All Scores

Gold medalist Brianna Decker joins PHF front office

Brianna Decker won an Olympic gold medal with Team USA at the 2018 Winter Games. (Sam Wasson/Getty Images)

Brianna Decker is joining the Premier Hockey Federation in a part-time advisory role, the league announced Friday.

Widely regarded as one of the best players in the world, Decker is a longtime member of Team USA. She played in the Beijing Olympics but broke her leg and tore ligaments in her ankle during the group stage. She has not played since then, having gone through a lengthy recovery process following surgery.

“Brianna Decker is a one-of-a-kind proven leader on and off the ice,” PHF commissioner Reagan Carey said in a statement. “Her commitment to development has earned her the title of one of the best players in the world, but it’s her dedication to sharing her time, knowledge, and experience with the next generation that makes her such a valuable and respected member of the women’s hockey landscape.

“She has won at every level of the sport, and we’re excited to have her competitive drive onboard with the PHF.”

With the PHF, Decker is looking at her future off the ice, and she told The Athletic on Friday that her on-ice future is up in the air. She recently turned down an invite to the U.S. training camp ahead of the 2022 IIHF Women’s World Championship, which began Thursday in Denmark.

“I just needed more time mentally and physically from everything that I went through in the spring,” she told The Athletic. “From a playing standpoint, I’ve just been taking time away. Not necessarily being done. Not necessarily saying, ‘Yes, I’m back.’”

In her role with the PHF as team and player development advisor, she will focus on elevating the training, competition and overall league standards while working as a liaison between the league and its players and coaches. She joins former Team USA teammate Kacey Bellamy, who works as a scout and player relations liaison.

Decker also was a member of Team USA when Carey was the general manager for the team.

Decker says that the addition of Carey as commissioner was a selling point for her in joining the league’s front office. Additionally, while she thinks that the PWHPA “has a great vision,” she decided to help make the PHF better.

“(Reagan) brought our U.S. program from where we were to winning an Olympic gold medal,” Decker said. “And so I know her insight and her vision when it comes to (growing the women’s game) is great. We connected and I was like, ‘I want to get involved somehow.’

“I think it’s just been a little bit of a standstill with the PWHPA, and if I have an opportunity to help grow our game, grow the professional women’s hockey game in any way, I am going to do it. This role with the PHF is giving me that opportunity to help out, and so that’s why I jumped on it.”

The PHF announced Wednesday that it has extended its deal with ESPN, which will keep the league on ESPN networks through the 2023-24 season.

The league also announced two more front office hires Friday: Marissa Halligan will serve as the lead operations director, while Nichole Bargo will serve as director of finance.

Texas A&M Takes on Kentucky in 2025 NCAA Volleyball Championship Final

An overhead view of Kansas City's T-Mobile Center before the 2025 NCAA volleyball tournament semifinals.
No. 3-seed Texas A&M swept No. 1-seed Pitt in the 2025 NCAA volleyball tournament semifinals on Thursday. (Jamie Schwaberow/NCAA Photos via Getty Images)

The 2025 NCAA volleyball championship game is officially on lock, as No. 3-seed Texas A&M and No. 1-seed Kentucky survived Thursday's semifinals to punch their tickets to Sunday's season finale.

After snapping overall top-seed Nebraska's undefeated season in last weekend's Elite Eight round, The Aggies kept their history-making hot streak alive, blowing past No. 1 Pitt as the first team to sweep the Panthers all year.

Leading the charge for A&M were sophomore outside hitter Kyndal Stowers and senior opposite Logan Lednicky, who registered 16 and 14 kills, respectively, on the Final Four court in Kansas City.

As for the last No. 1 seed standing, Kentucky survived No. 3 Wisconsin in a five-set thriller on Thursday, following the example of senior outside hitter Eva Hudson, whose 29 kills trailed only the semifinals-leading 32 posted by Badger senior outside hitter — and fellow AVCA Player of the Year finalist — Mimi Colyer.

With Kentucky hoping to add to their 2020 Division I title — the only NCAA volleyball championship in SEC history — the conference already owns the 2025 trophy, as Thursday set up the sport's first-ever all-SEC national final.

Though the 2025 SEC champion Wildcats seemingly have the edge over the conference's runners-up — Kentucky took down Texas A&M 3-1 in October — A&M's current momentum is undeniable, with the Aggies riding into Sunday's clash having ousted two No. 1 seeds and one No. 2 seed en route to a program-first national final.

"We are considered the underdog in a lot of these moments just [because] we haven't been here before. But we know we have all the right pieces," said Lednicky. "So why not us?"

How to watch the 2025 NCAA volleyball championship

No. 3 Texas A&M will battle No. 1 Kentucky for the 2025 NCAA volleyball championship at 3:30 PM ET on Sunday, airing live on ABC.

Report: Portland Fire Hires Hall of Fame WNBA Icon Sylvia Fowles as Assistant Coach

Retired WNBA star Sylvia Fowles poses in her Naismith Hall of Fame jacket and ring holding a basketball during her 2025 induction.
2025 Naismith Hall of Fame inductee Sylvia Fowles won two WNBA titles with the Minnesota Lynx. (Adam Glanzman/Getty Images)

Retired WNBA icon Sylvia Fowles is returning to the court, with ESPN reporting on Wednesday that the former Minnesota Lynx star center will join the staff of the Portland Fire, becoming an assistant coach for the 2026 expansion team.

After reportedly fielding multiple offers of WNBA coaching opportunities, the 40-year-old will back up recently announced Portland Fire head coach Alex Sarama during the team's debut season, with the opportunity to help mold a fresh league roster and create culture from day one serving as a deciding factor in Fowles choosing the expansion franchise.

The 2025 Naismith Hall of Fame inductee's resume underlines her ability to make an impact from the sideline, as the beloved WNBA alum packs both championship experience and a defensive mindset to aid a team still forming its identity.

In a 14-year playing career split between the Chicago Sky and Minnesota, the 2017 WNBA MVP won two league titles, earning Finals MVP honors alongside each of those Lynx championships.

A four-time WNBA Defensive Player of the Year, Fowles exited her pro career as the league's all-time rebounds leader with 4,007 boards — a stat that held until current Connecticut Sun center Tina Charles passed the Hall of Famer in September 2024.

The eight-time All-Star also shined on the international stage, as Fowles snagged four Olympic gold medals during her time with Team USA.

UWCL Draw Sets Up Potential Chelsea-Arsenal Champions League Quarterfinal Clash

The 2025/26 Champions League draw cards for WSL clubs Chelsea, Arsenal, and Manchester United sit on a table before the draw for the playoffs and quarterfinals rounds.
The 2025/26 Champions League quarterfinals could see an all-WSL battle. (Kristian Skeie - UEFA/Getty Images)

With the 18-team UWCL league phase now done and dusted, the 12 clubs still standing discovered their paths to the Final in the 2025/26 Champions League knockouts draw on Thursday.

While the top four clubs — No. 1 Barcelona, No. 2 OL Lyonnes, No. 3 Chelsea FC, and No. 4 Bayern Munich — punched their way into March's quarterfinals behind elite league-phase performances, the remaining eight teams must battle in February's playoffs in order to advance.

Thursday's draw has reigning champs No. 5 Arsenal facing Belgian side No. 12 Oud-Heverlee Leuven in the playoffs, but the Gunners then face a difficult road in the UWCL knockouts, staring down a potential quarterfinal clash with WSL rivals Chelsea as eight-time UWCL winners OL Lyonnes looms on the same side of the semifinal bracket.

Elsewhere, No. 7 Real Madrid have an opportunity to make UWCL history should they win their playoff tie against No. 10 Paris FC, setting up the tournament's first-ever El Clásico with a possible quarterfinal match against perennial winners Barcelona.

How to watch the 2025/26 Champions League Playoffs

The first-leg of the 2025/26 UWCL playoffs kick off with No. 12 Oud-Heverlee Leuven hosting No. 5 Arsenal at 12:45 PM ET on February 11th, with No. 7 Real Madrid visiting No. 10 Paris FC at 3 PM ET.

The following day, No. 8 Juventus will take on hosts No. 9 Wolfsburg at 12:45 PM ET before No. 11
Atlético de Madrid faces the visiting No. 6 Manchester United at 3 PM ET.

All 2025/26 Champions League matches will stream live on Paramount+.

NWSL Players Association Rejects League’s Proposed ‘High Impact Player’ Rule

Washington Spirit star Trinity Rodman looks on from the sideline during the 2025 NWSL Championship match.
The NWSL "High Impact Player" proposal comes as the Washington Spirit try to retain star striker Trinity Rodman. (Erin Chang/ISI Photos/ISI Photos via Getty Images)

The NWSL Players Association is not on board with the league's latest proposal, rejecting the NWSL's new "High Impact Player" rule allowing teams to exceed the salary cap by up to $1 million to retain star athletes.

According to the current CBA, the union — rather than the league — has the final sign-off on all changes regarding compensation.

"The league is trying to control and interfere by trying to dictate which players [benefit from] this pot of funds," NWSLPA executive director Meghann Burke told ESPN. "How you measure a player's value, both in terms of sporting merit and business criteria, is nuanced. It is more complicated than a handful of bullet points."

The NWSLPA has instead suggested that the league simply raise the 2026 salary cap by $1 million, giving clubs the same spending discretion without the star player mechanism.

Citing concerns about the rule's potential long-term implications on the market, roster structures, and locker-room culture, Burke noted that "We just don't feel that it delivers anything of value that simply increasing the team salary cap wouldn't, without having negative consequences."

"Our position is that teams — GMs, soccer ops, business folks at the team level — are uniquely positioned to make judgment calls about how to structure their rosters, how to negotiate deals," Burke continued. "It is within the purview of the teams to make those judgement calls, and in a system of free agency like we all agreed to, that's how it works. It's a free market."

"We are actively reviewing feedback from the NWSLPA as part of the consultation process outlined in the CBA," an NWSL spokesperson said in response.

"The league remains committed to being the home of the world's best talent, and this path gives our clubs the opportunity to pursue that goal while raising overall player investment."