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Canady tosses 6-hitter as Texas Tech beats Texas 4-3 to set up decisive Game 3 at WCWS

OKLAHOMA CITY — NiJaree Canady scattered six hits and pitched her way out of a seventh-inning jam, and Texas Tech forced a decisive third game in the Women’s College World Series with a 4-3 victory over Texas in Game 2 on Thursday night. The Game 3 showdown on Friday matches teams looking for their first […]

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OKLAHOMA CITY — NiJaree Canady scattered six hits and pitched her way out of a seventh-inning jam, and Texas Tech forced a decisive third game in the Women’s College World Series with a 4-3 victory over Texas in Game 2 on Thursday night.

The Game 3 showdown on Friday matches teams looking for their first national title.

Canady, who allowed a go-ahead, two-run single for Texas while trying to walk a member of the Longhorns in the sixth inning of an eventual 2-1 loss in the series opener on Wednesday, again went the distance for the Red Raiders. She has pitched every inning in the super regionals and World Series and carried a 4-1 lead to the seventh.

But Texas’ Katie Stewart reached on an error by the shortstop and Canady hit Victoria Hunter to put runners on first and second with no outs. Leighann Goode doubled to left center, scoring Stewart and moving Hunter to third. Pinch-hitter Katie Cimusz lined out to left field and Hunter scored to cut the deficit to 4-3.

But Canady got Ashton Mahoney to ground out and struck out Kayden Henry to end the game.

“Last night was a test for us, and we’re growing from everything that happens to us,” Texas Tech coach Gerry Glasco said. “I told them after the game last night we learn 10 times more when we lose than when we win. We learned so much last night, and I think the bottom of seventh, our fortitude and our determination and the way we reacted there at the end was a testament to the toughness they’re acquiring by playing these tough battles.”

Mac Morgan started for Texas and pitched two scoreless innings. Cambria Salmon entered and worked two scoreless before running into trouble in the fifth when Texas Tech loaded the bases with two outs. Salmon then hit Alana Johnson with a pitch to score Raegan Jennings from third and then thew a wild pitch that scored Mihya Davis, giving the Red Raiders a 2-0 lead.

The Longhorns answered in the sixth on a solo home run to left center to make it 2-1.

Texas Tech responded in their half of the sixth off Longhorns reliever Citlay Gutierrez. Demi Elder drew a walk, Victoria Valdez reached on a throwing error that allowed pinch runner Mikayla Garcia to advance to third base. Bailey Lindermuth greeted reliever Teagan Kavan with a sacrifice fly to score Garcia, and Davis reached on a fielding error that brought home Valdez.

“An exciting game. A tough finish to it,” Texas coach Mike White said. “Getting down against NiJa 4-1, we made a good fight to come back, but we got down with some uncharacteristic errors there and some missed plays that they took advantage of, some good base running and everything else.

“We’ve got to come back now and face NiJa again for sure, and we’re going to have to kind of work really hard to get some runs and then obviously shut them down as well.”

Kansas City Chiefs quarterback Patrick Mahomes was on hand to root for the Red Raiders. The Texas Tech alum has been a supporter of the team on social media throughout the season and even gifted team members sports gear, including varsity jackets and sneakers.

Mahomes and his wife, Brittany, were animated and seemingly in full “sports fan” mode throughout the game, watching from a box in the stands. He appeared to be as involved in the game as he was in all his Super Bowl appearances, standing, clapping, yelling and encouraging the Red Raiders, hanging on every pitch.

___

AP sports: https://apnews.com/sports



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On the Air: Brian Anderson’s unlikely rise and future at TNT Sports

Welcome back to “On the Air,” in which Sports Media Watch Podcast co-host Armand Broady will offer in-depth breakdowns of broadcasters’ on-air performance and career journeys, plus chronicle broader trends in the industry. What do former SportsCenter anchor John Anderson and Hall-of-Fame pitcher CC Sabathia have to do with Brian Anderson becoming the voice of […]

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Welcome back to “On the Air,” in which Sports Media Watch Podcast co-host Armand Broady will offer in-depth breakdowns of broadcasters’ on-air performance and career journeys, plus chronicle broader trends in the industry.


What do former SportsCenter anchor John Anderson and Hall-of-Fame pitcher CC Sabathia have to do with Brian Anderson becoming the voice of TNT Sports? As Brian tells it, quite a bit.

It was 2008 and Sabathia’s Milwaukee Brewers were on their way to clinching the franchise’s first playoff berth since 1982. Brian was the team’s TV play-by-play voice while John, a Wisconsin native, kept a watchful eye on the Brewers while doing SportsCenter highlights.

“All of a sudden, Brewers games are on SportsCenter every night and this SportsCenter anchor starts rolling in the sound of me calling these moments,” Brian recalled last year on “The Inside Wisconsin Show,” which John (no relation) co-hosts. “My phone blows up. I said was John Anderson anchoring? Yes. I was like there you go.”

The Brewers’ Wild Card run led to Brian getting a call from TNT Sports executives. In October of that year, he called the Brewers-Phillies National League Division Series for TBS. He has been with the company ever since, covering some of the most significant events in recent sports history.

Anderson was at the TBS microphone in 2010 when Phillies pitcher Roy Halladay threw a no-hitter in game 1 of the NLDS vs. the Reds. He was there in 2018 when then-Red Sox infielder Brock Holt became the first player in MLB history to hit for the cycle in a postseason game. Atlanta Braves fans still remember Anderson’s spirited calls of their 2021 NLCS triumph over the Dodgers.

Anderson was courtside when Warriors G Steph Curry broke the NBA record for career three-point field goals in 2021. He was also on the call in 2023 when LeBron James became the NBA’s all-time leading scorer.

Just last month, Anderson was present for another consequential event, when Carlos Alcaraz defeated Jannik Sinner in a five-set classic to win his second straight Roland-Garros Men’s Final.

Brian Anderson has become to TNT Sports what Mike Tirico is to NBC. He is the network’s trusted lead voice, present at seemingly every major occurrence.


On the surface, Anderson’s rise to the top seems at least somewhat unlikely. He isn’t the son of a broadcast legend like Kenny Albert or Joe Buck. His voice doesn’t thunder like that of a Kevin Harlan or Sean McDonough. He is not a sentimental storyteller like Jim Nantz and he doesn’t exude charisma the way Ian Eagle does.

Anderson’s most winsome trait is his “everyman” temperament. Despite the occasional error — like his missed call of a buzzer-beating shot in the 2019 Purdue-Virginia Elite Eight game — Anderson is well-liked because of his authenticity. One gets the sense that he genuinely enjoys every event he covers and feels privileged to be there.

That unique quality has lifted Anderson to the heights of the industry. And at just 54 years old, his future is promising. Despite losing the NBA, he will continue calling the biggest MLB games for TNT Sports, as well as college basketball regular season and tournament action, plus championship tennis.

Some good fortune may have gotten him his big break, but Anderson’s versatility, passion and enthusiasm figure to keep him on the upper tier of sports broadcasting for many years to come.


Plus: ESPN should invest in Mike Monaco

At just 32 years old, Mike Monaco is already one of ESPN’s most valuable play-by-play announcers. There is no sport he can’t call. Since joining the network in 2019, he has worked MLB, NHL, volleyball, lacrosse, football, softball, the Little League World Series and College World Series.

His most memorable call came in 2022, when Ole Miss took down Oklahoma to win the CWS: “From last four in to last team standing, Ole Miss has won the College World Series!”

Now, he is currently a part of ESPN’s coverage of Wimbledon.

In recent years, ESPN has missed on opportunities to hold on to young play-by-play announcers. At one time, Adam Amin, Jason Benetti and Joe Davis, — three of the industry’s best — worked for ESPN. All three have since left for Fox, and their respective profiles have only grown. Amin, 38, is the network’s #2 MLB announcer; Benetti, 41, is their #2 college football announcer; the Emmy-winning Davis, 37, is the voice of the World Series.

Talent as versatile as Monaco does not come around often. ESPN should learn from prior mistakes and keep him around. He is good enough now to supplant Karl Ravech as the voice of the CWS.



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What Penn State is really buying with Gavin McKenna

Gavin McKenna, the presumptive No. 1 pick in the 2026 NHL Draft, will play his draft eligible season at Penn State. It’s pretty notable, and the biggest exclamation point yet on the changing state of junior hockey after the NCAA ruling back in November that made CHL players now eligible. According to multiple reports, including […]

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Gavin McKenna, the presumptive No. 1 pick in the 2026 NHL Draft, will play his draft eligible season at Penn State.

It’s pretty notable, and the biggest exclamation point yet on the changing state of junior hockey after the NCAA ruling back in November that made CHL players now eligible.

According to multiple reports, including my pal over at Elite Prospects, Cam Robinson, it came down to Penn State or Michigan State, and in the end an NIL package believed to be worth around $700,000 for the season was too much to pass up for McKenna.

It’s a tough break for the Medicine Hat Tigers and the WHL, losing a player that dominated the league as a 16 and 17-year-old, won a WHL title, and would have been a favorite to reach the Memorial Cup, again.

Now when McKenna is drafted first overall next June, instead of his official introduction being “from Medicine Hat….” it’ll be read as “from Penn State.”

Maybe it’s the author and writer in me, maybe I’m out to lunch on this, but I’ve spent a lot of time this past week thinking about the power of that statement, and how that’s really what Penn State is buying with $700,000 of NIL money.

Think about past No. 1 picks and the flashbacks to their draft year, think about how you probably think about Rimouski Océanic more than you ever thought you would because you know Sidney Crosby played and was drafted from there.

Sure, Penn State wants to win a national championship and they are a much better team now after landing McKenna, but national championships aren’t necessarily what drive recruiting and reputation or a program.

If that were the case, Michigan would be struggling to land top recruits after last winning one in 1998.

Western Michigan and Minnesota State can win national championships, but only college hockey’s true power brokers can house (and afford) a No. 1 pick, like Michigan or Boston University have in recent years.

That’s what Penn State is shelling out for McKenna, the perception and imagery that gets you to the front of the sports consciousness. Buying McKenna’s services is buying a spot in hockey history, “from Penn State…” in the draft introduction, the highlights in Penn State’s jersey, it’s an ad buy that in the end will be worth way more than $700,000.

And it pays off in various ways. It sends a message to other recruits, bypassing the typical time required to prove your school is a “path to the pros,” and it also redefines fandom with McKenna as a connector.

Penn State has one of the nation’s largest alumni bases, I’ve been told that by any Penn State alumnus who is happy to brag about their school, and now that base will care about hockey — having a No. 1 pick a “generational player” will do that.

For the hockey program, which only exists because rich alumni have bolstered it to this stage, there’s not at least an inkling of other investment opportunities coming in, a seed has been planted on how Penn State can replace the rest of the Big 10 as the hockey powerhouse.

That’s what Penn State is buying, that’s the upfront investment, and honestly with the right roll of the dice they might be getting it at a discount.



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Connecticut Jr. Rangers’ Ranta Excited For Future With Post University • USPHL

By Joshua Boyd / USPHL.com  Cole Ranta, a two-year USPHL Premier veteran, is working towards what has all the makings of a fantastic college hockey career. Ranta, a 2004-born native of Marquette, Mich., committed just after the conclusion of the 2024-25 season to Post University. Post plays in the only NCAA Division II hockey conference, […]

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By Joshua Boyd / USPHL.com 

Cole Ranta, a two-year USPHL Premier veteran, is working towards what has all the makings of a fantastic college hockey career. Ranta, a 2004-born native of Marquette, Mich., committed just after the conclusion of the 2024-25 season to Post University. Post plays in the only NCAA Division II hockey conference, the Northeast-10 Conference. 

“I started talking to Post about a month before my commitment. I love their hockey, and they put together a very good team every year and I am very excited to become one of them,” said Ranta, who closed up his career as a top player for the Connecticut Jr. Rangers. “Their academics are outstanding and after touring I knew it would be the perfect place for me.”

Ranta completed a 40-game season for the Jr. Rangers, scoring 10 goals and 25 points. With his 2023-24 season playing for the Florida Eels and Hudson Havoc included, he finished with 53 points in 82 regular season games, and he added six points in six career playoff games. 

“CJR helped me become a college level player in many ways. Coach Mike Stanaway puts together a good schedule for the guys and pushes you to the next level to become the best you can possibly be,” said Ranta. “He also helps promote his players a ton, which helps a lot. The USPHL also helps a lot with commitment. The level of play pushes players and shows that they can play at the NCAA level.”

Ranta has a good handle on what it will take to succeed in the college game, and is applying that knowledge to a busy preparation schedule in the summer. 

“In the off-season I want to work on my skating. It is a big factor in anyone’s game and I believe when you have good feet and can get to open ice better, you get more opportunities,” Ranta said. “I also continue to work on faceoffs to try and be the most dominant center.”

The USPHL congratulates Cole Ranta, his family, the Connecticut Jr. Rangers and Post University.  



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Tennessee State Hockey team on ice for now according to report

Tennessee State University’s historic men’s hockey program will delay its debut according to a published report. Originally set to make history as the first ice hockey team at a public Historically Black College or University (HBCU) in the 2025–26 season, the program will now reportedly aim for a 2026–27 launch. As reported by The Tennessean, […]

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Tennessee State University’s historic men’s hockey program will delay its debut according to a published report. Originally set to make history as the first ice hockey team at a public Historically Black College or University (HBCU) in the 2025–26 season, the program will now reportedly aim for a 2026–27 launch.

As reported by The Tennessean, the delay stems from a mix of financial and logistical challenges, including the lack of a home rink, limited fundraising, and broader uncertainty around the university’s financial health. A source familiar with the situation confirmed the postponement, though no official announcement has been made.

The men’s hockey team was first unveiled at Bridgestone Arena in 2023 ahead of the NHL Draft, marking a groundbreaking step for HBCUs and the sport’s diversification. However, the excitement has been tempered by concerns that have built over the past two years.

Tennessee State has faced significant internal turmoil, including leadership turnover, declining enrollment, and budget deficits. Interim President Dwayne Tucker, who took office in December, warned earlier this year that the school would run out of funding without immediate intervention. In response, Tucker developed a five-year financial plan and negotiated with state officials for $96 million in funding, which was approved in June. That money, redirected from infrastructure reserves, is expected to stabilize the university’s operations. It remains unclear if any of those funds will support athletics or the delayed hockey program.

Despite the setbacks, supporters hope the program can regroup and make its long-awaited debut in 2026–27, keeping alive the vision of expanding hockey into new and more diverse communities.

Reporting credit: The Tennessean



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Pair of SNHU Field Hockey Players Named Academic All-American

Story Links Women’s At-Large Academic All-America NORTH ATTLEBORO, Mass. – Annemartine Christis and Emma Peeters of the Southern New Hampshire field hockey program have been selected to the Academic All-America Women’s At-Large teams, as announced by College Sports Communicators (CSC) on Tuesday afternoon.  […]

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NORTH ATTLEBORO, Mass. – Annemartine Christis and Emma Peeters of the Southern New Hampshire field hockey program have been selected to the Academic All-America Women’s At-Large teams, as announced by College Sports Communicators (CSC) on Tuesday afternoon. 

Christis was named to the First Team as a Business Administration major with a 3.89 GPA in her graduate program. Peeters was selected to the Second Team as a Sociology major with a 3.88 GPA. 

Christis was the Northeast 10 Conference and East Region Player of the Year, as she ranked first in all of Division II in goals (30), goals per game (1.50), points (74) and points per game (3.70). She also tied for second in assists with 14 (0.70 per game). Christis became the career leader in goals, assists and points at SNHU during the 2024 season. 

Peeters became the first SNHU player to ever win NE10 Goalkeeper of the Year. She ranked first in Division II in save percentage (.943), third in goals against average (.920) and 10th in saves (102). Peeters posted 10 shutouts for the Penmen in 2024. 

Both Christis and Peeters were named All-Americans by the National Field Hockey Coaches Association (NFHCA). 

The Division II At-Large teams honored 45 student-athletes with eight members of the First Team holding perfect 4.0 GPAs. A total of 16 of the 45 members have 4.0 GPAs either as an undergraduate or a graduate student. The 15-member First Team has a 3.93 cumulative GPA. 

The Division II Academic All-America® program is being financially supported by the NCAA Division II national governance structure to assist CSC with handling the awards fulfillment aspects for the 2024-25 Division II Academic All-America® program.

ABOUT THE NE10

The NE10 is an association of 10 diverse institutions serving student-athletes across 24 NCAA Division II sports. Together we build brilliant futures by embracing the journey of every student-athlete.

Each year, 4,500 of those student-athletes compete in conference championships in 24 sports, making the NE10 the largest DII conference in the country in terms of sport sponsorship. Leading the way in the classroom, on the field and within the community, the NE10 is proud of its comprehensive program and the experience it provides student-athletes.

 

Fans can subscribe via this link to follow NE10 NOW on FloSports this season.  The partnership between the NE10 and FloSports works to provide funds back to the athletic departments of the Northeast-10 Conference in support of student-athletes while promoting the league on a national platform.



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Gavin McKenna, projected 2026 NHL Draft No. 1 pick, commits to Penn State University

Gavin McKenna, the projected No. 1 pick in the 2026 NHL Draft and 2025 CHL Player of the Year, has committed to Penn State University for the 2025-26 season. He announced his choice on the Tuesday evening edition of ESPN’s SportsCenter. McKenna’s decision, which he narrowed down to Penn State or Michigan State (with Denver and […]

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Gavin McKenna, the projected No. 1 pick in the 2026 NHL Draft and 2025 CHL Player of the Year, has committed to Penn State University for the 2025-26 season.

He announced his choice on the Tuesday evening edition of ESPN’s SportsCenter.

McKenna’s decision, which he narrowed down to Penn State or Michigan State (with Denver and Michigan as other considerations), had been widely anticipated for months and marks one of the biggest commitments in college hockey history.

McKenna has dominated the WHL over the last two years. He registered 103 points in 66 combined regular-season and playoff games two years ago, and 173 points split between 76 regular-season, playoff and Memorial Cup games last season, leading the Medicine Hat Tigers to a WHL title while stringing together a 51-game point streak. He was the third-youngest player ever to win CHL Player of the Year (behind Sidney Crosby and John Tavares) and could very well dominate college in a way that Macklin Celebrini, Jack Eichel and Adam Fantilli did, immediately becoming one of the preseason favorites for the Hobey Baker.

With McKenna and top 2026 D prospect Keaton Verhoeff — bound for North Dakota — now committed to play college hockey in their draft year, there is a very real chance that the top two picks in next year’s NHL Draft are both Canadians who chose to play in the NCAA, an indicator of the rapidly-changing landscape in junior and college hockey.

Why McKenna chose Penn State 

Michigan State is a historic program that has been rejuvenated since hiring head coach Adam Nightingale in the spring of 2022, and has assembled a loaded roster full of legitimate NHL prospects. Already a favorite in the Big Ten and nationally heading into the 2025-26 season, landing McKenna could have turned the Spartans into one of college hockey’s all-time juggernauts.

However, Penn State, fresh off its first appearance in the Frozen Four, has emerged as a rival in the now extremely competitive Big Ten and a leading contender for a lot of the top CHL names in this new world of college recruiting. With significant financial backing, Penn State has stepped up with major NIL offers in a push to land premier talent. It’s believed that despite a limited track record of producing NHL players, McKenna valued the opportunity to put his stamp on a program and look to help further lift the school’s college hockey standing under head coach Guy Gadowsky.

The Nittany Lions’ 2025-26 freshman class already included 2025 Blue Jackets first-rounder Jackson Smith and 2024 Flames draft pick Luke Misa. They’ve also added Mac Gadowsky, Guy’s son, who was one of the top players in the transfer portal, and are returning a core that includes Predators prospect Aiden Fink (who finished fourth in college hockey scoring last year) and 2025 Hurricanes second-rounder Charlie Cerrato.

Scouting reports

McKenna was one of the very best players in the CHL this season. He’s an electric forward with truly elite skill and offensive sense. He’s one of the most creative and skilled players I’ve seen in recent years. That McKenna is also a high-end skater who can make his difficult plays at quick tempos gives a lot of confidence about how his game could fare in the NHL. If teams were going to pick him apart, it would be that he’s an average-sized winger who doesn’t have a super high motor, but his talent and scoring are so good that it’s nitpicking. I wouldn’t call him a Macklin Celebrini/Connor Bedard-level prospect, but he’s not far off. — Corey Pronman, senior prospects writer

McKenna is a captivating offensive winger who had one of the most productive age-adjusted seasons in modern CHL history last season. He’s a fabulous, flowing skater with natural straight-line and corner speed, great edges and a rare ability to make plays while flying around out there. He’s impressive at carrying and dodging sticks through neutral ice to create entries. He has a first touch like glue where the puck just lands and sticks to his blade when he’s catching it, even when it’s coming in hot or into compromising positions. He’s a brilliant puck transporter, transition machine and get-out-of-jail-free card who routinely skates pucks out of the zone himself and relieves pressure. McKenna is so shifty with the puck, blending shoulder fakes into his playmaking. He has impressive maneuverability and adjustability from his hips down. He plays pucks into space and leads guys at an advanced level. He shields pucks extremely well from defenders’ sticks. He’s constantly changing directions and keeping defenders off him. He pre-scans and sees and reads the game at an elite level.

When he’s on the ice, the talent divide is always clear, even when he has played with top players. Though he’s a natural playmaker first, he’s also got scoring elements, has tons of pre-shot deception in his movements, attacks the middle and goes downhill, and has been one of the WHL’s leaders in shots on goal since entering the league. He can beat you to the middle or the outside if you give it to him. And while he’s lean, he’s also got a really good stick defensively, taking back and lifting a lot of pucks (though there is the odd time when he doesn’t pick up assignments and can puck watch/drive-by instead of stopping on pucks). He projects as a first-line, star and maybe even superstar winger. — Scott Wheeler, national prospects writer

(Photo: Jonathan Kozub / Getty Images)



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