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The Tufts Daily
Where you read it first | Sunday, April 27, 2025

Sports

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Sports

Isco: A poetic reunion

Tucked less than 20 km west of Málaga on Spain’s Southern Costa de Sol lies the quiet town of Benálmadena. In addition to its quintessential Andalusian beaches and historic architecture, the town is home to one of Spain’s greatest midfield talents: Francisco Román Alcarón Suárez, known to the world as Isco.


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Hockey

Tufts’ men ice hockey stuns No. 1 Hamilton, falls to Amherst to earn another weekend split

Tufts men’s ice hockey took a road trip out west for a pair of conference matchups against league-leading Hamilton as well as Amherst, returning to Medford with a win and a loss in the penultimate regular season weekend. The Jumbos made their first stop in Clinton, N.Y. to face the Continentals on Friday for the second time this season with aspirations for revenge after being handily beat 6—1 on Jan. 17.




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Sports

The Round-off Roundup: Politics and sports

This week, the head of Russian national rhythmic gymnastics team, Irina Viner, stepped down and was replaced by Alina Kabaeva. The only person who responded with appropriate shock to this news when I told them was my mother, who did gymnastics in the seventies and eighties. Everyone else was just like, "Huh." So, this column goes out to everyone at the Fletcher School and all the international relations majors.


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Sports

Squash teams reign as runners-up at NESCAC tournament

After breezing past their first-round matches 9–0 this past weekend at the annual NESCAC tournament hosted by Trinity College, both the men’s and women’s squash teams faced their closest competition from the regular season in the semifinals. The men faced Williams on Sunday morning, who they had lost 5–4 to just two weeks prior. The women, ranked No. 11, took on No. 3 Amherst, who they topped 5–4 on Jan. 17.



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Column

Lay of the Leagues: The search for quality, long-term player development in the NFL

The NFL has entered a phase of expansion, where its leadership is determined to spread the market to destinations deemed unreachable just 10 years ago. The highest-grossing revenue league has cemented its gritty and purely American presence in settings across the globe. Becoming more worldwide than ever before and with the 2025 Super Bowl in the books, the league trails in building an effective player development model. Many teams feel burdened to fast-track their own rebuilding process, leaving a scarcity of “complete” teams league-wide.


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Columns

Full Court Press: What’s wrong with Mahomes?

Around 7:30 p.m. Sunday night, a collective cacophony of gasps, screams and sighs could be heard from the couches of most American households. Seconds before the rapture, the Kansas City Chiefs lined up for a third-and-16. The ball was snapped. Mahomes rolled right, looked back over the middle and fired it … right into the hands of Philadelphia Eagles rookie nickel cornerback Cooper DeJean.


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Sports

BU wins Beanpot in star-studded matchup

Although the NHL has expanded across the country, hockey remains a regional sport in the United States, with its popularity concentrated in several pockets. Massachusetts is one of those pockets, having produced more NHL players than any state except Minnesota, and the Beanpot tournament is perhaps the greatest showcase of the state’s love for hockey.



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Columns

QB Q&A: The legend of Johnny Unitas

At a certain point in every legendary athlete’s career, something shifts in their perception. At this point, a very small number of living people can say that they have seen Jesse Owens at the Olympics, Babe Ruth at bat or Dolph Schayes on the court. These athletes have become folklore. Their epics are discounted in the modern era. Wilt Chamberlain’s 100-point game seems just as much of a tall tale as Paul Bunyan’s legendary tall tales, yet these legendary feats are legitimate.


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Columns

The 90-Minute Breakdown: Big transfers, big matches

Welcome to The 90-Minute Breakdown! I’ll be providing a weekly recap of all the biggest news, matches and storylines in world soccer. For the latest in the beautiful game, follow along! Players The winter transfer market didn’t disappoint, delivering last-minute drama and masterful chess moves. ...


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Football

The big game isn’t football

The spectacle is great, yes, but exhausting. Only the NFL can justify their dependence on commercials by making them a part of the product. Why are we accepting the overreach of advertising into places that should resist it, like sports? The Olympics understands this better –– its lack of any advertisements deeply changes the way we engage with sports for two brief weeks every two years.


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Hockey

Ice hockey climbs up conference rankings after weekend split with Conn. College

Loud offensive performances in a pair of games against Connecticut College last weekend propelled Tufts men’s ice hockey to fifth place in the NESCAC and the privilege of a playoff game on home ice. The Jumbos opened the weekend on the road, traveling to New London, Conn., where they slammed into a brick wall in Camels’ junior goalie Will McEvoy. Despite notching 41 shots on goal to the Camels’s 24, the Jumbos couldn’t manage to sneak one into the back of the net, and a singular power play goal by Connecticut College in the first period held up as the game-winner. The second and third periods ticked down without a score from either squad, and the 1–0 Camels win marked the first career shutout for McEvoy.


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Sports

Women's basketball 5-game win streak put to an end

Coming off of an incredible week of competitive conference play and a successful Senior Day, Tufts was looking strong going into this past weekend’s games against Amherst College and Hamilton College. However, the Jumbos seemed to fall short, resulting in them going down to fourth in the NESCAC rankings with a 5–4 conference record and 14–8 overall.


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Gymnastics

The Round-off Roundup: Life after sports

When sports come to an end, athletes stand at a crossroads and must decide what comes next. Leaving sports can feel like the end of an era, but for many athletes, it can also be the beginning of a new chapter. Let’s explore the career paths of top gymnasts after their retirement.




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Sports

Ice hockey splits weekend NESCAC series

In an exciting weekend of NESCAC play, Tufts men’s ice hockey had two games that were both decided by a solitary goal. Their 3–2 win against Middlebury on Friday and 3–2 overtime loss to Williams on Saturday made for a stressful weekend for those watching.