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Oldest Jewish university in US 'rebounds' after October 7 tragedy with resilient men's basketball team

Oldest Jewish university in US 'rebounds' after October 7 tragedy with resilient men's basketball team

Fox News09-04-2025
The Yeshiva University men's basketball team has accomplished many feats in the NCAA's Division III, including a 50-game winning streak. But coming back strong after the tragic October 7 attacks in Israel may arguably be their biggest yet.
"Rebound: A Year of Triumph and Tragedy at Yeshiva University Basketball" — a new documentary streaming exclusively on Fox Nation — chronicles the journey of the 2023-2024 Yeshiva University Maccabees men's basketball team, and how they responded to the October 7 Hamas attacks in Israel that claimed over 1,000 lives.
In September 2023, the Maccabees were preparing for yet another run for glory in the NCAA Division III tournament. However, when tragedy struck at the hands of terrorist group Hamas, the team faced unimaginable grief.New York City's Yeshiva, the oldest Jewish university in the United States, had six Israeli players on the men's basketball roster.
Forced to decide whether to cancel the season or play for their community after being stricken by horrors, the Maccabees chose to keep their season alive — their in-season visit to Israel following the attacks on their home country propelling them to keep playing the game. JEWISH STUDENTS AT THE UNIVERSITY OF TEXAS EXPERIENCE 'JEW HATRED' AT PROTESTS: 'F--- YOU, ZION NAZI B----'Head coach Elliot Steinmetz and leading scorer Zevi Samet are featured in Fox Nation's behind-the-scenes look at how the team overcame difficult obstacles as they aimed to maintain the program's success in the wind of immense grief.
Steinmetz and Emmy award-winning director Pat Dimon joined "Fox & Friends," Wednesday, to discuss the new show and reflect on the Maccabees' 2023-2024 season.
"It was definitely a challenge coming back from Israel and meeting with the guys," Steinmetz said, discussing the complex decision to continue the season. "Ultimately, our guys were all on board. We decided that we obviously wanted to have a season, but we wanted it to have more meaning."
"Normally, I'm dealing with athletes and storylines, not of this kind of sensitivity and this kind of intensity really," director Dimon explained. "So yeah, I really had to take a different approach here."
"I thank Elliot and the team and the university for trusting me. And I think I come at it from kind of a human perspective, and a storytelling perspective," he added. "But yeah, I mean, it was really a sensitive subject that we had to approach carefully."
To learn more about the Yeshiva University Macabees men's basketball team and how they navigated the aftermath of the fateful Hamas attacks, subscribe to Fox Nation.
Fox Nation programs are viewable on-demand and from your mobile device app, but only for Fox Nation subscribers. Go to Fox Nation to start a free trial and watch the extensive library from your favorite Fox Nation personalities.
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Jake Retzlaff still loves BYU but expresses faith in his fresh start at Tulane

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NEW ORLEANS -- Jake Retzlaff is embracing some new nicknames. 'BYJew' is an endearment of the past. Now, 'Kosher Cannon,' 'Shabbat Shotgun' and 'Bayou Jew' are among the monikers mentioned by the sizeable Jewish community at Retzlaff's new school, Tulane. It's a fresh start for Retzlaff, but one the former BYU quarterback wasn't necessarily seeking until May, when he was named in a since-dismissed civil sexual assault lawsuit. Retzlaff maintains that he loved playing for the Cougars, despite being one of very few Jews on BYU's predominantly Mormon campus in Provo, Utah. 'BYU was an amazing place. It made me into an amazing human being. I feel like it helped me grow in so many ways on and especially off the field,' Retzlaff said, wearing a Star of David on a chain around his neck. 'It helped me connect stronger with my faith than I did before, because I was in a place where it was so faith-oriented that it was just right in front of you.' Retzlaff went 11-2 as a starter for a 2024 BYU team that finished the season at No. 13 in the final AP Top 25 Poll. His decision to withdraw came while he reportedly faced a suspension for acknowledging what he described as a consensual sexual relationship while defending himself against the lawsuit. The university's honor code requires students to abstain from premarital sex. Speaking on Friday for the first time since arriving at Tulane about a week ago, Retzlaff declined to address the factors that led him to leave BYU, where he spent the past two years. 'I'm just worried about where my feet are," Retzlaff said. "I'm just worried about this next chapter, being at Tulane, winning football games.' Tulane coach Jon Sumrall said the university's administration vetted Retzlaff before clearing the way for Sumrall to bring him to the Green Wave, where he'll now have to outperform three other transfer QBs — Kadin Semonza from Ball State, Donovan Leary from Illinois and Brendan Sullivan from Iowa — to win the starting job. 'I was very transparent with the guys in the (quarterback) room. I was also very up front with Jake,' Sumrall said. 'None of them were promised anything in regards to who's going to start.' Retzlaff said he had other offers, but remembered fondly his recruitment by the then-coach of Troy in 2023 — Sumrall. Retzlaff recalled telling his father, Steve, that he could envision playing for Sumrall one day. 'I knew he's a guy I want to be around,' Retzlaff said. Tulane didn't have a scholarship available for Ratzlaff, but the 22-year-old graduate transfer said that being a walk-on suits him because he plays with a chip on his shoulder and doesn't want to be short-sighted about money at the expense of setting himself up for long-term success. 'I know that I'm going to get what I deserve, hopefully, at the next level," Retzlaff said. "If that means sacrificing a little bit of money on my side (now) .. so what? Let's go win football games.' First, he has to learn a new offense, which he said has meant a lot of late nights. He also is working to acclimatize himself to oppressively hot, heavy air of swampy south Louisiana in the summer, even wearing a sweat absorbent wrist band on his throwing arm for the first time. 'I'm soaked right now,' he said after practice, contrasting his new home to the cooler, mountainous, semi-arid Salt Lake area. 'I haven't sweat this much in my life.' One adjustment he won't mind is being on a campus where around 40% of students are Jewish. 'It's a cool deal. It's so opposite" from BYU, Retzlaff said. 'My faith is super important to me. So, that fact just made it that much sweeter to come here." He said he's felt welcome in the locker room as well. 'The guys have been nothing but great to me — every guy on the team and especially the quarterback room,' Retzlaff said, noting that he has tried to eat each meal of each day with different players in an effort to get to know them better. Whoever plays quarterback for Tulane will do so for a team that has appeared in three straight American Conference title games, but also had a lot of turnover after last season — including the loss of one-year starter Darian Mensah to Duke in the transfer portal. Sumrall not only isn't projecting Mensah's replacement, but said he might play two quarterbacks in the Green Wave's season opener against Northwestern in New Orleans on Aug. 30. 'No matter what, this is a new chapter in my life,' Retzlaff said. "I'm excited to attack it and make the most of it.'

Jake Retzlaff still loves BYU but expresses faith in his fresh start at Tulane
Jake Retzlaff still loves BYU but expresses faith in his fresh start at Tulane

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time7 hours ago

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Jake Retzlaff still loves BYU but expresses faith in his fresh start at Tulane

NEW ORLEANS (AP) — Jake Retzlaff is embracing some new nicknames. 'BYJew' is an endearment of the past . Now, 'Kosher Cannon,' 'Shabbat Shotgun' and 'Bayou Jew' are among the monikers mentioned by the sizeable Jewish community at Retzlaff's new school, Tulane. It's a fresh start for Retzlaff, but one the former BYU quarterback wasn't necessarily seeking until May, when he was named in a since-dismissed civil sexual assault lawsuit. Retzlaff maintains that he loved playing for the Cougars, despite being one of very few Jews on BYU's predominantly Mormon campus in Provo, Utah. 'BYU was an amazing place. It made me into an amazing human being. I feel like it helped me grow in so many ways on and especially off the field,' Retzlaff said, wearing a Star of David on a chain around his neck. 'It helped me connect stronger with my faith than I did before, because I was in a place where it was so faith-oriented that it was just right in front of you.' Retzlaff went 11-2 as a starter for a 2024 BYU team that finished the season at No. 13 in the final AP Top 25 Poll . His decision to withdraw came while he reportedly faced a suspension for acknowledging what he described as a consensual sexual relationship while defending himself against the lawsuit. The university's honor code requires students to abstain from premarital sex. Speaking on Friday for the first time since arriving at Tulane about a week ago, Retzlaff declined to address the factors that led him to leave BYU, where he spent the past two years. 'I'm just worried about where my feet are,' Retzlaff said. 'I'm just worried about this next chapter, being at Tulane, winning football games.' Tulane coach Jon Sumrall said the university's administration vetted Retzlaff before clearing the way for Sumrall to bring him to the Green Wave, where he'll now have to outperform three other transfer QBs — Kadin Semonza from Ball State, Donovan Leary from Illinois and Brendan Sullivan from Iowa — to win the starting job. 'I was very transparent with the guys in the (quarterback) room. I was also very up front with Jake,' Sumrall said. 'None of them were promised anything in regards to who's going to start.' Retzlaff said he had other offers, but remembered fondly his recruitment by the then-coach of Troy in 2023 — Sumrall. Retzlaff recalled telling his father, Steve, that he could envision playing for Sumrall one day. 'I knew he's a guy I want to be around,' Retzlaff said. Tulane didn't have a scholarship available for Ratzlaff, but the 22-year-old graduate transfer said that being a walk-on suits him because he plays with a chip on his shoulder and doesn't want to be short-sighted about money at the expense of setting himself up for long-term success. 'I know that I'm going to get what I deserve, hopefully, at the next level,' Retzlaff said. 'If that means sacrificing a little bit of money on my side (now) .. so what? Let's go win football games.' First, he has to learn a new offense, which he said has meant a lot of late nights. He also is working to acclimatize himself to oppressively hot, heavy air of swampy south Louisiana in the summer, even wearing a sweat absorbent wrist band on his throwing arm for the first time. 'I'm soaked right now,' he said after practice, contrasting his new home to the cooler, mountainous, semi-arid Salt Lake area. 'I haven't sweat this much in my life.' One adjustment he won't mind is being on a campus where around 40% of students are Jewish. 'It's a cool deal. It's so opposite' from BYU, Retzlaff said. 'My faith is super important to me. So, that fact just made it that much sweeter to come here.' He said he's felt welcome in the locker room as well. 'The guys have been nothing but great to me — every guy on the team and especially the quarterback room,' Retzlaff said, noting that he has tried to eat each meal of each day with different players in an effort to get to know them better. Whoever plays quarterback for Tulane will do so for a team that has appeared in three straight American Conference title games, but also had a lot of turnover after last season — including the loss of one-year starter Darian Mensah to Duke in the transfer portal. Sumrall not only isn't projecting Mensah's replacement, but said he might play two quarterbacks in the Green Wave's season opener against Northwestern in New Orleans on Aug. 30. 'No matter what, this is a new chapter in my life,' Retzlaff said. 'I'm excited to attack it and make the most of it.' ___ AP college football: and

Jake Retzlaff still loves BYU but expresses faith in his fresh start at Tulane
Jake Retzlaff still loves BYU but expresses faith in his fresh start at Tulane

San Francisco Chronicle​

time7 hours ago

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Jake Retzlaff still loves BYU but expresses faith in his fresh start at Tulane

NEW ORLEANS (AP) — Jake Retzlaff is embracing some new nicknames. 'BYJew' is an endearment of the past. Now, 'Kosher Cannon,' 'Shabbat Shotgun' and 'Bayou Jew' are among the monikers mentioned by the sizeable Jewish community at Retzlaff's new school, Tulane. It's a fresh start for Retzlaff, but one the former BYU quarterback wasn't necessarily seeking until May, when he was named in a since-dismissed civil sexual assault lawsuit. Retzlaff maintains that he loved playing for the Cougars, despite being one of very few Jews on BYU's predominantly Mormon campus in Provo, Utah. 'BYU was an amazing place. It made me into an amazing human being. I feel like it helped me grow in so many ways on and especially off the field,' Retzlaff said, wearing a Star of David on a chain around his neck. 'It helped me connect stronger with my faith than I did before, because I was in a place where it was so faith-oriented that it was just right in front of you.' Retzlaff went 11-2 as a starter for a 2024 BYU team that finished the season at No. 13 in the final AP Top 25 Poll. His decision to withdraw came while he reportedly faced a suspension for acknowledging what he described as a consensual sexual relationship while defending himself against the lawsuit. The university's honor code requires students to abstain from premarital sex. Speaking on Friday for the first time since arriving at Tulane about a week ago, Retzlaff declined to address the factors that led him to leave BYU, where he spent the past two years. 'I'm just worried about where my feet are," Retzlaff said. "I'm just worried about this next chapter, being at Tulane, winning football games.' Tulane coach Jon Sumrall said the university's administration vetted Retzlaff before clearing the way for Sumrall to bring him to the Green Wave, where he'll now have to outperform three other transfer QBs — Kadin Semonza from Ball State, Donovan Leary from Illinois and Brendan Sullivan from Iowa — to win the starting job. 'I was very transparent with the guys in the (quarterback) room. I was also very up front with Jake,' Sumrall said. 'None of them were promised anything in regards to who's going to start.' Retzlaff said he had other offers, but remembered fondly his recruitment by the then-coach of Troy in 2023 — Sumrall. Retzlaff recalled telling his father, Steve, that he could envision playing for Sumrall one day. 'I knew he's a guy I want to be around,' Retzlaff said. Tulane didn't have a scholarship available for Ratzlaff, but the 22-year-old graduate transfer said that being a walk-on suits him because he plays with a chip on his shoulder and doesn't want to be short-sighted about money at the expense of setting himself up for long-term success. 'I know that I'm going to get what I deserve, hopefully, at the next level," Retzlaff said. "If that means sacrificing a little bit of money on my side (now) .. so what? Let's go win football games.' First, he has to learn a new offense, which he said has meant a lot of late nights. He also is working to acclimatize himself to oppressively hot, heavy air of swampy south Louisiana in the summer, even wearing a sweat absorbent wrist band on his throwing arm for the first time. 'I'm soaked right now,' he said after practice, contrasting his new home to the cooler, mountainous, semi-arid Salt Lake area. 'I haven't sweat this much in my life.' One adjustment he won't mind is being on a campus where around 40% of students are Jewish. 'It's a cool deal. It's so opposite" from BYU, Retzlaff said. 'My faith is super important to me. So, that fact just made it that much sweeter to come here." He said he's felt welcome in the locker room as well. 'The guys have been nothing but great to me — every guy on the team and especially the quarterback room,' Retzlaff said, noting that he has tried to eat each meal of each day with different players in an effort to get to know them better. Whoever plays quarterback for Tulane will do so for a team that has appeared in three straight American Conference title games, but also had a lot of turnover after last season — including the loss of one-year starter Darian Mensah to Duke in the transfer portal. Sumrall not only isn't projecting Mensah's replacement, but said he might play two quarterbacks in the Green Wave's season opener against Northwestern in New Orleans on Aug. 30. 'No matter what, this is a new chapter in my life,' Retzlaff said. "I'm excited to attack it and make the most of it.' ___

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