College Sports
University of New Haven Accepts Northeast Conference Membership Invite
Story Links Bridgewater, NJ — The University of New Haven has accepted a full membership invitation from the Northeast Conference (NEC) Council of Presidents and will officially join the league on July 1, 2025. The announcement was made today by NEC Commissioner Noreen Morris and University of New Haven President Jens Frederiksen, […]

Bridgewater, NJ — The University of New Haven has accepted a full membership invitation from the Northeast Conference (NEC) Council of Presidents and will officially join the league on July 1, 2025. The announcement was made today by NEC Commissioner Noreen Morris and University of New Haven President Jens Frederiksen, Ph.D.
Located on Connecticut’s southern coast, New Haven will begin its transition to NCAA Division I and the NEC during the 2025-26 academic year. The Chargers will attain full Division I membership in 2028-29 following the NCAA-mandated reclassification period.
“We are thrilled to welcome the University of New Haven to the Northeast Conference family,” said NEC Commissioner Noreen Morris. “Making the move to Division I is a bold step, and we’re honored that New Haven chose to take that step with us. From the start, it was clear that they share our values – putting academics, competitive excellence and the student-athlete experience at the forefront. I want to thank President Jens Frederiksen and Athletic Director Devin Crosby for their thoughtful leadership throughout this process. I’m also grateful to the NEC Council of Presidents for their support and shared vision as we continue to shape the future of the conference. We’re excited to partner with the Chargers as they make their mark in Division I and help elevate the NEC.”
Beginning with the 2025-26 academic year, New Haven is set to become the NEC’s tenth full-time member. The Chargers will join NEC charter members Fairleigh Dickinson University, Long Island University, Saint Francis University and Wagner College, along with Central Connecticut State University (joined in 1997), Stonehill College (2022), Le Moyne College (2023), Chicago State University (2024) and Mercyhurst University (2024).
A member of the Northeast-10 (NE10) Conference since 2008, New Haven sponsors 20 varsity programs, 19 of which align with NEC sponsored sports. The Chargers field teams in baseball, men’s and women’s basketball, men’s and women’s cross country, field hockey, football, men’s and women’s golf, women’s lacrosse, men’s and women’s soccer, softball, women’s tennis, men’s and women’s track & field (indoor and outdoor) and women’s volleyball. The Chargers also sponsor women’s rugby.
New Haven will be integrated into NEC athletic schedules beginning with the 2025-26 academic year, with the exception of football. The timing of New Haven football’s addition to the conference schedule is still to be determined.
During its reclassification, the Chargers will immediately be able to participate in NEC Championships in NCAA non-automatic qualifier sports: cross country, indoor track and field, and outdoor track and field. New Haven athletic programs will gain full NEC Championship access as early as the 2026-27 academic year, but no later than 2027-28. Per conference policy, no more than two schools undergoing reclassification may have full championship access at the same time. As the third NEC member currently in transition, New Haven’s timeline is contingent on when the others complete their process. The Chargers will become eligible for NCAA Championship competition in 2028-29, upon successful completion of their reclassification period.
“We are thrilled about this opportunity for the University of New Haven,” said President Frederiksen. “Athletics has been and continues to be a vital driver of enrollment and brand recognition for the University. This move to the Northeast Conference and Division I positions the University for an exciting future – one consistent with the overall strategic focus on academic, professional and global return on investment.”
Devin Crosby, New Haven’s Director of Intercollegiate Athletics, shared his excitement about the university’s transition to Division I and its new partnership with the NEC.
“This is about positioning ourselves at the highest level,” said Crosby. “The University of New Haven’s momentum under President Frederiksen’s leadership aligns naturally with our transition to NCAA Division I and the Northeast Conference. The Blue & Gold deserve this.”
The University of New Haven is a private institution founded in 1920 on the campus of Yale University.
Nationally recognized by The Princeton Review and U.S. News & World Report, New Haven offers more than 105 majors and has earned acclaim for academic excellence across a wide range of disciplines. Its forensic science program has been ranked No. 1 in the country, and the University also holds top national rankings in homeland security, law enforcement and firefighting. The University’s M.S. in Sports Management ranks among the top 10 globally and is No. 1 worldwide for graduate outcomes. New Haven also offers the only CAHME-accredited Master of Healthcare Administration program located between New York City and Boston.
New Haven boasts a proud athletic tradition, producing a National League Cy Young Award winner, a Harlon Hill Trophy recipient and a five-time NCAA track and field champion. The Chargers have enjoyed national success across multiple sports: women’s basketball captured the national championship in 1987, men’s basketball reached the NCAA quarterfinals in 2023 and women’s volleyball has made 37 NCAA Tournament appearances. On the gridiron, New Haven has ranked among the best in Division II and is one of only five football programs – and the only private school – to earn an NCAA playoff bid in each of the past four seasons. Since 2009, the Chargers have captured six conference football titles and play on a distinctive blue-and-gold field at DellaCamera Stadium, widely regarded as one of the most unique venues in Connecticut.
In 2023, the University unveiled the Peterson Performance Center, a state-of-the-art facility featuring a 7,000 square foot weight room, a 60-yard turf training area, a 1,500 square foot sports medicine center, a 2,500 square foot football locker room and a nutrition station overseen by a registered dietitian. Plans are also underway for a major renovation of the Jeffery P. Hazell Athletics Center, with enhancements including upgraded locker rooms, expanded seating and viewing areas, additional team meeting space and coaches’ offices, and a reimagined lobby to honor Charger legends and the program’s championship legacy.
For media inquiries, please contact Carolyn Meyer (University of New Haven Media Relations Manager) at CMeyer@newhaven.edu or Ron Ratner (NEC Senior Associate Commissioner) at rratner@northeastconference.org.
About the Northeast Conference
Now in its 44th season, the Northeast Conference is an NCAA Division I collegiate athletic association consisting of nine institutions of higher learning located throughout six states. Media coverage of the NEC extends to a number of the largest markets in the United States including New York (#1), Chicago (#3), Boston (#8). Hartford/New Haven (#32) and Syracuse (#87). Founded in 1981 as the basketball-only ECAC Metro Conference, the NEC has grown to sponsor 25 championship sports for men and women and now enjoys automatic access to 16 different NCAA Championships. NEC full member institutions include Central Connecticut, Chicago State, FDU, Le Moyne, LIU, Mercyhurst, Saint Francis U, Stonehill and Wagner. For more information on the NEC, visit the league’s official website (www.northeastconference.org) and digital network (www.necfrontrow.com), or follow the league on Twitter, Facebook, YouTube, Instagram and TikTok, all @NECsports.
About the University of New Haven
The University of New Haven, founded in 1920, is a private university whose mission is to prepare students to excel and lead purposeful and fulfilling lives in a global society. The university offers more than 150 undergraduate and graduate programs and has been recognized for academic excellence, nationally and internationally. In addition to its main campus in West Haven, the university has campuses in Orange, Conn., and Tuscany, Italy. For more information about the University of New Haven, visit www.newhaven.edu.
College Sports
House Settlement Approved: A New Era for College Athletics
Dear UConn Nation, In June 2020, a lawsuit was filed by a former college swimmer named Grant House, seeking damages for student-athletes who were unable to earn money from their name, image and likeness (NIL). This lawsuit and other similar cases were ultimately consolidated into what has been popularly referred to as the House vs. NCAA settlement. Now, five years […]

Dear UConn Nation,
In June 2020, a lawsuit was filed by a former college swimmer named Grant House, seeking damages for student-athletes who were unable to earn money from their name, image and likeness (NIL). This lawsuit and other similar cases were ultimately consolidated into what has been popularly referred to as the House vs. NCAA settlement. Now, five years later, U.S. District Judge Claudia Wilken has just granted final approval of the historic settlement, which will reshape college athletics through the introduction of revenue sharing with student-athletes starting on July 1.
As you know from my prior communications, all of us at UConn have been closely monitoring the legal proceedings and making plans for this eventuality. Revenue sharing represents a necessary and significant financial investment and, as such, we have been meeting regularly to explore new and enhanced revenue streams in order to identify funding sources. From bolstering ticket sales to securing additional corporate sponsorships to elevating media rights, we have been analyzing every opportunity to enhance departmental income, while minimizing or postponing expenditures that don’t carry an associated return. We are also studying possible naming rights initiatives, more robust concession areas at our facilities, and merchandising/apparel sales expansion in the market. Maximizing revenues in the new world order will be a paramount priority.
The other critical element in our revenue generation efforts, which I have shared with our loyal supporters through my emails, in person at games and through regular conversations, is private fundraising. The House settlement permits athletic departments to share up to $20.5 million annually with their student-athletes. This year, we intend to share $18 million, with the near-term goal of being fully funded. It is only with the support of our loyal fans that we will be able to thrive in this evolving landscape, as success in revenue sharing directly translates to success on the fields of competition.
As I have conveyed previously, we need to double our overall donor participation in terms of Husky Athletic Fund members and contributions, in order to continue competing at the highest level. If we cherish the joy that is derived from conference, regional and national championships, along with bowl wins, we need to lock arms and travel this road together. The college athletics game has changed, but our focus on greatness doesn’t have to.
For those who already give so generously, we appreciate you more than you know. Please join us in recruiting more fans who understand the urgency and will make a gift to the Fight On Fund. With your help, we will grow our base of support, produce more winners, and share the ongoing pride in our achievements.
Thank you for your dedication to UConn Athletics and our student-athletes. Go Huskies!
Sincerely,
David Benedict
Director of Athletics
College Sports
Fisher Officially Named Head Coach at Lindenwood : College Hockey News
June 9, 2025 PRINT Leaves Penn State After 13 Years CHN Staff Report Related Articles Keith Fisher Lindenwood Penn State ST. CHARLES, Mo. Lindenwood officially named Keith Fisher its new head coach today. It comes one week after previous coach Bill Muckalt left to take the job at Michigan Tech. Lindenwood is going into […]

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Leaves Penn State After 13 Years
CHN Staff Report

ST. CHARLES, Mo. Lindenwood officially named Keith Fisher its new head coach today. It comes one week after previous coach Bill Muckalt left to take the job at Michigan Tech.
Lindenwood is going into its fourth season as a Division I NCAA program. Its first two years were led by Rick Zombo, and Muckalt was at the helm for one.
Fisher comes to Lindenwood after a lengthy stint as assistant coach at Penn State, which made its first Frozen Four this past season.
“It is an exciting time to be a Lion, and I look forward to building the program into a national contender. I can’t wait to get started,” Fisher said.
Overall, Fisher has over 25 years of coaching experience between collegiate and junior hockey.
“From the outset of our search, it was essential to find a leader who could elevate our program to the next level,” Lindenwood athletic director Jason Coomer said. “Coach Fisher has been immersed in winning cultures throughout his career and has consistently helped young men grow and compete at the highest levels of the game.”
During his time at Penn State, the Nittany Lions made four NCAA Tournaments (2017, 2018, 2023 and 2025) and won a pair of Big Ten postseason championships (2017, 2020).
“While Coach Fisher’s recent run to the Frozen Four speaks volumes, it’s his overall body of work that truly sets him apart,” Coomer said. “He is widely respected across the college hockey landscape, and we couldn’t be more excited to have him behind the bench, guiding and developing our young men.”
Fisher was named the 2020 Terry Flannagan Award winner, honoring the nation’s top assistant and their career body of work. In total, Fisher has coached three Big Ten Player of the Year winners with two coming on the defensive side, 12 All-Conference performers, a pair of All-Americans, and three NHL players while at Penn State.
Fisher spent 2005-11 on the staff at Princeton. With the Tigers, he helped lead the team to a pair of NCAA Tournament berths (2008, 2009) and the 2008 ECAC and Ivy League Championships. When Princeton head coach Guy Gadowsky accepted the job at Penn State, Fisher came along with him,
“Today Lindenwood hired an excellent coach and an even better person,” Gadowsky said. “Coach Fisher has been a great friend and a huge part of the success of the hockey programs at Penn State and Princeton. Penn State Hockey, and me personally, will really miss Fish but we all look forward to seeing him build the Lindenwood hockey program with great integrity — just like him.”
Fisher spent five years with the USHL’s Omaha Lancers’ coaching staff, helping the team to the Clark Cup championship in 2001. His team also was crowned the Anderson Cup regular-season champions in both 2002 and 2005.
In Omaha, he served as the team’s recruiting coordinator and academic advisor, in addition to other responsibilities of on-ice coaching, video breakdown and game analysis.
Fisher began his career at St. Cloud State, serving as an undergraduate assistant coach for two seasons.
A graduate of St. Cloud State, Fisher has a bachelor’s degree in communications. Prior to coaching, Fisher played two seasons at Hibbing Community College and participated in the NJCAA National Tournament.
College Sports
Two Minnesotans help lead Oklahoma Sooners to 7th NCAA women’s gymnastics title
It was a rookie year to remember for Lily Pederson and Elle Mueller on the University of Oklahoma women’s gymnastics team. The freshmen helped lead the Sooners to their seventh NCAA title back in April. “I knew it could be achievable, but I didn’t know freshman year, right out of the gate,” Mueller said. “Being […]

It was a rookie year to remember for Lily Pederson and Elle Mueller on the University of Oklahoma women’s gymnastics team. The freshmen helped lead the Sooners to their seventh NCAA title back in April.
“I knew it could be achievable, but I didn’t know freshman year, right out of the gate,” Mueller said.
“Being able to have two people from the same state, and two friends being able to go to the same college, and accomplish both of our dreams and goals, it’s amazing,” Pederson said.
Pederson grew up competing for Flips Gymnastics in White Bear Lake, Minnesota, and Mueller at Twin City Twisters in Champlin, Minnesota. The two often competed against each other as kids.
Ali Gradischer / Getty Images
“So literally we’ve known each other since we were so young, to now we’re teammates at OU, so now it’s so cool that both of us from Minnesota are now at the number one college,” Pederson said.
Now, these northerners are creating names for themselves in the Southeastern Conference (SEC).
“Yeah, we’re really proud. I mean, we get made fun of for our accents sometimes, but it’s fine, it’s totally fine,” Pederson said, laughing.
It was a rare experience for two freshmen to contribute in big ways at the Division I NCAA Nationals. Mueller competed on the floor, earning a 9.90, and again on the vault, earning a 9.98 for the Sooners.
“I wasn’t competing for myself anymore, I was competing for my team because we all wanted to win that national championship,” Mueller said.
Pederson competed on the beam, vault and bars at nationals. She rebounded from a fall on the beam in the semifinals in a huge way, earning a 9.9375 after nailing her dismount when it mattered most.
Aric Becker/ISI Photos / Getty Images
“On day two, I completed the best beam routine I’ve had in my life. I had the best score I’ve ever had,” Pederson said. “It was such an amazing feeling, and knowing everyone believed in me and was confident in me, like the celebration after, it was a feeling like no other. I was feeling all the emotions and it’s a feeling I’ll never forget.”
No matter how big the wins are now and in the future, these gymnasts are always thankful for where the love of this sport started.
“[It] keeps me humble and keeps me to myself and reminds me of how far I’ve come,” Mueller said.
The Sooners had a nearly undefeated season and won the SEC for the first time in this conference.
College Sports
Greg Sankey provides new details on golf meeting with President Donald Trump
Reports of SEC commissioner Greg Sankey playing golf with President Donald Trump emerged on Sunday, only to be confirmed on Monday. Sankey has openly discussed his outing with President Trump, a big meeting between the leader of the country and one of the more influential people in college athletics. While the details of Trump and […]

Reports of SEC commissioner Greg Sankey playing golf with President Donald Trump emerged on Sunday, only to be confirmed on Monday. Sankey has openly discussed his outing with President Trump, a big meeting between the leader of the country and one of the more influential people in college athletics.
While the details of Trump and Sankey’s conversation are of interest, ESPN’s Paul Finebaum wanted to know about the outing himself. Sankey did have his golf game on display recently in Birmingham alongside other SEC coaches. Not your typical day on the course, there were trends Sankey noticed quite quickly.
“I slept restlessly because your mind conjures up all kinds of things,” Sankey said Monday via The Paul Finebaum Show. “Being on the driving range first, adjacent to the President, wanting to make sure I made solid contact repeatedly, given the importance of first impressions. And then, there are an enormous number of people around, obviously for security and communication purposes. So the first lesson was — always stay approximal to the President. Otherwise, you’re behind a whole lot of golf carts and you may not be able to move very quickly.”
President Trump is known for his love of golf, still playing throughout his time in the White House. Sankey revealed Trump did play well on Sunday, highlighting one moment where both of them had looks at birdie. One rolled the putt in while the other did not have such luck.
“I don’t know if Secret Service calls if I give away the wrong thing but I think it’s fine to say I high-fived the President, I fist bumped the President after good shots,” Trump said. “Others in our group did as well. He played well. There was a point where he had a birdie putt, I had a birdie putt. He made his and I made sure to miss mine. That seemed like the wisest thing to do. I think mine was more of a skill deficit.”
Overall, Sankey came away impressed with how interested President Trump is in sports. Multiple SEC games have hosted him throughout the years, as have neutral-site College Football Playoff venues. Questions were asked and perspectives were shared on issues surrounding college athletics, making for an overall successful day on the course.
“Very conversational, very interested in sports,” Sankey said. “Had been to a UFC event the night before. So, talked through some of the folks he met there. Talked about college sports directly and sharing perspective and asking questions.”
College Sports
Fisk University to discontinue gymnastics program in 2026
NASHVILLE, Tenn. (WSMV) – Fisk University will discontinue its gymnastics program, the first in HBCU history, in May 2026. Fisk Athletics competes in the HBCUAC. Currently, gymnastics is not an HBCUAC-sanctioned sport, which the school says causes considerable challenges for the university to schedule competitions and build a robust recruiting pipeline. Fisk Gymnastics’ final season […]

NASHVILLE, Tenn. (WSMV) – Fisk University will discontinue its gymnastics program, the first in HBCU history, in May 2026.
Fisk Athletics competes in the HBCUAC.
Currently, gymnastics is not an HBCUAC-sanctioned sport, which the school says causes considerable challenges for the university to schedule competitions and build a robust recruiting pipeline.
Fisk Gymnastics’ final season of competition will be Spring 2026.
“While we are tremendously proud of the history our gymnastics team has made in just three years, we look forward to focusing on our conference-affiliated teams to strengthen our impact in the HBCU Athletic Conference,” said Valencia Jordan, Director of Fisk Athletics. “Fisk is grateful for the hard work, dedication and tenacity of its gymnasts, staff members, and coaches who made this program possible.”
Fisk first announced the program in 2022. Their prize recruit, Morgan Price, who decommitted from Arkansas to come to Nashville, became the first HBCU gymnast to win a national championship.
Price announced last month that she was transferring to the University of Arkansas for her final season.
Fisk’s decision to end the program comes about a year after Talladega College — the first HBCU to announce a gymnastics team — ended its own after just one season.

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Copyright 2025 WSMV. All rights reserved.
College Sports
'Call Her Daddy' host Alex Cooper claims college soccer coach sexually harassed her
Popular podcaster Alex Cooper claims in a new docuseries that she was sexually harassed by her soccer coach during her time playing the sport at Boston University. “Call Her Alex,” which premiered at the Tribeca Film Festival on Sunday and debuts on Hulu on Tuesday, chronicles the media figure’s ascent to stardom, detailing her early […]


Popular podcaster Alex Cooper claims in a new docuseries that she was sexually harassed by her soccer coach during her time playing the sport at Boston University.
“Call Her Alex,” which premiered at the Tribeca Film Festival on Sunday and debuts on Hulu on Tuesday, chronicles the media figure’s ascent to stardom, detailing her early childhood in Pennsylvania and her journey to become one of the most influential podcasters.
In the two-part docuseries, which NBC News viewed screeners of, the “Call Her Daddy” host alleges that her former coach Nancy Feldman “fixated” on her, “wanting to know who I was dating … making comments on my body, and always wanting to be alone with me.”
Cooper played on the team from 2013-2015, according to the B.U. women’s soccer website. Feldman, who retired in 2022 after 27 years at the university, made comments about her appearance and her legs, Cooper alleges, and put her hand on Cooper’s thigh. She said Feldman also once questioned her about a date, asking if she had sex the night before.
“I felt so deeply uncomfortable,” she says in the docuseries, adding that she was attending B.U. on a full-tuition scholarship and felt if she “didn’t follow” Feldman’s rules, she’d be “gone.”
In the docuseries, Cooper’s mom says the family reached out to a lawyer who advised them to sue Feldman, but warned litigation could take years. Cooper said her parents reached out to B.U. to report the claims of sexual harassment. Her mom said she provided notes to B.U. that she took from her calls with Cooper over the years in which her daughter described the alleged incidents. The notes were shown in the docuseries.
Cooper claims she told B.U. she wanted to play her senior year but she couldn’t play for Feldman. The university, she alleges, said they told her they wouldn’t be conducting an investigation and said they wouldn’t fire Feldman. They said Cooper could keep her scholarship even if she didn’t play her senior year.
“Within five minutes, they had entirely dismissed everything I had been through,” Cooper said.
Feldman and a representative for Boston University did not respond to requests for comment made on Monday. A spokesperson for Cooper said she is not commenting further.
The docuseries does not include a statement from the university or from Feldman.
During a Q&A with director Ry Russo-Young after the Tribeca screening, Cooper reflected on her decision to speak out 10 years after the alleged harassment.
In the years since she graduated, Cooper, now 30, has built a media empire. Her millions of listeners, nicknamed the “Daddy Gang,” consider her the go-to voice on relationships, dating and life in your 20s and 30s. In addition to her podcast, one of the most listened to on Spotify, she launched the Unwell Network, a subsidiary of the media company Trending, which she founded with her now-husband, Matt Kaplan, and a drink brand.
She said that while filming the documentary project she returned to B.U.’s campus for the first time, and she got emotional.
“At this point in the filming process, I was not sure I wanted to talk about this experience,” she said during the Q&A, according to People, which also shared a clip of the conversation on Instagram.
“The minute I stepped back on that field, I felt so small,” Cooper said. “I just felt like I was 18 years old again, and I was in a situation with someone in a position of power who abused their power, and I felt like I wasn’t the ‘Call Her Daddy’ girl. I wasn’t someone who had money and influence or whatever. I was just another woman who experienced harassment on a level that changed my life forever and took away the thing I loved the most.”
This is the first time Cooper has opened up about the allegations, though she has alluded to having a “traumatic experience” with a coach during her time on the team in the past. In a 2023 interview with Cosmopolitan magazine, she described a “specific thing” without mentioning what had happened, saying “it’s so personal to me and it took such a toll on my mental health.”
She said reconnecting with people she played soccer with, “who were around when things were happening,” had been “pretty cathartic” for her.
“I met up with one of my teammates in Santa Monica who I hadn’t seen since we graduated — we didn’t even say hi, we just both started crying,” she said. “There’s another woman that went through it with me, and we finally saw each other recently, and it’s just wild to talk about it together. Connecting with these other women with these scars, that’s the first step to me actually being like, “Oh my god, I’m feeling better.”
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