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John's Journal

Not long ago, Joshua Kyei-Baffour had dreams of glory on the soccer pitch. Now a senior at Rochester Century, the 6-foot-3, 180-pound all-around athlete has been playing soccer for a long time, and on a soccer recruiting website a while back, Joshua wrote in part, “I have been in love with sports since kindergarten. I […]

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John's Journal

Not long ago, Joshua Kyei-Baffour had dreams of glory on the soccer pitch. Now a senior at Rochester Century, the 6-foot-3, 180-pound all-around athlete has been playing soccer for a long time, and on a soccer recruiting website a while back, Joshua wrote in part, “I have been in love with sports since kindergarten. I tried football and basketball but soccer was the one sport that I fell in love with when I reached middle school. Since then I’ve developed an ambition to play college soccer because I want to play at that high level.”

Oh how things can change. A member of the Century track and field team – as well as the soccer team — throughout his high school years, Kyei-Baffour has made a name for himself as one of the state’s best hurdlers. And he solidified that fact by setting an all-time Minnesota high school record on Saturday.

Kyei-Baffour won the 110-meter high hurdles at the Section 1AAA championships with a blazing time of 13.58 seconds. That bested the previous state record of 13.66 by St. Croix Lutheran’s Jon Tollefson in 2015.

“It’s amazing,” he said a few minutes after crossing the finish line on a sunny, warm day at Lakeville South. “At the beginning of the season my coaches were like, ‘Let’s put our name in the record books.’ I just kind of shrugged my shoulders and said, ‘OK.’ But I didn’t expect I was going to get to this moment. I’m super happy and grateful.”

Those dreams of playing college soccer have been replaced; Kyei-Baffour will join the track and field program at North Dakota State later this year.

“My joy for track and field has gone up 100 percent,” Kyei-Baffour told the Rochester Post Bulletin’s Pat Ruff earlier this spring. “It was competing at high levels that did it for me. When I went to visit NDSU, (hurdles and sprints coach) Reece Vega hooked me right away. I also loved the campus, the coaches and the guys on the team. I’ll be putting down my cleats and putting on my spikes next year.”

One of his Bison track teammates, as well as his roommate, will be current St. Charles senior Christopher Hilton. In Class A, Hilton qualified for state in the 110 hurdles, 300 hurdles, 200 meters and triple jump. (Read about Hilton by clicking here: https://shorturl.at/hVI1t)

“We’re going to hang out soon, but we text here and there and encourage each other,” Joshua said of his friendship with Hilton.

Kyei-Baffour’s evolution as a hurdler has been steady. He ran a time of 15.22 as a sophomore and got down to 14.13 last season. He finished fourth at the Class 3A state championships in 2024 with a time of 14.28, and will return to chase a championship when the state meet is held June 10-12 at St. Michael-Albertville.

“I’m keeping my head down, staying humble, just preparing mentally and physically for the next week,” Joshua said.

He also ran the 300-meter low hurdles Saturday and was a member of Century’s 4×200 relay team; in both events the Panthers came up short of qualifying for state.

In Thursday’s section preliminaries, Kyei-Baffour had a first-place finish of 14.23 seconds. Knocking that time down to 13.58 two days later, and setting a state record in the process, was a mixture of preparation, focus, speed and power.

Earlier Saturday, Joshua said he told his friends, “I can feel the all-time record being mine.”

Afterwards, he said, “I just kind of remembered, ‘Get out of the box fast, stay clean, and it’ll all connect.’ ”

He came off the start ahead of the pack and was clean over every hurdle. As he reached the finish line he dipped his head and threw his arms back. After crossing the line he lifted his head and put his right hand over his heart in appreciation.

“This was perfect weather, a perfect day,” he said with a big smile.

Indeed. Everything was perfect.

–MSHSL staff member John Millea has been the leading voice of Minnesota high school activities for decades. Follow him on Bluesky at johnmilleamn and listen to “Preps Today with John Millea” wherever you get podcasts. Contact John at [email protected] or [email protected] 

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Women's college soccer

By Jonathon Zenk, Northwestern State Assistant Director of Communications; featured photo by Chris Reich, NSU Photographic Services AUSTIN, Texas—The game could not have started much better for Northwestern State. And it ended even better, as it scored its first-ever victory over a ranked opponent with a 3-2 upset win at No. 19 Texas on Thursday […]

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Women's college soccer

By Jonathon Zenk, Northwestern State Assistant Director of Communications; featured photo by Chris Reich, NSU Photographic Services

AUSTIN, Texas—The game could not have started much better for Northwestern State. And it ended even better, as it scored its first-ever victory over a ranked opponent with a 3-2 upset win at No. 19 Texas on Thursday evening at Mike A. Myers Stadium.

Emily Senatore found the back of the net twice, including what turned out to be the game winner, and Hosane Soukou scored a goal in her first career game, leading NSU (1-0) to its most monumental victory in regular season program history against the preseason No. 2 in the SEC.

“All credit goes to the girls,” head coach Ian Brophy said. “They executed really well and played for each other. I am really proud of them.”

NSU was unable to find the back of the net until game six last season, but Senatore wasted little time putting NSU on the scoreboard in this one, scoring an unassisted goal in the fifth minute on the Demons first shot of the game, shortly after a corner kick.

But the 19th-ranked team knew how to respond, as the Longhorns scored two first half goals to take a 2-1 lead at halftime.

The Longhorns (0-1) tied it up in the 25th minute following a long pass to Ava McDonald and a mishit by the NSU defense, leading to an open opportunity for McDonald, who sent it past a diving Kennedy Rist.

In the 33rd minute, Texas grabbed its first lead when Amalia Villarreal raced into the box and shot it to the left side of the net from just right of the box.

Villarreal, the reigning SEC Freshman of the Year, attempted a whopping 10 shots with eight on frame, including that goal.

Texas controlled the final 40 minutes of the half to lead, out-shooting NSU 16-2 in the opening half. But the lead was just 2-1.

While the offense was trying to break through against the Texas defense, Rist was a brick wall in net.

Overall, Rist made 13 saves to keep the Demons in the game before the offense could take over.

The 13 saves are the most since Libe Banuelos stopped 14 shots against Lamar in 2023 and tied for the eighth-most saves in a game in program history.

“She kept us in the game,” Brophy said. “I knew that if we didn’t allow another goal, the chances were there for us to score against them.”

While Rist was a brick wall defensively,  NSU needed a spark offensively.

Enter freshman Hosane Soukou.

After playing 13 minutes in the first half, Soukou started the second half and delivered when her team needed her the most.

In the 61st minute, she scored the tying goal on a lead feed from Riley Stern, and Soukou had a clear look at the net and put it home, just over a minute after having another shot stopped.

She is the first freshman to score in her season opener since Paige Armstrong in 2022.

“For a freshman, the way she fought, she didn’t look like a freshman,” Brophy said. “It was an unbelievable goal. She took advantage of her moments and gave Texas defenders fits all game long.”

Between Soukou and fellow freshman Kendall Hemperley, freshmen recorded four of the seven shot attempts by the Demons.

Senatore started the scoring for NSU, so it was appropriate she finished the scoring as well.

Shortly after another corner kick, she shot one through traffic, past UT goalkeeper Mateya Dessieux for her second goal of the game in the 72nd minute.

The multi-goal game is Senatore’s fourth in school history, which ties her for 10th all-time at NSU in multi-goal games.

“Those were two unreal goals by Emily,” Brophy said. “She can score from anywhere. She is one of the best scoring midfielders in the conference and maybe the entire country. Defensively, she was outstanding as well. It was the best game I have ever seen from her.”

While Senatore and Soukou gave the visitors the advantage, Rist closed the door on the Longhorns. The redshirt junior made three saves in the final 17 minutes, including one in the box where she challenged a Texas player and stopped it to keep NSU in front.

Texas frantically tried to come back, attempting seven shots in the final 16:07, but Rist and the defense finished off the upset.

The Longhorns out-shot the Demons 25-7, including 16-7 on frame, but NSU made the most of its chances and Rist was incredible in her first start.

NSU showed its depth, as 19 players saw game action with 17 playing at least 18 minutes.

The Demons aim for another shocker when they travel to SMU on Sunday to cap the weekend.

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Adrian College Officially Opens the Sweebe Family Indoor Athletic Center as Football Holds First Practice

Story Links ADRIAN, Mich. – Thursday, August 14, 2025, marked a major milestone for Adrian College athletics as the football team held its first official practice inside the new Sweebe Family Indoor Athletic Facility. The brand-new facility, nicknamed “The Dome,” opened its doors to student-athletes as the Bulldogs kicked off the 2025 season. […]

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ADRIAN, Mich. – Thursday, August 14, 2025, marked a major milestone for Adrian College athletics as the football team held its first official practice inside the new Sweebe Family Indoor Athletic Facility.

The brand-new facility, nicknamed “The Dome,” opened its doors to student-athletes as the Bulldogs kicked off the 2025 season.

“We are very excited to have the Dome open for our student-athletes,” said Athletic Director Craig Rainey. “This state-of-the-art facility ensures our teams can continue practicing without interruption, regardless of weather. We’re incredibly grateful to the donors who made this possible and look forward to the impact this will have on our athletic success.”

The centerpiece of the facility is a 131,000-square-foot air-supported dome that includes a full-size turf field and a four-lane track. Standing 90 feet tall, the Dome is a striking new landmark visible from across campus.

Attached to the Dome is a 5,000-square-foot lobby featuring two changing rooms, an athletic training room, and an office space to support team operations.

The $11 million facility is designed to serve multiple sports, including football, soccer, rugby, track & field, baseball, softball, and lacrosse. It’s fully equipped with a portable sound system, scoreboards, and shot/play clocks making it suitable for hosting indoor competitions during inclement weather.

The Sweebe Family Indoor Athletic Center is located on the site formerly known as the “Back-40,” nestled between Nicolay Field and the Adrian College Track & Field Complex. In addition to enhancing year-round training opportunities, the project also expands parking options for surrounding athletic venues.



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Gadowsky picked as head coach for U.S. Collegiate Select Team | News, Sports, Jobs

DAVOS, Switzerland – Penn State’s Guy Gadowsky has been tabbed the head coach for the United States Collegiate Select Team ahead of the 2025 Spengler Cup as announced by College Hockey Inc. earlier Thursday morning. Along with Gadowsky, fellow NCAA bench bosses Mike Souza (UNH) and Jason Lammers (Niagara) will serve as assistants. For the […]

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DAVOS, Switzerland – Penn State’s Guy Gadowsky has been tabbed the head coach for the United States Collegiate Select Team ahead of the 2025 Spengler Cup as announced by College Hockey Inc. earlier Thursday morning. Along with Gadowsky, fellow NCAA bench bosses Mike Souza (UNH) and Jason Lammers (Niagara) will serve as assistants.

For the first time in the 102-year history of the tournament, which dates back to 1923 making it the oldest invitational ice hockey tournament in the world, a team of top NCAA collegiate players will compete, led by Gadowsky.

Held annually in Davos, Switzerland from December 26-31, 2025, the Spengler Cup is hosted by the Swiss professional team HC Davos with the 2025 rendition marking the 97th all-time tournament. HC Fribourg-Gotteron defeated the Straubing Tigers, 7-2, in last year’s tournament capturing their first Spengler Cup in the process. The hosts, HC Davos, along with Team Canada have each won 16 Spengler Cups, tying for the most by a single club all-time.

“It’s an honor to be on the inaugural staff of the US Collegiate Selects and to be competing in such a prestigious tournament,” commented Gadowsky. “The Spengler Cup will provide an incredible experience for the players selected and will be great for the continued exposure of college hockey outside of the United States.”

The U.S. Collegiate Select team will be made up of 25 student-athletes, named at a later date, from across NCAA division I men’s ice hockey, with each conference being represented. Along with the Selects, host HC Davos, Team Canada, HC Fribourg-Gotteron, Sparta Praha and IFK Helsinki will be taking part in the 2025 edition, with the six participating teams playing a minimum of two contests.



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Hockey, prep school and a mystery drive Pittsburgh native’s new novel

Anna Bruno’s second novel, “Fine Young People” (Algonquin), is a whodunit: After one of their classmates dies by suicide, two senior girls at a Sewickley prep school work to unravel the mystery of an earlier, seemingly related death — that of another of the school’s student ice hockey stars two decades earlier. But in addition […]

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Anna Bruno’s second novel, “Fine Young People” (Algonquin), is a whodunit: After one of their classmates dies by suicide, two senior girls at a Sewickley prep school work to unravel the mystery of an earlier, seemingly related death — that of another of the school’s student ice hockey stars two decades earlier.

But in addition to being a page-turner, “Fine Young People” is also a critique of the culture of money, ambition and, yes, even sports obsession that enfolds most everyone in the orbit of the fictional St. Ignatius high school.

‘Secular gods’

Bruno grew up in Upper St. Clair and got her own high school diploma from Shady Side Academy. She also grew up Catholic, and she said the social criticism in “Fine Young People” targets the way worldly idols have taken the place of spiritual values.

Fine Young People book cover

The nominally Catholic St. Ignatius, she said, “has come to worship secular gods like the endowment and the hockey team and Ivy League admissions.”

The book’s protagonist, Frankie Northrup, is a high achiever with a single mom who tackles the closed-case murder mystery as a class project with her best friend, Shivani. St. Ignatius hockey legend Woolf Whiting, it’s said, was bound for the NHL; his death, too, was ruled a suicide, but the girls don’t buy it, and their sleuthing touches on everything from schoolboy athletes on painkillers to family politics and shady business deals.

The book toggles between third-person accounts of past events and Frankie’s own soul-searching but witty present-day narration. The high school senior, specially tuned to differences in social class, characterizes her sort-of boyfriend thus: “Ingo squinted at me with the earnest cluelessness of a boy who’d never had to make his own sandwich.”

But it’s perhaps ice hockey, complete with hometown references to the Pittsburgh Penguins, that the story revolves around most. “Everyone in a way loses [themselves] in this sport, which they care so much about,” Bruno said. “The book is questioning, ‘Well, why do we care so much about it? Or why do we care so much about it that we’re willing to give up everything else for it?’”

‘A soulless place’

Bruno played soccer in high school (her brother was the hockey player), and her writing draws on her campus experiences. She set the novel in Sewickley rather than Fox Chapel — home to Shady Side — because it offers a business district in which characters can convene.

And like her young characters — one of whom is an 18-year-old who has apparently begun planning for retirement — Bruno was an ambitious kid. She graduated from Stanford University and worked in PR and marketing for tech and financial-services companies in Silicon Valley.

“So I was living in California for about 10 years and I thought that was what I was supposed to be doing, and I was supposed to be making money and being successful as sort of classically defined,” she said. She even earned an MBA from Cornell.

Not surprisingly, she enjoyed spending her 20s in San Francisco. But something, as they say, was missing. A lot, actually.

“I think Silicon Valley is a bit of a soulless place,” Bruno said. “That sounds harsh coming out of my mouth right now, but there is such a focus there on the tech industry and venture capital and just extreme wealth and a lot of the other stuff that makes a life, whether it’s the arts or other parts of the culture, … sort of get pushed to the side.”

“I realized that I wanted to be a writer,” she said. “That I was more interested in the spiritual — my inner life, I guess my ambitions were directed more towards that.”

Bruno has now spent 10 years in Iowa City, where she earned an MFA in Fiction from the Iowa Writers’ Workshop. She lives with her husband and two sons and teaches at the University of Iowa’s Tippie College of Business and the Iowa Summer Writing Festival.

Her choice seems to be paying off. Like her debut novel, 2020’s “Ordinary Hazards,” “Fine Young People” is drawing strong reviews.

“Bruno uses the framework of a whodunit to drive at deeper questions of faith and family,” wrote Publisher’s Weekly. “Bruno pulls it off, thanks to her keen sense of what’s at stake for her teenage characters and Frankie’s indelible voice. It’s a winner.”





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New details on how MLB might split expiring ESPN package

The saga of ESPN’s expiring MLB rights package involves four contenders — and perhaps more — vying for different pieces of the pie. MLB is in active negotiations with ESPN, Comcast-owned NBCUniversal, Apple and Netflix on the expiring ESPN rights package, and it is possible that other platforms could enter the mix, Andrew Marchand of […]

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The saga of ESPN’s expiring MLB rights package involves four contenders — and perhaps more — vying for different pieces of the pie.

MLB is in active negotiations with ESPN, Comcast-owned NBCUniversal, Apple and Netflix on the expiring ESPN rights package, and it is possible that other platforms could enter the mix, Andrew Marchand of The Athletic reported Thursday. Though Marchand did not state as much, the details of the report leave open the possibility that MLB could reach deals with all four companies.

The expiring $550 million/year package, which includes “Sunday Night Baseball,” the Wild Card round, Home Run Derby and a handful of weekday games (including Opening Day), has been on the market since ESPN opted out of the final three years of its deal in February. Any deals MLB eventually reaches will be for those remaining seasons only, bringing the expiration in line with those of the league’s deals with Fox and TNT Sports.

According to Marchand, Apple and NBCUniversal are believed to be “the final contenders” for “Sunday Night Baseball” and the Wild Card round. Netflix, as reported by Bloomberg last week, is eyeing the Home Run Derby. While the loss of those three properties would seem to leave incumbent ESPN with nothing, Marchand reported Thursday that ESPN is “after a new set of rights” that would include weekday and local games.

ESPN president Jimmy Pitaro has repeatedly stated his network’s interest in local MLB rights, including in a podcast interview with Bryan Curtis of The Ringer three days ago. According to Marchand, ESPN is interested in MLB.tv, which the league was reported earlier this year to be willing to include in negotiations.

Depending on the size of a potential weekday package, ESPN could for all intents and purposes exit the national MLB business. “Sunday Night Baseball” has for nearly 40 years been a cornerstone of the network’s lineup and this season is averaging its largest audience since 2017. A move to NBCU would create a year-round run of Sunday night programming with “Sunday Night Football” in the fall, “Sunday Night Basketball” in the spring and “Sunday Night Baseball” in the summer.

For Apple, the acquisition of “Sunday Night Baseball” would presumably give the streamer two weekend nights of exclusive game inventory to go along with the company’s Friday night games.

According to Marchand, it is possible that MLB could split Sunday Night Baseball and the Wild Card games. In that scenario, one imagines NBC would get the Sunday night games; it would defy logic for NBC to acquire the three-day Wild Card round with no other MLB inventory. An Apple package that includes Friday night games and the Wild Card round also seems more in line with the streamer’s strategy than one that includes three games and two nights a week all season long.

In the event that MLB sells Sunday Night Baseball to NBCU, the Wild Card playoffs to Apple, the Home Run Derby to Netflix, and a new package of weeknight and local games to ESPN, the league would seem to have at least some chance of cobbling together a combined rights fee that approaches what ESPN is currently paying.

It would also give the league a whopping seven national rights partners entering the expiration of its media rights deals in 2028.



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MacBean, Herr earn college soccer honors

LONG BEACH, Calif. – The Penn State women’s soccer program garnered a wide array of national attention from TopDrawerSoccer.com in its preseason releases, with the Nittany Lions landing the No. 6 overall team ranking while securing one Best XI Team selection and a pair of preseason top-100 players in the organization’s releases Tuesday. Penn State […]

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MacBean, Herr earn college soccer honors

LONG BEACH, Calif. – The Penn State women’s soccer program garnered a wide array of national attention from TopDrawerSoccer.com in its preseason releases, with the Nittany Lions landing the No. 6 overall team ranking while securing one Best XI Team selection and a pair of preseason top-100 players in the organization’s releases Tuesday.

Penn State picked up the No. 6 national ranking according to TopDrawerSoccer’s preseason release, the highest rated program in the Big Ten Conference and the highest ranked team in the nation outside of the Atlantic Coast Conference. The Nittany Lions are one of eight Big Ten programs in the national preseason top 25, with PSU joining UCLA (No. 8), Ohio State (No. 9), Michigan State (No. 11), Wisconsin (No. 13), Minnesota (No. 14), Iowa (No. 17) and USC (No. 21). In total PSU, will challenge a trio of teams who are ranked in the national preseason top 25 by the organization, including Duke (No. 5), Ohio State and Wisconsin.

On an individual basis, graduate forward Kaitlyn MacBean secured a pair of preseason accolades, earning an appearance on the TopDrawerSoccer Preseason Best XI Second Team, the only forward from the Big Ten Conference recognized by the TDS Best XI teams. MacBean also secured the second-highest ranking of any B1G athlete in the organization’s Preseason Top 100 Player Rankings, landing the No. 18 position nationally. On the back line, redshirt junior defender Kayleigh Herr picked up the No. 80 individual ranking to round out PSU’s list of preseason accolades from TopDrawerSoccer.

MacBean, a native of Excelsior, Minnesota, published a 2024 season in the Blue & White that was by far her most statistically significant since joining the Penn State program as a true freshman in 2020. Her single-season career-best 34-point outburst a year ago marked the highest scoring individual season by a Nittany Lion since Maya Hayes turned in an astounding 70-point campaign in 2013. MacBean also managed to muster the third-longest goal scoring streak in Penn State history in a span from the 2023 and 2024 seasons. The veteran attacking player started all 25 fixtures for PSU in the team’s run to the NCAA Tournament National Quarterfinals last season, helping anchor the Nittany Lions with the third-most points in the B1G and 15th-most nationally while scoring 16 goals and adding two assists. MacBean was the highest-ranked forward in the league according to TDS and picked up the second-highest overall ranking in the Big Ten behind Ohio State midfielder Amanda Schlueter.

Herr, a native of Cary, North Carolina, made an instant impact on the Nittany Lion back line as an everyday starter in her first season in Happy Valley in 2024. She shattered career highs in multiple statistics, highlighted by a career-best 25 appearances paired with 25 starts in her inaugural season with the Blue & White. Herr finished second on the Penn State roster and was one of just three PSU student-athletes to surpass the 2,000-minute threshold, with the then-redshirt sophomore tallying 2,076 minutes of action on the pitch. She logged one assist and point on the offensive end of the pitch, adding five total shots with three on-target attempts. Overall, Herr helped power the Nittany Lion defense to 11 shutouts in the 2024 season with a 0.88 goals-against average, one of the strongest marks in the nation.

Last season, the Nittany Lions advanced to the National Quarterfinals for the second year in a row, extended the nation’s longest streak of consecutive Sweet 16 appearances to eight-straight, secured the program’s 30th consecutive NCAA Tournament bid and booked the program’s 31st consecutive season with at least 10 victories, the second-longest stretch of that nature in women’s college soccer. The Blue & White return six starters from last year’s Elite Eight run, including goalkeeper Mackenzie Gress, defenders Herr and Bella Ayscue, midfielder Molly Martin, and forwards MacBean and Amelia White. Penn State additionally boasts the nation’s fifth-ranked recruiting class and strongest signing group in the Big Ten Conference per TopDrawerSoccer’s July release. With MacBean and Herr leading the charge, the United Soccer Coaches 11th-ranked Nittany Lions will open their 2025 season in two days’ time, with a 7 p.m. (ET) kickoff scheduled against the fourth-ranked Duke Blue Devils on Thursday, August 14, from Koskinen Stadium in Durham, North Carolina.

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