College Sports
Utah Grizzlies are now up for sale — and could be relocated
WEST VALLEY CITY — The Utah Grizzlies are now on the market and could be on the move, a year after Utah secured a National Hockey League franchise. In an open letter to fans, the Grizzlies announced Sunday evening they’ve started the “formal process to explore a potential sale of the team” and that it […]

WEST VALLEY CITY — The Utah Grizzlies are now on the market and could be on the move, a year after Utah secured a National Hockey League franchise.
In an open letter to fans, the Grizzlies announced Sunday evening they’ve started the “formal process to explore a potential sale of the team” and that it could “ultimately lead to the relocation” of the ECHL franchise.
“This step comes with deep reflection and heartfelt appreciation for a community that has embraced the Grizzlies for nearly three decades,” the team wrote. “From championship runs and Olympic legacy to countless unforgettable nights at the Maverik Center, the Grizzlies have been proud to call Utah home.”
No sales or relocation decisions have been finalized yet, but the franchise is no stranger to moving.
The Grizzlies first existed as an AHL franchise that relocated from Denver to Salt Lake City in 1995 after Denver landed the Quebec Nordiques NHL team, which became the Colorado Avalanche, a year after the Grizzlies formed. The team ultimately relocated again to Ohio in 2005, where it remains today as the Cleveland Monsters.
Utah gained an ECHL franchise in 2005, though. What was first the Nashville South Stars in 1981, serving as the Central Hockey League affiliate for the Minnesota North Stars, ended up in Utah after a series of relocations. It’s currently an ECHL affiliate of the Avalanche.
However, longtime owner Dave Elmore died in 2023, and his wife and co-owner, Donna Tuttle, has been in “declining health,” the team explained in its letter. As such, the family has struggled to “remain actively involved in team operations,” it added.
Sunday’s announcement also comes a month after the death of the team’s president and CEO, Kevin Bruder.
“This is an emotional and difficult moment for our family and our organization,” Elmore Sports Group said in a statement. “Utah has been more than a home — it has been part of our identity. But ensuring the Grizzlies have the opportunity to thrive in the future may require new ownership and, potentially, a new home.”
Any potential relocation is subject to approval from the ECHL. The team said it plans to “continue conversations” with the league and local leaders so they stay in the loop.
The team will still have at least one more season in the Maverik Center, with its 2025-26 season starting on Oct. 17 at the Greenville Swamp Rabbits before its Oct. 24 home opener against Idaho.
The announcement also comes after Utah joined the NHL ranks for the first time ever last year. Ryan and Ashley Smith acquired the Arizona Coyotes in a deal that relocated the franchise to Utah. The team officially became the Mammoth last month.
The Key Takeaways for this article were generated with the assistance of large language models and reviewed by our editorial team. The article, itself, is solely human-written.
College Sports
More Las Vegas Sports Hospitality: Big Ten Conference Media Days Come To Mandalay Bay This Week
LVSportsBiz.com CONTACT: Alan Snel, veteran journalist and LVSportsBiz.com publisher. ASnel@LVSportsBiz.com. LVSPORTSBIZ.COM, launched June 2017: We are a digital magazine providing market-leading news, intelligence, enterprise and breaking news on Las Vegas’ sports/stadium industry. Our stories are quoted nationally and we set the sportsbiz news agenda in Las Vegas. Publisher Alan Snel has reported on the business […]

LVSportsBiz.com CONTACT: Alan Snel, veteran journalist and LVSportsBiz.com publisher. ASnel@LVSportsBiz.com.
LVSPORTSBIZ.COM, launched June 2017: We are a digital magazine providing market-leading news, intelligence, enterprise and breaking news on Las Vegas’ sports/stadium industry. Our stories are quoted nationally and we set the sportsbiz news agenda in Las Vegas. Publisher Alan Snel has reported on the business of sports and stadiums in Denver, South Florida, Seattle and Tampa besides Las Vegas and is considered a national authority on the topic. Please read our investigative reports on:
F1 race promoting misleading economic data on race event in Las Vegas
Las Vegas still owing more than $1 billion on its debt for contributing $750 million for construction of Raiders’ NFL stadium.
LVCVA spending $165,000 on Super Bowl trip to LA
LVCVA CEO Steve Hill’s claiming that tourism decreases in Las Vegas in summer is wrong
Las Vegas consultant Jeremy Aguero having conflict of interest for asking Nevada Legislature for A’s stadium construction money while also working as administrative support for Las Vegas Stadium Authority.
LVCVA awarding $1.2 million contract to Phoenix-based sports marketing company that hires former husband of LVCVA’s vice president of sports & events less than a month after.
ADVERTISEMENT: Please shop at Jay’s Market at 190 East Flamingo at the Koval Lane intersection east of the Strip. Jay’s Market is the official presenting sponsor of LVSportBiz.com’s stories.
Our coverage of the Athletics stadium project in Las Vegas.
A’s owner John Fisher in Las Vegas
New A’s team president Marc Badain
LVCVA spends $8.25 million on A’s sponsorship
Big League Sports With Small Town Politics
Man of Many Hats
Athletics’ long, strange journey for new ballpark
Athletics consultant Jeremy Aguero is eye of Las Vegas’ sports hurricane
How Deal Was Made For A’s Ballpark On Strip
Bally’s Corp, Gaming & Leisure Properties team up with A’s for ballpark on Strip
Bally’s Corp Chairman Wants Hotel Open When A’s Stadium Is Ready In 2028
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College Sports
House v. NCAA Lawyers Reach Agreement Over NIL Collectives
House v. NCAA Lawyers Reach Agreement Over NIL Collectives Privacy Manager Link 0

College Sports
ASU women’s hockey adding new team fall 2026
Defying the desert heat, ice hockey won’t be melting away anytime soon — especially with ASU women’s hockey announcing an additional team for next school year. Big news! 😈 We are proud to announce that we will be adding an ACHA Division 2 women’s team in Fall 2026! With continued interest from players and ranked […]

Defying the desert heat, ice hockey won’t be melting away anytime soon — especially with ASU women’s hockey announcing an additional team for next school year.
Since 2016, the women’s club has built a strong reputation that has attracted athletes both inside and outside the United States.
Coming from Calgary, Alberta, junior defender Hannah Kunz chose ASU for its team environment.
“To know that there was a team that prides itself on the culture … stood out to me,” Kunz said. “They were super committed to the growth of the sport.”
Lindsey Ellis, the head coach and director of hockey operations, has been with the program since its establishment in the fall of 2016. She has been named the WWCHL Coach of the Year three times.
As an Arizona native and former ACHA Division I player for Miami University (Ohio), Ellis is passionate about providing young women with the opportunity to play hockey in the desert.
Junior defender Sophie Fausel strives to be a role model for girls within the Arizona Kachinas community. Fausel has previously coached for the organization, during which she aimed to inspire girls to continue playing hockey through college.
“I would talk to them a lot about (ASU hockey),” Fausel said. “They seemed to really look up to me for it, and they would come and support our games.”
Kunz has seen the relationship between the Sun Devils and the Kachinas bring people together.
“There’s not that many teams in the desert, especially for women’s hockey, for younger girls to look up to,” Kunz said. “So I think it’s really amazing that we get to be that foundation for them.”
In recent years, the Sun Devils have grown their fanbase through their connection to the Arizona Kachinas; with an expansion team on the way, they benefit from the attention of these younger athletes.
Junior goalie Brooke Kimel thinks the ACHA Division II team will bring more girls from around the state to join ASU’s program.
“Usually we only have two or three people from Arizona on our team,” Kimel said. “The more Arizona people we have on the team, the more it can help spread local awareness.”
Beyond raising local awareness in the community, the Sun Devils have also gained popularity in the digital world through their strong social media presence.
“I can’t remember what our Instagram is at now, but it is probably one of the most followed teams in the ACHA for women’s sports,” Kunz said. “The coverage has been amazing. It really showed people the high level and competitiveness that women’s hockey has, especially our team, and competing with everybody else in our league.”
This competitive atmosphere exists for both men’s and women’s hockey at ASU, drawing the attention of fellow Sun Devils. Within her community, Kimel has seen hockey gain momentum and believes the men’s and women’s programs benefit from each other’s success.
“It honestly benefits us that the men’s team is doing so well right now,’” Kimel said. “We sold out a couple of our games this year at the Mountainside of the Mullet Arena, which has never happened since I’ve been going to ASU.”
Kunz said she believes the biggest contributor to the recent growth of the women’s program was moving from the off-campus Oceanside Ice Arena to the on-campus Mullet Arena.
“When we came into the on-campus rink … that was huge for the game, because now students can walk to it and we’re right there,” Kunz said. “That was definitely one of the biggest things that increased, specifically, our team’s support.”
Behind this growing program is the idea of “pushing the girl next to you,” Fausel said.
Fausel said the team often finds motivation in the idea of holding themselves accountable on the ice for their teammates.
“If you’re not having a good practice or a good skate, don’t think about yourself. Someone else probably wants to get some goals or some points and win the game,” Fausel said. “We have a mentality of: If you are feeling crappy one day at practice, then do it for the player next to you who’s not. Make them better if you can’t do it for yourself.”
Kunz believes the Division II program will be an “amazing addition” that will offer a place for players to develop.
“They can still grow, they can still learn, and they can develop in a way that we haven’t had a place for yet,” Kunz said. “It’s amazing, and it’s a great way to build that community that I love so much.”
Edited by Jack McCarthy, Leah Mesquita and Ellis Preston.
Reach the reporter at cjoneil6@asu.edu and follow @cjojournalism on X.
Like The State Press on Facebook and follow @statepress on X.
Char O’Neil is a junior studying sports journalism with a minor in special events management. This is her second semester with The State Press. She has also reported for AZPreps365, Blaze Radio and Phoenix College Basketball.
College Sports
New NIL clearinghouse to back off on limiting collective pay to athletes
Attorneys representing the plaintiffs in the House settlement and attorneys for the power conferences have reached an agreement that will, in effect, lead the College Sports Commission to back off on striking down deals with athletes, according to multiple reports on Tuesday. Back on July 10, the CSC issued a guidance that said booster-run collectives […]

Attorneys representing the plaintiffs in the House settlement and attorneys for the power conferences have reached an agreement that will, in effect, lead the College Sports Commission to back off on striking down deals with athletes, according to multiple reports on Tuesday.
Back on July 10, the CSC issued a guidance that said booster-run collectives did not satisfy its terms as a “valid business purpose.” This meant that, in layman’s terms, a collective could work as a marketing arm to facilitate a deal between Athlete A and Business Z, but Athlete A could not enter into a deal with a collective itself — even if that collected operated as a business by selling T-shirts and hats to the public or producing a podcast. This was, needless to say, a shock to the system, because collective pay served as the backbone of the NIL system. Very few athletes were paid by the likes of Dr Pepper or Adidas, but thousands received money to sell their NIL rights to their own collective. According to the firm Opendorse, collective pay rose from $321 million in 2021-22 to more than $900 million by 2022-23.
“All of their (athletes’) deals are getting shut down by NIL Go,” a source at a collective told The Athletic. “Even deals of $5,000 or less.”
The Collective Association threatened to sue, since the CSC and its NIL Go system were threatening to put them out of business. This exchange from Utah AD Mark Harlan explained the thinking of the CSC and those behind it.
Maybe this is just me, but has this group been under a rock? Makes me appreciate the team at the Crimson Collective who knew that after the settlement agreement, the game charged. True NIL….not that hard https://t.co/jI2pZIuTgp
— Mark Harlan (@MarkHarlan_AD) July 10, 2025
Now, to use Harlan’s term, the game is set to change yet again, back to the old one. As Yahoo explained Tuesday:
The change to the valid business purpose standard potentially opens the door for the continuation of school-affiliated, booster-backed collectives to provide athletes with compensation that, if approved by the clearinghouse, does not count against a school’s House settlement revenue-share cap. This provides collectives a path to strike deals with athletes as long as those transactions deliver to the public goods and services for a profit for the organization, such as holding athlete merchandise sales, autograph signings and athlete appearances at, for example, golf tournaments.
Collectives are still tied to the CSC’s “fair market value” clause, where School C cannot pay their starting quarterback $500,000 to sign autographs if School A and School B pay theirs $5,000. But if Schools A and B also pay theirs $500,000… who’s to say what fair market value really is?
That is perhaps a legal question for another day, but Tuesday’s agreement indicates the power conferences admitted they were going to be sued into oblivion if collectives were no longer allowed to pay athletes.
College Sports
How New York Times ‘hit piece’ led to SI Swimsuit dream
Olivia “Livvy” Dunne said her career with Sports Illustrated Swimsuit “all started because of a hit piece” The New York Times published about her in November 2022. During a recent appearance on the “What’s Your Story?” podcast, the retired NCAA gymnast recalled the fallout from the past interview about her Name, Image and Likeness (NIL), […]

Olivia “Livvy” Dunne said her career with Sports Illustrated Swimsuit “all started because of a hit piece” The New York Times published about her in November 2022.
During a recent appearance on the “What’s Your Story?” podcast, the retired NCAA gymnast recalled the fallout from the past interview about her Name, Image and Likeness (NIL), which was titled, “New Endorsements for College Athletes Resurface an Old Concern: Sex Sells” — and featured a snapshot of her in a LSU team-issued leotard.
“So I got offered to be in Sports Illustrated — it all started because of a hit piece The New York Times wrote about me,” Dunne, who landed the cover of the 2025 Sports Illustrated Swimsuit issue, told host Stephanie McMahon.
“So they came to our gymnastics facility at LSU, took pictures of me. They said, ‘Wear your team-issued attire, put on a leotard,’’ and they took a picture of me standing in front of the beam, like any gymnast would, and then they blew it up on the screen and put the headline, ‘Sex Sells.’
“Okay, well, you just came into the facility and took pictures of me in our team-issued attire and blew it up on a screen… So I was like, ‘Okay, well, this is crazy.’ And there was obviously a lot of backlash to The New York Times because of that.”
At the time, Dunne fired back at the newspaper in an Instagram Story post.
“And I decided I [was] going to put that same picture that they posted and captioned ‘sex sells’ on my Instagram story and write ‘at The New York Times, is this too much?’” Dunne recalled of her clap back in 2022. “Because, come on, you know what you’re doing. You just put a picture of me in a leotard for clicks and then caption it ‘sex sells.’
“… And then people loved that. They were like, ‘This is so great,’ because no, it’s not too much. You’re in your team-issued attire, which is a leotard for gymnasts. I can’t control that…. So it was just ridiculous. There was a lot of positive feedback from that. So, Sports Illustrated reached out to my agent. I was so excited about that. That was always a dream of mine. I mean, there’s some legends and some amazing athletes that have been in Sports Illustrated.”
The New York Times story was published with the sub-headline, “Female college athletes are making millions thanks to their large social media followings. But some who have fought for equity in women’s sports worry that their brand-building is regressive.”
This isn’t the first time Dunne has called out The New York Times publicly.
During an appearance on the “Full Send Podcast” in 2023, Dunne called the piece “complete BS,” and claimed the reporter “was asking me very odd questions” in the phone interview.
“The interviewer called me and he was asking me very odd questions. It was worded quite weird,” Dunne said. “He was like, ‘So, how does it feel to be a small petite blonde gymnast doing so well with NIL?’ I was just like, ‘Why does it matter that I’m petite and blonde?’ You can just ask me about NIL without you having to use these weird ways of saying it.”
Dunne appeared in the SI Swimsuit issue for the third straight year in 2025, landing one of the four covers for the 2025 issue.
The New Jersey native shot on location in Bermuda, where she posed in a two-piece by Reina Olga.
She told McMahon that she shot the cover with a fractured kneecap suffered during her last season with LSU.
College Sports
2025 U.S. Classic Recap – GymCastic
Claire Pease is our 2025 U.S. Classic Champion! What are our biggest takeaways from this meet, favorite moments and what USAG said about the judging error. If you missed our immediate recap live from Chicago on Saturday night, listen here. GymCastic LIVE in CHICAGO: REPLAY Tickets on sale now Get Tickets HEADLINES Claire Pease is […]

Claire Pease is our 2025 U.S. Classic Champion! What are our biggest takeaways from this meet, favorite moments and what USAG said about the judging error. If you missed our immediate recap live from Chicago on Saturday night, listen here.

GymCastic LIVE in CHICAGO: REPLAY Tickets on sale now
Get Tickets
HEADLINES
- Claire Pease is our U.S. Classic all-around and vault champion!
- Myli Lew took the bars title, but first, a judging controversy
- In a GymCastic exclusive: USAG issued a statement to us about the bars error
- How can we fix these types of errors in the future?
- Ashlee Sullivan and her Arabian took the beam title
- Reese Esponda qualified herself to Championships ANNDDD took the floor title while she was at it
Classic
- Important updates heading into Championships
- Skye Blakely submitted a successful petition to compete at U.S. Championships
- Tiana is coming back from her Pan Ams ankle injury and is resting for Championships
- Members of the 2024 Olympic team and alternates are eligible to petition to U.S. Championships
- Who were our E-score champions of the meet?
Mind Changers at U.S. Classic
- What were our biggest takeaways?
- Should we be worried about the state of elite gymnastics in the United States after this meet?!!???
- Why Jessica thinks this group of elites is the “confidence generation”
- Why Nola Matthews and Pacific Reign are leading the artistry game
- Who else finally got the artistry memo here?
- What new skills are we seeing in response to the new code?
- The skill Ally Damelio does on bars that should automatically make her the winner of everything
- Reese Esponda’s crazy new floor combination and Vivi Crain’s scorpion turn
- Why Dulcy Caylor’s new tumbling pass is giving us 1992 flashbacks
- Our way-too-early Worlds team predictions
- Opportunities for comedy during the meet
- Important art and leotard fashion updates
RELATED:
Live Reaction Podcast from Chicago
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UP NEXT:
- Behind The Scenes: Live Q&A podcast every Friday at noon Pacific/7 GMT
- July 28th podcast: Drag icon, actor and Drag Race winner, Katya Zamolodchikova joins us for a gymnastics coffee klatch episode.
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- GymCastic Store: clothing and gifts to let your gym nerd flag fly and even “tapestries” (banners, the perfect to display in an arena) to support your favorite gymnast!
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