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University of Akron fires women's soccer head coach after investigation of players' physical …

AKRON, Ohio – The University of Akron has fired its women’s soccer head coach following an investigation by its Human Resources department into the mental health and physical safety of players. Jen Simonetti was placed on paid administrative leave on Feb. 14, according to records obtained by cleveland.com and The Plain Dealer. Simonetti, who was […]

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University of Akron fires women's soccer head coach after investigation of players' physical ...

AKRON, Ohio – The University of Akron has fired its women’s soccer head coach following an investigation by its Human Resources department into the mental health and physical safety of players.

Jen Simonetti was placed on paid administrative leave on Feb. 14, according to records obtained by cleveland.com and The Plain Dealer. Simonetti, who was hired before the 2022 season, received a termination letter on May 13.

The investigation findings were detailed in an April 1 report that included complaints against Simonetti dating back to 2023. The investigation included interviews with more than two dozen people, including current players, former players, University of Akron athletic department staff members, UA strength and conditioning coaches, Akron Children’s Hospital athletic training staff members, assistant coaches and Simonetti herself.

In its investigatory findings, the university said that while it received multiple anonymous communications regarding the women’s soccer program prior to Feb. 14, 2025, its ability to respond was limited because the concerns were shared anonymously. After the university received concerns from Akron Children’s Hospital staff and multiple reports via a UA hotline, the university began the formal investigation process, according to the report.

Physical safety of players

One instance cited in the report was pushback an Akron Children’s Hospital athletic trainer said they received regarding a student athlete with a suspected concussion who was sent to the emergency department due to unequal pupils. Coach Simonetti reportedly asked the staff member “if that was really necessary,” to which the staff member replied, “do you understand this is my job–my livelihood–I have a license to protect–not releasing if not OK.”

In another instance detailed in the report, an Akron Children’s Hospital athletic trainer said there was an interaction between Simonetti and an athlete during which Simonetti told her she was having shin pain because she was “unfit.” The athlete was later diagnosed with a black line, a dark line seen on an X-ray that suggests a high-risk stress fracture, often associated with delayed healing and potentially requiring more aggressive treatment.

In her response, Simonetti said that the women’s soccer team has had four athletic trainers since she was hired in July of 2022. She also said the current strength and conditioning coach for soccer is “good, but she knows nothing about soccer.” Simonetti also said that she asks athletes for clarity when it comes to injuries because there is “miscommunications,” which can impact rehab and healing.

Anonymous letters and emails included in the report suggest Simonetti puts pressure on student athletes to return to play too early when they are hurt, which results in them getting re-injured. Multiple statements in the letters and emails cited student athletes getting hurt because of overuse and poor treatment of injuries. In one letter, a parent said “the girls practice and play hurt because they fear what Jen will do.”

Degrading/disrespectful language

During the investigation, current and former athletes were asked if they had ever witnessed Simonetti using degrading or disrespectful language with athletes or training staff. Ten of the athletes interviewed said that they had, four athletes said they had not and three athletes said that they hadn’t directly, but they have heard it from other members of the team.

The report includes an interview with a former athlete who said the coach told her certain students were “selfish brats” and that she shouldn’t hang around them. The former athlete explained she felt she needed to record her one-on-one meeting with the coach for her “own safety” due to the coach saying one thing in meetings and another in public.

In her response, Simonetti said she talks about the team in terms of the top 10%, middle 80% and bottom 10%, and she challenges athletes to surround themselves with those who are going to push them to be better players.

Sharing personal information

According to the investigation, 10 of the 16 athletes interviewed said the team culture is “great” among athletes but “lacking” among coaching staff. Several athletes said they don’t feel like what they talk about with Simonetti remains confidential and that she uses what they share against them. When 17 current and former athletes were asked if they were asked to share personal information with Simonetti that they felt was not in line with what a coach would need to know, 10 said yes.

In her response, Simonetti said personal information shared with her was not shared with other teammates. She also said there are times when a player may need more help to meet their goals, so it’s important to understand what is going on with them that could affect their performance.

The investigation concluded that Simonetti:

“Did not abide by the highest standards of personal conduct. While the coach reports that her standards are high and her goal is to grow student athletes in their personal lives and as student athletes, her methods seem contrary to the needs of her current athletes. Her integrity is in question regarding multiple reports of personal information shared by athletes that were then used against them or shared with others without permission. There were a significant number of examples given by student athletes and training professionals indicating that Coach Simonetti frequently criticized student athletes when injured. It would reason that if Coach Simonetti was fair, sympathetic, and protective, student athletes would not report being afraid to talk to coach about their injuries and would feel comfortable stating that they could not play due to pain. It is also reasonable that a coach would ask additional questions to players and medical staff for clarification purposes. However, it does appear that Coach Simonetti has expressed open hostility to the professionals from Akron Children’s Hospital when they don’t answer in the manner she expects.”

Before Akron, Simonetti was the head coach at Case Western Reserve University dating back to 2019. She played as a defender at the University of Dayton and earned NSCAA All-America third team status in 2004 as a senior.

The University of Akron named Maggie Kuhn as head coach. Kuhn had been an assistant women’s soccer coach with the Zips for four years. She was previously the head coach at Lock Haven University, according to her biography on the University of Akron’s website.

Want more Akron news? Sign up for cleveland.com’s Rubber City Update, an email newsletter delivered at 5:30 a.m. Wednesdays.

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Sports psychiatrist explains effect of heckling following incident involving Ketel Marte

PHOENIX (AZFamily) — Earlier this week, Arizona Diamondbacks star Ketel Marte was brought to tears by a heckler who reportedly made comments about his late mother during the team’s game against the Chicago White Sox. According to MLB.com, the spectator made a derogatory remark about Marte’s mother, who passed away in a car accident in […]

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Sports psychiatrist explains effect of heckling following incident involving Ketel Marte

PHOENIX (AZFamily) — Earlier this week, Arizona Diamondbacks star Ketel Marte was brought to tears by a heckler who reportedly made comments about his late mother during the team’s game against the Chicago White Sox.

According to MLB.com, the spectator made a derogatory remark about Marte’s mother, who passed away in a car accident in 2017.

Arizona’s Family spoke to sports psychiatrist Brook Choulet, M.D., about the effects inappropriate comments have on athletes’ mental health. She says this incident is a reminder that athletes are people, too, while viewers may sometimes see them just as performers.

“Because we’re watching them on TV, you forget and you lose touch that they go through a lot of the same things that we go through, stress, anxiety, family challenges. So to see this is such a human display of that person behind the sport,” she said.

D-backs manager Torey Lovullo consoled Marte after the fans’ outburst. Choulet explained this culture shift between coaches and players in today’s game versus years past.

“Before, it’s like suck it up, you know, just move on, focus on next play mentality, and now we’re really seeing coaches treating them as humans, too, beyond their sport,” she explained. “That’s the biggest thing I talk to athletes about is their identity is often tied to their sport. So when we can separate that athlete from the sport and see them and treat them as a person, I love to see that.”

Following the incident, many have shown support for the Diamondbacks and Marte, including the White Sox displaying a sign that read, “Baseball is family. The White Sox community supports Ketel Marte.”

Officials confirmed the heckler was banned from all Major League Baseball stadiums.

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California violated Title IX in transgender athlete clash, Education Department says

WASHINGTON — The Trump administration has found that the California Department of Education and the state’s high school sports federation violated civil rights law by allowing transgender girls to compete on girls sports teams. The federal Education Department announced the finding Wednesday and proposed a resolution that would require California to bar transgender women from women’s sports and strip […]

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California violated Title IX in transgender athlete clash, Education Department says

WASHINGTON — The Trump administration has found that the California Department of Education and the state’s high school sports federation violated civil rights law by allowing transgender girls to compete on girls sports teams.

The federal Education Department announced the finding Wednesday and proposed a resolution that would require California to bar transgender women from women’s sports and strip transgender athletes of records, titles and awards. It’s the latest escalation in the Republican administration’s effort to bar transgender athletes from women’s sports teams nationwide.

If California rejects the proposal, the Education Department could move to terminate the state’s federal education funding.

“The Trump Administration will relentlessly enforce Title IX protections for women and girls, and our findings today make clear that California has failed to adhere to its obligations under federal law,” Education Secretary Linda McMahon said. “The state must swiftly come into compliance with Title IX or face the consequences that follow.”

Title IX is a 1972 law forbidding sex discrimination based in education.

California education and sports officials did not immediately respond to requests for comment Wednesday.

Federal officials opened an investigation into the California Interscholastic Federation in February after the organization said it would abide by a state law allowing athletes to compete on teams consistent with their gender identity. That followed an executive order signed by President Donald Trump that was intended to ban transgender athletes from participating in girls and women’s sports.

In April, McMahon’s department opened an investigation into the California Department of Education over the same issue.

Both investigations concluded that state policies violated Title IX. The administration has been invoking the law in its campaign against transgender athletes, launching scores of investigations into schools, colleges and states. It’s a reversal from the Biden administration, which attempted to expand Title IX to provide protections for transgender students. A federal judge struck down the expansion before Trump took office in January.

The administration’s proposed resolution would require California to notify schools that transgender athletes should be barred from girls athletic teams and that all schools must “adopt biology-based definitions of the words ‘male’ and ‘female.’ ” The state also would have to notify schools that any conflicting interpretation of state law would be considered a violation of Title IX.

Athletes who lost awards, titles or records to transgender athletes would have their honors restored under the proposal, and the state would be required to send personal apology letters to those athletes.

A similar resolution was offered to Maine’s education agency in a separate clash with the administration over transgender athletes. Maine rejected the proposal in April, prompting a Justice Department lawsuit seeking to terminate the state’s federal education funding.

Under federal guidelines, California’s education office and the sports federation have 10 days to come into compliance or risk enforcement action.

The federation separately tested a pilot policy at a state track meet in May, allowing one extra competitor in three events featuring high school junior AB Hernandez, who is transgender. The organization announced the change after Trump took to social medial to criticize Hernandez’s participation. The Justice Department said it would investigate Hernandez’s district and the state to determine whether Title IX was being violated.

The Associated Press’ education coverage receives financial support from multiple private foundations. AP is solely responsible for all content. Find AP’s standards for working with philanthropies, a list of supporters and funded coverage areas at AP.org.



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Florida assault survivor shares hope for change with new mental health law

Governor Ron DeSantis signed Senate Bill 168, the Tristin Murphy Act to tackle mental health issues and prevent crime. JACKSONVILLE, Fla. — A new law signed today by governor Ron Desantis is aimed at tackling mental health issues and preventing crime. Senate Bill 168, also known as the Tristin Murphy Act, will provide counties with […]

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Florida assault survivor shares hope for change with new mental health law

Governor Ron DeSantis signed Senate Bill 168, the Tristin Murphy Act to tackle mental health issues and prevent crime.

JACKSONVILLE, Fla. — A new law signed today by governor Ron Desantis is aimed at tackling mental health issues and preventing crime.

Senate Bill 168, also known as the Tristin Murphy Act, will provide counties with the resources to create mental health programs for certain offenders, instead of sending them straight to jail. 

First Coast News first introduced you to a woman, who is asking to not be identified for safety reasons, back in May.

“It’s one of those scenarios that you never think would happen to you,” she said.

She and her friend were attacked by a man while walking along the Southbank Riverwalk near the friendship fountain.

The man was arrested and police identified him as Talmadge Billingslea Jr. He has a long history of stalking, violence and making racially motivated statements.

The women shared their story in hopes of getting Billingslea and other offenders help.

“He needs mental help and until you solve the base problem, jail is not going to do anything. It doesn’t seem like a solution to me,” the woman said.

Florida lawmakers are now trying to solve this problem.

On Wednesday, the Governor signed Senate bill 168, the Tristin Murphy Act, which allows counties to establish misdemeanor mental health programs and pretrial felony programs to prevent people who are mentally ill from being incarcerated.

“We don’t think putting them in jail is always going to fix those problems, and people need to be held accountable, but you also need to provide support that will address the problem,” said Governor Desantis.

The bill will also require emergency responder training and mental health evaluations for people with a history of incompetency before they are released on probation and return to society.

“I’m hoping that the bill helps them get the help they need and gets off the streets eventually and maybe into getting a job and living on their own. It’s a start and I think that’s great,” said one victim. 

Talmadge Billingslea Jr. is still behind bars with a bond set at $19,000.

He makes his next court appearance on July 8.

RELATED: ‘Is it going to take murder?’: Two Jacksonville women attacked in the middle of the day

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McDonald named volleyball assistant coach

Story Links SLIPPERY ROCK, Pa. – Raquel McDonald will join the Slippery Rock University volleyball program as an assistant coach, head coach Dylan Lasher announced Wednesday. “We’re very excited to have Raquel join our program,” said Lasher. “She will bring a great deal of energy, work ethic and commitment to SRU. Raquel’s passion, successful playing career […]

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SLIPPERY ROCK, Pa. – Raquel McDonald will join the Slippery Rock University volleyball program as an assistant coach, head coach Dylan Lasher announced Wednesday.
 
“We’re very excited to have Raquel join our program,” said Lasher. “She will bring a great deal of energy, work ethic and commitment to SRU. Raquel’s passion, successful playing career and coaching ability will be extremely beneficial to our players, staff and community.”
 
McDonald comes to The Rock after spending two successful seasons on Lasher’s staff at Thiel College.
 
“I’m looking forward to starting this new chapter at Slippery Rock University and am excited for the opportunity to grow, contribute, face challenges and work alongside a great team,” said McDonald. “Let’s get to work!”
 
During her time at Thiel, McDonald assisted in all facets of the volleyball program and helped Lasher turn around the Tomcats’ women’s team that after going just 3-22 in 2023 compiled an impressive 17-9 record in 2024.
 
The 2024 season not only marked the second-highest victory total inside the Thiel women’s program since 2012, The 14-win improvement from 2023 to 2024 was the second-best year-to-year improvement among all 419 NCAA Division III women’s volleyball programs last fall.
 
McDonald was also an assistant for the Thiel men’s program which concluded its 2025 season with a 22-7 record that included a perfect 12-0 showing in the Presidents’ Athletic Conference, a PAC Tournament championship and an NCAA Tournament berth.
 
Prior to embarking on her coaching career, McDonald was a standout middle blocker for Thiel from 2019-22. Over 95 career matches, McDonald totaled 208 blocks, 660 kills and a .247 attack percentage while being named an All-PAC honoree on three occasions in addition to earning a spot on the College Sports Communicators Academic All-America Team as a senior.
 
McDonald, who ranks second in Tomcat program history in career attack percentage and ninth in total blocks, graduated from Thiel with her bachelor’s in cognitive psychology, sociology and criminal justice while minoring in Spanish. She is currently finishing her master’s in special education from SRU. 

Outside of volleyball, McDonald has served as a Behavioral Health Technician at George Junior Republic, taught Spanish at Kennedy Catholic High School and was the Director of Student Services at the William Penn Academy.
 
A native of Syracuse, New York, McDonald officially began her new role at SRU this week.
 
The Slippery Rock volleyball team opens its 2025 season 3 p.m. Sept. 3 against Elizabeth City State University at the Fairmont State Classic.

To stay up to date with all that happens at The Rock, follow our official Athletic Communication accounts on ‘X’ (formerly Twitter, @Rock_Athletics), Facebook (RockAthletics) and Instagram (RockAthletics).

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NCAA to consider allowing athletes, staff to bet on professional sports

The NCAA Division I Council will consider a proposal to allow athletes and staff to wager on professional sports, the organization announced Tuesday. Interestingly, the change would only go into effect if Division II and Division III also vote to lift their prohibitions on professional sports gambling, which will take place next month. All rules regarding […]

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NCAA to consider allowing athletes, staff to bet on professional sports

The NCAA Division I Council will consider a proposal to allow athletes and staff to wager on professional sports, the organization announced Tuesday. Interestingly, the change would only go into effect if Division II and Division III also vote to lift their prohibitions on professional sports gambling, which will take place next month. All rules regarding betting on college sports will remain in place.

The reasons for this possible rules change are several, all of them interesting:

— There’s a general fatigue around enforcing gambling rules considering how wide-spread sports betting has become in American culture ever since the Supreme Court overturned the federal ban on sports wagering in 2018. Thirty-nine states now allow sports betting, and it’s become a common pastime among young people (more on this below), and generally there’s a feeling that the NCAA and its members are wasting their time prosecuting college golfers for putting $100 worth of action on a Monday Night Football game.

“NCAA rules prohibiting sports betting at all levels were written and adopted at a time when sports gambling was largely illegal nationwide,” NCAA DI Council chairman and Illinois AD Josh Whitman said.

— There’s also a feeling that punishing sports betting may actually be making a serious problem worse. As Pat Forde wrote for Sports Illustrated earlier this week:

Toward that end, campus athletic mental-health practitioners have been given more information to treat problem gambling in a manner similar to other addictive behaviors. The hope is that gambling addicts would be more willing to admit a wagering problem and seek help if they weren’t afraid of losing eligibility for betting on pro sports.

“One of the big things that’s not really being tracked is gambling as a mental-health issue,” one source says. “We should be helping people instead of whacking them with ineligibility.”

“Throughout our discussions, the council has remained focused on student-athlete wellness and educating student-athletes about the risks and potentially harmful impacts of betting,” Whitman said.

In September, Fairleigh Dickinson University published a survey that found 10 percent of young men exhibited behavior consistent with a gambling addiction, more than three times the national average. “By meeting student-athletes where they are, schools may be more effective at preventing, identifying and supporting student-athletes with problematic gambling behaviors. Regardless of the change, schools are encouraged to use the many sports betting resources already available,” NCAA chief medical officer Dr. Deena Casiero said.

— Unspoken by the NCAA, but money is also undoubtedly a factor. Every athletics department in the country is looking for new revenue streams right now, and the gambling industry has become an attractive option for many. Last week, Iowa State announced that Cyclone Sports Properties and its We Will Collective have reached a sponsorship agreement with Elite Casino Resorts. This is the same Iowa State (along with Iowa) that found itself in a major gambling scandal just two years ago. (Five current or former Cyclones football staffers collectively wagered more than $100,000 across 6,200 bets, and routinely wagered on Iowa State men’s and women’s basketball games — which would still be a violation of NCAA rules.)

Allowing their staff and players to bet on professional sports might make athletics departments feel less gross about taking a casino’s money.

— Sparked by the Iowa/Iowa State scandal, the NCAA reviewed its gambling policies and found they were more restrictive than other major sports organizations of similar stature.

— However, Forde reports that it’s not a guarantee that the ban will be lifted. Opponents have made the slippery-slope argument against lifting the prohibition, reasoning that normalizing betting on pro sports will make it more likely that staffers and athletes will then bet on college sports.

To that end, the NCAA has made it a major priority to lobby against allowing sports books to create prop bets around college athletes. In March, the NCAA touted that 18 states have banned athlete prop bets while launching its Don’t Be a Loser campaign in conjunction with the opening of the Division I basketball tournament.

NCAA president Charlie Baker says allowing prop bets risks the safety of both the athletes themselves and the integrity of the competitions. 

“Go sit behind the bench at one of these conference tournaments and listen to the bettors, yell and scream at these kids about their performance,” Baker said in March. “‘You need to do better. I’m losing money on you.’ Or the stuff that shows up online which we track in our tournaments, which is way more vicious and brutal than that. It’s really, this is a problem.”

So, one faction of the D1 Council is uncomfortable with of knocking down the wall between the NCAA and such a risky activity like gambling. 

“It’s been hotly debated,” one source told Forde. “This is not a slam dunk.”

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Amber Glenn discusses mental health journey on TODAY

Two-time U.S. figure skating champion Amber Glenn reflected on her mental health journey, starting with briefly stepping away from the sport in late 2015, in a TODAY interview that aired Tuesday. “I was in a very dark place,” Glenn said, referring to 2015 and noting she was diagnosed with anxiety, depression and an eating disorder. […]

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Amber Glenn discusses mental health journey on TODAY

Two-time U.S. figure skating champion Amber Glenn reflected on her mental health journey, starting with briefly stepping away from the sport in late 2015, in a TODAY interview that aired Tuesday.

“I was in a very dark place,” Glenn said, referring to 2015 and noting she was diagnosed with anxiety, depression and an eating disorder. “One of my friends contacted one of my parents, and I sought help. I’m so grateful for that.”

Glenn turned 16 years old during that time. She reflected for months and did step back on the ice.

“I had no idea (if I would go back to figure skating),” Glenn told TODAY. “I knew that there was no way I could go back to the way I was doing things. And eventually I got to a place where I was doing things in a healthy way, and I could speak about my struggles.”

In March 2016, while still on a break from competition, Glenn attended the World Championships women’s free skate in Boston.

She watched as American Ashley Wagner performed brilliantly, moving up from fourth place after the short program to earn a silver medal.

It was part inspiring and also part discouraging. Glenn didn’t believe at the time that she could ever reach that level.

“Growing up, I saw the top skaters as untouchable and as these people who didn’t have the same struggles that I was having at that age,” she said. “Eventually, I got a peek behind the curtain, and they were struggling in silence. After seeing that, I realized that it was more important for me to be honest about my journey than to try and act like everything was perfect.”

Eight years after that time away, Glenn won her first senior U.S. title in 2024, then repeated as champion this past January.

She also won this past December’s Grand Prix Final, the second-most prestigious annual international event after the World Championships.

Glenn is bidding to make the three-woman team for the 2026 Milan Cortina Olympics, which will be decided by a committee after this upcoming January’s U.S. Championships.

At 26, she can become the oldest U.S. women’s singles skater to compete in an Olympics in 98 years.

“Part of me is still in disbelief,” Glenn told TODAY. “I need to trust that I put in the work to be here and that I do deserve it.”

FSKATE-FRA

Amber Glenn reflected on long-ago memories of Jason Brown and Ashley Wagner, plus recent ones with a local school class.

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