
HS SPORTS PODCAST: Paige Dymek joins Film Room Episode 34
Welcome back to the Film Room Podcast! The Times-Tribune Athlete of the Week North Pocono softball player Paige Dymek joins hosts Joe Baress and Joby Fawcett to discuss her team's strong start to the season, the team's depth bringing in talented freshmen, the talent in the sport in District 2, her future plans, athletes she admires, including Mookie Betts, and her Michigan football fandom.
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We also discuss some other great performances in softball, baseball, track and field, including Jhaven Sims breaking his school record, and lacrosse.
Joby also dives into what it takes to be successful in hurdles and looks back on his career. We also talk about the Girls All-Region Wrestling team, the NCAA Tournament and the state of our brackets.
You can listen on Apple, Spotify, YouTube, Amazon Music and, of course, Podbean. Be sure to subscribe so you don't miss an episode.
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Miami Herald
5 hours ago
- Miami Herald
HBCU Adds Big Ten Champs to Already Loaded Schedule
Coppin State women's basketball isn't ducking anyone. Fresh off announcing marquee matchups against South Carolina and Tennessee, the HBCU just added another giant to their 2025-26 gauntlet: Big Ten champion Ohio State. Head coach Darrell Mosley revealed that Coppin will face the Buckeyes on November 9 at Value City Arena in Columbus. The Eagles also tacked on a road game at SMU on December 10, rounding out a schedule that's quickly becoming one of the most ambitious in all of HBCU hoops. Coppin's four Power Conference opponents read like a who's who of women's college basketball royalty. The Eagles will open with Big Ten champion Ohio State on November 9 in Columbus, then travel to Knoxville on November 23 to face eight-time national champion Tennessee. On January 18, Coppin will welcome the 2024 national champion South Carolina Gamecocks to Baltimore, before closing the stretch with a December 10 trip to Dallas to battle AAC contender SMU. The matchup with Ohio State will mark the first-ever meeting between the two programs. The Buckeyes finished 26-7 last season, reached the second round of the NCAA Tournament, and brought back Jaloni Cambridge, a unanimous All-Big Ten First Team pick and Co-Freshman of the Year. Guard Chance Gray returns after starting all 33 games and scoring over 1,000 career points, while Boston College transfer T'yana Todd adds one of the nation's top three-point strokes. In short, Coppin is stepping directly into the fire. For Coppin State, this isn't unfamiliar territory. Just two years ago, the Eagles hosted Angel Reese and LSU inside PEC Arena, giving Baltimore fans a courtside look at the eventual national champions and one of the most recognizable names in women's basketball. That willingness to challenge the sport's elite has become a calling card for the program. And now, under a new head coach, the Eagles are doubling down on that identity. The Mosley era at Coppin State is officially underway after a major coaching change this offseason. Longtime coach Jermaine Woods stepped away, and in stepped Darrell Mosley, a Baltimore native who spent the last three seasons at Arizona State-two as the Sun Devils' associate head coach. Mosley previously turned Lincoln (Pa.) into a perennial contender in the CIAA and brings 15 years of experience at the college level. Athletic Director Derek Carter called him "a leader ready to take Coppin to new heights," while Mosley himself vowed to build "a culture of excellence both on and off the court." Scheduling Ohio State, Tennessee, and South Carolina in Year One? That's a statement. For HBCU women's basketball, these types of games are more than just paydays-they're platforms. Coppin State players will test themselves against some of the best talent in the country, from WNBA prospects at Tennessee to one of the deepest Big Ten lineups at Ohio State. Win or lose, it's visibility that strengthens recruiting, energizes alumni, and shows that HBCU programs aren't afraid to swing big. And with Mosley at the helm, Coppin State is swinging harder than ever. The post HBCU Adds Big Ten Champs to Already Loaded Schedule appeared first on HBCU Gameday. Copyright HBCU Gameday 2012-2025


USA Today
6 hours ago
- USA Today
CBS Sports lists 3 Florida Gators among top college basketball player by position
Another college basketball season is almost upon us, which means it's time to start talking about who the best players in the country are. With Cooper Flagg now in the NBA, the No. 1 draft spot is once again a conversation, and it's best to break things up position-by-position this early in the cycle. Florida still has plenty of returning talent from its national championship run, and there are a couple of new additions that are expected to make some loud noise in Orange and Blue. But are any of them among the elites in their respective roles? Isaac Trotter of CBS Sports attempted to tackle that question with an NFL-style big board exercise. Instead of breaking things down by the traditional positions — point guard, shooting guard, etc. — Trotter took a more modern approach, listing a top five for each college basketball archetype — combo guard, true wing, stretch 4, etc. G Boogie Fland Three Florida Gators land on the list, starting with Arkansas transfer Boogie Fland as the No. 5 "scorer/creator" in college hoops. "Fland is primed to smash at Florida," Trotter wrote. "The Arkansas transfer can oscillate between running a team and going to get a bucket. Fland is an outstanding pull-up shooter — which is an essential trait for Florida's coaching staff — and the Gators' barrage of Gortat Screens should help him finish at the rim far more effectively, just like it did for Walter Clayton Jr., Alijah Martin and Will Richard. Fland also plays defense and makes good decisions with the rock. Fland-to-Florida looks like one of the best transfer portal fits from the 2025 cycle. " Todd Golden is a mastermind at rosterbuilding. He proved that much by winning a national championship in three seasons, pulling most of the talent from the transfer portal. If Fland is the kind of organizational fit, many seem to think he is, Florida has a good chance to repeat. F Thomas Haugh Thomas Haugh is the No. 5 "stretch 4/big," according to Trotter. Haugh went from the most underrated sixth man in the country after the SEC Tournament to a potential draft pick by the end of the NCAA Tournament. Being the best at the end of the season can go a long way, and now experts are predicting a big year for the third-year forward. "Haugh has some freaky traits," he wrote. "The 6-9 forward has a sneaky-terrific handle. His right-hand drives are super impactful, and the size and shooting create one heck of a combination. Haugh is also an outstanding cutter who brings it on the defensive end every night and can guard multiple positions effectively. Haugh will be one of Florida's best players in 2025-26 and will have a huge say on its chances of winning it all again." Of course, a slow start will be viewed as a dropoff for Haugh, so expect his name to come and go in this conversation throughout the year. Just like last season, a strong finish can rocket him up draft boards. F Alex Condon It's pretty surprising to see Alex Condon as an honorable mention in the "small-ball big" category. He was a borderline first-round selection last season, and injuries are the only real knock on him. This might be an example of the inverse situation of Haugh. Condon got outshone in the playoff run, albeit with greater expectations hanging over him. A return to form could easily move him up this list, even if it's a deeper archetype than the other two. Follow us @GatorsWire on X, formerly known as Twitter, as well as Bluesky, and like our page on Facebook to follow ongoing coverage of Florida Gators news, notes and opinions.

NBC Sports
7 hours ago
- NBC Sports
Erich Sailer, youth ski coach of Olympians including Lindsey Vonn, dies at 99
Erich Sailer, a Hall of Fame coach who developed young skiers who became Olympians, including Lindsey Vonn, has died at age 99. His death was confirmed by Buck Hill Ski and Snowboard Area in Minnesota, where he coached from 1969 to 2022. Sailer (SY-ler), a native Austrian, instructed thousands on a bump of a slalom slope with little more than 300 vertical feet overlooking Interstate 35 just south of Minneapolis. Sailer taught Vonn's father, Alan Kildow, and then Vonn, who joined the Buck Hill team at age 7, then moved around age 11 to more challenging mountains in Colorado. 'It's hard to put into words how much of an Impact Erich Sailer had on my life but I will try,' Vonn posted. 'Erich was more than my ski coach. More than my father's ski coach. Erich was my family. My father has known him for 62 years and he has been a part of my life since I was born. There is no doubt that I would not be the person or skier I am today without him. The entire ski racing community would not be the same without him. He single handedly did more for skiing than any other coach in America and perhaps the world. Even from the small but mighty Buck Hill, Minnesota-which he put on the map as a premier racing program. 'Today we mourn but also must celebrate Erich. He would want us to be on the mountain, doing what we love to do; ski. I know he's got his hand timer up there, making sure we are always getting faster and still getting upset with me when I'm leaning too much on my inside ski.' Vonn wrote in 'Rise,' her 2022 memoir, about Sailer moving to the U.S. in 1955. 'The story goes that when he first arrived, he had thirty-five dollars in his pocket and the only word he knew how to say in English was 'hamburger,'' she wrote. After running ski camps in Oregon and Montana, he moved to Minnesota and produced a premier developmental ski racing program. He jokingly called a young Vonn 'a turtle.' Of her first races, he said, 'You could walk faster than she skied,' according to The New York Times. Yet Sailer shook his head when told by others that Vonn should change her technique. 'You're fast the way you are,' Vonn wrote. 'That's the best piece of advice he ever gave me.' She improved under Sailer, following his training routine of skiing 1,000 gates per day on weekends. 'Up and down the mountain, day after day — nights, weekends, holidays — Lindsey was always there, and she never complained,' Sailer said, according to a 2010 Times story. 'She would go until we turned off the lights at night.' Those hours with Sailer laid the foundation for a legendary career: the first U.S. woman to win Olympic downhill gold in 2010, plus four World Cup overall season titles and 82 individual World Cup race victories. 'For the people that live here, they don't need a big mountain,' Sailer told NBC's Twin Cities affiliate earlier this year. 'She proved it.' Sailer and Vonn FaceTimed on the eve of her final race before her 2019 retirement. 'Of course you can do it!' he told her that night, Vonn wrote. 'It's nothing! What's a minute and a half? I'm ninety-three!' Last fall, Vonn ended a five-year retirement. She is bidding to race at a fifth and final Olympics next February. 'Erich… I will try to make my last turns in ski racing fast for you… I will try to make them mean something more for you,' she posted Thursday while at a preseason training camp in New Zealand. 'You always believed in me… even now, at 40. Your passion and love for skiing was the same as when I was a kid. I'm so thankful I got to see you this summer. Thankful to hear that belief in me one last time. I will use that when I'm in the starting gate this last season but also for the rest of my life. I will never forget you. Never.' Sailer, inducted into the U.S. Ski and Snowboard Hall of Fame in 2005, was also a youth coach for retired Olympians Kristina Koznick and David Chodounsky and active Olympians Paula Moltzan and Sarah Schleper. 'There are no words. My heart is broken, yet I have never felt more grateful,' Koznick posted. 'You were my coach. You were my mentor. You poured your heart and soul into me. I was so blessed to know and love you Erich. The ski racing was just frosting on the top. All the wins were filled with joy because you helped me get there. A big piece of me feels missing without you here. I don't remember my life on earth without you in it. It won't be the same without you…… but I will see you again someday. I can't wait. I love you!!!'