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
Arena authority awaits appraisal on parcel before negotiations can resume on sale
WILKES-BARRE TWP. — Following a 15-minute executive session on Wednesday, the Luzerne County Convention Center Authority board said negotiations are continuing on the sale of a 7-parcel that would bring another hotel to the area. Authority Board Chair Patrick Patte Jr. said the authority’s solicitor Christopher Slusser said an appraisal of the property should […]

WILKES-BARRE TWP. — Following a 15-minute executive session on Wednesday, the Luzerne County Convention Center Authority board said negotiations are continuing on the sale of a 7-parcel that would bring another hotel to the area.
Authority Board Chair Patrick Patte Jr. said the authority’s solicitor Christopher Slusser said an appraisal of the property should be completed within one week, then negotiations would resume with Sonny Singh of ONVB, regarding his request to purchase the land from the arena authority to build a second hotel.
Singh built a Residence Inn extended-stay hotel four years ago, and this parcel adjoins that site. The authority has stated it hopes to get at least $1 million for the property.
In other business on Wednesday, the board:
• Approved a $1.3 million contract with CMTA, Inc., for a cooling tower for its HVAC system. Steve Poremba, ASM Global’s general manager, said the arena will not have air conditioning during the length of the project, which will begin July 21 and run through August Poremba said the arena will not host any events during that time. The board decided to consolidate its July and August meetings to one on July 30.
Poremba said the next live show at the arena will be Cole Swindell on Saturday, Sept. 13.
• Approved a citation in memory of the late Tom Woods, who passed away in May. Woods served on the board since May 2014, and he was lauded for his dedicated service and significant contributions to the arena authority. The board will attend a service for Woods on Saturday, June 21.
• Discussed the process for filling Woods’ seat on the board, Luzerne County Council will fill the seat at a future meeting. Up to seven citizens will be considered for appointment.
Three citizens already were on the eligibility list because they were publicly interviewed by council’s Authorities, Boards and Commissions Committee in the past — William Barrett, Scott Letcher and Michelle Reilly.
Four more citizens have completed interviews and are in the screening phase to ensure they meet eligibility requirements, according to the county. They are Charles Jones, Vincent Argenio, Joseph Jones and Carl Kuren.
• Approved $281,000 for an air handler unit.
Reach Bill O’Boyle at 570-991-6118 or on Twitter @TLBillOBoyle. Jennifer Learn-Andes contributed to this report.
College Sports
Longtime Ohio State football SID Jerry Emig to retire after ’25 season
Ohio State sports information director Jerry Emig will retire after the 2025 season, the school has announced. Emig, 64, has been the primary spokesman for the Buckeyes football program since 2011. He served in a similar capacity in 1998 and ’99. In all, Emig has worked for OSU for 23 years. “When you get into […]

Ohio State sports information director Jerry Emig will retire after the 2025 season, the school has announced.
Emig, 64, has been the primary spokesman for the Buckeyes football program since 2011. He served in a similar capacity in 1998 and ’99. In all, Emig has worked for OSU for 23 years.
“When you get into your 60s, you realize, or at least I did, that life is short,” Emig told The Dispatch. “There are things I want to do. Nothing crazy, but there are things I want to do. I feel great, and I’m thrilled about the 33-year career I had in sports information.”
Ohio State also announced the retirement of senior deputy director of athletics Janine Oman. She oversees OSU’s lacrosse and volleyball programs, as well as women’s soccer, women’s ice hockey and rowing.
Emig will retire at the end of February 2026. Emig is regarded as one of the premier SIDs in college football, handling one of the largest beats in American sports at any level. In 2017, Ohio State’s football sports information staff received the Super 11 Award from the Football Writers Association of America for SID excellence.
“He is a great man,” former OSU football coach Urban Meyer said. “I love the guy. He was great to work with and I’ll always appreciate the behind-the-scenes effort he gave to myself, our staff, and most importantly, our players.”
In a statement, athletic director Ross Bjork said, “As the leader of our communications team, Jerry has been a consistent and passionate advocate for our student-athletes, ensuring their stories are shared with authenticity and pride. His dedication to preserving and promoting the history of Buckeye athletics is truly commendable.”
A Minnesota native, Emig graduated from Murray State in Kentucky before beginning his SID career at Southern Illinois-Carbondale for three years. He spent six years at Temple University in Philadelphia before coming to Ohio State in 2007. Emig worked at a private public relations firm for seven years before returning to OSU.
Emig and his wife, Jody, have three children – daughter Shelby and sons Roman and A.J.
“I thank her for support all these years,” Emig said of Jody. “She has been a terrific wife and mother, and this wouldn’t have happened without her.”
Ohio State has been among college football’s elite during Emig’s time as SID. He listed as highlights the win over Alabama on the way to the 2014 College Football Playoff championship, last year’s playoff run to the national title, the win over Clemson in the 2019 CFP, as well as having five Heisman Trophy finalists and numerous All-Americans.
“We have worked together to try to make our very competitive, very populated environment as professional as possible for our players and coaches and also for (the media),” Emig said. “That’s been rewarding.”
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Ohio State football beat writer Bill Rabinowitz can be reached at brabinowitz@dispatch.com or on bluesky at billrabinowitz@bsky.social.
College Sports
Sarah Nurse | Ice Hockey, Olympics, Age, Parents, & College
Table of Contents Table of Contents Ask the Chatbot Top Questions What Olympic medals has Sarah Nurse won? Sarah Nurse won a silver medal at the 2018 Pyeongchang Olympics and a gold medal at the 2022 Beijing Olympics. What record did Sarah Nurse set during the 2022 Beijing Olympics? During the 2022 Beijing Olympics, Sarah […]

Top Questions
What Olympic medals has Sarah Nurse won?
What Olympic medals has Sarah Nurse won?
What record did Sarah Nurse set during the 2022 Beijing Olympics?
What record did Sarah Nurse set during the 2022 Beijing Olympics?
What is the Professional Women’s Hockey League (PWHL)?
What is the Professional Women’s Hockey League (PWHL)?
What advocacy work does Sarah Nurse do?
What advocacy work does Sarah Nurse do?
Who are some of Sarah Nurse’s athletic relatives?
Who are some of Sarah Nurse’s athletic relatives?
Sarah Nurse (born January 4, 1995, Burlington, Ontario, Canada) is a professional Canadian ice hockey forward who plays in the Professional Women’s Hockey League (PWHL). She was a member of the Toronto Sceptres (2024–25) and joined a new expansion team in Vancouver starting with the 2025–26 season. Nurse has also been a leading member of her country’s national women’s team, helping Canada take home the silver medal at the 2018 Pyeongchang Olympics and the gold medal at the 2022 Beijing Olympics. During the latter tournament, she recorded 18 points (five goals and 13 assists), which set a single-tournament scoring record, and she became the first Black athlete to win an Olympic gold in women’s hockey.
Early life and family
Nurse is the eldest of three children born to Michelle and Roger Nurse. Her father and his family immigrated to Canada from Trinidad in 1970, when he was a child. Sarah Nurse was raised in Hamilton, Ontario, where she learned to ice skate at age three and began playing hockey two years later. In 2002, when she was seven years old, Nurse watched the Canadian women’s ice hockey team, led by Hayley Wickenheiser, win gold at the Salt Lake City Winter Games and told her family that she would play in the Olympics one day.
Another source of inspiration for Nurse were the numerous accomplished athletes in her family tree. Her father was a national-level lacrosse player and then a middle-school teacher and coach; her uncle Richard Nurse was a wide receiver for the Hamilton Tiger-Cats, a professional Canadian football team, and is married to Cathy Doucette Nurse, who was a star basketball player at McMaster University; and her aunt Raquel-Ann (“Roxi”) Nurse McNabb was a point guard on Syracuse University’s women’s basketball team and is married to former Philadelphia Eagles quarterback Donovan McNabb. Moreover, Sarah Nurse’s cousins include Kia Nurse, a WNBA All-Star and three-time Olympian, and Darnell Nurse, a defenseman for the Edmonton Oilers.
Amateur and college career
In 2004 Nurse began playing organized hockey on a youth team in the Hamilton City Hub League. Later she developed into a promising athlete on the Stoney Creek Junior Sabres of the Provincial Women’s Hockey League, leading that league in goals during the 2012–13 season.
Nurse elected to play college ice hockey at the University of Wisconsin. She led the Badgers to the NCAA Frozen Four (the hockey equivalent of March Madness’s Final Four) four years in a row (2014–17) and helped the team win three consecutive Western Collegiate Hockey Association (WCHA) championships (2015–17). In addition, she was named to the All-WCHA Rookie Team her freshman year. She graduated in 2018 with a degree in business administration.
Canadian national teams
Nurse has also played for Canada’s national ice hockey teams. She made her first international appearance with Team Canada at the 2013 International Ice Hockey Federation (IIHF) U18 (Under-18) Women’s World Championship, helping the squad secure the gold medal. Two years later she was a member of the U22 National Women’s Development Team, which won the gold medal at the Nations Cup. Also in 2015 she made her debut with the main national team, which took the silver medal at the Four Nations Cup. Nurse was also on the teams that captured silvers at the Four Nations Cups in 2017 and 2018.
In 2018 Nurse was named to the Canadian Olympic team at the Pyeongchang Games. She scored a game-winning goal that helped put Canada through to the semifinals, and they went on to secure the silver medal, although that result was nevertheless considered a disappointment, as it was the first time the Canadian women’s team had not won gold at the Olympics since 1998. Nurse then participated with Team Canada at the senior IIHF Women’s World Championships, which won bronze in 2019 and gold in 2021 and 2022.
Nurse rejoined the Canadian Olympic squad at the 2022 Winter Games in Beijing. Among her starring performances were a hat trick (scoring three goals) in a 11–1 defeat of Finland in a preliminary round and a goal and an assist in the gold medal final 3–2 victory over the United States. Nurse’s run, during which she broke the single-Olympics points record and became the first Black woman to win an ice hockey gold medal, was all the more remarkable because she had suffered a knee injury leading up to the competition and had been unable to practice with the team until less than two months before it began.
Professional career
Concurrent with her national team career, Nurse has also participated in professional ice hockey. After graduating from Wisconsin in 2018, she was drafted second overall by the Toronto Furies of the Canadian Women’s Hockey League (CWHL). In her debut season (2018–19), she earned 26 points (14 goals and 12 assists) over 26 games. However, the CWHL—which did not pay players full-time salaries—collapsed at the end of the season because of a lack of funds. Nurse then joined with other players to form the nonprofit Professional Women’s Hockey Player’s Association (PWHPA) to protest the lack of adequate pay and other working conditions in existing leagues and to advocate for the creation of a viable, economically secure future for the sport.
Over the next several years, Nurse competed with other prominent hockey players in PWHPA-organized exhibition tournaments in Canada and the United States to build support for the establishment of a new professional league. That goal was realized in 2023, when the PWHL was formed. Nurse was a founding member of the PWHL Players’ Association and a key voice in the negotiation process with the new league, which led to a collective bargaining agreement ensuring adequate pay and benefits for players.
Nurse was among the first 18 players to sign to the league, inking a three-year contract with the Toronto Sceptres. During the inaugural season, held January–May 2024, she played in all 24 regular season games and accumulated 23 points (11 goals and 12 assists). Her production dipped to 14 points (6 goals and 8 assists) in the second season, held November 2024–May 2025. In the offseason Nurse was signed by the new PWHL team in Vancouver that will join the league in the 2025–26 season.
Advocacy and other ventures
In addition to her work organizing and promoting women’s ice hockey, Nurse has been a vocal advocate for diversity, equity, and inclusion in the sport. These efforts include initiating a program to mentor young Black female ice hockey players. In 2020 Mattel, Inc., released a limited-edition Barbie doll in her likeness, and all proceeds were donated to a nonprofit that advocates for girls’ participation in youth hockey.
Nurse has also become a prominent public figure through her appearance in advertisements and endorsement deals. In 2022 she became the first woman to be featured on the cover of an EA Sports hockey video game, NHL 23.
Laura Payne
College Sports
CC Releases 2025-26 Hockey Schedule
Story Links 2025-26 Hockey Schedule (web) 2025-26 Hockey Schedule (pdf) Colorado College has released its 2025-26 hockey schedule, again playing one of the most demanding slates in the country. The Tigers will play 10 games this upcoming season against teams […]

Colorado College has released its 2025-26 hockey schedule, again playing one of the most demanding slates in the country. The Tigers will play 10 games this upcoming season against teams that competed in the 2025 NCAA Tournament and 17 against teams that were ranked in the final 2024-25 USCHO Top-20 poll.
The Tigers open the regular season by hosting NCAA tournament teams UConn, Oct. 3-4, and Bentley, Oct. 10, at Ed Robson Arena.
The Pikes Peak Trophy, housed at CC since 2018, will be contested in a one-game series against Air Force on Oct. 11 at Cadet Ice Arena.
The Tigers travel to Northern Michigan (Oct. 17-18) before opening play in the NCHC against Omaha on Oct. 31-Nov. 1, at Robson Arena. Following a weekend series at Arizona State (Nov. 7-8), the first two games in the Battle for the Gold Pan against 2025 national semifinalist Denver will take place on Nov. 14, at Magness Arena and Nov. 15, at Robson Arena.
Back-to-back home series’ against Minnesota Duluth (Nov. 21-22) and NCAA tournament qualifier Providence (Nov. 28-29) precede the final weekend of the calendar year at Miami on Dec. 12-13.
Following the final non-conference series of the season at Augustana on Jan. 2-3, Colorado College plays 14 league games, starting with a series at home against North Dakota (Jan. 9-10), followed by a pair of games at Omaha on Jan. 23-24. In between those weekends is an exhibition game against Simon Fraser (Canada) on Saturday, Jan. 17, at Robson Arena.
During the second half of the season, CC will also host Arizona State (Jan. 30-31) and defending national champion Western Michigan (Feb. 20-21), and travel to St. Cloud State (Feb. 13-14) and Minnesota Duluth (Feb. 27-28).
For the first time since 2017-18, the Gold Pan series will not conclude on the final weekend of the regular season. CC and DU will face off at Robson Arena on Feb. 6 and Magness Arena on Feb. 7.
Colorado College will not host St. Cloud State and Miami or travel to North Dakota and Western Michigan in ’25-26.
Following the regular season, the new NCHC playoff format will take place over three weeks entirely on campus sites. Like in 2025, only the top eight teams in the final standings will make the NCHC Tournament, with best-of-three quarterfinal series set for March 6-8, 2026, at the four highest seeds.
The four quarterfinal series winners are then re-seeded with the two highest remaining seeds hosting single-game semifinals the following Saturday (March 14). The NCHC championship game will then be held the following Friday or Saturday (March 20 or 21) at the highest remaining seed, with the exact date still to be determined.
The 2026 NCAA Tournament begins on March 26, while the NCAA Frozen Four will be held in Las Vegas, Nev., April 9-11. The NCHC has produced the national champion in seven of the last nine seasons.
Colorado College has sold out every home game at Robson Arena since opening in October 2021. If interested in CC Hockey Season Tickets for the 2025-26 season, go to www.cctigers.com/tickets to get on the official season ticket waitlist.
The 2025-26 television schedule will be announced at a later date.
College Sports
Cornell Hockey Schedule Tracker: What We Know About the Men’s and Women’s Hockey 2025-2026 Schedules
Though men’s and women’s hockey’s full schedules will not be released until later on this summer, other teams around the NCAA have announced their 2025-2026 slates, giving us a better idea of what next season will look like for both teams. This article tracks the status of next season’s schedules for Cornell men’s and women’s […]

Though men’s and women’s hockey’s full schedules will not be released until later on this summer, other teams around the NCAA have announced their 2025-2026 slates, giving us a better idea of what next season will look like for both teams.
This article tracks the status of next season’s schedules for Cornell men’s and women’s hockey. It will be updated as new information is released and when the final schedules are ultimately made public.
On Tuesday, June 11 and Wednesday, June 12, the ECAC released the entire women’s and men’s hockey schedules. The remaining out of conference matchups for both teams will be confirmed by Cornell Athletics later this summer.
Men’s Hockey
Oct. 31-Nov. 1: at University of Massachusetts Amherst
Nov. 7-Nov. 8: at Harvard, at Dartmouth
Nov. 14-Nov. 15: vs. Brown, vs. Yale
Nov. 21-Nov. 22: vs. Union, vs. Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute
Nov. 29: vs. Boston University (at Madison Square Garden)
Dec. 5-Dec. 6: at Clarkson, at St. Lawrence
Jan. 2-Jan. 3: vs. University of Nebraska Omaha
Jan. 16-Jan. 17: vs. Princeton, vs. Quinnipiac
Jan. 23-Jan. 24: vs. Dartmouth, vs. Harvard
Jan. 30-Jan. 31: at Yale, at Brown
Feb. 6-Feb. 7: at Colgate, vs. Colgate
Feb. 13-Feb. 14: at RPI, at Union
Feb. 20-Feb. 21: at Quinnipiac, at Princeton
Feb. 27-Feb. 28: vs. St. Lawrence, vs. Clarkson
Women’s Hockey
Oct. 17-Oct. 18: vs. Boston College
Oct. 24-Oct. 25: at Harvard, at Dartmouth
Oct. 31-Nov. 1: vs. Yale, vs. Brown
Nov. 14-Nov. 15: at Colgate, vs. Colgate
Nov. 21-Nov. 22: at Union, at RPI
Dec. 5-Dec. 6: vs. Quinnipiac, vs. Princeton
Dec. 30: at Penn State
Jan. 9-Jan. 10: vs. Clarkson, vs. St. Lawrence
Jan. 16-Jan. 17: at Brown, at Yale
Jan. 20: vs. Penn State
Jan. 23-Jan. 24: at Princeton, at Quinnipiac
Jan. 30-Jan 31: vs. Dartmouth, vs. Harvard
Feb. 6-Feb 7: vs. RPI, vs. Union
Feb. 13-Feb. 14: at St. Lawrence, at Clarkson
Jane McNally is a senior editor on the 143rd editorial board and was the sports editor on the 142nd editorial board. She is a member of the Class of 2026 in the College of Agriculture and Life Sciences. You can follow her on X @JaneMcNally_ and reach her at jmcnally@cornellsun.com.
Eli Fastiff is a senior editor on the 143rd editorial board and a member of the class of 2026 in the College of Arts and Sciences. You can follow him on X @Eli_Fastiff and reach him at efastiff@cornellsun.com.
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College Sports
Ballston Spa Student
Ballston Spa High School student-athletes were honored during the school’s annual college athlete recognition ceremony on June 3. Photo by Jonathon Norcross. BALLSTON SPA — Dozens of Ballston Spa High School student-athletes were honored during an annual college athlete recognition ceremony on June 3, including state wrestling champion Mia Collins. 34 students were recognized in […]


BALLSTON SPA — Dozens of Ballston Spa High School student-athletes were honored during an annual college athlete recognition ceremony on June 3, including state wrestling champion Mia Collins.
34 students were recognized in total, including athletes headed to Division I, II, and III schools. Six of them were three-sport athletes and 13 were two-sport athletes. Collectively, the group had a cumulative grade point average of 92%.
During the ceremony, State Senator Jim Tedisco and Assemblywoman Mary Beth Walsh honored Collins, the New York State 132-pound division wrestling champ. Collins is currently ranked eighth nationally in her weight class.
“Mia Collins is a trailblazer and a tremendous student scholar athlete whose state championship victory capped off an undefeated regular season record of 10-0, along with being the first New York State Girls Wrestling Champion from Ballston Spa High School,” Tedisco said. “With Mia being only a junior, I have a feeling her already incredible athletic career is just getting started.”
“I’m incredibly proud to see Mia reach yet another milestone in her athletic career,” added Walsh. “Maintaining a 98 grade point average as a senior and excelling at a sport as she has is an amazing accomplishment. I can’t wait to see what other glass ceilings Mia will shatter as she furthers her education at Columbia over the next four years. Who knows, maybe we’ll see her on ESPN or at the Olympics before her college career is done.”
Below is a list of the student-athletes honored at the ceremony, as well as the higher education institutions they’ll be attending:
Declan Bain — SUNY New Paltz, soccer
Jessica Bowens — Hartwick College, basketball
Gabrielle Bozeth — Marist College, track & field
Kaleigh Capasso — Vermont State University at Castleton, volleyball
Mia Collins — Columbia University, wrestling
Nicholas Commisso — Hudson Valley Community College,
baseball
Matthew Cook — SUNY Brockport, lacrosse
Brayson Cornick — Southern Connecticut State University,
football
Emily Dierna — Loyola University of Maryland, crew
Kyle Fives — Mount St. Mary College, baseball
Kate Fletcher — Westfield State University, lacrosse
Ayla Hathaway — Lasell University, soccer
James Haughton — University of Rhode Island, baseball
Devin Hemraj — University of Buffalo, track & field
Nathan Hill — Stevens Institute of Technology, baseball
Kala’i Leahey-Makanani — University of Buffalo, track & field
Mariana Lefco — Massachusetts Maritime Academy, soccer
Nicholas Leonard — Pace University, football
Matthew Meerdink — Worcester Polytech Institute,
track/cross country
Mariah Nowicki — SUNY Plattsburgh, soccer
William O’Connor — Hartwick College, football
Anthony O’Leary — SUNY Brockport, swimming
Isabella O’Leary — SUNY Oneonta, lacrosse
Madelyn Perrone — Mercy University, softball
Caleigh Richards — Hartwick College, basketball
Aidan Ryan — Utica College, football
Nicholas Sorbera — Barton College, baseball
Mallory Sprissler — Alfred State College, basketball
McKenna Szmarz — Fredonia State University, soccer
Ally Teitsch — Norwich University, cross country
Livia Wiltsie — Marist College, softball
Petrina Zborovszky — University of Buffalo, track & field
Anna Zito — Endicott College, soccer
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