College Sports
Wayne Rooney and the Rising Tide of Sports 'Content'
Publicly, Argyle have always denied that Rooney was hired to raise the club’s profile. But it undoubtedly had that effect—and the effect might be outlasting Rooney. Yesterday, my girlfriend noticed that a man on a train in London (far away from Plymouth) was watching the Muslic video on his phone, and struck up a conversation. […]


Publicly, Argyle have always denied that Rooney was hired to raise the club’s profile. But it undoubtedly had that effect—and the effect might be outlasting Rooney. Yesterday, my girlfriend noticed that a man on a train in London (far away from Plymouth) was watching the Muslic video on his phone, and struck up a conversation. He told her that he hadn’t really known anything about Argyle—until the club made Rooney its head coach.
Then, in November, supporters learned that the media circus around Rooney would be taken up a notch: it was announced that filming had begun on a behind-the-scenes documentary about his time at the club. The film would be made by Lorton Entertainment, a production company that had made two previous documentaries about Rooney and his family; the question of distribution remained up in the air, but Rooney said there were “big brands looking to take it” and The Guardian later reported that the club hoped to sell the rights to a major streaming platform, like Netflix or Amazon, in a bid to “raise their global profile and secure a windfall.” Supporters were once again divided on the prospect: some feared it would be a distraction from on-field matters; others welcomed the exposure. (Some saw both sides: “It’ll be cringe,” one fan wrote on a popular Argyle forum, “but if it can generate money for the club I’m not opposed.”) Rooney insisted that the project would only have access to Argyle’s players to the extent that they were comfortable with it. “I think for the football club financially, it will help, which is really important,” he said. “But also from a fan’s point of view—if I’m a fan of the football club I’d be really intrigued to watch.”
Lorton Entertainment’s first major project involving Rooney was a feature-length documentary—titled simply Rooney—that appeared on Amazon Prime in 2022 and traces the arc of his playing career through interviews with Rooney and those close to him, nodding both to its highs (his remarkable ascent to stardom at just sixteen; his move to the soccer giant Manchester United) and its lows (his controversial and occasionally troubling behavior off the field; his petulant, sometimes even violent conduct on it). In 2023, a second project followed, on Disney+. The central subject matter this time didn’t concern Rooney so much as his wife, Coleen, and her centrality to one of the more compelling and curious media stories to come out of the UK in recent times: a much-discussed saga in which she accused another player’s wife of leaking stories about her to Britain’s tabloids (following an elaborate social media sting operation aimed at finding the culprit); got sued for libel; then won the case. The Argyle documentary was to be Lorton’s third Rooney project. Per The Guardian, one of the company’s owners is a shareholder in an agency that has long managed Rooney.
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If access-driven content can still raise a sports franchise’s profile, the saturated market for such content makes the extent of the profile-raising hard to predict; the collapse of the Rooney project, meanwhile, proved that access is no guarantee of content in the first place. And Argyle’s Rooney experiment—and its aftermath—also pointed to the importance of other forms of sports content in the modern media age. Rooney’s mere presence at Argyle arguably lifted these other boats already—regardless of the documentary falling through.
The commissioning of the documentary was big for Plymouth but not a novel development in general terms: in recent years, a range of English soccer teams have been the subject of fly-on-the-wall programs, from the all-conquering top-tier side Manchester City down to Wrexham, a club that has climbed from the fifth tier to the third since it was improbably acquired by the Hollywood stars Ryan Reynolds and Rob McElhenney in 2020. (Wrexham is in Wales, but its soccer club plays in the English league.) Indeed, the Rooney documentary mirrored trends in sports media far beyond English soccer, in an era when athlete-centered narratives are ubiquitous and have a material impact on the success not only of different sports teams but whole sports. (My colleague Josh Hersh wrote about this trend last year; around the same time, I wrote about how the Formula 1 documentary Drive to Survive had hugely juiced interest in motor racing, not least in the US.) Not that the boom in this sort of content has been limited to sports: writing for CJR in 2020, Danny Funt noted that whereas “filmmakers used to avoid the label ‘documentary,’” since “audiences considered them about as exciting as homework,” streamers are now stuffed with them, racking up millions of views.
The Argyle project sounded like it would be less similar to its Lorton predecessors than to the litany of other documentaries promising inside access to soccer clubs, a burgeoning genre that often trades in the same visual clichés—footage from the training pitch; footage from the locker room; footage from games, often in dizzying close-up—interspersed with interviews. Some of these shows have achieved iconic, or at least meme-worthy, status. A season of All or Nothing—an Amazon franchise whose other subjects have included the NFL’s Arizona Cardinals and NHL’s Toronto Maple Leafs—about the top-tier English soccer club Arsenal helped make a star of its manager, Mikel Arteta, and his unorthodox motivational routines. (In one pre-match speech, he invoked Thomas Edison’s light bulb to stress the importance of connectivity, adding that “it would be fucking dark if this guy wouldn’t have the idea to do that.”) My and many other viewers’ favorite of the genre is Sunderland ’Til I Die, a Netflix show that follows the fortunes of a soccer club fallen on hard times and centers its long-suffering supporters. One memorable montage shows a local vicar praying for the club.
When I tell Americans that I come from Plymouth, I sometimes have to add, No, not the one with the Rock; yes, the one in England that the Rock is named after. Some reply that they know it, only to have actually been thinking of Portsmouth, a city that is similarly named but not especially nearby. Over the summer, though, Plymouth was put on the map worldwide, at least in a sporting sense, after the local soccer club, Plymouth Argyle, named Wayne Rooney, an icon of the global game and one of the finest players in English history, as its new head coach. The appointment immediately put the club at the center of a media storm. I contribute to Argyle Life, an independent fan-led platform with a podcast and YouTube show. Our livestream dissecting Rooney’s arrival was viewed by well over ten thousand people. (For context, the capacity of Argyle’s stadium is only around seventeen thousand.)
Often, “content” is the operative word here—rather than, say, “journalism.” I wrote last year that while Drive to Survive has reportorial moments, it is more a work of entertainment; Hersh noted how, if athlete-centered narratives are now ubiquitous, they are mostly being crafted by athletes themselves, via documentaries and podcasts that cut out the traditional journalistic middleman. Funt wrote in 2020 that filmmakers desperate for access to celebrities—who, in the modern attention economy, hardly need to cooperate—commonly offer them “incentives that would be scandalous in any other news medium: paying for access, clearing quotes and clips, giving a subject’s business partners a producing credit.”
Muslic was an obscure figure in England—but he has quickly become recognizable, thanks to social media. Yesterday, Argyle posted a video of Muslic introducing himself to the squad; normally, this would have been unremarkable—one more piece of content forced into the internet’s maw—but it soon went viral due to Muslic’s charismatic delivery and motivational message. Even rival supporters joked that they would “run through a brick wall” for Muslic; soon, news sites picked up the video and reaction to it. On X, the account “argyletweets” quipped that Argyle had hired Rooney for PR reasons “only to realise a random Bosnian fella would instantly give the club more interaction on socials because he speaks like Churchill.”
Argyle play in the second tier of English soccer, but are one of its smaller sides, at least based on budget and recent history; we were promoted to the level in 2023 after thirteen years away, and had only narrowly avoided relegation back to the third tier when Rooney arrived. (For the uninitiated: think of relegation as being like if a baseball team could be bumped to triple-A due to sheer haplessness, then to double-A if they couldn’t hack it there either, and so on; my editor for this newsletter has bewailed the likely state of the Baltimore Orioles were this the setup stateside.) For all his immense talent as a player, Rooney’s nascent managerial career had not so far been a resounding success: after spells at Derby County and then at DC United in the US (where he had also been a player), he was coming off a brief tenure at Birmingham City in the English second tier that was such a disaster the club was unexpectedly relegated at the end of the season (sparing Argyle that fate, as it happened). Some Argyle supporters were aghast when he was hired but others were excited, by Rooney’s profile if not his record. When the new season kicked off, in August, the team made an undistinguished start—but then things improved, with dramatic wins in three consecutive home matches firing up the fan base and generating further headlines.
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And the process of replacing Rooney also shined a light on one of the true, persistent joys of the modern soccer information bubble: not the polished documentary, but the chaotic spread of raw gossip on social media, a form downstream of access—or, at least, the illusion thereof—but far from dependent on it. After days of discussing rumors (and evaluating the historical reliability of whatever anonymous X account had shared them), many fans (myself included) convinced themselves on Friday that a beloved former manager was poised to return. But then journalism intervened again: Fabrizio Romano—a leading source of soccer-deals news who is a social media native but essentially an old-school reporter at heart (and who may even be the most famous journalist in the world, as Jem Bartholomew wrote in an illuminating profile for CJR in 2023)—broke the news that Rooney’s replacement would be Miron Muslic, a Bosnian-born Austrian coach who formerly led Cercle Brugge, in Belgium.
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The main reason that that show is so watchable, however, is that it is candid, car-crash television, showing disaster after disaster befalling the club, interspersed with toe-curling footage of top executives testing out stadium hype music (it needs to be “a bit Ibiza”) and panic-buying a player who would subsequently flop. (Even the stirring prayer scene is cut together with footage of an angry supporter screaming at a player to “fuck off.”) The project was not exactly independent: the producers are both fans of Sunderland; one later joined the club’s board. But club executives reportedly had no say over the final cut. And if the show isn’t quite a work of journalism, it is at least bursting with authenticity. It certainly made an unusually wide impression. Prince William reportedly watched it. So, too, did McElhenney, who has said that the show helped inspire him to purchase Wrexham with Reynolds.
As Timms noted, the Rooney Argyle documentary could have broken the mold by itself becoming car-crash TV as the team lapsed into a disgraceful run of heavy defeats. As an Argyle fan, I wouldn’t have enjoyed reliving those myself, but can see the appeal for others; I also view Rooney as a quietly compelling character, one who is far from traditionally charismatic (his voice is often a mumbling monotone) but nonetheless has a certain enigmatic aura around him. Now, of course, we’ll never know. Whispers that the project might never see the light of day circulated in early December, when a “TV insider” suggested to the Sun tabloid that “the whole point of the documentary was to celebrate his move from player to becoming a manager” and that Rooney would not want it to become a “horror show”; later, The Guardian reported that Lorton had been granted access to only two matches before being “told to take a break.” By year’s end, Rooney was gone. Simon Hallett, Argyle’s chairman, confirmed last week that while he had seen the documentary as “consistent with our desire to raise the club’s profile,” Rooney’s exit meant that it, too, would be terminated.
The Rooney Argyle documentary, to be fair, was never touted as a work of journalism. And it will now be impossible to evaluate it on those or any other terms: two weeks ago, after a disastrous downturn in form, Argyle parted ways with Rooney, and the documentary was scrapped. Trailing in its wake are broader lessons about the limits of such access-driven projects—and reminders that, despite their ubiquity, they are still only one part of a diverse sports-media ecosystem, one that is increasingly dominated by content, but also rises and falls on the age-old appeal of celebrity, the unpredictable currents of social media, and, at least sometimes, the persistent ability of old-school journalism to set the agenda.
Sunderland ’Til I Die is not the norm: indeed, The Athletic has noted that the show pitched itself as “the antithesis” of the largely “polished” All or Nothing franchise. Many fly-on-the-wall soccer documentaries have a samey vibe, trading access for blandness. Writing in The Guardian last week, Aaron Timms excoriated the genre as “viciously uninteresting” and an exercise in “corporate PR.” Timms suggested that players—who must watch what they say at all times as the cameras roll—and fans are growing tired of such projects, but that they keep getting made because the participants want money and streamers want content. The latter’s “sole goal is to stuff their platforms with as much content as possible,” he wrote, “turning them into the technological-cultural equivalent of ducks fattened by gavage.”
- CNN’s Donie O’Sullivan spoke with third-party fact-checking partners of Meta, who learned last week that the company intends to sever ties with them, then quickly had to get to work trying to slow misinformation about the Los Angeles fires as it went viral on Meta’s platforms. Meanwhile, former Meta staffers told The Guardian that the company’s simultaneous pledge to move its content-moderation operations to Texas—in a bid to alleviate “bias” concerns—is “nothing more than a blatant appeal to Donald Trump” since the company already conducts such work in Texas. And CJR’s Meghnad Bose checked in with his former colleagues at The Quint, a news site in India that is a Meta fact-checking partner; Meta’s recent announcements have centered on the US, but Bose found anxiety about it beyond national borders.
- For the New York Times, David Enrich and Katie Robertson report on steps that US newsrooms are taking to prepare for a feared onslaught once Trump takes office. Reporters and editors “are increasing their reliance on encrypted communications to help shield themselves and their sources from potential federal leak investigations and subpoenas,” they write. Multiple newsrooms “are evaluating whether they have enough insurance coverage to absorb a potential wave of libel and other litigation from officials who have already shown an inclination to file such suits. And a nonprofit investigative journalism outlet is preparing for the possibility that the government will investigate issues like whether its use of freelancers complies with labor regulations.”
- The recent exodus from the Washington Post continued yesterday: Jennifer Rubin, a liberal opinion columnist, announced that she is leaving to cofound a publication on Substack and, on her way out, blasted the Post for perceived spinelessness in the face of Trump; meanwhile, Rosalind Helderman, a top investigative journalist, is reportedly joining the Times. Elsewhere, other outlets are shuffling their staffs as Trump 2.0 looms. MSNBC said that Rachel Maddow, currently only a Monday host, will be on air every night for Trump’s first hundred days. And Politico is importing Jack Blanchard from its UK edition to helm its influential DC Playbook newsletter.
- The New Yorker’s Ruth Margalit profiled Yinon Magal, a talk-show host on Israel’s Channel 14 who has aggressively defended Benjamin Netanyahu, the country’s right-wing prime minister, while attacking his critics, including judges, journalists, academics, and political opponents. “Magal was once a prime-time newscaster,” but these days, “he is an unapologetic combatant, delivering his version of the news in a hunched-over-the-deck posture that has been described as ‘gorilla pose,’” Margalit writes. “If Channel 14 is Netanyahu’s Fox News, Magal is its Tucker Carlson.”
Jon Allsop is a freelance journalist whose work has appeared in the New York Review of Books, The New Yorker, and The Atlantic, among other outlets. He writes CJR’s newsletter The Media Today. Find him on Twitter @Jon_Allsop.
College Sports
Felix, S. Williams, Krzyzewski, Miller among USOPC 2025 HOF class
COLORADO SPRINGS, Colo. — Seven-time gold medal sprinter Allyson Felix, four-time Olympic tennis champion Serena Williams and Mike Krzyzewski, who coached the U.S. to three basketball gold medals, are part of the U.S. Olympic and Paralympic Committee Hall of Fame’s class of 2025. Gymnastics champion Gabby Douglas, skiing’s Bode Miller, beach volleyball player Kerri Walsh […]

COLORADO SPRINGS, Colo. — Seven-time gold medal sprinter Allyson Felix, four-time Olympic tennis champion Serena Williams and Mike Krzyzewski, who coached the U.S. to three basketball gold medals, are part of the U.S. Olympic and Paralympic Committee Hall of Fame’s class of 2025.
Gymnastics champion Gabby Douglas, skiing’s Bode Miller, beach volleyball player Kerri Walsh Jennings and Nike founder Phil Knight are also in the group that will be inducted at a ceremony in Colorado Springs on July 12.
Others inductees are Steve Cash (sled hockey), Anita DeFrantz (longtime IOC member, rower), Susan Hagel (Para archery, Para track and field, wheelchair basketball), Flo Hyman (volleyball) and Marla Runyan (Para track and field), along with the 2010 four-man Olympic bobsled team led by Steve Holcomb, and the 2004 women’s wheelchair basketball team.
“We’re proud to welcome the Class of 2025 into the U.S. Olympic & Paralympic Hall of Fame and to honor the extraordinary accomplishments they’ve made as representatives of Team USA,” USOPC CEO Sarah Hirshland said in a statement. “This induction celebrates not only their remarkable performances and lasting impact but also acknowledges the essential contributions of those who supported their journeys every step of the way. Earning a place in the Hall of Fame is no small feat-especially given the incredible talent across this year’s group of finalists.”
The Hall of Fame’s inaugural class was inducted in 1983, and this will be the first class inducted since 2022. It will bring the total number of those enshrined to 210.
Copyright © 2025 ESPN Internet Ventures. All rights reserved.
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
Saint Joseph’s Men’s Lacrosse Players Earn Conference Honors
Story Links WINTHROP, MA- Junior defender Kevin Wood (Danvers, MA), junior attack Tiger Hopkins (Leeds, ME), and senior Anthony Samiotes (Hampstead, NH) received All-Great Northeast Athletic Conference (GNAC) honors as announced by the conference office today. Kevin Wood, a key force on the Monks’ defensive unit, has been named to the All-Conference […]

WINTHROP, MA- Junior defender Kevin Wood (Danvers, MA), junior attack Tiger Hopkins (Leeds, ME), and senior Anthony Samiotes (Hampstead, NH) received All-Great Northeast Athletic Conference (GNAC) honors as announced by the conference office today.
Kevin Wood, a key force on the Monks’ defensive unit, has been named to the All-Conference Second Team. A steady presence on the back line, Wood consistently shut down opposing attackers and led the Monks in caused turnovers.
On the offensive end, attack Tiger Hopkins was named All-Conference Third Team. Hopkins showcased his dynamic scoring ability and playmaking vision throughout the season. Hopkins was a major contributor to the Monks’ offense all season long, leading the team in assists and points.
Anthony Samiotes was selected to the All-Sportsmanship Team, highlighting his commitment to integrity, leadership, and respect for the game. Samiotes exemplified the spirit of sportsmanship throughout the season.
For the complete list of all-conference honorees, major award winners, and all-sportsmanship selections, please see below.
2025 Men’s Lacrosse All-GNAC Teams
ALL-CONFERENCE FIRST TEAM
A – Michael Ference, Rivier
A – Diego Alvarez-Segee, Dean
A – Jack Condon, Lasell
M – Cole Cloney, Emmanuel
M – Aidan D’Amato, University of Saint Joseph (Conn.)
M – Coby Mercier, Rivier
D – Adam Hailey, Rivier
D – Jack Antico, Emmanuel
D – Bubba Baumeister, Lasell
GK – Sawyer Gagnon, Rivier
FOM – Nathan Powers, Anna Maria
LSM – Francis Pino, Lasell
SSDM – Ty Carroll, Emmanuel
ALL-CONFERENCE SECOND TEAM
A – Cooper Mehlhorn, Emmanuel
A – Daniel Varga, New England College
A – Alec Speirs, Dean
M – Braxton Bragg, Emmanuel
M – Chris Heitmiller, Rivier
M – Jason Martin, Lasell
D – Clayton Cisar, Norwich
D – Kevin Wood, Saint Joseph’s (Maine)
D – CJ Denson, University of Saint Joseph (Conn.)
GK – Trey McCann, University of Saint Joseph (Conn.)
FOM – Matthew Carbone, Lasell
LSM – Jackson Kain, New England College
SSDM – Joseph O’Reilly, Rivier
ALL-CONFERENCE THIRD TEAM
A – Henri Pfeifle, New England College
A – Drew Fleury, Norwich
A – Tiger Hopkins, Saint Joseph’s (Maine)
M – Sam Guilmette, Lasell
M – Donny McInnis, Johnson & Wales
M – Jacob Tresser, Johnson & Wales
D – Scott Miller, Rivier
D – David Hill, Johnson & Wales
D – Trevor Reid, Johnson & Wales
GK – Michael Catalano, Lasell
FOM – Owen McDuffie, Rivier
LSM – Evan Decker, Emmanuel
SSDM – Jack Donnelly, Johnson & Wales
ALL-SPORTSMANSHIP TEAM
Cooper Strecker, Albertus Magnus
Matthew Brooker, Anna Maria
Isaiah Williams, Dean
Sam Yan, Emmanuel
Donny McInnis, Johnson & Wales
Kieran Oliver, Lasell
Cameron Haefs, Mitchell
Jared O’Connor, New England College
Cole Funk, Norwich
Brendan Cook, Regis
Owen McDuffie, Rivier
Anthony Samiotes, Saint Joseph’s (Maine)
Nick Pulcini, University of Saint Joseph (Conn.)
MAJOR AWARDS
Offensive Player of the Year – Michael Ference, Rivier
Defensive Player of the Year – Adam Hailey, Rivier
Goalkeeper of the Year – Sawyer Gagnon, Rivier
Faceoff Specialist of the Year – Nathan Powers, Anna Maria
Rookie of the Year – Jack Condon, Lasell
Coach of the Year – Dieter Treusdell, Lasell
Institutional Sportsmanship – Mitchell College
College Sports
SMU Football recruiting surge signals power shift in DWF
Once seen as a regional program on the outside looking in, the SMU Mustangs have transformed into a recruiting juggernaut, especially in the high-stakes Dallas-Fort Worth battleground. With high-level talent flowing into their locker room, it’s no longer a surprise when SMU beats out SEC programs. Rhett Lashlee and his staff are winning in their […]

Once seen as a regional program on the outside looking in, the SMU Mustangs have transformed into a recruiting juggernaut, especially in the high-stakes Dallas-Fort Worth battleground. With high-level talent flowing into their locker room, it’s no longer a surprise when SMU beats out SEC programs.
Rhett Lashlee and his staff are winning in their own backyard. The DFW is one of the most fertile recruiting grounds in the country, long dominated by schools like Texas, Oklahoma, and LSU.
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But that tide is turning fast. SMU’s aggressive push for top-tier talent is forcing traditional powers to rethink their strategy. As Locked In Oklahoma’s Grayson Singleton put it, “SMU is getting the blue chippers in DFW. And that’s a problem… not just for Oklahoma, that’s a problem for Texas, LSU, Arkansas… This is the fastest rising program in the country.”
College Sports
Northeastern women’s hockey paves the way for women’s sports, one win at a time
As the blaring sound of the final buzzer went off, the crowd erupted in cheers. Members of the Northeastern women’s hockey team threw their gloves in the air and skated toward their goalie, freshman Lisa Jönsson, to celebrate a memory that would last a lifetime — and a major moment for women’s sports. On Jan. […]

As the blaring sound of the final buzzer went off, the crowd erupted in cheers. Members of the Northeastern women’s hockey team threw their gloves in the air and skated toward their goalie, freshman Lisa Jönsson, to celebrate a memory that would last a lifetime — and a major moment for women’s sports.
On Jan. 21, the Northeastern women’s hockey team won their third consecutive Beanpot championship, defeating Boston University to secure their 20th overall Beanpot title. In what was only their second tournament appearance at TD Garden, the Northeastern women’s hockey team demonstrated, once again, how even modest investment into women’s sports can yield positive results.
Throughout the history of sports, men’s leagues developed decades before their women’s league counterparts. On top of that, it’s only in the last few years that women’s sports have seen increased visibility and growing support. The NBA was founded in 1946 while the WNBA was founded 50 years later in 1996. The MLS was founded in 1993 while the National Women’s Soccer League, or NWSL, was founded in 2012, and the NHL was founded in 1917 while the Professional Women’s Hockey League, or PWHL, was founded over 100 years later in 2023. Despite these disparities in establishment and coverage, female athletes have consistently navigated the evolving landscape of sports with resilience, contributing to a culture of excellence.
But how is this standard set? Who inspires these athletes to become the role models young girls look up to? What defines players like senior forward Skylar Irving and junior forward Holly Abela, and how did they reach this level?
It often begins with early influences — sometimes a parent, and often a professional player. In Irving’s case, it was athletes like Pittsburgh Penguins center Sidney Crosby and Northeastern alum and PWHL forward Kendall Coyne. With few female professional hockey role models, Irving was especially inspired by Coyne, who remained dedicated to the sport while balancing motherhood and advocating for greater recognition of women’s hockey.
“She was definitely one of my biggest inspirations as a female hockey player,” Irving said. “Just being able to watch her and see what she did every single day, it was so cool.”
Irving also drew inspiration from her upperclassmen teammates who taught her lessons beyond the ice.
“They were incredible, and they were just good people and good athletes,” Irving said. “They kind of just showed me that hockey is not just about how good you are on the ice, but it’s about how much you love your teammates, how much you care.”
Immersed in hockey from a young age, Irving was introduced to the sport at 2 years old when she could first hold a stick. She’s been on skates since she could walk and has played organized hockey since she was 4 years old.
“I’m 23 right now and I’m still playing and still loving the game as much as I did when I first picked up a stick,” Irving said.
Every child dreams about what they want to do or who they want to become, but to be able to live out your childhood dreams in your adult life is something only few can achieve. For many female athletes, that option hasn’t always been available.
“Growing up, there was never a professional league for younger players to look up to. So, college was sort of the end of the road that people are fighting to get to,” Abela said. “There was never a PWHL and now that there is, I think that’s so exciting, because I’ve watched girls that I’ve played with on my university team from my freshman year that are now in the league.”
With influential figures paving the way for more opportunities for everyone, an increasing number of female athletes are now able to envision a future in which they can continue their craft.
Reflecting on her start at Northeastern, Abela expressed her gratitude to have had a teammate and role model like Alina Müller. Müller played as a forward for the Northeastern women’s hockey team from 2018 to 2022 and now plays for the Boston Fleet.
“She kind of took me under her wing and she showed me what it means to be a true professional in every way,” Abela said. “To see that out of a female athlete was just so inspiring, because as a little girl, you don’t get to see that very often.”
Similar to Irving, Abela also started her hockey journey early. She started skating at 4 years old and started playing hockey around six. A major influence for Abela was her father, who drove her passion for the sport. It was this passion combined with her commitment and love for the game that allowed her to get to the point she’s at now in her hockey career.
“When I leave this place, I know that we’ve left it in a good spot; it’s a place people know that when they come here, there’s a standard — we’re a team that doesn’t give up,” Abela said. “It sets the expectation for those girls coming along to keep it competitive, to keep the league strong and to improve the generational talent of women’s hockey. I know the girls coming in will look up to that, and they’ll strive for the same goals.”

The legacy players and teams leave behind is possible because of the collective effort and dedication of all parties involved. For games like the Beanpot, the culture and support in the atmosphere is important as the players in these games are not only passionate about hockey but representing their schools and communities as well.
Despite their different backgrounds, a common trait amongst many athletes is hard work, dedication and love for the sports they play. The difference for female athletes is that oftentimes, they’re not only competing against one another to make it to the next level but fighting a system that has historically presented additional barriers.
The men’s Beanpot tournament has been played at TD Garden since 1996, while the women’s Beanpot tournament has only been held at TD Garden since 2024 — moreover, the women only play at the stadium for the final match-up, unlike their male counterparts who play their semifinal rounds at TD Garden as well. Despite the struggle, this recent progress proves that there may be a future in which the disparities between men’s and women’s sports will decrease.
“It’s so special that we have kind of been able to be a part of that growth,” Irving said. “I think that [the team is] gonna do great things, and I’m always gonna be cheering them on. I’m always proud to be a Husky.”
With the rise of the PWHL, the future of women’s hockey has also become more stable.
“They’ve done a great job marketing their product, and it’s something that people are excited about. And I think that’s starting to trickle down into the collegiate level, because it’s gaining traction,” said Northeastern women’s hockey assistant coach Melissa Piacentini. “I think it’s grown so much, and it still has so far to go.”
The culture established by schools and teams allows for the growth of student-athletes beyond their respective sports. University coaches aim to help their players not only grow in their professional fields but also as people.
“I think for me, that is what I’m gonna take away most about this whole place — that they helped me develop into the best person that I could be. And I feel like, when you go to college, that’s kind of your end goal,” Irving said. “Everybody pushes you every single day here, like you’re always expected to bring greatness into everything that you do.”
Hoping to continue to embody the lessons and values she’s learned, Irving has proven to be a role model not only for her teammates, but for young girls as she coaches youth leagues back home in Kingston, Massachusetts.
“My greatest privilege in life is coaching kids and seeing their progress and them growing. It’s just a special feeling that you really can’t describe,” Irving said. “I just want them to know that they’re gonna be able to accomplish whatever they want to.”
When looking at the growth of her athletes, Piacentini shared how one of the biggest things she hopes her players take away is the experience of playing a game they love with people they care about.
“I hope they recognize how special it is to have their teammates around them, and it goes so much further than hockey,” Piacentini said. “So when they graduate, they’ll have a good group of friends that they can carry forward in their lifetime.”
At Northeastern, athletes like Irving and Abela pride themselves in being a part of a community that upholds a high standard of success and hard work.
“I think they’ve been great leaders for our program. I really do think Northeastern has a great culture, and it’s because the people that are in the program, they’re the ones that have built that, and they take it seriously to maintain it,” Piacentini said.
The Northeastern women’s hockey team’s players have won numerous awards, earned 20 Beanpot titles, won six consecutive Hockey East titles from 2018 to 2023 and have made seven NCAA tournament appearances. Even in the 2024 and 2025 seasons, despite not winning the Hockey East title, the team still made it to the finals.
“I think it’s funny when you add a little bit of money to a sport and you give some girls attention, what they can do with it,” said graduate student defenseman Lily Yovetich in a viral video after this year’s Beanpot win. “I think everyone should take a page out of our book and really put some more time and effort into women’s everything.”
College Sports
Nick Saban brings Donald Trump into CFB discourse, plus Sherrone Moore’s suspension
Until Saturday Newsletter | This is The Athletic’s college football newsletter. Sign up here to receive Until Saturday directly in your inbox. Today in college football news, I’ve just been handed a tube of Pringles that are apparently Los Calientes Verde Pringles. This tube’s minutes are numbered. Business: Trump involvement emerges as House settlement nears […]

Until Saturday Newsletter | This is The Athletic’s college football newsletter. Sign up here to receive Until Saturday directly in your inbox.
Today in college football news, I’ve just been handed a tube of Pringles that are apparently Los Calientes Verde Pringles. This tube’s minutes are numbered.
Business: Trump involvement emerges as House settlement nears
Promise this is going somewhere:
- “President Trump said on Sunday that he wanted federal law enforcement agencies to work on restoring Alcatraz, now a museum, to a functioning maximum-security prison.”
- “The president’s sudden push … came just hours after a South Florida PBS station aired the 1979 classic film ‘Escape from Alcatraz.’ The president spent the past weekend at his Mar-a-Lago resort, which is located in Palm Beach.”
Inspiration can strike swiftly, is the point. Another example:
Three days prior, Nick Saban met with Trump in Tuscaloosa. Saban reportedly told Trump that modern player compensation has resulted in college athletics having an uneven playing field. (Saban, whose annual Alabama salaries at times surpassed those of every MAC head coach combined, also raised a similar complaint a year earlier when discussing his own retirement.)
After that chat with Saban, Trump is reportedly interested in an executive order meant to address payments to athletes. It’s unclear how (or whether) that might work:
“A congressional aide told The Athletic that an executive order might not stabilize the college sports system, which requires legal certainty and a limited safe harbor from litigation. Legal protections and the pre-empting of state NIL laws can only be addressed through congressional legislation. … Numerous bills and drafts have been introduced, announced or floated. … None of the bills has gone anywhere yet.”
Meanwhile, the House v. NCAA settlement remains close to approval. By allowing schools to set aside $20.5 million for their rosters, it’d provide far more compensation for the labor most responsible for college sports being a multi-billion-dollar industry.
But what about Saban’s worry of the playing field becoming even more uneven than the one he totally dominated? Sure, it’d arguably become even more uneven than ever before, with plenty of smaller schools having nowhere near $20.5 million to spend. So … is House itself now a target as well?
Either way, the settlement is tenuously nearing completion. As the carefully constructed stack of paperwork teeters, at least one side doesn’t appreciate the surprise gust of wind:
“An attorney representing current and former college athletes in the proposed $2.8. billion House vs. NCAA settlement said a potential executive order on the issue of NIL in college sports would be ‘unmerited and unhelpful’ and criticized Saban’s ‘eleventh-hour self importance.’”
Stay tuned. Likely to be a House update of some sort later this week, actually.
Quick Snaps
A detail in the newly announced 12-game series between Clemson and Notre Dame: “The Clemson games are expected to count toward the five-games-per-year average for Notre Dame with the ACC, which means smaller brands within the league may see the Irish less.”
Bill Belichick‘s book tour has gotten a lot of attention, to say the least, but how about the book itself? David Ubben has 11 takeaways from reading it. Join me in pondering this quote by the UNC coach: “Instinct negotiates between the dog’s goals and the dog’s actions. Unfortunately, we humans are not as instinctual as dogs.”
Nashville’s Jared Curtis, 2026’s top quarterback recruit, is becoming as instinctual as a Dawg. He committed to Georgia over Oregon yesterday.
The Big 12 extended commissioner Brett Yormark through 2030. Still surreal that this conference is the third most stable of all.
In a media mailbag, Richard Deitsch says Lee Corso‘s replacement on “College GameDay” is actually Saban, in one sense.
Dan Mullen heard from coaches who wished they had his ESPN job — and then he got back into coaching anyway. Why UNLV?
Last year was a good year for defenses in college football, a rare clapback after a decade-plus of offensive explosion. Was that a blip, or was it a new trend? After reading that post by Seth Emerson, I’m buying another relatively slow scoreboard season.
Where every Power 4 school stands at quarterback, with the portal in the rearview again. Very 2020s sentence: “Incarnate Word transfer Zach Calzada, who has spent time at Texas A&M and Auburn, is Kentucky’s QB1 as he enters his seventh collegiate season.”
C’mon, Michigan: Might as well think big with Moore suspension
Some news from yesterday, via Michigan reporter Austin Meek:
“Michigan is expected to suspend coach Sherrone Moore for two games as a penalty for allegedly deleting text messages he exchanged with Connor Stalions, the former Michigan staffer at the center of an NCAA investigation into allegations of advanced scouting.
“Moore is expected to coach the first two games, including a Week 2 matchup against Oklahoma, his alma mater, before missing games against Central Michigan and Nebraska in Week 3 and Week 4, a source briefed on Michigan’s plans confirmed.”
While the broader NCAA investigation into Michigan will next include a Committee of Infractions hearing, likely this summer, I’m more interested in which games Moore is expected to miss. Why devote full strength to the home opener against New Mexico, which could be a five-touchdown underdog, rather than the road trip to Nebraska, a likely tough Big Ten opponent?
I asked Austin for his thoughts. He said:
“It’s a pick-your-punishment situation for Michigan: Suspend Moore for the first two games and force him to miss his homecoming against Oklahoma or suspend him for weeks 3 and 4 and force him to miss Michigan’s Big Ten opener at Nebraska. One way or the other, he’d have to miss a big game … unless Michigan decided to suspend him for the opener against New Mexico and the Week 3 game against Central Michigan, which would be pretty brazen, even for Michigan.”
Sure, giving Moore such a carefully measured suspension would probably make Michigan look less remorseful to the NCAA — and thus partly defeat the whole purpose. But Michigan’s already done the suspend-the-head-coach-for-consecutive-games thing (for two stints of Jim Harbaugh’s final season, when Moore led six victories during a national title run). Let’s have some fun by picking and choosing.
Deja Vu: Rivals.com completes 18-year full circle
Quick piece of news about recruiting media:
“The ownership group behind On3, led by Shannon Terry, has reached an agreement to acquire Rivals — the original authority in recruiting, high school sports, and fan communities — from Yahoo Sports.”
If you keep up with recruiting coverage, Terry’s name probably sounds familiar, and probably because of previous news items very similar to this one. I was attempting to piece together the timeline of Terry’s recruiting website dealings, then noticed RedditCFB had already done it:
- 1995: Founds Alliance Sports
- 2000: Sells Alliance to Rivals
- 2001: Buys Rivals out of bankruptcy
- 2007: Sells Rivals to Yahoo
- 2010: Founds 247
- 2015: Sells 247 to CBS
- 2021: Founds On3
- 2025: On3 buys Rivals
While reading that, I just keep wanting to chime in with, “But they were all of them deceived, for another recruiting news website had been created, bought and/or sold by Shannon Terry.”
OK, that’s all for today. Email me at untilsaturday@theathletic.com with any thoughts!
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