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MBB Welcomes SMU Tuesday

• Carolina (9-6, 2-1 ACC) plays host to SMU (11-3, 2-1 ACC) on Tuesday, January 7, in a 9 p.m. start at the Smith Center on ACC Network.• It is the fourth time ever the Tar Heels are playing the Mustangs, and the first time in an ACC contest.• Elliot Cadeau’s four-point play, Carolina’s first […]

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MBB Welcomes SMU Tuesday

• Carolina (9-6, 2-1 ACC) plays host to SMU (11-3, 2-1 ACC) on Tuesday, January 7, in a 9 p.m. start at the Smith Center on ACC Network.
• It is the fourth time ever the Tar Heels are playing the Mustangs, and the first time in an ACC contest.
Elliot Cadeau’s four-point play, Carolina’s first in four seasons, gave the Tar Heels a 74-73 win at Notre Dame on Saturday.
• The Tar Heels led by double digits in both halves, but fell behind by as many as four points after the Irish went on a 12-0 run. Cadeau scored Carolina’s final six points in the last 22 seconds, including a three-pointer and free throw with 4.8 seconds to play.
• For the second time in four games (UCLA), Cadeau then defended the paint on a last-second shot to preserve the victory.
Ian Jackson led all scorers with a season-best 27 points, becoming the first Tar Heel freshman ever to score 23 or more points in four consecutive games.
RJ Davis didn’t make a three or score in double figures for the first time this season but delivered a season-high seven assists and passed Armando Bacot for second all-time in UNC scoring and ninth in ACC history.UNC-SMU
• Carolina is 2-1 all-time vs. the Mustangs with wins in Dallas at Reunion Arena in 1986 and the Smith Center in 1987.
• This is the first time the teams have played since a 90-74 Tar Heel victory in Chapel Hill on 12/12/1987. J.R. Reid led all scorers with 21 points, one of four Tar Heels to score in double figures.
• Assistant coach Jeff Lebo played in both of Carolina’s wins vs. the Mustangs. He had 10 points in the win at home and he led the Tar Heels with 22 points in the 88-86 win in Dallas his sophomore season. He was 6 for 12 from three-point range in the win in Texas.
• SMU Director of Athletics Rick Hart is a Carolina alum and former member of the athletic department staff. He is in his 13th year as the Mustangs’ AD.
• The Tar Heels will be playing all three of the newest members of the ACC in a 12-day span over the next four games. Following the SMU game, Carolina plays at NC State on Saturday before hosting Cal (January 15) and Stanford (January 18) next week in the Smith Center.NOVEMBER SIGNEES
• Carolina signed Isaiah Denis of Concord, N.C., and Derek Dixon of Vienna, Va.
• Denis is a 6-5 guard at Davidson Day High School in Davidson, N.C. His parents are Nancy Denis and Frantz Denis, and he plays AAU for CP3.
• Dixon, the son of John and Kari Dixon, is a 6-3 guard at Gonzaga College High School in Washington, D.C. He also plays AAU for Team Takeover.SMITH CENTER
• This is the 40th season the Tar Heels are playing in the Dean E. Smith Center.
• Carolina is 5-1 in the Smith Center this season and 482-88 (.845) all-time.
• The Tar Heels are 250-69 against ACC opponents in the Smith Center, including a win over Georgia Tech to begin league play on December 7.MORE MILESTONES FOR RJ
RJ Davis is the second-leading scorer in Carolina’s illustrious history with 2,353 points. He passed Armando Bacot, who also played in five seasons, for second place in the Notre Dame game, when he scored eight points.
• He broke the UNC career record for three-pointers (304) on December 29 and has the highest free throw percentage ever by a Tar Heel (85.9%).
• Davis’ 29-point outing vs. Florida on December 17 made him the highest scoring guard in Carolina history, eclipsing the mark held by Phil Ford.
• Davis’ career scoring average is 15.4, the eighth-highest by a Tar Heel guard.
• Last year, Davis became the 19th Tar Heel to earn consensus first-team All-America honors. Those 19 players have won consensus first-team All-America honors a total of 28 times.
• Davis joined Lennie Rosenbluth in 1957, Phil Ford in 1978, Michael Jordan in 1983 and 1984, Kenny Smith in 1987, Jerry Stackhouse in 1995, Antawn Jamison in 1998, Joseph Forte in 2001 and Tyler Hansbrough in 2008 and 2009 as the only Tar Heels to make first-team All-America on each of the teams the NCAA recognizes to determine consensus first-team All-America.
• Davis was the 15th Tar Heel to win ACC Player-of-the-Year honors, the first since Justin Jackson in 2016-17. It is the 16th time a Tar Heel has won the award (Larry Miller won twice).NOTABLE
• Junior guard Seth Trimble has missed the last three games due to an upper body injury he suffered in practice on December 28.
• Carolina has scored 150 more points in the second half than in the first (10.0 more per game).
• Saturday at Notre Dame, UNC scored 39 points in the first half and a season-low 35 in the second. It was just the second time all season and first time since the opener vs. Elon the Tar Heels scored more points in the first half than the second.
• The Tar Heels are averaging 37.0 first-half points (while allowing 38.4) and 47.0 in the second half (allowing 40.0).
• Carolina has shot a higher field goal percentage in the second half than it did in the first in 14 of the first 15 games (only against Georgia Tech did UNC shoot better in the first half). That included the Notre Dame game, when the Tar Heels shot 48.1% in the first and 58.3% in the second.
• Carolina has shot 50% from the floor four times in the first half (vs. American, Michigan State, La Salle and Campbell) and 11 times in the second half (vs. Kansas, American, Hawai’i, Dayton, Michigan State, La Salle, Florida, UCLA, Campbell, at Louisville and at Notre Dame). That includes three second-half performances when UNC shot better than 62% from the floor (vs. American, Florida and Campbell).
• The Tar Heels have shot a combined 58.4% from the floor in the second halves of their last six games (La Salle, Florida, UCLA, Campbell, Louisville and Notre Dame). UNC has made 101 of 173 field goal attempts in the second half in those six games.
• The Tar Heels are 22nd in the country in scoring at 84.6 points per game but 328th in scoring defense (79.2).
• However, factoring in the number of possessions, Carolina is 26th in the country in offensive efficiency and 58th in defensive efficiency.
• Carolina has allowed 17.5 more points in its six losses (89.7) than the opponents have averaged in UNC’s nine wins (72.2).
• UNC has allowed 90 or more points four times in 15 games. Opponents had only scored 90 or more six times in the previous three seasons. Four is the most in a season since 2001-02 (five times).
• Carolina is attempting 23.5 three-pointers per game, the second-most attempts in UNC single-season history. In 2028-19, a team that featured Coby White, Cameron Johnson and Luke Maye, the Tar Heels averaged 23.94 three-point attempts, the most in UNC history.
• Over the last seven games UNC is 53 for 199 (26.6%) from three-point range.
• The Tar Heels are shooting 57.0% from two-point range, their highest two-point percentage in a season since the three-point shot began in 1986-87.
• Carolina is making 19.4 free throws per game in its wins, while the opponents are averaging 18.0 attempts in those nine games.
• Carolina is averaging 19.4 made free throws in its nine wins and 21.5 free throw attempts in the six losses.
RJ Davis leads Carolina in scoring at 17.7 points per game. The Notre Dame game was the first time this season he didn’t score in double figures or make a three-pointer.
• Davis is averaging 15.1 field goal attempts per game. Last year, he averaged 16.4.
• Davis has made 30 three-pointers through 15 games. Last season, he made 44 through 15 games.
Ian Jackson is the only player to make a three in every game in which he has played (did not play vs. American).
• Carolina’s top four scorers are guards – Davis (17.7), Jackson (14.9), Trimble (14.8) and Elliot Cadeau (10.7).
• Trimble set career scoring highs in each of the first two games this season (15 vs. Elon and 19 at Kansas) then surpassed those with a 27-point double-double in the comeback win over Dayton.
• When Cade Tyson scored a game-high 23 points against La Salle, he became the seventh different Tar Heel to lead UNC in scoring this season. Last year, only four Tar Heels led Carolina in scoring.TAR HEELS AND THE ACC
• Carolina is a charter member of the Atlantic Coast Conference.
• This is the 72nd season of ACC men’s basketball.
• UNC has won the regular-season championship 33 times, including the 2023-24 season, when the Tar Heels went 17-3 to win the title outright for the 22nd time. Duke is second with 20 regular-season titles.
• The Tar Heels are 760-314 all-time in ACC regular-season play. The 760 wins are the most by any team.
RJ Davis was the 2024 ACC Player of the Year and Hubert Davis was the Coach of the Year.
RJ Davis is the first Player of the Year to return the following season since UNC’s Tyler Hansbrough won the award in 2008 and came back for his senior season in 2009, when he led the Tar Heels to an NCAA title.ROSENBLUTH A COLLEGE HALL OF FAMER
• Lennie Rosenbluth, a prolific scorer who led the 1956-57 Tar Heels to a 32-0 record and UNC’s first NCAA Tournament championship, is one of eight individuals elected to join the Collegiate Basketball Hall of Fame in the Class of 2024.
• Rosenbluth is the 15th Tar Heel to become a member of the Collegiate Basketball Hall of Fame, joining Dean Smith (inaugural class in 2006), Larry Brown, Ben Carnevale, Billy Cunningham, Bob McAdoo, Frank McGuire, James Worthy and Roy Williams (all in the Class of 2007), Phil Ford (2012), Charlie Scott (2015), Sam Perkins (2018), Antawn Jamison (2021), Larry Miller (2022) and Tyler Hansbrough (2023).
• Rosenbluth set the ACC career scoring record with 2,045 points (since broken) and still maintains single-season UNC records for points (897) and scoring average (28.0), both set in 1956-57. He easily holds the highest career scoring average by a Tar Heel at 26.9 points per game, set in 76 games over three seasons from 1954-57.
• Joining Rosenbluth in the Class of ’24 are six players and one coach (Jack Hartman, most notably at Kansas State). The players include Dave Meyers (UCLA), Sihugo Green (Duquesne), Wayne Estes (Utah State), Sam Lacey (New Mexico State), John Rudometkin (USC) and Tom Stith (St. Bonaventure).
 SCHEDULE NOTES
• KenPom ranks Carolina’s strength of schedule the fifth-hardest in the country behind Mississippi Valley State, Florida A&M, Jackson State and Memphis.
• Carolina is one of four teams among the ACC, Big East, Big Ten, Big 12 and SEC whose strength of schedule is ranked in the top 10 – UNC (5), Purdue (6), Alabama (9) and Creighton (10).
• Seven of Carolina’s opponents are ranked in the current AP poll – No. 2 Auburn, No. 4 Duke, No. 5 Alabama, No. 8 Florida, No. 11 Kansas, No. 16 Michigan State and No. 22 UCLA.
• This season is the second ever (1967-68) in which the Tar Heels played four top-10 opponents prior to New Year’s Day. Carolina played at No. 1 Kansas, No. 4 Auburn in Maui, No. 10 Alabama and No. 7 Florida in Charlotte.SECOND-HALF COMEBACKS
• Carolina’s loss to Louisville included another second-half comeback from a double-digit deficit. The Cards led by 11 early in the half before the Tar Heels rallied to tie the game at 61 with more than eight minutes to play.
• It was the eighth time UNC faced a deficit of 10 or more points and the sixth time UNC either drew even or took the lead.
• In two of those games, the Tar Heels rallied to win, beating Dayton, 92-90, after trailing by 21 and UCLA, 76-64, after trailing by 16.
• On December 21 in New York, the Tar Heels trailed UCLA,  59-43, with 12:35 to play. The Tar Heels closed within five with 7:06 remaining, within a point 90 seconds later and finally drew even at 72 on Jalen Washington’s second-chance bucket with 1:32 to play.
• Carolina took its first and only lead of the second half with 13.6 seconds to go on a pair of free throws by RJ Davis.
• This season is the first since 2010-11 the Tar Heels have rallied for two wins when trailing by at least 15 points. In 2011, UNC overcame a 19-point deficit to Miami and a 16-point deficit against Virginia Tech.
– Kansas took its first double-digit lead with 9:27 left in the first half, extended the lead to 20 later in the half and led by 15 at the break. Led by three 3FGs by Jae’Lyn Withers, Carolina took its first lead of the second half with 7:09 to play and led, 87-83, with 3:15 to play. The Jayhawks closed the game on a 9-2 run to win, 92-89.
– Carolina led Dayton, 18-17, nine minutes into the game. The Flyers out-scored UNC, 34-15, over the final 11 minutes of the half for an 18-point lead, which Dayton extended to 21 points early in the second half. The Tar Heels still trailed by double figures with 11 minutes to play, took their first lead on an RJ Davis three with 1:52 remaining and won the game on a three by Drake Powell with 1:13 left.
–The comeback win from 21 down tied the largest second-half comeback in UNC history (21 vs. Florida State in 1993) and was one point shy of the largest comeback win in any game in UNC history (22 vs. Wake Forest in 1992).
– Two days later in Maui, Michigan State raced to a 10-2 lead, pushed the margin to 14 with 3:05 left in the half and led by nine at the break. The Tar Heels took their only lead of the second half on a Powell drive with 13:25 to play. Seth Trimble’s three with four seconds to play sent the game to overtime, where the Spartans prevailed, 94-91.
– Florida jumped out to an early 16-6 lead and led by as much as 17 in the first half before Carolina scored the final four points of the opening period to cut the lead to a dozen. The Tar Heels opened the second half on an 11-0 run, took a 70-68 lead on a Trimble three-point play with 7:50 to play and led by four (81-77) at the 4:00 timeout. The Gators then outscored UNC 13-3, including eight second-chance points, for a 90-84 win.JACKSON ON A HISTORIC RUN
• Freshman guard Ian Jackson made 11 field goals (most by a Tar Heel this season) and scored a game-high 27 points in the 74-73 win at Notre Dame.
• The Bronx native is the first Tar Heel freshman ever to score 23 or more points in four straight games. He is the first to score 20 or more in four games in a row since Tyler Hansbrough (2005-06) and the first to lead UNC in scoring in four straight since Cole Anthony (2019-20).
• Phil Ford is only Tar Heel freshman to score 20 or more in five consecutive (he scored 22 or more in all five).
• Jackson has scored 100 points with 10 three-pointers and shot 56.5% from the floor (35 for 62) in the last four games – the only other Tar Heel ever to post those numbers in any four-game stretch was Hubert Davis in 1991-92.
• Jackson has averaged 25.0 points in the last four games and 19.3 over the last eight.
• Overall, he is averaging 14.9 points, the second-highest average on the team behind only RJ Davis.
In the last eight games he has averaged 30.3 minutes, including 35.3 in the last four.
• Jackson has scored in double figures 10 times, including eight of the last nine games, and leads UNC with five 20-point games (27 at Notre Dame, 26 vs. Campbell, 24 vs. UCLA, 23 vs. Alabama and 23 at Louisville).
• Jackson was named ACC Rookie of the Week for his 26-point performance on December 29 against Campbell.
• Jackson’s 24 points against UCLA were the second most ever by a Tar Heel freshman in Madison Square Garden (25 by Rashad McCants vs. Kansas in 2002).

College Sports

Texas Tech Red Raiders – Official Athletics Website

LUBBOCK, Texas – The 29th Arnold Palmer Cup will commence on Thursday, a three-day event that will feature Texas Tech’s Connor Graham as a member of the international team in a Ryder Cup-style amateur tournament. It will be hosted stateside in 2025, June 5-7, at Congaree Golf Club in Ridgeland, S.C. Announced April 29, live on the Golf Channel, […]

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LUBBOCK, Texas – The 29th Arnold Palmer Cup will commence on Thursday, a three-day event that will feature Texas Tech’s Connor Graham as a member of the international team in a Ryder Cup-style amateur tournament. It will be hosted stateside in 2025, June 5-7, at Congaree Golf Club in Ridgeland, S.C.

Announced April 29, live on the Golf Channel, the freshman from Scotland was one of 12 selections for the International Men’s Team. Graham completed his freshman season with the Red Raiders at the NCAA Championships on May 26, helping the team to their fourth Top 10 finish at the championship under head coach Greg Sands and the sixth in program history. 

Graham led Texas Tech during the 2024-25 season with a 71.1 scoring average over 13 events and 41 rounds of golf. He was named to the PING All-Region Team and later named to the GCAA All-Freshman Team for his standout season.

The Arnold Palmer Cup features the top men’s and women’s college golfers in the world, pitting the United States against a team of international players annually. Both teams consist of 24 golfers, with 12 men and 12 women on each team. Each gender, on each team, consisted of one coaches’ pick, which included the Red Raiders’ Graham, who was one of two team international coaches’ picks.

Texas Tech has a long history of being represented at the Arnold Palmer Cup, as Graham’s selection is the 13th since 2011 and the eighth of the last nine years. Past participants include Nils Floren (2011), Clement Sordet (2015), Hannes Ronneblad (2017), Fredrik Nilehn (2017, 2018), Hurly Long (2018), Ivan Ramirez (2019), Sandy Scott (2019), Ludvig Aberg (2020, 2022), Tyran Snyders (2023) and Calum Scott (2024). In addition, Sands served as the Team USA head coach in 2021.

Team USA defeated Team International 32.5-27.5 to win the 2024 Arnold Palmer Cup and retain the Cup for the second straight year. The event consists of three days of play featuring a Four-Ball Match (Better Ball), two Foursomes Matches (Alternate Shot), and Singles Matches.

Schedule/Tee Times

  • Thu., June 5: Mixed Four-Ball Matches – 8:30-11:15 a.m. ET (No. 1 tee)
  • Fri., June 6: Foursomes – 8:30-9:20 a.m. ET (split tees) / Mixed Foursomes – 1:30-2:20 p.m. ET (split tees)
  • Sat., June 7: Singles – 7:30-9:20 a.m. ET (split tees) / Closing Ceremonies

 TECH 



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‘You can just feel a buzz’ ahead of Stanley Cup Final

EDMONTON, Alberta — The wait is almost over. The Florida Panthers and Edmonton Oilers will drop the puck at 8 p.m. Wednesday to begin Game 1 of the Stanley Cup Final. WATCH BELOW: WPTV reports from Edmonton ahead of Game 1 Panthers ready for Game 1 of Stanley Cup final By the afternoon, hockey fans […]

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EDMONTON, Alberta — The wait is almost over.

The Florida Panthers and Edmonton Oilers will drop the puck at 8 p.m. Wednesday to begin Game 1 of the Stanley Cup Final.

WATCH BELOW: WPTV reports from Edmonton ahead of Game 1

Panthers ready for Game 1 of Stanley Cup final

By the afternoon, hockey fans were already gathering outside Rogers Place in Edmonton in anticipation of the re-match of last year’s final.

“As a hockey fan and just respecting the overall culture of the game,” Oilers fan Jerry Maclachlan said. “I tell you what, the Oilers, we’re coming.”

After the Oilers eliminated Dallas last Thursday in the Western Conference finals, the city has been busy prepping for Game 1.

Fans in the hockey-crazed capital of Alberta get to see their team start a series at home for the first time during this playoff run.

“To be able to start the Stanley Cup Final on home ice, you can just feel a buzz in the city and these people deserve it,” NHL MVP finalist Leon Draisaitl said. “They’ve waited a long time for this and, obviously to us, it’s all about finishing it.”

Starting at home last year, the Panthers went up two games to none and won the first game in Edmonton to take a 3-0 series lead. They lost the next three before winning Game 7 to capture the first title in franchise history.

Panthers season ticket holder makes trip to ‘hockey country’

Florida is in the final for a third consecutive season and is four wins away from becoming the NHL’s first back-to-back champions since cross-state rival Tampa Bay in 2020 and ’21.

“It’s why we’re here: We’re playing hockey in June for the third straight year and a chance to be a part of history,” standout winger Matthew Tkachuk said. “We’ve had two kicks at it so far, and they’ve been very different summers, so we’re hoping for the good one.”

The Panthers have won 10 of 11 playoff series since Tkachuk joined in a trade from Calgary in 2022 and coach Paul Maurice took over that same offseason.

As one of those 10 opponents who ended up on the wrong side of the handshake line against the burgeoning hockey powerhouse in South Florida, the Oilers don’t want history to repeat itself. But veteran defenseman Mattias Ekholm, back from an extended injury absence, doesn’t want to load up too much pressure on Game 1.

“You ask every single guy in our locker room, we want to come out flying, we want to play great and we want to win Game 1,” Ekholm said. “You go to their locker room, they’re probably saying the same thing. One team’s going to win it and one team’s not.”

Game 2 will be Friday in Edmonton before the series shifts to Sunrise. Games 3 and 4 will be played on Monday and next Thursday in South Florida.





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Recruiting Revolution: The 3 Schools Winning Big in the NIL Arms Race

On the latest episode of the On3 Recruits podcast, hosts Josh Newberg, Scott Schrader, Andrew Bone, and Blake Alderman talked about and analyzed a massive recruiting weekend, highlighting three programs: USC, Georgia, and Florida, that are using the NIL and strategic visits to dominate the 2026 cycle. Dive into PFSN’s FREE Mock Draft Simulator and […]

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On the latest episode of the On3 Recruits podcast, hosts Josh Newberg, Scott Schrader, Andrew Bone, and Blake Alderman talked about and analyzed a massive recruiting weekend, highlighting three programs: USC, Georgia, and Florida, that are using the NIL and strategic visits to dominate the 2026 cycle.

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Dive into PFSN’s FREE Mock Draft Simulator and run a mock by yourself or with your friends!

USC, Georgia Bulldogs, And Florida Gators Are Making Massive Strides In The NIL Says Experts

USC

USC has reclaimed the No. 1 spot in the On3 Industry Team Rankings, fueled by a game-changing commitment from five-star tight end Mark Bowman on Friday. The Modern Day High School star, who chose USC over Georgia, pushed the Trojans ahead of LSU, which had held the top spot for weeks.

“It’s a big boost in NIL,” Schrader noted, suggesting that USC’s strong collectives are a key driver for their position. The Trojans’ pipeline from Southern California, including talents like Bowman and TomTom Tapoule, is thriving under coach Lincoln Riley. USC’s class, with 15 commitments, is all set to hit 30 by month’s end, with upcoming visits from prospects like Brandon Arrington promising more home-state hauls.

Georgia

On the other hand, Georgia also hosted a massive recruiting weekend, welcoming double-digit visitors to Athens and securing their 11th commitment of the 2026 class in defensive lineman Carter Lucky. The 6-foot-5, 270-pound Norcross native, whose family bleeds red and black, joins standout Jevon Cloud on the defensive front.

Newberg noted that five-star wide receiver Cedarian Morgan, a longtime Alabama player, is leaning towards Athens. The Bulldogs are also targeting five-star tight end Kaden Prothrow and flip candidates like Isaiah Williams, the No. 1 linebacker committed to Ole Miss, and Auburn commit Devin Carter.

Florida

Finally, Gainesville, Florida, is not holding back on capitalizing on its home-state advantage and NIL momentum. The Gators hosted a loaded official visit weekend, headlined by five-star safety Bralan Womack.

KEEP READING: Gray Shirt, Blue Shirt, Redshirt: What Do They Mean in College Football Recruiting?

Alderman praised how great Florida has been so far. Florida is also reportedly closing in on flipping Nebraska-committed quarterback CJ Bronaugh, whose 10.24-second 100-meter dash at the Florida Relays turned heads. Defensive linemen Vondy Cleveland and Jeran McCoy, both on campus, are key targets, with McCoy leaning toward Florida over Texas. With a top-10 class and coach Billy Napier’s aggressive push, the Gators are building some good momentum.

College Sports Network has you covered with the latest news, analysis, insights, and trending stories in college footballmen’s college basketballwomen’s college basketball, and college baseball!



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Rocky hires former Battlin' Bear to lead men's soccer program

BILLINGS — Former Battlin’ Bear men’s soccer player Milo Downey has been hired as the Rocky Mountain College men’s soccer head coach. According to a press release from the RMC athletic department, Downey is the second head men’s soccer coach in program history. Downey succeeds the coach he played for collegiately, Richard Duffy, who transitioned […]

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Rocky hires former Battlin' Bear to lead men's soccer program

BILLINGS — Former Battlin’ Bear men’s soccer player Milo Downey has been hired as the Rocky Mountain College men’s soccer head coach.

According to a press release from the RMC athletic department, Downey is the second head men’s soccer coach in program history. Downey succeeds the coach he played for collegiately, Richard Duffy, who transitioned to become the head coach of the women’s soccer program after serving as the first head coach of the Rocky men’s soccer program since 2009.

“We are excited to welcome Coach Downey home to Rocky Mountain College,” RMC athletic director Jim Klemann said in a press release. “I’m confident that Milo’s journey from a decorated student-athlete to head coach will help pave the way for future success in our men’s soccer program both in the classroom and on the pitch.”

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Milo Downey

Rocky Mountain College’s Milo Downey kicks the ball during a match against Montana State University Billings at Rocky Mountain College on Aug. 23, 2019.




Originally from Colchester, United Kingdom, Downey played soccer for the Battlin’ Bears from 2017 to 2021. Over his five seasons as a player, Rocky men’s soccer totaled a record of 63-18-6, winning the Cascade Collegiate Conference regular season title in 2020, the CCC Tournament in 2018, and making two trips to the NAIA National Tournament, including a trip to the quarterfinals. Individually, Downey was a two-time All-American Honorable Mention (2020 and 2021), the CCC Player of the Year and Defensive Player of the Year in 2021, and earned two first team All-Conference honors (2020 and 2021). He was also a team captain for two seasons.

After graduating from Rocky, Downey played semi-professionally for Apotheos FC in Atlanta, Georgia, during the 2022 National Premier Soccer League season, where he was a team captain.







Milo Downey

Downey




“I want to thank athletic director Jim Klemann and coach Richard Duffy for the consideration and opportunity to coach the men’s soccer team,” Downey was quoted in the RMC release. “It is an honor to have progressed from student-athlete to captain to voluntary assistant and now head coach. I am very privileged to uphold the academic and athletic success at a great program. I am excited to continue the legacy of coach Duffy and add to the success of the program.”

Downey’s coaching career began as a graduate assistant at Montana State Billings during the 2023-24 season. His role expanded during the 2024-25 season, when he became an assistant head coach. Coach Downey currently holds a UEFA B Coaching Certification.

Downey is joined in Billings by his wife, Maia (Wetzel), who was a goalkeeper for Rocky Mountain College women’s soccer from 2017 to 2020.

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Atlantic Hockey America Announces 2025-26 Men’s Schedule

Story Links BOSTON, Mass. – June 4, 2025 – Atlantic Hockey America has announced the schedule for the 2025-26 season. The full composite schedule can be found HERE. Dates and times are subject to change. The battle for the AHA regular season title will begin on Oct. 10 with the first slate […]

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BOSTON, Mass. – June 4, 2025 – Atlantic Hockey America has announced the schedule for the 2025-26 season. The full composite schedule can be found HERE. Dates and times are subject to change.

The battle for the AHA regular season title will begin on Oct. 10 with the first slate of conference games. The regular season wraps up on Feb. 28, with the postseason beginning on March 3.

Bentley Aims to Defend Title

After winning the 2025 AHA postseason title, the Bentley Falcons open their 2025-26 season on Oct. 10 at Colorado College. The first AHA conference game for Andy Jones‘ squad will be on Oct. 24 vs Canisius.

Championship Game Rematches

Last season, Bentley and Holy Cross met in the AHA title game on March 22, 2025, with Bentley prevailing in a 6-3 win. The Falcons and Crusaders will meet four times during the 2025-26 regular season: Jan. 2 at Bentley, Jan. 3 at Holy Cross, Feb. 6 at Holy Cross and Feb. 7 at Bentley.

Gotkin Begins Final Season

The 2025-26 season will be head coach Rick Gotkin‘s 38th and final season behind the bench at Mercyhurst. Gotkin is the longest-tenured coach in college hockey, and has racked up 611 career wins. Assistant coach Tom Peffall is slated to take over the program for the 2026-27 season. Peffall has been as assistant on Gotkin’s staff at Mercyhurst since 2022. Gotkin will begin his final season on Oct. 3 at Michigan. His final regular season home game is scheduled for Feb. 28 vs Robert Morris.

Riga and Holy Cross Open at Northeastern and Maine

Defending Atlantic Hockey Coach of the Year Bill Riga will lead Holy Cross into 2025-26 with a road tilt at Northeastern on Oct. 4. The Crusaders will then head to Maine for a weekend series on Oct. 10-11.

Thomas Takes Over at RIT

RIT head coach Matt Thomas enters his first season behind the bench in Rochester. RIT begins its season with a home series vs Sacred Heart on Oct. 10-11. Thomas takes the reins at his alma mater, where he appeared in 102 games from 1994-98, and served as a captain for the Tigers for the 1997-98 season. He totaled 72 points on 25 goals and 47 assists in his playing career with the Tigers.

2026 Atlantic Hockey America Men’s Postseason

The chase for the Jack Riley trophy will include all 10 Atlantic Hockey America teams. The 2026 Atlantic Hockey America Postseason will open with single-game first round matchups on March 3. The No. 7 and No. 8 seeds will host the No. 10 and No. 9 seeds, respectively. 

Best-of-three quarterfinal series will take place March 6-8. The semifinal best-of-three series will take place March 13-15 with the highest-remaining seeded quarterfinal winner hosting the lowest-seeded quarterfinal winner and the second-highest remaining seed hosting the third-highest remaining seed.

The postseason will conclude on March 21 when the two semifinal winners meet at the home of the highest-seeded semifinal winner for one game to determine Atlantic Hockey’s 2026 postseason champion. The winner of the AHA postseason tournament will claim the conference’s automatic qualifier into the NCAA Tournament. 

About Atlantic Hockey America

Atlantic Hockey America (AHA) embarks on its second season in 2025-26 after the merger between the Atlantic Hockey Association and College Hockey America prior to the 2024-25 campaign. The conference fields 10 men’s teams (Bentley University, Canisius University, The College of Holy Cross, Mercyhurst University, Niagara University, Rochester Institute of Technology, Robert Morris University, Sacred Heart University, the United States Air Force Academy, and the United States Military Academy), and seven women’s teams (University of Delaware, Lindenwood University, Mercyhurst University, Penn State University, Rochester Institute of Technology, Robert Morris University, and Syracuse University). For more information, visit atlantichockeyamerica.com.



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College Sports

Hockey Unveils 2025-26 Schedule – Canisius University Athletics

Canisius hockey head coach Trevor Large announced the 2025-26 schedule on Wednesday, a 34-game slate that features eight non-conference matchups and 26 games against Atlantic Hockey Association competition. The Golden Griffins schedule for the upcoming season features an even split of 17 home games and 17 road contests. Canisius begins its ninth season under the […]

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Canisius hockey head coach Trevor Large announced the 2025-26 schedule on Wednesday, a 34-game slate that features eight non-conference matchups and 26 games against Atlantic Hockey Association competition.

The Golden Griffins schedule for the upcoming season features an even split of 17 home games and 17 road contests.

Canisius begins its ninth season under the guidance of Large Oct. 3 when it welcomes North Country foe Clarkson to LECOM Harborcenter.

Non-league matchups at home against St. Lawrence (Oct. 5) and LIU (Oct. 10-11) follow the season-opening contest against the Golden Knights before the Griffs take to the road for their AHA debut at Army (Oct. 14). A visit to Colgate (Oct. 17-18) and a trip to defending AHA Tournament champion Bentley (Oct. 24-25) close out the first month of the regular season.

November gets underway with the home half of Canisius’ season series against Army (Nov. 1) and continues with a pair of AHA games at Sacred Heart (Nov. 14-15) before concluding with home league series against longtime rival Mercyhurst (Nov. 21-22) and Air Force (Nov. 28-29). The Griffs close out the fall semester with a home-and-home series against RIT (Dec. 5-6).

Canisius rings in the new year with a trip to Big Ten foe Notre Dame for a pair of games to wrap up the non-conference portion of its schedule (Jan. 2-3) before returning its focus to league play with its second home-and-home weekend against RIT (Jan. 16-17).

A visit to Mercyhurst (Jan. 23-24) and a home-and-home series against Battle of the Bridge rival Niagara (Jan. 30-31) put the finishing touches on the January slate.

The final month of the regular season gets underway for the Griffs with a visit to Robert Morris (Feb. 6-7). Home series against defending AHA Regular Season Champion Holy Cross (Feb. 13-14) and Robert Morris (Feb. 20-21) await Canisius after their visit to the Steel City before concluding the regular season with a home-and-home weekend against Niagara (Feb. 27-28).

The 2026 AHA Postseason will feature all 10 league teams. All rounds of the tournament will be held at on-campus facilities.

 

The top six teams at the end of the regular season will receive a first-round bye, while the other four teams will square off in a pair of single-elimination contests on March 3.

 

The winners of the two first-round matchups will join the top-six seeds for a best-of-three quarterfinal round (March 6-8). A pair of best-of-three semifinal series will be held the following weekend (March 13-15) before a single-elimination championship game will take place at the highest-remaining seed (March. 21). The winner of that contest will receive the league’s automatic berth in the 2026 NCAA Tournament.

 

Season and single-game ticket information for the 2025-26 season will be made available to the public in the coming weeks.

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