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Bedell to play soccer at Trevecca Nazarene University

“I think probably my senior season would stand out out the most, because that was when everything came together,” Bedell said. “Everything I’ve been working for the past four years came together, and it was when I had most of my achievements, most of my goals and most of my assists.” Poplar Bluff coach Rusty […]

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Bedell to play soccer at Trevecca Nazarene University

“I think probably my senior season would stand out out the most, because that was when everything came together,” Bedell said. “Everything I’ve been working for the past four years came together, and it was when I had most of my achievements, most of my goals and most of my assists.”

Poplar Bluff coach Rusty Crafton had words of praise for Bedell.

“He’s meant everything to this program,” Crafton said. “Our whole team pretty much surrounded him the last couple of years — that’s how talented a player he is. And not only just with the goals and assists, but he’s just a complete player on the field and he changes the game. He’s a game-changer, and he’s going to do some great things at the next level. I think (he will make an) immediate impact for his college.”

Crafton expects it will be a challenge for Bedell to crack the TNU starting lineup, but he also believes will be up to the challenge.

“I think that’s going to challenge him,” Crafton said. “I think it’s going to be really tough for him to get (in the starting lineup) the first year, but I think he’s got a chance. There are going to be a lot of foreign players that he’s got to compete against, but he works hard, and I think he’s going to push himself to get one of those starting spots eventually.”

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Dartmouth Athletics Announces Thompson Arena Renovations

Story Links HANOVER, N.H.—Dartmouth’s Haldeman Family Director of Athletics and Recreation, Mike Harrity and Dartmouth College announce a project to renovate Dartmouth’s Rupert C. Thompson Arena, that will modernize locker rooms and team spaces, and benefit team building, student-athlete development, and future recruiting. Thompson Arena has been the home of […]

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HANOVER, N.H.—Dartmouth’s Haldeman Family Director of Athletics and Recreation, Mike Harrity and Dartmouth College announce a project to renovate Dartmouth’s Rupert C. Thompson Arena, that will modernize locker rooms and team spaces, and benefit team building, student-athlete development, and future recruiting.

Thompson Arena has been the home of Dartmouth men’s and women’s hockey since opening in 1975. The 11,050-square-foot renovation will provide both programs with new locker rooms, team lounges, sports medicine spaces, a weight room, a coaches’ suite, as well as a new donor and fan hospitality space on the concourse level.

Thompson Renos Collage

Over the last year, Dartmouth women’s hockey welcomed new head coach Maura Crowell, who brings a record of sustained success from the University of Minnesota Duluth (UMD). Crowell led UMD to three consecutive 20 plus win seasons and two NCAA Frozen Four appearances (2021, 2022). She was named the USCHO Division I Women’s Coach of the Year and the CCM/AHCA National Coach of the Year in 2016–17 and was a finalist for the CCM/AHCA award again in both 2021 and 2022. Her leadership signals a new chapter for Dartmouth women’s hockey, rooted in competitive excellence and academic achievement.

The men’s hockey program continues to thrive under Koenig Family Head Coach of Dartmouth Men’s Hockey, Reid Cashman. The program is coming off a historic 2024–25 season, returning to the Top 20 rankings and winning the Ivy League Championship outright for the first time since 1979–80. In addition, Cashman and his staff were named Ivy League coaching staff of the year in 2024-25, while Cashman was named Tim Taylor ECAC Coach of the Year previously for the 2023-24 season. This success reflects the program’s continued investment in holistic student-athlete development—combining elite performance with academic rigor.

“This renovation will create a modern space to facilitate individual student-athlete development and team cohesion both on and off the ice,” Harrity shared. “We’re able to provide our teams with this enhancement because of the tremendous support from our alumni, the college, and the athletics and recreation department.”

The Thompson Arena locker rooms were last renovated in the summer of 2016 with both the men’s and women’s locker rooms receiving improvements. Part of the 2016 renovation also saw updates to the playing surface including new dasher boards and glass and a new refrigeration system. 

Crowell is excited about the upgraded locker room, which will be among the best in Division I hockey. “An upgraded locker room is meaningful to our team because it will give us the ability to have more space and create a true hockey epicenter, which is important to our program. The upgraded stalls and design will put us among the best locker rooms in the nation.”

Cashman is looking forward to having a central hub for Dartmouth hockey. “One of the great positives from this renovation is that everything related to Dartmouth hockey will now be under the Thompson roof. Our new coaches’ suite will allow our coaches to have more integration with our student-athletes. The new locker rooms and lounges will give our student-athletes an unbelievable atmosphere to prepare on and off the ice.”

The project will be divided into three phases, with the final phase expected to be completed in the fall of 2026.

“Renovated facilities are great for the current student-athletes but also should enhance recruiting to grow our program. Thompson Arena is already an incredible rink but the decision to renovate is a testament to Dartmouth’s commitment to constant improvement in all areas,” Dartmouth women’s hockey player Izee Powell ’26 added. “This renovation will create a better training facility for our team which is an important signal that Dartmouth is investing in the student-athletes so that we can be the best we can possibly be. I’m really lucky to be a part of it and I can’t wait for the future success of Dartmouth women’s hockey.”

Matt Fusco ’27 of the men’s hockey team is excited about all of the renovations. “The plans for the rink look unbelievable. We will have so many resources at our disposal, and everything we need will be right there for our whole team. This addition will be big and will help us separate from the rest of college hockey. Having all of the benefits of what Dartmouth offers its students plus the addition to the rink; it makes Dartmouth the place to be in college hockey.”

Phase one, which started in January 2025, focuses on adding to the building infrastructure of the arena.  Phase two focuses on the energy upgrades to the mechanical systems which is part of Dartmouth’s decarbonization effort to reach carbon-zero operations by 2050.

Phase three will complete the interior renovations and all site work upgrades with the completion anticipated in time for the start of the season in fall 2026.

Throughout the renovations, both Dartmouth men’s and women’s hockey will continue to call Thompson Arena home. Dartmouth Athletics and Recreation is grateful to campus leaders for their support in updating Thompson Arena for the first time in 50 years. Dartmouth hockey has benefitted from an energized alumni and fan base with millions of dollars in private support committed to this project. For more information on how you can make a transformational gift to the Thompson Arena renovation, contact Steve Maciejewski, Senior Associate Athletics Director for Development (steven.j.maciejewski@dartmouth.edu).

2025-26 season ticket deposits are now on sale, to secure your season ticket for 2025-26, click here for men’s hockey and click here for women’s hockey.




 



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University of Minnesota Athletics

MINNEAPOLIS – Sarah Martin has been invited to participate in the first-of-its-kind Women’s College Talent ID Camp, U.S. Soccer announced Monday. The camp will take place June 18–22 in Atlanta, home of the new Arthur M. Blank U.S. Soccer National Training Center. Martin, a goalkeeper from Champlin, Minn., is one of 42 players selected. The […]

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MINNEAPOLIS – Sarah Martin has been invited to participate in the first-of-its-kind Women’s College Talent ID Camp, U.S. Soccer announced Monday. The camp will take place June 18–22 in Atlanta, home of the new Arthur M. Blank U.S. Soccer National Training Center.

Martin, a goalkeeper from Champlin, Minn., is one of 42 players selected. The camp is part of U.S. Youth National Teams’ evolving scouting strategy aimed at increasing programming opportunities for college players with high potential, with the goal of expanding the U.S. under-18, under-19 and under-20 women’s national team player pools.

Last season, Martin started all 22 matches for the Golden Gophers in goal. She finished the year with 60 saves and a 0.714 goals-against average, ranking sixth all-time in Minnesota’s single-season records. She recorded seven shutouts, including three straight: at Illinois (Sept. 12), vs. North Dakota State (Sept. 15), and vs. Michigan (Sept. 19).

Martin is one of 14 Big Ten players selected and the only Minnesotan invited.



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UMaine hockey adds NHL draft pick from Canada with ‘blazing one-timer’

Another NHL draft pick is on the way to Orono. Carolina Hurricanes fifth-round draft choice (156th overall) Justin Poirier, who scored 122 goals in 181 regular season games over the last three seasons for Baie-Comeau Drakkar in the Quebec Maritimes Junior Hockey League, will be playing for the University of Maine this coming season. The […]

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Another NHL draft pick is on the way to Orono.

Carolina Hurricanes fifth-round draft choice (156th overall) Justin Poirier, who scored 122 goals in 181 regular season games over the last three seasons for Baie-Comeau Drakkar in the Quebec Maritimes Junior Hockey League, will be playing for the University of Maine this coming season.

The 5-foot-9, 183-pound Poirier scored 43 goals and added 37 assists in 58 games for Baie-Comeau Drakkar this past season after leading the league in goals in 2023-24 with 51. He also had 31 assists for 82 points in 68 games two years ago.

He led the league in playoff goals in 2023-24 with 18 in 17 games. He had nine playoff assists.

Poirier, who will turn 19 on Sept. 4, said there were a number of reasons behind his decision to come to UMaine.

“I liked the fact the guys were all friends with each other,” Poirier said about the Black Bears locker room.

He also liked that he was coming to a winning program and he was impressed with the renovations to the Alfond Arena.

UMaine won the Hockey East Tournament last season for the first time since 2004 and has reached the NCAA Tournament the last two years for the first time since the 2005-06 and 2006-07 seasons.

UMaine is in the midst of a $50 million renovation to the 48-year-old arena.

“There’s going to be a lounge where you can have dinner and do your homework and that’s very cool,” said Poirier, who added that he liked the fact the rink was on campus and close to the classrooms and living facilities.

Poirier will be expected to help fill a scoring void left by the departure of players who scored exactly half of UMaine’s goals last season. Sixty-two of the 124 goals were scored by players who have departed.

“That’s what I’m going to try to bring to the team, my offensive side. I’m going to keep shooting the puck and hope to score some goals,” said Poirier, who is from Salaberry-de-Valleyfield, Quebec.

According to the Elite Prospects 2024 NHL Draft Guide, Poirier “drives all over the offensive zone in search of goals, positioning himself at the far-post for backdoor plays and jumping on rebounds in front of the net.”

Poirier “instinctively knows when and where a scoring chance will arise and how to seize them all,” according to that draft guide, which adds that he “can fire in the middle of steps on the rush, directly off passes with a catch-and-release motion or with a blazing one-timer.”

The incoming right wing knows there is going to be a significant adjustment and he is looking forward to it.

“I’ll be playing against older guys and bigger guys,” Poirier said. “In Major Junior, the players are 16-20 years old while in NCAA, they’re 18-to-25. So this will be way better for my development. I want to play in the NHL so I’m excited to make this jump.”

He intends to keep working on his strength in the offseason and he is also focusing on improving his quickness, especially in tight spaces. He wants to be able to get close to full speed in as few steps as possible.

“I want to become the best hockey player I can for the entire 200 feet. Hard work is the key to success,” said Poirier.

He noted that Orono will be a much shorter commute for his family compared to when he was playing for Baie-Comeau Drakkar, and they’re excited about coming to watch him play.

“It is five and a half hours to Orono while it was nine hours the last three years in juniors,” he pointed out.

His coming to UMaine is contingent upon him being accepted into the school and meeting NCAA eligibility requirements.



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Crusader Quarterly with Kit Hughes | June 2025

Story Links Dear Crusaders, I hope you are well and excited to recharge during the (very) slow approaching weeks of summer. As I reflect upon a year of incredible progress for Crusader Athletics, I am filled with gratitude for the dedication of our coaches and staff, skill and determination of our students, […]

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Dear Crusaders,

I hope you are well and excited to recharge during the (very) slow approaching weeks of summer. As I reflect upon a year of incredible progress for Crusader Athletics, I am filled with gratitude for the dedication of our coaches and staff, skill and determination of our students, and incredible support of our Holy Cross community. 2024-25 marked the most competitively successful year for Crusader Athletics in the last decade, while also setting new highs in several areas including department GPA, community service, and event attendance among others. Simply put, our programs are getting it done here on The Hill, all while remaining true to our core values, mission and commitment to serving others. I am so proud — as I am sure you are as well — but as you already know, the best is yet to come!

Over the past five weeks, we celebrated 158 graduating student-athletes at Commencement. We made stops in Washington, D.C.Boston and New York City for our third annual Coaches Road Show. We welcomed our alumni during Reunion Weekend and our fourth annual Coaches Home Show. Our Crusader family traveled far and wide as our athletes represented Holy Cross in Chapel Hill, N.C.Jacksonville, Fla.Camden, N.J. and Amherst, Va. throughout the spring postseason. During each of these moments, it has been incredible to witness the togetherness of our community, and the tenacity and pride of our student-athletes.

Just as remarkable is the generosity of our loyal alumni, fans, and families, whose contributions have been critical to our success. This support empowers our Crusaders to excel in the classroom and in competition. As of today, we have raised over $2.72 million with $980,000 remaining to reach our goal of raising $3.7 million through the Crusader Athletics Fund before June 30. Your partnership is essential in providing a co-curricular athletic experience that is truly world-class, sustained by our Jesuit, Catholic identity. This experience is central to the education our students receive on Mount St. James. Join with over 4,200 supporters and make your gift before the June 30 deadline. Your support is essential as we continue to reach for even greater heights!!

Below, you will read about more recent highlights and some ways to continue connecting with us in the coming weeks and months. Whether at an upcoming game or golf tournament, our Crusader Community Festival, or during an unexpected trip back to campus, I look forward to seeing you all soon! 

Go Cross Go! 

Kit Hughes

Vice President for Intercollegiate Athletics


Feel free to reach out — any time — with your thoughts, questions or concerns on our “Be Heard” page!

Three Things To Know

 






1.

All summer long, many of our teams will be hosting youth clinics — visit goholycross.com/clinics to learn more about all of our options! 
2.

Let’s work together to Pack Fitton this fall — and also raise money for your group, charity or organization! Starting this year, we’re offering the opportunity for groups to fundraise by selling single-game tickets for any of our four home games at Fitton Field. Visit goholycross.com/groupfundraising for more information.

3.

The last day to make your gift to the Crusader Athletics Fund to count for this year is June 30. Gifts can be designated to any of our 27 varsity sports, and every gift gets us closer to our $3.7 million goal! With any questions, please contact the Crusader Athletics Fund team at crusaderathletics@holycross.edu.


NEWS AND UPDATES

Athletic Highlights
















• 

Baseball junior CJ Egrie earned Patriot League Player of the Year honors, while junior Jaden Wywoda was named the Patriot League Pitcher of the Year.
• 

First team All-Patriot League honors were earned by senior Chris Baillargeon (baseball), junior Giavanna Ciaravino (women’s track & field), freshman Abby Desmarais (women’s track & field), freshman Danielle DiEsso (women’s track & field), junior CJ Egrie (baseball), senior Jimmy King (baseball), senior Ella Kittredge (women’s lacrosse), junior Racheli Levy-Smith (women’s lacrosse), senior Haley Murphy (women’s track & field), senior Isabela Miller (women’s lacrosse), senior Molly O’Connor (women’s track & field), junior Jaden Wywoda (baseball) and senior Sally Zinsner (women’s lacrosse).
• 

Second team All-Patriot League selections included junior Anna Brait (softball), freshman Ezequiel De la Plaza (men’s tennis), senior Brian Fennelly (men’s track & field), junior Celia Kulis (women’s track & field), sophomore John LaFleur (baseball), junior Danny Macchiarola (baseball), senior Connor Peek (baseball), sophomore Gianni Royer (baseball) and senior Maura Switzer (women’s track & field).
• 

All-Northeast Region honors went to senior Ella Kittredge (women’s lacrosse), junior Racheli Levy-Smith (women’s lacrosse) and senior Isabela Miller (women’s lacrosse).
• 

Baseball won the Patriot League regular season and tournament championships, to advance to the NCAA Tournament for the first time since 2017. Junior Danny Macchiarola was named the Patriot League Tournament MVP while seniors Jimmy King and Chris Baillargeon and sophomore Gianni Royer joined Macchiarola on the All-Tournament Team.
• 

Baseball competed at the Chapel Hill Regional, taking on No. 5 overall seed and D1Baseball.com‘s No. 1 nationally-ranked North Carolina on May 30 and Nebraska on May 31.
• 

Junior Liam Lyons placed 42nd in the 1500m with a time of 3.46.63 at the NCAA East Regional First Round hosted by UNF in Jacksonville, Fla. on May 28.
• 

Holy Cross hosted the Patriot League Championship in both baseball and track and field.
• 

The men’s golf team finished in second place at the Patriot League Championship, with senior Nolan Schuermann becoming just the second player in program history to win the league individual title. Schuermann went on to finish in a tie for 49th place at the NCAA Amherst Regional, firing a strong 74-74-71-219 (+9) performance.
• 

Track and field picked up seven medals and broke eight women’s school records at home for the Patriot League Outdoor Championship from May 2-3. Haley Murphy took home gold and set a new school and Patriot League Championship meet record in the 400m hurdles with a time of 59.08. The following weekend at the New England Outdoor Championship (May 10), the Crusaders brought home 10 medals and three new school records.
• 

The men’s rowing team qualified for the IRA National Championship for the first time since 2015, finishing in 20th as a team.
• 

Women’s lacrosse finished in fourth place in the Patriot League and earned a home game in the tournament quarterfinals, where they defeated Colgate 19-13 to advance to the semifinals for the second straight season.
• 

Women’s rowing achieved their highest national ranking since 2015 and placed seventh at the Patriot League Championship.

Academic Highlights








• 

Seventeen of our teams achieved a perfect score of 1,000 in the NCAA’s academic performance standard, the Academic Progress Rate (APR), tying for the third-most in the nation out of 362 Division I schools.
• 

Senior Nolan Schuermann of men’s golf was selected as the Patriot League Scholar-Athlete of the Year.
• 

Academic All-Patriot League selections included senior Ginger Berry (women’s rowing), senior Brian Fennelly (men’s track & field), senior Ella Grey (women’s track & field), senior Jimmy King (baseball), junior Danny Macchiarola (baseball), senior Haley Murphy (women’s track & field), sophomore Gianni Royer (baseball), senior Nolan Schuermann (men’s golf), junior Ali Sniegocki (softball), senior Maura Switzer (women’s track & field) and senior Sally Zinsner (women’s lacrosse).
• 

College Sports Communicators Academic All-District honors went to senior Caroline Carlson (women’s tennis), senior Caroline Fredey (women’s tennis), sophomore Ava Gambichler (softball), junior Maddie Hamm (women’s tennis), sophomore John LaFleur (baseball), senior Ahana Nagarkatti (women’s tennis), sophomore Emma Pietrzak (softball), sophomore Gianni Royer (baseball) and junior Ali Sniegocki (softball).
• 

A number of our student-athletes presented at the College’s annual Academic Conference.


Staffing Highlights

Other Highlights











• 

Our student-athletes and teams were honored for their outstanding achievements on May 5 during the annual Crusader Awards. The award winners were highlighted by Crusader of the Year selections Christo Kelly (football) and Haley Murphy (women’s track & field).
• 

The Patriot League formally announced the addition of both William & Mary and Villanova as associate members for football beginning in the 2026 season.
• 

We retired the jerseys of five Crusader Baseball Legends on April 27: Jack Barry (Class of 1910), Owen Carroll (Class of 1925), Jim O’Neill (Class of 1952), Ron Perry (Class of 1954) and Louis Sockalexis (Class of 1897).
• 

The Holy Cross Varsity Club announced its Hall of Fame Class of 2025, which includes Maureen Connolly (Class of 2018, field hockey), Jerry Dickinson (Class of 2009, soccer), Ed Kutschke (Class of 1986, football), Megan Orr (Class of 2007, lacrosse), David Puloka (Class of 2001, football, track and field) and Ann Zelesky (honorary).
• 

Luke Newman ’24 was selected in the sixth round of the National Football League draft by the Chicago Bears.
• 

Stacey Hochkins ’12 was named the 2025 USA Hockey Adult Player of the Year.
• 

Bill McGovern ’85, an All-American defensive back for the Holy Cross football team and a member of the Varsity Club Hall of Fame, returns to the 2026 ballot for the College Football Hall of Fame.
• 

Men’s tennis junior Patrick Ling attended the NCAA’s Career in Sports Forum, a four-day event in Indianapolis that brought together over 150 student-athletes from around the nation.

UPCOMING EVENTS

Aug. 22 | Men’s Ice Hockey Golf Outing

Aug. 30 | Football Season Opener at Northern Illinois

Sept. 13 | Football Home Opener vs. Rhode Island

Sept. 14 | Crusader Community Festival | Women’s Soccer vs. Rhode Island at 2 p.m.

Oct. 4 | Football vs. Harvard | Homecoming

Oct. 25 | Football vs. Colgate | Hall of Fame Dinner

Nov. 1 | Football vs. Lafayette | Family Weekend

Nov. 22 | Football vs. Georgetown at Fenway Park

2025 Season Ticket Membership deposits are open now!

FOLLOW THE CRUSADERS 
Be sure to follow all things Crusader Athletics on social media!
Twitter – @goholycross

Instagram – @goholycross

Facebook – Holy Cross Athletics

YouTube – GoHolyCross





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McMahan Signs Three to 2025 Class

Story Links CHARLOTTE – Charlotte Women’s Golf Head Coach C.C. McMahan has completed the 2025 recruiting class that features one freshman and two transfers. Emma Heyman and Wawa Booncharn join Charlotte after two seasons of college golf meanwhile Maia Hattrell signs as a freshman from England. MCMAHAN ON THE NEWCOMERS “We are thrilled […]

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CHARLOTTE – Charlotte Women’s Golf Head Coach C.C. McMahan has completed the 2025 recruiting class that features one freshman and two transfers. Emma Heyman and Wawa Booncharn join Charlotte after two seasons of college golf meanwhile Maia Hattrell signs as a freshman from England.

MCMAHAN ON THE NEWCOMERS

“We are thrilled to officially welcome these three outstanding young women to our program. Each one brings a unique spark that fits the culture we are committed to that is rooted in character, competitiveness, and a growth mindset.”

EMMA HEYMAN

Heyman comes to Charlotte after two seasons at Idaho. She competed in all 10 of the team’s tournaments in 2024-25 with a scoring average of 76.8, totaling two top 10 finishes. At the Bobcat Desert Classic, Heyman finished in ninth individually by shooting one under par.

A native of Oskarshamn, Sweden and graduate of Birgitta School, Heyman earned multiple top 10 finishes in the summer of 2023 including coming in second at the Galvin Green Junior Open. In 2022, she played on the Swedish Championship Team and Swedish Junior Team Championship.

“I want to thank Coach McMahan for the opportunity to become a Charlotte 49er,” said Heyman. “It is great to join a team that is supportive and motivated. I am pumped to get started in August and keep pushing to get better.”

WAWA BOONCHARN

After two years at New Mexico Junior College, Booncharn will join fellow Thailand native Pinky Chaisilprungruang at Charlotte. Booncharn finished the season as the 16th ranked individual in the NJCAA and fourth regionally in the Scoreboard by Clippd rankings. She totaled six top three finishes including a 302-71-9 win-loss record. For the season, her scoring average was 76.2.

MAIA HATTRELL

A native of Essex, England, Hattrell graduated from New Hall School and was a member of the West Essex Golf Club. Hattrell was the Essex Girl’s Championship Nett Winner and helped New Hall win the ISGA British Schools National Finals, with her career low round score of 74.

 



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Three Ducks named to Olympic hockey teams – Daily News

The Ducks will be represented by at least three players at the 2026 Winter Olympics in Milan. There, Lukáš Dostál and Radko Gudas will reprise their roles from their 2024 World Championship triumph for Czechia while prospect Damian Clara will man the net for host nation Italy. Dostál made an immense leap forward last season […]

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The Ducks will be represented by at least three players at the 2026 Winter Olympics in Milan.

There, Lukáš Dostál and Radko Gudas will reprise their roles from their 2024 World Championship triumph for Czechia while prospect Damian Clara will man the net for host nation Italy.

Dostál made an immense leap forward last season for the Ducks, when he routinely saved goals above expected as the team’s most outstanding and most consistent player. Gudas took a step back on the blue line from his superb first season on Katella Ave., but also assumed the role of captain for the first time, continued to deepen his community presence and played through injuries.

Both men participated in Czechia’s gold-medal victory on home soil in the spring of 2024, when Dostál dominated the tournament, including a shutout in the final and another in the quarterfinal round. Gudas contributed to that excellence as part of the Czech defense corps, and the team effort even extended beyond the ice.

“It was a very special moment for our team and for our country as well. We haven’t been able to do that in, I think, 40 years,” Gudas said. “Everybody in the Czech Republic was cheering for us and it got the whole country together rooting for one thing.”

For Dostál, it was a springboard toward a season that established him as an NHL starter and may make him a wealthy man as he negotiates a new contract during his pending restricted free agency. He edged out a pair of more established NHL netminders for the gig in goal last spring.

“Getting the chance, being the youngest, people might have thought I might not be able to handle it, but I really wanted to prove everybody wrong, to show that ‘I’m here, I’m ready,’” Dostál said.

Clara, a 20-year-old prospect goaltender whose journey has taken him from Italy to Austria to Sweden to San Diego, will almost assuredly be the lone North American pro among the Italians.

“I hope I can give my best for the team and give my best for the nation,” Clara said.

With competition opening up beyond the traditional seven or so powers in ice hockey, the Italians hope to join the Swiss, Germans and other rising European sides. While Clara said he felt the program had ground to cover to close the gap on even those up-and-comers, he was enthused at some talent in the pipeline and hoped to be an exemplar within the program.

“I hope I can be a little bit of a role model in that you don’t have to start out big, you just have to go somewhere, try your luck and give it your all,” Clara said. “I know I’m not supposed to be here, given where I came from.”

On Monday, each of the 12 qualifying countries named half a dozen participants, with the bulk of the rosters to be determined ahead of the February games. That could send additional Ducks to Italy. Most notably, new addition Chris Kreider skated for the United States at 4 Nations Face-Off, where promising pivot Leo Carlsson filled a depth role for Sweden.



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