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By: D. Scott Fritchen All eyes turn to Arlington, Texas.   Kansas State ended its Big 12 Conference season with a 9-5 win at Cincinnati, giving the Wildcats a school-record 17 conference wins, and K-State, 31-23, currently own a 35 RPI and appear in a good position for a berth in the NCAA Regionals, which […]

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By: D. Scott Fritchen

All eyes turn to Arlington, Texas.

 

Kansas State ended its Big 12 Conference season with a 9-5 win at Cincinnati, giving the Wildcats a school-record 17 conference wins, and K-State, 31-23, currently own a 35 RPI and appear in a good position for a berth in the NCAA Regionals, which will be revealed on May 26.

 

But for now, K-State turns its attention to the Big 12 Baseball Championship at Globe Life Field in Arlington, starting on Wednesday. No. 6 seed K-State, 17-13, will face No. 11 Houston, 12-17, at 8:00 p.m. on Wednesday. The K-State/Houston winner will move on to play No. 3 seed TCU on Thursday at 7:30 p.m. The games will be shown on ESPN2 and ESPN+.

 

The 2025 Big 12 Championship, which features an increase to 12 teams, will be played in a single-elimination format for the first time.

 

K-State Sports Extra’s D. Scott Fritchen spoke with longtime K-State baseball broadcasters Brian Smoller and Matt Walters about the Wildcats, their season, and beyond.

 

D. Scott Fritchen: Every team is different. In your eyes, what is most unique about this 2025 K-State baseball team?

 

Brian Smoller: Good question. They are a competitive bunch. They’re so competitive at times that when they went through a slow part or low part of the season, they’re so competitive that they got down on themselves. Emotion in baseball is never a good thing. But for a team that’s relatively new with a lot of first-year guys that have transferred in, they’re remarkably close. I don’t know that I’ve been around a team that’s been this close to each other with a group of first-year players or transfers as this group is. They’re pretty tight. They do it all together. When they’re all hot, they’re all hot together. They’re on the upswing so that’s a good thing.

 

Matt Walters: The first thing that comes to mind is K-State has a large group of guys from the portal that have shown up in Manhattan from smaller Division I schools and have produced the most home runs in a season in school history and brought the threat of the home run to the plate in so many spots in the order.

 

Butler 25 SE

Fritchen: What are your biggest takeaways from the Cincinnati series?
 
Smoller: The big takeaway is that the K-State bullpen stepped up. The bullpen had a 1.08 ERA. The development and performance of Tanner Duke and Ty Ruhl and Tazwell Butler, that gives you a very encouraging sign going into the postseason. There was one question mark going into Cincinnati and that was who they were going throw behind their starters to get some consistency in the bullpen. Some of the matchups on paper actually favored K-State’s starting pitching, and it actually ended up to be the opposite. Lincoln Sheffield was OK on Saturday but the bullpen being as good as it was is a great sign for K-State going into the post season.
 
Walters: Getting out with a win. I was concerned that if K-State got swept at Cincinnati that it might put K-State in harm’s way regarding the NCAA Tournament. Thursday was a game K-State could’ve easily won and things didn’t go well Friday, and to bounce back and jump on Cincinnati early, set a tone, and finish it off with a 9-5 win was huge. That meant that K-State in the last nine games of the regular season, the last nine conference games, went 5-4 and finished above .500, which sets a much better tone than going 4-5 to finish off the regular season.
 
Fritchen: What did this K-State team show you in its last home series against No. 12 West Virginia?
 
Smoller: Faced with a must-win series against a team that was playing pretty well, K-State showed great resolve and had a never-say-die attitude, and of course, the Friday night game was one of the greatest wins in that stadium’s history, coming back from six in the ninth. It just shows you how tight this team is that they have great belief in each other and in their coaches. It’s fun when teams like that, that try that hard and care that much, when it actually pays off and you get wins like that. We saw great performances from Seth Dardar and Keegan O’Connor and all the guys who’ve hit so well at home, and then the pitching performances that the Cats got. It’s fun. It’s a great ride as a broadcaster and a great ride as a fan to see teams that care have it all pay off. That was the culmination of West Virginia, and it really cemented their place in the postseason.
 
Walters: This has been one of the most special teams at home I can ever recall. This is a team that’s a different team at home for whatever reason. They believe they can come from behind and score and do the necessary things to win games, and against West Virginia they showed that. It’s not the best of habits to fall behind by 5, 6 or 7 runs against a team like West Virginia, who’s had an incredible year. But to be able to move the line, to stretch some things together, and to produce some home runs in there to eradicate a big deficit in the first ballgame of the series, and then to have your heart ripped out late in the ballgame in the Sunday contest and to hang a seven spot on the board screams volumes about this team. They only lost three times in Manhattan all year, which is a spectacular accomplishment.
 
Fritchen: What most makes this K-State squad a dangerous team heading into the Big 12 Tournament?
 
Smoller: One of the positives is K-State tries to play a game in Globe Life early in the season, so the surroundings aren’t new. Teams get in there and they’re wowed by the Major League ballpark and the aura of being in the home of the Rangers, and they’re in their locker room, and in their cages. Everything is first rate. So, some of that can kind of distract you from the mission at hand. I don’t think K-State will be distracted. They know they’ll be playing next week. They go in and they’re playing some teams that they’ve played before, and they’ve won in that park already this year. They’re a pretty confident group going into Arlington and feel like they have a chance to make some noise.
 
Walters: If most everybody is clicking and this team is on the same page, not just in the Big 12 Tournament but in the postseason, it can be very dangerous because of the long-ball potential really anywhere in the order, once again. It’s a team that if you make mistakes, they can make you pay in a big way. If K-State is getting guys on base at the top of the order and guys are driving them in and they’re able to run a little bit and just playing the game like they did at home much of the year, they’re going to be a load to beat. K-State just has to go about its business, not think too much, just play the game. You’ve won 30-plus games and are going to be the field of 64. Just be smart, play smart, do the right thing, and you’re going to have a chance to win some ballgames.
 

Dardar 25 SE

Fritchen: In your mind, why is K-State a NCAA Regional team this year?
 
Smoller: The schedule has played out exactly as you’d hoped if you’re K-State. They’ve won enough games away from home and have beaten good teams enough that they’re RPI is a great strength. Unfortunately, in college baseball, you don’t have a NET ranking or a College Football Playoff Committee that evaluates teams based on metrics beyond the RPI. College baseball is still trying to figure that out. They have a committee that meets but the RPI is the main metric, and until that changes, you have to figure out how to get the RPI in your favor. Pete Hughes and his staff have done a great job of scheduling in a way that allows K-State to get a high RPI. They’re sitting at 35 in the RPI, and the strength of schedule is really good and they have 31 wins and a number of Quad 1 and Quad 2 wins and zero Quad 4 losses. That resonates as good as it gets. They’ll be a No. 3 seed and go somewhere, but as we saw last year, that makes them a dangerous team.
 
Walters: The fact that they went 17-13 in the Big 12 and had some very quality non-conference wins helped immensely. This is a team that, when it plays with an edge, is a much better baseball team. For whatever reason, this team has struggled on the road, but what’s done is done, you’ve earned your spot into the field of 64, and now you have to prove you belong in the field of 64, and I think this team can. We’ve talked a lot about offense, but the pitching has to uphold its end of the bargain, and there are some guys who have to do a little bit more. K-State maybe needs a little longer starts, and we’ll see if Coach Hughes moves anything around, but pitching and defense has to help out the offense. If K-State plays all three aspects well, they have a chance to rattle some cages, but it can’t just be an offensive postseason for K-State because they’re going to run into teams that are equally if not better offensively. The pitching and defense need to carry some mail here in the postseason.
 
Fritchen: How do you think the start of the season against No. 6 North Carolina, No. 5 Arkansas, Michigan, No. 22 TCU and No. 2 LSU most benefited this K-State team from the outset?
 
Smoller: Not only did they play those teams and were competitive, but they won most of those games and then had a chance to win against North Carolina and should’ve won the game against LSU. That showed that this team, they have this belief, and they talk about it all the time, that when they play well, they’re as good as anybody in the country. That’s what separates this team perhaps from some other K-State teams. The talent on this team was evident in those early weeks. We were in Arlington watching the team take batting practice, and I shook my head and told the coaches, “This is an embarrassment of riches. I don’t remember a team that is as talented just individually talented as this team.” They said, “Yeah, we’re pretty excited about this team. We just don’t know where it’s going to go yet.” Every team goes through its ups and downs, but when this team is on, they have the talent to compete with anybody in the country.
 
Walters: It showed them what they can do and what their potential is. I’m hoping this baseball team remembers that and remembers how it played in Frisco and plays that way now because nobody else is going to give K-State much of a chance to get out of a regional and get to super regional like they did last year. So, if you just play smart baseball, do the right things, move the guy in front of you, and do your part as a player, and hold up your end of the bargain, I think K-State very easily could get to a super regional. But it’s going to take a collective effort. From what happened in that very first weekend and what happened in Arlington and Frisco, that struck an early fire in this baseball team, and I hope they can rekindle it in Arlington and wherever they land in the NCAA Tournament, because this team has the potential to be very, very dangerous, and one you don’t want to play.
 

O'Connor 25 SE

Fritchen: What do you consider to be the biggest strengths of this K-State team?
 
Smoller: Offensively, I think that’s where it starts. The three things that Pete Hughes loves to talk about are home runs, walks and stolen bases. When they’re getting on the base or hitting home runs, they’re really hard to beat. We saw it in the Cincinnati game on Saturday. Cincinnati had a lot of momentum from the first two games of the series, and then it’s their Senior Day and they have a very large and experienced senior class, and K-State just battered them in the first three innings, put up nine runs, and that game was effectively over at that point. They can suck the life out of another team because of the threat of a long ball up and down the lineup, and right now the pitching – especially in the bullpen – is becoming a strength. This is kind of what happened last year. K-State went into the postseason and found some success with starters but their bullpen really kind of rounded into form. That’s kind of following the same path, and it gets you excited about what this team could do.
 
Walters: There’ve been numerous times this year when this team at the plate is going the opposite direction. When they’re hitting the opposite way, this team is that much better. Keegan O’Connor and Seth Dardar and AJ Evasco and Shintaro Inoue — when they’re letting the ball get a little deep and they go the opposite direction, that means you’re doing really good things at the plate. To me, that’s been one of the most impressive things about this squad is the ability to go to the opposite field with power.
 
Fritchen: What have been the biggest challenges for this K-State team?
 
Smoller: K-State is the only team in the Big 12 that has had the same starting rotation for every conference game. That’s a luxury that not everybody else can have, but it also means you have some guys who are maybe a little bit tired. Pete Hughes pointed that out after the Saturday start by Michael Quevedo this weekend, that he could be fatigued having thrown this many innings and in this many games, and in this many high-pressure situations. You have some depth in the bullpen to cover those guys. But starting pitching is the one area where they’re going to have to get some guys to step up the next couple weeks.
 
Walters: Winning on the road and finding the right mindset on the road. To me, when you play on the road, you have to play with a chip on your shoulder, because the world is against you. I don’t know that this team did that enough this year. You always have to be careful of the sweep, and I know it was highly disappointing to get swept in Stillwater and especially to get swept in Lawrence. Now when you get to the NCAA Tournament, you’ll likely be playing a top seed in its own ballpark and you have to be able to block everything out, believe in the guy next to you defensively, and the guy hitting behind you and in front of you in the order, and believe in the guys on the mound, and you have to go take it like K-State did last year in Fayetteville because they’re not going to give it to you.
 

Bishop 25 SE

Fritchen: For K-State fans who might see the Wildcats in action for the first time in the next couple weeks, who are some MVPs on this squad that fans should know about?
 
Smoller: I’d start with David Bishop, who is an unspoken MVP. We talked with him about two weeks ago about this team’s knack after losing to BYU and coming back so strongly and just being able to bounce back, and he mentioned that he had taken on a little bit more of a leadership role and a vocal role. I think the leadership role on this team is a really big strength, and he is one of those key guys. For a guy who never in his career has really been a big hitter, as far as putting up eye-popping numbers, he’s having a great finish. He’s playing outstanding baseball, had the three-run home run here the other day, and you can just see him taking on more of a captain role for K-State. He just bleeds purple. He’s definitely a guy to watch. He’s helped lengthen the lineup quite a bit.
 
Keegan O’Connor has put up All-Big 12 First Team numbers and is one home run shy of breaking the school record. He’s another guy K-State can really lean on. Truthfully, there are probably five or six who are playing outstanding baseball here down the stretch, and that’s what makes them so dangerous. It’s really not one guy you can focus on because as soon as I mention those two players, I’m thinking of three others.
 
Walters: To have guys come into the program from lower Division I programs and produce like some of the studs in big Division I programs has been beyond rewarding. Keegan O’Connor, Seth Dardar, Shintaro Inoue. A guy we haven’t talked about enough is David Bishop. You look at his five-RBI game on Saturday, and he’s a rock at first base and he’s just been incredible down the stretch. There are so many other guys, too, but that’s where you start because if you go back and look at it, the fact K-State lost the entire middle of its defense and the fact that you win 30-plus games again, finish sixth in the Big 12, and go to the NCAA Tournament again, that speaks volumes. You don’t just lose your catcher, your shortstop, your second baseman and your center fielder and have that kind of success the next year.
 
Fritchen: What can you say about the job Pete Hughes and his staff have done in Hughes’ seventh season as K-State head coach?
 
Smoller: I can’t say enough about Pete. First of all, he’s just a great guy to be around. Having done this for 25-plus years now, there are few coaches that make me laugh harder than Pete Hughes. He is just hilarious, and he’s always got great one-liners and keeps the guys loose, keeps the guys accountable, and he does a good job of delivering the message of what they need to do for each game. He relies on analytics and on his staff quite a bit, but he does a good job balancing that with good common sense. He’s one win shy of 200 in his career at K-State, making him the fastest coach to 200 wins in school history based on the number of games. He’s every bit deserving of that. He and his staff are fantastic. It really shows that even at K-State, if you have a coaching staff that’s completely aligned in the mission and in knowing exactly who you want to recruit and who your identity is as a team, and you go and recruit to that and stay true to that, and you work as a staff and you’re all on the same page, you can really do some special things.
 
Walters: With the incredible turnover compared to 2024, Coach Hughes and the entire staff deserve a big pat on the back, because there was no Kaelen Culpepper or Brady Day and there weren’t the name players, so to speak, and the coaches were able to get this team to believe early on, and when this team played with that chip on its shoulder and played without thinking too much and carefree and with that heart and passion, that’s what you have to do. This is a team that, after getting swept at Oklahoma State or at KU, could’ve gone the wrong way, but this team has stayed the course. It hasn’t produced a 15-game winning streak or a nine-game losing streak. There’s been a level of consistency, and now they have to turn that up a notch as we look to the postseason.



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Men’s Swim and Dive Welcomes Newcomers to Hanover

HANOVER, N.H. – Head Coach of Dartmouth Men’s and Women’s Swimming and Diving, Milana Socha, has announced the men’s program’s Class of 2029.     “We are excited to be welcoming these six men to the woods. As the highest ranked incoming class of recruits our program has ever seen, they are all poised to […]

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HANOVER, N.H. – Head Coach of Dartmouth Men’s and Women’s Swimming and Diving, Milana Socha, has announced the men’s program’s Class of 2029.  
 
“We are excited to be welcoming these six men to the woods. As the highest ranked incoming class of recruits our program has ever seen, they are all poised to make an immediate impact on the scoring potential of our team and will be key athletes to watch from dual meets to championship meets. Their collective leadership potential and drive to excel in the pool and on the boards is something our entire team is excited for. Beyond the pool, this is truly a great group of young men of high character that are sure to make an impact on the College community outside of just athletics. There is a lot to be excited about for the four-year journey of this class!” said Socha.
 
David Gal
Budapest, Hungary | IM/Fly | Great Grace International School

Before Dartmouth: U16 National Short Course Championship winner 200fly

Why Dartmouth: “I chose Dartmouth because I felt it was not just a school for me, but a second family.”

 


 
Jihoon Jung
Fishers, Ind. | Breast/IM/Fly | Fishers Area Swimming Tigers | Hamilton Southeastern

Before Dartmouth: Winter Junior National Finalist…Summer Junior National Qualifier…Indiana Swimming 15-16 Performer of the Year…2x USA Swimming Scholastic All-American…NISCA All-American …5x individual high school state finalist…high school record holder

Why Dartmouth: “I chose Dartmouth for the coaches’ and teams’ incredible support and camaraderie with one another. Also, for their world-class commitment to academics and athletics.”

 


Andrew Chou
Oak Ridge, Tenn. | Fly/Back/IM | Tennessee Aquatics | Oak Ridge High School
 
Before Dartmouth: Swim team Captain…2 Knoxville Area swim records…Five school records…TN State Champion in 100 Fly…Scholastic All-American…Seal of Biliteracy…AP Scholar with Honor Award… Winter Junior Nationals Finalist
 
Why Dartmouth: “There were so many great people I met on my visit. The school is in a wonderful natural area, the campus is beautiful, and the education is amazing.”
 


Adam Man
Belmont, Calif. | Diving | Stanford Diving Club | Carlmont High School

Before Dartmouth: 2025 CIF State Championships 6th Place Medalist…2025 CIF Central Coast Section 3rd Place Medalist…2025 CIF Peninsula Athletic League 1st Place Champion…2024 USA Diving Junior National Championships Qualifier…2024 CIF Central Coast Section 6th Place Medalist…1x NISCA All-American Diver…2023 USA Gymnastics Junior National Championships Finalist (11th All Around)…AP Scholar with distinction…Awarded the SUHSD Seal of Biliteracy (English and French)

 

Why Dartmouth: “I chose Dartmouth because I was captivated by the incredible team dynamic and world-class academics. Dartmouth allows me to pursue my athletic and academic careers alongside a fantastic community of athletes, coaches, students, and professors.”

 


David Kushnirsky
Hewlett, N.Y. | Breast | Long Island Aquatic Club | Hewlett High School
 
Before Dartmouth: USA Swimming National Championships Qualifier…New York State Champion…NCSA Summer Championships A-finalist…Honor Roll student
 
Why Dartmouth: “I loved the athletic and academic options at Dartmouth!”
 


Michael Solomon
Lafayette, Calif. | Diving | Sherman Divers | Athenian High School
 
Before Dartmouth: 3-time All American…3-time North Coast Section Champion and State Finalist…USA Diving Junior Nationals Qualifier…National Merit Scholarship Winner
 
Why Dartmouth: “I chose Dartmouth because the tight-knit, warm environment felt like home to me.”
 



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Sirens stock up on offense in PWHL draft. Choose Kaltounkova at No. 1, trade up to pick O’Brien 3rd | News, Sports, Jobs

FILE – Kristyna Kaltounkova of Czech Republic celebrates after scoring her sides first goal during the bronze medal match between Czech Republic and Finland at the Women’s Ice Hockey Championships in Ceske Budejovice, Czech Republic, Sunday, April 20, 2025. (AP Photo/Petr David Josek, file) Sarah Fillier has offensive reinforcements joining her in New York, after […]

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FILE – Kristyna Kaltounkova of Czech Republic celebrates after scoring her sides first goal during the bronze medal match between Czech Republic and Finland at the Women’s Ice Hockey Championships in Ceske Budejovice, Czech Republic, Sunday, April 20, 2025. (AP Photo/Petr David Josek, file)

Sarah Fillier has offensive reinforcements joining her in New York, after the Sirens restocked their expansion-depleted roster by adding two of college hockey’s top scorers in the first round of the PWHL draft Tuesday night.

The Sirens used the No. 1 pick to select rugged, and hard-shooting Colgate forward Kristyna Kaltounkova. Minutes later Sirens general manager Pascal Daoust completed a trade with the Toronto Sceptres to acquire the No. 3 pick and choose Wisconsin center Casey O’Brien, women’s college hockey’s MVP last season.

“Watching who’s on the roster, I’m just really excited to get started,” said Kaltounkova, who is from the Czech Republic and became the first European-born player selected No. 1 in the PWHL draft. “I’m happy to jump in and help out as much as I can and make an impact immediately.”

Daoust traded top defensema Ella Shelton to acquire Toronto’s first and fourth-round pick (27th overall) in the eight-team, six-round draft.

The two forwards fill a major offensive hole after New York lost two of its three leading scorers — Alex Carpenter and Jessie Eldridge — as well as starting goalie Corinne Schroeder to Seattle in the PWHL expansion draft and signing process earlier this month. Carpenter and Eldridge combined to score 20 of the Sirens’ league-low 71 goals last season.

“Now we have more tools to play,” Daoust said. “We just felt that it was an opportunity for us to gear up and cover a new angle and we’re very happy with it.”

Kaltounkova and O’Brien join a team in need of star power after finishing last in the standings in each of the PWHL’s first two seasons and lags in attendance playing out of New Jersey. And they join a lineup deep at defense and features Fillier, last year’s No. 1 pick, who finished tied for the PWHL lead with 29 points.

“Sarah is one of those players who I grew up hearing her name, and I’ve always been a really big fan of her game,” O’Brien said. “I think we have similar vision and so I’d be honored if I got the opportunity to be her teammate.”

The Sirens also acquired two-way forward Kristin O’Neill and the 28th pick in trading forward Abby Roque to the Montreal Victoire.

Two Clarkson defenseman rounded out the top four picks with the Boston Fleet choosing Haley Winn at No. 2, and Montreal drafting Nicole Gosling at No. 4.

For Boston GM Danielle Marmer, Winn’s versatility fills several needs on a team that lost four-time Olympian Hilary Knight to Seattle, as well as defensemen Emily Brown to Seattle and Sydney Bard to Vancouver.

“She can do absolutely everything and anything you need,” Marmer said of Winn, a U.S. national team player at 19 who finished her four-year career as Clarkson’s second-leading scorer among defenders. “If you think about who’s going to score goals for us, Haley Winn can be the answer. Who’s going to defend against (Marie-Philip) Poulin, Haley Winn’s the answer. … She’s someone who can do so much.”

The Ottawa Charge selected Cornell defenseman Rory Guilday at No. 5. The two-time defending champion Minnesota Frost followed by drafting Quinnipiac defenseman Kendall Cooper at No. 6. Cooper provides an offensive dimension to a blue line that lost Claire Thompson and Sophie Jaques to Vancouver.

The PWHL’s two expansion teams went next with Vancouver selecting 35-year-old forward Michelle Karvinen, a four-time Olympian and Finland’s career leading scorer in world championship play. Seattle closed the first round by drafting Ohio State forward Jenna Buglioni.

The draft capped a significant day for women’s hockey with former U.S. national team player Brianna Decker and Team Canada’s Jennifer Botterill selected for induction into the Hockey Hall of Fame. And they were joined by former Canada women’s coach and Victoire GM Daniele Sauvageau becoming the first female elected in the builders category — marking the first time three women were inducted in the same class.

“I couldn’t talk,” Sauvageau said of receiving word of her induction. “And more than they were talking to me and telling me why I was receiving this call, the less I was able to talk because I was very emotional.”

Overall, 23 Americans and 17 Canadians were among the 48 selections, which included two Russian players Anna Shokhina (No. 13) and Fanuza Kadirova (45th), selected by Ottawa. The 28-year-old Shokhina led Russia’s ZhHL women’s league in scoring six times.

Charge GM Mike Hirshfeld said the team did extensive scouting on both players. and he had Shokhina listed as the fourth-best prospect in the draft.

The Sirens’ first-round splash captured most of the attention of the PHWL’s third draft.

Kaltounkova is reunited with Sirens coach Greg Fargo, who previously coached her at Colgate. Kaltounkova leaves the Raiders after five seasons as the school’s career-leading scorer with 111 goals and second with 223 points.

The 23-year-old was honored in serving as a role model for girls in the Czech Republic, where she made her national team debut at the world championships in April.

“I just hope that those little girls that were watching see that it’s not just Americans or Canadians that get drafted high or No. 1,” Kaltounkova said. “It’s going to be hopefully motivation to all of them and shows that it is possible.”

O’Brien was this season’s Patty Kazmaier award winner after leading the nation with 88 points (26 goals, 62 assists) for the NCAA-champion Badgers. In five seasons, the 23-year-old finished with 274 career points in 182 games to break the Wisconsin record held by Knight.

Toronto dealt starting goalie Kristen Campbell — last season’s PWHL goalie of the year — and their third-round pick (19th overall) to Vancouver, who previously added Ottawa starter Emerance Maschmeyer. In return, Toronto landed Vancouver’s picks at No. 16 and 23.

In landing Shelton, a PWHL defender of the year finalist in 2024, the Sceptres improve a defense that already features Renata Fast. Fast and Shelton are teammates on Canada’s national squad and members of the 2022 gold medal-winning team at the Beijing Games.



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Shortage of new teachers is hurting Pa. kids’ academic prospects, report says

HARRISBURG — When D’Arcy McQuoid was hired to teach special education in Philadelphia public schools 32 years ago, it took a year for the district to find a place for her in a classroom. Early career teachers today “can’t believe it” when she tells them about that wait. Philadelphia and other school districts statewide […]

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HARRISBURG — When D’Arcy McQuoid was hired to teach special education in Philadelphia public schools 32 years ago, it took a year for the district to find a place for her in a classroom.

Early career teachers today “can’t believe it” when she tells them about that wait.

Philadelphia and other school districts statewide are struggling to find enough certified teachers to fill vacancies, a trend that advocates for students say is diminishing the quality of kids’ education.

Why fewer people are becoming certified teachers in Pennsylvania is complex, but school officials, educators, and experts offered theories from inequity that leads to low salaries to long commute times and undesirable work locations in rural communities.

Advocates are currently pushing state lawmakers to continue sending more money to the state’s poorest schools and provide more funding for student-teacher stipends.

Teachers get their certifications after completing a preparation program and a student-teaching requirement. The credential ensures that they have enough experience and training before entering the classroom.

A recent report from Penn State education researchers found that the number of teaching certificates issued by the commonwealth dropped by more than 60% between the 2010-11 and 2023-24 school years.

When districts can’t find enough certified teachers to fill vacancies from retirement and regular turnover, districts use emergency permits. These permits are less rigorous than teaching certifications, requiring only a bachelor’s degree, and the state issues them only when schools can find no fully qualified applicants.

The Penn State report found that’s increasingly the case, and during the 2021-22 school year, amid the pandemic, the number of emergency permits the state issued surpassed the number of normal certifications.

The number has remained higher ever since, particularly in districts with concentrations of poverty and students of color.

This is a big concern for public education advocates. Emergency certifications were never meant to be in widespread use, said Christopher Lilienthal, a spokesperson for the Pennsylvania State Education Association, a teachers union.

“It went from being a stopgap thing that gets used very rarely to something that school districts and school entities have had to use consistently to fill these positions because of this shortage,” he said.

Ed Fuller, an associate professor at Penn State’s College of Education and a co-author of the report, said all teacher shortages are negatively associated with student outcomes. He also stressed that shortages can have a negative economic impact on the state.

“We know when kids have lower achievement, they’re less likely to generate tax revenue, they’re more likely to require more state support in the health system, they’re more likely to end up in the criminal justice system,” he said. “So when we’re not providing all of our children quality teachers every single year … in fact, we’re losing money. We’re losing money from the state.”

Teacher shortages across the state vary widely, but they are heavily concentrated in urban and rural counties, according to Fuller.

Districts with higher rates of poverty tend to be the ones with worse shortages, he said, and those with high numbers of students of color also tend to suffer larger shortages.

Inequalities in Pennsylvania’s public school districts are a longstanding concern among educators and advocates.

State lawmakers are under a 2023 court order to fix what a judge called an unconstitutionally inequitable public education system. Last year, they made their first big attempt at rectifying it, sending $500 million to the commonwealth’s poorest districts.

Democratic lawmakers in the state House and Democratic Gov. Josh Shapiro have proposed a similar investment in this year’s budget, which is due June 30. But Republicans, who control the state Senate, have not committed to the spending.

Education advocates told Spotlight PA they are optimistic about proposed increases to education funding. Along with the extra money for poor schools, Shapiro has proposed doubling student-teacher stipends to $40 million, according to the budget plan.

The program, now in its first year, currently provides $10,000 stipends to student-teachers on a first-come, first-served basis.

“If this program continues, I would be shocked if we did not see a dramatic uptick in the number of college students coming out of college and getting their first-time certificates for being an educator,” said Aaron Chapin, PSEA’s president.

A big district with unique problems

The School District of Philadelphia, which serves Pennsylvania’s biggest city, enrolls nearly 200,000 students and operates 331 schools.

The Penn State report found severe teacher shortages in the district, and also gave it low marks for teacher quality and levels of attrition. In the current school year, there were 644 vacancies across the district, and last school year, 23% of teachers had emergency permits, according to the report.

Laura Boyce, executive director of the teacher advocacy nonprofit, Teach Plus Pennsylvania, said underfunding could be the cause of a lot of these issues. But she emphasized that more research is needed to fully understand the scope of the problem.

“The districts that are suffering the most from the teacher shortage are those that have the largest adequacy gaps, that are the most underfunded by the state,” Boyce said.

An adequacy gap is a concept state lawmakers introduced to address the 2023 court ruling that found Pennsylvania hadn’t invested enough money in poor school districts. Defined as the difference between the amount a district spends per student and the amount that the district would need to spend to serve each child at an acceptable level, the metric now informs new education spending.

Lawmakers have estimated that Philadelphia’s school district has the biggest adequacy gap in the state, at more than $1.2 billion total.

Boyce said adequacy gaps lead to districts offering lower teacher salaries and having poorer working conditions, which make it difficult for them to compete for teachers.

In addition to the larger national trends she named — declining prestige of the teaching profession, student behavioral issues, and teacher attrition — she identified inequity as a core concern. “If you have just a reduced supply of teachers, not all districts are experiencing it the same, and those with the fewest resources are going to be the ones who are having the hardest time both recruiting and retaining teachers,” Boyce said.

Shortages have created a new reliance on emergency certified teachers in Philadelphia. As a potential solution, some school districts are looking for ways to encourage emergency certified teachers to get more certifications, Boyce said.

The issue is urgent. Students internalize staff shortages and feel like they are part of the problem when the real issue is systemic, according to Kate Sundeen, a teacher at the Academy at Palumbo high school and political liaison for the School District of Philadelphia.

“As much as we say, ‘It’s not about you’ to the students, the students are like, ‘Well, then why isn’t it changing?’” Sundeen said.

Rural counties have lots of land, few teachers

Rural counties also feel the strain of teacher shortages, Fuller said.

Warren County School District, located in northwestern Pennsylvania, enrolls nearly 3,800 students and operates nine schools. According to the Penn State report, during the period reviewed, Warren, like Philadelphia, had a severe teacher shortage, lower quality teachers, and high levels of attrition.

This school year, there are only four vacancies across the district, but as of last year — the most recent year with complete data — 22% of teachers had emergency permits.

Shortages particularly hurt technical and special education, as well as advanced math and science courses, according to Gary Weber, the superintendent of Warren County School District. The district encompasses almost the entire county.

Weber thinks the shortage issue dates all the way back to the 10% cut to the state’s basic education budget under Republican Gov. Tom Corbett in 2010, in the midst of a serious post-recession shortfall.

The move, he said, caused his district to furlough many teachers. He thinks the state then saw a trickle-down effect in which Pennsylvania colleges and universities stopped offering teaching programs because there were fewer available jobs across the commonwealth.

Weber said it’s especially difficult to find teachers certified in specialized subjects such as physics.

“We used to have, 20 years ago, 50, 60, 70, 80 applicants. We’re lucky if we have 10 at this time. In many cases, we might have two or three. And in some cases, we’re going out and trying to find people,” he said.

Fuller said rural school districts like Warren often face recruiting challenges because they have fewer people around.

“Unless a district is relatively close to prep programs producing a fair amount of teachers, then it is hard to find enough teachers to hire. Research shows that teachers work where they went to high school or where they went to college,” he said.

Teachers in big rural counties also struggle with commute times. Warren’s single primary school district, for instance, covers almost the entirety of the county’s nearly 900 square miles. Schools are spaced out around the district, so even teachers living inside county lines may have to travel long distances for work.

Rural Blair County has similar staffing problems, according to teachers who shared their experiences with Spotlight PA.

While Penn State’s study found that Blair County’s overall teacher shortage wasn’t as bad as others — it was rated as having a “high” shortage as opposed to a “severe” one, like Philly and Warren — its supply of new teachers, teacher quality, and rate of attrition all got low marks.

Dan Drumm, a music teacher in the county’s Spring Cove School District, said he’s wary of encouraging his elementary students to become teachers.

Students aren’t oblivious to debates over educational politics, testing, expenses, safety, and other issues, Drumm explained.

“It’s the culmination of all these things together that make the profession undesirable for a lot of people,” he said.

As a potential solution, some schools are starting “Grow-your-own” programs to get high school students interested in the profession.

“You are attracting those who are already in the community, already connected to schools, and creating high-quality, low-cost pathways for them into the profession,” Boyce said of the initiative.

Some schools also offer formal pathways, like Career and Technical Education programs, for students interested in becoming teachers.

Other schools take a more homespun approach.

Social studies teacher Joe Logan, who has worked at Central High School in the Spring Cove district for 24 years, first ran his “Future Teachers Club” in the 2021-22 school year. In meetings, Logan talks with students about teaching, getting an education degree, and local opportunities. He started the club to replicate the inspiration he got from his high school teachers.

“I’d like to be that same kind of catalyst for the students that are looking at getting into education,” he said.

Elena Eisenstadt is an intern with the Pennsylvania Legislative Correspondents’ Association. Learn more about the program. Spotlight PA is funded by foundations and readers like you who are committed to accountability journalism that gets results.



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2x Olympian Bri McLaughlin shares wisdom at girl’s hockey camp in Rochester

ROCHESTER, N.Y. (WHEC) – This week, Premier Ice Prospects is hosting a camp for girls hockey players around late elementary school to middle school age. Former Olympian Bri McLaughlin is one of the many coaches helping the young players learn on and off ice skills. While they’re far from their potential as hockey players, they’re […]

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ROCHESTER, N.Y. (WHEC) – This week, Premier Ice Prospects is hosting a camp for girls hockey players around late elementary school to middle school age. Former Olympian Bri McLaughlin is one of the many coaches helping the young players learn on and off ice skills.

While they’re far from their potential as hockey players, they’re already learning tons of things to set them up for bright future

But having a league of their own hasn’t always been the case for girl’s hockey.

“When we were little it was like, we want to play in the NHL! We didn’t have that option, I barely even knew about playing college hockey,” said McLaughlin.

But now – even for the youngest skaters – they’ve got their own leagues, teams, and even a high profile camp taking place this week at the Tim Horton’s Iceplex.

“I just want to improve on everything. I want to get to a really high level,” said camper Kenzie Brown.

“You learn how to stick handle, you know how to shoot, and I feel really comfortable with the coaches,” said camper Savina Veltri.

Of course, it’s easy to feel comfortable when you learn from the best, like two-time Olympian Bri McLaughlin, who had as long of a pro career as any women’s hockey player out there.

“Maybe it’s a little bit different than what they’ve been taught and you see this UGH in their face, they’re a little bit frustrated and then they put it together a little bit more, and they put it together a little bit more, and we’re finishing every single practice with a smile on our face and feeling a little bit better about that skillset,” said McLaughlin.

Campers have a week to really get better and improve on the ice. But off the ice it matters too. These girls are here to make friends with each other and also just improve character traits that matter in life in general.

“You see them on their boys teams and they have such a different personality when they get here, and they’re with their friends, and they get to learn together,” said McLaughlin.

“People can learn from each other by being good teammates, being nice to each other and picking each other up. People learn from that and then it can grow on,” said Brown.

And unlike when Bri McLaughlin started playing, there is a clear avenue to playing college hockey, and even in the pros.

“It’s an honor, cuz I get to play it as a kid and I want to play it through college hockey,” said Veltri.

“It makes me excited that there’s more women’s hockey in the world. Back then there was only boys hockey and there wasn’t a PWHL like there is now,” said Brown.

Making it to the PWHL isn’t too big of a dream. We just saw 2 Rochester natives get drafted to the league on Tuesday, in Haley Winn and Kiara Zanon. It looks like there could be more to follow in the future.



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University of New Hampshire

AMESBURY, Mass.  – Sixteen student-athletes on the University of New Hampshire women’s hockey team were named to the Hockey East 2024-25 Women’s All-Academic Team. The announcement was made Wednesday by the league.   Senior forward Kira Juodikis (Windsor, Ontario) and sophomore goaltender Noemi Martinez (Glen Ridge, N.J.) were both named a Hockey East Top Scholar-Athlete; […]

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AMESBURY, Mass.  – Sixteen student-athletes on the University of New Hampshire women’s hockey team were named to the Hockey East 2024-25 Women’s All-Academic Team. The announcement was made Wednesday by the league.
 
Senior forward Kira Juodikis (Windsor, Ontario) and sophomore goaltender Noemi Martinez (Glen Ridge, N.J.) were both named a Hockey East Top Scholar-Athlete; all 21 honorees recorded a perfect 4.0 GPA in the 2024-25 academic year.
 
Those 21 student-athletes, including Juodikis and Martinez, also comprise the 2024-25 Hockey East All-Academic All-Star Team, which recognizes the highest GPA by position.
 
Juodikis was among the 20 women’s Hockey East women’s players who received Distinguished Scholar status by qualifying for the All-Academic Team each of the past four seasons. She was also named a Hockey East Third Team All-Star for the third consecutive year in 2025.
 
This is the second time in as many years that Martinez has earned Top Scholar-Athlete, All-Academic All-Star Team and All-Academic Team recognition.
 
Every student-athlete on the 2024-25 Hockey East All-Academic Team achieved a grade point average of 3.0 or higher in both academic semesters of competition. A record total of 203 student-athletes were honored on this year’s women’s team.
 
Grad students Chavonne Truter (Uxbridge, Ontario) and Andi Calderone (Kirkland, Quebec) were recognized for the third time, as was senior Marina Alvarez (Center Moriches, N.Y.).
 
Senior Brooke Hammer (Commerce Township, Mich.) and junior Kelly Harty (Billerica, Mass.) were among the second time honorees. Sophomores Julia Cabral (Lee, N.H.), Lucie Legro (Brentwood, N.H.), Sydney Leonard (St. Bonifacius, Minn.) and Martinez were recognized for the second consecutive year.
 
Grad students Sara Boucher (Burlington, Ontario) and Maddie Crowley-Cahill (Haverhill, Mass.), senior Shea Verrier (Reading, Mass.) and juniors Alyson Hush (Scarborough, Ontario) and Hannah Rodgers (Wilmington, N.C.) are all first time honorees. Freshman Charlie Rauch (Ramsey, N.J.) earned the honor in her first year.
 



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Strickulis and D’Antonio Named to CSC Academic All-District® At-Large Team

Story Links EASTON, Mass. (June 25, 2025) – Junior Makayla Strickulis and sophomore Julieta D’Antonio of the Stonehill College field hockey team have been named to the 2025 College Sports Communicators (CSC) Academic All-District® At-Large Team, as announced by the organization. The CSC Academic All-District® At-Large program recognizes the nation’s top student-athletes for their combined achievements in […]

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EASTON, Mass. (June 25, 2025) – Junior Makayla Strickulis and sophomore Julieta D’Antonio of the Stonehill College field hockey team have been named to the 2025 College Sports Communicators (CSC) Academic All-District® At-Large Team, as announced by the organization.

The CSC Academic All-District® At-Large program recognizes the nation’s top student-athletes for their combined achievements in athletic competition and academic excellence. Honorees are selected across four divisions — NCAA Division I, II, III, and NAIA — with consideration for sports not sponsored by specific CSC Academic All-America® teams.

Strickulis earns Academic All-District® honors for the second consecutive year, following another standout season on the field and in the classroom. A finance major, she is tied for the second-highest cumulative GPA on the team with a 3.97. In addition to being named to both the NEC Commissioner’s and Academic Honor Rolls and inducted into the Chi Alpha Sigma Honor Society, she appeared in all 18 games for the Skyhawks, making 16 starts. She matched her career-high with four goals, while setting new personal bests in minutes played (806), shot attempts (34), and shots on goal (18).

D’Antonio also turned in a strong sophomore campaign while maintaining a 3.97 GPA as a chemistry major. A two-time selection to the NEC Commissioner’s Honor Roll, she recorded career-highs in goals (2), assists (2), points (6), shot attempts (22), and shots on goal (10).

Stonehill concluded its 2024 season with a 7-11 overall record, including a 4-4 mark in NEC play, finishing sixth in the conference and just one game shy of a postseason berth. The Skyhawks continued to build momentum in their third NCAA Division I season, improving by two overall wins and three NEC victories compared to their inaugural 2022 campaign.

About College Sports Communicators

College Sports Communicators (CSC) was founded in 1957 and is a 3,200+ member national association for strategic, creative, and digital communicators across intercollegiate athletics in the United States and Canada. The current name of the organization was adopted following a member-wide vote on Aug. 31, 2022.

From its founding in 1957 until the 2022 name change, the organization was known as College Sports Information Directors of America (CoSIDA).

The name change signaled a significant step in a broader strategic plan to highlight the association’s evolution and growth. The move better aligns with the association’s membership makeup and further positions the organization to support and advocate for its members who serve in the communications, digital, and creative sports industry, regardless of position or title.

The organization, which celebrated its 65th anniversary during the 2021-22 academic year, is the second-oldest management association in all intercollegiate athletics. College Sports Communicators became an affiliated partner with NACDA (National Association of Collegiate Directors of Athletics) in December 2008.

For the latest on Stonehill Athletics, follow the Skyhawks via social media on TwitterFacebook, and Instagram.

 





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