Oregon State (32-9) vs. Oregon (29-12)April 27, 2025 • 12:05 p.m. PT • Eugene, Ore. • PK ParkLHP Ethan Kleinschmit (6-1, 3.74) vs. RHP Jason Reitz (1-0, 4.33) The GameOregon State takes on Oregon in the weekend finale in Eugene. First pitch at PK Park is slated for 12:05 p.m. PT. The Oregon State – […]
Oregon State (32-9) vs. Oregon (29-12) April 27, 2025 • 12:05 p.m. PT • Eugene, Ore. • PK Park LHP Ethan Kleinschmit (6-1, 3.74) vs. RHP Jason Reitz (1-0, 4.33)
The Game Oregon State takes on Oregon in the weekend finale in Eugene. First pitch at PK Park is slated for 12:05 p.m. PT. The Oregon State – Oregon Rivalry Series is presented by Safeway-Albertsons, PacificSource Health Plans, Your Local Toyota Dealers and First Interstate Bank.
Radio The game will be carried live on the Beaver Sports Network throughout the state of Oregon. Mike Parker will call the action.
Listen Online Catch the game online by visiting osubeavers.com, and find the live broadcast on the Oregon State baseball schedule page. The game can be heard via the Varsity Network, which is available for users with smartphones and tablets. Download the free Varsity Network application for live games and archived broadcasts.
Television The game will not be broadcast.
Live Video The game will stream live on B1G+ as produced by Oregon.
Live Stats Live stats for the game can be accessed by clicking on the live stats link located on the baseball schedule page on osubeavers.com.
Last Game AJ Singer drove in Oregon State’s lone run in the sixth as the Beavers dropped a 13-1 decision to Oregon Saturday afternoon at PK Park. Gavin Turley went 2-for-5 to pace the Oregon State offense.
Oregon State Notables • Oregon State is looking to avoid its first three-game losing streak of the season. The Beavers have lost two straight for the third time this year. • OSU’s last losing streak of three or more was four games last season from April 17 to April 21 at Nevada and California. • Aiva Arquette saw his hit streak snapped at 13 games Saturday. His was the third Beaver hit streak of 10 or more games this season, following a 15-gamer by Gavin Turley and 14 games by Trent Caraway. • Wilson Weber pushed his hit streak to a season-long seven games by going 1-for-2 Saturday. He is 15-for-31 (.484) during the streak. • Gavin Turley has reached base safely in 35 consecutive games. • Easton Talt moved into the top-10 at OSU with his 50th walk of the season Saturday. Adley Rutschman (2019) and Travis Bazzana (2024) co-share the single-season record with 74. • Talt has 67 walks in 84 career games while striking out 49 times. • The Beavers failed to record an extra-base hit for the first time this season in Saturday’s loss. • Ethan Kleinschmit, Sunday’s probable starter, is facing his fifth Big Ten opponent this season. He is 1-1 in the previous four games, striking out 20 to nine walks in 19 innings. He’s scattered 13 hits and nine earned runs for a 4.26 ERA in the four games. • Turley now has 344 career total bases, three shy of equaling Joe Gerber (1997-2000) for sixth-most by a Beaver. • The Beavers have gone without a home run in two straight games for the second time this season, following March 15 and 16 against Santa Clara and Grand Canyon. • Dawson Santana made his third start of the season and recorded his second career hit. It marked his first career bunt for a base hit. • The Beavers allowed an opponent 10 or more runs for just the 29th time in Mitch Canham‘s tenure. Conversely, OSU has scored 10 or more 79 times since 2020. • Oregon State has gone errorless in five straight and six of the last seven games and is at a season-high .980 fielding percentage.
Centre County residents experience power outages amid record-breaking heat wave | Penn State, State College News
More than 5,200 Centre County residents have lost electricity as widespread power outages affected several townships during a record-breaking heatwave on Monday. Approximately 5,245 or roughly 7.6% of utility customers were without service earlier Monday afternoon, according to outage data from FindEnergy.com. In State College, outages have dropped from over 700 earlier in the day to just […]
More than 5,200 Centre County residents have lost electricity as widespread power outages affected several townships during a record-breaking heatwave on Monday.
Approximately 5,245 or roughly 7.6% of utility customers were without service earlier Monday afternoon, according to outage data from FindEnergy.com. In State College, outages have dropped from over 700 earlier in the day to just about 120 in the afternoon.
Todd Meyers, a West Penn Power spokesperson, confirmed that crews are investigating a potential substation issue near Pine Mills Grove, which may be contributing to the outages.
“Our goal is to restore power for customers as quickly as possible, especially on a hot day like this,” Meyers said. “We know it’s inconvenient to be in the sweltering heat without power, our substation electricians and line workers are using nearby interconnected power lines to temporarily restore electricity wherever possible.”
Meyers said outages have steadily decreased throughout the day thanks to switching operations. The total number of outages fell to roughly 3,100 in Centre County. Ferguson Township still has 2,900 outages, while Patton Township has reduced to approximately 100.
West Penn Power continues to investigate the root cause of this disruption and will proceed with permanent repairs once they identify the issue.
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Edina’s Mason West commits to Michigan State for hockey
“I have to work on my skating,” he said. “And the USHL is a different level of hockey. Teams are more physical and try to intimidate. That’s hockey. I need to get better at that part of my game.” Playing in the Big Ten was a strong reason why West chose Michigan State. A conversation […]
“I have to work on my skating,” he said. “And the USHL is a different level of hockey. Teams are more physical and try to intimidate. That’s hockey. I need to get better at that part of my game.”
Playing in the Big Ten was a strong reason why West chose Michigan State. A conversation with Minnesota Wild draft pick Charlie Stramel, a Rosemount native who was drafted No. 21 overall in 2023, endorsed his college choice. Stramel originally played in college at Wisconsin before transferring to Michigan State last April.
“Playing teams like Wisconsin, Notre Dame, Minnesota, Ohio State, Penn State… that’s great hockey,” West said. “That’s a big reason why I chose Michigan State. And they were the first school to really talk to me, so I’ve always had a good feeling for them.”
West said that the University of Minnesota was never in the mix for his services, but playing against his hometown school adds a little motivation for him.
“I never really talked to them” he said. “But for sure, I want to play them, prove to them what I can do.”
While his future lies on the ice, West said he’s still planning on returning to Edina to play football this fall. He’s got some unfinished business on the gridiron.
College Credits: Glenview Residents Earn Dean’s List At University Of Iowa
GLENVIEW, IL — We’re keeping track of all the major higher education accomplishments of area students. Send your submissions to eric.degrechie@patch.com. Huskers Named To Deans’ List For spring 2025 More than 6,700 University of Nebraska-Lincoln students have been named to the Deans’ List for the spring semester of the 2024-25 academic year. Students from Glenview […]
GLENVIEW, IL — We’re keeping track of all the major higher education accomplishments of area students. Send your submissions to eric.degrechie@patch.com.
Huskers Named To Deans’ List For spring 2025
More than 6,700 University of Nebraska-Lincoln students have been named to the Deans’ List for the spring semester of the 2024-25 academic year. Students from Glenview named to the list include:
Cole Brady, senior, Dean’s List, College of Agricultural Sciences and Natural Resources, environmental studies.
Nolan Alan Rachiele, junior, Dean’s List, College of Journalism and Mass Communications, broadcasting.
— Merit Pages News
2025 Spring Semester President’s List Honorees Announced At Iowa
More than 1,250 undergraduate students at the University of Iowa were named to the president’s list for the 2025 spring semester. Students from Glenview named to the list include:
Leah Desserich
Megan Flentye
Ariella Gutman
Emma Owens
— Merit Pages News
2025 Spring Semester Dean’s List Honorees Announced At Iowa
IOWA CITY, IA (06/19/2025)– More than 8,000 students at the University of Iowa were named to the dean’s list for the 2025 spring semester. Students from Glenview making the list include:
Francesca Bellavia
Emily Braasch
Carter Cohen
Mia Costello
Theodore Demos
Leah Desserich
Megan Flentye
Ariella Gutman
Tali Hans
Teighan Harris
Anna Heppner
Madeline Hussey
Vanessa Kaddatz
Patrick Keenan
Emilia Krolikowski
Evan McClung
Ainslee Nieman
Rachel Oldham
Emma Owens
Emily Pavlik
Skylar Read
Jacob Rueckert
Emmaline Schuh
Mackenzie Schuh
Emilia Scott
Samantha Sladoje
Margaret Thein
Samuel Zelinsky
— Merit Pages News
Ethan Albin Named to Spring 2025 Dean’s List at Hofstra University
Ethan Albin, of Glenview, excelled during the spring 2025 semester at Hofstra, achieving a GPA of at least 3.5 to earn a spot on the Dean’s List. Ethan’s major is Journalism.
Puhl Named UW-Eau Claire Head Women’s Lacrosse Coach
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**Release courtesy of UW-Eau Claire Sports Information EAU CLAIRE, Wis. –University of Wisconsin-Eau Claire Director of Athletics Jason Verdugo announced the hiring of Courtney “CJ” Puhl as the university’s Head Women’s Lacrosse Coach on June 23. Puhl served as an assistant coach with the Blugolds in 2024 and 2025, including a […]
**Release courtesy of UW-Eau Claire Sports Information
EAU CLAIRE, Wis.
–University of Wisconsin-Eau Claire Director of Athletics Jason Verdugo announced the hiring of Courtney “CJ” Puhl as the university’s Head Women’s Lacrosse Coach on June 23.
Puhl served as an assistant coach with the Blugolds in 2024 and 2025, including a stint as interim head coach at the end of the 2025 campaign. She helped UW-Eau Claire finish as the runner-up at the WIAC Tournament this spring. The Blugolds posted a 23-12 record over the last two seasons with Puhl on the coaching staff.
“CJ has shown a remarkable dedication to developing our student-athletes both on the field and in the classroom,” Verdugo said. “I am confident that her commitment to their holistic development will ensure the program’s continued growth and the production of consistently competitive teams.”
Prior to her UW-Eau Claire experience, Puhl coached high school lacrosse teams for Hudson High School (Wis.) and Coronado High School (Nev.) between 2018-2023. She helped both programs earn state runner-up finishes — Hudson in 2022 and Coronado in 2023. She also has extensive experience coaching in the club game.
“I am so excited to continue to grow the game of lacrosse in the Chippewa Valley with such a talented and resilient group of women,” Puhl said. “There is so much talent in our community and I am excited to continue this journey with the Blugolds.”
Puhl was a four-year lacrosse player in high school and played one season for Augustana College at the Division III level.
In addition to her work as a lacrosse coach, Puhl has worked in education for several years. Most recently, she has worked with Four Lakes Education and Wisconsin Virtual Academy as a virtual education case manager.
Dayle Ross played most of her senior season at SCSU with torn ACL
Dayle Ross had begun doing postseason workouts in the spring with teammates on the St. Cloud State women’s hockey team when she heard something troubling. “I was a little bit worried because I heard clicking in my knee,” Ross said. “I thought it was something like my patella tendon is torn or there was some […]
Dayle Ross had begun doing postseason workouts in the spring with teammates on the St. Cloud State women’s hockey team when she heard something troubling.
“I was a little bit worried because I heard clicking in my knee,” Ross said. “I thought it was something like my patella tendon is torn or there was some cartilage floating around. You never know.
“I reached out to my trainer and asked if I could get an MRI. It showed that it was a torn ACL and didn’t figure it would be that extreme. When I found out, I was going full out with the girls, playing games. I was feeling the best I’ve ever felt. I remember having a conversation with
(SCSU coach) Brian (Idalski)
and saying that I’ve never felt so good after a season and physically strong.”
In short order, she had surgery to repair the damage.
“We got it done within a week,” Ross said. “It was pretty fast. I’m so thankful for the staff and the doctor. If I didn’t get it done, I could have wrecked something else. This was probably the best move I made for me for hockey.
“By graduation, I was still limping and in a brace. I stayed an extra month to work with the physio and (SCSU athletic trainer) Rachel (Nagel) and all the amazing staff in St. Cloud. I can’t thank them enough for helping an old senior out.”
Ross, a 5-foot-6 22-year-old defenseman from Spirit River, Alberta, is in Ottawa and will be on hand at the Hard Rock Hotel & Casino at 6 p.m. Tuesday, June 24, for the Professional Women’s Hockey League Draft. Online, you can watch the draft on the PWHL’s
YouTube station.
With Vancouver and Seattle joining as expansion teams, there will be 48 players picked over six rounds. Some draft projections have Ross going as high as the top 30 in the draft.
“At the last second, I saw the Hockey News had me ranked in the top 30 and thought, ‘maybe I should go,'” she said. “I thought that I’d be kicking myself if I don’t go. If I don’t get picked, there’s amazing people that will be there and all these coaches I’ve talked to. There are players that I grew up with or played with that will be there.
“I just want to go there for the experience more than anything.”
St. Cloud State defenseman Dayle Ross celebrates a goal at the Herb Brooks National Hockey Center in St. Cloud.
St. Cloud State University Athletics
Ross said that her rehabilitation from surgery is ahead of schedule. She has begun jogging and is lifting weights.
“They just don’t want me to turn my knee,” she said. “I can move forward and backward and side-to-side slowly. It’s about the way I move it to protect my ACL that is starting to re-attach. I can run as long as I want, but I can’t sprint yet. It’s a slow process. I’m still getting stronger.”
Ross is known for being an ardent trainer both during and after the season. During the offseason, she is typically on the ice 3-4 times a day with either a skating instructor or giving skating lessons.
She is hoping to be able to get back on the ice by the end of July.
“I’m so used to skating all the time that I’m missing it,” Ross said. “I’m hoping that when I get back to playing hockey, my love for the game will be that much more. I hate that I’m at this point, but I know when I get back, I’ll enjoy it more.”
It sounds like she may be missing coaching youth players as much as she misses working on her own skills.
“I’m hoping to get on the ice as soon as I can because I’m missing working with the kids,” she said.
St. Cloud State senior defenseman Dayle Ross (2) carries the puck with Mercyhurst’s Sofia Ljung defending in a nonconference women’s hockey game on Saturday, Oct. 5, 2024, at the Herb Brooks National Hockey Center in St. Cloud.
St. Cloud State University Athletics
While she was playing through her injury, Ross ended up having the best season of her college career. She had 13 assists, 15 points, a career-best 103 shots, 46 blocked shots and led
the Huskies
in plus/minus with a career-best plus-11.
To put that plus/minus number in perspective, her next closest teammates were sophomore forward Sofianna Sundelin, senior defenseman Ella Anick and freshman defenseman Siiri Yrjölä, who were all plus-3.
Keep in mind, Ross was playing on the top defensive pairing, so she was facing most of the top scoring forwards in NCAA Division I every game.
“It’s not like I didn’t play against top lines. I was out there a lot,” Ross said. “I think (Team USA and Minnesota forward) Abbey Murphy didn’t scored on me a single time. I know that’s a good stat to have and I’m thankful for that. I know they don’t look at just stats.”
So after she got injured, how was she able to get on the ice and play?
“After the week we played Wisconsin, we had an off weekend and I took that week off and played fine,” Ross said. “I didn’t have any pain. My knee would just swell after the game sometimes.
“I did the rehab before practice, I would do some extra stuff to get through the season. I didn’t realize that I tore my ACL. My quad was strong enough to cope with the pain and cope that sensibility of my knee shifting. I played the whole season without a brace.”
St. Cloud State defenseman Dayle Ross (2) carries the puck in a game against Wisconsin with teammate Ally Qualley (12) and Badgers forward Laila Edwards (10) in pursuit at the Herb Brooks National Hockey Center in St. Cloud.
St. Cloud State University Athletics
Ross’ agent is Nick DiLisi and she said that he has been talking to some PWHL teams as they prepare for the draft.
“He talks with them about who I am as a player and as a person,” she said. “He does the talking … I have no idea how many teams. A couple for sure. If there was none that my agent was talking to, I’d be a little worried. He does all that work for me.
“He’s really helped me with taking phone calls from teams and dealing with all the media stuff. He deals with talking with all the teams, which I’m not good at. So I really appreciate that about him.”
Ross also has an ally in
Idalski, who was named the first head coach of the Vancouver team on Monday, June 23.
“Brian is my little agent as well,” said Ross, who played three seasons for Idalski. “He has so many contacts and knows so many people and knows me personally. If there’s something bad about me, he’ll tell them. If there’s something good about me, he’ll tell them. It’s nice to have him on my side.”
Ross said that she is just hoping that she gets a shot in the PWHL and was happy with how she played last season.
“At the end of the year, I had a decent amount of points and I thought I played really well,” she said. “At the end, you never really know. The media talks about all the players that score a zillion goals and have all the points on the top teams. But there are really good players on other teams that maybe don’t get as many points, but they might get as many points if they were on one of those top teams.”
While the surgery has been a setback to her training, Ross is optimistic about her chances of getting drafted.
“I was really worried about my injury, but that’s just part of the game,” she said. “I’m a good defenseman and I have to believe that I’m good. I have to sell myself a bit.”
Ross is one of three former SCSU players likely to be drafted. The other players are
forward Emma Gentry
and
goalie Sanni Ahola,
who also finished their eligibility.
Ross has earned her degree in exercise science and was a two-time WCHA All-Academic Team pick. In her career, she had 33 assists, 40 points, 252 shots, 92 penalty minutes, was a plus-6 and had 269 blocked shots in 142 games. In 2022-23, Ross set an NCAA record with 104 blocked shots.
DI Board of Directors formally adopts changes to roster limits
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The Division I Board of Directors on Monday adopted additional changes to NCAA rules to implement the court-approved House settlement. The changes — which codify roster limits, including legislated exceptions for current student-athletes whose roster spots would have been impacted by those limits — are effective July 1. “With the […]
The Division I Board of Directors on Monday adopted additional changes to NCAA rules to implement the court-approved House settlement. The changes — which codify roster limits, including legislated exceptions for current student-athletes whose roster spots would have been impacted by those limits — are effective July 1.
“With the court’s approval of the House settlement, college sports are entering a new era of increased benefits for college athletes,” said Tim Sands, chair of the board and president at Virginia Tech. “Today’s vote to codify the roster provisions of the settlement formally removes limits on scholarships for schools that opt in, dramatically increasing the potential available scholarships for student-athletes across all sports in Division I.”
Moving forward, NCAA rules for Division I programs will no longer include sport-specific scholarship limits. Instead, schools in the defendant conferences and others that opt in to the settlement rules and associated benefits to student-athletes will have roster limits, and schools will have the option to offer scholarships to any and all of those student-athletes. This change will dramatically increase the number of scholarships potentially available to Division I student-athletes, including more than doubling the possible number of scholarships that can be offered to women. NCAA schools have a deadline of June 30 to indicate whether they intend to opt into the settlement for the 2025-26 academic year.
The rules changes include legislated exceptions for current student-athletes with remaining eligibility whose roster spots would have been impacted by immediate implementation of the roster limits. Those designated student-athletes will be identified by their current or former schools, and regardless of the school for which they participate, they will not count toward that school’s roster limits for the duration of their eligibility.
The division’s core guarantees — which include scholarship protections — are not impacted by the rules changes. If a student-athlete receiving athletics aid loses a roster spot for roster management, athletics performance reasons, or due to injury, that student-athlete’s scholarship cannot be revoked unless and until the student chooses to transfer.
A document containing frequently asked questions and the answers to those questions was released shortly after settlement approval and will be updated as appropriate.
Decision-Making Working Group
The board received an update from the Decision-Making Working Group on recommendations that, if adopted at the board’s August meeting, would restructure governance in Division I.
After weeks of soliciting membership feedback, via surveys and receiving direct correspondence from stakeholders, the working group met again in mid-June and made some modifications to its original concepts for committee composition and structure.
The working group’s recommendations would streamline decision-making, creating a flatter and more agile governance structure that would enable Division I to act more quickly when changes are needed. A more streamlined structure would also more clearly delineate where responsibility for membership decisions lies, thus increasing member schools’ accountability for rules they propose and adopt.
The recommended structure would, however, continue to highlight the tie between college sports and academics, focus on increased athletics opportunities, and emphasize providing a safe and healthy athletics environment. It will also protect access to championships for all Division I conferences and preserve existing revenue distribution formulas.
If ultimately adopted in August, the Division I governance structure will comprise:
The Division I Board of Directors, which will maintain oversight over the division’s finances, litigation and the NCAA infractions process (for violations or rules unrelated to the settlement terms).
The Administrative Committee, which will report to the board and will have legislative oversight for rules not included in the settlement.
The Academics and Eligibility Committee, which will report to the Administrative Committee and which — via two subcommittees — will have oversight over minimum standards for academics and athletics eligibility requirements.
The Membership Committee, which will report to the Administrative Committee and will have oversight over minimum national standards for NCAA and conference membership requirements.
The Student-Athlete Advisory Committee, which will report directly to the Division I Board of Directors.
Sport-specific oversight committees, which will report to the Administrative Committee when needed and will have authority over playing and practice seasons, recruiting rules, Division I playing rules and championship administration. Sport oversight committees already exist in football (Football Bowl Subdivision and Football Championship Subdivision) and men’s and women’s basketball.
For all of the committees, the working group determined that voting representation — including the weighted voting for autonomy conferences, totaling approximately 65% on each committee — was appropriate, reflecting the recognizable prominence of the schools competing in those conferences, as well as the increased legal scrutiny those conferences face as compared with their peers.
The working group supported seats designated for certain subdivisions in Division I being populated by representatives from schools or conference offices.
Conference membership requirements
In April, the board directed NCAA staff to share concepts for potential adjustments to conference membership requirements with NCAA members for feedback.
After reviewing the feedback from NCAA members, the board took no action, noting a broad lack of support for changes at this time. Although the board will not consider any further changes to the conference membership requirements in the near future, it will consider a moratorium on applications for schools reclassifying from Division II and III to Division I during its Aug. 5 videoconference.