Connect with us

Sports

EAST REGIONAL PREVIEW: Gannon Heads to Michigan to Compete in East Regional

GANNON GOLDEN KNIGHTS at NCAA DIV. II EAST REGIONAL DATE/TIME:  Monday, May 5 to Wednesday, May 7, 2025 I 10:00 a.m. tee time – Monday; 12:10 p.m. tee time – Tuesday; TBD — Wednesday FORMAT: Play 5, score 4 I Allow one Substitution per day COURSE/LOCATION:  The Meadows Golf Club I Allendale, Mich. LIVE SCORING   ERIE, Pa. – […]

Published

on


GANNON GOLDEN KNIGHTS at NCAA DIV. II EAST REGIONAL

DATE/TIME:  Monday, May 5 to Wednesday, May 7, 2025 I 10:00 a.m. tee time – Monday; 12:10 p.m. tee time – Tuesday; TBD — Wednesday

FORMAT: Play 5, score 4 I Allow one Substitution per day

COURSE/LOCATION:  The Meadows Golf Club I Allendale, Mich.

LIVE SCORING

 

ERIE, Pa. – The Gannon women’s golf team will make its fifth consecutive appearance in the NCAA Division II East Regional on Monday, May 5 to Wednesday, May 7. Coach Scott Stano‘s squad claimed an automatic spot in the NCAA playoffs by winning the PSAC championship for the sixth consecutive year last weekend in Kutztown, Pa.

 

Gannon is one of 72 teams nationwide and 18 teams in the East Region to claim a spot in the NCAA Division II Women’s Golf Championships. The Golden Knights are seeded eighth in the 18-team East Regional, which will be played at The Meadows Golf Club in Allendale, Mich. and hosted by No. 2 seed Grand Valley State.

 

Findlay is the No. 1 seed in the regional followed by GVSU. The rest of the top five includes No. 3 Missouri-St. Louis, No. 4 UIndy, and No. 5 Tiffin. The second five includes No. 6 Ferris State, No. 7 Ashland, No. 8 Gannon, No. 9 Wayne State (Mich.), and No. 10 Davenport.

Also included in the East Regional field are Drury, McKendree, Maryville (Mo.), Ohio Dominican, Saginaw Valley State, Franklin Pierce, Glenville State, and Illinois Springfield

Six individuals complete the field: Sydney Hugo, Walsh; Lucia Martin, Charleston (WV); AJ Powell, Wisconsin-Parkside; Abby Wolff, William Jewell; Addie Delcamp, Northwood; and Rockhurst’s Grace Claney.

The top five team finishers in the 54-hole East Regional team competition will advance to the NCAA Division II Women’s Golf Championships on May 13-17 at Boulder Creek Golf Course in Las Vegas, Nev. The top five teams from the East and West Regions and the top four teams in the Central and South along with the top two individuals not on an advancing team will advance to the championships.

 

STANO COMMENTS 

“We’re very excited for the opportunity to compete in this year’s regional,” related Stano. “We have worked hard since August for this tournament. We have started to play better each tournament in the spring and we’re starting to get into a nice groove. We set up a difficult tournament schedule to help prepare us for this tournament. Top to bottom of the team I am so proud of this year’s team.  They believe in one another. They have the focus and determination to put themselves in contention for a spot to move on come Wednesday.”

 

GOLDEN KNIGHTS SHOWCASE SEASONED LINEUP 

Gannon enjoyed another strong season with wins in three events. Stano’s squad has won its last two tournaments, finishing first by 20 strokes in the recent PSAC Championships and prior to that a first-place showing in the Cav Classic.

 

Gannon has now won a PSAC-record six straight PSAC Championships and Ditte Petersen (Dianalund, Denmark/Sorø Akademi Skole) won her third straight individual title, which has also never been done before. Petersen has been named the PSAC Women’s Golf Athlete of the Year the last two years and was previously named the PSAC Freshman of the Year.

 

Petersen’s win in the PSAC Championships also tied her for the career record at Gannon with seven victories. She has three first-place finishes this season and has been in the top five in six of 11 tournaments. The senior from Denmark enters with a 76.0 average over 23 rounds.

 

Fellow senior Andrea Martinez (Tarragona, Spain/Col·legi Vedruna Sagrat Cor) and junior Emily Donahue (Grove City, Pa./Grove City) add experience to the lineup. Martinez, a native of Spain, has a 79.4 average over 23 rounds and recently finished fourth at the Cav Classic. She was also second at the Michael Corbett Fall Classic.

 

Donahue is a junior with an 82.8 average over 20 rounds. She has played some of her best golf this spring to grab a spot in the lineup. Donahue finished in a tie for 12th in the PSAC Championships.

 

Cloe Mateo (Sabadell, Spain/Montcau la Mola) and Alexandria LeCureux (Clarkston, Mich./Clarkston) provide the youth in the lineup. Mateo is a sophomore from Spain and has a 79.1 average in 21 rounds. She owns three top ten finishes and was tied for third at the PSAC Championships.

 

LeCureux is second on the team with a 79.0 average in 23 rounds with five top-five showings. The freshman has six finishes in the top ten and posted her highest showing of the season at the PSAC Championships with a tie for third.   

 

Victoria Colmenares (Santa Cruz, Bolivia/ICL Academy) will serve as Gannon’s substitute. A sophomore from Bolivia, she has an 84.5 average in 13 rounds.      

 

TAKING A LOOK BACK AT THE 2024 EAST REGIONAL

Gannon posted its highest finish ever at the NCAA Division II East Regional. The Golden Knights tied for seventh place in the 15-team regional, missing the last of five qualifying spots for the NCAA finals by just two places and seven strokes.  

 

Ditte Petersen (Dianalund, Denmark/Sorø Akademi Skole) shot a 2-over-par 74 on Wednesday, and the Knights turned in an impressive score of 21-over-par 309 on the tough Prairie View Golf Club course.

 

Gannon tied Ferris State with a three-day score of 949 as the Knights’ scores improved on each of the final two days. After opening in 11th place with a 327 score on Monday, Gannon shot 313 on Tuesday and 309 on Wednesday. Gannon’s 309 was the fourth-best score of the day among the 15 teams.

 

Ditte Petersen (Dianalund, Denmark/Sorø Akademi Skole) was Gannon’s top finisher and also posted a better score each day. Petersen finished in a tie for 11th with scores of 80-77-74 for a 15-over par total of 231.        

 

Cloe Mateo (Sabadell, Spain/Montcau la Mola) (79-85-77) and Andrea Martinez (Tarragona, Spain/Col·legi Vedruna Sagrat Cor) (85-75-81) each finished in a tie for 44th with a 25-over par total of 241. Sarah White (Erie, Pa./Mercyhurst Prep) T48 — 83-80-80—243 +27) and Zoey McClain (Erie, Pa./McDowell) (T56 — 89-81-78—248 +32) completed Gannon’s contingent of golfers.

THE GANNON LINEUP FOR NCAA DIV. II EAST REGIONAL

1. Ditte Petersen (Dianalund, Denmark/Sorø Akademi Skole) (Sr., 76.0 avg. in 23 rounds)     

2. Andrea Martinez (Tarragona, Spain/Col·legi Vedruna Sagrat Cor) (Sr., 79.4 avg. in 23 rounds)        

3. Alexandria LeCureux (Clarkston, Mich./Clarkston) (Fr., 79.0 avg. in 23 rounds)          

4. Cloe Mateo (Sabadell, Spain/Montcau la Mola) (So., 79.1 avg. in 21 rounds)          

5. Emily Donahue (Grove City, Pa./Grove City) (Jr., 82.8 avg. in 20 rounds)

 

Substitute

Victoria Colmenares (Santa Cruz, Bolivia/ICL Academy) (So., 84.5 avg. in 13 rounds)     



Link

Continue Reading
Click to comment

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Sports

Comeback Falls Short in Game Two of Big West Championship

Next Game: at Cal State Fullerton 5/23/2025 | 4:00 P.M. HT ESPN Honolulu May. 23 (Fri) / 4:00 P.M. HT at Cal State Fullerton History FULLERTON, Calif. – The Hawai’i baseball team fell into an early hole then rallied in the late innings before ultimately falling to No. 20 […]

Published

on


FULLERTON, Calif. – The Hawai’i baseball team fell into an early hole then rallied in the late innings before ultimately falling to No. 20 UC Irvine, 7-5, in its second game of the Big West Championship Thursday.
 
The Rainbow Warriors will now play an elimination game Friday at 4 p.m. HT against the loser of the Cal Poly-Cal State Fullerton game. Friday’s elimination game will be UH’s third win-or-go-home game in its last four contests.
 
The Anteaters struck early and often, scoring three runs in the first inning before striking for three in the second sandwiched around a two-run Hawai’i second inning to make it 6-2 early on.
 
UH got its runs in the second via four consecutive hits, the last two of which came on a Kamana Nahaku RBI double and a Draven Nushida run-scoring single.
 
The Hawai’i bullpen did a great job of keeping UH in the game, holding the Anteaters to just one run over the final seven innings. Liam O’Brien and Ethan Thomas each delivered scoreless outings in relief, with O’Brien working three frames and Thomas the next 2.1 to keep the ‘Bows within striking distance.
 
UH would fight back in the seventh, when Ben Zeigler-Namoa hit his second three-run homer of the weekend to pull the Rainbow Warriors within a run at 6-5. The Anteaters added a key insurance run in the ninth, striking with two outs in the frame to make it 7-5.
 
Zeigler-Namoa and Jordan Donahue helped pace the UH offense, with Donahue going 3-for-4 with a run scored while Zeigler-Namoa’s homer was his seventh of the season and second three-run bomb in as many days.
 



Link

Continue Reading

Sports

Emily Ausmus, Tilly Kearns & Ryann Neushul Named Peter J. Cutino Award Finalists

Courtesy: USA Water Polo San Francisco, CA – May 22 – The Olympic Club has announced the women’s finalists for the Peter J. Cutino Award, an iconic honor in NCAA water polo to recognize the best men’s and women’s players each year. The women’s finalists are Emily Ausmus (USC), Tilly Kearns (USC), and Ryann Neushul (Stanford). Emily Ausmus was named MPSF Newcomer of the […]

Published

on


Courtesy: USA Water Polo

San Francisco, CA – May 22 – The Olympic Club has announced the women’s finalists for the Peter J. Cutino Award, an iconic honor in NCAA water polo to recognize the best men’s and women’s players each year. The women’s finalists are Emily Ausmus (USC), Tilly Kearns (USC), and Ryann Neushul (Stanford).

Emily Ausmus was named MPSF Newcomer of the Year and a member of the All-MPSF First Team. The freshman attacker scored in all 34 games for USC to become the fastest Trojan to reach the 100-goal mark on her way to setting a school single-season record with 114 goals. Ausmus also handed out 55 assists, stole the ball 46 times, and went 28-2 on sprints this season. En route to the NCAA Championship game, she scored three goals with two assists and two steals in the national quarterfinal against Harvard.

Tilly Kearns became a three-time All-MPSF First Team honoree this season for USC. The redshirt senior center scored 100 goals and finishes her career ranked third all-time in scoring for the Trojans with 262 goals. In addition to the scoring, Kearns earned 62 exclusions and notched 48 steals on the year. She earned NCAA All-Tournament First Team honors and was instrumental in propelling USC to the NCAA Championship game by scoring five goals and earning six exclusions in the national semifinal against UCLA.

Ryann Neushul was named MPSF Player of the Year and won the NCAA Championship this season with Stanford. The redshirt senior attacker scored 60 goals to push her career total to 228 which stands in fifth place all-time for the Cardinal. She claimed NCAA All-Tournament First Team honors after five goals, four assists, two blocks, and two steals throughout the run to a title. Neushul finishes her career as Stanford’s only four-time NCAA Champion as well as a four-time NCAA All-Tournament Team member and four-time All-MPSF Team selection.

The men’s finalists were announced previously and include Ryder Dodd (UCLA), Max Miller (USC), and Mihailo Vukazic (University of the Pacific).

The Cutino Awards will take place on the evening of Saturday, June 7 at The Olympic Club in San Francisco. The ceremony will be live streamed at Overnght.com. The broadcast will feature interviews with finalists, athletes, coaches plus the Cutino Award ceremony in its entirety. Those interested in attending the awards can register by clicking here.

Established in 1999 by The Olympic Club, the Cutino Award is given annually to the top men’s and women’s NCAA Division I water polo players as voted on by coaches from across the country. The namesake of the award is a legend in United States water polo history, with eight NCAA titles as head coach at Cal. The Olympic Club has a long and distinguished competitive water polo history, a tradition that continues today in the pool with some of the best age-group teams in the world.





Link

Continue Reading

Sports

Celtics ownership group brings aboard major foreign investor – 98.5 The Sports Hub

Bill Chisholm, the incumbent majority stakeholder in the Boston Celtics’ new ownership group, needed to find more investors to front the $6.1 billion cost. This is so he could diminish the percentage his private equity partner was providing. Otherwise, the sale may not have complied with NBA rules. Well, he found more investors, and information […]

Published

on


Bill Chisholm, the incumbent majority stakeholder in the Boston Celtics’ new ownership group, needed to find more investors to front the $6.1 billion cost. This is so he could diminish the percentage his private equity partner was providing. Otherwise, the sale may not have complied with NBA rules.

Well, he found more investors, and information has come out about who his helping Chisholm finalize his purchase of the C’s. As reported by ESPN on Thursday, the second-largest stakeholder in the Celtics will be Indian businessman Aditya Mittal, who contributed $1 billion to the ownership group.

Mittal is the heir to the fortune of his father Lakshmi Mittal, and the CEO of ArcelorMittal, a major steel production and distribution conglomerate.

With his investment, Mittal has the potential to serve as the Celtics’ “alternate governor” at some point during his ownership. However, he has to keep his ownership “passive,” meaning he cannot be the controlling or managing partner, due to the NBA’s rules surrounding foreign investments.

“The new guidelines restrict sovereign funds, which are broadly found in oil-rich Middle Eastern countries, to so-called ‘passive’ ownership, meaning for now they can’t become controlling owners,” wrote Brian Windhorst of ESPN about this specific topic back in 2022.

With Mittal being added into the picture – and as a sizable contributor – the Celtics are now an internationally owned enterprise. It will also be interesting to see how he acts as a benchmark for foreign investors in the NBA going forward.

Luke Graham is a digital sports content co-op for 98.5 the Sports Hub. He is currently a sophomore at Northeastern University studying communications and media studies. Read all his articles here, and follow him on X @LukeGraham05.



Link

Continue Reading

Sports

Former Wisconsin Badgers star joins coaching staff of college volleyball powerhouse

Izzy Ashburn made a name for herself as a dominant setter for the Wisconsin Badgers. She’s quickly parlaying that success into the coaching ranks, joining one of the top college volleyball programs in the country. The Creighton Bluejays announced Wednesday they hired Ashburn as an assistant coach and recruiting coordinator. She’s making the move to […]

Published

on


Izzy Ashburn made a name for herself as a dominant setter for the Wisconsin Badgers.

She’s quickly parlaying that success into the coaching ranks, joining one of the top college volleyball programs in the country.

The Creighton Bluejays announced Wednesday they hired Ashburn as an assistant coach and recruiting coordinator.

She’s making the move to Omaha after coaching this spring for the Indy Ignite in the Pro Volleyball Federation.

Ashburn joins a Creighton program that is transitioning to new head coach Brian Rosen.

“As an athlete, I love her story of taking on any role thrown her way and working tirelessly to become the captain and starting setter at Wisconsin,” Rosen said in a press release. “She knows what it takes to be successful and compete for the goals we are chasing here at Creighton. Her championship pedigree and recent coaching experience at the highest levels will allow her to make an immediate impact on our setter group and team as a whole.”

Ashburn led Wisconsin to a national title in 2021 and holds program records for career aces and matches and sets played.

Her Badgers teams won the Big Ten four times and made four trips to the NCAA Final Four.

Less than two years after her playing career, she’s coaching for a Creighton team that has lost only 13 matches in the last three seasons.

Her Bluejays will be playing volleyball at the Kohl Center next season as part of the Opening Spike Classic, but they won’t actually face the Badgers in either of their games in Madison.



Link

Continue Reading

Sports

OVC selects Nye as 2024

Posted: May 23, 2025 By Mike Lehman, TTU Sports Information & OVC Media Relations BRENTWOOD, Tenn. – The first soccer student-athlete to earn five All-OVC honors, Meredith Nye proved to be a winner on the pitch, in the classroom, and in the community throughout her Tennessee Tech tenure. The Ohio Valley Conference recognized her efforts Friday […]

Published

on

OVC selects Nye as 2024

By Mike Lehman, TTU Sports Information & OVC Media Relations

BRENTWOOD, Tenn. – The first soccer student-athlete to earn five All-OVC honors, Meredith Nye proved to be a winner on the pitch, in the classroom, and in the community throughout her Tennessee Tech tenure. The Ohio Valley Conference recognized her efforts Friday morning, announcing the Golden Eagle midfielder as the league’s Steve Hamilton Sportsmanship Award winner for 2024-25.

The award is given annually to an Ohio Valley Conference male or female student-athlete of junior or senior standing who best exemplifies the characteristics of the late Morehead State student-athlete, coach, and administrator Steve Hamilton. Criteria include significant athletic performance along with good sportsmanship and citizenship. The award is voted on by the Conference’s athletics directors and sports information directors.

Hamilton competed on OVC Championship teams in each of baseball, basketball, and track while at Morehead State. He earned his bachelor’s degree in 1958 and a master’s degree from Morehead State in 1963. He went on to have an 11-year major-league pitching career and coached in the minor leagues before returning to MSU in 1976 to become the head baseball coach. He held that position for 13 years and compiled a 305-275 record while leading the Eagles to five divisional championships and two OVC titles.

He was named Morehead State’s Director of Athletics in July 1988 and served in that position until his death in 1997. As the A.D., Hamilton led the program to success on the field, in facilities, and in the classroom. During his tenure, a weight room was built, an academic counselor for athletes was added, graduation rates of student-athletes improved, and the University won the OVC Academic Achievement Banner four times. Hamilton is the only individual to play in the NCAA Basketball Championship, a Major League Baseball World Series (New York Yankees), and a National Basketball Association Championship Series (Minneapolis Lakers).

A team captain for two seasons for Tech, Nye constantly fostered a competitive and supportive team culture throughout her career in Cookeville. She served two terms as the president of Tech’s Student-Athlete Advisory Committee chapter during her four-year tenure and three seasons as an OVC representative.

Through her athletic prowess, leadership and success in the classroom, Nye was selected as Tech Athletics’ nominee for the Derryberry Award – the University’s top student honor named for long-time University President Everett Derryberry, an inaugural inductee into the OVC Hall of Fame – as well as the program’s Woman of the Year Award winner. Her leadership helped the Golden Eagles achieve every member of the team on the Tech Athletic Director’s Honor Roll.

During her time in Cookeville, she has been active in several advisory roles, serving three seasons on the OVC Awareness Committee, one year on the University Ad Hoc Calendar Committee, and one year on the OVC Sport Management Cabinet. Nye presented the student-athlete initiatives to the OVC leadership at the 2024 Spring Meetings and also spoke with the Tech Board of Trustees in celebration of the women’s soccer team’s conference championships. She was Tech’s selection for the conference’s sportsmanship video that is played before many events.

Nye was a 2024 Maverick Innovators Fellow through the Clouse-Elrod Foundation and worked four years as a leader for the annual Rotary Youth Leadership Awards Camp through Rotary International. In her volunteer efforts, Nye worked with the TTU Food Pantry, Upper Cumberland Habitat for Humanity, Tech’s Window on the World event, the FIRST LEGO League, a Remote Area Medical clinic at Cookeville High School, and as an engineering lab assistant, organized a clothing drive throughout Tech Athletics.

In addition to her athletic scholarship through the soccer program and University academic awards, Nye earned the Ned McWherter Scholarship and the James A. and Roberta Hill Carlen Endowed Memorial Scholarship in Engineering. She received the Engineering Department’s Eminence Award for Distinguished Design in 2023 for her team’s project to win the award was to design two tables for a nine-year-old girl in need.

An eight-time selection for the Dean’s List, Nye was a nine-time member of the Tech Athletic Director’s Honor Roll and three times on the OVC Commissioner’s Honor Roll. In her academic efforts, Nye spent three years as an Athletics academic tutor and as an engineering department tutor, while also teaching swimming lessons and serving as a lifeguard at local community pools.

She was named to the OVC’s All-Newcomer Team in 2020, was an All-OVC Second Team pick in 2020, 2021, 2022, and 2024, and a First-Team selection in 2023. Nye was named to the OVC All-Tournament Team twice in 2023 and 2024.

In addition to her time with the soccer team, she played intramural basketball and was a non-audition member of the Tech Concert Choir, performing in four concerts. Her artistic efforts also extend off campus as she has spent eight years as a professional watercolor artist, specializing in commission-based work.

The Steve Hamilton Sportsmanship Award is being awarded for the 26th time in 2025. Nye is the third Golden Eagle in the last five years and the fifth overall TTU student-athlete to earn the honor, joining Grant Swallows (2001-02), Beth Boden (2007-08), Jamaal Thompson (2020-21), and Seth Carlisle (2002-23).

Other OVC student-athletes nominated for the award included Eastern Illinois’ Chad Smith (soccer), Lindenwood’s Kadence Berry (cross country/track & field), Little Rock’s Anna Dawson (golf), Morehead State’s Lucy Singleton (cross country/track & field) and UT Martin’s Jonathan Xoinis (golf).

Continue Reading

Sports

Women's Soccer Adds Wright for 2025

Story Links WILMINGTON, N.C. – UNCW women’s soccer head coach Chris Neal has added goalkeeper Caelan Wright for the 2025 season. “Caelan has played in the highly competitive ECNL Mid-Atlantic conference over the past few years,” Neal said. “She is ready for the opportunity here at UNCW and will provide competition and depth within our goalkeeping unit. She […]

Published

on

Women's Soccer Adds Wright for 2025

WILMINGTON, N.C. – UNCW women’s soccer head coach Chris Neal has added goalkeeper Caelan Wright for the 2025 season.

“Caelan has played in the highly competitive ECNL Mid-Atlantic conference over the past few years,” Neal said. “She is ready for the opportunity here at UNCW and will provide competition and depth within our goalkeeping unit. She has also been accepted into the Honor’s College at UNCW!”

Wright, a native of Front Royal, Virginia, will arrive in Wilmington as a freshman for the 2025 season. She is a four-year starter and a current senior at Kettle Run High School in Nokesville, Virginia.

During her ongoing senior season, she has captained the Cougars to a 15-0-1 overall record. Wright has recorded shutouts in all 16 matches with 43 saves, an average of 2.7 saves per match. 

Wright played her club career for coach Nadir Moumen and the Fairfax Virginia Union McLean in the Elite Clubs National League. 

She also comes from an athletic family. Her father, Chad, played baseball at Averett University, and her mother, Kerri, played softball at Shenandoah University. 

Print Friendly Version
Continue Reading

Most Viewed Posts

Trending