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Acrobatics and tumbling recommended for NCAA championship status

Acrobatics and tumbling made significant progress this week toward NCAA championship status, with its inaugural National Collegiate Championship potentially taking place in spring 2027. The NCAA Committee on Women’s Athletics voted Thursday to recommend that all three divisions sponsor legislation to establish a National Collegiate Championship in acrobatics and tumbling. The recommendation is contingent on […]

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Acrobatics and tumbling made significant progress this week toward NCAA championship status, with its inaugural National Collegiate Championship potentially taking place in spring 2027.

The NCAA Committee on Women’s Athletics voted Thursday to recommend that all three divisions sponsor legislation to establish a National Collegiate Championship in acrobatics and tumbling. The recommendation is contingent on official confirmation of the sport’s sponsorship and participation numbers for spring 2025 competition, which will occur over the summer.

Before the Committee on Women’s Athletics can recommend a sport for NCAA championship status, at least 40 schools must sponsor it at the varsity level and meet the sport’s minimum competition and participant requirements. The committee oversees the Emerging Sports for Women program, which aims to grow participation and competitive opportunities for women’s sports across the NCAA. The committee also recommended the three divisions sponsor legislation to add a National Collegiate stunt championship, contingent on official confirmation of its sponsorship and participation numbers.

Acrobatics and tumbling, which became an emerging sport in August 2020, quickly grew its NCAA sponsorship from 27 schools in the 2020-21 academic year to more than 40 in 2023-24.

“The advancement of acrobatics and tumbling toward National Collegiate Championship status is a powerful step forward for women’s sports,” said Ragean Hill, chair of the Committee on Women’s Athletics and executive associate athletics director/senior woman administrator at Charlotte. “This discipline not only showcases athleticism and teamwork at the highest level but also reflects the continued commitment to expanding opportunities for female student-athletes across the country.”

“The NCAA is, once again, expanding championship opportunities to women athletes nationwide,” added Marion Terenzio, vice chair of the Committee on Women’s Athletics and president at SUNY Cobleskill. “The addition of acrobatics and tumbling demonstrates the NCAA’s commitment to its mission to grow the college sports ecosystem. I am proud that we continue to do our part in elevating women in the pursuit of athletic excellence.”

Acrobatics and tumbling is a fast-paced, team-based discipline in which athletes perform a series of synchronized skills in events such as acrobatics, pyramid, toss, tumbling and team routines. Meets feature six events and typically span 90 to 120 minutes, with skills scored on difficulty and execution. The sport is currently governed by the National Collegiate Acrobatics and Tumbling Association and draws participants from gymnastics, cheerleading, diving and other strength-based sports.

“The acrobatics and tumbling community is resilient, passionate and remains focused on our goal of creating opportunities for women to have the life-changing experience of being a collegiate student-athlete,” said Janell Cook, executive director of the National Collegiate Acrobatics & Tumbling Association. “Today, I am overwhelmed thinking of the group of coaches and administrators who took this leap of faith to create a new sport, our member institutions who have committed to adding new opportunities, and most of all, the coaches and student-athletes who have participated in and grown the sport each year.

“On behalf of our member institutions, the NCATA thanks the Committee on Women’s Athletics for the recommendation to more forward and NCAA staff for their support throughout this process. We look forward to the next steps as we move closer to realizing the dream of becoming an NCAA championship sport.”

At least 48 schools reported they planned to sponsor acrobatics and tumbling during the 2024-25 academic year. This represents continued growth from the 2023-24 academic year, which included more than 1,100 acrobatics and tumbling student-athletes across the NCAA. If all three divisions sponsor and approve legislation to create a National Collegiate Championship, acrobatics and tumbling student-athletes across all divisions would compete at the championship.

“I am thrilled to see acrobatics and tumbling recommended to be a championship sport. Although this emerging sport has already given thousands of young women the opportunity to compete at the highest level, this next step will legitimize our status as a league and create the ultimate opportunity to compete under the NCAA,” said Tiffany Zieba, who finished her acrobatics and tumbling career in 2024 at Quinnipiac, where she now coaches. “All the hard work of hundreds of coaches, administrators and student-athletes is coming to fruition. This is a prime example of how perseverance, diligence and a pioneering spirit will pay off.”

Following the committee’s recommendation, the projected timeline to add an acrobatics and tumbling championship is:

  • Each division is expected to review the recommendation and sponsor a proposal by its respective 2025-26 legislative cycle deadline.
  • If sponsored, the divisions are expected to vote on the proposals during the 2026 NCAA Convention in Washington, D.C.
  • The recommendation also includes establishing an NCAA Acrobatics and Tumbling Committee, which would begin its work in January 2026, to allow time to prepare for a championship in spring 2027.
  • If adopted on that timeline, the first acrobatics and tumbling championship would be held in spring 2027.

Before a National Collegiate Championship can be established, funding must be approved by the appropriate financial oversight committees. If the sport is approved, acrobatics and tumbling would join the following sports to earn NCAA championship status through the Emerging Sports for Women program: rowing (1996), ice hockey (2000), water polo (2000), bowling (2003) and wrestling (2025). In 2023-24, emerging sports accounted for over 5,000 participation opportunities for student-athletes based on NCAA sports sponsorship and participation rates data, an increase of over 30% from 2022-23.



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Logan Hensler, already a world junior gold medalist, is top-ranked Minnesotan for the NHL draft

Logan Hensler was 5 years old when his dad, Joe, built their first backyard rink. Joe Hensler never played hockey growing up in Appleton, Wis.; he was into football, basketball and track. But after he moved to Minnesota in 2000, he began dating his future wife Alicia, and she took Joe to a Wild game […]

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Logan Hensler was 5 years old when his dad, Joe, built their first backyard rink.

Joe Hensler never played hockey growing up in Appleton, Wis.; he was into football, basketball and track. But after he moved to Minnesota in 2000, he began dating his future wife Alicia, and she took Joe to a Wild game with her parents’ season tickets.

Years later, at a family gathering during the holidays, Joe noticed the outdoor rink Logan’s uncle and cousins had and thought, “That’s pretty cool. I wonder if I can do that.”

He could, and he did — for 13 years and counting.

“[Logan] wanted to be out there all the time, and he wanted somebody to be out there with him,” Joe Hensler recalled. “So, it was me, and that’s where I learned a lot in terms of skating and shooting pucks and such that he taught me from what he learned.

“Very Minnesota thing to do, right, to be on the backyard rink and the lights on and the kind of peaceful nights in winter. I really enjoyed that a lot.”

Logan stuck with hockey and not just at home in Woodbury.

The defenseman played for the Minnesota Blades and was a freshman at Hill-Murray before leaving for USA Hockey’s National Team Development Program in Michigan. Next season, he will be a sophomore at the University of Wisconsin, and the NHL is a possibility: Logan Hensler, 18, is projected to be picked in the first round of the draft on Friday in Los Angeles.



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Varsity 845 2024-25 seniors head to college to play athletics

The dream of many scholastic athletes is to get an opportunity to play at the next level, earning a college degree in the process. The Varsity 845 schools from Orange, Ulster and Sullivan counties have regularly sent their top athletes to college, announcing the signees every couple months when signing periods open. 2023-24 SENIORS COMMITMENTS: […]

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The dream of many scholastic athletes is to get an opportunity to play at the next level, earning a college degree in the process.

The Varsity 845 schools from Orange, Ulster and Sullivan counties have regularly sent their top athletes to college, announcing the signees every couple months when signing periods open.

Here is a list of 2024-25 Varsity 845 graduates who will be playing next season. If your athlete is missing, send a kind note to Ken McMillan, with the name, high school and pending college and he will add to the list once confirmed by the coach and/or athletic director.

kmcmillan@th-record.com

X / Twitter: @KenMcMillanTHR

John S. Burke Catholic

Boys soccer – Aiden Trapp (Bard); Football – Nasir Aymat (Fairleigh Dickinson-Florham); Michael Benzinger (Fairleigh Dickinson-Florham); Kevin Cushing (Widener); Josh Fiorello (Fairleigh Dickinson-Florham); Liam Gralton (Buffalo State, plus track and field); Justin Mazzie (Hartwick); Aidan Owen (Fairleigh Dickinson-Florham); Girls lacrosse – Baylie Dow (New College of Florida); Abby Ferraro (Saint John Fisher); Girls track and field – Erin McClean (King’s)

Chapel Field

None

Chester

xxx – xxx

Cornwall

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Delaware Valley, Pa.

Baseball – Isaiah Berrios (Francis Marion); Trevor Phillips (Penn State-Scranton); Boys lacrosse – Jaxon Barbalich (Siena); Bryson Mackey (Misericordia); Noah Rabolli (Messiah); Boys swimming – Liam Fass (Penn State-Altoona); Tyler Ingraham (Penn State-Behrend); Joseph Kessler (Marywood); Boys track and field – Michael Donlon (Edinboro, and cross country); Sean Winship (Orange County CC); Field hockey – Mackenzie Koger (Moravian); Ava O’Grady (Susquehanna); Kayla Sykes (Wagner); Football – Logan Olsommer (Lackawanna); Pasquale Venetucci (Millersville); Girls cross country – Isabella Como (Albright); Girls lacrosse – Ava Kraszewski (Mount Saint Mary’s); Peyton LaRocco (Stevenson); Carrigan McCormack (Findlay); Girls swimming – Olivia Cruz (Fairleigh Dickinson); Maya Sussman (Lebanon Valley); Girls tennis – Noelle Holderith (DeSales); Girls track and field – Caterina Catizone (Cedar Crest); Lilianna Coe (The Citadel); Victoria Depew (Marywood); Kayla Sykes (Wagner, and cross country); Softball – Ashlynn McCardle (Penn State Berks); Volleyball – Lauren Donnelly (Moravian); Wrestling – Brady Colville (Misericordia); Christopher DellaBella (Wilkes); Kristen Langelotti (East Stroudsburg)

Dover

Football – Mason Meilleur (Springfield); Girls soccer – Tatum Roidl (Eastern Univ.)

Eldred

None

Ellenville

xxx – xxx

Fallsburg

Boys track and field – Isaiah Kirk (Saint Thomas Aquinas, plus cross country); Nazir Lopez (Long Island); Jordyn Wall-Carty (Southern New Hampshire); William J. Martinez (Valley Forge); Football – Nick Storms (Molloy)

Goshen

Baseball – Forrest Mitterbauer (Bryant and Stratton); Boys lacrosse – John Corvino (SUNY Oneonta); Boys soccer – Colin Butryn (Springfield); Parker Warren (SUNY Brockport); Boys track and field – Noah Klugman (Monmouth, also cross country); Football – Vincenzo Pupo (SUNY Cortland); Girls lacrosse – Meghan Doody (Alabama-Huntsville); Girls soccer – Sophia Appello (Mars Hill); Emma Duffy (Manhattan); Julia Griffin (Pace); Eryn Primus (Manhattan); Softball – Mia Antolino (Marywood); Stunt – Hope Miller (East Stroudsburg); Volleyball – Olivia Grob (Massachusetts College of Liberal Arts)

Highland

Figure skating – Kaitlyn Brittel (Sacred Heart); Football – Kulin Ogelle (Bucknell); Girls basketball – Sam Calahan (SUNY Plattsburgh); Girls lacrosse – Danica Valente (Mount Saint Mary); Kelcey Whalen (Western Connecticut State); Gymnastics – Cadence Meltz (SUNY Oneonta)

Kingston

Baseball – Jake Martino (Wilkes); Preston Provenzano (SUNY Oneonta); Boys basketball – Marcus Steele (Hudson Valley CC); Boys cross country – Lukas Paunovic (Manhattan); Boys soccer – Abby McCord (Utica); Thierry Vessell (Utica); Boys track and field – Shawn Bleboo (Long Island); Logan Manor (Merrimack); Joe McDonald Jr. (Indian Hills College); Football – Jaazi Herbert (Hudson Valley CC); John Jones (Western New England); Armondo Medley (Saint Thomas Aquinas); Isaiah Merillen (Hudson Valley CC); Marshall Stokes (Western New England); Rowing – Henry Shannon (Skidmore)

Liberty

Football – Matthew Lutz (Alfred Univ.); Andrew McPhillips (Hartwick)

Livingston Manor

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Our Lady of Lourdes

Boys soccer – Evan Cancro (SUNY Oswego); Rowan King (SUNY Oswego); Jack Youg (Pace); Crew – Emma Berardis (Long Island); Bridget Leonard (Iona); Emily Luttman (Loyola, Md.); Football – Andrew Kozack (Sacred Heart); Boys track and field – Joseph Nuzzo (RPI, and cross country); Girls lacrosse – Neela Natarajan (Hartwick); Girls soccer – Ryleigh Calimano (Misericordia); Girls track and field – Caitlin O’Keeeffe (Sacred Heart, and cross country); Softball – Lila Lovgren (SUNY Brockport, and basketball); Noelani Sokolik (Ava Maria); Molly Veach (King’s)

Marlboro

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Middletown

Baseball – Jarod Melendez (Massachusetts-Dartmouth); Daniel Noviski (Utica); Colby Stoehr (Utica): Boys basketball – Michael Fullerton (SUNY Orange); Brandon Nassa (Manhattanville); Boys lacrosse – Zane Kervella (SUNY New Paltz); Boys swimming – Joseph Britto (Ramapo); Jordyn Cristoff-Gonzalez (Pace); Boys track and field – Quillar Baidy (Albany); Myles Berry (Albany); Jayden Bryan (Dominican); Amir McEachin (SUNY Oneonta); Anthony Ramos (Dominican); Troi Roberts (Hampton); Javion Roldan (SUNY Delhi); Football – James Mays (SUNY Morrisville); Girls basketball – Sydney MacCalla (Wheaton); Girls track and field – Christina Chambers (Ramapo); Girls wrestling – Angelica Cabrera (East Stroudsburg); Softball – Alyssa Platero (St. John’s)

Millbrook

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Minisink Valley

Baseball – Nik Marrero (SUNY Orange); Nick Parco (Mount Saint Mary); Boys swimming – Lukas Struble (SUNY Cortland); Boys track and field – Samuel Anderson (Boston Univ.); Ryan Capo (Niagara; plus cross country); Brian Capper (Misericordia); Tyler Cloidt (DeSales); Cheerleading – Jillian Babcock (Elmira); Football – Keith Henry (Misericordia); Michael Hughson (Alfred State); Dominic Marasco (Alfred State); Nate Tormey (Alfred State); Girls ice hockey – Mia Abruzzese (Nazareth); Girls lacrosse – Logan Barry (Lehigh); Riley Boice (Marist); C.J. Kuiken (East Carolina); Isabella Odland (Wagner); Girls swimming – Brianna Foote (Misericordia); Girls track and field – Julia Kronimus (Arcadia); Emily Murphy (Marywood); Kaleigh Murphy (Iona); Softball – Ryin Perico (SUNY Oswego); Natalie Rogers (SUNY Plattsburgh); Volleyball – Bailey Burns (Marywood); Briana Juncaj (Hartwick); Chloe MarcoVecchio (volleyball); Kayla Wasserman (SUNY Cortland); Boys wrestling – P.J. Duke (Penn State); Anthony Tresch (Army Prep); Girls wrestling – Patricia Deslandes (East Stroudsburg)

Monroe-Woodbury

Baseball – Lucas Beers (SUNY Cortland); Mason Diltz (SUNY Plattsburgh); Angel Maldonado (Monroe Univ.); Max Post (SUNY Oneonta); Boys lacrosse – Dylan Baisley ()Russell Sage); Tyler Baisley (SUNY Polytechnic); Ryan Behringer (SUNY Oswego); Max Weeks (SUNY Oswego); Boys soccer – Neptaly Castro (SUNY Potsdam); Sean Gilligan (SUNY Oswego); Luka Tatanshvili (Elmira); Boys track and field – Gavin Catherwood (Stony Brook, also cross country); Jaden Medrano (Stony Brook); Ronaldo Rodriguez Perez (Saint Thomas Aquains); Cheerleading – Victoria Esposito (Fairfield); Brianna Pedersen (Albany); Allie Raia (Montclair); Miranda Rivera (Albany); Riyah Williams (Albany); Football – Louis Meade (American International); Kamal Salaudeen (American International); Udo Ugwuekeh (American International); Girls basketball – Madison Fileen (Converse Univ.); Girls soccer – Madison Magazino (Pace); Girls swimming – Eliana Calone (Long Island); Girls track and field – Lily Benza (SUNY Geneseo, also cross country); Rikayla Bingham (Wagner); YvonneMae Campbell (Albany); Emeline Clark (Syracuse); Makenzie Hughes (SUNY Oneonta); Softball – Brenna Quinn (Widener); Gabby Schaeffer (Mississippi State); Volleyball – Emily O’Brien (SUNY Plattsburgh)

Monticello

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Mount Academy

Boys basketball – Jake Maendel (SUNY Polytechnic); Boys cross country – Donovan Baird (Hamilton); Girls soccer – Corah Boller (Hamilton); Volleyball – Amy Boller (Trinity)

New Paltz

Baseball – Jackson Maiale (Delaware); Boys track and field – Michael Ayala (SUNY Plattsburgh, plus cross country); Landon Fracasse (SUNY Cortland, plus cross country); Football – Nicolas Horowitz (Ursinus); Girls lacrosse – Sidney Mayers (Johnson & Wales); Girls soccer – Leah Schamberg (Pace); Girls swimming – Alaura Sheeley (SUNY New Paltz); Kate Suchowiecki (Central Connecticut State); Girls track and field – Adelynn Laurie (Scripps); Rhiana Thomas (Johnson & Wales); Annika Walsh (Saint Olaf)

Newburgh

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James I. O’Neill

xxx – xxx

Onteora

Boys swimming – Keegan Burkhardt (Hartwick); Boys cross country – Corbin Smith (SUNY New Paltz); Boys track and field – Yogi Johansen (Pratt); Football – Cole Matteson (Hudson Valley CC); Girls soccer – Natalie Hastie (Hudson Valley CC); Girls swimming – Grace Young (Central Connecticut State); Girls track and field – Anna Johnson (Vassar); Jillian Tyler (New Jersey City University); Girls wrestling – LilyKate Brosnan (SUNY Onondaga)

Pine Bush

Baseball – Ollie Auryensen (Eastern Connecticut); Michael Esposito (Lasell); Brady Fandle (Fairleigh Dickinson); Kaeden Fisher (Vermont State-Castleton); Brian Murtagh (SUNY Ulster); Triston Santos (Hudson Valley CC); Boys golf – Ryan Wittenberg (Marywood); Boys lacrosse – Dominick Ciarelli (Lasell); Miles Joray (SUNY Morrisville); Chris Sgourdas (Marywood); Field hockey – Grace Grant (SUNY New Paltz); Girls basketball – Ketura Rutty (Dominican); Leticia Watson (Dominican); Girls lacrosse – Mackenzie Brown (Mount Union); Girls soccer – Gianna Conklin (Saint John Fisher); Girls swimming and diving – Paige Gandolfini (Saint Bonaventure); Girls track and field – Averie Klein (Binghamton); Softball – Molly Dowson (SUNY Canton)

Pine Plains

Boys cross country – Max Decker (Siena); Field hockey – Cat Dillinger (Western Connecticut State)

Port Jervis

Boys cross country – Bryce Shannon (Paul Smith’s); Football – Elijah Campbell (SUNY Brockport); Na-Shawn Campbell (Hartwick); Carroll Dolshun (SUNY Brockport); Xavian Joseph (Hudson Valley CC); Maddox McCormick (Wilkes); Hunter Roberts (Hartwick); Anthony Theodore (Wilkes); Girls track and field – Aniyah Greene (SUNY Oneonta)

Red Hook

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Rhinebeck

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Rondout Valley

Boys golf – Dominic Giamei (Defiance); Field hockey – Kendell Erlwein (RPI); Joleigh Kozack (SUNY New Paltz); Lauren Schoonmaker (New Haven); Girls golf – Madison Paddock (SUNY Cobleskill); Girls soccer – Kelly Casas (Purchase); Girls swimming – Clara Mae Samko (Siena); Girls track and field – Juliana Turner (New Haven); Volleyball – Morgan Barcone (SUNY Morrisville)

F.D. Roosevelt

Baseball – Riley Leone (Fairleigh Dickinson); John Theysohn (American International); Braydon VanDeWater (SUNY New Paltz); Boys golf – Ike Rothman (Adelphi); Football – Kens Vernelus (Western Connecticut State); Girls swimming – Katherine Farrell (Aldred Univ.); Girls tennis – Bianca Buel (SUNY Plattsburgh); Volleyball – Sanaiya Whitted (SUNY Cortland)

Roscoe

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Saugerties

Baseball – Samuel Lauer (SUNY Ulster); Boys basketball – Liam Boek (Western New England); Boys lacrosse – Ryan Haberski (Purchase); Girls basketball – Mia Denier (Mount Saint Mary; plus girls lacrosse); Girls soccer – Helene Kerr (Queens); Girls wrestling – Savannah Tittelback (East Stroudsburg); Softball – Stefanie Cogswell (Farmingdale State)

S.S. Seward

None

Spackenkill

Baseball – Linus Oudom (Wagner); Boys soccer – Davis Barnes (Saint Peter’s); Crew – Daniel Campbell (Massachusetts Martime Academy); Maryclare Parker-Stark (Mercyhurst); Maeve VanJura (Ithaca); Girls soccer – Blythe McQuade (Norwich, also basketball)

Sullivan West

xxx – xxx

Tri-Valley

Boys track and field – Van Furman (Georgetown; plus cross country); Girls track and field – Molly Van Etten (SUNY Cortland); Softball – Jenna Carmody (SUNY New Paltz)

Tuxedo

xxx – xxx

Valley Central

xxx – xxx

Wallkill

Baseball – Michael Daley (Massachusetts College of Liberal Arts); Conner Griffin (Alfred State); Zack Kantor (SUNY Ulster); Ryan Mayer (SUNY Plattsburgh); Boys lacrosse – Brent DeCouer (SUNY Delhi); Stephen Lischinsky (SUNY Delhi); Carlos Paz (Tompkins-Cortland CC); Joseph Price (Hartwick); Boys track and field – John Post (SUNY Cobleskill); Mario Verruto (SUNY Geneseo; plus cross country); Football – Pablo Acosta (Hartwick); Girls basketball – Zoe Mesuch (Navy); Girls soccer – Brianna Merrill (SUNY Plattsburgh); Maya Simon (Haverford); Girls swimming – Kaitlyn Bonner (Pace); Girls track and field – Maria Morales (SUNY Oneonta; plus cross country); Aubrey Nugent (SUNY Delhi); Wrestling – Devin Strother (Elmira)

Warwick

Baseball – Cole Haskew (Susquehanna); Dallas Kaminsky (SUNY Cobleskill); Garrison Sobo (Vassar); Garrett Srednicki (FDU Madison); Boys basketball – Jaedyn Rodrigues (Post); Boys lacrosse – Aidan Corbalis (SUNY Geneseo); Joey Finn (SUNY Maritime); Anthony Mazza (Eastern Connecticut); Dylan Sullivan (U.S. Merchant Marine Academy); Ryan Sullivan (U.S. Merchant Marine Academy); Darren Vogt (Saint John Fisher); Boys soccer – Symon Roldan (Misericordia); Cheerleading – Gabriella DiMarco (Western Connecticut State); Taylor Secord (Penn State); Football – Brody Frederick (Ithaca); Rashied Richardson (SUNY Morrisville); Wyatt Vreeland (SUNY Maritime); Girls basketball – Angelika Quadrino (Ramapo); Girls lacrosse – Abigail Kadus (Rowan); Girls soccer – Charlotte Gillen (SUNY Maritime); Kaitlyn Larney (Vermont); Charlotte Wendt (Misericordia); Girls track and field – Alyssa Dovico (Iona; plus cross country); Brielle Isemia (Hofstra); Lillybeth Kurosz (RPI); Rachel Venter (North Carolina); Softball – Etta Garofalo (Rutgers); Eva Garofalo (Rutgers); Jalyn Rosario (Messiah); Volleyball – Alexa Hansen (Farmingdale State); Charlene Petreshock (Lycoming); Boys wrestling – Ronan Bradley (Maine Maritime Academy)

Washingtonville

Baseball – Andrew Dempsey (SUNY Oswego); Omar Puello (Mount Saint Vincent); Tyler Valentin (Tompkins Cortland CC); Boys lacrosse – Joseph Corallo (Immaculate Univ.); Timothy Mackay (Chatham); Brandon Pagano (Mount Saint Mary); Boys soccer – Grayson Dueck (Scranton); Austin Mobray (Boston Univ.); Maxwell Mobray (Harvard); Boys tennis – Blake Anderson (SUNY Oswego); Boys track and field – Fernando Burgos (SUNY Morrisville; also cross country); James Mynio (SUNY Delhi; also cross country); Gavin Rich (SUNY Geneseo); Malachi Taylor (Buffalo); Cole Wilson (Southern Connecticut State); Flag football – Joelynn Matos (Marywood); Football – Drew Parchen (Alfred Univ.); Girls lacrosse – Isabella Perri (Western Connecticut State); Girls soccer – Gracie Drenth (Russell Sage); Girls tennis – Sophia Rivera (SUNY Geneseo); Anastasia Shaw (Alfred Univ.); Girls track and field – Olivia DeCarvalho (SUNY Geneseo, also cross country); Alexis Jones (Howard, also cross country); Leah Scopteuolo-Rosen (Union); Volleyball – Sophia Siruchek (Western Connecticut State)

Boys wrestling – Christian Bernazar (John Carroll; also track and field); Jacob DeJesus (Castleton); Mason Ketcham (Buffalo)

Webutuck

xxx – xxx



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NBA Finals Game 7 ratings prediction: How will Pacers-Thunder fare?

It is no secret that the Pacers-Thunder NBA Finals has been something less than a ratings bonanza. The first five games averaged 9.18 million viewers, the worst five-game average for the Finals in the Nielsen people meter era (1988-present), save for Lakers-Heat in the fall 2020 “bubble” — a months-delayed, fanless, neutral site series that […]

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It is no secret that the Pacers-Thunder NBA Finals has been something less than a ratings bonanza. The first five games averaged 9.18 million viewers, the worst five-game average for the Finals in the Nielsen people meter era (1988-present), save for Lakers-Heat in the fall 2020 “bubble” — a months-delayed, fanless, neutral site series that had to compete with the NFL, the election, and a presidential hospital stay.

Pacers-Thunder has thus far averaged about the same audience as the 2023 Rangers-Diamondbacks World Series — an infamously low-rated matchup that averaged 9.11 million for its full five-game run — and that is despite Nielsen expanding its out-of-home viewership sample earlier this year.

What has been particularly notable about this NBA Finals has been the lack of any meaningful growth from game to game. Most championship series start out at a certain level for the first four games before picking up in Game 5. Last year’s NBA Finals grew 27 percent from Game 4 (9.62M) to Game 5 (12.22M). Two years ago, it was a 26 percent jump (from 10.41 to 13.08M). Three years ago, a more modest eight percent bump (from 12.06 to 13.03M).

This year? Try one percent, from 9.41 to 9.54 million.

The growth in viewership from Game 1 to Game 5 has been seven percent, the lowest since — of all years — 2016. That, of course, was the last NBA Finals to go the full seven games until this year.


Seventh Heaven

Where can you go when the world don’t treat you right? The answer is Game 7.

There are plenty of examples in recent history of a Game 7 salvaging an otherwise low-rated series. Just look at last year’s Stanley Cup Final, which went from averaging 3.6 million through six games to 7.7 million in the seventh. Or the World Series, which in both 2014 and 2019 avoided record lows because of a seventh game. In the NBA, one could go back to Spurs-Pistons in 2005, a series that was barely outpacing Spurs-Nets two years earlier until it went the distance — or Rockets-Knicks in 1994, which was overshadowed by O.J. Simpson and the impetus for a Sports Illustrated cover pronouncing the NBA “not” hot.

In none of these cases did Game 7 transform the series into a ratings hit, but it provided a positive note on which to end the season — and made the overall average look a bit more respectable.

But it should be noted that those game sevens took place in a different era of television. Can one be certain that a Game 7 will attract the kind of casual audience that has thus far spurned this series? Certainly, last year’s Stanley Cup Game 7 seems to point in that direction, growing its audience by more than 80 percent over Game 6. Assuming viewership for this year’s NBA Game 6 finished around the same level as Game 5 (those figures will not be out until Monday), an 80 percent increase would mean an audience of about 17.5 million, which to be frank seems a touch out of reach for this series — and the NBA generally in 2025.

Since 2019 — and really more accurately since March 11, 2020 — the NBA has been unable to hit the heights that had been commonplace throughout the 2010s. In an era of seven different NBA champions in as many years, there was never any chance that the NBA would be able to sustain the audience it attracted during LeBron James’ run of eight-straight NBA Finals (half of which were against Stephen Curry). Nevertheless, even a pessimist in 2019 would not have predicted that the league would go through the first half of the decade without a single game getting to the 14 million mark. (Warriors-Celtics Game 6 in 2022 came to within a hair with 13.99 million.)

Even before getting its golden Yankees-Dodgers World Series last year, Major League Baseball had gotten to the 14 million mark once with Game 6 of Braves-Astros in 2021 — a matchup that sounds like an NLDS rather than a World Series. Four of the five least-watched NCAA men’s basketball national title games have occurred this decade, but they all topped 14 million. The Kentucky Derby gets to that level with relative ease, and while it has the advantage of a shorter runtime than an NBA game, few would argue that horse racing is in the same neighborhood as the NBA in terms of popularity.

To be clear, 14 million is not some kind of milestone figure. There is no real ring to it. That it would mark a meaningful superlative for the league — its largest audience in six years — is more an indication of just how difficult it has been for it to hit the high notes in this decade.

There are some milestones that could be in reach. 18.2 million would be the largest men’s basketball audience of this decade. 18.4 million would be the largest pro sports audience, outside of the NFL, in this decade. Nineteen million would be the largest sports audience period — outside of the NFL and Olympics — in this decade. (Go back in time and tell someone in 2019 that a women’s basketball game — Caitlin Clark’s final collegiate contest — holds the top spot.)

It would take an unusually large lift for Game 7 to reach those levels. While Spurs-Pistons in 2005 got to 19 million for its Game 7, no game of that series averaged under ten million — a figure that this year’s series has yet to reach (pending results for Game 6).

If Game 7 is unlikely to give the NBA a leg up on the competition, is a six-year high really all the league can hope for? Not necessarily. Game 7, regardless of the viewership figure, will likely guarantee that this year’s playoff audience surpasses last year, a result that reinforces the importance of series length. Considering the viewership for the series to this point, that is more than a small victory.


Ultimately, there is little Game 7 is going to change about the perception of this series, and of the NBA, as a ratings draw. Even a larger-than-expected Game 7 audience is going to pale in comparison to the halcyon days of LeBron vs. Steph in 2016 (31M), or even to the most recent World Series Game 7 between the Nationals and Astros in 2019 (23M). Simply put, no amount of out-of-home viewing can change the trajectory of linear television viewership, and the young-skewing NBA is perhaps particularly exposed to that erosion.

If one is to believe that the long-term ratings trend matters — and the NBA has 77 billion reasons to cast a skeptical eye toward that argument — this year’s NBA Finals will ultimately be a negative data point. There is no era of the NBA where a Finals matchup of Indiana and Oklahoma City was going to be a ratings hit, but one would have thought going into this series that a well-played, unpredictable matchup could at least get to the ten million mark once in five games.

The counterargument is that the ratings matter less than ever given the state of television, that the league is set for the next 11 years with an unprecedented financial windfall, and that making sure small market teams can compete for a championship is more important than the Finals averaging 20 million viewers again — a viewership figure that, it should be noted, provides no tangible financial benefit for the league or its players.

All true, but it is perhaps meaningful that high-quality basketball involving Oklahoma City and Indiana is trailing a dreadful slog like last year’s Boston-Dallas by double-digits and needs a Game 7 just to get in range of Milwaukee-Phoenix — in July — four years ago. That may not say anything about the financial health of the NBA; it may not be a threat to the league’s business or impact the on-court product; it may not even be the most accurate gauge of popularity in 2025. But it is not insignificant. And it cannot be totally hand-waved away by noting the accelerating decline of television viewership (down 13 percent during the Finals, compared to 6-8 percent a year ago).


As for Game 7, expect the largest NBA audience since 2019. That is not an entirely confident prediction, because the lack of lift throughout this series cannot be completely discounted. An audience in the 13 million range would not be a shock — especially if world events lure viewers to cable news channels — but the expectation here is something in the 14-15 million range.

For each of the other NBA Finals game sevens in the Nielsen people-meter era, viewership rose substantially over Game 6 — 50 percent in 2016 (from 20.7 to 31.0 million), a modest 28 percent in 2013 (from 20.6 to 26.3 million), 57 percent in 2010 (from 18.0 to 28.2 million), 41 percent in 2005 (from 13.5 to 19.0 million) and 53 percent in 1994 (from 17.0 to 26.1 million).

Assuming a Game 6 audience in line with Game 5 (9.5M) and a 50 percent increase, that would put Game 7 just over 14 million.

NBA Finals Game 7: Indiana Pacers at Oklahoma City Thunder (8p Sun ABC, ESPN+): Prediction: 14.97M.



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Recapping Penn State’s final official visit weekend | Penn State Football News

In the last weekend before the dead period starts, Penn State hosted a few prospects for official visits. This week’s visitors included a 247Sports composite 4-star tight end who included the Nittany Lions in his top-two schools and two other prospects who will announce their college commitments soon. Here’s a rundown on the last batch […]

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In the last weekend before the dead period starts, Penn State hosted a few prospects for official visits.

This week’s visitors included a 247Sports composite 4-star tight end who included the Nittany Lions in his top-two schools and two other prospects who will announce their college commitments soon.

Here’s a rundown on the last batch of official visitors.

TE Pierce Petersohn

Four-star tight end Pierce Petersohn recently announced his finalists as Penn State and Minnesota. He took a visit to the Golden Gophers earlier this month.

Petersohn is listed as an athlete in the composite, but he’s being recruited as a tight end by Penn State. The Triton High School product is the No. 341 player in the country and No. 3 player in Minnesota.

The blue and white has yet to land a tight end in its 2026 class, but it did also host 4-star Brayden Fogle last weekend. Fogle’s recruitment is wide open, so if the team wants a 2026 tight end soon, Petersohn might be its best shot.

CB Danny Odem

The Nittany Lions are the last official visit 4-star cornerback Danny Odem took this cycle. Nebraska, Clemson, Oklahoma and Ohio State are also in the mix for Odem, and he’s taken official visits with each of his finalists, except the Cornhuskers.

The First Academy prospect is the No. 253 player nationally, No. 22 cornerback and No. 40 player in Florida. He’s slated to make his pledge at 5 p.m. Monday.

Penn State already has three other 2026 cornerback commits in 3-stars Julian Peterson, Jaziel Hart and Amauri Polydor.

DL Cameron Brickle

It’s a four-team race to land 3-star Cameron Brickle between Penn State, Florida State, Ohio State and Maryland. His commitment date is scheduled for June 28.

Brickle, who plays at Florida powerhouse IMG Academy, is the No. 531 player nationally, No. 61 defensive lineman and No. 76 player in his home state.

Three-stars Alexander Haskell and Isaac Chukwurah already make up defensive line coach Deion Barnes’ 2026 class, so Brickle has the chance to be the third commit in the room.

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LSU sweeps Coastal Carolina to win College World Series title: Reaction and analysis

According to an NCAA statement, Coastal Carolina coach Kevin Schnall will be suspended for the next two games after today — so he’s out for the remainder of this championship series. NCAA Playing Rule 5-15 a-4 states that an additional two-game suspension is added to any other penalties for any team personnel who continues to […]

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According to an NCAA statement, Coastal Carolina coach Kevin Schnall will be suspended for the next two games after today — so he’s out for the remainder of this championship series.

NCAA Playing Rule 5-15 a-4 states that an additional two-game suspension is added to any other penalties for any team personnel who continues to “argue or excessively express themselves with prolonged actions or offensive language after an ejection.”

Matt Schilling, the Chanticleers’ first-base coach, per rule, will face a three-game suspension for his actions.



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Coastal Carolina coach gets ejected in first inning of pivotal College World Series matchup

NEWYou can now listen to Fox News articles! Coastal Carolina Chanticleers head coach Kevin Schnall was ejected in the first inning of Game 2 of the Men’s College World Series on Sunday against the LSU Tigers. The Chanticleers came into the game hoping for a win and to extend the College World Series to a […]

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Coastal Carolina coach gets ejected in first inning of pivotal College World Series matchup

NEWYou can now listen to Fox News articles!

Coastal Carolina Chanticleers head coach Kevin Schnall was ejected in the first inning of Game 2 of the Men’s College World Series on Sunday against the LSU Tigers.

The Chanticleers came into the game hoping for a win and to extend the College World Series to a decisive Game 3. LSU already had a runner on second when Schnall was upset with another call. He came out of the dugout yelling at home plate umpire Angel Campos.

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Kevin Schnall irate

Coastal Carolina head coach Kevin Schnall, center left, screams at the umpires after being ejected in the first inning against LSU in Game 2 of the NCAA College World Series baseball finals in Omaha, Neb., Sunday, June 22, 2025.  (AP Photo/Rebecca S. Gratz)

“You missed three pitches,” Schnall said from the dugout.

Two umpires stepped in between Schnall and Camps as the Coastal Carolina coach continued to berate Campos. One umpire fell to the ground as he tried to keep the peace. Campos also ejected first base coach Matt Schilling.

No runs were scored at the time.

LSU’S KADE ANDERSON THROWS 130 PITCHES, STRIKES OUT 10 IN COLLEGE WORLD SERIES WIN

Kevin Schnall irate

Coastal Carolina head coach Kevin Schnall, center left, screams at the umpires after being ejected in the first inning against LSU in Game 2 of the NCAA College World Series baseball finals in Omaha, Neb., Sunday, June 22, 2025.  (AP Photo/Rebecca S. Gratz)

LSU took a 1-0 series lead on Saturday night as Tigers lefty Kade Anderson threw 130 pitches and struck out 10 batters in a 1-0 victory in Game 1.

Coastal Carolina is looking for its second College World Series title and the fifth school to win the title in each of its first two trips to the event. It would be the first since Michigan in 1962.

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Schnall reminded reporters on Saturday night that the team was down 1-0 in the series in 2016 when the Chanticleers came back to win the final two games.

The Associated Press contributed to this report.

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