College Sports
BYU trio among a handful of college basketball players paying it forward
It’s no easy chore for BYU basketball players to escape the program’s soaring expectations, which, like the morning sun, seem to rise brighter each day. Whether it’s Joe Lunardi’s projection as a No. 2 seed for next year’s NCAA Tournament or CBS Sports ranking BYU No. 5 in its preseason poll, the Cougars are hot […]

It’s no easy chore for BYU basketball players to escape the program’s soaring expectations, which, like the morning sun, seem to rise brighter each day. Whether it’s Joe Lunardi’s projection as a No. 2 seed for next year’s NCAA Tournament or CBS Sports ranking BYU No. 5 in its preseason poll, the Cougars are hot and getting hotter.
To get out of the heat, Keba Keita and Khadim Mboup are going to a place that’s even hotter — but for a very cool reason. No one in Senegal or Mali is spending the summer worrying about whether BYU can reach the Final Four. They have weightier issues and fellow countrymen Keita and Mboup are returning home to lighten their load.
A trio of Cougars, including former BYU player Mawot Mag, are joining forces with other college players, including Ibi Traore (Utah) and Malick Diallo (TCU) at next month’s Africa Elite Basketball Camps. The first camp will be in Mboup’s country of Senegal (June 3-4) with the second one set for Mali (June 7-8), where Keita and former Cougar Fousseyni Traore are from.

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“Those boys come back and give back at these (basketball) camps,” Utah businessman Carlos Iglesias told the “Y’s Guys” podcast recently. Iglesias supports the camps for Mike Clayton, who formed the non-profit Mali Wellness Foundation in 2016. “Even the schoolteachers and staff look at these young men and how they have really grown up with their opportunities.”
The initial goodwill missions by the foundation provided Mali with medical and dental services and health education. They also built their first basketball court. Iglesias and his team mixed the cement by hand using shovels and sticks.
“Having kids come to those courts to play basketball gives them a reason to come to school,” Iglesias said. “Most of these courts are at school and school isn’t necessarily mandatory for them. We have to do something to keep these kids in school — so, why not sports?”
In time, those attending the camps, like Keita, Traore and Mboup, earned opportunities to come to the United States to attend high school, play basketball and earn a college degree. Iglesias and his wife Kari are Keita’s American parents. They also assist other players who come to the U.S. through the foundation.
“We do this to help these young men have a future,” Iglesias said. “Their parents are giving up these children for the future of their families and their villages and communities and we are seeing the fruits of our labor that we started in 2016 — to have college graduates start giving back to their communities.”
For Iglesias, as a volunteer board member, his motivation to assist in Mali and Senegal stems from his own childhood, where he was raised by his valiant mother, a Guatemalan immigrant, in the inner-city neighborhoods of Los Angeles.
“We struggled. It’s not a good thing,” he said. “I have always said, ‘If there was a way that I could give back one day, if I could just make enough money to make ends meet, I’m going to try to help people.’
“There is nothing better that touches the human heart than serving others. I don’t care how many problems you have, there are other people dealing with way more.”
There is no guarantee that the Cougars’ preseason hype won’t follow Keita and Mboup halfway around the world and they might even get asked a question or two about the globe’s top recruit AJ Dybantsa.
This is indeed a different time for BYU basketball and for two weeks in June, these two Cougars are pausing on the present to go back in time to inspire the future — mentoring starstruck kids who will stand and shoot at the same baskets where they used to play before someone came to help them.
Dave McCann is a sportswriter and columnist for the Deseret News and is a play-by-play announcer and show host for BYUtv/ESPN+. He co-hosts “Y’s Guys” at ysguys.com and is the author of the children’s book “C is for Cougar,” available at deseretbook.com.
If you would like to support the Africa Elite Basketball Camps, please go to maliwellnessfoundation.org and scroll to sports.
College Sports
Beyond the Byline: Like the flood mud, the memories still stink
WILKES-BARRE — Gone — everything was gone. And it would never come back. It will be 53 years since Hurricane Agnes swept away most of the memories I had of life before June 23, 1972. The mid-1960s to that fateful June day in 1972 really are difficult for me to even want to try […]

WILKES-BARRE — Gone — everything was gone.
And it would never come back.
It will be 53 years since Hurricane Agnes swept away most of the memories I had of life before June 23, 1972.
The mid-1960s to that fateful June day in 1972 really are difficult for me to even want to try to remember. My mom died on the day before Mother’s Day in the year I was to graduate from high school — 1968.
Those were extremely difficult times. My dad and I were lost. We really didn’t know how to cope without my mom around.
So one day my dad asked how I felt about moving out of the only home I had ever known. It was difficult to be in that house after my mom died. Everywhere we looked there were memories — lots of memories that were partially saved in several photo albums we had.
There was the kitchen where my mom cooked and baked and served meals.
And there was the living room where she would hang Christmas garland made out of red-and-green construction paper.
And there was my bedroom where she would serve me ice cream on most mornings before school.
There was the little stand where our black dial telephone sat and where my mom would call Jack’s Market to order that evening’s dinner.
There was her sewing machine in one corner and her jewelry in a drawer by her dressing table.
There was the screen door that led to the front porch where she would sit under the shade of our big maple tree and talk to neighbors across the street.
Too many nights crying myself to sleep, always hoping I would wake up from this nightmare and Mom would be there — for me and Dad.
So we decided to move off the hill, down to Main Street. Before long, as we continued to put our lives back together, the sirens blared on this June night. We went to Aunt Betty’s house on East Shawnee Avenue and waited.
The flood waters came, staying there for days. Finally, the water began to recede. I vividly remember the brownness of the streets and the lawns.
And I clearly recall the stink. It was awful.
Now came the time to return to our apartment on West Main Street. I remember walking in and seeing how everything was just gone. What was left — which wasn’t much — was covered in mud, soaked in river water.
And everything had that stink.
All that was important to us was gone.
Gone were my record albums — of the sixties, man.
Gone were my baseball cards — Mantle, Mays, Koufax, Aaron, Clemente, all the stars of the sixties.
Gone were all my clothes, my diplomas, baseball gloves, sneakers, even my underwear.
It was all gone.
And also gone were all those photo albums. The ones that contained all my connections to my past — the photos of the O’Boyles and the Kraszewskis — all the people I knew growing up and those who were around before I was born.
Pictures of my mom.
All were gone.
All was lost.
And just four years after my dad and I lost the only person we felt we couldn’t live without.
Every street in the floodplain had piles of flood mud-covered garbage stacked out front, waiting for the Army Corps of Engineers to take it to a landfill. Every day, this process continued as everybody’s lifelong memories were piled into dump trucks and taken away.
So don’t be surprised when I tell you that I, for one, cannot celebrate the 53rd anniversary of Agnes.
Not at all.
Living through the Agnes Flood of 1972 was — and still is in a word — humbling.
Here we were, my dad and I, living in a trailer, faced with the task of putting our already broken lives back together.
Never did we miss 210 Reynolds St. as much as we did in the aftermath of Hurricane Agnes.
One more thing that I lost in June 1972 and will never get back is that feeling of security — the feeling of safety found in a mother’s arms. The feeling that no matter what, everything will be okay.
That’s what I lost in May 1968 and then again in June 1972. That’s what most victims of Agnes lost.
I just can’t feel like I did before Agnes — no matter how hard I try.
The brown, muddy, smelly river water clearly showed me the reality of loss.
And like that smell indelibly embedded in my memory bank — it stinks.
Reach Bill O’Boyle at 570-991-6118 or on Twitter @TLBillOBoyle.
College Sports
Penn State Hockey Lands Commitment From Potential First-Round NHL Pick Jackson Smith
Penn State men’s hockey is turning its first run to the Frozen Four into a potential title run next season. The Nittany Lions received a rapid-fire pair of commitments from 5-star players, including top prospect Jackson Smith. The defenseman announced his commitment to Penn State on social media, generating further buzz around coach Guy Gadowsky’s […]

Penn State men’s hockey is turning its first run to the Frozen Four into a potential title run next season. The Nittany Lions received a rapid-fire pair of commitments from 5-star players, including top prospect Jackson Smith. The defenseman announced his commitment to Penn State on social media, generating further buzz around coach Guy Gadowsky’s next team.
“I am excited to announce my commitment to play NCAA Division 1 hockey at Penn State University for the 2025-2026 season,” Smith wrote in an Instagram post. “I want to thank my family, friends and advisors who helped me through this process. I can’t wait to get started in Hockey Valley!”
Smith joins fellow 5-star prospect Pierce Mbuyi in committing to the Nittany Lions recently. Mbuyi was the Ontario Hockey League’s rookie of the year after totaling 52 points (29 points, 23 assists) for the Owen Sound Attack as a 16-year-old. He was a finalist for the Canadian Hockey League’s rookie of the year award. It’s unclear when Mbuyi will begin playing for Penn State.
Penn State gets another first round pick. Jackson Smith, 6’3″ defenseman. Should go around 12-14th overall in this months NHL Draft. Turned 18 in May. pic.twitter.com/aUCgrzSvdN
— BucciOT.Com (@Buccigross) June 15, 2025
Smith, 18, is a highly prized prospect of the 2025 NHL Entry Draft. He recorded 54 points (11 goals, 43 assists) for the Tri-City Americans of the WHL. The 6-3, 190-pound Smith played 130 games for Tri-City over the past two seasons, totaling 18 goals and 83 points.
Smith ranks 10th among draft-eligible prospects, according to ESPN, which projects his ceiling as a top-four defenseman in the NHL. Elsewhere, Smith is a consensus top-15 draft prospect, according to his Elite Prospects profile, which ranks him sixth overall and scouts him as a two-way force.
“Smith’s skating, combined with his handling skill and creativity, often lead to some truly incredible plays,” according to the Elite Prospects draft guide. “He spins off the forecheck, takes the middle, and launches a cross-ice pass through the next layer for a chance. From the point, he steps in, fakes, explodes across, and walks inside for a chance. With seemingly endless creativity, he pulls pucks through defenders’ legs, cuts off the wall, and capitalizes on backdoor passing lanes as they open.”
Since the NCAA announced that CHL players will be eligible to compete this season, Penn State has been active in the market. Smith became the eighth CHL player to commit to the Nittany Lions, according to Sportsnet. And the Nittany Lions might not be done, as they have been linked to Gavin McKenna, the potential No. 1 overall pick of the 2026 NHL Entry Draft.
Penn State has been riding a hot streak since January, when the team rebounded from a winless start to the Big Ten season to make the Frozen Four for the first time in program history. Gadowsky left St. Louis, site of the Frozen Four, energized about the program’s future.
“I think we’re more hopeful because of the lesson that the program learned,” Gadowsky said at the Frozen Four. “And the lesson that we learned isn’t something you can read about and just say, ‘OK, we got it.’ You can’t. You really need to go through it. And the fact that we were so far back, so left for dead and came back to make the Frozen Four, is something I don’t think any of these guys are ever going to forget. I know I’m not. I’m really grateful to be part of this group because of that lesson.”
More Penn State Sports
College Sports
Livvy Dunne shows true colors with custom Paul Skenes jersey at College World Series
Livvy Dunne had joined LSU Tigers fans to watch their College World Series showdown where they defeated Arkansas, falling in love with baseball since beginning her relationship with Paul Skenes Charlie Wilson US Sports Reporter 05:22 ET, 16 Jun 2025 Olivia Dunne and Paul Skenes have been in a relationship for two years(Image: paulskenes/Instagram) Olivia […]

Livvy Dunne had joined LSU Tigers fans to watch their College World Series showdown where they defeated Arkansas, falling in love with baseball since beginning her relationship with Paul Skenes
Olivia Dunne donned a custom-made Paul Skenes jersey with his LSU Tigers and Pittsburgh Pirates colors combined while showing support for her college team.
Dunne and Skenes both met at LSU, where she became the superstar name she is today while competing on their gymnastics team. Skenes emerged as one of college baseball’s best pitchers in recent history – going on to win the National Championship with the school.
Skenes was drafted into the MLB with the first overall pick by the Pirates, and Dunne could now be moving to be closer with her boyfriend, having recently finished her final year of eligibility after graduating from the school.
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Dunne travelled with fans from LSU up to the game in Omaha, Nebraska, while rocking the jersey, and showed it off on her social media platforms.
Dunne, who has more than 13 million followers across her TikTok and Instagram accounts, posted an image showing the front and back of her jersey, with the caption: ‘Party in the front business in the back’.
The college gymnast turned model and Sports Illustrated cover star has been at a number of games in support of Skenes, who has quickly blossomed into one of the best pitchers in all of baseball, and current NL Rookie of the Year.
The couple started dating in June 2023, when Dunne posted a TikTok wearing Paul’s jersey, but didn’t confirm their relationship until August 2023, when the pitcher confirmed it to the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette.
A more reserved personality, Skenes has admitted that he has had to get used to eyes being on him since becoming a baseball superstar and being in a relationship with an a-list model.
While Dunne attends baseball games as often as she does, she has been said to find it difficult at times due to fan attention being on her.
“I do wish she could come to a baseball game and just enjoy it. It does irk me,” Skenes said to the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette. I don’t have any control over it. She really doesn’t either. I’m sure it’ll get better as I go up levels, but that’s something I want for her,” he added.
Just last month, Dunne had openly spoken on having to deal with stalkers. She said on her social media platforms: “I think I’m being stalked and I don’t know what to do. It’s got to the point every single time I go to the airport, there’s a group of at least 10 middle-aged men waiting for me, and they harass me.
“It’s these men that want my autograph. They have a stack of 40 pictures of me or my magazines and they will run after me down the TSA PreCheck line and yell at me if I don’t give them my autograph, it’s insane.
“But they will yell at me and make a scene and the people around me are scared. It’s crazy. Even this morning was a terrible experience.”
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College Sports
Sophie Zemianek makes worldwide connections through hockey and lacrosse | Sports
Norwich University student and BFA-St. Albans graduate, Sophie Zemianek, closed her junior year with the Cadets women’s lacrosse team, who made a historic run in playoffs. Zemianek, who also plays hockey for Norwich’s women’s team, supplemented her hockey season with a trip to Las Vegas, NV, to play for the Puerto Rican women’s team in […]

Norwich University student and BFA-St. Albans graduate, Sophie Zemianek, closed her junior year with the Cadets women’s lacrosse team, who made a historic run in playoffs. Zemianek, who also plays hockey for Norwich’s women’s team, supplemented her hockey season with a trip to Las Vegas, NV, to play for the Puerto Rican women’s team in honor of her grandmother’s heritage.
Q&A with Sophie Zemianek
What will you remember about the historic playoff run with Norwich? Last year, we won our play-in game to get to the quarters for the first time in 10 years. This year, we bounced back higher, and instead of having the play-in game, we got a bye as the No. 2 seed in the Great Northeast Athletic Conference is split into north and south divisions, and we’re in the north. We were the No. 2 seed in the north for the GNAC.
We played the quarter game against Dean with a home advantage for the first time in many years and won 18-6. It was the first time we’d won a quarter since 2012. We went to Johnson and Wales and lost in the semis, which was the first time since 2012 that we’d played in a semifinal.
We had a lot of big firsts, including conference titles, our coach was Coach of the Year for the conference–accolades the school hadn’t seen in a while.
What did you enjoy about being able to make an impact in the playoff run? I was happy to be there and contribute to the team’s success. I scored at least three goals in the game against Dean, but didn’t play as much against Johnson and Wales because of injuries. It’s more about having the opportunity to do something the program hasn’t done for a while and to see the growth. We’ve been focused on building the program step by step and year by year.
What do you enjoy about playing college lacrosse? It’s a great way to reset after hockey season. Hockey is so much fun, but it’s a lot. Lacrosse lets me stay in good condition, meet new people, and keep playing a game I’ve loved for so long. It’s great to stay active and to stay involved with the school.
How do you manage the intensity of the end of the year with lacrosse playoffs? Weather impacts lacrosse with reschedules, so we end up playing into finals week. Last year, we played our final game on graduation day. It got intense with the work on the field, the games, and finals. You have to keep up with lacrosse and be mindful of your timing with everything. The weather also improved, which was really nice. It is nice to step away from finals and be able to get out, take a break, and focus on something else. It can be overwhelming to have the work to do, but the break is good. You have to find the work balance and work it all out. I’ve been able to manage it well with my major. I feel for the nursing and engineering majors who are dealing with clinicals and intense finals.
What did you enjoy about the season as a whole? We lost three games total this season, including playoffs. As a hockey player, I don’t get into the season until halfway through. Of the 19 games played, I played in nine or 10. One of the biggest things about this year was that the team was so welcoming. Even though the hockey players came in late, it felt like we never missed a beat. We were close-knit and enjoyed one another’s company on the field and in the locker room. It was a high-energy team, and it was fun. It was so easy to get to know everyone, and they were so outgoing and happy to play lacrosse. That made it a lot more fun and the hard times easier. Everyone had such a positive perspective on everything.
Why were you also playing hockey in Las Vegas this year? I play hockey for the Puerto Rican Women’s National team, which we’re building. I’ve been part of the team for two years. My older brother Jake did some Puerto Rico lacrosse and then hockey. He told me he thought I’d like getting into it. It’s an opportunity to represent our heritage through our grandmother. My brother Tomas has done some of the showcases, and my older brother Luke is also getting into it. They’re all looking to go to a tournament in August.
I’ve played all over the country– in Florida, New York, Chicago, Vegas, and New Jersey. There are a couple of international events coming up that I may be involved in this year.
The team went to Brazil this year, and we may be returning to South America again; I’d like to go to that one.
What do you enjoy about your Puerto Rico Women’s hockey team teammates? We have athletes from Puerto Rico and those from the United States. You have to have 25 percent Puerto Rican heritage, which I do through my grandmother.
How have the last three years of athletics expanded your worldview? With all of these opportunities to play, I’ve been able to travel much, which I’m grateful for. I’ve had teammates from Canada, Sweden, Austria, France, and the United Kingdom. I have friends who span across the world. Experiencing pieces of those countries through knowing these people gives me a different perspective of what else is out there. Girls bring back food from their home country that we share, and even that gives exposure to a different culture. When you get to know these people personally and work with them daily, it gives you a different perspective of what’s going on around the world.
I gave a University of Vermont puck to one of the girls who lives in Puerto Rico. She tried to give it back to me, but I told her I wanted her to have a little piece of Vermont. She sent me a picture with the puck on a Boogie Board, and it was awesome.
What have you enjoyed about representing your grandmother’s heritage? It’s a lot of fun and has allowed me to travel. It’s given me a greater appreciation of my heritage. When I tell people I play for the team, I get questions. We’re working on becoming an affiliate with the International Ice Hockey Federation and getting an ice rink in Puerto Rico, which would help us become an affiliate. When asked if I’m Puerto Rican, I say yes. I don’t look like it, but my grandmother was born and raised there, and my grandparents live there now. I have a lot of fun with the opportunity, and I’ve met so many people nationally and internationally.
In these tournaments, we’re playing other international teams–Greece, Lebanon, Chile–– and meeting those people has given me connections and friends all over the world.
College Sports
Italian Ice Sports Federation announce first six men’s hockey players to preliminary roster
The Italian Ice Sports Federation have announced six initial players proposed for its preliminary men’s ice hockey roster for the Olympic Winter Games Milano Cortina 2026. They are: Damian Clara, Diego Kostner, Thomas Larkin, Daniel Mantenuto, Tommy Purdeller, and Luca Zanatta. The announcement was made in cooperation with the International Ice Hockey Federation, the National […]

The Italian Ice Sports Federation have announced six initial players proposed for its preliminary men’s ice hockey roster for the Olympic Winter Games Milano Cortina 2026.
They are: Damian Clara, Diego Kostner, Thomas Larkin, Daniel Mantenuto, Tommy Purdeller, and Luca Zanatta.
The announcement was made in cooperation with the International Ice Hockey Federation, the National Hockey League, the National Hockey League Players’ Association, and the International Olympic Committee.
As National Olympic Committees have the exclusive authority for the representation of their respective countries at the Olympic Winter Games, athletes’ participation at Milano Cortina 2026 depends on their NOC selecting them to represent their delegation at the Games.
The men’s tournament at Milano Cortina 2026 is scheduled to take place from 11 to 22 February 2026. The competition will be held at two venues: Milano Santagiulia Ice Hockey Arena, the main 14,000-capacity rink, as well as Milano Rho Ice Hockey Arena with a capacity of 5,700.
Each of the 12 teams has been allocated into three groups of four. Canada, Czechia, Switzerland, and France play in Group A; Finland, Sweden, Slovakia, and hosts Italy are in Group B; while Group C features the United States, Germany, Latvia, and Denmark.
Complete rosters for each team will be announced in the early part of 2026.
Discover a history of the Swedish team at the Winter Olympics below, as well as the prior First 6 players named by the Swedish Ice Hockey Association, Finnish Ice Hockey Association and Latvia Hockey Federation.
College Sports
Recapping Penn State’s June 13-15 official visits | Penn State Football News
As compared to previous weeks, there was a smaller number of official visitors in Happy Valley this past weekend, but there were still some notable players. Overall, nine prospects took their official visit to the Nittany Lions this past weekend, including seven uncommitted targets and two Penn State commits. Here’s a rundown on each player […]

As compared to previous weeks, there was a smaller number of official visitors in Happy Valley this past weekend, but there were still some notable players.
Overall, nine prospects took their official visit to the Nittany Lions this past weekend, including seven uncommitted targets and two Penn State commits.
Here’s a rundown on each player that was in State College.
Uncommitted visitors
247Sports composite 5-star interior offensive lineman Immanuel Iheanacho was the headliner of the weekend for Penn State. He’s the No. 8 player nationally, No. 1 interior offensive lineman and No. 2 player in Maryland.
Iheanacho recently announced his top-four programs — Oregon, LSU, Penn State and Auburn. He also said on X that he’ll be back in town for the White Out game.
Had ah great OV at PSU looking forward to being back at the whiteout game! #WeAre https://t.co/HZ7am0KBiI
— Immanuel Iheanacho ✭ (@immanueli24) June 15, 2025
Brian Bonner, a 4-star running back out of Valencia High School, made the cross-country trek to State College this weekend. He’s the No. 105 player nationally, No. 7 running back and No. 13 player in California.
Bonner announced a top five of Notre Dame, Washington, UCLA and Nebraska in addition to the Nittany Lions back in April.
Four-star tight end Brayden Fogle also visited Penn State after receiving an offer from the team on May 22. He’s the No. 163 player nationally, No. 10 tight end and No. 7 player in Ohio and has been on trips to Georgia and LSU recently.
It’s a six-school race to land 4-star offensive tackle Drew Evers: SMU, Ohio State, LSU, Texas A&M, Penn State and Oklahoma.
The Texas native out of Flower Mound High School is the No. 208 player nationally and No. 27 player in Texas, and he’s visited each of his finalists except for the Aggies so far.
After many defensive line prospects took their official visit to Penn State last week, another had one this weekend in 3-star T-Ron Richardson.
He comes in as the No. 83 defensive lineman and No. 17 player in Virginia. The Hopewell High School product is another recent player to receive a Penn State offer as he announced his on May 21.
Rounding out the list of uncommitted visitors was offensive tackle Charlie Thom, who recently picked up his offer from the Nittany Lions. He’s unranked in the 247Sports composite, but 247Sports rates him as the No. 74 offensive tackle and No. 5 player in Connecticut.
Thom also visited Boston College earlier this month.
Committed visitors
On top of the seven uncommitted visitors, two players that have already pledged to Penn State made the trip up to Happy Valley.
In-state 4-star linebacker Terry Wiggins, a teammate of 2027 priority target Maxwell Hiller at Coatesville Area High School, has been committed to the Nittany Lions since May 2. He’s the No. 24 linebacker and No. 9 player in Pennsylvania.
Three-star interior offensive lineman Benjamin Eziuka committed on June 3, marking the third offensive lineman in Penn State’s 2026 class. He’s the No. 11 player in Michigan.
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