College Sports
Dempsey Scores Twice As Regular Season Concludes
Maggie Steffens and Tara Prentice picked up a big win over Rubi with Sabadell and now prepare for the league semifinals against Barcelona. Maryn Dempsey scored twice and Tenerife defeated Iruna to close regular season play. Dempsey and Tenerife finish the season in ninth place and will look to fend off relegation when they battle […]


Maggie Steffens and Tara Prentice picked up a big win over Rubi with Sabadell and now prepare for the league semifinals against Barcelona. Maryn Dempsey scored twice and Tenerife defeated Iruna to close regular season play. Dempsey and Tenerife finish the season in ninth place and will look to fend off relegation when they battle Rubi in the first round of the play out.
Here’s a look ahead at some important matches featuring Team USA athletes:
Champions League (Quarterfinal Round, Day 5) April 22
Savona at FTC Telekom
Euro Cup (Semifinal Round, Second Leg) April 24
Pro Recco (ITA) at Sabadell (ESP)
Serie A1 (Day 26) April 18-19
Pro Recco vs Brescia
Savona vs Bologna De Akker
TeliMar vs Roma Vis Nova
A1 Ethniki (Winner’s Stage) April 17
Chios vs Panionios
Vouliagmeni vs Apollon Smirnis
División De Honor (Semifinal Round, First Leg) April 27
Sabadell vs Barcelona
Women’s División De Honor (Playoffs/Playout, First Leg) April 26
Sabadell vs Mataro
Tenerife vs Rubi
Women’s A1 Ethniki (Day 22) April 26
Glyfada vs Olympiacos
Panionios vs Ilioupolis
College Sports
IIHF – Boumedienne born to play
He was born in Finland, raised in Sweden, and has lived in the United States for several years now. Just like his father, Josef, Sascha Boumedienne is an international Swedish star in the making—and he’s off to a great start in Frisco with the highest-scoring team the Swedes have ever sent to the U18. But […]

But he wouldn’t be here without his father. Josef was born in Stockholm and then travelled the world playing hockey for nearly 20 years. He played for Sweden at the World Juniors in 1997 and 1998. He played in the NHL with New Jersey, Tampa Bay, and Washington, and he also played in the AHL. He played in Sweden and Finland, and later in his career he played in Switzerland, Slovakia, and Russia. He is his son’s father.
“I wouldn’t be where I am today without my dad,” Sascha enthused in his perfect, unaccented English. “I’m so thankful for everything he’s done for me. He’s by my side every step of the way. We moved to the U.S. as a family, and he’s been by my side the whole time. It’s a privilege to have him as my dad.”
Sascha was born mid-season, on January 17, 2007, in Oulu, Finland, when his dad was playing in the Finnish league with Karpat. He was raised in Sweden, but the family moved to Ohio some five years ago so that Sascha could play in the system of the Blue Jackets. From there he played a year in the USHL, with Younsgtown as preparation for NCAA hockey, and this past season he has had a great year with Boston University.
If it seems like Sascha has worked his whole life on becoming an NHLer, it’s by osmosis, not any specific agenda.
“I don’t think my dad and I ever really talked about [becoming a pro],” Sascha continued. “It was always the only plan. There was never really a plan B. Since day one, I knew I was going to be a hockey player.”
And he’s a good one at that. A defender, he is tall with plenty of body to fill out, and at 18 he is ranked #18 on the NHL’s Central Scouting for North American skaters. Here in Frisco, he is tied for second in tournament scoring with eight points in three games, and he is tied for the tournament lead with seven assists.
Next year, he will almost certainly be back with the Terriers. “I’m going back to BU next year,” he stated emphatically, unconcerned with who drafts him in what position and what plans they might have for him. “I haven’t thought otherwise. That’s my plan, and that’s where I’ll be.”
When he moved overseas, he could have played junior in Canada or NCAA in the U.S., and chose the latter.
“When we moved to the U.S., we didn’t know the difference between NCAA and CHL, coming from Sweden. But playing college hockey at such a high level and seeing guys go on from there to the NHL, and see how skilled they are and how structured they play was amazing. They play the right way. So I thought college hockey, the atmosphere, and you get to go to school as well, I loved it. I’m at BU and have loved every second of it, so it was definitely the right decision for me.”
Despite his father’s travels and now his own at such a young age, Sascha remains firmly connected to Sweden and could never see himself as anything but a Swede.
“I feel 100% Swedish,” he emphasized. “That’s where I was raised most of my life even though obviously I’ve moved around a bit.”
As a hockey player, all this moving around means he has had to adapt to different styles of play, different coaching, different hockey language. No problem. He is a puck polyglot.
“I don’t think the styles are too big of a difference,” he explained. “Swedes are really skilled and have to make good plays with the puck, and they’re good skaters of course, playing on the bigger sheet. But they play a hard-nosed game in America. It’s more direct, to the net, whereas in Sweden you may turn back a couple of times to make the correct play.”
No matter what the style, no matter how the team performs the rest of the way in Frisco, Boumedienne will be part of an NHL organization by the end of June. From there, who knows? But with his personality, pedigree, and ambition, you know he’s moving up in the hockey world.
College Sports
Orange Complete Sweep of Boston College
SYRACUSE, N.Y. – A pair of two-hit performances from Vanessa Flores and Madelyn Lopez helped the Syracuse softball team (27-19, 6-15 ACC) complete a sweep of Boston College (21-26, 5-16 ACC), defeating the Eagles 5-1 on Sunday at Skytop Softball Stadium. The win marked the Orange’s first ACC sweep since the 2023 season. HOW IT HAPPENED: […]

HOW IT HAPPENED:
The Orange broke a scoreless contest in the bottom of the third when Lopez doubled to right, bringing home Kelly Breen for the first run of the day. Kaimi Tulua then came up clutch once again as a pinch hitter, singling to drive in pinch runner Sophia Taliaferro. Flores capped the inning by making it 3-0 with an RBI single that scored Jadyn Burney.
Two innings later, Syracuse extended its lead to 5-0. A throwing error on a bunt by Burney allowed Lopez, who had doubled earlier in the frame, to score. Flores then stepped up again, delivering her second RBI of the afternoon with a double to right-center.
Boston College attempted a comeback, pushing across a run with an RBI single in the top of the sixth, but that was all the offense starter Julianna Verni and the Orange defense would allow. Syracuse secured the 5-1 victory to complete the sweep.
In the circle, Verni threw a complete game, allowing seven hits and just one run while striking out five without issuing a walk.
OF NOTE:
- With the win, Syracuse secured its first ACC series sweep since April 28-29, 2023, when the Orange swept Virginia.
- Syracuse was firing on all cylinders throughout the weekend, finishing the series by outhitting BC 31-17 and outscoring the Eagles 28-4. The Orange also excelled at putting the ball in play, striking out just five times across the three games.
- Lopez turned in one of her best ACC series performances of the season, collecting six hits, six runs, and five RBIs over the three games. The junior continues her historic season for Syracuse, with her current .450 batting average on pace to be the second-highest single-season mark in program history.
- Flores also had a strong series at the plate, finishing with four hits and eight RBIs.
- Verni’s strong outing in the circle earned her first conference win of the season, improving her record to 11-6.
- The win moves Syracuse to 17-22 all-time against BC.
UP NEXT:
Syracuse returns to the diamond next weekend (May 2-4) for a three-game series against Cal. Game one is set for Friday at 3 p.m.
For complete coverage of Syracuse softball, follow us on Facebook (/cusesb), Twitter (@CuseSB) and Instagram (@cusesb).
College Sports
Bloomsburg police investigating abandonment of dog
BLOOMSBURG — Police in Bloomsburg are seeking public assistance to learn the identity of the person who threw a dog out of a truck on East Ninth Street. Police said the driver of a white extended cab pickup truck threw the dog out of the window at about 5:50 a.m. on April 24. The […]

BLOOMSBURG — Police in Bloomsburg are seeking public assistance to learn the identity of the person who threw a dog out of a truck on East Ninth Street.
Police said the driver of a white extended cab pickup truck threw the dog out of the window at about 5:50 a.m. on April 24. The truck was last seen driving toward Poplar Street, police reported.
Anyone who can identify the truck or has information is asked to call Bloomsburg police Officer Ryan Edgar at 570-784-4155 Ext. 166 or by email redgar@bloomsburgpa.org.
Reach Ed Lewis at 570-991-6116 or on Twitter @TLEdLewis.
College Sports
2025 NCHC Play of the Year Tournament: Final – Day 9
Story Links We’ve reached the championship match-up in the 2024-25 NCHC Play of the Year Tournament, with the final round of fan voting now available on Monday. The championship pits a pair of overtime game-winners against each other. Squaring off in the final match-up is Omaha forward Cameron Mitchell, who scores the overtime […]

We’ve reached the championship match-up in the 2024-25 NCHC Play of the Year Tournament, with the final round of fan voting now available on Monday. The championship pits a pair of overtime game-winners against each other.
Squaring off in the final match-up is Omaha forward Cameron Mitchell, who scores the overtime game-winner against Holy Cross with a nice deke at the 2025 Cactus Cup in Week 12, going up against Western Michigan forward Alex Bump, who makes a strong defensive play and snipes a goal in double overtime to win the 2025 Frozen Faceoff for the Broncos against Denver.
Winning our second semifinal on Friday was WMU’s Bump, who advanced past Arizona State forward Artem Shlaine with 57 percent of the more than 1,100 votes cast.
Video of today’s championship match-up is below with the poll to vote below the video. Voting will remain open until Wednesday at 2 p.m. ET/1 p.m. CT, with the Play of the Year winner announced shortly after on social media and NCHChockey.com. The entire bracket can be seen at the bottom of the page.
CAMERON MITCHELL vs. ALEX BUMP
NCHC Poll

–#NCHChockey–
College Sports
Coach Schafer ’86 imparts hockey-infused wisdom in ‘Last Lecture’
Sullivan Mack ’25 had heard it all before. The third-leading scorer on this year’s Cornell men’s hockey team, Mack has absorbed four years of inspirational, passionate, occasionally profane and always brutally honest locker-room talks from Mike Schafer ’86, the soon-to-be-retired Jay R. Bloom ’77 Head Coach of Men’s Hockey. So when fellow members of a senior […]

Sullivan Mack ’25 had heard it all before.
The third-leading scorer on this year’s Cornell men’s hockey team, Mack has absorbed four years of inspirational, passionate, occasionally profane and always brutally honest locker-room talks from Mike Schafer ’86, the soon-to-be-retired Jay R. Bloom ’77 Head Coach of Men’s Hockey.
So when fellow members of a senior honor society asked Mack if he thought Schafer would be up for delivering the latest installment in Cornell’s “Last Lecture” series, he gave it a shot.
“I mean, he’s given us some of the best pre-game speeches that I’ve been a part of, so I thought for him to be able to talk to the general student body would be an awesome opportunity,” said Mack, a forward from Anchorage, Alaska, who is bound for the American Hockey League.
Schafer agreed, and in the process undoubtedly made some “Last Lecture” history: This “last” lecture was also the lecturer’s first.
“Intimidating” is how Schafer – who last month coached his final game in a remarkable 30-year career at his alma mater – characterized the prospect of giving a lecture in an academic setting, which he did April 23 in Baker Lab.
The Last Lecture series, which began three decades ago and resumed this past fall following a five-year hiatus due to COVID, invites a respected professor or staff member to give a lecture as if it were their final one.
“When I talk to our players, or our alumni, when I talk for fundraising, that’s a little bit of a different venue,” he said. “I’m an expert in hockey and Cornell hockey, so it makes it a lot easier.
“But to really think about what you’d say in your ‘last lecture,’” he said, “and try to piece that all together with all the different things that you try to teach your players throughout the course of a four-year career is kind of intimidating.”
Schafer needn’t have worried. He had a rapt audience of students, student-athletes (including several of his own players), a professor or two and some alumni, many dressed in “Lynah Faithful” regalia.
“It was a huge honor to host Coach Schafer,” said Avery Look ’25, a biological sciences major from Queens and a member of the society that invited Schafer. “During our speaker selection process, we thought it was important to find someone who can bring people together and leave an audience inspired. With hockey being a huge part of Cornell culture and this being his final semester with the team, choosing Coach Schafer was a no-brainer.”
Among the approximately 600 in attendance – including around 100 in an overflow room, watching on Zoom – were his coaching compatriots: Casey Jones ’90, who will take over for Schafer behind the Big Red men’s bench next season; and Doug Derraugh ’91, the Everett Family Head Coach of Women’s Ice Hockey.
With no notes and no script, Schafer spoke “from the heart,” he said, touching on the lessons he learned both as the youngest of nine children growing up in Durham, Ontario; as a small-town kid arriving in 1982 at a major university, the first from his family to go to college; and as a defenseman for the Big Red.
“I still remember being at North Campus,” he said, “listening to all these kids talk about their achievements, and how smart they were, and I was like, ‘Oh, my God, I don’t belong here.’”
He soon proved that he did – earning athletic and academic awards from Cornell and ECAC Hockey, serving as team captain for two years and graduating from the College of Agriculture and Life Sciences with a degree in business management and marketing.
With a diploma in his hand but hockey in his blood, he stayed on East Hill for four years as an assistant coach under Brian McCutcheon ’71 before realizing “I needed to leave … I needed a challenge.” He headed to Kalamazoo, Michigan, to become an assistant coach at Western Michigan University.
After five years in the Midwest, Schafer returned to Cornell in 1995 and embarked on a coaching journey that included 561 victories (second all-time among Cornell coaches in any sport), 15 NCAA Tournament appearances, seven ECAC Hockey Tournament championships and six regular-season conference titles.
Schafer spoke passionately for nearly an hour, touching on themes of hard work; having a “growth mindset” – focusing on the process of getting better instead of the result you’re seeking; and what it means to be a contributor to your group, team, family and society.
“Go for the money, have success – but what are you going to do with it?” he asked. “Are you going to help others? Are you going to be in service to others? Are you going to use it wisely and be a strong person in your community? Those are things we talk about with our guys.”
He spoke of the legacy a person will leave, regardless of the records set, the championships won, the acclaim received.
“I just moved all my stuff out of my office – championship rings, coach of the year awards,” he said. “You know where they are? Where my wife (Diane ’86) put all my awards from college: in a bin in the basement, on a shelf. So the awards really mean nothing, in the sense of, ‘But how did I do it?’”
One of his closing themes was leadership – the fact that making the right decision for the organization is more important than trying to keep everyone happy. A tough decision will always make someone unhappy, Schafer said.
“I always thought, make the right decision, what your gut says, and live with it,” he said, “because then you can put your head down to sleep at night.”
College Sports
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