of weeks doesn’t have to do with players or recruitment at all. Headlines suggest that such developments will be essential for the NCAA sports landscape as a whole for the foreseeable future. To put it plainly, […]

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Perhaps the most interesting piece of information to come up surrounding the BC Men’s Hockey program these past couple of weeks doesn’t have to do with players or recruitment at all. Headlines suggest that such developments will be essential for the NCAA sports landscape as a whole for the foreseeable future.

To put it plainly, schools that opted into a new revenue-sharing agreement will be able to pay college athletes $20.5 million in aggregate dollars among all NCAA-sanctioned programs. While schools such as BC have opted into the agreement for this upcoming academic year, rivals such as Boston University have not. So, how these developments will affect college hockey in the upcoming years remains to be seen.

In the past, Comm. Ave rivals BC and BU have ridden the wave of elite recruiting strictly through positive word of mouth, top-notch coaching/development, and program success. However, with athletes now being able to receive financial compensation, all that goes out the window.



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Walter Ferry V Obituary –

Walter Charles Ferry IV OBITUARY Walter Charles Ferry IV, of Red Hill, passed away unexpectedly Friday afternoon, July 18, 2025 at age 55. He was born January 8, 1970 to Anita (Novicki) and Walter Charles Ferry III. He was predeceased by his father and grandparents. A beloved son, brother and uncle, Walt enjoyed spending time […]

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Walter Charles Ferry IV


OBITUARY

Walter Charles Ferry IV, of Red Hill, passed away unexpectedly Friday afternoon, July 18, 2025 at age 55. He was born January 8, 1970 to Anita (Novicki) and Walter Charles Ferry III. He was predeceased by his father and grandparents. A beloved son, brother and uncle, Walt enjoyed spending time with his family and friends. He also loved spending time with his special buddy, his cat Milo, whom Walt adored and affectionately called “Sweet.” Walt was introduced to fishing at a very young age and was immediately hooked! He enjoyed surf fishing, deep sea fishing and especially liked fishing in Pulaski, New York with his friends. Another passion Walt developed at an early age was his love for hockey. He and his family spent countless hours playing street hockey on Washington Street. He played ice hockey and roller hockey in various leagues throughout eastern Pennsylvania. After graduating from Mount Pocono High School, Walt attended East Stroudsburg University, where he was the goaltender on the ice hockey team. Walt also liked watching hockey. Saying he was a huge Flyers and Phantoms fan is an understatement. He attended many, many games as well as numerous Flyers’ Wives Fight For Lives Carnivals. He and his cousin Scott even made the evening news when they hit Behn Wilson with whipped cream pies at one of the carnivals. In a fundraiser, Walt played goalie for the You Too Animal Rescue team skating against the Flyers’ Alumni All-Star team. He also golfed with Bernie Parent, Joe and Jimmy Watson and Bob Kelly in other fund raisers for the Rescue. Walt was a great skier and had the opportunity to ski the slopes of many resorts across the country, including Jackson Hole, which was one of his favorites. He also went to Czechoslovakia to ski in Prague. For more than 25 years, Walt was the respected business owner of Ferry’s Lawn Services, which included cutting grass, landscaping and snow removal. He was also a skilled carpenter and very knowledgable in plumbing and HVAC. Walt was well-loved by many people in the community. He could often be found hanging out with his friends at the PC Pub, VFW or the Red Hill Fire House. Walt loved having fun, talking about sports and politics, and was an avid fan of the Three Stooges. Walt made many people happy with his great sense of humor and his infectious laugh that was as unique as he was. He will be greatly missed by his mother, Anita Ferry, sister Sabrina Taylor Van Horn, sister Tiffany Andrews, nephews Matthew Taylor and Liam Andrews, niece Lily Andrews, Uncle William Novicki and wife Darlene, Aunt Ronnie Novicki, cousin Scott Novicki and wife Jennifer, cousin Angie Novicki-Geesey and husband Jason Geesey, and the other relatives and friends he leaves behind. A celebration of Walt’s life will take place at the Red Hill Fire Hall Saturday, August 9, beginning with visitation at 1 pm, service at 1:30 pm, followed by a luncheon. In lieu of flowers, please make donations in Walt’s memory to The Philadelphia Zoo, where Walt volunteered from 2003 to 2013. For on-line donations go to philadelphiazoo.org and click “donate now.” Mail donations go to the Philadelphia Zoo, Attn. Development Dept., 3400 W. Girard Ave, Philadelphia PA 19104. Thank you to Jim Bowen and everyone at Maryott-Bowen Funeral Home, 217 York Ave, Towanda, for all the arrangements. Memories and condolences be expressed by visiting www.bowenfuneralhomes.com.



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Major college football head coach admits to ‘losing locker room’ over NIL

Head coach Mike Locksley and the Maryland Terrapins compiled back-to-back eight-win seasons and three consecutive bowl wins before falling to 4-8 in 2024. It was Locksley’s sixth season at the helm, and one that the former Nick Saban assistant admitted featured an underlying issue. Locksley revealed at Big Ten Media Days that he and his […]

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Head coach Mike Locksley and the Maryland Terrapins compiled back-to-back eight-win seasons and three consecutive bowl wins before falling to 4-8 in 2024.

It was Locksley’s sixth season at the helm, and one that the former Nick Saban assistant admitted featured an underlying issue.

Locksley revealed at Big Ten Media Days that he and his staff “lost” the locker room, leading to just four wins and five-straight losses to cap off the year.

“I’ll tell you, a year ago Coach Locks lost his locker room,” Locksley said at Big Ten Media Days. “For me to stand in front of a group of media and tell you that I lost my locker room – and it wasn’t because I wasn’t a good coach, it wasn’t because they weren’t good players because we were better than a four-win team.”

Locksley pointed to significant shift to the NIL era as the root of the locker room disconnect, which he believed was created by his players not playing for the collective group. He even claimed that he will put his desk inside the locker room this year if it comes to it.

“What we had to do was, we had haves and have-nots for the first time in our locker room, and the landscape of college football taught me a valuable lesson,” Locksley said. “That valuable lesson is it’s important for me, even in the midst of this change, to continue to educate our players on the importance of what playing for something bigger than yourself is all about. And I can tell you that if I’ve got to put my desk in the locker room this year, I will.”

Some players are hauling in millions of dollars in NIL funds in today’s era. But those figures aren’t distributed equally, and Locksley aims to create more of an equal environment within the program this season.

“What I’ve decided now is if you come to Maryland and you look outside of the our locker room, there’s a sign,” he continued. “That sign reads, ‘You can leave your Louis belts, your car keys, and your financial statements outside of this locker room,’ because when you enter those doors, we’ll all pay the same price for success or failure.”

Maryland’s first test will come in the season opener against Florida Atlantic at home on Aug. 30 at noon ET.





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Steve Shephard – Penn State

Phone: 814-863-7461 Email: ses13@psu.edu Eight NCAA Championships appearances, and eight NCAA Regional Championships. Eighteen All-America titles, 25 regional individual titles and 106 all-conference academic selections. Three-time Big Ten Coach of the Year (1999, 2006, 2009). One of his athletes sits atop every Penn State event record list. All this as Steve Shephard enters his 18th […]

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Phone: 814-863-7461 Email: ses13@psu.edu

Eight NCAA Championships appearances, and eight NCAA Regional Championships. Eighteen All-America titles, 25 regional individual titles and 106 all-conference academic selections. Three-time Big Ten Coach of the Year (1999, 2006, 2009). One of his athletes sits atop every Penn State event record list. All this as Steve Shephard enters his 18th season as the head coach of the Nittany Lion women[apos]s gymnastics team.
Beyond impressive scores and records, Shephard[apos]s true aim lies in molding the all-around college student. To that end, he, longtime assistant Jessica Bastardi and assistant Randy Monahan have created a family atmosphere within the gymnastics program that has helped athletes thrive.

[quote]We have a philosophy where we want our athletes to succeed in all aspects of their college experience,[quote] Shephard explains. [quote]We want them to succeed academically, athletically, and socially. We want them to come away feeling good about their time at Penn State.[quote]

Shephard, an avid off-road motorcyclist, began his affiliation with national caliber competition early in his career. Competing at Hinsdale High School in Illinois, Shephard was part of two national high school championship teams. He finished fourth in floor exercise in the state scholastic meet in 1973 and was on state championship teams from 1969-73. As an undergraduate at Southern Illinois, Shephard was part of the 1975 Saluki team that placed third at the NCAA Championships.

Shephard went on to become the coach and co-director of the Olympic Academy of Gymnastics and Dance in Newark, Ohio, for a year before joining the coaching staff at his alma mater in 1978.
He moved on to coach the men[apos]s team at Ball State in Indiana for two years and was director of the Woodward Gymnastics Camp in nearby Woodward, Pa., in the summer of 1981. He then purchased the Nittany Gymnastics and Dance School in State College in 1983, a facility he owned and operated for six years.

In 1989, Shephard was named Penn State[apos]s assistant women[apos]s gymnastics coach. During his three seasons as an assistant to Judi Avener, Shephard earned Assistant Coach of the Year honors in the Northeast and helped the Nittany Lions to fifth and fourth-place NCAA finishes and two Atlantic 10 Conference championships.

Following Avener[apos]s departure for the head job at Florida following the 1992 season, Shephard was named Penn State[apos]s eighth women[apos]s gymnastics coach.

In addition to years of competitive gymnastics experience, Shephard holds a master[apos]s degree in physical education and is an internship away from a second masters in Counselor Education. He has used this educational background to enthusiastically develop a unique coaching philosophy.

Shephard and his wife, Debbie, have two sons, Taylor and Sam.



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Head coach and players reflect on humble beginnings, a season to remember, and look towards the future

BLACKSBURG, Va. – Blacksburg may be quiet for now, but it won’t be long before a little over 37,000 college students descend upon the small town nestled in the foothills of the Blue Ridge Mountains in late August for the beginning of classes this year. For many students and faculty, the beginning of the fall […]

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BLACKSBURG, Va. – Blacksburg may be quiet for now, but it won’t be long before a little over 37,000 college students descend upon the small town nestled in the foothills of the Blue Ridge Mountains in late August for the beginning of classes this year. For many students and faculty, the beginning of the fall semester marks the start of something new, and the same could be said for 42-year-old Joey Mullen, a father of two and the head coach of Virginia Tech’s Club Ice Hockey Team.

Virginia Tech, the student body, the alumni and Southwest Virginia have strong Hokie pride that runs deep. That same pride is directly intertwined with the school’s extensive collection of NCAA Division I sports programs: football, basketball, baseball and the list goes on.

Just ask any Virginia Tech fan to conjure up some sports images or memories in their head. What comes to mind? Maybe it’s Michael Vick bobbing and weaving through defenders on his way to the endzone, as he was known to do so many times in his stint with the school. Or maybe it’s Georgia Amoore and Liz Kitley leading the 31-5 women’s basketball team to a Final Four appearance against Angel Reese and powerhouse LSU. But how many of those fans would bring up ice hockey despite the club’s presence at the school for the past 41 years?

Although not an NCAA Division I program, the club hockey team is the only collegiate men’s ice hockey team that represents the school. The team currently plays in the ACCHL (Atlantic Coast Collegiate Hockey League), which is a conference within Division II of the ACHA (American Collegiate Hockey Association). The ACHA is the governing body of non-NCAA hockey, which covers three distinct divisions, each of which has different conferences within those divisions.

The club was founded in 1984 by “a few transplanted New Englanders,” according to the team’s website. Since those humble beginnings, the club has been building a culture that all Hokie fans, hockey and non-hockey fans alike, can be proud of, culminating with a historic 24-4-1 season last year. It’s a testament to the coaching style of Mullen, who has been with the ACHA team for 15 years.

Head Coach Mullen (Photo courtesy of Bill Gerke, graphic made by WSLS) (WSLS2025)

Mullen is no stranger to hockey. One of his uncles is three-time Stanley Cup Champion and Hockey Hall of Famer Joe Mullen; his dad also played pro hockey. Mullen is no stranger to Southwest Virginia either; the Roanoke native has been playing hockey in the area since he was two.

Mullen played junior hockey in the Northeast and at Radford before calling it a playing career. However, Mullen has always wanted to stay close to the game.

“I didn’t go to college long. I just got into working and started coaching some youth hockey at like 19 [or] 20 years old, just helping out, trying to get back to hockey, and the opportunity at Radford came along. I’ve kind of enjoyed coaching just as much, if not more than like playing,” Mullen said.

The “opportunity at Radford” Mullen is referring to was a coaching gig for the school’s club hockey program – the same program he played for during his college years, despite not actually being a student at Radford.

“It was the early years of, like, the ACHA, which is like our governing body. The rules weren’t very strict, so you could kinda dance around them a little bit. So that’s how I ended up at Radford. It was me and a couple of other guys who played there that didn’t go to Radford,” Mullen said.

Mullen coached at Radford for four years before making the jump to become an assistant coach at Virginia Tech after receiving a call from a friend about an opening at the program.

Mullen said that within his first year at Virginia Tech, the team ran into issues with head coaching, and with just two weeks left in the season, he took over head coaching responsibilities.

Since taking the reins, Mullen has not looked back; his tenure includes impressive feats such as 200 wins, the most head coaching wins in program and ACCHL history, multiple regional appearances, one National Tournament berth, and a regular season championship in 2021. While these achievements may not be Mullen’s ultimate goal of winning a national championship, they show a much broader significance.

These achievements are building blocks that increase team visibility not only amongst recruits but fans as well. The ACHA, which had only 15 teams at its inception in 1991, now stands 460 strong, which is reflective of the growth of hockey on a national scale. Recent success from teams like the Washington Capitals and Carolina Hurricanes has also increased interest in the sport right here in our region, making it very easy for Mullen and the club to recruit impressive young talent on a consistent basis.

Some of that aforementioned young talent includes rising sophomore defenseman JH Lages and rising junior winger Kam Khazai. Both Khazai and Lages are from McLean, Virginia, an area in the Northern part of the state just a stone’s throw away from Washington, D.C., which has seen a boom in youth hockey thanks in no small part to Alex Ovechkin and the rest of the Washington Capitals.

According to a 2024-2025 USA Hockey membership poll by state, a total of 11,085 players ranging from 6 years old to 19 years old and over registered to play hockey in Virginia, almost a 6,000-player increase from a similar USA Hockey Report in 2003.

Khazai is just one of many who were drawn into playing hockey by watching the likes of Ovechkin and Niklas Backstrom, a player who his dad would certainly like Khazai to emulate his game after, on their television screens. “I want to do that,” Khazai told his parents one day.

Kam Khazai (Photo Courtesy of Bill Gerke, graphic by WSLS) (WSLS2025)

Khazai’s parents obliged, and his dad took him to see a figure skating coach who taught Khazai how to skate, which turned into hockey eventually.

“I think, with the Caps winning the Stanley Cup, the exposure in Northern Virginia for hockey’s gone way up. I started playing for a team called Caps Academy, and they didn’t even have like a Double-A team … I went to Triple-A for the Little Caps … now they have Caps Academy, which has grown, and they have so many teams. But yeah, it’s definitely growing and still growing,” Khazai said about his beginnings in hockey.

Khazai continued to play youth hockey and work his way through the ranks at Caps Academy before landing on a team in Rockville, Maryland, where he honed his skills and continued to grow as a competitor.

“I met with a coach … Rob. He had, like this summer team called D.C. Selects. That was like the true coaching experience that I got because at my Caps Academy thing, it was all like dads and dad coaches. But Rob actually played … like Rob went to like the Pittsburgh Penguins Development Camp, and so that was like the first true hardcore hockey that I experienced, and I made the team … But ever since then, it was competitive,” Khazai said.

For most up-and-coming players looking to play hockey at the collegiate level, the path isn’t always cut and dry, and it certainly isn’t guaranteed. Those who are looking to get scouted by colleges elect to play junior hockey. There are a multitude of junior leagues across North America, including the NCDC (National Collegiate Development Conference). The NCDC is a branch of the United States Premier Hockey League, a team in that league drafted Khazai. However, with the uncertainty regarding playing time and a desire to pursue academics, Khazai chose a different path, which landed him at Virginia Tech and into the lap of coach Mullen.

22-year-old defenseman JH Lages’ entry into hockey isn’t much different from Khazai’s. Lages’ parents had season tickets to the San Jose Sharks’ inaugural season before eventually moving to the D.C. area.

“When they moved to the D.C area, and I was born, I was skating…. they had me skating since I was like two or three years old. That was kind of the foundation of it… They weren’t gonna let me play hockey unless I was a good skater, because that’s a very important part of it. So once I was able to show them that I was a good skater, then I started playing when I was like five,” Lages said.

JH Lages (Photo courtesy of Bill Gerke, graphic by WSLS) (WSLS2025)

Lages continued his career bouncing around from location to location, club to club, school to school, including stops in New Jersey, Maryland and New England Prep for his junior and senior year of high school, experiences he thoroughly enjoyed.

“I thought it was a blast. You learn, you meet so many new people, you learn different structures of the game, whether it’s in New Jersey or here, or it’s in Connecticut. You just try to take in the most that you can get…If I had to do it over, I would I would do the same exact thing.”

Unlike Khazai, Lages decided to pursue the Junior hockey route. The offensive-minded defenseman spent two years, including one year in the OJHL (Ontario Junior Hockey League) in Canada. After two years in juniors, Lages had plenty of D-III offers, but he wasn’t interested in playing hockey at a small school far from home, compounded with uncertainties regarding playing time. After much contemplation, and a tour at Virginia Tech that sealed the deal, Lages decided to stick close to home and play club hockey in Blacksburg.

Lages’ first season with the club, Khazai’s second season and Mullen’s 15th proved to be a memorable one last year – a season Mullen is hoping to build on this fall.

The 2024 season started off strong in September despite the club dropping the home opener in Roanoke to N.C State.

Virginia Tech plays at Lancerlot Sports Complex in Vinton, an arena which both players and coach Mullen have nothing but nice things to say about how accommodating the rink and staff are to the team.

“We have our own locker room there, like, they’re awesome to us. We get all the good game time stuff like that, like we’re not playing home games at 11 o’clock at night,” Mullen said.

However, the almost 50-minute drive from campus can take its toll on some of the players who also have to balance their responsibilities as students. The distance of the rink from campus can also be a deterrent for students and fans who might otherwise be interested in watching the team play. The situation is a far cry away from a school like Liberty University, whose club team plays at LaHayce Ice Center, an accessible on-campus ice rink that seats 4,000. However, the university is a bit of an outlier in the region, with schools like Radford and UVA playing at off-campus rinks just like Tech.

After the season-opening loss, the Hokies were able to rattle off 13 straight wins, wins that Lages said were more of an “expectation” for the players in the club. Coach Mullen said the team played very clean hockey throughout the stretch.

“We got to a point….where, instead of game by game, we were breaking it down period by period… We want to win every period, just to keep them motivated, because you can get a little complacent when you’re winning a lot. We didn’t want that to factor in, because we knew the second half of our schedule was gonna be really tough..” Mullen said.

A loss to Penn State would ultimately cut the winning streak short in November after not seeing a loss the entire month of October; the loss was a tight one in overtime, which meant the club was still able to salvage a point. A point streak that would continue throughout the month of December as anticipation built throughout the locker room for Virginia Tech’s first outdoor game in history in January.

Virginia Tech had been scheduled to play the University of North Carolina in Charlotte, North Carolina, on Saturday, January 4th, which by pure happenstance, coincided with the Hokie football team’s appearance against Minnesota in the Duke’s Mayo Bowl Friday, January 3rd, in the same city. The football team played in Bank of America Stadium, and the hockey team at Truist Field, where the Charlotte Knights, a minor league affiliate of the Chicago White Sox, play.

It was a game and weekend trip that Mullen, Lages and Khazai will not soon forget. It was also a game the club was to determined to win.

“I give a lot of credit to the kids because we brought them back like three days after Christmas to practice for a whole week…and had a little practice. So we were prepped. We were ready,” Mullen said.

“Prepped and ready” is an understatement; the Hokies came out swinging, scoring three goals in the first 10 minutes, taking a strong 4-0 lead at the end of the first period. It was a commanding lead they never surrendered, blanking UNC 6-0 on a picturesque, albeit cold, Saturday night in Charlotte.

Team celebrates after scoring goal (Courtesy of Bill Gerke) (BG2025)

The game and trip was a tremendous bonding experience for the club, some even attended the football team’s bowl game the night before. The trip also boosted fan recognition and team visibility on multiple fronts.

Pop Watson, quarterback for Virginia Tech, who played in the Duke’s Mayo Bowl Friday, was named as an honorary captain for the hockey game along with offensive lineman Brody Meadows.

Pop Watson does ceremonial puck drop (Courtesy of Bill Gerke) (BG2025)

Watson and Meadows showing up for the hockey game Saturday speaks volumes to the camaraderie of Hokie athletics. Watson even ate a pregame meal with the team, a gesture that the club greatly appreciated. The game was also live-streamed on ESPN+ for those who were unable to make the trek to Charlotte.

Outdoor game in Charlotte (Courtesy of Bill Gerke) (BG2025)
Kam Khazai action shot (Courtesy of Bill Gerke) (BG2025)
Team photo (Courtesy of Bill Gerke) (BG2025)

After the outdoor game, it was back to business as usual, the team finished the regular season with a 5-2 record in January. The team’s 24-4-1 finish, combined with a successful showing in the ACCHL playoffs, was enough to propel them to regionals in Evansville, Indiana, after barely missing regionals in the 2023-2024 season. It was the team’s first regionals appearance in five years.

“We nearly missed out on it the last couple of years by like a spot or two, and that was kind of disappointing for those seniors that have kind of worked to get us back to where we’re at now. So it was super rewarding this year. For some of these guys to get a chance to get there. I wish we could have done more damage,” Mullen said.

The Hokies ultimately lost 3-2 in the first game of regionals, an early bird special, 11 a.m. game against the University of Ohio. Tech lost in heartbreaking fashion in double overtime. Lages, Khazai, and Mullen all shared the same sentiment: the team could have gone to nationals.

“I mean, we all wanted to go to nationals…. A bunch of people were also burnt out. There’s a lot of hockey and it’s a lot of effort throughout the season,” Khazai said.

“I thought we really had the team [to make nationals]. I mean losing 3-2, in double overtime, is tough…especially a game. I thought we played pretty well and could have won,” Mullen said.

“There was a ton of upsets… it’s playoff hockey. It’s why it’s the best sport in the world, the seed just has no like implication on anything… It’s just it’s one hockey game. Doesn’t matter what seed you are. It doesn’t matter who was good in the regular season… Just who can be better in 60 minutes.. or in our case, you know 90, or 80…It was a close game, we, had some moments there where we thought we were gonna close the door in overtime, but you know that’s hockey for you. You win some. You lose some…” Lages said.

A memorable season came to a brutal and abrupt close for the Virginia Tech hockey team, a season that had numerous personal highlights for both Khazai and Lages. Khazai finished the season with an astounding 26 goals and 41 assists, racking up 67 points in total playing on the top line. His efforts did not go unnoticed. He received the team’s unsung hero award. Khazai said that it is always great to be recognized by the team and staff.

Lages was also able to produce at a high level. The freshman defenseman took on the top defensive pairing role with ease; he was able to garner 12 goals and 24 assists for a total of 36 points. Lages also received the team’s Rookie of the Year award and was named the ACCHL’s Premiere Division Defenseman of the Year.

The historic year combined with a bolstered and consistent social media presence, which was carefully crafted by a student-run media team, was the exact recipe the club needed to boost fan recognition and team chemistry. Right now, the team’s socials have amassed a little over 7,000 followers across all major platforms (Instagram, Facebook, X).

The Virginia Tech Hockey Network, a student-run broadcast network, has also increased visibility for the team and provides insightful analysis, podcasts and even pre-game shows for wall-to-wall coverage of the team.

Virginia Tech Hockey media team (Photo Courtesy of Sydney Haddox) (SH2025)

“It was really cool to watch. And we’ve seen a lot of other teams like Liberty does a really high end product. N.C. State, it’s a high-end product like that.You kind of want to keep up with them and emulate what they got going on …. just to get our name out there and kind of show everybody what we’re about, what we do. It’s definitely helped…We reach kids from all over the country now,” Mullen said.

As summer turns to fall in just under 60 days the club and Mullen set their sights on the ultimate prize: 2026 Nationals in St. Louis. It’s a goal that both the players and Coach Mullen believe is attainable, in the sports world, that is called “buy in”. Everyone has to “buy in,” and with the culture that has been created at Virginia Tech, that is exactly what Coach Mullen and his staff have. But until then, Coach Mullen, Khazai and Lages have to take things one step at a time, and that first step is tryouts, next wil be the regular season and playoffs, followed by success in regionals, and then and only then will they be on their way to St. Louis.

Just about a month away before 37,000 students return to campus, around 30 of those returning 37,000 will play club ice hockey this year and compete for the ultimate prize in the ACHA.

For more information on the club, click here.

Copyright 2025 by WSLS 10 – All rights reserved.





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Why the college football betting market is underrating Alabama in 2025

Gambling content 21+. The New York Post may receive an affiliate commission if you sign up through our links. Read our editorial standards for more information. You used to be able to set your watch to Alabama Football. Under Nick Saban, the pattern generally followed the same script. The Crimson Tide would be one of […]

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You used to be able to set your watch to Alabama Football.

Under Nick Saban, the pattern generally followed the same script.

The Crimson Tide would be one of the favorites to win the national championship, they’d often be odds-on to win the SEC and their Over/Under would be the highest in the country.

For most of Saban’s tenure, Alabama would meet or surpass the lofty expectations that were set ahead of each campaign. 

The Crimson Tide won six national championships and nine SEC titles during Saban’s 17-year tenure, and they only lost more than one conference game in four of those seasons.

The stability under Saban made Alabama one of the safest teams to project in all of college football. The range of outcomes was minimal.

Those days appear to be over, and not just because Saban is no longer in charge of the Crimson Tide, but also because the entire landscape of college football has changed.

Realignment, the expanded Playoff and the outlandish growth of NIL have leveled the playing field at the top of college football, making it hard for any program to maintain its spot at the top of the food chain.

Alabama, in its second year under head coach Kalen DeBoer, is the seventh-favorite (12/1) to win the national championship at BetMGM, putting the Tide behind Texas, Ohio State, Georgia, Oregon, Penn State, and Clemson.

Alabama was 15/1 to win the national championship ahead of 2024, which means this will likely be the first time in 15 years that the Crimson Tide enters back-to-back seasons with outright odds in the double digits.


Alabama head coach Kalen DeBoer at practice.
Alabama head coach Kalen DeBoer at practice. AP

The betting market was largely proven right last year when it came to Alabama. DeBoer’s first season got off to a flawless start, culminating in a 41-34 win over Georgia to get to 4-0, but the following week saw the Crimson Tide lose to Vanderbilt for the first time since 1984. 

That result set the tone for the rest of an inconsistent season for the Crimson Tide, one that ended with a loss to Michigan in the ReliaQuest Bowl. 

Given how his first season in Tuscaloosa went, it’s no surprise that everybody seems to be lukewarm on ‘Bama in DeBoer’s second season.

The AP preseason poll won’t come out for a few weeks, but Alabama will likely be sitting right around fifth behind Texas, Ohio State, Georgia, and perhaps Penn State and/or Oregon. 


Betting on College Football?


That would match the betting market and public sentiment, as the college football world needs to be convinced that DeBoer is the man for this job.

While the winds of uncertainty that are swirling around DeBoer may seem like reasons for bettors to abandon ship, they’re also presenting a rare opportunity to buy low on ‘Bama in a season that sets up quite well for them on paper.

Aside from DeBoer, the biggest question mark for Alabama will be under center, where dual-threat QB Ty Simpson is the projected starter. 


Ryan Williams was a standout performer as a freshman in 2024.
Ryan Williams was a standout performer as a freshman in 2024. AP

Simpson does not have much experience running the show at Alabama, but he’s walking into a terrific situation. The offensive line should be among the best in the country, he’s got an experienced backfield to ride with him and his wide receiver corps could be historically good, with Ryan Williams leading the way. 

The defense also grades out splendidly, which should mean that Simpson – or whoever wins the job – won’t need to win many games on his own. 

If you strip out the noise and size up Alabama based on the talent on its roster, you could argue that this is one of the two best teams in the country right now.

In fact, Bill Connelly’s SP+ rankings have the Tide ranked second behind Ohio State.

Connelly’s numbers back up the notion that there are just two (albeit important ones) questions for the Tide to answer going into the season.

For any other team, this kind of setup would lead to a bullish market. 

But for Alabama, two question marks are two more than we’re used to, and that has caused the market to sour on the Tide.


Why Trust New York Post Betting

Michael Leboff is a long-suffering Islanders fan, but a long-profiting sports bettor with 10 years of experience in the gambling industry. He loves using game theory to help punters win bracket pools, find long shots, and learn how to beat the market in mainstream and niche sports.



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