College Sports
Kansas State University
NICHOLASVILLE, Ky. – For the first time in program history, the Kansas State women’s golf team has advanced to the NCAA Championship as the Wildcats tied for second place, while senior Carla Bernat was the individual medalist of the 2025 NCAA Lexington Regional after final-round play on Wednesday at the par-72, 6,095-yard Keene Trace Golf […]

The Wildcats, who entered play on Wednesday in third place and just six shots clear of the cutline, turned in the round of the day at 10-under par 278, which tied for the eighth-lowest round in program history. K-State finished with a three-round total of 10-under par 854, the sixth-lowest 54-hole score in school history and 12 shots clear of the cutline.
“Moments like this are why we do all the work,” head coach Stew Burke said. “It was a pleasure to be out there today with them. They were composed, confident, and determined. Nobody was going to give it to us, so we just had to go out there and take it.
“The team was excellent with everyone contributing this week. They never looked uncomfortable and just stuck to the task at hand. We couldn’t be prouder of how they came into this week wanting to play again next week and not resting on a great season.”
Bernat – the 2024-25 Big 12 Player of the Year – earned her third victory this season and fifth as Wildcat – the latter of which moved her into sole possession of second place in school history – while she has eight in her collegiate career after picking up three wins at Tulane prior to transferring to K-State.
Her 54-hole score of 12-under par 204 tied the school record set by fellow senior Sophie Bert three months ago at the Westbrook Invitational. Additionally, it was one shot better than her collegiate low of 205 during a victory at the MountainView Collegiate in March.
Bernat’s winning tally was fueled by a final-round score of 6-under par 66, which tied for the sixth-lowest round in school history. After she parred the first four holes, Bernat kicked off her low round with an albatross on the par-5 5th hole, the first time in her collegiate or international career she went 3-under par on a hole. From there, she carded birdies on Nos. 8, 11, 12 and 16. A product of Castellon, Spain, Bernat now has 17 rounds in the 60s this season and 42 in her collegiate career.
Ranked No. 23 in the National Collegiate Golf Rankings and No. 22 in the World Amateur Golf Rankings (WAGR), Bernat earned a two-shot victory over the No. 1 and 2 players in the WAGR, Florida State’s Mirabel Ting and Lottie Woad.
“Carla really had a great tournament and built well into the week,” Burke said of Bernat, who led the field by going 9-under par on the par 5s. “Winning a regional against the No. 1 and 2 players not just in the country but the world is no easy feat. It was special to see her albatross at hole 5, and it came right when we needed it as a team. To win once in college golf is an unbelievable achievement, but eight times is truly remarkable. She has a bright future ahead of her after college, but let’s first try and add to that total in California.”
Freshman Nanami Nakashima posted a season-low round of 5-under par 67, one shot better than her previous low of 68 during the second round of the Rainbow Wahine Invitational in October. The Kani, Japan, native went bogey-free and 5-under par on the front 9, while she had one bogey and one birdie on the back. Nakashima improved 16 spots on the leaderboard during the final round to tie for 18th place – her third top-20 finish this season – at even-par 216.
Sophomore Alenka Navarro tied with Nakashima as she went even par on the day, including a bogey-free and 1-under par back 9.
Junior Noa van Beek turned in a counting score of 1-over par 73 on Wednesday thanks to an eagle on No. 5 and birdies on four of her first five holes on the back 9. The Oene, Netherlands, native finished in 29th place at 4-over par 220.
Bert produced her second-straight round of 3-over par 75 on Wednesday as she finished in 58th place with a three-round total of 14-over par 230.
After going a collective 12-over par on the back 9 over the first two rounds, the Wildcats did not let the tougher half of the golf course derail their final-round momentum as they were 5-under par on that side on Wednesday, the best of any squad in the 12-team field. Kansas State led the field by going 20-under par on the par 5s, tied for first with two eagles or better and finished with 47 birdies to rank second, just one behind team champion Florida State.
Along with K-State and Florida State, the other teams to advance out of the NCAA Lexington Regional were Georgia Southern – which tied with the Wildcats for second place – USC and Vanderbilt. TCU finished one stroke back of the Commodores and in sixth place.
The 2025 NCAA Championship begins on Friday, May 16, with the first of three days of stroke play. Following Sunday’s third round, the field will be cut to 15 teams and the top nine individuals on a non-advancing team for the fourth and final round on Monday, May 19, to determine the top eight teams that will advance to match play as well as the 72-hole individual champion.
The team national champion will be determined by a match-play format that will consist of quarterfinals and semifinals on Tuesday, May 20, followed by the finals on Wednesday, May 21. Monday’s final round of stroke play and all three rounds of match play will be shown on GOLF Channel.
College Sports
Luzerne County proposes employee discount for community college classes
Luzerne County government workers would receive a discount on Luzerne County Community College courses through a program under consideration. County Manager Romilda Crocamo said during last week’s council work session the program would help attract and retain employees. Under the proposal, the college and county would each pay 25% of a course. The employee […]

Luzerne County government workers would receive a discount on Luzerne County Community College courses through a program under consideration.
County Manager Romilda Crocamo said during last week’s council work session the program would help attract and retain employees.
Under the proposal, the college and county would each pay 25% of a course. The employee would be responsible for the remaining 50% and any required class materials and fees.
College Vice President of Finance Erin Herman told council the average three-credit class would cost an employee approximately $225, while the college and county would each pay $112.50.
County Budget/Finance Division Head Mary Roselle said classes must be approved by an employee’s manager. Most county departments have budgeted funds for education and training that could cover the expense, she said.
Councilman Harry Haas said he supports the initiative, describing the community college as the “best deal in town.” Council’s strategic initiatives committee had discussed the need for such partnerships to build staff, he said.
Councilwoman Brittany Stephenson highly praised the initiative and said it is a “tangible” way to bolster the county workforce.
Council must approve the program at a future meeting for it to take effect.
Study commission
The county’s government study commission will meet at 6 p.m. Monday in the county courthouse on River Street in Wilkes-Barre.
The seven-citizen commission is drafting a revised county home rule charter for voters to consider adopting in November.
Agenda topics include continued discussion about the structure and powers of the county election board.
Under the plan, which has not been finalized, the commission would recommend keeping a five-citizen election board but mandating that it has more power, including authority to hire the election director and prepare the annual budget request to county council.
A link to attend the meeting remotely will be posted under council’s online meeting section (scroll down) at luzernecounty.org.
Transportation matches
Council approved two annual county allocations for public transportation last week.
Hazleton Public Transit received a $229,778 county match required for the agency to obtain $2.8 million in state funding. The county Transportation Authority received an $871,609 allocation necessary for its $8.7 million in state operating assistance funds.
Pittston lease
Magisterial District Court 11-01-04 will remain in Pittston City Hall because council approved a lease for two more years.
The county court administration requested the lease renewal, which will cost $3,708 per month for approximately 2,000 square feet on the building’s second floor, or a total of $89,000 over the two-year period, the agenda said.
Correctional services
County council presented a proclamation to the county’s correctional services division last week to commemorate “National Correctional Officers and Employees Week.”
It acknowledged their “difficult and often dangerous assignment of ensuring the custody, safety and well-being” of county inmates.
“These corrections professionals consistently place themselves in danger to protect individuals whom society has generally cast aside,” it said.
Correctional Services Division Head James Wilbur said approximately 400,000 correctional officer hours are required annually to meet minimum staffing levels at the county prison on Water Street in Wilkes-Barre and nearby minimum offenders building on Reichard Street.
“These employees have dedicated their lives to keeping our communities safe,” Wilbur said.
Children, Youth and Families
The agency is collecting cleaning supplies for families in need this month as part of a spring cleaning campaign.
Requested items include spray and floor cleaning products and dish-washing sponges. Products can be dropped off at the county human services building at 111 N. Pennsylvania Ave. in Wilkes-Barre.
Ethics commission
The county ethics commission is seeking proposals from qualified attorneys to provide legal services, according to a posting in the purchasing section at luzernecounty.org.
Under the council-adopted county ethics code, the commission must rely on a panel of outside attorneys to handle the initial stage of complaint investigations. On a rotating basis, the contracted attorneys are assigned cases and must determine within 60 days whether an investigation should be terminated, further investigated or result in the issuing of a formal complaint spelling out alleged code violations.
Due to ongoing recruitment challenges, the commission had only one outside attorney, Qiana Lehman, and she resigned last week.
County Controller Walter Griffith, who was named commission chairman last week, said he is determined to focus on a proposal to revamp the code to address concerns.
Griffith said code changes are necessary regardless of whether voters approve the revised home rule charter in November.
The county study commission’s proposal would require council to keep an ethics commission and code and mandate a council vote within nine months to either ratify or amend the existing ethics code.
The commission is composed of the county district attorney, manager, controller and two council-appointed citizens (one Democrat and one Republican).
Reach Jennifer Learn-Andes at 570-991-6388 or on Twitter @TLJenLearnAndes.
College Sports
UW-Oshkosh and UW-Whitewater Headed To NCAA Baseball Super Regionals
Story Links **UW-Oshkosh and UW-Whitewater Sports Information Offices contributed to this recap. MADISON, Wis. –For the fourth consecutive season, two Wisconsin Intercollegiate Athletic Conference (WIAC) baseball teams have reached the Super Regionals of the NCAA Division III Baseball Championship after UW-Oshkosh and UW-Whitewater emerged with regional titles on May 18. UW-Oshkosh […]

**UW-Oshkosh and UW-Whitewater Sports Information Offices contributed to this recap.
MADISON, Wis.
–For the fourth consecutive season, two Wisconsin Intercollegiate Athletic Conference (WIAC) baseball teams have reached the Super Regionals of the NCAA Division III Baseball Championship after UW-Oshkosh and UW-Whitewater emerged with regional titles on May 18.
UW-Oshkosh (34-14) won the St. Peter, Minn., Regional with a 10-2 victory over University of Chicago (Ill.). The Titans opened regional action with a 34-8 drubbing of UChicago that featured a cycle by Jake Surane and the second-most runs scored in program history. UW-Oshkosh also set a WIAC record with 31 hits in the contest. The Titans then beat Gustavus Adolphus College (Minn.) 15-10. In a rematch with UChicago, UW-Oshkosh fell 7-3 to force a winner-take-all regional title game. The Titans will face UW-Whitewater in a best-of-three Super Regional.
UW-Whitewater (42-5) claimed the Adrian, Mich., Regional with a 4-1 win over Adrian College (Mich.) and followed with a 4-3, 11-inning victory over Washington University in St. Louis (Mo.) before the clinching win.
UW-La Crosse also represented the conference in regional action. The Eagles opened NCAA action with a 4-2 victory over Bethany Lutheran College (Minn.) and an 8-6 triumph over Claremont-Mudd-Scripps Colleges (Calif.). UW-La Crosse then dropped back-to-back games to Claremont-Mudd-Scripps by scores of 11-2 and 6-2.
The Eagles completed the 2025 campaign with a 35-11 record and made their third consecutive NCAA appearance and ninth NCAA in program history.
In UW-Oshkosh’s regional-clinching victory over UChicago, the Maroons scored the first run of the game in the fourth inning with a groundout RBI and added another run in the fifth when on a solo home run.
After a scoreless sixth inning, Carter Stebane had a run-scoring single to right field, while Jack McKellips brought in a pair of runs with a single up the middle to give the Titans a 3-2 lead.
In the eighth inning, Owen Housinger had a RBI single to leftfield and the Titans tacked on another run when McKellips was hit by a pitch with the bases loaded. Mason Kirchberg had a sacrifice fly to deep left field for a 6-2 advantage.
In the ninth inning, Zach Taylor had a sacrifice fly and Stebane ripped a three-run home run down the left field line for a 9-2 lead. Mason Kirchberg added a RBI double to make the score 10-2.
Connor Walters pitched a complete game for the Titans, allowing two runs on four hits, while striking out five. He improved to 6-4 on the season.
In UW-Whitewater’s regional-clinching win over Adrian, the Warhawks got on the board in the second inning on a sacrifice fly by Dominik McVay.
Adrian tied the game in the third inning on their own sacrifice fly, but UW-Whitewater loaded the bases up in the bottom of the third, and had a two-run single from Danny Hopper followed by a run-scoring single from Sam Paden to give the Warhawks a 4-1 advantage.
Ben Lee pitched the first seven innings and scattered five hits, while striking out four and allowing one unearned run. He improved to 5-1 on the season.
Ethan Wickman pitched 1.2 innings and struck out two, while Jack Hagen got the call on the mound for the final out and recorded his third save of the year.
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College Sports
Matt Brown, paralyzed 15 years ago, is finding his groove
The answer surprised even Brown himself. “While the answer is always yes, it would be harder to hit that reset button than most people think,” Matt Brown said. “Because I wouldn’t be able to do what I’m doing now.” Fifteen years after he was paralyzed after crashing into the boards while playing hockey for Norwood […]
The answer surprised even Brown himself.
“While the answer is always yes, it would be harder to hit that reset button than most people think,” Matt Brown said. “Because I wouldn’t be able to do what I’m doing now.”
Fifteen years after he was paralyzed after crashing into the boards while playing hockey for Norwood High, Brown believes the accident that robbed him of so much has given him a perspective he never would have had if he hadn’t been paralyzed.
People spend years, sometimes a lifetime, trying to figure out their purpose. What were they put on this earth for?
From his wheelchair, Matt Brown can see higher and further than most. His purpose is, quite simply, to help others.
The Matt Brown Foundation was launched by Brown and his family in the middle of the pandemic.
“Not exactly the optimum time,” he concedes.
Five years later, the foundation is, like Brown himself, finding its groove. It has distributed some $300,000 in grants to people who are living with paralysis, paying for accessible vehicles, home modifications, essential equipment.
Besides donors, an annual golf tournament and the Falmouth Road Race are big fund-raising tools. This year, the foundation gained charity status with the Boston Marathon, allowing it to field runners, opening a new revenue source that Brown hopes will allow it to distribute even more grants to more people.
The grants change little things, changing lives. They renovated a bathroom for a guy on the South Shore who hadn’t been able to shower since his accident a year before. They bought a standing frame for a man so he could be vertical in his Quincy home.
Not long ago, Brown got a call from the folks at the Little Mustangs Preschool Academy in Norwood, about two miles from his house.
One of the students there, a 4-year-old boy, is paraplegic. When his classmates went out to recess, all the boy could do was watch them from his wheelchair, because the playground equipment wasn’t accessible to him.
Brown’s foundation paid for an adaptive swing, and on Tuesday, Brown watched as the boy called his parents over to push him in that swing for the first time.
The boy’s classmates made cards for Brown, thanking him in eight different languages.
“To see that little boy smile,” Brown said, “to see his parents smile, I can’t even explain what that feels like.”
He lives in the house he grew up in, with his parents, Mike and Sue. His parents met in the sixth grade. Sue’s maiden name is Brown, same as Mike’s, so they like to say Mike took her name when they got married.
Matt Brown would like to get a place of his own some day. But he can’t imagine leaving Norwood. The town, and its people, always had his back.
Next month, he’ll be the best man at the wedding of his childhood friend Austin Glaser, a Norwood police officer who was his roommate at Stonehill College. Brown has been working on his speech for ages, trying to get it down from a half-hour to five minutes.
He has also remained close to Tyler Piacentini, the Weymouth High player whose check sent Brown crashing headfirst into the boards at Pilgrim Skating Arena in Hingham in 2010. He never blamed Piacentini, saying it was “just two guys going for the puck.”
Last year, he did doughnuts in his wheelchair on the dance floor at Piacentini’s wedding in Nashville.
On Wednesday, Brown was sitting in his driveway. As he does three days a week, he had just spent more than two hours at the gym at Journey Forward, a nonprofit in Canton that helps those with spinal cord injuries.
He regularly works out there alongside his friends, hockey players who suffered similar spinal cord injuries: Jake Thibeault, who was paralyzed in 2021 while playing for Milton Academy; AJ Quetta, who was paralyzed in 2021 while playing for Bishop Feehan High; and Denna Laing, who was paralyzed in 2015 while playing for the Boston Pride in the National Women’s Hockey League.
“We almost have enough of us for a full line,” Brown deadpans.
Brown was mentored and inspired by Travis Roy, the Boston University player who was paralyzed on his first shift for the Terriers in 1995, whose own foundation raised millions and who died in 2020 at the age of 45.
“We’re all following in Travis’s tire tracks,” Brown said.
In the driveway, Brown’s friend Jack Doherty was talking about speeches he’s lining up for Brown. Doherty has his own story: He died on the ice, a cardiac arrest while playing in a men’s league in Weymouth in 2013. After being clinically dead for seven minutes, Doherty was brought back to life by first responders. He says Brown is one of the most inspirational speakers he’s ever heard.
“When he speaks,” Doherty said, “people want him to speak longer.”
Brown doesn’t want anyone to think he’s some super hero. He’s just a regular guy from Norwood, who’s been able to move on from a life-altering injury with the help of family and friends who never gave up on him, who always inspired him. And so he aspires to inspire others.
It could have gone the other way, he says.
“I could have closed the door, just stayed in my room, give in to that darkness,” he said. “But my friends and family kept me going.”
He turned to look at the house where he ran down the stairs on Christmas mornings. Where he put on his uniform for Little League games. Where he did his math homework.
“When one door closes, not all doors close,” he said. “I have to work hard to find those other doors. But I’ll never stop trying.”
He looked up and down his street and then he said it, his mantra, something that repeats in his head, and he lives by it.
“Never quit,” Matt Brown said. “Overcome. Keep going forward.”
Kevin Cullen is a Globe columnist. He can be reached at kevin.cullen@globe.com.
College Sports
Men’s Lacrosse Punches Ticket to NCAA Final Four – Penn State
ANNAPOLIS, Md.- No. 7 Penn State men’s lacrosse earned a 14-12 comeback victory over the reigning back-to-back National Champions Notre Dame in the NCAA Quarterfinals. The Nittany Lions used a 8-0 scoring run over the last two quarters to rally back from a six-goal deficit midway through the third stanza. Penn State earns its third […]
College Sports
Rich Rodriguez shows interest joining Nick Saban on Trump’s College Sports Commission
May 17—President Donald Trump can be seen at college football games, UFC events, and even NASCAR races. Trump enjoys appearing at sporting events, and recently has entered himself into the college athletics space, attempting to create order in a wild west that is college sports. It was inevitable that the NIL system currently in place […]

May 17—President Donald Trump can be seen at college football games, UFC events, and even NASCAR races. Trump enjoys appearing at sporting events, and recently has entered himself into the college athletics space, attempting to create order in a wild west that is college sports.
It was inevitable that the NIL system currently in place was going to cause issues. This spring marked the first player to sit out of practice over money disputes. The players currently have all the power and there are no guardrails on how much schools can pay players, making it unfair in some sense.
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NIL hasn’t been used like it’s intended so far. Originally, NIL was put in place so players could make money off autographs and jerseys with their name on them. But now, it’s used by boosters to pay players to play for their alma mater.
Trump is stepping in. Trump is reportedly creating a College Sports Commission, which will reportedly be led by former West Virginian and college football legend Nick Saban and Texas businessman Cody Campbell. The commission will regulate the transfer portal, boosters and college athlete employment.
This would be the first leader of college sports and potentially create a system that has structure.
Saban might not be the only West Virginian on the commission. In a recent interview with Sirius XM, Rich Rodriguez showed interest in helping his friend, Saban.
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“I’m going to give him my cell number if they want an active coach on the deal, ” Rodriguez said. “I’ll be on that sucker. I’ve got some experience. I can help from a current standpoint. I don’t know if they need me, though.
Like Saban, Rodriguez has been coaching for a long time, not as long as Saban and a lot fewer championships, but he’s seen the change and evolution of the sport.
All spring, Rodriguez voiced his problems with the NCAA. Rodriguez didn’t like the roster limit to 105, how there’s a spring portal, where a player you coached all spring can just leave, and how there are no limitations to how much a player can be paid.
Rodriguez has the background to be a candidate for the commission.
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So far, it sounds like Saban will lead. Rodriguez agrees it should be the greatest college football coach of all time as the leader.
“He is the greatest college football coach of all time, ” Rodriguez said. “He has a great grasp of the game in general … He’s truly about college football.”
Almost all professional sports leagues have a commissioner who settles issues throughout the league. College football doesn’t because it’s governed by the NCAA. After NIL was passed, the NCAA lost all its power, leaving it to the schools and players, creating chaos.
There’s no movement to create guardrails, and it’s starting to get out of hand. So much, that Trump felt the need to step in.
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College sports, and more specifically college football, is a billion-dollar entertainment business. There needs to be structure before it falls apart even further. Saban’s the favorite to lead the next generation of college athletics, and West Virginia’s very own, Rodriguez, could be helping out, too.
“College football is such a great entity, it’s hard to screw it up, ” Rodriguez said. “You can do whatever you want. There’s still going to be that passion for your school and that level of athletes. We’ve done enough things to screw it up in the last couple of years.”
College Sports
NCAA D-1 Tennis Player Files Explosive Objection to NIL Settlement Against Duke University, Citing Broken Promises and Retaliation
In a dramatic twist to the ongoing College Athlete NIL Litigation, Duke University tennis player Samuel Landau, an NCAA Division I Athlete, has filed a limited objection to the proposed House settlement, accusing the school of luring him with false promises of NIL payments and retaliating when he spoke out. $45K NIL Deal, Potential False […]

In a dramatic twist to the ongoing College Athlete NIL Litigation, Duke University tennis player Samuel Landau, an NCAA Division I Athlete, has filed a limited objection to the proposed House settlement, accusing the school of luring him with false promises of NIL payments and retaliating when he spoke out.
$45K NIL Deal, Potential False Rumors, and Anti-Semitic Accusations Surface in Filing
The objection, which was filed on Thursday in the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of California, Oakland division, claims that Duke Men’s Tennis Head Coach Ramsey Smith promised Landau $45,000 in NIL compensation in addition to his scholarship to secure his transfer to Duke in late 2023.
According to the objection, Coach Smith assured Landau and his family multiple times, including in an April 2024 text message to Landau’s mother, that the player would be “well taken care of.” However, once Landau joined the program, he alleges that the NIL money never came through.
The objection, filed by Landau’s attorney, Rodger Landau, paints a troubling picture of alleged misconduct within Duke’s athletic department. It accuses the university of retaliating after Landau raised concerns about the NIL payments. According to the filing,
Coach Smith allegedly spread false rumors that Landau had a drug problem, citing a false statement from University of Texas coach Bruce Berque, which has since been denied in writing by the Texas program.
The filing alleges that Duke officials wrongly suspected Landau, who is Jewish, of running a social media account that was critical of his own team members, invoking what the family describes as an anti-Semitic trope. Landau argues that the current language in the proposed settlement is too broad and could allow Power 5 schools to escape liability for NIL misconduct, including false inducements and broken promises.
He is urging the court to revise the settlement to include expanded audit rights and establish an arbitration process for student-athletes to seek compensation for unpaid NIL deals. He proposes allowing arbitrators to impose penalties of up to $5 million per athlete for proven fraud or retaliation.
If such revisions aren’t made, Landau is calling for Duke University to be excluded from the House Settlement altogether. He argues that Duke, with its $12 billion endowment, has demonstrated an unwillingness to honor NIL commitments and has weaponized its institutional power to suppress dissent.
The NIL era has meant that college athletes can now earn money from their name, image, and likeness through endorsements and sponsorships. Earlier, college athletes were not paid and did not gain monetary benefits from the revenue generated by prestigious college sports programs.
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