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Region 1 Mark of Excellence Awards 2024 winners announced

CONTACT:Lou Harry, SPJ Manager of Publications and Awards, [email protected]Nadia Gordon, SPJ Communications Coordinator, [email protected] The Society of Professional Journalists recognizes the best collegiate journalism in Region 1 with 2024 Mark of Excellence Awards winners. SPJ’s Region 1 comprises Connecticut, Maine, Massachusetts, New Hampshire, New Jersey, New York, Pennsylvania (Central/Eastern), Rhode Island and Vermont. First-place winners will compete at the national level among other […]

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CONTACT:
Lou Harry, SPJ Manager of Publications and Awards, [email protected]
Nadia Gordon, SPJ Communications Coordinator, [email protected]


The Society of Professional Journalists recognizes the best collegiate journalism in Region 1 with 2024 Mark of Excellence Awards winners.

SPJ’s Region 1 comprises Connecticut, Maine, Massachusetts, New Hampshire, New Jersey, New York, Pennsylvania (Central/Eastern), Rhode Island and Vermont. First-place winners will compete at the national level among other MOE winners from the 12 SPJ regions. National winners will be notified in late spring.

MOE Awards entries are judged by professionals with at least three years of journalism experience. Judges were directed to choose entries they felt were among the best in student journalism. If no entry rose to the level of excellence, no award was given. Any category not listed has no winner.

School divisions are based on student enrollment, including both graduate and undergraduate: Large schools have at least 10,000 students and small schools have 9,999 or fewer students.

The list below details all Region 1 winners. If you have any questions regarding the MOE Awards, contact SPJ Manager of Publications and Awards Lou Harry by email.

This list reflects the spelling and titles submitted in the award entries.

 

Print/Online 

Breaking News Reporting (Large)

Winner: Harvard President Claudine Gay resigns, shortest tenure in University history — by Emma H. Haidar, Cam E. Kettles, The Harvard Crimson, Harvard College

Finalist: Pepper spray and surging crowds: Videos show flashpoints at City College — by Luca GoldMansour, Melanie Marich, NYCity News Service, CUNY

Finalist: Former assistant dean of Seton Hall Law School sentenced to 3 years in prison for embezzlement — by Jacqueline Litowinsky, Rachel Suazo, The Setonian, Seton Hall University

 

General News Reporting (Large)

Winner: Harvard’s Legacy of Slavery initiative — by The Harvard Crimson staff, The Harvard Crimson, Harvard College

Finalist: Norris Square vs The Land Bank as community fears increasing gentrification — by Alyana Hutchinson, The Logan Center for Investigative Reporting, Temple University

Finalist: AI boom poses threat to trans community, experts warn — by Eduardo Salazar, NYCity News Service, CUNY

 

General News Reporting (Small)

Winner: Kensington nonprofit to cease storefront operations  — by Luke Sanelli, The Hawk News, Saint Josephs University

Finalist: One year later: University begins to address gaps in communication since false shooter incident — by Ally Engelbert, Allie Miller, The Hawk News, Saint Josephs University

Finalist: Cumberland Valley School Board reverses decision to cancel anti-bullying assembly — by Adam Beam, Connor Niszczak, The Slate, Shippensburg University

 

In-Depth Reporting (Large)

Winner: A theater of hunger  — by Chloe Budakian, The New Journal, Yale

Finalist: The encampment files  — by Ben Binday, Jasmine Ni , The Daily Pennsylvanian, University of Pennsylvania

Finalist: In Allston’s Brazilian community, new arrivals suffer in overcrowded apartments — by Jack R. Trapanick, The Harvard Crimson, Harvard College

 

In-Depth Reporting (Small)

Winner: Keene State College conduct cases — by Nathan Hope, Charlotte King, The Equinox, Keene State College

Finalist: Bethlehem public schools combat mental health crisis — by Fiona Corr, The Brown and White, Lehigh University

Finalist: Beyond the binary — by Allie Miller, The Hawk News, Saint Josephs University

 

Feature Writing (Large)

Winner: From blight to blessing — by Allison Beck, The Logan Center for Urban Investigative Reporting, Temple University

Finalist: Another day on the job — by Joe Lister, Bellisario Student Media, Penn State

 

Feature Writing (Small)

Winner: Locked in — by Jay’Mi Vazquez, Julien Laforest, Crescent Magazine, Southern Connecticut State University

Finalist: Over the edge — by Jay’Mi Vazquez, Crescent magazine, Southern Connecticut State University

Finalist: El nuevo periódico: A behind-the-scenes look at Framingham State’s newest student-run publication — by Ryan O’Connell, The Gatepost, Framingham State

 

Personality Profile Writing (Large)

Winner: Bows up: Freshman Elijah Moore brings signature elbow celebration to SU — by Aiden Stepansky, The Daily Orange, Syracuse University

Finalist: The heart of the valley — by Emma Kelly, Bellisario Student Media, Penn State

Finalist: From starting line to starting over: The path to launch a sports radio network — by Truth Headlam, NYCity News Service, CUNY

Personality Profile Writing (Small)

Winner: An introspection of professor Christopher Driscoll — by Isabella Insingo, The Brown and White, Lehigh University

Finalist: Professor’s travel passion inspires global research — by Arava Rose, The Brown and White, Lehigh University

Finalist: Gaze long — by Mia Rose Kohn, Yale Daily News Magazine, Yale University

Sports Writing (Large)

Winner: Sign man: A fan’s unmatched legacy — by Pedro Gray Soares, Massachusetts Daily Collegian, University of Massachusetts-Amherst

Finalist: ‘I don’t feel safe’: Penn track and field program accused of sexual harassment, mistreatment — by Vivian Yao, Sean McKeown, Walker Carnathan, The Daily Pennsylvanian, University of Pennsylvania

Finalist: ‘It’s hard to stay silent’: Pro-Palestinian athletes on the risks of speaking out at Columbia — by Heather Chen, Takashi Williams, Columbia Daily Spectator, Columbia University

 

Sports Writing (Small)

Winner: Women’s ice hockey opens inaugural season: Historic moment for Framingham women’s athletics — by Sophia Oppedisano, The Gatepost, Framingham State

Finalist: Women’s Big 5 coverage lacking despite growing interest — by Mia Messina, The Hawk News, Saint Josephs University

Finalist: Shot stoppers – a dive into the art of goalkeeping — by Kyra Tolley, Riley Crowell, The Gatepost, Framingham State

 

Editorial/Opinion Writing

Winner: Harvard Crimson editorials — by The Harvard Crimson editorial board, The Harvard Crimson, Harvard College

Finalist: Montclarion editorials — by Cassandra Michalakis, Colin Luderitz, The Montclarion, Montclair State University

Finalist: Massachusetts Daily Collegian columns — by Samuel Cavalhiero, Massachusetts Daily Collegian, University of Massachusetts-Amherst

 

General Column Writing

Winner: A broken system — by Rachael A. Dziaba, The Harvard Crimson, Harvard College

Finalist: Daily Orange columns — by Sarhia Rahim, The Daily Orange, Syracuse University

Finalist: A school outside Boston — by Yona T. Sperling-Milner, The Harvard Crimson, Harvard College

 

Corbin Gwaltney Award for Best All-Around Student Newspaper (Large)

Winner: Columbia Daily Spectator — by Columbia Daily Spectator staff, Columbia Daily Spectator, Columbia University

Finalist: The Harvard Crimson — by The Harvard Crimson staff, The Harvard Crimson, Harvard College

Finalist: The Vector — by The Vector staff, The Vector, New Jersey Institute of Technology

 

Corbin Gwaltney Award for Best All-Around Student Newspaper (Small)

Winner: The Ithacan — by The Ithacan staff, The Ithacan, Ithaca College

Finalist: The Equinox — by Staff, The Equinox, Keene State College

Finalist: The Gatepost — by Staff, The Gatepost, Framingham State

 

Best Single-issue Student Magazine

Winner: NYC under the surface — by Scienceline staff, Scienceline, New York University

 

Best Ongoing Student Magazine

Winner: The New Journal — by The New Journal staff, The New Journal, Yale University

Finalist: Baked — by Baked staff, Baked, Syracuse University

Finalist: Jerk  — by Staff, Jerk , Syracuse University

 

Best Affiliated Web Site

Winner: theithacan.org — by Ithacan staff, The Ithacan, Ithaca College

Finalist: kscequinox.com — by Staff, The Equinox, Keene State College

Finalist: The Daily Orange — by The Daily Orange staff, The Daily Orange, Syracuse University

 

Best Independent Online Student Publication

Winner: Scienceline — by Scienceline staff, Scienceline, New York University

Finalist: Harlem View — by Staff, Harlem View, The City College of New York

Finalist: The Herring — by Staff, The Herring, Amsterdam University College

 

Art/Graphics/Multimedia 

Breaking News Photography

Winner: Philadelphia Police Department declines to disband encampment after Penn requests immediate help — by Ethan Young, The Daily Pennsylvanian, University of Pennsylvania

Finalist: Go inside the Trump rally at Madison Square Garden — by Tyler Paz, NYCity News Service, CUNY

Finalist: Shafik authorizes NYPD to sweep ‘Gaza Solidarity Encampment,’ officers in riot gear arrest over 100 — by Stella Ragas, Columbia Daily Spectator, Columbia University

 

General News Photography

Winner: A pierce-ing devotion — by Jack Henry, The NewsHouse, Syracuse University

Finalist: Butler shooting vigil — by Esteban Marenco, Bellisario Student Media, Penn State

Finalist: Mourning mother — by Jackson Ranger, Bellisario Student Media, Penn State

 

Feature Photography

Winner: The Dollhouse is the ‘most inclusive house’ for CNY bands — by Lars Jendruschewitz, The Daily Orange, Syracuse University

Finalist: Locked in — by Tyrese Abdul-Shakoor, Crescent magazine, Southern Connecticut State University

Finalist: Upside down flier — by Esteban Marenco, Bellisario Student Media, Penn State

 

Photo Essay/Slideshow

Winner: Last sermon — by Natalie Book, Bellisario Student Media, Penn State

Finalist: Otto Tunes’ first ICCA semifinals is the result of a close knit brotherhood — by Cassandra Roshu, The Daily Orange, Syracuse University

Finalist: A look inside local recycling — by Arthur Maiorella, The NewsHouse, Syracuse University

 

Illustration

Winner: New York Jazz — by Dorothea Dolan, Jerk, Syracuse University

Finalist: Harvard’s feeder schools — by Catherine H. Feng, The Harvard Crimson, Harvard College

Finalist: Inside Columbia’s surveillance and disciplinary operation for student protesters — by Kelsea Petersen, Columbia Daily Spectator, Columbia University

 

Photo Illustration

Winner: The American Dream — by Zobayer Joti, Jerk, Syracuse University

Finalist: Mervin James’ journey to Rider — by Josiah Thomas, The Rider News, Rider University

Finalist: Infighting and pressure from above: Inside Harvard’s Legacy of Slavery initiative — by Hannah S. Lee, The Harvard Crimson, Harvard College

 

Sports Photography

Winner: Paralympic hard knocks — by Jackson Ranger, Bellisario Student Media, Penn State

Finalist: Olympic retirement — by Jackson Ranger, Bellisario Student Media, Penn State

Finalist: Field Hockey: No. 2 Northwestern’s overtime victory over Virginia carries the weight of a title bout — by Dov Weinstein Elul, The Daily Northwestern, Northwestern University

 

Best Use of Multimedia

Winner: East Palestine: One year later — by The News Lab staff, The News Lab, Penn State University

Finalist: Impact unveiled: Wildfire smoke — by Zach Nemirovsky, The NewsHouse, Syracuse University

Finalist: The Editorial Board’s overseer endorsements — by Alexander D. Cai, Dennis S. Eum, Neil H. Shah, Victoria A. Kauffman, The Harvard Crimson, Harvard College

 

News Videography

Winner: Pro-Palestine protesters begin encampment in Harvard Yard — by Julian J. Giordano, The Harvard Crimson, Harvard College

Finalist: Food vendors compete with restaurants in Jackson Heights — by Lizbeth Fuentes Ascencio, Harlem View, The City College of New York

 

Feature Videography

Winner: Art exhibit dismantles stereotypes of incarcerated people — by Matthew Ferrera, NYCity News Service, CUNY

Finalist: On the Fly diner brings Cajun food to Syracuse with ‘labor of love’ — by Joe Zhao, The Daily Orange, Syracuse University

 

Sports Videography

Winner: Harvard Men’s Crew prepares for 2024 Head of the Charles Regatta — by Lara R. Berliner, Julian J. Giordano, Ben J. Lann, The Harvard Crimson, Harvard College

 

Data Visualization

Winner: Tracking the path to professorship at Brown University — by Brown Daily Herald staff, The Brown Daily Herald, Brown University

Finalist: Most schools dream of sending students to Harvard. These 21 expect to. — by Elyse C. Goncalves, Matan H. Josephy, Grayson M. Martin, The Harvard Crimson, Harvard College

 

Audio  

Radio News Reporting

Winner: Full or not, Ogdensburg’s new flights to DC are taking off — by Zach Jaworski, North Country Public Radio, St. Lawrence University

Finalist: After the Daniel Penny trial, New Yorkers evaluate how safe they are on the subway — by Melanie Marich, AudioFiles, CUNY

Finalist: Protecting the Hudson: Riverkeepers’ newest captain — by Jesse King, AudioFiles, CUNY

 

Radio Feature

Winner: Newspaper press in the Adirondacks keeps printing despite national trends — by Zach Jaworski, North Country Public Radio, St. Lawrence University

 

Radio In-Depth Reporting

Winner: New rat city — by Perry Gregory, AudioFiles, CUNY

Finalist: How Watertown’s rare, non-partisan government shapes its elections — by Zach Jaworski, North Country Public Radio, St. Lawrence University

Finalist: The green black market — by Jamie Korenblat, AudioFiles, Syracuse University

 

Radio Sports Reporting

Winner: Real life gladiators fight in medieval combat tournament — by Graham Hartmann, AudioFiles, CUNY

 

Best All-Around Radio Newscast

Winner: WRHU FM Newsline — by Staff, WRHU FM, Hofstra University

 

Podcast (Narrative)

Winner: What’s it like to plan for when you lose it? — by Rebecca Rand, Caroline Handel, AudioFiles, CUNY

Finalist: The Wakefields: Two brothers, Six generations  — by Cade Miller, The News Lab / West Virginia Public Media, Penn State University

Finalist: Dancing, drones and changes across New York — by AudioFiles staff, AudioFiles, CUNY

 

Podcast (Conversational)

Winner: We the Students:  LGBTQ+ in America — by Sophia Moore, Alejandro Rosales, Tommy DaSilva, The NewsHouse, Syracuse Universi

 

Broadcast 

Television Breaking News Reporting

Winner: Haley Jacobs: Election night breaking news — by Haley Jacobs, Centre County Report, Penn State University

Finalist: Psi Upsilon hazing allegations — by Michael Lamorte, Staff, CitrusTV, Syracuse University

Finalist: CUNY students mobilize to support those arrested in campus protests — by Ana Valdez Saravia, Jackie Zamora, NYCity News Service, CUNY

 

Television General News Reporting

Winner: Swipe gone wrong: The rise of social media scams — by Haley Jacobs, Centre County Report, Penn State University

Finalist: Rumor has it — by Nicole Aponte, NCC News, Syracuse University

Finalist: Child poverty rate in Syracuse remains high; How the community is responding — by Max Williams, NCC News, Syracuse University

 

Television Feature Reporting

Winner: Welding with a purpose — by Moira Vaughan, NCC News, Syracuse University

Finalist: Central New York drive-in opens for first time in 40 years — by Max Williams, NCC News, Syracuse University

Finalist: One more minute: A mother’s fight for bridge barriers — by Erin Holton, Facundo Martinez, Sofia Milojevic, Highlands Current, Marist University

 

Television In-Depth Reporting

Winner: The reality behind Turkey’s water resources — by Sophia Montanye, Centre County Report, Penn State University

Finalist: CitrusTV Election Night 2024 — by Margueritte Bellotti, Brandon Myers, staff, CitrusTV, Syracuse University

Finalist: Green black market — by Zach Richter, Jamie Korenblat, Nardeen Saleep, Josh Feldstein, Newhouse Spotlight Team, Syracuse University

 

Television Sports Reporting

Winner: Centre County is key spot for fastest growing high school sport — by Savannah Wood, Centre County Report, Penn State University

Finalist: ACC Women’s Soccer coast-to-coast travel feature — by Nico Horning, ACC Network Extra, Syracuse University

Finalist: The Brotherhood: Rugby Club aims to grow the sport in Pennsylvania — by Ryan Eslinger, Centre County Report, Penn State University

 

Best All-Around Television Newscast

Winner: Hofstra Votes Live 2024 — by HEAT Network staff, HEAT Network, Hofstra University

Finalist: Centre County Report — by Staff, Centre County Report, Penn State University

 

Best All-Around Television News Magazine

Winner: Centre County Report in Turkey — by Centre County Report staff, Centre County Report, Penn State University

 

All Platforms 

Arts/Entertainment/Fashion Journalism

Winner: Broadway Broadcast — by Hannah Seeman, WRHU FM / WRHU.org – Radio Hofstra University, Hofstra University

Finalist: I read 150+ pages of a BoF-McKinsey Report so you don’t have to: The state of fashion 2025 — by Victoria Palumbo, The Marist Circle, Marist University

Finalist: As Puerto Rico prepares for its gubernatorial elections, Bad Bunny ensures his community is heard — by Suzanne Bagia, Massachusetts Daily Collegian, University of Massachusetts-Amherst

 

Campus Reporting

Winner: Our campus. Our crisis. Inside the encampments and crackdowns that shook American politics. — by Columbus Daily Spectator staff, Columbia Daily Spectator / New York Magazine, Columbia University

Finalist: Viral Veritas: How student influencers turn Harvard into payouts and purpose — by Harvard Crimson staff, The Harvard Crimson, Harvard College

Finalist: The stakes of solidarity: What low-income students risked the day of Columbia’s April 18 mass arrest — by Ann Vettikkal, Columbia Daily Spectator, Columbia University

 

Collaborative Journalism

Winner: A tale of two cities: Reclaiming Niagara Falls and Salinas — by A Tale of Two Cities staff, The Newhouse School, Syracuse University, Universidad del Sagrado Corazón

 

Cultural Criticism

Winner: Harvard Crimson columns — by Vivienne Germain, The Harvard Crimson, Harvard University

 

Food/Restaurant Journalism

Winner: How far to get food in Weeksville, Brooklyn? — by Apolline Lamy, NYCity News Service, CUNY

Finalist: Montclair hidden gem “da Pepo” offers taste of Italy inside bookstore — by Rob Ferguson, Jordan Reed, The Montclarion, Montclair State University

Finalist: Jollof Wars at First Love NY Church — by Adeshewa Coker, Harlem View, The City College of New York

 

Investigative Reporting

Winner: Day care danger — by NYCity News Service Staff, NYCity News Service, CUNY

Finalist: Chipped away — by John Perik, Lilli Iannella, Finn Lincoln, Julie Gilchrest, NCC News, Syracuse University

Finalist: How Brown’s inner circle helps well connected applicants get admitted — by Owen Dahlkamp, The Brown Daily Herald, Brown University

 

Regional Political Reporting

Winner: In Harvard’s backyard, A state representative fights for her political life — by Matan H. Josephy, The Harvard Crimson, Harvard College

Finalist: Signs pointed to Trump’s close race in New Jersey and others — by Peter Guziejewski, The Montclarion, Montclair State University

Finalist: Talking Points — by Margueritte Bellotti, Luke Radel, Jake Morel, Ben Bascuk, CitrusTV, Syracuse University

 

Retail/Small Business Journalism

Winner: Parthenon Books emphasizes shopping local | Juice and Java — by CitrusTV staff, CitrusTV, Syracuse University

 

Science/Environment/Climate Reporting

Winner: Are whales trying to tell us something? — by Serena Jampel, The Harvard Crimson, Harvard College

Finalist: Catch of the day: The round goby — by Grace McConnell, Julia Virnelli, Dan Klosowski, Gloria Rivera, The Canal Keepers, Syracuse University

 

SPJ champions journalists by recognizing outstanding achievement, fighting to protect press freedom, promoting high ethical standards and educating new generations of emerging professionals. Support excellent journalism and fight for your right to know. Become a member and give to the Legal Defense Fund,First Amendment Forever Fund orSPJ Foundation

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College Sports

Three Ducks named to Olympic hockey teams – Orange County Register

The Ducks will be represented by at least three players at the 2026 Winter Olympics in Milan. There, Lukáš Dostál and Radko Gudas will reprise their roles from their 2024 World Championship triumph for Czechia while prospect Damian Clara will man the net for host nation Italy. Dostál made an immense leap forward last season […]

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The Ducks will be represented by at least three players at the 2026 Winter Olympics in Milan.

There, Lukáš Dostál and Radko Gudas will reprise their roles from their 2024 World Championship triumph for Czechia while prospect Damian Clara will man the net for host nation Italy.

Dostál made an immense leap forward last season for the Ducks, when he routinely saved goals above expected as the team’s most outstanding and most consistent player. Gudas took a step back on the blue line from his superb first season on Katella Ave., but also assumed the role of captain for the first time, continued to deepen his community presence and played through injuries.

Both men participated in Czechia’s gold-medal victory on home soil in the spring of 2024, when Dostál dominated the tournament, including a shutout in the final and another in the quarterfinal round. Gudas contributed to that excellence as part of the Czech defense corps, and the team effort even extended beyond the ice.

“It was a very special moment for our team and for our country as well. We haven’t been able to do that in, I think, 40 years,” Gudas said. “Everybody in the Czech Republic was cheering for us and it got the whole country together rooting for one thing.”

For Dostál, it was a springboard toward a season that established him as an NHL starter and may make him a wealthy man as he negotiates a new contract during his pending restricted free agency. He edged out a pair of more established NHL netminders for the gig in goal last spring.

“Getting the chance, being the youngest, people might have thought I might not be able to handle it, but I really wanted to prove everybody wrong, to show that ‘I’m here, I’m ready,’” Dostál said.

Clara, a 20-year-old prospect goaltender whose journey has taken him from Italy to Austria to Sweden to San Diego, will almost assuredly be the lone North American pro among the Italians.

“I hope I can give my best for the team and give my best for the nation,” Clara said.

With competition opening up beyond the traditional seven or so powers in ice hockey, the Italians hope to join the Swiss, Germans and other rising European sides. While Clara said he felt the program had ground to cover to close the gap on even those up-and-comers, he was enthused at some talent in the pipeline and hoped to be an exemplar within the program.

“I hope I can be a little bit of a role model in that you don’t have to start out big, you just have to go somewhere, try your luck and give it your all,” Clara said. “I know I’m not supposed to be here, given where I came from.”

On Monday, each of the 12 qualifying countries named half a dozen participants, with the bulk of the rosters to be determined ahead of the February games. That could send additional Ducks to Italy. Most notably, new addition Chris Kreider skated for the United States at 4 Nations Face-Off, where promising pivot Leo Carlsson filled a depth role for Sweden.



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Penn State women soccer's Hannah Jordan selected to U.S. Soccer Women's College ID Camp

An incoming Nittany Lion is off to Georgia.  Penn State freshman Hannah Jordan will be heading to Atlanta this week for the first-ever U.S. Soccer Women’s College ID Camp. Rookie ready to MAKE HER MARK🇺🇸Congratulations to incoming freshman Hannah Jordan on earning a call up to the inaugural U.S. Soccer Women’s College ID Camp💪#WeAre | […]

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Penn State women soccer's Hannah Jordan selected to U.S. Soccer Women's College ID Camp


An incoming Nittany Lion is off to Georgia. 

Penn State freshman Hannah Jordan will be heading to Atlanta this week for the first-ever U.S. Soccer Women’s College ID Camp.

The Southlake, Texas, native is one of three incoming freshman midfielders for the Nittany Lions. 

Jordan is part of a Penn State signing class that secured a top-six ranking. 

MORE SOCCER COVERAGE

4 Penn State women's soccer players qualify for FIFA U20 World Cup

The Nittany Lions are taking the national stage.

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



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Sam Burns claims lead heading into final round of 125th U.S. Open

Could we have a first-time major championship winner crowned at Oakmont Country Club on Father’s Day evening in Western Pennsylvania? That certainly seems possible. Sam Burns fired a one-under 69 one day after a five-under 65 to claim a 54-hole lead at the U.S. Open. Three other players remained within three shots when closing day […]

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Could we have a first-time major championship winner crowned at Oakmont Country Club on Father’s Day evening in Western Pennsylvania? That certainly seems possible.

Sam Burns fired a one-under 69 one day after a five-under 65 to claim a 54-hole lead at the U.S. Open. Three other players remained within three shots when closing day wrapped up on Saturday evening.

We’ve got an interesting leaderboard at Oakmont.

Place Player Score Round Summary
1 Sam Burns -4 72-65-69
T-2 Adam Scott -3 70-70-67
T-2 J.J. Spaun -3 66-72-69
4 Viktor Hovland -1 71-68-70
5 Carlos Ortiz E 71-72-67
T-6 Tyrrell Hatton +1 73-70-68
T-6 Thriston Lawrence +1 67-74-70
8 Rasmus Neergaard-Petersen +2 69-74-69
T-9 Robert MacIntyre +3 70-74-69
T-9 Cameron Young +3 70-74-69
T-11 Marc Leishman +4 71-75-68
T-11 Chris Gotterup +4 76-69-69
T-11 Scottie Scheffler +4 73-71-70
T-11 Nick Taylor +4 73-71-70
T-11 Christiaan Bezuidenhout +4 72-71-71
T-11 Max Greyserman +4 76-67-71
T-11 Emilian Grillo +4 71-72-71
T-11 Russell Henley +4 70-72-72
T-11 Victor Perez +4 71-70-73
T-11 Ben Griffin +4 69-71-74
T-21 Ryan Gerard +5 72-74-69
T-21 Matt Wallace +5 72-74-69
T-21 Sam Stevens +5 71-72-72
T-21 Keegan Bradley +5 73-70-72
T-21 Chris Kirk +5 73-70-72
T-21 Jason Day +5 76-67-72
T-21 Thomas Detry +5 69-73-73
T-21 Brooks Koepka +5 68-74-73
T-29 J.T. Poston +6 74-72-70
T-29 Jordan Spieth +6 70-75-71
T-29 Trevor Cone +6 71-73-72
T-29 Aaron Rai +6 72-72-72
T-29 Jhonattan Vegas +6 74-70-72
T-29 Si Woo Kim +6 68-74-74
T-35 Xander Schauffele +7 72-74-71
T-35 Maverick McNealy +7 76-69-72
T-35 Tom Kim +7 72-73-72
T-35 Jon Rahm +7 69-75-73
T-39 Laurie Canter +8 72-75-71
T-39 Patrick Reed +8 73-74-71
T-39 Corey Conners +8 72-74-72
T-39 Ryan Fox +8 72-73-73
T-39 Rasmus Hojgaard +8 71-73-74
T-39 Collin Morikawa +8 70-74-74
T-45 Matt Fitzpatrick +9 74-73-72
T-45 Justin Hastings +9 73-73-73
T-45 Mackenzie Hughes +9 73-72-74
T-45 Adam Schenk +9 71-72-76
T-49 Andrew Novak +10 76-71-73
T-49 Rory McIlroy +10 74-72-74
T-49 Tony Finau +10 76-70-74
T-49 Daniel Berger +10 72-72-76
T-49 Denny McCarthy +10 70-74-76
T-54 Niklas Norgaard +11 76-70-75
T-54 Sungjae Im +11 68-77-76
T-56 Philip Barbaree, Jr. +12 76-71-75
T-56 Brian Harman +12 71-76-75
T-56 James Nicholas +12 69-78-75
T-56 Michael Kim +12 75-71-76
T-56 Johnny Keefer +12 76-69-77
T-56 Taylor Pendrith +12 72-72-78
62 Ryan McCormick +13 70-77-76
T-63 Harris English +14 73-74-77
T-63 Hideki Matsuyama +14 74-73-77
65 Jordan Smith +15 72-74-79
66 Mathieu Pavon +16 71-74-81
67 Cam Davis +19 74-73-82

Adam Scott is the only player within seven shots of the lead with a major championship. It’s very possible that we could be five-wide or more when we get to the back nine. However, it looks like an aggregate score of under par will win this tournament. The carnage has not necessarily been outrageous.

Buckle in for Sunday at the U.S. Open.

U.S. Open Sunday tee times

7:52 a.m. – Cam Davis
8:03 a.m. – Matthieu Pavon, Jordan Smith
8:14 a.m. – Hideki Matsuyama, Harris English
8:25 a.m. – Ryan McCormick, Taylor Pendrith
8:36 a.m. – Johnny Keefer,Michael Kim
8:47 a.m. – James Nicholas, Brian Harman
8:58 a.m. – Philip Barbaree, Jr., Sungjae Im
9:14 a.m. – Niklas Norgaard, Denny McCarthy
9:25 a.m. – Daniel Berger, Tony Finau
9:36 a.m. – Rory McIlroy, Andrew Novak
9:47 a.m. – Adam Schenk, Mackenzie Hughes
9:58 a.m. – Justin Hastings (a), Matt Fitzpatrick
10:09 a.m. – Collin Morikawa, Rasmus Højgaard
10:20 a.m. – Ryan Fox, Corey Conners
10:36 a.m. – Patrick Reed, Laurie Canter
10:47 a.m. – Jon Rahm, Tom Kim
10:58 a.m. – Maverick McNealy, Xander Schauffele
11:09 a.m. – Si Woo Kim, Jhonattan Vegas
11:20 a.m. – Aaron Rai, Trevor Cone
11:31 a.m. – Jordan Spieth, J.T. Poston
11:42 a.m. – Brooks Koepka, Thomas Detry
11:58 a.m. – Jason Day, Chris Kirk
12:09 p.m. – Keegan Bradley, Sam Stevens
12:20 p.m. – Matt Wallace, Ryan Gerard
12:31 p.m. – Ben Griffin, Victor Perez
12:42 p.m. – Russell Henley, Emiliano Grillo
12:53 p.m. – Max Greyserman, Christiaan Bezuidenhout
1:04 p.m. – Nick Taylor, Scottie Scheffler
1:20 p.m. – Chris Gotterup, Marc Leishman
1:31 p.m. – Cameron Young, Robert MacIntyre
1:42 p.m. – Rasmus Neergaard-Petersen, Thriston Lawrence
1:53 p.m. – Tyrrell Hatton, Carlos Ortiz
2:04 p.m. – Viktor Hovland, J.J. Spaun
2:15 p.m. – Adam Scott, Sam Burns



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Assistant Coach – Men’s Ice Hockey in Medford, MA for Tufts University

Details Posted: 16-Jun-25 Location: Medford, Massachusetts Type: Full-time Categories: Coaching Coaching – Ice Hockey Sector: Collegiate Sports Overview Located five miles from downtown Boston, Tufts University is a Division III member of the National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) and the highly-competitive New England Small College Athletic Conference (NESCAC). Tufts students participate in 30 varsity […]

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Details

Posted: 16-Jun-25

Location: Medford, Massachusetts

Type: Full-time

Categories:

Coaching

Coaching – Ice Hockey

Sector:

Collegiate Sports

Overview


Located five miles from downtown Boston, Tufts University is a Division III member of the National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) and the highly-competitive New England Small College Athletic Conference (NESCAC). Tufts students participate in 30 varsity sports, 20 club sports and a number of intramural sports. Tufts Athletics has won thirteen NCAA team championships since 2010 and has finished in the top 10 of the Learfield Sports Directors’ Cup in each of the last 10 years, including winning the Director’s Cup in 2021-2022 as the top Division III Athletic Department in the nation. Tufts Athletics oversees the Physical Education Department and manages all athletics facilities, including the Steve Tisch Sports & Fitness Center which opened in 2012. The Department of Athletics provides student-athletes a dynamic, transformational experience on and off the field. They experience the joy of personal growth inherent in high level competition, while cultivating lifelong connections with teammates, the Tufts community and the world around us


What You’ll Do


Assists the Head Coach in all aspects of running an NCAA Division III men’s ice hockey program by educating and coaching student-athletes, recruiting highly selective prospective student-athletes, developing and implementing practice sessions and game strategies, and supporting student-athletes in their personal, academic and athletic growths and development at Tufts.


Essential Functions:


– Educate and coach student athletes


– Practice organization


– Assist in running clinics and other fundraising efforts


– Recruiting highly selective prospective student-athletes


– Secondary assignment assigned by director of athletics


Additional Information


The department’s budgeted salary is targeting the low to mid-point of the salary range.

Basic Requirements:

  • Bachelor’s degree and prior coaching experience;
    Strong leadership, interpersonal and communication skills.
  • Ability to develop and relate to student-athletes in an extremely competitive academic environment;
  • Dedication to the full academic, athletic and social development of student-athletes;
  • Commitment to gender equity, rules compliance, diversity and inclusion and the mission of Tufts University; and
  • Valid US driver’s license and ability to travel.

Preferred Qualifications:

  • Prior experience coaching defensive line or defensive backs
  • Prior experience coaching at the collegiate level
  • Prior competitive playing experience
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About Tufts University

Located five miles from downtown Boston, Tufts University is a Division III member of the National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) and the highly-competitive New England Small College Athletic Conference (NESCAC). Tufts students participate in 30 varsity sports, 20 club sports and a number of intramural sports. Tufts Athletics has won eleven NCAA team championships since 2010 and has finished in the top 10 of the Learfield Sports Directors’ Cup in each of the last eight years, including winning the Director’s Cup in 2021-2022 as the top Division III Athletic Department in the nation. Tufts Athletics oversees the Physical Education Department and manages all athletics facilities, including the Steve Tisch Sports & Fitness Center which opened in 2012. The Department of Athletics provides student-athletes a dynamic, transformational experience on and off the field. They experience the joy of personal growth inherent in high level competition, while cultivating lifelong connections with teammates, the Tufts community and the world around us.


Connections working at Tufts University



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Kukan Earns Invite to U.S. Soccer College Talent ID Camp

TUSCALOOSA, Ala. –– Alabama soccer’s Kiley Kukan has been called up to a first-of-its-kind United States Soccer Women’s College Talent ID Camp, U.S. Soccer announced Monday. Kukan will compete in a five-day training camp beginning June 18 in Atlanta. The camp is part of the growing U.S. Youth National Teams’ scouting strategy and aims to […]

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Kukan Earns Invite to U.S. Soccer College Talent ID Camp

TUSCALOOSA, Ala. –– Alabama soccer’s Kiley Kukan has been called up to a first-of-its-kind United States Soccer Women’s College Talent ID Camp, U.S. Soccer announced Monday. Kukan will compete in a five-day training camp beginning June 18 in Atlanta.

The camp is part of the growing U.S. Youth National Teams’ scouting strategy and aims to increase opportunities and expand the U.S. Under-18, Under-19 and Under-20 Women’s National Team player pools.The five-day camp will consist of 42 players and will feature three training sessions and two intrasquad matches.

Kiley Kukan, U.S. Soccer College Talent ID Camp

  • Named to the 2024 Southeastern Conference All-Freshman Team
  • Ranked fourth on the team in points after scoring three goals and tallying three assists during her freshman campaign
  • Her three goals ranked third on the team
  • Scored her first collegiate goal in a 2-1 road win over North Texas on Aug. 17, 2024
  • Started 19 games during her freshman year
  • A three-time U.S. Youth National Team Regional ID Camp participant (2021, 2022, 2023)
  • Competed in the 2022 and 2023 ECNL National Selection Game
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Dartmouth Athletics Announces Thompson Arena Renovations

Story Links HANOVER, N.H.—Dartmouth’s Haldeman Family Director of Athletics and Recreation, Mike Harrity and Dartmouth College announce a project to renovate Dartmouth’s Rupert C. Thompson Arena, that will modernize locker rooms and team spaces, and benefit team building, student-athlete development, and future recruiting. Thompson Arena has been the home of […]

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HANOVER, N.H.—Dartmouth’s Haldeman Family Director of Athletics and Recreation, Mike Harrity and Dartmouth College announce a project to renovate Dartmouth’s Rupert C. Thompson Arena, that will modernize locker rooms and team spaces, and benefit team building, student-athlete development, and future recruiting.

Thompson Arena has been the home of Dartmouth men’s and women’s hockey since opening in 1975. The 11,050-square-foot renovation will provide both programs with new locker rooms, team lounges, sports medicine spaces, a weight room, a coaches’ suite, as well as a new donor and fan hospitality space on the concourse level.

Thompson Renos Collage

Over the last year, Dartmouth women’s hockey welcomed new head coach Maura Crowell, who brings a record of sustained success from the University of Minnesota Duluth (UMD). Crowell led UMD to three consecutive 20 plus win seasons and two NCAA Frozen Four appearances (2021, 2022). She was named the USCHO Division I Women’s Coach of the Year and the CCM/AHCA National Coach of the Year in 2016–17 and was a finalist for the CCM/AHCA award again in both 2021 and 2022. Her leadership signals a new chapter for Dartmouth women’s hockey, rooted in competitive excellence and academic achievement.

The men’s hockey program continues to thrive under Koenig Family Head Coach of Dartmouth Men’s Hockey, Reid Cashman. The program is coming off a historic 2024–25 season, returning to the Top 20 rankings and winning the Ivy League Championship outright for the first time since 1979–80. In addition, Cashman and his staff were named Ivy League coaching staff of the year in 2024-25, while Cashman was named Tim Taylor ECAC Coach of the Year previously for the 2023-24 season. This success reflects the program’s continued investment in holistic student-athlete development—combining elite performance with academic rigor.

“This renovation will create a modern space to facilitate individual student-athlete development and team cohesion both on and off the ice,” Harrity shared. “We’re able to provide our teams with this enhancement because of the tremendous support from our alumni, the college, and the athletics and recreation department.”

The Thompson Arena locker rooms were last renovated in the summer of 2016 with both the men’s and women’s locker rooms receiving improvements. Part of the 2016 renovation also saw updates to the playing surface including new dasher boards and glass and a new refrigeration system. 

Crowell is excited about the upgraded locker room, which will be among the best in Division I hockey. “An upgraded locker room is meaningful to our team because it will give us the ability to have more space and create a true hockey epicenter, which is important to our program. The upgraded stalls and design will put us among the best locker rooms in the nation.”

Cashman is looking forward to having a central hub for Dartmouth hockey. “One of the great positives from this renovation is that everything related to Dartmouth hockey will now be under the Thompson roof. Our new coaches’ suite will allow our coaches to have more integration with our student-athletes. The new locker rooms and lounges will give our student-athletes an unbelievable atmosphere to prepare on and off the ice.”

The project will be divided into three phases, with the final phase expected to be completed in the fall of 2026.

“Renovated facilities are great for the current student-athletes but also should enhance recruiting to grow our program. Thompson Arena is already an incredible rink but the decision to renovate is a testament to Dartmouth’s commitment to constant improvement in all areas,” Dartmouth women’s hockey player Izee Powell ’26 added. “This renovation will create a better training facility for our team which is an important signal that Dartmouth is investing in the student-athletes so that we can be the best we can possibly be. I’m really lucky to be a part of it and I can’t wait for the future success of Dartmouth women’s hockey.”

Matt Fusco ’27 of the men’s hockey team is excited about all of the renovations. “The plans for the rink look unbelievable. We will have so many resources at our disposal, and everything we need will be right there for our whole team. This addition will be big and will help us separate from the rest of college hockey. Having all of the benefits of what Dartmouth offers its students plus the addition to the rink; it makes Dartmouth the place to be in college hockey.”

Phase one, which started in January 2025, focuses on adding to the building infrastructure of the arena.  Phase two focuses on the energy upgrades to the mechanical systems which is part of Dartmouth’s decarbonization effort to reach carbon-zero operations by 2050.

Phase three will complete the interior renovations and all site work upgrades with the completion anticipated in time for the start of the season in fall 2026.

Throughout the renovations, both Dartmouth men’s and women’s hockey will continue to call Thompson Arena home. Dartmouth Athletics and Recreation is grateful to campus leaders for their support in updating Thompson Arena for the first time in 50 years. Dartmouth hockey has benefitted from an energized alumni and fan base with millions of dollars in private support committed to this project. For more information on how you can make a transformational gift to the Thompson Arena renovation, contact Steve Maciejewski, Senior Associate Athletics Director for Development (steven.j.maciejewski@dartmouth.edu).

2025-26 season ticket deposits are now on sale, to secure your season ticket for 2025-26, click here for men’s hockey and click here for women’s hockey.




 



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