College Sports
Matt Rhule Issues Transfer Portal Advice to Nebraska Team, Other College Football Players
Another round of the transfer portal is about to begin. The spring transfer portal window runs from April 16-25. Since the end of the 2024 season, more than 2,100 FBS scholarship players have entered the portal. Nebraska football coach Matt Rhule talked for several minutes about the transfer portal at his spring practice media availability […]

Another round of the transfer portal is about to begin.
The spring transfer portal window runs from April 16-25. Since the end of the 2024 season, more than 2,100 FBS scholarship players have entered the portal.
Nebraska football coach Matt Rhule talked for several minutes about the transfer portal at his spring practice media availability Saturday.
“Players sometimes make a mistake going into the portal looking for an improved situation,” Rhule said. “Unless you’re not going to play somewhere, or you’re not going to be in the 105, then absolutely you should find somewhere.”
Rhule said he wants players to make the “right decision based on the right information.”
“Don’t come to me later and say, ‘well, they told me this but they end up doing that’,” Rhule said. “If you’ve been here and we’ve always told you the truth as best we know, then if we tell you, ‘hey this is where we see you’, then you should probably listen as opposed to somebody out there. Everybody out there always has something better for you. Make sure you’re listening to the right information and then do it the right way.”
Rhule’s message went beyond addressing the Huskers and was for college football players everywhere.
“I think too many outside people – parents, coaches – we’re always trying to find a better situation. If you really are an NFL player, or you’re really a great player, you’ll make your situation good enough by just getting better,” Rhule said. “If you’re going to listen to some other college coach tell you, ‘hey you’ll be the starter,’ then don’t call me afterwards and say, ‘well, I wasn’t the starter’.”
As for his own team, Rhule said those discussions now are similar to what was done for the last portal window.
“We told everybody in December, because that’s what I thought was fair, ‘hey, if we did the 105 right now you would be in the 105, you would be out of the 105, you would be competing for the 105’,” Rhule said. “We try to do that to be fair. We tried to be transparent since day one.”
Rhule believes Nebraska has the best opportunities for players looking to develop and improve over their time in college.
“If you stay in this place, and you stay in this weight room, this training facility, this training table for four years, you’re probably going to get developed,” Rhule said. “Chasing a better situation because you have a chance to go quicker but you’re not getting the same training and all that, it doesn’t make as much sense to me.
“If you’re at a place like this, you should really only leave if you’re never going to get on the field and you want to play.”
Bryant, Rhule’s son, is a freshman at the University of Nebraska. Rhule said if his son wasn’t happy then he and his wife would help him find some place where he would be. That same rule applies to players on the team.
“If someone’s not happy here, I want them to leave,” Rhule said. “Just don’t leave because someone’s saying, hey, I can get you a couple more bucks or a couple more this or a couple more that.’ I think a lot the guys that leave, they find out not all that’s true.”
Rhule is hopeful that House settlement ultimately includes a grandfather clause to have previously rostered players remain on the team.
“I was in Big Ten meetings early on where I was a major proponent of grandfathering people in. Even if you went 120, 115, 110, 105. I know some other conferences had some concerns about that,” Rhule said.
Rhule noted that he has been “pleased” with some of the guys that have moved on and found spots, even though he hated to see them go. He mentioned Mason Jones to Lindenwood as well as Ryker Evans and Dae’vonn Hall at UNK.
“I want the guys to be somewhere, in school, playing football, happy,” Rhule said.
You can watch Rhule’s full media availability below.
Stay up to date on all things Huskers by bookmarking Nebraska Cornhuskers On SI, subscribing to HuskerMax on YouTube, and visiting HuskerMax.com daily.
College Sports
Sargent Gymnasium – The Bowdoin Orient
Janet BriggsSOUNDS OF SARGENT: Sargent Gymnasium is a recreational haven for the day-to-day athletic activities of students, from intramural basketball to fencing to dancing. Dudley Sargent advocated for the construction of the gym to promote indoor exercise. Ascending past the Polar Bear statue to the entrance of Sargent Gymnasium, the echoes of bouncing balls guide […]


Ascending past the Polar Bear statue to the entrance of Sargent Gymnasium, the echoes of bouncing balls guide you to a vast room patterned by an expansive matrix of court lines. Sargent is a dynamic space hosting a variety of student sports teams throughout the year, including varsity and intramural basketball, the fencing team and the ultimate frisbee teams. Sometimes, the space is even converted into a makeshift dance studio.
Sargent was named after Dudley Sargent, a gymnastics coaching recruit who later became a student of the College and who helped establish indoor exercise at Bowdoin. Beyond attaining his degree in 1875, Sargent established a legacy of promoting physical education in New England at both Yale University and Harvard University and even started the Sargent School of Physical Training in Cambridge, Mass.
The title of Sargent Gymnasium originally belonged to a structure now utilized as the primary heating plant for Bowdoin. (Today, Sargent is located within Smith Union, and has been there since 1913.) The original complex, which was constructed in 1886, redefined exercise for the student body. Although physical activity is now widely deemed a staple of a healthy lifestyle for young adults, Sargent’s first location was established in the decades following an era when indoor exercise was widely considered an “ungentlemanly” practice for men who attended college in the United States and an overall obstacle to the ideal learning environment.
When, under the leadership of President William De Witt Hyde, the College was prepared to erect its own gymnasium, Sargent advocated for the project. Other influential figures in the history of sports at Bowdoin, like Frank N. Whittier, class of 1885, also helped establish academic requirements for activities in the building, such as classes in boxing and hygiene.
During a period when Collegiate Gothic style was the predominant architectural design at Bowdoin, the architect behind Sargent Gymnasium, Charles Collens, opted for Colonial Revival architecture. Collens argued the style would honor the College’s New England roots. At the entrance to Sargent, characteristics like a triangular pediment and classical door define the building’s façade.
Today, the College no longer demands that all students take physical education courses to graduate, but community members still take advantage of various opportunities in Sargent for their own leisure and fitness.
Sonia Katahdin ’28, who is enrolled in an art history course dedicated to the study of material culture, has expressed interest in Sargent’s unique position on campus in her course research.
“I have a lot of interest in historical buildings. I’ve been making a documentary about the history of Howell House [for an art history course], and the architect, Arnold Berton, did architectural work for the original Sargent Gymnasium, so that has taken me a little bit into this neck of the woods,” Katahdin said.
With its direct location above both the Mail Center and the Bowdoin Music Collective, its presence has wide-ranging impacts on student life.
Maya Funez ’28, who is a member of the student band Pariah and frequently utilizes the music practice rooms, noted that she sometimes feels frustrated with the upstairs noise from Sargent.
“If we’re songwriting, it’s hard to focus with the noise, assuming we haven’t already turned on all our gear,” Funez said. “For the most part, it’s just loud.”
Current students who use Sargent have expressed their desire for modifications to the space in years to come. Alex Krauss ’28, a member of the fencing, co-ed volleyball and intramural pickleball clubs, has suggestions for how to improve Sargent Gymnasium.
“It would be cool if there were pickleball lines or a new paint job,” Krauss said.
With the current campus layout, Sargent is also a frequent point of comparison with newer facilities on campus, like Morrell Gymnasium, a sports complex completed in 1965 that hosts the varsity basketball and volleyball teams. However, students still appreciate Sargent’s role in the day-to-day athletic activities of the community.
“I think Sargent is a great alternative to Morrell Gymnasium, and I’m glad we have it on campus,” Krauss said.
College Sports
Monks Close Out Season with Loss to Albertus Magnus
NASHUA, N.H. –The Saint Joseph’s College of Maine softball team wrapped up its 2025 season on Friday night with an 18-10 loss to Albertus Magnus College in GNAC Tournament Pod Play at Raider Diamond. Saint Joseph’s got off to a fast start, jumping ahead 2-0 in the first inning thanks to […]
NASHUA, N.H. –The Saint Joseph’s College of Maine softball team wrapped up its 2025 season on Friday night with an 18-10 loss to Albertus Magnus College in GNAC Tournament Pod Play at Raider Diamond.
Saint Joseph’s got off to a fast start, jumping ahead 2-0 in the first inning thanks to aggressive running on the bases and a couple of defensive miscues by Albertus Magnus. The Falcons quickly turned the tide in the second inning, scoring four runs to take a lead they never gave back to the Monks.
Albertus added three more in the third and later put the game out of reach with a big eight-run seventh inning.
Down by a wide margin in their final at-bat, the Monks didn’t go quietly. They rallied for four runs in the bottom of the seventh, highlighted by a three-run homer off the bat of Sadie Tirrell (Naples, ME).
Sadie Tirrell paced the Monks at the plate, going 2-for-4 with a home run, four RBIs, and two runs scored. Monks catcher Chantelle Bouchard (Biddeford, ME) also went deep, finishing 2-for-5 with an RBI. Shortstop Charlotte Cloutier (Lewiston, ME) added two hits and drove in a pai of runs for the Monks.
Albertus Magnus was powered by Barreiro’s 3-for-4, five-RBI performance. Schwipper added three hits and two RBIs, and Rubino capped the scoring with a three-run homer in the seventh. Jabs picked up the win for the Falcons.
College Sports
College Sports Chaos series explores NIL, transfer portal, realignment | UNLV
The college athletics landscape continues to shift. Almost daily, fans see countless names enter the transfer portal from all sports, more controversy from name, image and likeness dollars and news on even more conference expansion. Issues are being decided through mediation and even a multibillion-dollar antitrust settlement before a federal judge. There is much to […]

The college athletics landscape continues to shift.
Almost daily, fans see countless names enter the transfer portal from all sports, more controversy from name, image and likeness dollars and news on even more conference expansion.
Issues are being decided through mediation and even a multibillion-dollar antitrust settlement before a federal judge.
There is much to dissect, including UNLV’s place in a system that has become more and more about the professionalization of college sports.
The Review-Journal is beginning a new series entitled “College Sports Chaos” to report on and bring depth to those issues and more.
Here is just some of what the series will cover:
Mountain West vs. Pac-12
The conferences are likely headed toward mediation to resolve a lawsuit the Pac-12 filed over $55 million in poaching fees the Mountain West says it is owed.
The dispute dates to five Mountain West schools — Boise State, Colorado State, Fresno State, San Diego State and Utah State — announcing in September 2024 that they were joining the Pac-12.
There is also the issue of media rights dollars and what they mean to athletic departments in both conferences — and what the outlook is for each league when it comes to their next television contracts.
The Pac-12 still needs to add an eighth football-playing member to be considered a conference, and it has been reported that such a move might not occur until after its media rights deal for 2026 and beyond has been established.
The Mountain West, on the other hand, can likely expect to make less on its next deal than the newly formed Pac-12, not to mention leagues such as the Big 12 and ACC.
What is in store for the Mountain West and Pac-12? Could a program like UNLV ultimately end up in the Pac-12 should it not receive the millions of dollars promised it to remain in the Mountain West? Could it possibly bring legal action to get out of the Mountain West deal?
Stay tuned.
Transfer portal
There is good and bad to all of it, major challenges that still need to be considered when athletes make the decision to jump into such a pool.
Many see up to 70 percent of their academic credits lost.
The calendar for when the portal opens and closes each year also has come under great scrutiny.
But in a world where coaches can switch jobs on a whim, the idea that athletes also have the freedom to search for better opportunities is a good one.
Locally, we will break down the portal with UNLV men’s and women’s basketball coaches Josh Pastner and Lindy La Rocque.
In his first months leading the Rebels, Pastner has had to rely heavily on the portal to build a roster.
La Rocque, who has established her program as tops in the Mountain West, saw three of her best young players enter the portal following last season.
It’s a never-ending cycle of movement that only appears to be getting bigger and bigger as each season passes.
House vs. NCAA
This is the class-action lawsuit brought in 2020 by former Arizona State swimmer Grant House and former TCU women’s college basketball player Sedona Prince.
The basis of it: to lift restrictions on revenue sharing of media rights revenues.
It would create a system in which schools can pay athletes directly beginning this summer, a number expected to start at $20.5 million per school.
It would also guarantee retroactive payments to former athletes who were not able to profit off their name, image and likeness.
Group of Five schools would likely pay much less to their athletes than those from the Power Four, but some level of revenue sharing will be required from programs like UNLV.
The question then becomes, how would the Rebels come up with funds for a system that essentially becomes free agency in college sports? At what level could UNLV compete with other schools paying much more to their athletes?
The lawsuit is near a final conclusion, but U.S. District Judge Claudia Wilken wants both sides to agree on the implementation of roster limits. Wilken has been opposed to the immediate elimination of thousands of athletes from NCAA sports.
The final ruling will also have its effect on the NIL world by allowing direct payments from schools to athletes and changing many of the deals signed with collectives.
Or will future lawsuits following such a ruling keep a final determination from occurring for years to come?
NIL
How competitive is a school like UNLV in this highly significant area of college sports? How competitive is it with other schools in the Mountain West and newly formed Pac-12?
Power Four schools through NIL collectives now pay some of their athletes — the quarterback, the star point guard — millions of dollars annually.
One local example is former UNLV basketball player Dedan Thomas Jr., who entered the transfer portal and ultimately signed with LSU for a hefty raise in his NIL deal.
Group of Five schools find it nearly impossible to keep up. It will likely be the same reality once the House settlement is official.
The rich keep getting richer, is right.
Key UNLV questions
Will the Rebels ever receive an invite to a power conference?
Realignment and expansion aren’t over, and it’s the charge of a program like UNLV to position itself in the best possible light once things begin to again shift within the Power Four leagues.
The arrival of a legitimate football team certainly helps UNLV’s cause. So would Pastner turning around a basketball program that hasn’t been to the NCAA Tournament since 2013.
The Rebels have facilities good enough to be considered on par with Power Four programs.
But is Las Vegas ready to support big-time college athletics in every manner? And if not, what does that mean for the future of UNLV sports?
All of it and more will be covered in “College Sports Chaos.“
Contact Ed Graney at egraney@reviewjournal.com. Follow @edgraney on X.
College Sports
The ESSLY Awards: A celebration of UWL Athletics
The UW-La Crosse logo lit up on the wall of Mitchell Hall. Photo by John Gaynor. On Tuesday, April 29, the University of Wisconsin-La Crosse Athletics Department hosted the 11th annual ESSLYs, the annual award show designed to celebrate the achievements of UWL student-athletes in school, in sport and in life. Because many student-athletes get […]


The UW-La Crosse logo lit up on the wall of Mitchell Hall. Photo by John Gaynor.
On Tuesday, April 29, the University of Wisconsin-La Crosse Athletics Department hosted the 11th annual ESSLYs, the annual award show designed to celebrate the achievements of UWL student-athletes in school, in sport and in life.
Because many student-athletes get caught up in schoolwork, workouts, practices and competitions, the ESSLYs are an opportunity for everyone involved with UWL Athletics to be recognized for their achievements.
“We all get busy and don’t recognize the work our student athletes put in often enough. The ESSLYs give you the opportunity to see the incredible athletes here at UWL, and everything they’re doing,” said Volleyball Head Coach Deb Sazama.
At the ESSLYS, UWL student-athletes in each university-sponsored athletic discipline are recognized for their accomplishments, by recognition of team captains, community service hours, scholar athletes and 4.00 GPA students. All-Americans, academic All-Americans, four-year participants, as well as individual and team national champions are recognized as well
Individual athlete awards are also recognized during the event. Such awards include the Male and Female Athlete of the Year, Student of the Year, Male and Female Newcomer of the Year, Comeback Athlete of the Year, The Eagle Award and the Outstanding Career Award.
A faculty member is also recognized as Faculty of the Year.
In addition to the individual awards, there are two team awards given out during the ceremony. One of these awards is given to the team with the highest cumulative grade point average (GPA) and the other is Team of the Year, for the team with the most success within the past year.
This year, the team with the highest cumulative GPA was the Women’s Cross Country team and the Faculty of the Year award was given to Biology Professor, Jennifer Miskowski.
The UWL Athletics Department has three pillars. The department aims for its student-athletes to excel in school, in sport and in life.
For the school pillar, the UWL Athletic Department handed out the Student award. The award is given to the student-athletes who performed the best in the classroom, with all three athletes who received the award having earned a 4.0 GPA.
This year’s winners were Justine Bastyr of Volleyball, Reilly Eiynck of Women’s Swim & Dive and Addie Pauling of Soccer.
Bastyr is currently pursuing her CPA license and is a double major in accounting and finance. Eiynck will be attending graduate school at Yale on a full scholarship to pursue a PhD. Pauling is currently working at an internship in Colorado.
To Sazama, the awards represent an opportunity to motivate her squad. “Historically, our program hasn’t been in that position, lifting the trophy. I hope seeing others do it makes my team say, ‘that can and should be us.’”
Over the past year, UWL Athletics has seen an unprecedented number of teams compete and find success on a national level, a feat many Division III schools could only dream of.
The ESSLYs celebrated Men’s Track and Field winning a national title in its 2024 Outdoor season, Men’s Cross Country getting their revenge and winning a national championship during their 2024 season, Gymnastics winning an National College Gymnastics Association (NCGA) national title in March of 2025 and Men’s Track & Field winning an Indoor National Championship title in March of 2025.
During the past year, UWL Athletic have also secured nine Wisconsin Intercollegiate Athletic Conference (WIAC) championships. One of the teams to take home a WIAC title over the past year was Wrestling, who came home with the Upset of the Year award after winning a regional title and sending nine of ten weight classes to the national meet.
“What happens here doesn’t happen anywhere else,” said Head Coach of UWL Wrestling Dave Malecek.
Across all National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) schools, sports and divisions, UWL has the 11th-most team national championships in the nation with 51 national titles.
On March 22, the UWL Gymnastics team captured the program’s 18th NCGA title and UWL’s 79th overall national title, about a week after the UWL Men’s Track & Field team concluded its 2025 Indoor season with winning a national championship, the 21st in program history.
“Other schools would throw a ticker-tape parade if they won just one national championship, but we had cake and coffee for our 78th and 79th,” said Malecek.
While not every team can win a national championship every year, there were many programs that stood out. Men’s and Women’s Basketball both had record-breaking seasons, each making the national tournament.
Under Head Coach J.T. Gritzmacher, the Men’s Basketball team completed the winningest season in program history. The team won 22 regular-season games and three in the postseason before being eliminated by Missouri’s Washington University.
For the Women’s Basketball team, this year wasn’t just about accomplishments, but rather pushing forward and giving back. The team was faced with a setback early in the year, with the tragic loss of UWL Women’s Basketball Head Coach Moran Lonning’s son, Charlie Lonning Weber.
The Women’s Basketball team and the entire UWL community surrounded Lonning and her family with thoughts, prayers and love. Over a thousand people showed up in November to stand in support with the team when they hosted Bubba’s Youth Night in memoriam of their ‘Forever Sixth Man’.
In Webber’s honor, Athletic Director Kim Blum’s True Grit Award was renamed to The Charlie Award and given to the Women’s Basketball team.
Following the Charlie Award, Blum highlighted each team’s service efforts within the La Crosse community, emphasizing the perpetual effort from UWL student-athletes on every team to step up and support a good cause.
During their off-season, each athletic discipline sponsored by the UWL Athletic Department participates in community service efforts, whether on-campus or anywhere in La Crosse County.
UWL Football Head Coach Matt Janus chimed in on Blum’s remarks. “To see and to hear about the ways our UWL student-athletes were able to help the La Crosse community and to be a part of that community as well is something special. It’s not just about sports for our teams. It’s using sports to provide a platform to provide an experience,” said Janus.
Each year, the UWL Athletic department recognizes an athlete who has overcome one or more significant obstacles or injuries to return to competing at a high level. This year’s winner of the Comeback of the Year award is UWL Gymnastics’ very own, Sara Beck.
Beck lost a year of her college career to multiple injuries in her leg, but persevered and scored a 9.750 on the uneven bars to place third at the NCGA National Championships and help UWL bring home its first NCGA title since 2016.
For the third pillar, the department created The Life Award. The Life Award encapsulates being successful in all areas of student-athlete life and was awarded to two athletes. Recipients of the 2025 Life Award are Men’s Swim and Dive’s Connor Cleveland and Women’s Cross Country’s Sierra Rabe.
Each year, thousands of athletes arrive onto new college campuses to compete in various sports. Whether it is through being a transfer or first-year student-athlete, the Newcomer Award recognizes individuals who have been successful in their first year at UWL and have excelled in their athletic discipline.
The 2025 Newcomer Award winners are Men’s Tennis’ Ty Schneider and Women’s Swim and Dive’s Zoey Rank. This past season, Schneider went 15-7 in singles and 16-5 in doubles, tied for second in overall victories on the team. Rank was victorious in the 200-meter individual medley at the WIAC Championships and won the WIAC’s Newcomer of the Year Award.
While many athletes have done great things during their time competing at UWL and post-graduation, the 2025 Career Award recognizes four UWL Athletes for their accomplishments during their time at UWL. The 2025 Career Award was given to Soccer’s Ellie Arndt, Baseball’s Mac Born, Softball’s Kyra Lard and Men’s Track and Field’s Sam Blaskowski.
During her time at UWL, Arndt has earned All-Region and All-American honors three times, appearing in 90 games and starting 84 of them.
As Baseball’s captain, Born is a four-time All-WIAC selection and is a three-time selection to D3Baseball.com’s All-America Second Team and ABCA All-Region Team.
Lard suited up 153 games for the Eagles throughout her career, with a .421 batting average over her career and earning an All-WIAC selection three times.
Throughout his career at UWL, Blaskowski has proven himself as one of the greatest sprinters in Division III history, holding records in the 60m, 100m and 200m. Blaskowski has won 11 national titles and has earned 20 DIII All-American honors in his career. In 2024, Blaskowski competed in the Team USA Track and Field Olympic Trials where he ran 10.17 in the 100m semi-final.
For the last awards of the night, the UWL Athletics Department handed out the Male and Female Athlete of the Year Awards. The awards exemplify the best student-athletes in each gender, regardless of discipline.
For the men, Football’s Jack Studer and Track and Field/Cross Country’s Grant Matthai received the award. For the women, Track and Field’s Lauren Jarrett and Basketball’s Lauryn Milne took home the award.
Studer was a semi-finalist for The Gagliardi Trophy, Division III football’s highest honor. Studer is UWL’s all-time leading receiver in catches and touchdowns and received an invitation to the Green Bay Packers’ 2025 Rookie Minicamp.
Matthai helped lead both Men’s Cross Country and Track and Field to National Championships, placing third at the National Cross-Country Championships in November and first in the 5k at the NCAA Track and Field National Championships in March.
Jarrett holds the NCAA Division III record indoors for the 60m and outdoors in the 100m dash. Jarrett is the only sprinter in UWL history to take home indoor titles in the 60m and 200m dash at the Indoor Championships and has won six national titles.
Milne is a 2025 All-WIAC First Team selection and is one of three players in UWL history to score over 1,200 career points and record more than 500 rebounds. Milne suited up for the Eagles nearly one hundred times in her career, averaging 11.2 points and 4.7 assists per game.
The 2025 ESSLYs recognized all the aforementioned individuals and teams for their unparalleled accomplishments this past year, encapsulating the work put in by UWL student-athletes, coaching staff, athletic trainers, and volunteers.
UWL Women’s Basketball Team receives the Charlie Award From Athletic Director Kim Blum during the 2025 ESSLYs in Mitchell Hall, on Tuesday, April 29, 2025. Photo by John Gaynor.
College Sports
Women’s Hockey Announces Highly Touted Incoming Recruiting Class
Story Links CAMBRIDGE, Mass. – Harvard women’s ice hockey will officially welcome seven new faces to the program next season as a part of its highly touted recruiting class. The strong class, made up of three forwards, three defenders and one goaltender, gives the Crimson balance across the ice and will help […]

CAMBRIDGE, Mass. – Harvard women’s ice hockey will officially welcome seven new faces to the program next season as a part of its highly touted recruiting class. The strong class, made up of three forwards, three defenders and one goaltender, gives the Crimson balance across the ice and will help the team continue to develop under the Landry Family Head Coach for Harvard Women’s Ice Hockey, Laura Bellamy.
This exciting group of incoming student-athletes will join the Harvard class of 2029 when it arrives on campus this Fall and will look to make an immediate impact when they join the program for the upcoming 2025-26 season. Learn more about each of the seven new players who pull on the Crimson and White below.
Emi Biotti
Defense | Cambridge, Mass. | Buckingham, Browne and Nichols | East Coast Wizards
Before Harvard
- Skated at the 2025 IIHF Under-18 Women’s World Championship.
- Represented Team USA in the Under-18 Series vs. Canada in 2024.
- Helped lead BB&N to its first ISL Championship since 1991 in her senior season.
- 2023-24 ISL League All-Star Selection.
Bella Finnegan
Defense | Orono, Minn. | Minnetonka High School | Elite League
Before Harvard
- Earned a spot on the All-State Tournament Team in 2023-24 season.
- Named Second Team All-Metro in 2024.
- Two-time All-Conference selection in 2023-2024 and 2024-2025.
- Named to the All-State team in Minnesota after the 2024-2025 season.
- Ms. Hockey honorable mention selction after the 2024-25 season.
- Helped lead Minnetonka to three consecutive State Tournament appearance in her sophomore, junior and senior seasons.
- Recorded 90 points with 36 goals and 54 assists in her high school career.
Morgan McGathey
Forward | Braintree, Mass. | Thayer Academy | East Coast Wizards
Before Harvard
- Member of the IIHF USA U-18 Member of Gold Medal Team in Switzerland in 2024.
- Played on the USA U-18 Team in the series vs. Canada in 2023.
- Recipient of Prestigious Boston Bruins John Carlton Memorial Trophy in 2025.
- Two-time ISL League MVP in 2024 and 2025.
- Four-time ISL All League First Team selection (2022-2025)
- Three Time All- NEPSAC First Team Selection (2023-2025)
- Thayer Team MVP- 2021 in all four years of varsity hockey.
- Holds Thayer Academy Record for Most Points (169) and Goals (116)
Carla McSweeney
Forward | Chicago, Ill. | The Latin School of Chicago | Chicago Mission Hockey
Before Harvard
- USA Hockey National Development Camps attendee from 2021-2024.
- Attended the USA Hockey Women’s National Festival in 2023
- Member of the USA Hockey U-18 Select Team in 2023
- Named All-State in Illinois during all four years of high school
- Awarded the Illinois Girls High School Ice Hockey Player of the Year for the 2024-25 season.
- Named the World Selects Invitational MVP in 2019.
Alex Paulsen
Defense | Orono, Minn. | Orono High School | Elite League
Before Harvard
- Recorded 131 points in five seasons with the Orono varsity hockey team.
- Named a team captain in her junior and senior seasons at Orono.
- Helped lead Orono to the State Tournament in her first-year season.
- Selected to the All-State team after her senior season in 2024-25.
Elle Sproule
Forward | Old Greenwich, Conn. | Shattuck St. Mary’s
Before Harvard
- Member of a National Championship winning U19 Girls Hockey team in 2024.
- Minnesota State Champion for the U19 Shattuck Girls Prep team in 2024 and 2025.
- U18 Girls National USA Hockey camp selectee in 2023 and 2024.
- Scored 63 goals and notched 126 points in three seasons at Shattuck.
- Uncle Doug Sproule played hockey at Harvard and graduated in 1998.
Izzy Whynot
Goaltender | Newmarket, Ontario | Sir William Mulock Secondary | Central York Panthers
Before Harvard
- Posted 12 shutouts and 31 wins in two seasons as a starter.
- Recorded a 1.51 goals against average (GAA) and a .937 save percentage to lead her team to the playoffs in her senior season.
- Played club hockey with the Central York Panthers (2017-2025) and the Newmarket Renegades (2012-2017).
- Also lettered in flag football and badminton in high school.
College Sports
Kansas State University
MANHATTAN, Kan. – Playing in its first postseason in eight years, the Kansas State women’s golf team is set to begin its quest for the first NCAA Championship appearance in program history next Monday through Wednesday as the Wildcats compete in the 2025 NCAA Lexington Regional at the par-72, 6,322-yard Keene Trace Golf Club in […]

K-State, which is the No. 5 seed for the regional, is one of 12 squads vying for a spot in the 2025 NCAA Championship as the top five teams and top individual not on an advancing team will move on to the championship, May 16-21, at Omni La Costa Resort & Spa in Carlsbad, California.
“Our season starts Monday,” head coach Stew Burke said. “The ladies have played a lot of great golf throughout the semester to get us in this position. However, it is now top five or go home, and I don’t think anybody on this roster is ready for the season to end. Ultimately, we will continue to focus on each round at a time and see where three good rounds leave us at the end of the tournament. I can promise you that these ladies are ready to take the leap to the next level.”
The top four seeds in the NCAA Lexington Regional are No.1 Florida State – the ACC Champion – No. 2 USC, No. 3 TCU and No. 4 Vanderbilt. Other teams competing consist of Georgia Southern, Pepperdine, Louisville, Miami, Conference USA Champion Western Kentucky, Ohio Valley Champion Morehead State and Northeast Champion Fairleigh Dickinson.
The Wildcats will use the same lineup as the Big 12 Championship in seniors Carla Bernat and Sophie Bert, freshman Nanami Nakashima, sophomore Alenka Navarro and junior Noa van Beek. Sophomore Julia Ballester Barrio will serve as the alternate.
“This will be a new experience for the majority of the team, but it’s great to have Carla and Sophie who have had some postseason experience,” Burke said. “Keene Trace is a great golf course with many similarities to our home at Colbert Hills.”
Bernat enters the postseason after being selected as the 2025 Big 12 Women’s Golfer of the Year and was joined on the All-Big 12 Team by Bert. A native of Castellon, Spain, Bernat is the second player in program history to earn the conference’s top honor (Christine Boucher – 2003-04), while it was the first time ever the Wildcats had two All-Big 12 golfers in the same season.
The 2025 Augusta National Women’s Amateur Champion, Bernat currently owns the school’s single-season (70.09) and career (70.40) scoring average records. She enters the regional ranked 23rd in the National Collegiate Golf Rankings thanks to seven top-five finishes and a pair of victories, while she never finished outside the top 20 in any of her 11 appearances this season.
Bert won the 2025 Big 12 Championship to become the first Wildcat to ever to claim an individual conference championship, while she was also named the Big 12 Women’s Golfer of the Month for May. A transfer from East Tennessee State, Bert’s 72.75 scoring average this season ranks third in school history, while she also set (63) and tied (204) Kansas State’s single round and 54-hole scoring records, respectively.
Both Bernat and Bert enter the NCAA Lexington Regional with postseason experience under their belts. This will be Bernat’s fourth NCAA Regional after tying for 10th at the 2022 NCAA Stillwater Regional, 27th in the 2023 NCAA Athens Regional and third in the 2024 NCAA Bryan (Texas) Regional, the latter of which allowed her to advance to the NCAA Championship. Bert tied for 13th at last year’s NCAA Auburn Regional as part of ETSU’s Southern Conference Champion squad.
A native of Kani, Japan, Nakashima has competed in all 11 events this season and ranks third on the team with a 73.84 scoring average, and her best finish this season was a second-place showing at the Powercat Invitational.
Navarro has the fourth-best scoring average on the team at 74.03, just ahead of van Beek’s mark of 74.16. Those two players have combined for six top-20 finishes, and both have notched a top-10 showing this season. Navarro’s appearance in the top 10 was a tie for third place at the Powercat Invitational, while van Beek tied for seventh at the MountainView Collegiate.
Kansas State begins play at the 2025 NCAA Lexington Regional off the 10th tee on Monday morning starting at 8 a.m. (ET), as the Wildcats are paired with Vanderbilt and Georgia Southern. Live results can be followed on SCOREBOARD powered by Clippd.
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