


Stanford’s Eric Reveno will be carrying a loftier title when he starts the second year of his second stint as an assistant men’s basketball coach for the Cardinal this fall.
The school announced Monday that the 59-year-old Reveno has been named general manager of the men’s basketball program.
Reveno, a two-time basketball team captain at Stanford, joins football general manager Andrew Luck as another beloved ex-Cardinal athlete returning to school to run his old program.
“I am honored to step into this role at a time of existential change in college athletics,” said Reveno, who remains the associate head coach under second-year head coach Kyle Smith. “The opportunity to help shape the future of Stanford basketball – supporting our student-athletes, coaches, and campus – is both humbling and energizing. We have the opportunity to develop amazing young men, build championship teams and impact all of college athletics.”
Reveno’s new responsibilities will include management of the name, image and likeness (NIL) and revenue strategy, roster and scholarship optimization. As the general manager, Reveno’s role will be to work closely with campus leaders across Stanford departments.
The Stanford-born Reveno helped Smith lead the Cardinal to a 21-14 record last season, the most wins for the school in 10 years. He’s a noted as a skilled coach for interior players and he helped in the development of last year’s All-American, Maxime Raynaud.
Reveno’s time at Stanford includes seven years under Mike Montgomery (1997-2004) and two years with Trent Johnson (2004-06). Reveno also spent 10 seasons as head coach at Portland.
— Jon Becker
NHL
Another former San Jose Sharks head coach has landed a job in New York.
The New York Islanders announced they’ve hired Bob Boughner to be an assistant on coach Patrick Roy’s staff. Ray Bennett was also named an assistant coach with the Islanders, following his eight seasons in the same role with the Colorado Avalanche.
Boughner spent two-plus seasons as the Sharks’ head coach and had a 67-85-23 record before being fired on June 30, 2022. He soon joined the Detroit Red Wings staff as an associate coach alongside head coach Derek Lalonde, but both were let go by the team on Dec. 26, 2024, after a 13-17-4 start to the season. Former Sharks coach Todd McLellan replaced Lalonde.
Last week, David Quinn, who succeeded Boughner as the Sharks’ head coach in 2022 and was fired by the team in April 2024 after two unsuccessful seasons, was officially named an assistant coach on Mike Sullivan’s staff with the New York Rangers.
Quinn, who had a 41-98-25 record with the Sharks, joined Sullivan’s staff with the Penguins in 2024 after being dismissed in San Jose. Sullivan and the Penguins parted ways in April.
— Curtis Pashelka
T.J. Oshie, who scored four shootout goals for the U.S. to beat host Russia at the 2014 Sochi Olympics and helped the Washington Capitals win the Stanley Cup in 2018, announced he is retiring after playing 16 NHL seasons.
WNBA
Caitlin Clark will sit out a fifth consecutive game with a quadriceps strain when Indiana visits Atlanta tonight, shifting the focus to whether the Fever star will return against the WNBA champion New York Liberty on Saturday.
Indiana coach Stephanie White stopped short of saying Clark had been cleared for basketball activities, saying the club was ready for the reigning Rookie of the Year to start “ramping back up.”
The Fever initially said Clark would miss at least two weeks, and it has been 16 days since Clark was injured in a 90-88 loss to the Liberty. She finished the game, saying later adrenaline likely allowed her to play with the strain.
Clark is scheduled to make her first Bay Area appearance when the Fever face the Valkyries at Chase Center on Thursday, June 19.
BROADCASTING
Dick Vitale, 86, has signed a contract through the 2027-28 season, while ESPN Events is launching the Dick Vitale Invitational — the first matchup coming with a season-opening tilt between Duke and Texas on Nov. 4 in Charlotte, North Carolina.
MEN’S SOCCER
U.S. midfielder Tyler Adams will miss tonight’s friendly against Switzerland because of a foot injury. He played the second half of Saturday’s 2-1 loss to Turkey.
The Americans open the CONCACAF Gold Cup against Trinidad and Tobago in San Jose on Sunday.