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Final Big West Game, Senior Day, and Harper Cup on Tap this Weekend

Caroline Christl, Lucia Doak, Sila Fedler, Kenzie Larson, Abby Moll, Courtney Okumura, Lexi Stahl, and Kendall Thomas. Tickets for both games can be purchased through the Triton Box Office. INSIDE THE GAMES— Game 28: Big West Conference —• #9/13 UC San Diego (14-13, 3-3) vs. #18/19 UC Santa Barbara (16-11, 2-4)• Friday / April 18 / 6 p.m. Pacific• Tickets• […]

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Final Big West Game, Senior Day, and Harper Cup on Tap this Weekend

Caroline Christl, Lucia Doak, Sila Fedler, Kenzie Larson, Abby Moll, Courtney Okumura, Lexi Stahl, and Kendall Thomas.

Tickets for both games can be purchased through the Triton Box Office.


INSIDE THE GAMES
— Game 28: Big West Conference —

• #9/13 UC San Diego (14-13, 3-3) vs. #18/19 UC Santa Barbara (16-11, 2-4)
• Friday / April 18 / 6 p.m. Pacific
• Tickets
• Canyonview Aquatic Center / La Jolla, Calif.
• ESPN+ | FOSH Live Stats
• Instagram

— Game 29: Senior Day/Harper Cup —
• #9/13 UC San Diego (14-13) vs. #21/22 San Diego State (14-12)
• Saturday / April 19 / 12 p.m. Pacific
• Tickets
• Canyonview Aquatic Center / La Jolla, Calif.
• ESPN+ | FOSH Live Stats
• Instagram


THE TEAMS

UC SAN DIEGO TRITONS UC SANTA BARBARA GAUCHOS SAN DIEGO STATE AZTECS
Roster | Schedule & Results | Statistics Roster | Schedule & Results | Statistics Roster | Schedule & Results | Statistics
Location: La Jolla, Calif. Location: Santa Barbara, Calif. Location: San Diego, Calif.
Conference: Big West Conference: Big West Conference: Golden Coast
Overall: 14-13 Overall: 16-11 Overall: 14-12
Big West: 3-3 Big West: 2-4 Golden Coast: 4-3
Home: 3-6 Home: 3-2 Home: 5-4
Away: 3-3 Away: 3-4 Away: 4-3
Neutral: 8-4 Neutral: 10-5 Neutral: 5-5
Streak: 1 loss Streak: 3 wins Streak: 1 loss
ACWPC National Ranking: 9 ACWPC National Ranking: 18 ACWPC National Ranking: 22
CWPA National Ranking: 13 CWPA National Ranking: 19 CWPA National Ranking: 21
Big West Preseason Poll: 4th of 8 Big West Preseason Poll: 2nd of 8 Golden Coast Preseason Poll: 4th of 8

THE HARPER CUP SERIES
• All-Time Series: San Diego State leads 13-9
• Last Meeting: 4/21/24, UC San Diego wins 12-10 in San Diego
• First Meeting: 4/19/02: San Diego State wins 8-7 in La Jolla
• Last San Diego State Win: 4/18/15, 6-3 in San Diego
• Current Streak: UC San Diego 8 wins
• At UC San Diego: San Diego State leads 6-5
• At San Diego State: San Diego State leads 7-4
• UC San Diego Goals Scored: 151
• San Diego State Goals Scored: 179

2024: UC San Diego 12, San Diego State 10
2023: San Diego State 9, UC San Diego 10
2022: UC San Diego 13, San Diego State 8
2021: San Diego State 7, UC San Diego 10
2020: Game canceled due to pandemic
2019: UC San Diego 9, San Diego State 5
2018: San Diego State 5, UC San Diego 6
2017: UC San Diego 10, San Diego State 6
2016: San Diego State 5, UC San Diego 6 (SD)
2015: UC San Diego 3, San Diego State 6
2014: San Diego State 5, UC San Diego 8
2013: UC San Diego 4, San Diego State 6
2012: San Diego State 10, UC San Diego 5
2011: UC San Diego 7, San Diego State 15
2010: San Diego State 11, UC San Diego 3
2009: UC San Diego 7, San Diego State 14
2008: San Diego State 6, UC San Diego 5
2007: UC San Diego 8, San Diego State 10
2006: San Diego State 6, UC San Diego 5
2005: UC San Diego 4, San Diego State 9
2004: San Diego State 9, UC San Diego 4
2003: UC San Diego 5, San Diego State 9
2002: San Diego State 8, UC San Diego 7


KREUTZKAMP HITS MILESTONE
In his 16th season leading the Tritons, Brad Kreutzkamp, the program’s winningest coach, hit a major career milestone on Jan. 31. A 16-15 sudden victory overtime triumph against Arizona State in La Jolla was his 300th career win at UC San Diego. He came into the 2025 season with 296 wins.

Kreutzkamp Moments
Win #1: 2/6/10, 8-4 vs. Marist
Win #50: 3/31/12, 13-4 vs. Azusa Pacific
Win #100: 3/16/14, 11-8 vs. Wagner
Win #200: 4/29/18, 12-2 vs. Cal State East Bay
Win #300: 1/31/25, 16-15 (SV) vs. Arizona State


SARAH LIZOTTE TRAVELS TO AFRICA
Assistant coach and Triton All-American Sarah Lizotte recently took a trip to Zimbabwe to help revitalize youth water polo in the country. Check out the feature story “From California to Zimbabwe: Global Coaching, Local Impact with Sarah Lizotte”, written by Alexandra Tuff. 


MAKANA FAKE WINS COLLEGIATE DEBUT
Freshman goalie Makana Fake saw her first collegiate action on March 15 against Michigan at Canyonview Aquatic Center. She played all 32 minutes en route to winning her debut contest, 13-12. Fake made four saves and grabbed three steals in the victory.


BIG WEST STANDINGS
(through 4/17)

Team Big West Overall
Hawai’i 7-0 18-4
Long Beach State 6-1 15-10
UC Irvine 5-2 14-12
UC San Diego 3-3 14-13
UC Santa Barbara 2-4 16-11
UC Davis 2-4 12-13
CSUN 1-6 16-1q
Cal State Fullerton 0-6 11-19

TRITON RECORDS
(through 4/17)

Overall 14-13
Big West 3-3
Non-conference 11-10
At home 3-6
On the road 3-3
At at neutral site 8-4
In overtime 2-0
Scoring 0-6 goals 0-2
Scoring 7-9 goals 0-6
Scoring 10-12 goals 2-5
Scoring 13-15 goals 8-0
Scoring 16-18 goals 2-0
Scoring 19-20 goals 2-0
Scoring 21-plus goals 0-0
On Thursdays 0-1
On Fridays 4-0
On Saturdays 8-8
On Sundays 2-4
vs. Ranked Teams 11-13
vs. Unranked Teams 3-0

MULTIPLE GOAL GAMES
(through 4/17)


GAME-WINNING GOALS
(through 4/17)


CURRENT TRITON SCORING STREAKS
(through 4/17)
Caroline Christl 21
Holly Roberts 4
Abigail Schechter 2


GAME-BY-GAME GOAL LEADERS
(through 4/17)


2025 AWARDS
Caroline Christl:
Two-time Big West Player of the Week (3/5, 2/12), Two-time UCSDTritons.com Athlete of the Week (2/24, 2/3)
Kendall Thomas: Big West Preseason Coaches’ Team, UCSDTritons.com Athlete of the Week (4/7)


2024 AWARDS
Caroline Christl:
ACWPC All-America Honorable Mention, All-Big West Second Team, UCU Athlete of the Week (4/1)
Lexi Stahl: All-Big West Second Team, Two-time Big West Player of the Week (4/10, 3/13)
Kendall Thomas: ACWPC All-America Third Team, All-Big West First Team … All-Big West Preseason Coaches’ Team, Two-time UCU Athlete of the Week (4/22, 1/29)


AYE AYE CAPTAIN
The 2025 Triton captains are Lexi Stahl and Kendall Thomas.


ACWPC NATIONAL POLL (4/16) CWPA NATIONAL POLL (4/16) BIG WEST PRESEASON POLL
1. USC 1. USC 1. UC Irvine
2. Stanford 2 Stanford 2. Hawai’i
3. UCLA 3. UCLA 3. Long Beach State
4. Hawai’i 4. Hawai’i 4. UC San Diego
5. California 5. California 5.UC Davis
6. Long Beach State 6. Long Beach State 6. CSUN
7. UC Irvine 7. UC Irvine 7. UC Santa Barbara
8. Fresno State 8. Fresno State 8. Cal State Fullerton
9. UC San Diego 9. Princeton
10. Arizona State 10. Loyola Marymount
11. Harvard 11. Arizona State
12. Loyola Marymount 12. Indiana
13. Princeton 13. UC San Diego
14. Michigan t-14. Harvard
15. San Jose State t-14. San Jose State
16. Indiana 16. Michigan
17. UC Davis 17. UC Davis
18. UC Santa Barbara 18. Wagner
19. Pacific 19. UC Santa Barbara
20. Wagner 20. Brown
21. Brown t-21. Pacific
22. San Diego State t-21. San Diego State
23. Marist 23. Marist
24. California Baptist 24. CSUN
25. Long Island University t-25. Long Island University
t-25. California Baptist
UCSD: 15, 15, 11, 13, 11, 8, 7, 9, 10, 10, 9, 9, 9 UCSD: 12, 14, 14, 13, 11, 10, 8, 9, 11, 11, 12, 11, 13

 


HEAD COACH BRAD KREUTZKAMP
Brad Kreutzkamp is currently in his 16th season as head coach of the UC San Diego women’s water polo program in 2025. Kreutzkamp has led UC San Diego to eight Western Water Polo Association (WWPA) championships and eight appearances at the NCAA Championship. Kreutzkamp has been named the Association of Collegiate Water Polo Coaches (ACWPC) and WWPA Coach of the Year five times during his career. On Jan. 31, 2025, he hit a major milestone by earning his 300th career win – a 16-15 sudden victory overtime win against Arizona State in La Jolla. Full Bio


WELCOME BACK SARAH
Four-time ACWPC All-America First Team honoree and two-time NCAA Division II Player of the Year Sarah Lizotte rejoined the team this season as an assistant coach. As a player for Brad Kreutzkamp between 2011 and 2014, Lizotte is UC San Diego’s all-time leader in goals (321), assists (176), and shots (758). Player Bio | Coaching Bio


ON THE MOVE
After 20 seasons playing as an NCAA Division II team, the entire athletics program has completed a four-year transition to NCAA Division I, culminating in full DI status as a member of the Big West Conference for the 2024-25 academic year. All UC San Diego sports are now eligible for conference and NCAA postseason play.


FOR THE YOUNGER CROWD
Got some young Triton fans in your family? If they are eighth grade or under, check out the Junior Triton Club. Membership includes a free t-shirt, admission to over 100 UC San Diego home athletic events, and much more!


GEAR HERE
For the latest Triton apparel and accessories, visit the official team store of the Tritons here.


WHY THE TRITONS?
The Triton is described as the offspring of Poseidon and Amphitrite, a demigod of the sea with a lower part of the body like that of a fish. It is known as a mighty and fierce sea warrior. Given UC San Diego’s close proximity to the Pacific Ocean and its connections with the world-famous Scripps Institution of Oceanography, the Triton became our mascot in 1964.


About UC San Diego Athletics
After two decades as one of the most successful programs in NCAA Division II, the UC San Diego intercollegiate athletics program began a new era in 2020 as a member of The Big West in NCAA Division I. The 23-sport Tritons earned 30 team and nearly 150 individual national championships during its time in Divisions II and III and helped guide 1,400 scholar-athletes to All-America honors. A total of 84 Tritons have earned Academic All-America honors, while 38 have earned prestigious NCAA Post Graduate Scholarships. UC San Diego scholar-athletes exemplify the academic ideals of one of the world’s preeminent institutions, graduating at an average rate of 91 percent, one of the highest rates among institutions at all divisions.

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College Sports

Baseball’s Mike Stenhouse ’80 Elected into College Baseball Hall of Fame

Story Links CAMBRIDGE, Mass. – Harvard University baseball alumnus Mike Stenhouse ’80, a two-time All-American and three-time All-Ivy selection for the Crimson, has earned induction into the College Baseball Hall of Fame, the College Baseball Foundation announced on Monday.   During his time at Harvard, Stenhouse earned All-America accolades twice, including First […]

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CAMBRIDGE, Mass. – Harvard University baseball alumnus Mike Stenhouse ’80, a two-time All-American and three-time All-Ivy selection for the Crimson, has earned induction into the College Baseball Hall of Fame, the College Baseball Foundation announced on Monday.
 
During his time at Harvard, Stenhouse earned All-America accolades twice, including First Team All-America in 1978, and All-Ivy honors three times, including First Team All-Ivy laurels in 1978 and 1979. A 2003 inductee into the Harvard Varsity Club Hall of Fame, he played three seasons for the Crimson from 1977-79 and still holds the school records for career batting average (.422) and career triples (12).
 
Stenhouse won the Charles H. Blair Batting Title in Ivy Games after hitting .500 in conference play in 1978, set the school record for single-season batting average (.475) in 1977, and claimed the school record for single-season triples (six) in 1979.
 
The 26th overall pick in the 1979 Major League Baseball Draft, Stenhouse went on to play in the MLB from 1982-86, competing for the Montreal Expos (1982-84), Minnesota Twins (1985), and Boston Red Sox (1986).
 
The 18th induction class will be honored at the 2026 Night of Champions presented by Prairiefire on February 12, 2026 in Overland Park, Kansas, the home of the College Baseball Hall of Fame. The event will serve as the ceremonial start to the 2026 college baseball season, which begins on February 13, 2026.
 



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Boulder High's Xander Sevian named Gatorade Player of the Year in boys soccer

Where good news shines Clemson soccer’s getting a gem. Boulder High’s Xander Sevian, who has signed to play college soccer at Clemson, was named Gatorade Colorado Boys Soccer Player of the Year. A senior forward, Sevian had 24 goals and 26 assists as the Panthers advanced to the Class 5A state semifinals, according to CHSAA. […]

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Boulder High's Xander Sevian named Gatorade Player of the Year in boys soccer

Where good news shines

Clemson soccer’s getting a gem.

Boulder High’s Xander Sevian, who has signed to play college soccer at Clemson, was named Gatorade Colorado Boys Soccer Player of the Year. A senior forward, Sevian had 24 goals and 26 assists as the Panthers advanced to the Class 5A state semifinals, according to CHSAA.

Sevian is ranked the No. 5 recruit in the Class of 2025, according to PrepSoccer.com. He also carried a 3.63 grade point average.

(“Colorado Sunshine” celebrates the good news in sports. Suggestions encouraged through Denver Gazette sports editor Paul Klee at paul.klee@gazette.com.)

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Hard work and 35,000 practice shots pay off for Clarkson defenseman Haley Winn entering PWHL draft

Associated Press As accustomed as Matt Desrosiers was to seeing defenseman Haley Winn take one attempt after another at the RapidShot machine inside Clarkson’s training facility during her freshman season four years ago, the Golden Knights coach was stunned upon learning the final tally. How does 35,000 shots sound? “We actually had people from RapidShot […]

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Associated Press

As accustomed as Matt Desrosiers was to seeing defenseman Haley Winn take one attempt after another at the RapidShot machine inside Clarkson’s training facility during her freshman season four years ago, the Golden Knights coach was stunned upon learning the final tally.

How does 35,000 shots sound?

“We actually had people from RapidShot grab us at the coaches’ convention and tell us they hadn’t seen anything like it,” Desrosiers said. “And that’s not including the pucks she went on the ice and shot extra, too. She’s just the most dedicated athlete we’ve been fortunate enough to have.”

The 21-year-old Winn laughed at the memory.

“Yeah, that sounds pretty accurate,” she said. “I could stay at the rink all day just because that’s what I enjoy doing. I don’t have to force myself to do it.”

The relentless work translated into Winn completing her college career ranking second among Clarkson defensemen with 130 career points (37 goals, 93 assists), seven behind Erin Ambrose at the school in upstate New York. It helped Winn, at 19, land a spot on the U.S. national team, with her already winning two gold medals in three world championship appearances.

And she’s considered a top-three pick entering the eight-team, six-round PWHL draft in Ottawa on Tuesday.

“It doesn’t even feel real that my name should be up there,” said Winn, who got her start at 3 on her father’s backyard rink in Rochester, New York.

“When I was that young, really, all I wanted to do was go to the Olympics,” added Winn, who has an opportunity to achieve that dream at the Milan-Cortina Winter Games in February. “As I grew older, I realized the steps to get there and what it was going to take. So yeah, it’s just awesome.”

Sirens have No. 1 pick

The New York Sirens hold the No. 1 pick for a second straight year, followed by the Boston Fleet and Toronto Sceptres. Next year’s expansion teams, Vancouver and Seattle, pick seventh and eighth, respectively..

Rounding out the top prospects are Colgate forward Kristyna Kaltounkova, who is from the Czech Republic and could be the first European chosen first; and Wisconsin forward Casey O’Brien, this season’s Patty Kazmaier Award winner as women’s college hockey’s MVP.

The prevailing consensus has the Sirens looking for a forward to complement last year’s No. 1 pick, Sarah Fillier, who finished tied for the PWHL lead with 29 points.

New York’s offense took a hit in the PWHL’s expansion process by losing forwards Alex Carpenter and Jessie Eldridge. They combined for 20 of the team’s PWHL-low 71 goals last season. Meantime, New York is deep at defense with the return of Ella Shelton, Maja Nylan Persson and Micah Zandee-Hart.

Not ruling out D

New York GM Pascal Daoust acknowledged a need at forward, while refusing to rule out targeting a defenseman at No. 1.

“Thinking that it automatically means we go forward is probably not covering all the angles, knowing me,” Daoust said, referring to potential trade opportunities. “There’s still a lot that can still be done between June and November.”

Sirens coach Greg Fargo previously coached Kaltounkova at Colgate, where he also faced Winn in ECAC competition.

At 5-foot-9 and 165 pounds, the 23-year-old Kaltounkova brings a physical style with offensive flair. She finished her five-year college career with 233 points (111 goals, 122 assists) and 218 penalty minutes in 171 games.

The only potential blemish was the ECAC assessing Kaltounkova a two-game suspension for an undisclosed reason in February 2024, after which she missed two more games to, as the school put it, “step away from the team.”

Kaltounkova staying grounded

Kaltounkova told the Rinkside Rundown podcast last week she’s doing her best to stay grounded in approaching the draft.

“There’s moments where I’m like, `Oh my god, what if this and what if that?′ And then I pause and just like, `I can’t think about that.′ Like, that would just bring me down a rabbit hole,” she said. “It kind of fuels me because it’s either people hyping you up and cheering you on, or it’s people criticizing you. And both things motivate me so much.”

Kaltounkova had four goals and six points in her world championship tournament debut on home ice in April.

“She’s coming with speed, she’s coming with physicality, she’s coming with a great shot — a PWHL shot-level quality,” Daoust said of Kaltounkova.

As for Winn, Daoust noted her puck-moving ability and defensive presence. “Great person, great leader, so a lot of positives under her name,” he said.

Winn reflected on her younger days in joining her three older brothers on the family’s rink.

“They never wanted me to play because I was the little sister. But I think I’ve earned my spot now,” Winn said. “Obviously, they were pretty tough on me. But that’s what made me who I am today.”

___

AP women’s hockey: https://apnews.com/hub/womens-hockey




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Tufts Athletic Communications Listed In 2024-25 CSC Creative & Digital Design Awards

Story Links MEDFORD, MA (June 23, 2025) — The Tufts University athletic communications office was recently honored with the release of the 2024-25 College Sports Communicators Creative & Digital Design contest, as released on the CSC website.  College Sports Communicators sponsors a variety of media guide/publication and digital design […]

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MEDFORD, MA (June 23, 2025) — The Tufts University athletic communications office was recently honored with the release of the 2024-25 College Sports Communicators Creative & Digital Design contest, as released on the CSC website. 

College Sports Communicators sponsors a variety of media guide/publication and digital design contests and an annual writing contest for its members, with every current member at every level having the opportunity to receive recognition for his/her work. It’s no small honor to earn an award since the judging is done by news media/communications professionals who use those publications in their work. 

Jumbo sophomore videographer Nick Goldberg and his full-season recap of the Tufts Field Hockey season was named as the top Long Form Video/Recap/Feature category in the College Division. The video was also tops in all of Division III. 

In the short form videos (“reels”), Tufts earned a pair of honors as junior videographer John Mulvihill and his recap of the Tufts’ football win over Hamilton College was ranked No. 3 in the College Division. Furthermore, Goldberg was ranked No. 14 out of hundreds of videos in the same category after his recap of the Tufts’ men’s basketball victory over Connecticut College. 

 


Mulvihill’s video was No. 2 in all of Division III, while Goldberg’s ranked No. 5. Tufts was the only college in the nation with two “reels” in the top five in Division III. 
 


For the full list of honorees, click HERE. 


–JUMBOS–

 





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Gophers hockey commit traded in WHL, won’t make college jump until 2026

Gophers men’s hockey commit Jacob Kvasnicka was traded from Wenatchee to Penticton in the Western Hockey League (WHL), serving as an indicator that he won’t be suiting up for Gophers just yet. We’ve acquired ’07-born forward Jacob Kvasnicka and a 3rd-round CHL Import Draft pick from the @WHLwild_. DETAILS | https://t.co/m8v7QHGA0T pic.twitter.com/XSwhhUUZWP — Penticton Vees […]

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Gophers men’s hockey commit Jacob Kvasnicka was traded from Wenatchee to Penticton in the Western Hockey League (WHL), serving as an indicator that he won’t be suiting up for Gophers just yet.

Hailing from Burnsville, Minnesota, Kvasnicka is one of the most intriguing prospects currently committed to the Gophers. He totaled 18 goals and 39 points with the NTDP U18 team last year. There was some thought he could join the Gophers’ roster next season, but he won’t turn 18 until August and the 5-foot-11 forward will now get another season to develop at the junior level.

Related: Predicting the top 5 point leaders for Gophers hockey in 2025–26

Talented incoming freshmen LJ Mooney and Tate Pritchard are expected to make their college debuts next season with the Gophers, but Kvasnicka’s situation now gives us more clarity that forwards Mason Moe, Javon Moore and Teddy Townsend will all likely do the same. Without Kvasnicka, Minnesota now has 13 forwards projected on next season’s roster.

The Gophers have 24 players projected to be on next season’s roster, which is two below the max of 26. If they wanted to make a late roster addition, they still have some flexibility to do so.

Kvasnicka is one of a handful of Gophers eligible for the 2025 NHL Draft, which takes place this weekend in Los Angeles.





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Livvy Dunne Buys Rare Paul Skenes Card for Thousands

At Fanatics Fest NYC, Olivia “Livvy” Dunne once again proved she’s all-in on boyfriend Paul Skenes—this time with her wallet. Dunne negotiated the price of a rare 2024 Bowman’s Best Paul Skenes Animae card—numbered to just five copies and graded PSA 10—from $3,000 down to $2,850 at the Steel City Collectibles booth. RELATED: Commanders’ Owner […]

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At Fanatics Fest NYC, Olivia “Livvy” Dunne once again proved she’s all-in on boyfriend Paul Skenes—this time with her wallet. Dunne negotiated the price of a rare 2024 Bowman’s Best Paul Skenes Animae card—numbered to just five copies and graded PSA 10—from $3,000 down to $2,850 at the Steel City Collectibles booth.

RELATED: Commanders’ Owner Buys Half Million Dollar Jayden Daniels Card At Fanatics Fest

But Dunne wasn’t buying for a deal—she was buying for love, legacy, and a little bit of flex. It was a playful but pointed move from someone who’s made “supportive girlfriend” into a public, fan-favorite persona. From her viral posts to in-game appearances, Dunne has fully embraced Skenes’ MLB rise—and now, she’s got the cardboard to prove it.

RELATED: Touring the $200 Million Museum of Greatness at Fanatics Fest

Couple Goals

The couple first met at LSU in 2023, introduced through mutual friends. Their first date was a simple ice cream outing (despite Skenes not really liking ice cream), and their relationship became public when Dunne wore his jersey during LSU’s College World Series run. 

Since then, they’ve emerged as a Gen Z power couple: he was the  2023 MLB #1 draft pick and 2024 NL Rookie of the Year; she has over 13 million followers across social media, has made multiple appearances in Sports Illustrated—including as a cover model for the 2025 Swimsuit Issue, and scored a NCAA gymnastics championship at LSU.

Making Fanatics Fest Her Own

In 2024, Dunne threw a ceremonial pitch in full Skenes uniform (fake mustache included), cartwheeling across the stage and mimicking her boyfriend’s famous pitching style.

At Fanatics Fest NYC 2025, Dunne has been an extremely active participant. From visiting the $1.11 million Paul Skenes Topps MLB Debut Patch card on display at the Dick’s Sporting Goods booth, to chowing down on chicken tenders alongside world-champion eater Joey Chestnut, to accidentally breaking a FIFA replica trophy in a soccer shootout, she’s been one of the event’s most entertaining and unforgettable figures.

RELATED: Power Players: Female Athlete Influencers Making Waves in Collectibles

Return the Favor? Here’s What Skenes Could Scoop Up

If Paul Skenes wants to even the score in cardboard, there are some standout Livvy Dunne cards he could chase for his collection. Paul could pick up their 2024 Topps Now (with Skenes) in PSA 10 for around $35. If he wanted to spend some of his major league salary, there’s always her 2023 Leaf Exotic 1/1 on-card auto in PSA 9, currently listed for around $ 2,500.

2024 Topps Now Paul Skenes Livvy Dunne PSA 10

2024 Topps Now Paul Skenes Livvy Dunne PSA 10 / https://ebay.us/m/mQ8aoO

Dunne’s cards are gaining steam in the hobby—especially among collectors who love a crossover between sports stardom and social media influence. Once Skenes picks up one of these, the collector couple status will be officially mutual.

Livvy Dunne 2023 Leaf Exotic Metal Leopard Crystal On Card Auto 1/1 PSA 9

Livvy Dunne 2023 Leaf Exotic Metal Leopard Crystal On Card Auto 1/1 PSA 9 / https://ebay.us/m/4v6LuC

TOP TRENDING COLLECTIBLES ARTICLES:





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