Whittier recently battled to bring the football program back, and has lured a MAC assistant to lead the program.
Ippei Mizuhara pleaded guilty to bank and tax fraud after he stole nearly $17 million from the Los Angeles Dodgers player’s account.
Spending and success are being criticized; meanwhile, Yankees owner Hal Steinbrenner is not a chip off the old block ...
Brookfield, 98, and a longtime resident of Whittier, was born in Chemnitz, Germany, the only child of Willy and Dora Fleischmann. On Saturday, she shared her memories in advance of International ...
In at least one corner of the world, these were wholly connected events. With college sports and politics — and college sports and the legal system — any Venn diagram is becoming more of a circle.
the day before the national championship game. The NFL is ESPN’s most important property, but in many ways, college sports make ESPN go. With the confetti falling around them, Ohio State’s ...
But the fact sheet still serves as a warning to college athletic departments: Next time there's a Democrat in the White House, be ready for this possibility. The fact sheet says payments must be ...
The Municipal Working Group meets Monday, Jan. 27, at 1 p.m., at Northern Essex Community College. Shawn Regan, Whittier Tech liaison to Northern Essex, told Ipswich Tri-Board members this week ...
Nearly all of that was for men's sports, including $1.1 billion spent on college football and an estimated $390 million on college basketball. So much money is leaping toward those two big men's ...
College football fans won’t have to wait another 11 years for the next edition of their sport’s video game. EA Sports on Thursday announced that College Football 26 will be released this ...
According to a report from CNBC, the Oregon Ducks ranks as the No. 17 valuable college athletic program in the country. The rankings exclude military academies and only included schools within the ...
RELATED: College Football Playoff 2025: Previewing Ohio State vs. Notre Dame in national title game Money is the root cause of anything that a sports league does; the NCAA is no different.