Connect with us
https://yoursportsnation.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/07/call-to-1.png

College Sports

U20 WNT Captures Group A at Concacaf

The U.S. U-20 Women’s National Team dominated host Costa Rica in a 4-0 win, taking first place in its third and final Group A match at the 2025 Concacaf Women’s U-20 Championship. The USA qualified for the 2026 FIFA U-20 Women’s World Cup by winning its first two games in Group A, and this match […]

Published

on

U20 WNT Captures Group A at Concacaf

The U.S. U-20 Women’s National Team dominated host Costa Rica in a 4-0 win, taking first place in its third and final Group A match at the 2025 Concacaf Women’s U-20 Championship.

The USA qualified for the 2026 FIFA U-20 Women’s World Cup by winning its first two games in Group A, and this match was just for semifinal seeding. With the win, the USA takes the top spot in the group and will play Group B runner-up Canada on June 6 for a berth to the title game (11:30 a.m. ET on FS2). Group B winner Mexico will face Costa Rica in the other semifinal.

The match was played in steady rain on a somewhat sloppy field, but the young Americans still kept the pressure on Las Ticas for the entire match. U.S. head coach Carrie Kveton made eight changes to the starting XI from the USA’s 3-1 victory over Puerto Rico on June 1 in the second match of the tournament, after making nine changes between the first two matches. Forward Chloe Ricketts and defenders Abby Mills and team captain Katie Scott were the holdovers in today’s starting lineup from the second game.

It took the USA 23 minutes to breach the Costa Rica back line. The game-winning goal came when Angel City FC midfielder Kennedy Fuller played UNC midfielder Linda Ullmark behind the defense with a well-weighted pass into the penalty box. Ullmark held off her defender and slotted it home into the left corner from eight yards out for her second goal of the tournament. It marked Fuller’s fourth assist of the tournament, a team-high.

A physical Costa Rica side, playing in front of the home crowd, was definitely up for the fight, but the USA outshot the Central Americans, 19-4, for the match and 8-1 in shots on goal.

The USA doubled the lead in the 60th minute off a goal from halftime substitute Mary Long, her third of the tournament. Ullmark played a nice pass to Dallas Trinity midfielder Sealy Strawn into the right side of the box, drawing the goalkeeper and a defender. Strawn then dished an entirely unselfish pass across the goal mouth on the ground for an easy tap-in for Long. It was the Kansas City Current forward’s third goal of the tournament after scoring twice in the last game against Puerto Rico. 

The USA made it 3-0 in the 65th minute off a corner kick from the left side that was taken by Fuller. Long rose to head the ball on frame, but it was blocked on the goal line by Costa Rica’s Sheika Scott. Notre Dame midfielder Grace Restovitch then crashed the goal and blocked the attempted clearance with her midsection before smashing the ball into the net from the one-inch line for her first goal of the tournament.

Costa Rica just needed to avoid a 5-0 defeat to finish second in the group, qualify for the World Cup and advance to the semifinals, so the remainder of the game featured a home side content to not take too many chances in the attack while defending their hearts out.

Fuller surely drew cheers from the Puerto Rican team watching from their hotel when she scored a fourth in the 87th minute, blasting her shot off the hands of Costa Rica goalkeeper Alondra Iriarte and into the left side of the net from just outside the penalty area. It was Fuller’s second score of the tournament.

Fortunately for Las Ticas, who had to sweat out seven minutes of stoppage time, the game ended 4-0 and Costa Rica qualified for the World Cup by the slimmest of margins. Costa Rica tied Group A third-place finisher Puerto Rico on points (4) and goal difference (+5), while only slightly ahead on the next tie-breaker, goals scored, besting the islanders nine goals to eight. The final whistle sparked wild celebrations for the home team despite the loss.

The 2026 FIFA U-20 Women’s World Cup will be held from September 5–27 next year in Poland.

Additional Notes: 

  • In group play, the USA outscored its three opponents 15-1.
  • Every player on the U.S. roster earned their first U-20 cap or caps in this tournament, except for defender Avan Alvarez, who had two previous U-20 caps coming into the competition.
  • Alverez, who got the start, earned her team-leading fifth U-20 international cap.
  • The USA played three different goalkeepers in each group match with Notre Dame’s Sonoma Kasica handling the netminding duties in the first game, Penn State’s Kealy Titmuss in the second, and Stanford’s Caroline Birkel earning the shutout today.
  • Kansas City Current defender Katie Scott, who hails from Pennsylvania, captained the U.S. U-20s for the second time in this tournament.
  • Izzy Engle still leads the USA in scoring in this tournament after pounding in four goals in the first match against Guyana.

-U.S. UNDER-20 WOMEN’S NATIONAL TEAM MATCH REPORT-

Match: U.S. Under-20 Women’s National Team vs. Costa Rica U-20 WNT

Date: June 3, 2025

Competition: Concacaf Women’s U-20 Championship

Venue: Estadio Alejandro Morera Soto; Alajuela, Costa Rica 

Attendance: 369

Kickoff: 2 p.m. local (4 p.m. ET)

Weather: 72 degrees and raining

Scoring Summary 1 2 F
USA 1 3 4
CRC 0 0 0

Lineups:

USA: 1-Caroline Birkel; 2-Katie Scott (15-Leena Powell, 64), 17-Edra Bello, 4-Abby Mills (5-Bella Ayscue, 46), 3-Aven Alvarez; 6-Grace Restovich, 8-Kennedy Fuller, 10-Linda Ullmark (16-Kennedy Ring, 64); 11-Sealey Strawn, 9-Izzy Engle (19-Mary Long, 46), 7-Chloe Ricketts (18-Ashlyn Puerta, 77)

Substitutes Not Used: 12-Kealey Titmuss, 13-Peyton McGovern, 14-Emma Johnson, 20-Mya Townes, 21-Sonoma Kasica

Head Coach: Carrie Kveton

CRC: 1-Valeria Fernandez; 2-Brittany Vasquez, 3-Josselyn Briceńo,14-Brittany Castrillo; 4-Fabiana Alfaro (5-Tiara Ruiz, 29), 8-Daniela Ocampo, 12-Alondra Gonzalez (16-Alisha Lindo, 79), 15-Jimena Jimenez (Capt.) , 20-Lucia Paniagua (7-Emma Azofeifa, 79); 10-Sheika Scott, 11-Stacy Thomas

Substitutes Not Used: 6-Valeria Vargas, 9-Keisy Taylor, 13-Genesis Cespedes, 17-Yeslim Alvarado, 18-Ashley Quesada, 19-Odette Pitty, 21-Raquel Recio

Head Coach: Patricia Aguilar


RECOMMENDED FOR YOU

Continue Reading
Click to comment

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

College Sports

Gavin McKenna Joins Forces With Sidney Crosby’s Agent As 2026 NHL Draft Prospect Embarks on $700,000 Journey

The hockey world is buzzing as Gavin McKenna, projected No. 1 overall pick in the 2026 NHL Draft, makes a decision that could change everything for future NHL stars. At just 17 years old, McKenna isn’t just grabbing headlines for his jaw-dropping stats and electric potential on ice. He’s rewriting the playbook by ditching the […]

Published

on


The hockey world is buzzing as Gavin McKenna, projected No. 1 overall pick in the 2026 NHL Draft, makes a decision that could change everything for future NHL stars. At just 17 years old, McKenna isn’t just grabbing headlines for his jaw-dropping stats and electric potential on ice. He’s rewriting the playbook by ditching the Canadian Hockey League for NCAA hockey, committing to Penn State University with NIL compensation reportedly around $700,000.

Why Did Gavin McKenna Choose College Over Junior Hockey?

This move goes way deeper than McKenna’s individual career path. It signals a seismic shift in hockey development that has executives, scouts, and players watching closely.

After his record-breaking campaign with the Medicine Hat Tigers in the Western Hockey League, where he racked up 129 points in just 56 games, McKenna could have easily returned to dominate Canadian junior hockey again. Instead, he’s betting on the college route, bringing a wave of change that reflects the evolving relationship between the NCAA, CHL, and NHL.

The timing couldn’t be more perfect. Until recently, NCAA rules blocked players from Canadian junior teams from suiting up for Division I hockey. That barrier crumbled last November when the NCAA made its landmark NIL ruling, opening the door for CHL players to compete in U.S. college hockey.

The new rule kicks in this August, and McKenna stands as one of the first marquee prospects to jump on this opportunity. His choice isn’t just making history; it’s a ringing endorsement of college hockey as a legitimate path for elite prospects.

“Both options were great, but I just think going to college, being in such a great conference, it’ll really challenge me and prepare me,” McKenna said.

What Does McKenna’s Star-Power Agent Bring to the Table?

McKenna’s journey gets even more intriguing when you look at who’s steering his career. He’s teamed up with legendary NHL agent Pat Brisson, the same power broker who guided first-overall picks Sidney Crosby, Nathan MacKinnon, and John Tavares to stardom. Brisson and rising CAA agent Matt Williams now have their hands full managing someone many consider hockey’s next generational talent.

For McKenna, picking Penn State over CHL powerhouses or even other top NCAA programs like Michigan State, who reportedly dangled $200,000 to $300,000 in NIL money, wasn’t purely about the cash. Development played a huge role.

College hockey throws younger players into battles against older, stronger, more experienced competition, especially in a brutal conference like the Big Ten. It’s a similar strategy as recent top picks like Auston Matthews (who played in Switzerland before the draft) and Macklin Celebrini (who starred at Boston University) used to sharpen their games before jumping to the NHL.

McKenna gets a chance to fine-tune his skills against top-tier competition before making his professional leap.

How Does This Set Up McKenna’s NHL Future?

That leap to the pros looks virtually guaranteed. If McKenna gets selected first overall in 2026 as everyone expects, he’ll likely step straight into an NHL lineup, following the blueprint of countless top picks before him.

McKenna would also join exclusive company, becoming just the fourth winger in the past 15 years to go first overall, alongside Nail Yakupov (2012, Alexis Lafreniere (2020), and Juraj Slafkovsky (2022). But unlike those three, McKenna is already generating the kind of early buzz and excitement usually reserved for franchise centers like Connor McDavid and Auston Matthews.

Meanwhile, Canadian hockey officials are taking McKenna’s decision in stride. While many fans and league executives would have loved to see him continue tearing up the CHL, the Ontario Hockey League and other circuits are staying calm. OHL Commissioner Bryan Crawford has acknowledged McKenna’s choice and is reportedly working with him and his representation moving forward.

McKenna’s move to Penn State represents more than one player changing paths. It’s the first major test of how the new NCAA rules will reshape hockey development, potentially opening floodgates for other elite prospects to consider college hockey as a serious alternative to traditional junior routes.





Link

Continue Reading

College Sports

2 Penn State women’s hockey players invited to USA Hockey U19 Camp | Penn State Women’s Hockey News

Two of Penn State’s newest players will compete for a spot on Team USA’s U19 team. Defenseman Sophie Morrow and forward Mikah Keller received invites to the USA Hockey U19 Camp. 𝐍𝐞𝐱𝐭 𝐒𝐭𝐨𝐩: USA Hockey U19 Camp for Sophie Morrow & Mikah Keller 🇺🇸 🏒 #WeAre pic.twitter.com/IOQ9ZihVit — Penn State Women’s Hockey (@PennStateWHKY) July 17, […]

Published

on


Two of Penn State’s newest players will compete for a spot on Team USA’s U19 team.

Defenseman Sophie Morrow and forward Mikah Keller received invites to the USA Hockey U19 Camp.

Morrow is coming off a strong season from the blue line, tallying 35 points across 46 games for Shattuck St. Mary’s Prep.

Keller was a point-scoring machine before starting her collegiate career. Across 24 games in her final season, she totaled 18 goals and 35 points.

The Nittany Lions are no strangers to international competition as Morrow and Keller will look to join the likes of Tessa Janecke and Nicole Hall, who’ve previously competed for their respective countries.

MORE HOCKEY COVERAGE


Penn State women’s hockey players to watch for upcoming 2025-26 season

The doors at Pegula Ice Arena aren’t open yet, but it’s not too early to start thinking abou…

If you’re interested in submitting a Letter to the Editor, click here.





Link

Continue Reading

College Sports

Live from US Classic in Chicago

Welcome to Behind The Scenes! This is our exclusive live from Chicago after 2025 U.S Classic. We have a weekly Q&A episode and live exclusives after competitions all year long. We estimate live (right here, on this page) around 10pm Central. Login to reveal the show below. Here’s how to ask questions live. Can’t make it live? […]

Published

on


Welcome to Behind The Scenes!

This is our exclusive live from Chicago after 2025 U.S Classic. We have a weekly Q&A episode and live exclusives after competitions all year long. We estimate live (right here, on this page) around 10pm Central. Login to reveal the show below. Here’s how to ask questions live. Can’t make it live? Add BTS to your favorite podcast player (instructions here).

GymCastic LIVE in CHICAGO: REPLAY Tickets on sale now

Get Tickets

  • MEMBER VERSION
    Behind The Scenes is a weekly Q&A live podcast and post-meet live exclusive. It’s all part of the bonus content for our Club Members who supporting our work year around.

    NON MEMBER VERSION

    VIDEO AND AUDIO COMING SOON

    This is our weekly Behind The Scenes Q&A live podcast. It’s all part of the bonus content for our Club Members who support our work year around.

    the balance - angle cover

    CHECK OUT FACT CHECKER’S NEW BOOK WITH AIMEE BOORMAN

    BONUS CONTENT 

        • Club members can watch Vanessa Atler’s live show by logging in to her live show page, it will appear below.
        • Join Club Gym Nerd (or give it as a gift!) for access to weekly Behind the Scenes episodes.
        • Club Gym Nerd members can watch the podcast being recorded, participate in watch-alongs with Spencer, access to all of our exclusive extended interviews, Behind The Scenes and College & Cocktails.
        • Not sure about joining the club?  College & Cocktails: The Friday Night NCAA Gymnastics Post-Meet Show is available to sample (even if you aren’t a Club Gym Nerd member yet). Watch or listen here.

    MERCH

    • GymCastic Store: clothing and gifts to let your gym nerd flag fly and even “tapestries” (banners, the perfect to display in an arena) to support your favorite gymnast!

    NEWSLETTERS

    RESOURCES

    RESISTANCE 

    Submitted by you.

    • Action
      • ResistBot
        • Turns your texts into faxes, postal mail, or emails to your representatives in minutes
      • 5Calls App will call your Congresspeople by issue with a script to guide you
          • Make 2 to your Congressional rep (local and DC office). 2 each to your US Senators (local and state offices)
            1. State your name and zip code or district
            2. Be concise with your question or demand (i.e. What specific steps is Senator X taking to stop XYZ)
            3. Wait for answer
            4. Ask for action items –  tell them what you want then to do (i.e. draft articles of impeachment immediately, I want to see you holding a press conference in front of…etc.)
      • Indivisible
    • Donate or volunteer for organizations suing the administration for illegal actions
    • Stay Informed:
    • Immigrant Rights



Link

Continue Reading

College Sports

Florida gymnastics Leanne Wong participating in US Classic

Recent Florida graduate and Olympic alternate Leanne Wong is in action Saturday night at the 2025 U.S. Classic presented by Saatva. She’ll be a member of the second rotation group in the second senior women’s session between 8-10 p.m. ET. Gymnastics fans can tune in on CNBC or using a Peacock account (free with ads). […]

Published

on


Recent Florida graduate and Olympic alternate Leanne Wong is in action Saturday night at the 2025 U.S. Classic presented by Saatva. She’ll be a member of the second rotation group in the second senior women’s session between 8-10 p.m. ET.

Gymnastics fans can tune in on CNBC or using a Peacock account (free with ads). A recap of the senior women’s session will air on NBC Sunday between 4-6 p.m. ET.

Wong won three golds in the 2022 U.S. Classic, taking medals in all-around, balance beam and a share of the vault title. Following her Olympic run as an alternate last summer, Wong represented the United States in the Swiss Cup in Zurich. This will be Wong’s first major competition of 2025.

Leanne Wong at Florida

Wong is one of the best to pass through Florida’s gymnastics program. She earned 29 All-American honors (14 NCAA/5 WCGA Regular Season) and was All-SEC for each of her four years. In 2024, she was the NCAA uneven bars champion. She won the SEC balance beam championship in 2022 and 2023, and in 2025 she won the conference uneven bars championship.

Wong posted 10.0 in all four events at some point while with Florida. She did it five times on the bars, three times on the balance beam and twice on the floor. Her best all-around score was a 39.875, which happened twice.

Follow us @GatorsWire on X, formerly known as Twitter, as well as Bluesky, and like our page on Facebook to follow ongoing coverage of Florida Gators news, notes and opinions.





Link

Continue Reading

College Sports

Unrivaled Signs 14 College Players to NIL Deals

Unrivaled Signs 14 College Players to NIL Deals Privacy Manager Link 0

Published

on





Unrivaled Signs 14 College Players to NIL Deals



































Link

Continue Reading

College Sports

Unrivaled announces NIL deals with 14 college players, including JuJu Watkins and Flau’Jae Johnson | Sports

INDIANAPOLIS – JuJu Watkins, Flau’Jae Johnson and Azzi Fudd are three of 14 top women’s college basketball players that Unrivaled is signing to NIL deals, the league announced Saturday. It’s the second consecutive year that the 3-on-3 league that was founded by Napheesa Collier and Breanna Stewart has had name, image and likeness deals with […]

Published

on


INDIANAPOLIS – JuJu Watkins, Flau’Jae Johnson and Azzi Fudd are three of 14 top women’s college basketball players that Unrivaled is signing to NIL deals, the league announced Saturday.

It’s the second consecutive year that the 3-on-3 league that was founded by Napheesa Collier and Breanna Stewart has had name, image and likeness deals with college players. In it’s inaugural season, Unrivaled had deals with Paige Bueckers and Johnson.


This page requires Javascript.

Javascript is required for you to be able to read premium content. Please enable it in your browser settings.

kAm(2E<:?D[ H9@ A=2JD 7@C $@FE96C? r2=:7@C?:2 3FE 😀 D:56=:?65 H:E9 2? pr{ :?;FCJ[ 92D 2=D@ AC6G:@FD=J 366? :?G@=G65 H:E9 &?C:G2=65 2D 2? :?G6DE@C 😕 :ED $6C:6D p 7F?5:?8 C@F?5]k^Am

kAmy@9?D@?[ H9@ 😀 2E {$&[ 2?5 uF55[ 2E &r@??[ 3@E9 H6C6 @? 92?5 7@C E96 2??@F?46>6?E[ 2D H6C6 }@EC6 s2>6’D w2??29 w:52=8@ 2?5 &r@??’D $2C29 $EC@?8]k^Am

kAm~E96C A=2J6CD D:8?65 :?4=F56 %r&VD ~=:G:2 |:=6D[ &r{pVD z:<: #:46 2?5 25:D@? q@@<6C[ x@H2 $E2E6VD pF5: rC@@ D@A9@>@C6D E@ D6?:@CD]k^Am

kAm(@>6?VD 32D<6E32== A=2J6CD 92G6 k2 9C67lQ9EEADi^^2A?6HD]4@>^2CE:4=6^H?32?:=7=2F;269:52=8@>:=6Degf`aaf_fch6g7b_5b3e66eefa554446Qm366? 23=6 E@ E2<6 25G2?E286 @7 x{ @AA@CEF?:E:6Dk^2m @G6C E96 =2DE 76H J62CD H:E9 r2:E=:? r=2C<[ p?86= #66D6[ qF64<6CD 2?5 y@9?D@? 2E E96 7@C67C@?E @7 :E] #66D6 A=2J65 😕 &?C:G2=65 😕 :ED 7:CDE D62D@?]k^Am

kAmpD A2CE @7 E96 :?:E:2E:G6[ E96 4=2DD H:== 36 2EE6?5:?8 2 >F=E:\52J 6G6?E 2E E96 =628F6’D 9625BF2CE6CD 😕 |:2>:[ H9:49 H:== :?4=F56 D<:== 56G6=@A>6?E 2?5 4@?E6?E D9@@ED]k^Am

kAm“%9:D EC2?D7@C>2E:@?2=[ 7:CDE\@7\:ED\<:?5 :?:E:2E:G6 3C:?8D E@86E96C E96 36DE @7 E96 36DE 2?5 C67=64ED @FC 566A 4@>>:E>6?E E@ 6=6G2E:?8 E96 H@>6?’D 82>6 2?5 9@=:DE:42==J DFAA@CE:?8 2E9=6E6D[” F<6 r@@A6C[ !C6D:56?E @7 q2D<6E32== ~A6C2E:@?D 2E &?C:G2=65[ D2:5 😕 E96 :?:E:2E:G6’D 2??@F?46>6?E] “x?G6DE:?8 😕 6=:E6 H@>6?’D 32D<6E32== E2=6?E 😀 46?EC2= E@ &?C:G2=65’D >:DD:@?]”k^Am

kAm&?C:G2=65 4@>A=6E65 :ED :?2F8FC2= D62D@? E9:D A2DE qpi k2 9C67lQ9EEADi^^2A?6HD]4@>^9F3^H?32\32D<6E32==Qm9EEADi^^2A?6HD]4@>^9F3^H?32\32D<6E32==k^2mk^Am

Copyright 2025 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed without permission.





Link

Continue Reading

Most Viewed Posts

Trending