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2024

Joel Klatt Lead College Football Analyst In a way, they remind me of those New England Patriots teams that did similar things. Sure, they don’t have a Tom Brady or Rob Gronkowski, but they do a lot of things well and there’s not a real weak link in the chain (more on that later). They […]

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2024

In a way, they remind me of those New England Patriots teams that did similar things. Sure, they don’t have a Tom Brady or Rob Gronkowski, but they do a lot of things well and there’s not a real weak link in the chain (more on that later). They were excellent on third down, going 11 of 17, while Penn State went 3 of 11. At the end of the first half, Notre Dame executed what they needed to in order to get three more points.So, you could tell Texas’ game plan was to get the ball on the outside at that moment. It called a slant and a run on the perimeter with an interior run sandwiched between those two plays. The sweep play on second-and-goal is the one everyone’s going to be talking about. Safety Caleb Downs made a great play to blow it up, pushing Texas outside the 5-yard line. Everyone seemed to hate that play call, but the film Sarkisian watched suggested that Texas couldn’t run the ball up the gut on two straight plays. The Longhorns were right there, traveling the correct path. The Buckeyes didn’t play too well either — with their offense failing to execute at the level they did in the previous two games and making costly penalties — but Texas had a legitimate shot at winning. I thought Texas was going to pull off the upset at one point in the fourth quarter. That’s how close it was. Texas survived the first quarter — like I said it needed to do — after Ohio State got an early score. I thought Sawyer’s interception at the goal line against Michigan was going to be an epic moment, but Ohio State didn’t win the game. So, Sawyer finally gets his moment — and it came in the CFP semifinals. That was an incredible pass rush. That was a play that no one will ever forget in Columbus or in all of college football for a long time. 

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Texas’ fantastic effort wasn’t enough.

Then, of course, there was the end-of-game situation. Notre Dame executed well in the final minutes, and Penn State didn’t. All of these games are going to come down to a play or two. Notre Dame made those plays. Penn State didn’t. Ewers said prior to the game that he expects to enter the 2025 NFL Draft, so there will be a quarterback change in Austin. But Arch Manning will take over, and Texas has put itself into the top echelon of the SEC. I don’t see the Longhorns taking any steps backward.It was such a strain for both teams to move the ball, and I loved every second of it. Penn State’s defense did what it needed to do, holding Notre Dame to fewer than three yards per carry for the first time all season. Both sides were giving max effort.recommendedBefore I dive into that Allar interception, I just want to say that this was a really successful year for Penn State. It had a chance late in the game to clinch a spot in the national championship. All Penn State fans would’ve taken that scenario at the start of the season. The season ended in heartbreak, but that’s going to be the new reality for nearly every contender in the expanded CFP era.Howard is at his best when Ohio State gets the ball to its playmakers in space. He’s not a great drop-back passer, though, and we saw that against a great Texas secondary. He’s going to face an excellent secondary in the title game. I thought Texas’ decision to double superstar wideout Jeremiah Smith was brilliant too, so Notre Dame has reasonable hope that a version of this can play out in the title game.Like Texas, Penn State made two crucial mistakes too many. Unlike Texas, though, Penn State’s mistakes weren’t from coaching decisions. A Penn State defender initially slipped in coverage on Jaden Greathouse‘s game-tying touchdown in the fourth quarter, and Allar threw the interception that allowed Notre Dame to win the game.When you run a deep in route, you have to make the defensive back feel like you’re going vertical. If he doesn’t feel like you’re going vertical, it’s going to be so tough to get back inside of him and cross his face to get the ball. That didn’t happen on that play. Gray sensed that the receiver wasn’t going anywhere, allowing him to get to the ball before the receiver was out of his cut.I can’t remember a defensive play that impactful and made by one guy. There might be some NFL ones, but that was such a special play and moment from the Ohio kid. He was a huge piece of Ohio State’s 2021 recruiting class. Everyone in Columbus will tell you that.

Ohio State beats Texas to advance to the National Championship

Ohio State beats Texas to advance to the National Championship

Jack Sawyer will never have to pay for anything in Columbus ever again.

From Penn State’s perspective, it had to put trust in its receivers that they would win their routes. You can’t always see it and you can’t wait to see it. QBs have to be on time and on target. Allar was decently on time and on target, but it was still picked. Notre Dame’s Christian Gray made an incredible play, and the receiver ran an atrocious route. What an incredible couple of days for college football that was.Texas wound up making critical mistakes at the wrong time, though. There were two obvious ones for the Longhorns. They didn’t score any points when they were at the 1-yard line and trailing 21-14 in the fourth quarter, and they allowed Buckeyes RB TreVeyon Henderson to take a screen pass 75 yards for a touchdown seconds before halftime. Both the Orange Bowl and the Cotton Bowl were incredible. Notre Dame is back in the title game for the first time in 12 years after its last-second win over Penn State. Meanwhile, Ohio State has a chance to win its first title in 10 years after taking down Texas — making a huge goal-line stand before Jack Sawyer‘s scoop-and-score sealed the game. That was also an epic game and one we’ve been hoping for.

The blueprint is there to slow down Ohio State’s offense.

Joel Klatt is FOX Sports’ lead college football game analyst and the host of the podcast “The Joel Klatt Show.” Follow him at @joelklatt and subscribe to the “Joel Klatt Show” on YouTube.That said, I despise toss sweeps in short-yardage situations. The ball goes five yards back intentionally. A play call like that is tough to swallow. In that situation, it’s even tougher. So, I didn’t like the call, but I understood it. 

Texas will be just fine.

The Fighting Irish seem to always make the right plays at the right time. That’s a credit to their head coach, Marcus Freeman. He has done such a good job coaching this team. They execute and don’t beat themselves. Allar did that, and the play wasn’t totally his fault. It was a progression read against man coverage. For anyone who’s ever played the position, when you have to throw the ball downfield to your third read, very rarely are you going to be on platform. Generally, something will be in the quarterback’s lap at that moment, and he’s trying to throw a dig or in route. That’s an uberaggressive play call. 

Notre Dame is a good situational football team.

Sawyer is a great player and has been a great human in my meetings with him, so I’m happy for him that he had that moment.As I mentioned earlier, Ohio State’s underwhelming execution certainly gave Texas a chance to win that game. Texas did some great things defensively as well, but some of Ohio State’s offensive woes were its own doing. I’ve been saying this since I was on the call for the Michigan game, but when Ohio State has a lack of creativity offensively, it can struggle. It’s not a great running or drop-back passing team.The way that game ended might feel devastating for Texas, but Sarkisian has the program on the rise. It made it to the semifinals for a second straight year, and Sarkisian is not going anywhere anytime soon. [Want great stories delivered right to your inbox? Create or log in to your FOX Sports account, follow leagues, teams and players to receive a personalized newsletter daily.]

Drew Allar‘s interception was brutal, but he wasn’t all to blame for it.

In the lead up to the game, I mentioned how Penn State’s receivers were going to have to make a play at some point. In fact, James Franklin has told me that what held this team back in the past is that it doesn’t have that wide receiver it can rely on in a big situation. Well, Penn State’s wide receivers had zero catches in the Orange Bowl. They became the first non-service academy to have a game this year when a wide receiver didn’t have a single catch.Texas was nearly able to overcome that crucial mistake. QB Will Howard wasn’t playing well, and Ohio State’s game plan wasn’t dynamic, in large part because of how Texas played. Texas’ defensive line and secondary were great.Franklin knew this was the weak link. He tried to address it in the transfer portal. There were moments during the season where Penn State’s receivers made big plays, but they never felt reliable. Ohio State still needed to make two more stops to prevent Texas from tying the game in the final minutes. After forcing an incompletion on third down, “Captain Jack” saved the day for Ohio State with his strip sack and 83-yard touchdown return on fourth-and-goal.

Notre Dame wins 27-24 over Penn State with a game-winning field goal

Notre Dame wins 27-24 over Penn State with a game-winning field goal

This College Football Playoff has over-delivered. Let’s start with the Henderson touchdown. Texas didn’t need to play prevent-defense there, but it shouldn’t have manipulated its own structure to create a vulnerability. Texas is going to watch that film and wonder why it blitzed a corner on that play, with the screen pass going right to that spot.Allar is also going to get too much of the blame. I’m not going to try and be an apologist for Allar, because you can’t blindly throw a ball over the middle like that late in a game. That’s the No. 1 cardinal sin of quarterbacking. Just saying you can’t throw the ball over the middle like that, though, doesn’t do the play justice. The play had Allar going back toward the middle of the field in his progression. Allar said he was trying to dirt at his receiver’s feet after the first two progressions weren’t there, but he took the bullet like a man when he spoke to reporters after the game. Texas did what it needed to do against Ohio State in a game that I thought offered a narrow path to win. Ohio State was playing great coming into this game. It was like a supernova of a team through its first two CFP games. It was going to take a specific game plan and path from Texas to win that game.Allar showed good leadership by taking accountability for that play, and that’s what quarterbacks are supposed to do. When we lose, it’s me. When we win, it’s me. 

Notre Dame beats Penn State 27-24, Advances to CFP Final

Notre Dame beats Penn State 27-24, Advances to CFP Final

Penn State’s weak link was exposed.

Ohio State began to show some of what I call “eye candy” plays in the fourth quarter, particularly on its game-winning touchdown drive. Yet, Texas had responded all game long with QB Quinn Ewers making some excellent plays. The Longhorns were doing that again after the Buckeyes went up 21-14, and it seemed inevitable that they’d tie the game.As for the interception, Allar is going to live with that mistake for the rest of his life. I feel bad for him in that sense. I have never played in a game of that magnitude, but I’ve thrown interceptions that will haunt me forever. Before we preview the last game of the year, let’s share my takeaways from the semifinals. Freeman is an incredible coach. Notre Dame is a team that people love to hate for a lot of reasons, but he has made Notre Dame a likeable product with the way he handles his business.It showed on the most critical play of Penn State’s season, too. That’s a tough pill to swallow for the Nittany Lions. 



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Dartmouth Wins Multiple Events in Final Split-Squad Meets

By: Maddie Omana Story Links CAMBRIDGE, Mass. – The Dartmouth men’s and women’s track and field teams had their final split-squad meets of the season on Thursday evening, with student athletes competing at the UMass Last Chance Qualifier and the MIT Final Qualifier.  UMass Last Chance Qualifier On the throwing side, […]

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CAMBRIDGE, Mass. – The Dartmouth men’s and women’s track and field teams had their final split-squad meets of the season on Thursday evening, with student athletes competing at the UMass Last Chance Qualifier and the MIT Final Qualifier. 

UMass Last Chance Qualifier

On the throwing side, Colton McMaster won the shot put with his 17.31m finish, which is good for fourth all-time. Additionally, McMaster clinched the discus with his 51.44m mark. Cate Schelly won the women’s discus with a 46.10m throw. 

Jada Jones continued her success, clinching the 200m for the Big Green with a final time of 23.80. 

Mariella Schweitzer placed first in the long jump with her 5.92m mark, while Charlotte DiRocco placed second in the high jump after clearing 1.65m. 

Painter Richards-Baker triumphed in the 110m and 400m hurdles, winning both events with 15.39 and 53.25 finishes, respectively. Liam Murray finished second in the 400m, recording a time of 47.27. 

MIT Final Qualifier

Andie Murray, who holds the third all-time best finish in the 800m, set a personal record in the event with her 2:05.32 finish. 

Albert Velikonja was the runner-up in the 1500m and put himself at second all-time with his 3:42.67 mark. Ashton Bange finished fourth in the event and set a personal record after recording a 3:47.34 finish. 

ALL-TIME RESULTS

Men’s 1500m

  1. 3:40.17 – Ben True – 2007
  2. 3:42.67 – Albert Velikonja – 2025
  3. 3:43.42 – Sean O’Neal – 1985
  4. 3:43.81 – Eric Gibson – 2022
  5. 3:44.85 – Sam Wilbur – 1994
  6. 3:45.02 – Silas Talbot – 2015
  7. 3:45.20 – Ben Gose – 1992
  8. 3:45.26 – Henry Raymond – 2018
  9. 3:45.35 – Harry Norton – 2008
  10. 3:45.36 – Steve Mangan 2012

Men’s Shot Put

  1. 19.89 – Adam Nelson – 1997
  2. 18.00 – Max Klein – 2023
  3. 17.45 – Wayne Moody – 1973, 17.45 – Ted Moody – 1972
  4. 17.31m – Colton McMaster – 2025
  5. 17.25m – Burt Anderson – 1991
  6. 17.12m – Ken Jansson – 1979
  7. 17.08m – Shaun McGregor – 2000
  8. 17.01m – Pacey Pet – 198217.01m – Jeff Rettig – 1991
  9. 16.89m – Marty Perkins – 1991
  10. 16.87m – Peter Kortebein – 1986

Women’s 800m

  1. 2:03.81 – Julia Fenerty – 2023 
  2. 2:03.82 – Megan Krumpoch – 2014
  3. 2:05.32 – Andie Murray – 2025
  4. 2:06.99 –  Meggie Donovan – 2014
  5. 2:07.35 – Annie Jackson – 2024
  6. 2:07.40 – Bella Pietrasiewicz – 2025
  7. 2:07.86 – Kristin Manwarning – 1996
  8. 2:08.11 – Abbey D’Agostino – 2013
  9. 2:08.12 – Abbey Livingston – 2018 
  10. 2:08.15 – Cecily Garber – 2003 

 



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Hwang earns All-Liberty League Second Team honors

Story Links TROY, N.Y. – Johnny Hwang, a first-year from the Skidmore College golf team, earned All-Liberty League Second Team recognition as announced on Thursday.   Johnny Hwang (Fy., Falmouth, Maine) – All-Liberty League Second Team Hwang led Skidmore with a 74.67 scoring average over 10.5 rounds, including a ninth-place finish at […]

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TROY, N.Y. – Johnny Hwang, a first-year from the Skidmore College golf team, earned All-Liberty League Second Team recognition as announced on Thursday.
 
Johnny Hwang (Fy., Falmouth, Maine) – All-Liberty League Second Team
Hwang led Skidmore with a 74.67 scoring average over 10.5 rounds, including a ninth-place finish at the Liberty League Championship in April with rounds of 74, 36 (9 holes), 72. Arriving as a mainstay to the team’s lineup in the spring, Hwang had the second of the team’s two rounds in the 60s for the season when he shot a 69 in the second round of the Tim Brown Invitational in a round that featured four birdies in a row and a 13-hole period played at 6-under par.
 
2024-25 All-Liberty League Men’s Golf Teams and Awards
PLAYER OF THE YEAR: Shibo Wang, Rochester
ROOKIE OF THE YEAR: Luke Evans, Rochester
COACHING STAFF OF THE YEAR: Rochester
 
ALL-LIBERTY LEAGUE FIRST TEAM
Arjun Aujla, Rochester
Matt Buckley, RPI
Luke Evans, Rochester
Kevin Kim, NYU
Jomyuth Luangtana-anan, NYU
Shibo Wang, Rochester
 
ALL-LIBERTY LEAGUE SECOND TEAM
Johnny Hwang, Skidmore
Jacob Lindsay, RPI
Eddie Ren, Rochester
Alvin Su, Rochester
Oscar Uribe, NYU
 
ALL-LIBERTY LEAGUE HONORABLE MENTION
Ryan Komp, RPI
Sam Lyman, St. Lawrence
Eric Spoth, Clarkson



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Three Penn State wrestling connections are picked to win at the World Team Trials this weekend

Penn State wrestling is already set to be represented by Luke Lilledahl and Mitchell Mesenbrink at Final X. The June event will feature 20 men’s and women’s freestyle matches to determine the 2025 U.S. Senior team, which will compete at the World Championship later this year. Before that, the U.S. World Team Trials will be […]

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Three Penn State wrestling connections are picked to win at the World Team Trials this weekend

Penn State wrestling is already set to be represented by Luke Lilledahl and Mitchell Mesenbrink at Final X. The June event will feature 20 men’s and women’s freestyle matches to determine the 2025 U.S. Senior team, which will compete at the World Championship later this year. Before that, the U.S. World Team Trials will be held this Friday and Saturday in Louisville. That’s where PSU and Nittany Lion Wrestling Club connections can punch their ticket to join Lilledahl and Mesenbrink, and Kyle Snyder in New Jersey. And, one national writer thinks that more than a few will.

Writing for FLO Wrestling, Jon Kozak predicts three Penn State connections will take first this weekend. He projects that senior Levi Haines will win the 79 kilogram (174.1 pounds) bracket while redshirt sophomore Josh Barr claims the 92 kilogram (202.8 pounds) division. He picked the Nittany Lion to do so before Jacob Cardenas dropped from the bracket. Now, Barr might be an even bigger favorite. And, beyond current members of Cael Sanderson’s team, Kozak also has NLWC member and two-time Olympic bronze medalist Kyle Dake taking the 86 kilogram (189.5 pounds) title.

Learn more about the Penn State wrestling connections competing at the U.S. World Team Trials by watching the latest BWI wrestling show below!

“The 79 kg bracket at the WTT is essentially a smaller version of the 79 kg bracket from the US Open,” Kozak writes. “In Vegas, DJ Hamiti finished as the runner-up with a tech fall over Kennedy Monday while losing to Evan Wick in the finals 9-1. Simon Ruiz finished in third place at the US Open, also only losing to Evan Wick (9-5) but defeating Carson Kharchla (twice, 3-2 and 7-7) and Muhamed McBryde (6-4). From these results, Hamiti should be considered a slight favorite, but Ruiz and Kharchla are interesting challengers capable of making a run to the finals.

“Levi Haines is the only wrestler in this bracket who didn’t wrestle at the US Open. While Haines lost to Hamiti at the NCAA Tournament, Haines is capable of winning this bracket in Louisville. Haines hasn’t competed much in freestyle, but he notably finished 4th at the 2024 World Team Trials at 79 kg. There, Haines lost to Jordan Burroughs and David Carr but defeated US Open winner Evan Wick (by pin) and Keegan O’Toole (6-0). Haines’ wrestling translates well to freestyle, and he has incredible potential to win in Louisville and at Final X.”

The action begins 10 a.m. ET on Friday with preliminary round action. The first session closes by 2:30 p.m. ET following the quarterfinal round. The semifinals and consolation bracket action run 4-7:30 p.m. ET on Friday. And, the finals are at 2 p.m. ET on Saturday. FLO is streaming the event. Here’s the list of Penn State connections:

Penn State signee Marcus Blaze and program alum Beau Bartlett – 65 kilograms (143.3 pounds)

Nittany Lion signee PJ Duke – 70 kilograms (154.3 pounds)

Penn State senior Levi Haines – 79 kilograms (174.1 pounds)

Nittany Lion alum Carter Starocci and NLWC member Kyle Dake- 86 kilograms (189.5 pounds)

Penn State redshirt sophomore Josh Barr – 92 kilograms (202.8 pounds)

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PENINSULA COLLEGE

PORT ANGELES — Peninsula College Athletics celebrated its 2024-25 academic year accomplishments by handing out athletic awards to outstanding student-athletes Wednesday afternoon in the Pirate Union Building. Albin Rosenlund, Isaiah Lopez, Carliese O’Brien, Ciera Agasiva, Gemma Rowland, Evee Stoddard, Sid Gunton-Day and Konrad Mueller all won awards. The Art Feiro Award (basketball) and Wally Sigmar […]

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PENINSULA COLLEGE

PORT ANGELES — Peninsula College Athletics celebrated its 2024-25 academic year accomplishments by handing out athletic awards to outstanding student-athletes Wednesday afternoon in the Pirate Union Building.

Albin Rosenlund, Isaiah Lopez, Carliese O’Brien, Ciera Agasiva, Gemma Rowland, Evee Stoddard, Sid Gunton-Day and Konrad Mueller all won awards.

The Art Feiro Award (basketball) and Wally Sigmar Award (soccer) go to student-athletes who exemplify leadership, athleticism, academics and citizenship.

Those awards went to Rosenlund of Norrkoping, Sweden, for men’s basketball and to first-team all-region Agasiva of Kalihi, Hawaii, for women’s basketball.

The soccer awards went to Northwest Athletic Conference first-team all-star and defensive player of the year Stoddard of Pocatello, Idaho, for women’s soccer and to first-team all-star Mueller of Trier, Germany, for men’s soccer.

The Pirate Gold Award is given to student-athletes who share inspiration, dedication, accomplishment and ambassadorship.

Those awards went to Lopez of Okinawa, Japan, for men’s basketball and to all-defensive team selection O’Brien of Bethel, Alaska, for women’s basketball.

For women’s soccer, it was first-team all-star and student body president Rowland of Shedd, Ore., and the men’s winner was second-team all-star Gunton-Day of Bristol, United Kingdom.

“These eight student-athletes represent a truly remarkable Class of ’25,” said Rick Ross, associate dean. “The coaches had so many options for these awards. It was a year of high-achieving, high-energy and high-quality young women and men. We are blessed to get to do what we do, coaching and working with athletes from all over the world and helping them advance through their higher education journey.”

As a program, Pirate Athletics won Northwest Athletic Conference championships in women’s and men’s soccer, their 15th NWAC titles since 2010, and claimed three more North Region titles in women’s and men’s soccer and women’s basketball.

The 80 student-athletes combined for an average grade point of 3.2 with about 40 students on the honor roll and president’s list each quarter.

More than 25 sophomores will go on to play at the next level.


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Mizzou gymnastics star graduates this spring | Mizzou Xtra

COLUMBIA − Amari Celestine is a force on the floor. She has been a part of Mizzou Gymnastics all four years of her college career. She has been involved with gymnastics since she was a toddler. “I really don’t consider myself good at any other sport,” Celestine said. “Gymnastics has always just been innate to me […]

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COLUMBIA − Amari Celestine is a force on the floor. She has been a part of Mizzou Gymnastics all four years of her college career.

She has been involved with gymnastics since she was a toddler.

“I really don’t consider myself good at any other sport,” Celestine said. “Gymnastics has always just been innate to me its just been natural.”

Celestine’s ultimate goal that drove her was getting to college. Now, after helping her team place third at the NCAA Championship final, Celestine will graduate on Saturday.

Celestine helped her team score the highest floor score in Mizzou Gymnastics program history. She has scored 9.900 or higher on floor in 10 of 16 meets this season. She recorded five-straight scores of 9.900+ on bars. 

After Mizzou gymnastics earned a third place finish at the NCAA Championship final, Amari talked about the doubters that did not think the team would make it that far. She is a crucial part of uplift to the team, and was determined to leave a mark at Mizzou.

“We can’t let what they feel about us define our efforts,” Celestine said. “We want to say, okay, well this is gonna be the sweetest ‘I told you so’ in the world. Like, you’re gonna see, you’re gonna learn, so I think that’s been really helpful,” Celestine said.

Since being at Mizzou, Amari has earned a handful of awards, earning WCGA Vault Floor First Team All-American in 2022, WCGA All-Around Second Team All-American and WCGA South Central Regional Gymnast of the Year this year. She was also named the 2025 NCAA Seattle Regional Outright Vault Champion.

Celestine has been on the All-SEC team four times. She is only one of two Mizzou gymnasts to earn four All-American honors in four years.

With being on the team for four years, Celestine serves as a leader and a player her teammates can count on. “If I could describe Amari in one word, it would be inspiring,” fellow Mizzou gymnast, Kennedy Griffin, said. 

Griffin is a sophomore gymnast who has been under Celestine’s wing. She said she appreciates how Amari genuinely cares for her and her team as teammates and as people outside of the sport.

“She is someone I can come to with something even outside of gymnastics, like helping me apply to an internship that I’m currently doing,” Griffin said.

Post graduation, Amari will be an intern at Rich Paul’s sports agency in Los Angeles, Klutch Sports Agency. She will also be a graduate assistant in southern Alabama this coming fall.  



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Northwestern Wildcats Ready for NCAA Lacrosse Quarterfinal Vs. Penn

When Northwestern takes the field Thursday at Martin Stadium, the Wildcats will have the opportunity to reach their sixth consecutive Final Four. Just like 2024, Penn stands in the way in the NCAA Tournament Quarterfinal. The ‘Cats have two decades of championship-caliber history, but they aren’t looking to the past as they gear up for […]

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When Northwestern takes the field Thursday at Martin Stadium, the Wildcats will have the opportunity to reach their sixth consecutive Final Four. Just like 2024, Penn stands in the way in the NCAA Tournament Quarterfinal.

The ‘Cats have two decades of championship-caliber history, but they aren’t looking to the past as they gear up for another title run. Instead, they’re taking it one game at a time.

“This is such an exciting time of the year,” senior midfielder Emerson Boelig said on Wednesday. “We call it Christmas because, like holiday season, you’re so excited. Everyone on the team is ready to go for the next game, and you’re only guaranteed one game, so why wouldn’t we put everything we can into it?”

Northwestern, the No. 3 seed in the NCAA Tournament, enters Thursday with a 17-2 record. The team’s only two losses have come to No. 1 North Carolina and No. 2 Boston College.

The Wildcats played six opponents this season who reached the NCAA Tournament, but the Penn Quakers were not one of them. Madison Taylor, the nation’s leading scorer who logged a tournament-record 10 goals against Michigan on Sunday, said the ‘Cats relish the challenge that comes with facing a team for the first time.

“It’s an exciting opportunity to play a different opponent,” Taylor said. “We’re all really embracing that, working really hard on the field and watching film off the field… We’re really excited just to go out there and play one last game at home this year.”

Boehlig and Taylor were both on the 2023 National Championship team, as well as the 2024 group that fell just short in a rematch with Boston College. While each postseason game gives the players experience in high-pressure moments, Taylor said that coach Kelly Amonte Hiller preaches calmness throughout the game.

It’s this calmness that could take the Wildcats all the way to their ninth National Championship. First, though, Northwestern will have to get past the Quakers on Thursday, with the opening draw set for 11 a.m. CT.



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