College Sports
Bighorn Soccer programs excel on and off the field this spring
BULLHEAD CITY – The Mohave Community College men’s and women’s soccer teams delivered an outstanding performance during the Spring 2025 semester both in competition and in the classroom. The two programs combined for an impressive 3.24 overall grade point average. The women’s soccer team led the way with a 3.43 team GPA, including 12 players […]


BULLHEAD CITY – The Mohave Community College men’s and women’s soccer teams delivered an outstanding performance during the Spring 2025 semester both in competition and in the classroom.
The two programs combined for an impressive 3.24 overall grade point average. The women’s soccer team led the way with a 3.43 team GPA, including 12 players earning a 3.0 or higher, and two student-athletes achieving a perfect 4.0. The men’s soccer team was a 3.05 GPA, with eight players posting GPAs of 3.0 or above and two reaching a 4.0.
College Sports
The Sun’s Top 25 Senior Athletes 2024-25
The Sun’s sports department recognizes 25 outstanding graduating senior athletes — from record breakers, team captains and national champions. Here are the 25 athletes that represented Cornell with honor during the 2024-2025 season. Rory Guilday Women’s Ice Hockey Read more about Guilday here. CJ Kirst Men’s Lacrosse Read more about Kirst here. Aaron Liang Men’s Squash […]

The Sun’s sports department recognizes 25 outstanding graduating senior athletes — from record breakers, team captains and national champions. Here are the 25 athletes that represented Cornell with honor during the 2024-2025 season.
Rory Guilday
Women’s Ice Hockey
Read more about Guilday here.

CJ Kirst
Men’s Lacrosse
Read more about Kirst here.

Aaron Liang
Men’s Squash

Aaron Liang competed in the No. 1 and No. 2 spots for men’s squash for all three years he played for the team. He earned a 7-7 record his senior year, where he played exclusively in the No. 1 spot, and went on to post a 3-1 record in the College Squash Association’s Individual National Championships.
Liang is an international student from Singapore who said the “camaraderie” on the squash team was a defining part of his Cornell experience. Through the team, Liang said he found “a family” more than 10,000 miles away from home.
A national powerhouse, Liang earned Second Team All-American honors and made it to the round of 32 in the Individual Championships. He was named to the 2025 Second Team All-Ivy and 2024 Academic All-Ivy team. He told The Sun that the team’s “mantra” is to “leave the team in a better place than when you found it” and something he continued to do better as a team captain.
“I hope that my time at Cornell inspires future generations to carry that culture forward and continue elevating Cornell Squash,” Liang said.
Adit Sinha
Men’s Tennis

Since his collegiate start with the Red, Adit Sinha cemented himself as a leader of the men’s tennis team. He earned Second Team All-Ivy in singles twice and helped guide the No. 26 team to a successful 2024-2025 with a singles record of 20-8-3 and a doubles record of 16-7-4. In 2024, Sinha advanced to the men’s singles Intercollegiate Tennis Association quarterfinals to represent Cornell.
One of the team’s biggest accomplishments in recent memory was upsetting No. 9 Columbia University — which Sinha said was his favorite memory as a part of the tennis team.
“I remember how loud the tennis facility was and I remember the face of the coach on Columbia after that match was over,” Sinha said. “It was just pure bliss to beat our rivals in that fashion.”
Now leaving the team, Sinha hopes to leave behind a program that will reward its hardworking and deserving athletes.
“If you give your time and effort to the school and tennis program [by] fighting for every match, rocking up to practices, cheering on the bench even though you may want to play and of course being on top of your school then the school and program will reward you accordingly,” Sinha said.
Alioune Ka
Men’s Soccer

After an injury halted his sophomore season, forward Alioune Ka made a stunning recovery to become a critical piece of a team which made a run to the second round of the National Collegiate Athletics Association’s Tournament after losing just two regular-season matches.
Ka scored eight goals, including three game-winners and tallied three assists in his senior season. A versatile player, he took a spot in the midfield line, bringing speed and precision to the Red’s attack.
Ka will be continuing his soccer career at the professional level with Nashville Soccer Club, which selected Ka 36th overall during the 2025 Men’s Major League Soccer SuperDraft.
Allie Danko
Women’s Swim and Dive

Throughout her four seasons on the women’s swim and dive team, Allie Danko has left a trail of points and awards behind her. Danko has scored points individually at every Ivy Championship and set the top ten times in the program’s history for both the 500 and the 1000 yard swims.
However, she feels her biggest accomplishment is contributing to the school record for the 800-yard freestyle relay.
“I’m more proud of that relay record than any of my individual swims,” said Danko, “because I love and adore the three girls that I got it with, and they’re the greatest teammates and training partners.”
That feeling towards her teammates is one she holds onto as she steps away from swimming and towards Vanderbilt Law School next fall.
“I love all of my teammates so much,” Danko said. “They’re my best friends, [and] every friend I could possibly want is right here on the pool deck. I really am just so grateful for my teammates.”
Although her time with swimming is now over, Danko feels that the “leap of faith” she made in 2021 by joining the team has paid off.
“I feel like I can look back and confidently say that I made the right choice,” Danko said. “I’ve had a really amazing four years with the team. All of my best memories at Cornell stem back to the swim and dive team, and I’m just so grateful for everything that I’ve gotten to do.”
Ashley Messier
Women’s Ice Hockey

Despite being one of three captains (along with Rory Guilday and Gabbie Rud, fellow Sun Top 25 Senior honorees) and 11 seniors on women’s hockey, Ashley Messier still managed to stand out. The Saskatchewan native was a lockdown defender, racking up the second most blocks on the team while anchoring the third best defense in the nation. A Johnson School of Business graduate, Messier was a true two-way player, leading Cornell defenders in goals (seven) and tying for the lead in assists (20) en route to her ECAC second team 2024-2025 campaign.
“It’s bittersweet,” Messier said when asked about the end of her Cornell career. “It was a really special year so it’s obviously very sad to go, but lots of good parts about it.”
According to Messier, a key to this season’s success for Cornell was its depth and experience. The defender herself has plenty of experience, appearing in 108 games and notching 51 points across her four years on East Hill. Along with the success on the ice, Messier also has plenty of fond memories off it too.
“A very memorable moment of mine is when some friends and I — a couple girls on the team — made it to Izzy Daniel’s Patty [Kazmaier] ceremony,” Messier said.
After missing part of her sophomore year with a leg injury, Messier was granted an extra year of eligibility by the NCAA, which she is using to play for the University of Minnesota Duluth next season. Then, joining Daniel in the PWHL seems like a natural destination.
Augustine Haquet
Women’s Track and Field & Cross Country

After four years at Cornell, Augustine Haquet has amassed an unforgettable legacy. Haquet came to Cornell with one goal in mind — to dominate the field — and that is exactly what she did. Across 70 competitions, she amassed 35 top five-finishes, including 11 first-place finishes.
Most recently, Haquet competed in the NCAA’s East Preliminaries where she finished with her career high of 4:12.68 in the 1500m, good for second all time on the Cornell records list. She holds seven other first place spots on the Cornell women’s track and field record book.
“I have so many memorable experiences as an athlete at Cornell, but if I had to pick, I would say that running the relays with my incredible teammates is something I will never forget,” Haquet said. “Track and field is a very individual and sometimes lonely sport, so when you get to run with and for the people you love, it makes it exponentially more fun and intense.”
Looking forward, Haquet will move back to France and attend graduate school to pursue a master’s degree in Public Policy at Sciences Po Paris while training with an elite group of athletes for the chance to represent her home country at the international level.
Despite reaching all-time status with her accomplishments at Cornell, Haquet stressed the importance of cherishing every moment.
“This might seem cliché, but I think that taking in every single moment, the good but also the bad ones, is key to making the most of your time as a student-athlete at Cornell,” Haquet said “Looking back at these four years and realizing how much you went through and still accomplished is much more empowering than focusing on the highlights only.”
Ava Ramachandran
Women’s Polo

In her collegiate career, Ava Ramachandran made an impact on the women’s polo team.
This past year, the women’s team beat the University of New Hampshire to claim the Division II Championship. After the match, she was awarded the Clyde C. Waddell Jr. Sportsmanship Award. Ramachandran contributed five goals to the win and last year in the team’s win. Last year against Skidmore College, she scored a career-high of eight goals.
“Winning nationals alongside my team was a huge accomplishment and to and to do it alongside my best friends during my senior year made it so much more special,” Ramachandran said. “The legacy that I hope to leave behind would be a positive and energetic atmosphere in and out of the arena.”
She will be pursuing a master’s degree in social work at Boston College next year and hopes to pursue a career in psychology.
Caitlin Slaminko
Women’s Lacrosse

Midfielder Caitlin Slaminko rose through the ranks of women’s lacrosse to become the team’s highest scorer her senior year. With 41 goals, Slaminko led the team to its first winning record since 2020.
“I am honored to have represented Cornell Lacrosse and hope to have added to the Cornell women’s lacrosse foundation that the alumni before me have left,” Slaminko said. “To have been a leader that people could look up to and continue to lean on.”
Slaminko scored in every game of the 2025 season, including 11 multi-goal games. Her powerful shot gave her an 84.3 percent shot-on-goal percentage. Not only was she a threat in front of the net, but she won 41 draw controls and picked up 17 ground balls.
Her efforts didn’t go unnoticed; Slaminko was added to the Tewaaraton Watch List on May 6, and she was named second team all-Ivy.
Slaminko said her favorite part of the team has been “the connections” she made with her teammates and coaching staff.
“The Cornell athletics network is unmatched and has made my experience as an athlete extremely positive,” Slaminko said.
Chris Foca
Men’s Wrestling

Cornell wrestling fans won’t soon forget Chris Foca. Maybe it’s the tattoo of New Jersey inked on his back, the signature “Foca-Style” apparel or the way he wrestled: aggressive, unrelenting and just a little bit flashy.
“My personality is kind of built through wrestling,” Foca said. “In a way, I pride myself in hard work, being able to adapt to situations and approaching anything with an open mind because it’s the way that I approach matches. Wrestling taught me to just bounce back and give my all, not just on the map, but in anything that I do.”
On the mat, Foca was a force. Over his collegiate career, he became a two-time NCAA All-American, placing third at 174 pounds in 2023 and fifth at 184 pounds in 2025. He was a three-time unanimous First-Team All-Ivy selection, and won the inaugural Ivy League Tournament at 184 pounds this past year. Foca’s senior season saw him finish with a 23-8 record and he captained Cornell to a seventh-place finish at the NCAA Championships.
“You come to college thinking you’re going to win a national title,” Foca said. “When I went into nationals this year, it wasn’t about being at the top of the podium. Each week this season, I gave my all. I worked with coaches, did extra, ate right, slept right. The national tournament was just the culmination of all that coming together.”
But for Foca, wrestling was never just about trophies. As a senior, he doubled down on his commitment—mentoring younger wrestlers, leading by example and pushing himself through every grueling practice. He knew his legacy would be measured not just by his wins, but by the impact he had on those around him.
“Wrestling taught me resilience and humility,” Foca said. “In the future, applying that to everyday life is giving my all, being a genuine human being, staying humble and helping those around me in any way I can.”
Claire Wolfe
Women’s Field Hockey

As assistant captain of the field hockey team, Claire Wolfe is no stranger to being a leader. During her senior season, she was ranked fourth nationally for assists per game. In her 66-game career, she recorded 26 points and boosted the Red’s offensive production immensely with her 22 assists. Wolfe was a three time National Field Hockey Coaches Association National Academic Squad honoree and in 2024 was named to the 2024 NFHCA Mideast All-Region second team.
“I am so grateful for my team, for the memories I made and the lessons I learned through field hockey,” Wolfe said.
Her favorite memory at Cornell was making the Ivy League tournament in 2023 and the match against Princeton University. Even though the Red were unable to win, she says the team huddle after was a “true testament of the culture” of the field hockey team.
“We had lost so we were all heartbroken and sad, but I remember Caroline Ramsey, who was team captain at the time, talking to us and telling us how proud of us she was,” Wolfe said. “It was a moment of true sportsmanship and camaraderie between the team and it really made me proud to be a part of a team that was bigger than myself.”
She plans to play one more year of field hockey at the University of Exeter in the United Kingdom and pursue her master’s degree in Business Administration.
Damian Hackett
Men’s Track and Field & Cross Country

Damian Hackett secured himself a spot in Cornell track and field history earning the program’s first All-American first title honor in the 1500m. Competing at the 1500m NCAA final two weeks ago, he placed eighth and was less than half a second away from first in a tough race.
Hackett is no stranger to awards and breaking records — Hackett is mentioned 15 times in the Cornell track and field record book. His highlights include the best indoor mile at 3:56.15, the fastest 800m time of 1:47.40 and the best 1000m time at 2:20.42.
The best of his records however, is his 1500m time which he broke this year at the Raleigh Relays, winning the race for the Red and clocking in with a time of 3:36.78, good for No. 26 overall in the United States.
Hackett’s favorite memory was the 2025 Ivy League Heptagonal Indoor Championship which was held one final time at Barton Hall this year and had a “really electric atmosphere.” He hopes that he left behind a strong team culture.
“Everything is a lot easier when you recognize that your teammates are there to push, inspire and support you,” Hackett said. “[They are] not just a group of people you practice with for a few hours a day while you work on making yourself better.”
Gabbie Rud
Women’s Ice Hockey

Arriving in Ithaca in the fall of 2020, forward Gabbie Rud had high expectations for her debut season on a women’s ice hockey team which had been set to enter the 2020 NCAA tournament as the top seed before its cancelation due to COVID-19. Instead, the 2020-2021 season was canceled, and Rud’s first semester in Ithaca was a challenge.
“We had to practice with masks on, we only had a certain amount of hours a week, we couldn’t do any competition drills against each other or anything because you had to keep a distance,” Rud said. “The hockey side, it was pretty ridiculous.”
While Rud’s first semester may have been an on-ice low, her final season was a high point. The forward tallied a career-high 24 points — second most on the team — and scored a game winning goal with just 27 seconds remaining to sweep the ECAC quarterfinals.
“[The 2024-2025 season] definitely was the best year of hockey I’ve had,” Rud said. “You always have that dream of making the Frozen Four, and to live it was very surreal. But I think our group was really special because of the camaraderie we had and the closeness we had with each other.”
While Rud’s time playing hockey is done, she’s sure she will “be around it forever,” in part because both of her brothers and her father are either currently playing or working in hockey. After graduating as a food science major, Rud will return home to Minnesota, where she will begin working for a nutrition company this summer.
“I love this place so much, I’m going to miss it all,” said Rud when asked what she will remember about her time on East Hill. “[Especially] the people. I think the culture and the people of Cornell hockey specifically is unmatched.”
Ian Shane
Men’s Ice Hockey

When you pass NHL great Ken Dryden ’69 for a record of any kind, that’s an indication of a legacy.
Ian Shane’s 14 career shutouts — fourth-most in Cornell program history — just edge him past Dryden’s 13, but that’s just one number out of many that describe Shane’s importance between the pipes. The program’s starting goaltender since January of his freshman year, Shane has aided Cornell to two ECAC championships and three NCAA tournament appearances, often stealing games and shining under the brightest of lights.
“These four years have flown by,” Shane said after his senior night on Feb. 22. “To actually get to this moment was kind of bittersweet and was a great bookend for our journeys here at Cornell.”
Coming to Cornell undrafted after splitting time between different junior hockey leagues, Shane has a shot to play professionally. He signed an amateur tryout contract with the Norfolk Admirals of the ECHL on April 1, playing five games for Norfolk and posting a 3-0-2 record with one shutout and a .906 save percentage. Though he is not signed for next season yet, Shane — who is obtaining a degree in Hotel Administration — has a bright future in both professional hockey and the corporate world.
“For the 10 seniors, this year was about trying to leave a legacy and leave the jersey in a better place than we found it,” Shane said.
Jameson Wang
Men’s Football

Throughout his football career at Cornell, Jameson Wang has created a historic and record-breaking legacy that the Red will forever cherish. His junior year, Wang broke the quarterback rushing touchdowns record and ranked eighth in the country in rushing yards averaging 288 yards per game at the quarterback position. He scored 78 touchdowns in 38 games and produced 8,775 offensive yards for Cornell.
Wang also declared for the National Football League Draft and has gained traction nationally becoming the second Cornell player to receive an invitation to the Hula Bowl. Now, his attention is on making his professional football dreams a reality — and with an invitation to the Los Angeles Chargers Rookie Mini Camp — Wang is certainly headed in the right direction.
“My passion has always been football, so my goal right now is to play professional football as long as I can and when the day comes that I can not lace up my cleats anymore, I want to become a coach or work in the football industry,” Wang said.
Joseph Gurski
Men’s Swim and Dive

In his four years at Cornell, Joseph Gurski left an impactful legacy as a member of the swim and dive team. Specializing in butterfly, Gurski earned All-Ivy honors twice for his individual and relay contributions. As a junior, he won the 100-yard butterfly at the Ivy League Championship Meet, the first Cornell swimmer to do so in over thirty years. Gurski finishes his career with two Cornell records in the 100-yard and 200-yard butterfly.
Despite his significant individual success, Gurski notes the overall improvement of the program as the highlight of his collegiate career. As a senior captain, he helped lead Cornell to its first winning Ivy dual meet record in 15 years and a fifth place finish at the Ivy Championship Meet.
“We came from not winning a single Ivy dual meet my freshman year to winning four,” Gurski said. “I’m stoked to see the program continue our winning team culture and keep accomplishing much more than what we imagined.”
Across four years, Gurski shattered school and pool records, consistently anchored relays and embodied the resilience of a program on the rise. He looks back on his time at Cornell with gratitude for his teammates, leaving behind a legacy of leadership and camaraderie.
“I already miss my team. I miss the grind, and I miss swimming with my teammates most of all,” Gurski said. “I’m so grateful that I got to end my senior season and collegiate career on a high note – achieving a winning Ivy dual meet record and then going on to winning a relay at Ivies with my friends.”
Now that he has left Cornell, Gurski plans to spend time with his family and enter the job market.
Julian Ramirez
Men’s Wrestling

Julian Ramirez never had much use for half measures. From the moment he set foot on Cornell’s wrestling mats, he wrestled in a way that left little room for compromise. There were wins, of course: 94 total, four Ivy League titles and four NCAA tournament appearances. Yet the measure of Ramirez’s career was never just the numbers.
There was a grit to Ramirez’s style, a hunger that refused to be dulled, even when the grind of college wrestling seemed relentless. His senior season was proof of that. Due to Ivy League rules, Ramirez sat out the first semester, not being enrolled. Returning in December, he surged through the second half, qualifying for the NCAA tournament as the third seed in his bracket. Though he fell one match short of All-American honors, his leadership throughout the tournament was unmistakable.
“I’m most proud of helping my team succeed the last three years,” Ramirez said. “At the national tournament, we took third, second, seventh in that order. With a lot of changes in the lineup, the leadership was something that was needed, and I think I helped a lot with leading our team.”
As a two-year captain, Ramirez was the heartbeat of the team, a mentor to younger wrestlers and the standard-bearer of Cornell’s demanding culture. For him, it wasn’t just about drilling or conditioning. It was about cultivating a culture of accountability, where every wrestler understood that excellence was an expectation.
“This is my second year being a captain,” Ramirez said. “I wanted to make sure that I was able to help younger guys start finding their place on the team and their own leadership skills. The biggest impact I want to leave is that everybody can realize that they can lead the team if they do things the right way.”
Kyle Howe
Men’s Heavyweight Rowing

Kyle Howe has left a lasting legacy on the Cornell heavyweight rowing, embodying leadership, resilience and dedication as team co-captain. Howe has been on the team for the past four years and currently races in the 1V8.
“We’ve made incredible strides towards finding new speed this year,” Howe said.
At the end of his junior season, the team graduated 16 seniors, six of which Howe had previously rowed with in the 1V8. Howe and co-captain Geoffrey Miller worked exceptionally hard this year to rebuild the team. They redid their training plan and pushed their teammates to be the best they could be both on and off the water.
“I think that my favorite part about our team is that we are striving for excellence on every level,” Howe said. “There’s a lot more to life than just rowing. We’re trying to make a team where we’re also creating leaders and men of high character.”
Howe placed first in ‘C’ Final at Intercollegiate Rowing Association National Championship during his junior year and helped the team take home the Varsity Cup against the University of Pennsylvania his sophomore season. Also in his sophomore year, Howe attended the Henley Royal Regatta in Oxfordshire, England, where he raced some of the best rowing teams around the world.
After college, Howe plans to pursue a masters degree in real estate and finance at Cambridge University. He also wants to continue rowing and hopes to compete for a seat in the Oxford-Cambridge boat race.
Laken Gallman
Women’s Soccer

In just three seasons at Cornell, Laken Gallman made an unforgettable mark on women’s soccer. Putting up eight points in her senior season, nine in 2023 and 10 in 2022, Gallman led the team in scoring every year she played.
Gallman joined the team as a walk-on after transferring from the University of Tampa in 2022.
“I trained the whole summer, and my mindset was ‘I’m going to be on this team,’” Gallman said. “At the end of the two week [tryout], they offered me a spot.”
Joining a squad which had one conference victory and scored just 14 goals the year before, Gallman netted five goals in her first season. The next fall, she went on to be the first player since 2014 to notch more than one assist and the first since 2021 to score more than one goal in a single game.
Though she graduated from Cornell last December, Gallman’s athletics journey is far from over, and she plans to play professional soccer. Leaving behind a legacy of camaraderie and support, Gallman hopes to see the team grow in her absence.
“Being in the bottom [of the league] for so long, it’s hard to conjure up a winning mentality,” Gallman said. “We tried to focus on the small things that we could do, and build upon that to get a momentum going.”
Nazir Williams
Men’s Basketball

The men’s basketball team won’t be the same without guard Nazir Williams leading the court with his dominant offensive statistics — in his last season with the Red, Williams posted an impressive 51.2 percent field goal percentage that ranked him 83rd in the country. In the 107 games Williams suited up for, he scored 1,244 points for Cornell. His honors include two time selections to the All-Ivy second team and a spot on the National Association of Basketball Coaches All-North Atlantic District second team.
Williams favorite memory — and one of the men’s basketball team’s best accomplishments in recent memory was their victory against the University of California, Berkeley where the Red’s first-half offensive efforts was the key to its success. Williams contributed 18 points to help the team end its 73-year drought without a win against an Atlantic Coast Conference opponent.
For Williams, his athletic career at Cornell was special because of the people he met and the “tight knit” community of athletes. In addition, Williams emphasized how important discipline and hard work were for him as an athlete.
“It was also an eye open experience because it showed me the amount of discipline that it takes to succeed at anything in life at a high level,” Williams said. “Taking that discipline from the classroom onto the court and vice versa and meeting everyone I was able to … made this experience what it was.”
Ondrej Psenicka
Men’s Ice Hockey

Flying over 4,000 miles from home in Prague, Czech Republic to play college hockey, Ondrej Psenicka’s impact goes beyond the points and goals he amassed in four years. Lynah Rink was often adorned with Czech flags and t-shirts — especially on his senior night, which featured the Cornell Pep Band’s rendition of the Czech national anthem — making Ithaca feel like a second home.
“I would never think that I would be that lucky to get to such a prestigious university like Cornell,” Psenicka said. “[I] still can’t believe it.”
Psenicka — a 6’6” power forward — ended his four years at Cornell with 38 goals and 78 points. He’s posted a handful of notable performances, including his game-winning goal against Boston University at Madison Square Garden in 2023 and a three-point game against Clarkson in this year’s ECAC title game to secure Cornell’s 14th Whitelaw Cup.
After four years in the U.S., Psenicka will return to his home country to continue his professional hockey career. Next year, he’ll play with HC Škoda Plzeň, a club based southwest of Prague in the top Czech elite league, the Extraliga.
“I know everybody says that, but it’s just like, enjoy every moment, because it runs super quickly,” Psenicka said. “I’m happy [with] how I spent my four years here.”
Summer Parker-Hall
Women’s Basketball

Entering her senior year after the Red earned just one conference victory in the 2023-24 season, forward Summer Parker-Hall stepped up as the leader that women’s basketball needed to come back from the bottom of the league.
After averaging 3.0 points per game in her freshman season, she improved to 6.4, then 7.2, until finally Parker-Hall topped the stats sheet with 12.0 average points. Her 55.7 percent field goal percentage reflected her growth in maturity and skill, and she fought to win an average of 5.3 rebounds per game.
Parker-Hall was named to the 2024-25 Ivy League Women’s Basketball Academic All-Ivy team. Her senior season saw the Red improve its conference record to 3-11, winning both contests against Dartmouth and picking up a road victory against Yale, breaking a five-year losing streak against the Bulldogs.
Sydney Beers
Women’s Gymnastics

Records were just numbers to beat for gymnast Sydney Beers. In her career with the Red, Beers broke two Cornell women’s weightlifting records with a 355-pound squat and 240-pound bench. Beers was also leader for the team as a two-time captain.
Beers holds top positions in Cornell’s All-Around Records, ranking in the top five with standout scores in 2022 and 2024. She posted a 39.125 in 2022, and in 2024, secured first, second and fourth all-time with scores of 39.275, 39.225 and 39.150. At the February 14, 2024 Long Island University quad meet, she scored 9.900 on floor and vault, tying for first on the Vault Records and second on the Floor Records.
“My favorite memory of being an athlete at Cornell is competing with my team,” Beers said. “Going to practice every day and living with my teammates as well, we have become a family, which was something super special that I got to experience here.”
She plans to take a gap year and work as a medical scribe before attending physician assistant school the following year.
Tim Rego
Men’s Ice Hockey

Tim Rego’s graduation from Cornell marks a journey five years in the making. Originally a part of the Class of 2024, what was supposed to be Rego’s freshman season — 2020-2021 — was taken away due to the Ivy League and COVID-19 restrictions.
But five years after he was initially supposed to take the ice, a career senior year (8-16-24) capped off a strong four seasons anchoring Cornell’s blue line. Rego’s leadership and reliability aided the Red’s defense to three top-10 finishes in goals against per game, including one season as the nation’s top defense in 2023-2024.
An undrafted defenseman hailing from Mansfield, Massachusetts, Rego will depart the Hill with his Cornell degree and a professional contract. He signed a one-year deal with the Ontario Reign of the American Hockey League, affiliated with the National Hockey League’s Los Angeles Kings.
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College Sports
VIDEO-PHOTO GALLERY: Rotary Club of the Abingtons presents 39th Annual Fourth of July Fireworks Celebration
Rotary Club of the Abingtons presents 39th Annual Fourth of July Fireworks Celebration Macy Brower, 5, of Clarks Summit, looks in a mirror after getting her face painted during the Rotary Club of the Abingtons’ Independence Day celebration on Thursday, July 3. Macy Brower, 5, of Clarks Summit, looks in a mirror […]

Rotary Club of the Abingtons presents 39th Annual Fourth of July Fireworks Celebration

Macy Brower, 5, of Clarks Summit, looks in a mirror after getting her face painted during the Rotary Club of the Abingtons’ Independence Day celebration on Thursday, July 3.
Macy Brower, 5, of Clarks Summit, looks in a mirror after getting her face painted during the Rotary Club of the Abingtons’ Independence Day celebration on Thursday, July 3.
Elizabeth Baumeister | Times Leader

Elizabeth Baumeister | Times Leader

The field at Abington Heights Middle School begins to fill up for the Rotary Club of the Abingtons’ Independence Day celebration Thursday evening, July 3.
Elizabeth Baumeister | Times Leader

People set up their picnic blankets and camp chairs in the field at Abington Heights Middle School for the Rotary Club of the Abingtons’ Independence Day celebration on Thursday evening, July 3.
Elizabeth Baumeister | Times Leader

Event-goers support a raffle to help bring Dolly Parton’s Imagination Library to Lackawanna County.
Elizabeth Baumeister | Times Leader

People explore the edge of the pond shortly before sunset on Thursday evening, July 3, 2025, during the Rotary Club of the Abingtons’ Fourth of July event at Abington Heights Middle School.
Elizabeth Baumeister | Times Leader

The sun sets over the field at Abington Heights Middle school as people gather for the Rotary Club of the Abingtons’ 39th Annual Fourth of July Fireworks Celebration on Thursday, July 3.
Elizabeth Baumeister | Times Leader

The view from the top of the hill at Abington Heights Middle School during the Rotary Club of the Abingtons’ fireworks display on Thursday, July 3.
Elizabeth Baumeister | Times Leader
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NEWTON TWP. — Music. Laughter. Food. Camaraderie. Patriotism. The grounds of Abington Heights Middle School were filled with the makings of community on Thursday, July 3, as the Rotary Club of the Abingtons presented its 39th Annual 4th of July Fireworks Celebration.
Some families spread picnic blankets and folding camp chairs in the damp — but not soaked — grass, despite the rain earlier in the day. Others set up tailgating parties in the parking lot across the road.
Children and teens left their electronic devices behind and started games of tag, tossed balls back and forth and played on the swings. Event-goers partook of a variety of food truck menus from ice cream to pizza. Vendors and entertainers offered raffles, souvenirs, face painting and balloon sculptures. And a team of volunteers from the Rotary and Interact clubs worked with enthusiasm under the hot sun to bring it all about.
After the pink and orange hues of the sunset gave way to darkness, the sky lit up once again with explosions of color as the evening’s headliner — the fireworks display — boomed and popped over the patriotic tunes provided by Rock 107.
After the grand finale, the crowd’s cheers faded and were replaced by car horns and alarms as people searched for their vehicles and slowly made their way onto the road to head home, bringing along a collection of new memories for the ride.
College Sports
Five-star OT Felix Ojo commits to Texas Tech, lands $5M+ deal
Eli LedermanJul 4, 2025, 02:17 PM ET Close Eli Lederman covers college football and recruiting for ESPN.com. He joined ESPN in 2024 after covering the University of Oklahoma for Sellout Crowd and the Tulsa World. Five-star offensive tackle Felix Ojo, No. 20 in the 2026 ESPN 300, committed to Texas Tech on Friday upon signing […]

Five-star offensive tackle Felix Ojo, No. 20 in the 2026 ESPN 300, committed to Texas Tech on Friday upon signing a historic, seven-figure revenue share contract with the Red Raiders, his agent Derrick Shelby of Prestige Management told ESPN.
Ojo, a 6-foot-7, 285-pound prospect from Mansfield, Texas, is ESPN’s No. 4 offensive tackle and second-ranked recruit from the state of Texas in the 2026 class. He chose Texas Tech over Florida, Michigan, Ohio State and Texas following a slate of official visits this spring. Ojo will arrive as the program’s highest-ranked addition since ESPN began ranking high school prospects in the 2006 recruiting cycle.
Per Shelby, Ojo is set to join Texas Tech on a fully guaranteed three-year, $5.1 million contract.
The deal is believed to be one of the largest fully guaranteed revenue-share agreements in college football history under the recently approved federal settlement that allows college programs to pay their athletes directly. Ojo’s deal now rivals the lucrative multiyear package that top-ranked 2026 offensive tackle Jackson Cantwell secured with Miami earlier this year, which sources told ESPN will earn the nation’s No. 3 overall prospect more than $2 million annually with incentives.
“Football is a brutal sport, and athletes are not able to play professionally until their graduating class has been in college three years,” Shelby told ESPN. “It was important to be able to secure Felix Ojo’s future and give him and his family some security as he continues to develop into a first-round NFL draft pick.”
Ojo’s agreement with Texas Tech marks the school’s latest move in a string of significant expenditures over the past year.
ESPN’s Max Olson reported in February that the Red Raiders spent more than $10 million on 17 new players in the winter transfer portal window last December. All told, Texas Tech made 21 portal additions while assembling the nation’s second-ranked transfer class this offseason.
The Red Raiders also made waves last summer when the Matador Club, the school’s NIL collection, helped the softball program land transfer phenom NiJaree Canady from Stanford on a one-year, $1,050,024 deal. Canady, who is also represented by Shelby, signed another seven-figure contract with the Matador Club last month after leading the Red Raiders to their first Women’s College World Series appearance and a national runner-up finish in her debut season with the program.
A multiyear starter at Texas’ Lake Ridge High School and one of the nation’s top offensive line prospects, Ojo marks a seismic recruiting win for Texas Tech head coach Joey McGuire and the Red Raiders.
Ojo will join Texas Tech in 2026 as the program’s first five-star signee since wide receiver Micah Hudson in 2024.
Ojo’s list of official visits this spring included stops at Colorado, Florida, Michigan, Ohio State, Ole Miss, Utah and Texas along with the Red Raiders prior to his pledge. Sources told ESPN that Texas and Utah were among the programs that offered Ojo the most substantial revenue-share contracts in the final stages of his recruitment.
Ojo represents Texas Tech’s first ESPN 300 addition among 18 prospects committed to the program in the 2026 cycle, a group that includes 13 in-state pledges. He lands as a cornerstone commit in a Red Raiders offensive line class that also features a pair of spring pledges in three-star offensive guard Jerald Mays and offensive tackle Jacob Crow.
College Sports
2025 SJC Men’s Soccer Schedule Preview
Story Links STANDISH, Maine – The 2025 Saint Joseph’s College men’s soccer schedule has been announced. With 16 regular-season tilts on the docket, the Royal Blue will open the campaign at home on Friday, August 29th, with a 4:00 PM match-up against NEWMAC foe Wheaton College and conclude the regular season with […]

STANDISH, Maine – The 2025 Saint Joseph’s College men’s soccer schedule has been announced. With 16 regular-season tilts on the docket, the Royal Blue will open the campaign at home on Friday, August 29th, with a 4:00 PM match-up against NEWMAC foe Wheaton College and conclude the regular season with a Great Northeast Athletic Conference (GNAC) contest at Elms College on October 29th.
Led by seventh-year Head Coach Will Pike ’11, the Monks are slated to play 12 GNAC games and four non-conference match-ups this fall. In addition to the opener versus Wheaton, Saint Joseph’s will face all three of Maine’s NESCAC programs—Bates (Sep. 3), Colby (Sep. 16), and Bowdoin (Sep. 23)—in a challenging non-conference slate.
Saint Joseph’s begins GNAC play on Saturday, September 6th, with a 2:00 PM game at Rivier University and, following the September 23rd tilt at Bowdoin, will close the regular season with nine consecutive conference contests.
The 2025 GNAC Tournament begins with quarterfinal action on November 1st and continues with the semifinal and championship rounds on November 4th and 8th, respectively. The tournament champion earns the conference’s automatic berth into the NCAA Division III Tournament, which begins on November 15th.
In 2024, the Monks finished with an 8-8-3 overall record and a 7-5-2 mark in GNAC play. As the #5 seed in the GNAC Tournament, Saint Joseph’s traveled to #4 Emmanuel College for a quarterfinal match up on November 2nd. After a 1-1 draw through 110 minutes of regulation and overtime, the Monks were eliminated in penalty kicks—marking the program’s first first-round exit since 2015.
Games to Watch:
August 29 vs. Wheaton College – Saint Joseph’s opens the season with a new-look roster and hopes of avenging a 5-1 loss to the Lyons last fall in Norton, Mass. The Monks are 0-5-1 all-time against Wheaton.
September 13 at University of Saint Joseph – The Monks face the reigning GNAC Champion in their second conference match of the season. The Blue Jays defeated SJC 3-1 last year in Standish.
October 25 vs. Emmanuel College – Saint Joseph’s seeks redemption following a 2024 GNAC Tournament exit at the hands of the Saints. The contest is the first of four consecutive home games in a 10-day span to close the regular season.
CLOSER LOOK AT 2025 SCHEDULE/OPPONENTS: |
|
---|---|
Total Games: | 16 |
Home/Away/Neutral: | 8 / 8 / 0 |
Opponents’ Overall Record in 2024: | 104-133-55 (.450) |
Monks’ All-Time Record vs. 2025 Foes: | 105-68-13 (.599) |
Longest Current Winning Streak vs. 2025 Opponent: | 16 – Rivier |
Longest Current Losing Streak vs. 2025 Opponent: | 12 – Bates |
2024 NCAA Tournament Teams on 2025 Schedule: | Bowdoin, Saint Joseph (CT) |
First Time Opponent(s) on 2025 Schedule: | None |
2025 GNAC Tournament Dates: | Nov 1 (Quarterfinal), Nov 4 (Semifinal), Nov 8 (Championship) |
2025 NCAA Tournament Dates: | Nov 15 – Dec 7 |
College Sports
Drew Fortescue Makes The Decision To Return To Boston College As He Feels It’s Best For His Development
Peter Carr/The Journal News / USA TODAY NETWORK via Imagn Images One of the big questions going into the New York Rangers’ development camp was the future of Drew Fortescue. Fortescue is one of the Rangers’ most promising defensive, prospects and he’s shown a lot of potential through his two years at Boston College. Advertisement […]

Peter Carr/The Journal News / USA TODAY NETWORK via Imagn Images
One of the big questions going into the New York Rangers’ development camp was the future of Drew Fortescue.
Fortescue is one of the Rangers’ most promising defensive, prospects and he’s shown a lot of potential through his two years at Boston College.
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Instead of making the jump to professional hockey, where he would likely play for the Hartford Wolf Pack of the American Hockey League, Fortescue will return to Boston College for his junior year.
The 20-year-old feels that playing another season at the collegiate level will be best for his overall development.
“I talked to the front office a little bit and kind of just think that’s best for my development going forward,” Fortescue said about his decision to return to Boston College. “Right now I’m just focused on getting bigger and stronger. My plan is to continue to work on that and be ready for the following year.”
The Rangers’ ‘Busy And Exciting’ Offseason Has Been A Grand Success So Far
The Rangers’ ‘Busy And Exciting’ Offseason Has Been A Grand Success So Far New York
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Rangers president and general manager Chris Drury accomplished everything he wanted to do during the 2025 offseason.
The Rangers selected Fortescue in the third round of the 2023 NHL Draft.
This past season playing at Boston College with fellow Rangers prospect Gabe Perreault, Fortescue recorded 11 points in 36 games.
College Sports
College sports enter a “Wild West” era as House settlement rules kick in
This week, elite college sports officially entered a new era, Detroit learned it’s getting a new pro basketball team, and the Pistons made moves to replace a player facing an investigation. Michigan Public sports commentator John U. Bacon joined Morning Edition host Doug Tribou to discuss that and more sports news. Doug Tribou: The House settlement […]

This week, elite college sports officially entered a new era, Detroit learned it’s getting a new pro basketball team, and the Pistons made moves to replace a player facing an investigation.
Michigan Public sports commentator John U. Bacon joined Morning Edition host Doug Tribou to discuss that and more sports news.
Doug Tribou: The House settlement – the legal agreement that creates dramatic changes in college sports – officially kicked in this week – on July 1st. Now colleges can pay their athletes directly, roster limits have changed, and all athletes can be offered a scholarship. What will you be keeping an eye on in the early stages under the new rules?
John U. Bacon: Well, it’s Wild West now, so heads up. The first thing is just a ton of money sloshing around. Now universities have a $20.5-million salary cap, if you will. And they’re going to pay back pay to former athletes of $2.8 billion. What does that mean? Michigan and Michigan State are going to pay it and [Eastern Michigan University], and [Central Michigan University] and Western Michigan are going to have a hard time funding their programs, frankly. So, you’re going to see some programs at the Big Ten level and down, eliminating non-revenue sports.
But that’s not all, Doug. Check this one out. They’re also going to have NIL monitoring of deals — all deals more than $600, which is virtually all of them — to determine what the fair market value is to make sure you’re not overpaying name, image, likeness for your quarterback. What is the fair market value of a Van Gogh painting? Whatever the guy just paid, that’s what it is. So, that’s going to be impossible.
And then, of course, you’ve got the question of, “Are they student athletes or employees?” Now the NCAA still wants to say they’re student-athletes, but I’m willing to bet that the IRS and the courts will say otherwise. So heads up student athletes, you’re about to get taxed.
DT: And there’s all of this carrying over beyond the revenue sports, as well. Beyond the football and basketball teams, you’ve got these dollars being divvied up and trying to cover the [athletes in] non-revenue sports. And the name, image, likeness enforcement plays in there at some level. It’s very complicated.
JUB: What does it all mean? Nobody knows anything. Trust me on this one. Don’t worry about following it. It’s impossible.
But I want to throw this one out there. The NCAA has also abdicated most of its role as rule enforcer. Which is why it was created in 1905. That’s been left to the College Sports Commission, a newly created thing, and the conferences. They’re not going to do much.
So they used to be the sheriffs, the NCAA. Then they became the sheriff and saloon keeper, and now they’re dropping sheriff to focus on saloon keeping, because it turns out that’s a lot more lucrative. There you go.
DT: [Laughs] I’ll try to process that analogy…
JUB: [Laughs] At the bar later.
DT: All right. Let’s turn to the NBA. Malik Beasley set a Pistons’ record for three-pointers last season and helped the team during its historic turnaround. But now he’s the subject of a federal investigation into unusual betting action around a game when he played for Milwaukee in 2024. There are also many reports Beasley has had significant debt issues. He has not been charged – so it’s not fully clear where the investigation’s headed.
In the meantime, Beasley is a free agent and Detroit seems to be moving on and filling in the gaps with some players with local ties…
JUB: And indeed, they do. A couple of things: One, as far as Beasley goes, I can’t say, you can’t say, what’s happened there. But I can say, with so much legalized sports gambling swimming around all these sports, even the college sports, these things are bound to happen more, not less, in the future.
But in the meantime, the Pistons pick up Duncan Robinson, who was a transfer from Williams College, Division III, to Division I Michigan, and now is one of the best three-point shooters in the [NBA]. And Caris LeVert, another Michigan alum who, by the way, was in my class ten years ago when I was earning $10,000 to teach him. And he’s going to earn $29 million for two years. So kids, consider your career path.
The WNBA plans to add a new team in Detroit in 2029. The city was previously home to the Detroit Shock. The team moved away after the 2009 season.
DT: [Laughs] The WNBA is coming back to Detroit. The league announced this week that it’s adding to earlier expansion plans. Detroit’s new franchise will start playing in 2029.
Detroit was previously home to the Shock. The Shock won three WNBA titles in the early 2000s, but after the 2009 season they became the Tulsa Shock and are now the Dallas Wings. What do you make of the news that Detroit will soon have a team again?
JUB: Well, good for Detroit, good for the WNBA. Detroit is a great basketball town and good for Tom Gores, who, of course, owns the Detroit Pistons and is now one of the lead investors on this team as well.
It’s all because [of], frankly, Caitlin Clark. I’ve heard experts say that she is worth $1 billion to this league. So, now is the time to do it. I’ve heard others say that the league is a bubble that’s going to burst, and both could be true. I have no idea. But the timing is good to hop in this pool, I would say. And Gores is doing it.
DT: John, the Tigers remain firmly in first place in the American League Central Division. They’re having a special season so far and that’s in no small part because of pitcher Tarik Skubal. He’s got 10 wins and just 2 losses this season and was absolutely dominant on Sunday against the Twins. Can you give us an idea of how great he’s been so far?
JUB: Well how about this. The greatest in my lifetime so far. I’ve got to go back to Denny McLain, who won 31 games in 1968 — the last major league pitcher to do that, by the way. But I was four and I don’t recall it. So Skubal you’re it, man. Now it’s up to the Tigers to resign him before they lose this singular talent.
Editor’s notes: Some quotes in this article have been edited for length and clarity. You can hear the full conversation near the top of the page.
The University of Michigan holds Michigan Public’s broadcast license.
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