Connect with us

College Sports

Kansas State University

CARLSBAD, Calif. – Playing in the first NCAA Championship in program history, the Kansas State women’s golf team was unable to produce another low round to survive the 54-hole cut on Sunday, but sophomore Alenka Navarro and senior Carla Bernat advanced as individuals to Monday’s final round at the par-72, 6,330-yard Omni La Costa Resort […]

Published

on


CARLSBAD, Calif. – Playing in the first NCAA Championship in program history, the Kansas State women’s golf team was unable to produce another low round to survive the 54-hole cut on Sunday, but sophomore Alenka Navarro and senior Carla Bernat advanced as individuals to Monday’s final round at the par-72, 6,330-yard Omni La Costa Resort & Spa.
 
Following a round of 12-over par 890 on Sunday, the Wildcats finished in a tie for 19th place at 26-over par 890, eight shots below the 54-hole cutline of 15 teams. The Wildcats and Demon Decans finished five shots ahead of 21st-place Kansas. Navarro and Bernat were able to advance to Monday’s final round by virtue of being two of the top nine individuals on non-advancing teams.
 
“I think the last two days showed some of the stuff we need to clean up and the things we need to get better at, especially at the highest level,” head coach Stew Burke said. “You’re not going to get away with those mistakes. But, what a great season. I am really, really proud. It was looking as though we had a shot with a few holes to go. The most important thing is just keeping our fans happy.”
 
The Wildcats closed out the 2024-25 campaign by ranking first in program history in team scoring average (288.13) in addition to rounds (38) and tournaments (13) played. Additionally, 10 of the lowest 17 team rounds in school history and seven of the lowest 11 team 54-hole scores have come this season. On the individual front, seven of the top 17 rounds and six of the top 10 individual 54-hole scores were obtained this season.
 
Bernat led the Wildcats on Sunday by posting a score of 1-over par 73. After starting with a bogey and double bogey on the first two holes, the Castellon, Spain, native parred the rest of the front 9 before going bogey-free and 2-under par on the back 9. She enters Monday’s final round tied for 37th place at 3-over par 219.
 
Navarro finished Sunday’s round one shot back of Bernat, going 1-over par on each side. Overall, the Mexico City native is one shot ahead of Bernat as she is tied for 28th place at 2-over par 218.
 
“Both of those ladies did great to get to the fourth round,” Burke said. “Obviously we wanted to get there as a team, but two out of five isn’t bad. To be honest, it really is a changing of the guard. Carla has done so much for us the last two years. She had taken Alenka under her wing and shown her what it takes to be a high-class player. Tomorrow, they will go head to head in Carla’s final round. So that’s kind of cool for me to see. The future is bright.”
 
Senior Sophie Bert, junior Noa van Beek and freshman Nanami Nakashima each saw their seasons come to an end as they tied for 124th place at 15-over par 231. A native of Oene, Netherlands, van Beek had her best round of the weekend at 2-over par 74 with four birdies on the day. Bert played her final 18 collegiate holes at 7-over par 79, while Nakashima finished the day at 9-over par 81.
 
Bert, a former East Tennessee State transfer who became the first individual conference champion in program history, finished her lone season at K-State with a 73.39 scoring average to rank fourth in school history. Nakashima finished at 73.95 during her initial collegiate campaign to rank 10th in school history. van Beek will enter her senior campaign ranked fourth in school history with a career 74.47 scoring average.
 
The top-ranked team in the country, Stanford, held on to its 36-hole lead and is 15 shots clear of the next best team, Northwestern, as the Cardinal enters Monday’s final round at 23-under par 841. Stanford is in position to be the No. 1 seed once match play begins on Tuesday as the top eight teams after Monday’s final round of stroke play will advance to the match-play portion of the championship.
 
Arkansas’ Maria Jose Marin posted a score of 7-under par 65 on Sunday to improve 11 spots on the individual leaderboard. She enters the final round of stroke play at 9-under par 207, one shot ahead of Stanford’s Paula Martin Sampedro.
 
Navarro and Bernat will begin Monday’s final round off the 10th tee at 12:51 p.m. and 1:12 p.m. (PT), respectively.  Live results can be followed on SCOREBOARD powered by Clippd.

 



Link

Continue Reading
Click to comment

Leave a Reply

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

College Sports

Winter to serve as Video Coach for Team USA at upcoming IIHF World Junior Championship

Story Links COLORADO SPRINGS, Colo. – Bemidji State University Men’s Hockey associate head coach Travis Winter has been named a Video Coach for the U.S. National Junior Team for the upcoming 2026 IIHF World Junior Championship announced by USA Hockey.   Winter will join Greg Brown (Boston College), Steve Miller […]

Published

on


COLORADO SPRINGS, Colo. – Bemidji State University Men’s Hockey associate head coach Travis Winter has been named a Video Coach for the U.S. National Junior Team for the upcoming 2026 IIHF World Junior Championship announced by USA Hockey.
 
Winter will join Greg Brown (Boston College), Steve Miller (Minnesota), Garrett Raboin (Augustana), David Lassonde (USA Hockey) and Jacob LeRoy (Minnesota) on head coach Bob Motzko’s (Minnesota) coaching staff for the U.S.
 
The U.S. enters the 2026 IIHF World Junior Championship having won goal in the previous two World Juniors. The tournament will be played in St. Paul and Minneapolis, Minn., from Dec. 26, 2025 – Jan. 5, 2026.
 
Travis Winter, associate head coach of the Bemidji State University men’s ice hockey team, is serving on the staff of the U.S. National Junior Team for the first time.

The St. Cloud, Minnesota, native has been part of the Beavers coaching staff for the last 11 campaigns, including the first eight as assistant coach and the last three as associate head coach.

Previous to his time at BSU, he was the head coach and director of hockey operations for the Aberdeen Wings of the NAHL for one season (2013-14). Prior to that, he spent parts of four seasons (2009-10 to 2012-13) serving as assistant coach and recruiting coordinator for the USHL’s Cedar Rapids RoughRiders. 

Winter was also a volunteer coach for the Saint Johns University (Minn.) men’s ice hockey program in 2009 and served on the coaching staff of the USA Hockey Selection 15 National Camp in 2010.

 

As player, Winter was a four-year letterwinner (2005-09) for Bemidji State where as a senior he served as captain and helped the Beavers to the program’s first-ever Frozen Four appearance in 2009.

 

For more information on the Bemidji State men’s hockey program, tickets or schedules, visit BSUBeavers.com, follow the Beavers on X or Instagram or like them on Facebook.

 

Located on the shore of Lake Bemidji, Bemidji State University sponsors 15 varsity athletic programs with NCAA Division I men’s hockey in the Central Collegiate Hockey Association and women’s hockey in the Western Collegiate Hockey Association, while its 13 NCAA Division II programs hold membership in the Northern Sun Intercollegiate Conference (NSIC).

 

–bsu—





Link

Continue Reading

College Sports

Bruins admit potential misstep with first-round pick Dean Letourneau – 98.5 The Sports Hub

A year ago this week, the Bruins traded their way back into the first-round (as a result of the Linus Ullmark trade) and took a chance on Dean Letourneau. A potential boom-or-bust candidate, but with tantalizing size and skill (think Tage Thompson is everything pans out the way the Bruins hope), Letourneau decided to opt […]

Published

on


A year ago this week, the Bruins traded their way back into the first-round (as a result of the Linus Ullmark trade) and took a chance on Dean Letourneau.

A potential boom-or-bust candidate, but with tantalizing size and skill (think Tage Thompson is everything pans out the way the Bruins hope), Letourneau decided to opt for a different path than the one originally charted for him after dominating in the prep ranks and putting himself on the Bruins’ radar.

Instead of opting for a year in the USHL, an opening on Boston College’s roster allowed Letourneau to jump to the college game a year early. It did not go as planned, however, and Letourneau finished the year without a goal and just three assists in 36 games for the Eagles. It’s a decision that the Bruins admitted Tuesday probably was not in the best interest of either party.

“Significant growing pains, making a very big jump from the level of hockey he was [in] the year before, to the demands of college,” Bruins general manager Don Sweeney said in his pre-draft media availability. “There’s a little uniqueness there with [Sharks forward] Will Smith leaving early to go to the NHL, we talked a little bit about what would be the best place in terms of Dean and in hindsight, I think we all would have agreed that maybe another year of the USHL [or] a full year of the USHL would have been the best path.”

Again, that was the plan, with Letourneau originally committed to playing the 2024-25 season for USHL SIoux Falls before joining BC for 2025-26. That was a more than reasonable expectation given the fact that going from playing prep right to hockey would’ve by all means been skipping a level, which is something typically reserved for truly exceptional talents, not projected late-first rounders.

And in essence, yes, Letourneau was taking Smith’s roster spot on the Eagles’ roster. But he was absolutely not taking Smith’s minutes. Letourneau was mostly logging bottom-six minutes, actually, averaging 10:17 per game, which was second-lowest among BC forwards to make at least 30 appearances for the club during the 2024-25 season, according to CollegeHockeyNews.com.

“Physically he was able to play at the at the college level, and again, that opportunity presented in a bit of a unique fashion. I think everybody was sort of with the understanding that, hey, physically, he was ready to do it,” Sweeney noted. “Now, whether or not you can carry that over in the highest level, because that’s what the expectations at [Boston College] are, and be successful from a point production standpoint, you know, that’s a leap.”

This, for what it’s worth, was the word from pretty much every single scout I talked to that that had an in-person viewing of Letourneau in 2024-25. There were pockets of play that you liked, sure, but it always came back to a “he really shouldn’t be in this league right now” kind of rationale for his struggles or lack of production. Given that Letourneau was always considered a project, the feeling is and was that he needs minutes, minutes, and … yup, you guessed it … more minutes to work out any developmental kinks he may have to sort out.

Now, the good news for Letourneau is that BC did lose top-line talents Ryan Leonard (Washington) and Gabe Perreault (N.Y. Rangers) to the NHL at the end of last season, as well as veteran Eagle Michael Posma (ECHL Florida). That, in theory, should open the door for at least a few more minutes per game and some potential power-play opportunities for Letourneau in 2025-26.

“Deep down, is [Letourneau] better off for [last season’s struggles]? We’ll see this year, because I think that he’s been tested mentally and physically, and he’s putting in work now that he has an understanding of how much work it requires to play at that level and be successful,” Sweeney said. “That’s not necessarily a negative. It’s just that when players have had the success and put up the points their entire careers, and all of a sudden they’re like, ‘Hold on, this is a lot harder.’ It’s deflating to a degree.

“But talking through with it, he’ll be fine. He’ll earn his opportunity back, work his way up the depth chart and start to produce like he has. So, I don’t look at as a setback, I just look at it like a reality slap in a lot of ways.”

Given Letourneau’s numbers put up in his final year of prep (61 goals and 127 points in 56 games for St. Andrew’s), it’s not outlandish or pure fantasyland to envision a significant uptick in his production with more minutes and opportunities. It might be the most likely result, actually.

But until it happens for him, consider Letourneau another Sweeney pick that’s going to be scrutinized to death, especially with Liam Greentree (the next player selected after Letourneau) coming off a season that featured 49 goals and 119 points (third-most in the OHL) in 64 games for OHL Oshawa.



Link

Continue Reading

College Sports

Mark Stoops is too Motivated to golf

Mark Stoops is motivated. He’s said it plenty of times since Kentucky concluded a disappointing 4-8 campaign. His motivation has become the cornerstone of Big Blue Nation’s internet offseason conversations. However, it’s impossible to quantify how motivated he is, but we do have one data point that can confirm that he is, in fact, very, […]

Published

on


Mark Stoops is motivated. He’s said it plenty of times since Kentucky concluded a disappointing 4-8 campaign. His motivation has become the cornerstone of Big Blue Nation’s internet offseason conversations. However, it’s impossible to quantify how motivated he is, but we do have one data point that can confirm that he is, in fact, very, very motivated.

Even though there is no true offseason in college football, the summer months are a great way to find some time away from the office and sneak in a round of golf or two. Thanks to some sleuths in the state of Alabama, we actually know how often the Kentucky head football coach is hitting the links.

An AuburnLive message board poster noted that Hugh Freeze has frequented golf courses around the state of Alabama this offseason. It motivated AL.com’s investigative journalists to examine how many times he has golfed this year by using the USGA’s GHIN database, a tool golfers use to track their scores and create a handicap.

The AuburnLive message board user was correct. Hugh Freeze has played more golf than any other SEC coach this offseason, logging ten rounds during the first 20 days crucial recruiting month of June. After losing a few important recruits, Freeze’s golf game is inflaming the criticism. Shane Beamer had the second-most recorded rounds of any SEC coach, with three in June.

While scouring through the GHIN database, AL.com found that Mark Stoops did not pick up the sticks once in the month of June. During the month of May, when the entire team was off-campus, he posted seven scores at Lexington Country Club, but five of those were 9-hole rounds. Stoops’ best score this year was an 89. His all-time recorded low was an 84 last July. He has a handicap of 16.8.

It’s abundantly clear that Mark Stoops is motivated to turn-around the Kentucky football, too motivated to spend time on the golf course.

See Mark Stoops’ Golf Swing

KSR has actually spent some time with Mark Stoops on the links. Each year, the football program hosts the Schlarman Strong Golf Scramble, with this year’s event held in April. Back in 2023, we followed along a few former Cats at Keene Trace. Even though he just underwent surgery, Stoops took out the sticks and hit a few balls. The Kentucky head coach takes a long, full swing, but he hit his driver straight down the fairway. Enjoy this rare footage now, because you aren’t going to be seeing it anytime soon.

Sign up for the KSR Newsletter to receive Kentucky Wildcats news in the most ridiculous manner possible.



Link

Continue Reading

College Sports

Northwestern Men's Soccer Announces Full 2025 Signing Class

Northwestern Men’s Soccer’s 2024 season was a mixed bag. The ‘Cats were solid in nonconference play, finishing with a 9-7-1 overall record. In Big Ten play, though, they were much worse, finishing 3-6-1 and in eighth place (of only 11). Now, heading into next season, Northwestern has officially announced its 13-member 2025 signing class, including […]

Published

on

Northwestern Men's Soccer Announces Full 2025 Signing Class

Northwestern Men’s Soccer’s 2024 season was a mixed bag. The ‘Cats were solid in nonconference play, finishing with a 9-7-1 overall record. In Big Ten play, though, they were much worse, finishing 3-6-1 and in eighth place (of only 11).

Now, heading into next season, Northwestern has officially announced its 13-member 2025 signing class, including both transfers and players who have yet to start their collegiate careers.

Transfers include Tre Barrett from William and Mary, Doug Hainer from Coastal Carolina, Omar Jallow from Drexel, Seth Mahlmeister from Purdue Fort Wayne, Alejandro Martinez Santamaria from Milwaukee, Yuval Nimrodi from La Salle and Baraka Tarleton from Evansville.

Barrett, a forward who scored three goals and five assists as a freshman, stands out. He was good enough with William and Mary to earn CAA All-Rookie Team honors.

Mahlmeister from Purdue Fort Wayne is also a name to know. The four-year college soccer vet brings a lot of experience with him to Evanston. He was playing against lower-level competition, but Mahlmeister still scored an impressive 10 goals during his junior season.

Martinez Santamaria is the other big goal-scoring talent of the transfer group, having tallied nine goals and four assists last season. He was named a First Team All-Horizon League player for his efforts.

Outside of transfers, Northwestern is also adding some freshmen who played with different clubs prior to starting their NCAA careers. Those names include defender Dalton Bulowski, midfielder Evrit Fisher, defender Andrew Johnson, midfielder Sam Nagano, forward Aaron O’Reilly and defender Dimas Van Der Heide.

Continue Reading

College Sports

Here's everything coming to Netflix Canada in July 2025

Summer is officially here so it’s not surprising to see a slightly quieter month ahead for Netflix releases. But that certainly doesn’t mean that there’s nothing exciting coming out in July. Nearly 30 years after the original, the highly-anticipated Happy Gilmore 2 will finally be released on July 25. You don’t have to be a […]

Published

on

Here's everything coming to Netflix Canada in July 2025

Summer is officially here so it’s not surprising to see a slightly quieter month ahead for Netflix releases.

But that certainly doesn’t mean that there’s nothing exciting coming out in July.

Nearly 30 years after the original, the highly-anticipated Happy Gilmore 2 will finally be released on July 25.

You don’t have to be a sports fan to be looking forward to the iconic golf movie’s sequel, but sports fans might just be excited about season three of Quarterback coming out on July 8.

If you’re looking for non-sports, non-fiction content, there are quite a few documentaries coming our way and that includes continued weekly episodes from the streaming services Trainwreck series.

There are several new series debuting in July, but the only notable returning show is The Sandman, as season two will be released in two parts at the start and end of the month.

Apart from Happy Gilmore 2, there are also a handful of other Netflix original films dropping in July that might pique your interest.

Here’s a full list of content coming to Netflix Canada in July 2025:

July 1

  • Attack on London: Hunting The 7/7 Bombers — Netflix Documentary
  • Trainwreck: The Cult of American Apparel — Netflix Documentary
  • Cobweb
  • Heat
  • Legends of the Fall
  • Moms’ Night Out
  • The Random Hearts
  • The Roommate
  • Tom at the Farm

July 2

  • The Old Guard 2 — Netflix Film
  • Jaws
  • Tour de France: Unchained: Season 3 — Netflix Documentary

July 3

  • Countdown: Taylor vs. Serrano — Netflix Sports Series
  • Get Rich or Die Tryin’
  • The Mummy
  • The Sandman: Season 2 Volume 1 — Netflix Series

July 4

  • All the Sharks — Netflix Documentary
  • E.T. the Extra-Terrestrial

July 5

  • Forrest Gump
  • The Summer Hikaru Died — Netflix Anime

July 7

  • Suicide Squad
  • War Dogs

July 8

  • Better Late Than Single — Netflix Series
  • Nate Jackson: Super Funny — Netflix Comedy Special
  • Quarterback: Season 2 — Netflix Sports Series
  • Trainwreck: The Real Project X — Netflix Documentary
  • What Men Want

July 9

  • 1923: Season 1
  • Building The Band — Netflix Series
  • The Gringo Hunters — Netflix Series
  • IF
  • Under a Dark Sun — Netflix Series
  • Ziam — Netflix Film

July 10

  • 7 Bears — Netflix Family
  • Brick — Netflix Film
  • Leviathan — Netflix Anime
  • Off Road — Netflix Series
  • Sneaky Pete: Seasons 1-3
  • Too Much — Netflix Series

July 11

  • Aap Jaisa Koi — Netflix Film
  • Almost Cops — Netflix Film
  • Katie Taylor vs. Amanda Serrano 3 — Netflix Live Event
  • Sideways
  • Tyler Perry’s Madea’s Destination Wedding — Netflix Film

July 13

  • WWE Evolution: 2025 — Netflix Live Event

July 14

  • Apocalypse in the Tropics — Netflix Documentary
  • Sakamoto Days: Season 1, Part 2 — Netflix Anime

July 15

  • Black Hawk Down
  • Trainwreck Balloon Boy — Netflix Documentary

July 16

  • Amy Bradley Is Missing — Netflix Documentary

July 17

  • Catalog Community Squad: Season 2
  • Dawn of the Dead
  • The Firm
  • Untamed — Netflix Series
  • Thanksgiving

July 18

  • Almost Family — Netflix Film
  • Delirium — Netflix Series
  • I’m Still a Superstar — Netflix Documentary
  • Superstar — Netflix Series
  • Unbroken
  • Vir Das: Fool Volume — Netflix Comedy Special
  • Wall to Wall — Netflix Film

July 19

  • Justice League

July 22

  • Trainwreck: P.I. Moms — Netflix Documentary

July 23

  • Critical: Between Life and Death — Netflix Documentary
  • Letters From The Past — Netflix Series

July 24

  • A Normal Woman
  • Hitmakers — Netflix Series
  • My Melody & Kuromi — Netflix Anime
  • The Sandman: Season 2 Volume 2 — Netflix Series

July 25

  • Happy Gilmore 2 — Netflix Film
  • Trigger — Netflix Series
  • The Winning Try — Netflix Series
  • Yesterday

July 29

  • Dusty Slay: Wet Heat — Netflix Comedy
  • Trainwreck: Storm Area 51 — Netflix Documentary
  • WWE: Unreal — Netflix Sports Series

July 30

  • Conversations with a Killer: The Son of Sam Tapes — Netflix Documentary
  • Unspeakable Sins — Netflix Series

July 31

  • An Honest Life — Netflix Film
  • Glass Heart — Netflix Series
  • Leanne — Netflix Series
  • Marked — Netflix Series
  • The Sandman Season 2: Special Episode — Netflix

Here’s everything leaving Netflix Canada in July 2025:

  • Grown Ups 2 (July 1)
  • Loudermilk: Seasons 1-3 (July 1)
  • New Amsterdam: Seasons 1-5 (July 1)
  • She’s All That (July 1)
  • Step Brothers (July 1)
  • Call My Agent!: Seasons 1-4 (July 22)

Continue Reading

College Sports

Making history | Top 5 moments from Penn State sports in 2025 | Penn State Sports News

Penn State finished third in the 2024-25 fall Learfield Directors’ Cup rankings, led by a national championship from the women’s volleyball team. The Nittany Lions furthered their success in the spring semester with their second national championship of the year, as well as a pair of semifinal appearances. Those deep playoff runs, along with some […]

Published

on


Penn State finished third in the 2024-25 fall Learfield Directors’ Cup rankings, led by a national championship from the women’s volleyball team.

The Nittany Lions furthered their success in the spring semester with their second national championship of the year, as well as a pair of semifinal appearances.

Those deep playoff runs, along with some other moments, make up the top-five moments from the 2025 spring semester.

No. 5 – Men’s gymnastics NCAA championship finish

Josh Karnes took the floor for the 2024 Olympic qualifiers last June but fell short by 15 places.

While his Olympic dreams were postponed, he returned to Penn State to help the Nittany Lions to their best finish since 2016, earning fifth place at the NCAA championship.







Men's gymnastics vs Michigan, Karnes pommel

All-around gymnast Josh Karnes performs his routine on the pommel horse, scoring a 12.600, in a Penn State men’s gymnastics duel meet against Michigan at Rec Hall on Saturday, Feb. 1, 2025 in University Park, Pa. The Nittany Lions beat the Wolverines 319.000 to 313.900.




Along the way, Karnes picked up two All-American honors where he finished sixth in All-Around.

No. 4 – Men’s volleyball’s EIVA championship

Penn State lifted the EIVA championship trophy for the third consecutive year and once again made the NCAA Tournament.

The duo of Matthew Luoma and Will Kuhns led the way for the blue and white, helping the team navigate its less-than-ideal 15-16 record.

In the postseason, however, the Nittany Lions came alive, sweeping their way through each of their three games in the EIVA Tournament.

In the championship against Princeton, Penn State took the first and third sets easily with 25-20 and 25-19 victories, but struggled through the second set, playing to a 27-point win.







Men's Volleyball vs Princeton, group huddle

The Penn State men’s volleyball team huddles after the game against Princeton in Rec Hall on Friday, April 18, 2025 in University Park, Pa. The Tigers defeated the Nittany Lions 3-1.




No. 3 – Men’s lacrosse in NCAA semifinals

In Matt Traynor’s first full season with the blue and white, he led the team to the NCAA semifinals against Duke, where it lost 16-15 in overtime.

Two years later, the Nittany Lions were back in the same game, this time against Cornell.

After coming back from a one-point deficit against Colgate and a four-point deficit against Notre Dame, Penn State pushed ahead for a 4-2 lead over the Big Red before ultimately falling 11-9.







Men's lacrosse vs Colgate, Traynor shoots

Midfielder Matt Traynor (22) shoots the ball during the Penn State men’s lacrosse match against Colgate in the first round of the NCAA Tournament at Panzer Stadium on Saturday, May 10, 2025 in University Park, Pa. The Nittany Lions beat the Raiders 13-11 to move onto the NCAA Quarterfinals.




No. 2 – Wrestling’s fourth straight national championship

On May 1, 2024, four-time national champion Carter Starocci announced his return to Penn State in his quest to become the first five-time NCAA champion.

Less than a year later, Starocci fulfilled his dreams as he took down Northern Iowa’s Parker Keckeisen 4-3 victory.

In addition to the 2025 NCAA Wrestling Championship Outstanding Wrestler’s historic season, sophomore Mitchell Mesenbrink earned Penn State’s second individual championship, and coach Cael Sanderson won his 12th team title for the Nittany Lions.







NCAA Wrestling Finals, Lilledahl holding trophy

The Penn State wrestling team celebrates after winning its 13th national title at the NCAA D1 Wrestling Championships in the Wells Fargo Center on Saturday, March 22, 2025 in Philadelphia, Pa. The Nittany Lions won the team competition with a score of 177.




As a team, Penn State finished with 177.0 points, 60 points ahead of No. 2 Nebraska.

No. 1 – Penn State’s 1st Frozen Four

In his 14th season, coach Guy Gadowsky led the blue and white to the Frozen Four for the first time in the program’s history.

After a 4-7 start to the season, the Nittany Lions got hot, earning their fourth-ever bid to the NCAA Tournament.

With wins over Maine and UConn, Penn State found itself in St. Louis for the team’s first-ever Frozen Four appearance.

The Nittany Lions ultimately fell 3-1 against Boston University, but has used its historic season to recruit several top names in the hockey world this offseason.

MORE SPORTS CONTENT


Penn State track and field's Hannah Riolo finishes 2nd at U20 national championship

Despite failing to medal in the collegiate postseason, freshman Hannah Riolo has found her s…

If you’re interested in submitting a Letter to the Editor, click here.



Link

Continue Reading

Most Viewed Posts

Trending