From the go-figure department: A lineman who just finished his sophomore year of high school football has announced his commitment to Dartmouth:
Blessed and Honored to Announce My Commitment to @DartmouthFTBL
— Henry Reagan (@henryreag75) June 16, 2025
First, I want to thank God for the opportunities and strength He’s given me throughout this journey. I’m incredibly grateful to my family for their constant love, support, and sacrifices – especially my parents, who… pic.twitter.com/HWNKvLLy8Y
Henry Regan is a 6-foot-3, 275-pound rising junior at Connecticut’s New Canaan High School. He is the brother of Ben Reagan, a 6-2, 275 rising junior offensive lineman for the Big Green.
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The 2025 Ivy League football media poll will be released on Aug. 4, per OptaAnalyst. The same site reports that the Ivy League media day will be on Aug. 11.
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The Yankees appear ready to give hard-hitting Ben Rice ’22 an opportunity to get in the lineup as a catcher, the position he played at Dartmouth. From a story in The Athletic:
“I think this guy’s a major-league catcher,” catching coordinator Tanner Swanson said Tuesday before the Yankees lost to the Los Angeles Angels, 4-0, and extended their scoreless drought to 29 innings.
“I’ve said that many times. If he were to get regular reps, I think the rest of the world would see that as well.”
And . . .
The Dartmouth graduate has been a constant in the Yankees’ pregame starting pitcher meetings and in series advance meetings with relievers. He catches bullpens and often works on his blocking and throwing despite playing mostly DH (43 starts) and first base (11 starts).
And . . .
Offensively, Rice started the season hot. Through May 11, Rice was hitting .260 with nine home runs and a .937 OPS. Since then, his stats have taken a nosedive. In 27 games before Tuesday, he hit just .187 with three homers and a .534 OPS.
But there’s plenty of reason for optimism. Rice has been one of the most unlucky hitters in the majors this season regarding his quality of contact. His expected weighted on-base average was .401 compared to his actual on-base percentage of .336 — a 65 percentage point difference, the eighth-widest gap in the majors.
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EXTRA POINT
It is still another gloomy, overcast day here in Vermont and I’m at cross purposes. On the one hand, the lack of bright sunshine might just slow down how fast our six acres of lawn and field grow. That's a good thing given all the hours that I spend mowing.
On the other hand, our solar tracker keeps loyally turning and tilting to follow the location of the sun, but isn't generating much electricity. Given that we have two electric cars and an electric tractor, that's a bad thing.