Sports
Six unlikely CFP stars and what they do for an encore
When Notre Dame’s team buses pull up to Hard Rock Stadium in South Florida on Aug. 31, wide receiver Jaden Greathouse will hop off with a smile on his face.
“I’ve definitely been excited to get back there, to get back in that stadium,” Greathouse told ESPN.
The opponent will be different as No. 6 Notre Dame opens the season at No. 10 Miami, but Greathouse has good memories at Hard Rock, where he changed the course of his career Jan. 9 against Penn State. Greathouse entered the College Football Playoff semifinal at the Orange Bowl with only six receptions for 49 yards in his previous five games. He had not eclipsed 66 receiving yards for the season and still sought his first 100-yard performance in a Notre Dame uniform.
Few pegged Greathouse to be Notre Dame’s top offensive performer that night, especially with a national championship berth on the line, but that’s what happened. He had a career-high 105 receiving yards, catching passes all seven times he was targeted in a 27-24 Fighting Irish victory.
Eleven days later, in the national championship against Ohio State, Greathouse set another career best with 128 receiving yards, and had his first multi-touchdown performance of the season, as the Irish fell 34-23. Just like that, Greathouse had changed the trajectory of his career.
“… Opportunity is just a moment away,” Greathouse said. “Luckily for me, it turned out to be in the two biggest games of the season.”
Greathouse and a group of other players capitalized on a bigger, longer playoff to elevate their play.
Here’s a look at six players who hope to use the CFP as a springboard for even bigger things during the 2025 season.

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CFP highlights: Career-high 105 receiving yards and a game-tying 54-yard touchdown catch with 4:38 left in the fourth quarter against Penn State in national semifinal; caught passes on all seven targets; followed with a new career high of 128 receiving yards against Ohio State in the national title game, and caught two touchdown passes for the first time in the season.
The challenge for Greathouse in 2024 wasn’t necessarily physical or even maintaining his confidence. He had to keep playing the game while keeping it in perspective.
“That’s something that comes with playing the wide receiver position,” he said. “The quarterback touches the ball on every single play of the game, and on a good day, we may only get to touch it like nine times. A lot of the production is just not in our control. I don’t get to decide what play we call, or when the quarterback is going to throw it to me. I just always have to be ready because it could happen at any moment.”
0:37
Jaden Greathouse jukes multiple defenders for a Notre Dame TD
Jaden Greathouse breaks the ankles of multiple Penn State defenders on his way to score a 54-yard touchdown.
Greathouse came to Notre Dame as the nation’s No. 122 overall recruit in the 2022 class. Although he played wide receiver at Austin, Texas, powerhouse Westlake High School, he was classified as a tight end/H-back in ESPN’s database.
His first collegiate reception went for a touchdown in Notre Dame’s 2023 opener against Navy in Ireland, and he finished with two scores and a team-high 68 yards. Greathouse had only three more touchdowns the rest of his freshman season, but he led the team in the category, while making five starts.
He had two first-down receptions in the 2024 opener at Texas A&M, then was targeted nine times the following week against Northern Illinois. Greathouse had made a few notable plays by the middle of season — a 42-yard catch on his lone reception against Navy, a 34-yard scoring catch against Louisville — but the big numbers didn’t come.
“It’s all about coming out with a win, and we do that by any means necessary,” Notre Dame wide receivers coach Mike Brown said. “I tell the guys, ‘If we’ve got to run the ball 60 times a day, then we’ve got to run it. If we’ve got to throw it 60 times, we’ve got to throw it 60 times.’ We were very blessed to have a room that truly believed in that last year, and Jaden was one of those guys.”
Ahead of the Penn State game, Brown sensed Greathouse’s role could increase.
“I knew there could be some opportunities,” Brown said. “To say that I thought he was going to have the performance that he had would have been a little bit of a stretch, but we knew there was going to be some man coverage, that we were going to have to win some of the 50-50 balls and some of those battles.”
Brown saw Greathouse “walk around a bit different” and show more confidence in spring practice following his strong CFP finish. Greathouse and the other receivers recognize that Notre Dame will always stress complementary football, especially with a loaded running backs room led by Jeremiyah Love and one of the nation’s best defenses.
But Brown also wants guys in his room who crave the ball, and Greathouse showed what he can do when given the chance.
“He’s really competitive, doesn’t shy away from the big moment,” Brown said. “He’s really good in contested-catch situations and run after the catch.”
Greathouse often thinks about his first touchdown in the national championship game, a moment he had visualized for years. That “wonderful feeling” has propelled him through the offseason and toward a return to a familiar field for the opener.
“Obviously, we didn’t have any games after those last two, so I’m just trying to start the season off hot, make a difference for my team immediately and make sure that my presence is felt,” he said. “Everything else will take care of itself.”
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CFP highlights: Recorded at least one sack in all three playoff games; had two sacks, including a strip sack, against Notre Dame in CFP semifinal; and added an interception in the fourth quarter.
When Penn State began its first CFP voyage, the defensive end garnering the most buzz was, quite understandably, Abdul Carter. An All-America selection, he had been named Big Ten Defensive Player of the Year. Carter, who shifted from outside linebacker to end under defensive coordinator Tom Allen, positioned himself as the top pass rusher for the 2025 NFL draft.
As Penn State went through the postseason, though, Dennis-Sutton shined and became much more than a complement to Carter. He had 4.5 sacks in three CFP games and seemed to be everywhere in the semifinal matchup against Notre Dame, stripping quarterback Steve Angeli late in the first half and then intercepting Riley Leonard in the fourth quarter to set up a Penn State touchdown.
Dennis-Sutton made a handful of plays during the first half of the season but recorded more sacks in the three CFP games than in the previous 13. There was a sense early on that he didn’t want to cut loose. But he had a sack and three quarterback hurries in the regular-season finale against Maryland and then hit his stride in the CFP.
“He’s never going to be Abdul and he’s not that kind of guy, but he can be a very intimidating and dominating presence,” a Big Ten coordinator said. “So I would expect him to kind of take where he left off the season because he was playing at a really high level in the playoffs.”
Penn State first-year defensive coordinator Jim Knowles likes what he has seen from Dennis-Sutton, who was limited this spring but returned to full strength in fall camp.
“He has things that he wants to prove, and he’s a very driven individual,” Knowles told ESPN. “Super talented, very confident, plays with a demeanor that you want from one of your stars on defense, the guys look up to him. You need a stop, you need to get somebody to make a play, you know he’s going to do it, he’s not going to back down.”
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CFP highlights: Had an interception, a quarterback hurry and a half-sack in a first-round win over Clemson; added a sack in quarterfinal win against Arizona State and recorded season-high two pass breakups against Ohio State in national semifinal.
Simmons, a former five-star recruit and the No. 12 prospect in the 2024 class, arrived at Texas amid great anticipation and expectations. He was emblematic of the recruiting push made by coach Steve Sarkisian, who is stacking top-five classes alongside CFP appearances.
The 240-pound Simmons had a sack against Michigan and two in the SEC opener against Mississippi State but was a bit quieter during the middle part of SEC play, while not starting for Texas. But he had a strong finish to the regular season — two sacks against Arkansas, forced fumbles against Kentucky and Georgia in the SEC title game — and then recorded his first career interception against Clemson in the first-round CFP game. He added a sack against Arizona State in an overtime win at the Peach Bowl quarterfinal, then recorded his first pass breakups of the season against Ohio State.
“I always had confidence in myself,” Simmons told ESPN. “It’s not like I haven’t been before, going to state championships in high school. Being on the big stage felt normal.”
Simmons led Texas with nine sacks — the third most in team history by a freshman — and finished second in tackles for loss. After not starting in 2024, he enters his second season as one of the front men for a talent-stocked Texas defense, which includes linebacker Anthony Hill Jr., safety Michael Taaffe and others.
“I’m just polishing things people say I’m not good at,” Simmons said. “Some people still think I can’t play the run. Everybody knows I’m a talented pass rusher. It’s the spot details and little things. My eyes are one of the main things when it comes to reading the plays, the formations, the quarterback, the tackles.”
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CFP highlights: Intercepted passes against Boise State and Notre Dame; recorded a career-high 16 tackles, including a sack, against Notre Dame.
Wheatley had good overall production for Penn State in the regular season, recording 70 tackles and earning honorable mention All-Big Ten honors. But he found a different playmaking gear in the CFP, earning Fiesta Bowl Defensive Player of the Game honors and then intercepting a pass in the first quarter against Notre Dame in the semifinal. Wheatley had reached double digits in tackles just once before breaking out against the Irish.
“It meant everything,” Wheatley told ESPN. “Being young and watching these games on television, and then to be in those games and make plays and end up being a defensive MVP for a playoff game was amazing. It gives me a ton of confidence, just knowing you can do it on the biggest stage.”
Franklin said Penn State loved Wheatley’s ability to play the ball in high school, noting that the staff considered whether he could play wide receiver at one point. He’s a tall safety at 6-foot-2 and, while not a speed burner, brings good length and instincts.
“He’s got some Honey Badger in him, in terms of his ball skills, whether it’s causing fumbles, recovering fumbles, interceptions,” Franklin told ESPN, referring to former Heisman finalist and LSU and NFL star Tyrann Mathieu.
Wheatley could be an even bigger factor under Knowles, who coached All-America safety Caleb Downs last season at Ohio State. Downs saw his playmaking spike down the stretch of the regular season and into the CFP.
“We haven’t really unleashed him yet,” Knowles said of Wheatley. “With Zakee, yes, he has all the natural instincts. You can just put him out there and he’ll make plays. I’m probably slowing him down right now, to make sure he learns. We’ll speed him up later on.”
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CFP highlights: Had a sack, a forced fumble or a pass breakup in three of four CFP games; tied career high for tackles (9) against Texas; had four tackles for loss, two sacks, two pass breakups and a forced fumble in the CFP.
After two years at safety, including the 2023 season as a starter, Styles transitioned to linebacker last fall and helped anchor the defense with Cody Simon, Caleb Downs and others. He finished second on the team in total tackles with 85, but some of his best performances came down the stretch and in the CFP.
Styles had pass breakups against Tennessee and Texas and had sacks against Texas and Notre Dame. He finished second on the team in tackles during the CFP with 24, and he had a forced fumble in the first quarter of the Texas game.
“I can do a lot of different things on the field,” Styles told ESPN. “I’ve shown I can be an off-the-ball linebacker, track the ball sideline to sideline; I can cover pretty well; I’ve shown a little bit off the edge and things like that.”
Coach Ryan Day called Styles, who has a massive frame at 6-5 and 243 pounds, “one of the best-looking linebackers since I’ve been here.” Although he came to Ohio State as a top-15 national recruit at safety, his accelerated physical development — Styles turns only 21 in November but has played in 41 games — makes linebacker more of a natural fit.
The question will be how new defensive coordinator Matt Patricia chooses to employ Styles.
“When I first met him, I asked, ‘Hey, Coach, what kind of defense do you run?’ He’s like, ‘I don’t have a specific defense. I run what my players are,'” Styles said. “That’s pretty unique. … You get to experience a lot of different things, and you get to display a multiplicity of abilities.”
Which Styles certainly has after the past few seasons.
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CFP highlights: Set career highs in receptions (9) and receiving yards (116) and scored a touchdown in Clemson’s CFP first-round loss at Texas; had three more receptions than in any other game.
Moore was part of a resurgent Clemson wide receivers group in 2024, teaming with fellow freshman Bryant Wesco Jr., veteran Antonio Williams and others to help the offense finish 15th nationally in passing. Arriving as the nation’s No. 50 overall recruit, Moore had seven catches during the first five games before his production began to increase.
He had solid midseason performances against Virginia, Louisville and Virginia Tech and eventually earned a starting job, but he didn’t reach 100 receiving yards until the CFP, when he consistently found open spots in Texas’ zone defense, piling up catches. His best catch came early in the fourth quarter, when he hauled in a 30-yard fade ball from Cade Klubnik, beating Texas’ Malik Muhammad.
0:22
T.J. Moore hauls in one-handed snag for Clemson
T.J. Moore manages to come down with a tough one-handed catch down the sideline.
“I caught the ball with one hand, and somehow I got both feet in,” Moore told ESPN. “That was probably my favorite play from that game. I hadn’t made a play like that at Clemson.”
After the strong finish to his freshman year, Moore has worked to become a more complete receiver, improving his quickness and hands, while adding about 8 pounds to his frame.
“It gave me more drive, more want, to get better in the offseason, knowing that I could do how I did,” Moore said of the Texas game.
Moore, who finished third on the team with 45 receptions last fall, grew up watching NFL standouts such as Julio Jones, Michael Thomas and Stefon Diggs. He didn’t try to model himself after any of them but liked their approach toward the technical side of the position.
“I enjoy that part of it,” he said. “I get back to look at myself, ‘OK, I don’t like that, let me try it again,’ and then just keep building from there.”
Sports
Proposal for historic NCAA tournament expansion reaches final stages: report
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Michigan’s men’s basketball team secured its first national title in more than 30 years earlier this month. One day earlier, UCLA’s women’s team claimed its first NCAA Tournament crown.
Michigan and UCLA powered through a 64-team bracket to hoist their respective championship trophies, but an expanded bracket could make repeat runs more difficult next season. ESPN reported Tuesday, citing sources, that the NCAA is moving forward with plans to expand both tournaments to 76 teams.
Expansion has been on the table for more than a year, but this latest step could pave the way for formal approval, with an announcement possible as soon as next month. The larger field could be in place before the 2026-27 season.
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The Sweet 16/Elite Eight March Madness logo is displayed on the floor before the NCAA men’s basketball tournament Elite Eight game between Texas Tech and Florida at the Chase Center in San Francisco, Calif., on March 29, 2025. (Mitchell Layton/Getty Images)
Though several hurdles remain with NCAA committees before any changes can become official, a source told ESPN the remaining steps are merely “formalities.”
Media rights deals remain unfinished, and signed contracts will likely be needed before the men’s and women’s basketball committees, oversight groups and other parties move forward. ESPN reported that NCAA officials have recently engaged in discussions with key media partners.
NCAA TOURNAMENT IS GOING TO EXPAND, UNFORTUNATELY. JUST WHAT WE NEED, MORE TEAMS
While the financial framework for expansion is still unclear, costs are expected to rise with more teams traveling and competing. A source told ESPN the plan could still ultimately produce profit and a “modest financial upside.”

A game ball with the March Madness logo is shown during the first round of the 2025 NCAA Women’s Basketball Tournament at Pete Maravich Assembly Center in Baton Rouge, La., on March 22, 2025. (Beau Brune/NCAA Photos)
Expansion discussions appear to be fueled more by the push for at-large bids for power conferences than by financial considerations. Many leagues have added a considerable number of schools under the current agreement.
“Expanding the basketball tournaments would require approval from multiple NCAA committees, including the men’s and women’s basketball committees, and no final recommendations or decisions have been made at this time,” an NCAA spokesperson told OutKick’s Trey Wallace.
Currently, the First Four features eight teams across four games. Under expansion, that would grow to 12 games involving 24 teams, with the men’s tournament adding eight at-large bids.

The NCAA basketball goes through the net during the SEC women’s college basketball tournament at Bon Secours Wellness Arena in Greenville, S.C., on March 8, 2025. (John Byrum/Icon Sportswire)
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Overall, the proposal would mean the First Four would see 24 of those 76 teams competing Tuesday and Wednesday. Eight teams that once would have been in the customary bracket would now face eight new at-large teams. The main 64-team bracket would still tip off Thursday with little change.
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Sports
World Cup to get cash boost as FIFA unveils red card crackdown | The Express Tribune
United States would now total $871 million, up from an initial figure of $727 million announced in December
General view of the Premier League ball before the match. PHOTO REUTERS
FIFA on Tuesday boosted overall World Cup cash distributions to nearly $900 million following concerns over the spiraling costs for teams taking part in the tournament.
Football’s global governing body said in a statement that money shared between the 48 teams taking part in the finals in Mexico, Canada and the United States would now total $871 million, up from an initial figure of $727 million announced in December.
The cash injection was announced following a meeting of FIFA’s ruling council ahead of the body’s Congress taking place in Vancouver on Thursday.
The hefty increase comes after several FIFA members reportedly argued that the high cost of travel, tax and overall operations could result in them losing money from taking part in the tournament.
FIFA has now moved to alleviate those concerns, hiking an award of $1.5 million for “preparation costs” to $2.5 million for each of the qualified teams.
A payment of $9 million for qualifying for the tournament has also been increased to $10 million.
Further contributions for team delegation costs and increased team ticketing allocations are also part of the overall increase.
“FIFA is proud to be in its most solid financial position ever, enabling us to help all our member associations in an unprecedented way,” FIFA President Gianni Infantino said in a statement.
Read: Vancouver hosts FIFA congress
“This is one more example of how FIFA’s resources are reinvested back into the game”.
FIFA is projected to earn around $13 billion from the current four-year World Cup cycle, which concludes with this year’s tournament, the largest World Cup in history.
FIFA’s prize money for the 2026 tournament announced last year had already shattered the cash handed out at the 2022 World Cup, increasing by 50 percent.
The increase in cash payments comes with FIFA increasingly under fire for the high cost of tickets to the tournament, while some local authorities in the United States have dramatically raised transport costs during the event.
Mouth-covering crackdown
FIFA, meanwhile, also confirmed law changes which will be rolled out at the World Cup, which kicks off in Mexico City on June 11.
From now on, players who cover their mouths during confrontations with opponents will face a red card as part of a new initiative aimed at combating racism.
In a statement following a meeting of the International Football Association Board (IFAB) in Vancouver on Tuesday, FIFA confirmed that the rule was one of two law changes that would be introduced at the World Cup.
“At the discretion of the competition organiser, any player covering their mouth in a confrontational situation with an opponent may be sanctioned with a red card,” FIFA said.
The new rule follows controversy earlier this year when Benfica winger Gianluca Prestianni was accused of racially abusing Real Madrid star Vinicius Junior during a Champions League game in February.
Prestianni was accused of calling Vinicius a “monkey” repeatedly while covering his mouth. Prestianni denied racially abusing Vinicius but was later banned for six matches — with three of those suspended — for “homophobic conduct”.
Read more: World Cup last-minute ticket sales phase re-opens 50 days from kick-off
In a separate law change announced on Tuesday to be enforced at the World Cup, FIFA said that red cards would also be introduced for players leaving the field of play in protest at a referee’s decision.
FIFA also said a team causing a game to be abandoned will forfeit the match.
The move follows the uproar at this year’s final of the Africa Cup of Nations, when Senegal’s players, head coach Pape Thiaw and his staff walked off the pitch in Rabat after Morocco were awarded a penalty in added time, which forward Brahim Diaz ultimately missed.
Senegal went on to win the final 1-0 in extra time, but were sensationally stripped of the title by the Confederation of African Football (CAF) in a bombshell decision issued last month.
FIFA has also approved a change to the way sanctions are enforced during the World Cup.
From this year’s tournament, single yellow cards issued to players in the group stage will be cancelled after the first round, and then again after the quarter-finals.
The move is aimed at ensuring that star players do not find themselves suspended for crucial games in the tournament after collecting two separate yellow cards.
Sports
Vermont pays $566K in damages to Christian school it banned from all sports competitions for years
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FIRST ON FOX: State education agencies in Vermont have paid $566,000 in damages and legal fees to a Christian school that was banned from all sports and academic competitions for two years after its girls’ basketball team refused to compete against a trans athlete in 2023.
A judge’s decision was finalized on Tuesday that awarded the plaintiffs, including the Mid Vermont Christian School and its law firm Alliance Defending Freedom (ADF), the $566,000. The plaintiffs took legal action to challenge the ban in November 2023, and have now officially been transferred their winnings.
Fox News Digital reached out to the Vermont Principals’ Association and the Vermont State Board of Education for a response.
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The settlement comes after a years-long saga in which all the school’s sports teams, and even its academic teams, like spelling bee and mathletes, had to travel out of state to compete against other schools.
The conflict dates back to an afternoon early in the 2023 school year at Mid Vermont Christian, when the school decided to forfeit a girls’ basketball postseason game against a team with a trans athlete.
Their Christian faith was more important to them than a game. But it was still a hard call, and it brought some tears.
“We were all in agreement that the right decision was to not compromise our beliefs and to withdraw, but the conversation with the players was the hardest,” Mid Vermont Christian girls’ basketball coach Chris Goodwin told Fox News Digital.
“Because you play a 20-game season, and you put in the work and the expectation is that you enter the postseason tournament with a shot to see how you’re going to do and to see how far you can get. So there were some teary eyes, and some sad faces, but in the end, they all really did understand that it was the right thing to do.”
But it was about to get much harder for not just the team, but for the entire school of about 111 students.
Within days of the forfeit, they learned the consequences escalated far beyond a single game. The Vermont Principals’ Association banned the school, not just from basketball, but from all athletics and a range of academic competitions.
“Almost immediately… they came out very strongly,” Goodwin said. “We were going to be banned from all athletic competition in the state… and then on top of that… science fairs and spelling bees.”
What followed was not a single lost season, but years of dislocation. The school was forced to arrange competitions with schools out of state just to make sure their extracurricular programs could continue.
Instead of short bus rides to nearby schools, teams traveled hours across state lines. Familiar rivalries disappeared. Home gyms sat quieter.
“The travel is probably triple,” Goodwin said. “You’re getting back at 10 o’clock at night… kids trying to do homework. I don’t want to say there’s a nightmare, but it was difficult.”
Along the way, Goodwin said there were teams he coached that had the potential to win the state championship, but never got the chance.
“You know, the hard part was that we knew we had lost… we lost a couple years of participation. And we had some really good teams during those two years where we would have been, if not winning the state championship, competing for the state championship.”
Goodwin says it affected the school’s entire culture.
“That’s a big part of the culture… having games in your gym, where parents and community members come,” he said. “That just disappeared.”
When the school took the issue to the courts, the state and its agencies didn’t fold.
ADF Senior Counsel Dave Cortman told Fox News Digital that he was shocked at how firmly the education authorities in Vermont wouldn’t back down from their sweeping sanction on the small Christian school.
“It’s been surprising how much the state has dug in their heels,” he said. “The arguments they’ve made… even saying your beliefs are wrong…
“Their message was, ‘in order for you to follow your religious beliefs, boys are boys, girls are girls, that would actually violate their nondiscrimination policies.’ So the irony of it was, they were discriminating against religious schools.”
Mid Vermont Christian School girls basketball team plays following the school’s reinstatement to Vermont state sports after a U.S. Court of Appeals order in February 2024. (Alliance Defending Freedom)
OREGON TEENS WHO PROTESTED TRANS ATHLETE AT MEDAL PODIUM SETTLE FREE SPEECH LAWSUIT VS SPORTS LEAGUE
The turning point came in 2025, when the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit ordered the school reinstated while the case continued — a decision that opened the door for students to return to competition.
The appeals court ruled in September 2025 that Mid Vermont Christian must be allowed to participate in state athletics, after two years of banishment had passed. The court then returned the case to district court for further proceedings.
So Goodwin was able to lead his team back onto the court this season.
A bittersweet moment occurred when Mid Vermont Christian made it back to the state tournament and back to the Barre Auditorium. It is the state’s old arena every Vermont player dreams about stepping onto for a chance to win a championship.
“When we won our quarterfinal game to get there, our senior captain who graduated a year ago, was talking on the phone to her sister who plays for me now, they’re both crying on the phone, number one because of the joy of achieving a goal that they wanted to achieve, but also the sadness of her sister, who’s a freshman in college now, not having that opportunity,” Goodwin said.

Mid Vermont Christian School’s girls basketball team was reinstated to Vermont state sports following a court order by the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit in June 2024. (Alliance Defending Freedom)
“That’s the hardest part to see the sadness that these girls have to experience. Because the state decided to make the decision it just, it was hurtful and it’s bittersweet that we’re back in, but we are glad we’re back in.”
For the school and ADF, the satisfaction of their win in court goes beyond just the arena of play, as the movement to “save girls sports” grows nationwide.
Cortman recalled a moment during the proceedings.
“In one of the hearings before the court, the state argued that the school was on the wrong side of history,” Cortman said.
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“The school is on the right side of history and will be for following his faith in its beliefs, for doing what’s right… sometimes there’s a price to pay. But it’s always the right thing to do. You’re always on the right side of history when you stand up for truth.”
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