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There are apparently leaders in the clubhouse for the Arizona women’s basketball head coaching position. Mitchell Northam of SB Nation, among others, is reporting that Becky Burke of the University of Buffalo and Vanessa Blair-Lewis of George Mason are the finalists to replace Adia Barnes. Per multiple sources, the finalists for the Arizona job are: […]

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There are apparently leaders in the clubhouse for the Arizona women’s basketball head coaching position. Mitchell Northam of SB Nation, among others, is reporting that Becky Burke of the University of Buffalo and Vanessa Blair-Lewis of George Mason are the finalists to replace Adia Barnes.

Blair-Lewis is very experienced with 22 years of coaching experience on her resume. She has taken her last two schools to their first NCAA Tournament appearances, including leading George Mason there this season. She has coached multiple conference players, rookies, and defensive players of the year. She has also been a finalist for Her Hoop Stats’ Kathy Delaney-Smith Mid-Major Coach of the Year award the last two years.

Burke is much younger at 35 years old. She played for a Final Four team at Louisville but like the other candidate, has not coached at a Power 4 (or Power 5) level. Her best postseason result was winning the WNIT this year. The WNIT is the current tertiary tournament for women’s basketball following the NCAA Tournament and the WBIT.

Whether they would come cheap is a question if Barnes’ salary was truly the breaking point at Arizona.

Burke made a $250,000 base salary in 2023-24, although bonuses could bump her up to $307,000. She is signed through the 2027-28 season.

When Blair-Lewis was hired in 2021, she was paid a base salary of $300,000 with bonuses of up to $232,500 for a possible $532,500 total. She has signed two extensions since. Current details of her salary are not available.

The problem is getting them out of their contracts. Both of them recently signed extensions. Blair-Lewis has signed one each of her last two years. The last extension ran through the 2028-29 season, but the buyout terms are not readily available. As of April 1, 2024, Burke had a buyout of $500,000.

Barnes is expected to be introduced as the next head coach at SMU tomorrow at 1 p.m. MST.

College Sports

MSU College of Engineering unveils new technology engineering degree program

Michigan State University’s College of Engineering unveiled a new undergraduate technology engineering program, serving as the college’s latest response to industry demand for practice-ready engineers. “Technology engineering is a new engineering discipline and MSU is leading the way with this,” Janet Brelin-Fornari, director of Technology Engineering, said in an interview with The State News. Technology […]

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Michigan State University’s College of Engineering unveiled a new undergraduate technology engineering program, serving as the college’s latest response to industry demand for practice-ready engineers.

“Technology engineering is a new engineering discipline and MSU is leading the way with this,” Janet Brelin-Fornari, director of Technology Engineering, said in an interview with The State News.

Technology Engineering, or TechE, which was launched in fall 2024, blends mechanical, electrical and computer engineering with computer science to prepare students for modern engineering challenges while working in state-of-the-art labs. The program aims to bridge the gap between engineers and computer scientists across product development teams, according to a press release. 

“While students have the core of choosing a concentration, they can mix it with the new Smart Agricultural Systems minor, and they can take the courses in that track as well to fulfill that,” Brelin-Fornari said. “The industry has been so excited to get their hands on these engineers.”

The new program will include courses in hardware cybersecurity, electronics and embedded systems, sensors and signal processing, robotics and automation and controls with the goal to “leverage hands-on, real-world projects that integrate cutting-edge technologies with a strong foundational engineering mindset,” the release says.

Brelin-Fornari said that with the engineering field rapidly changing due to advanced technology, MSU has created the curriculum addressing the changes to make students “career-ready engineers.”

“The students have a set of foundational courses that they have to take,” Brelin-Fornari said. “They have courses in electronics, sensors and signal processing, digital logic to understand what’s going on inside of a chip and the computer side.”

With the skills and knowledge students can learn, Brelin-Fornari said the program is designed to be hands-on.

“You need to know and understand the theory, and as engineers, a big part of what we do is to apply that theory—but the theory needs to come to life,” Brelin-Fornari said. “With that, we have hands-on opportunities in most of the courses within Technology Engineering.”

The TechE degree program’s first graduating class is expected in fall 2026, with incoming students learning more about the program during New Student Orientation. Students can find more information on the Technology Engineering program through the College of Engineering’s website.

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UCLA

LOS ANGELES – Designated player Alexis Ramirez went 3-for-4 with six runs batted in and logged her first career two-homer game to help the No. 6-ranked UCLA softball team defeat Northwestern, 15-8, in a slugfest at Easton Stadium Saturday afternoon.   The Bruins (47-8, 17-4 Big Ten) recorded 15 hits in a game for the […]

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LOS ANGELES – Designated player Alexis Ramirez went 3-for-4 with six runs batted in and logged her first career two-homer game to help the No. 6-ranked UCLA softball team defeat Northwestern, 15-8, in a slugfest at Easton Stadium Saturday afternoon.
 
The Bruins (47-8, 17-4 Big Ten) recorded 15 hits in a game for the fourth time this season on a misty and cloudy day in Los Angeles. Junior third baseman Jordan Woolery joined Ramirez with a three-hit performance (3-for-4) and scored three runs. In total, UCLA’s top three batters – Jessica Clements, Savannah Pola and Woolery – went a combined 7-for-11 with eight runs scored and four RBIs.
 
Sophomore pitcher Kaitlyn Terry was tasked with leading UCLA in the circle after its 8-0 shutout loss from the previous day. Terry opened her outing by allowing the first two batters she faced to reach on a walk and infield single deep in the 5-6 hole. A wild pitch in the middle of the next at-bat to Kelsey Nader complicated the matter, putting two in scoring position with no outs. Terry escaped the threat by striking out each of the next two Wildcats (28-17-1, 15-6 Big Ten) and inducing a groundout to first baseman Megan Grant.
 
The Bruins set the tone on offense early with three runs in the first inning. Clements worked a full-count walk and a double by Pola into the left-center gap put two aboard for the heart of the lineup. Northwestern starting pitcher Emma Blea, who had thrown just 19.1 innings entering the contest, walked Woolery and Grant to bring home UCLA’s first run of the game. Kaniya Bragg rolled into a 6-4-3 double play; the Wildcats took the two easy outs in exchange for the Bruins’ second run. The next batter, Ramirez, smacked the first pitch she saw up the middle to score Woolery with two outs and extend the lead to 3-0.
 
Terry retired the side in order for a shutdown second inning, putting the bat in her own hands to lead off the bottom half. Terry – UCLA’s No. 9 hitter – got the green light on a 3-0 count and barreled a long single to the center field wall. Despite Clements lining into a double play, the Bruins were able to generate five runs with two outs. Two straight singles by Pola and Woolery and an intentional walk to Grant brought Bragg to the plate. On a 3-1 count, Bragg squared up a ball that bounced off the Northwestern second baseman’s ankles for an error to score a pair. Ramirez made the Wildcats pay for the blunder with a three-run homer to left field, again on a first-pitch delivery. Ramirez’ blast pushed UCLA’s lead to a commanding 8-0.
 
Terry battled through eight runs (seven earned), four homers and nine total hits to earn her 16th win of the season (16-4) in a complete-game effort.
 
At the plate, Terry went 2-for-4 and showed off her athleticism by scoring from first base on a two-run double by Clements in the bottom of the third. On the next pitch, Woolery dropped another long single into the left center gap to score Clements from second and balloon UCLA’s lead to 11-0.
 
The left-hander Terry went to work in the top of the fourth with 11 runs of support. However, four straight hits by the Wildcats – single, single, double, homer – scored four runs to put the threat of a run-rule away temporarily. Designated player Avery Garden hit the three-run shot to left to cap the scoring in the fourth inning.
 
After being held scoreless by Northwestern reliever Renae Cunningham in the bottom half, the Wildcats continued to cut into UCLA’s lead with four more runs off a string of back-to-back-to-back jacks by Kansas Robinson, Izzy Cunnea and Lauren Sciborski. What was once an 11-run lead for Terry was trimmed to just three, 11-8.
 
UCLA’s offense did not let up, answering Northwestern’s four-run spot with one of its own in the bottom of the fifth. Clements led off the inning with her second double of the game to match her career high. She later came around to score on a sacrifice fly by Pola after advancing to third on a wild pitch. Woolery singled to left center for her third hit of the game and advanced into scoring position on a passed ball. Bragg came through by fisting a 3-1 delivery to opposite field (right) to score Woolery. Ramirez delivered the final blow with a home run to the deepest part of the ballpark for her second longball of the day to bring the score to its final tally, 15-8.
 
The Shelly Carlin UCLA Head Softball Coach Kelly Inouye-Perez elected to leave Terry in the ballgame to finish out the sixth and seventh innings. Terry retired the final six batters in order with relative ease, needing just eight and 15 pitches in each inning, respectively.
 
NEXT UP
UCLA closes the regular season versus Northwestern tomorrow morning at 11 a.m. (PT) at Easton Stadium. The Bruins will be honoring the eight members of their senior class – Kate Blunt, Jayla Castro, Jada Cecil, Jessica Clements, Seneca Curo, Lauren Hatch, Savannah Pola and Taylor Stephens – prior to first pitch as part of a Senior Day Ceremony.
 



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Miami hockey releases 2025-26 season schedule

Miami University hockey announced its schedule for the 2025-26 season on April 28. Miami’s season begins on Oct. 3 and 4, when it takes on the Ferris State University Bulldogs at home in the first of three non-conference series. Max Dukovac, who played his first three collegiate seasons with the RedHawks, will return to Goggin […]

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Miami University hockey announced its schedule for the 2025-26 season on April 28.

Miami’s season begins on Oct. 3 and 4, when it takes on the Ferris State University Bulldogs at home in the first of three non-conference series. Max Dukovac, who played his first three collegiate seasons with the RedHawks, will return to Goggin Ice Center for the first time as a Bulldog.

The second and third series will be on the road against familiar opponents from 2024-25: the Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute Engineers and the Lindenwood University Lions.

The RedHawks begin conference play against the Arizona State University Sun Devils on Halloween weekend. Former Miami forward and the RedHawks’ leading scorer last season, John Waldron, will be returning to Oxford after transferring to Tempe early in the portal window this offseason.

Following the Arizona State series, Miami’s schedule moves to a bye week before the second weekend of November. Miami will head up to Kalamazoo to take on the defending national champion Western Michigan University Broncos before returning home to face the St. Cloud State University Huskies.

Miami then embarks on a journey overseas to participate in the Friendship Four tournament in Belfast, Northern Ireland. The RedHawks will take on the Sacred Heart University Pioneers, the Rochester Institute of Technology Tigers and the Union College Garnet Chargers in games on Nov. 28 and 29 competing for the Belpot Trophy.

There’s no rest for the RedHawks following their international journey, though. As the second-half of the regular season begins, Miami travels to the Denver University Pioneers on Dec. 5-6 before returning home to take on the Colorado College Tigers, whom Miami did not play at home in 2024-25.

The RedHawks hit their second bye week before playing in another mid-season tournament, this one taking place in Grand Rapids, Michigan. The Great Lakes Invitational is another four-team tournament that will involve Miami along with Ferris State, Michigan State University and Michigan Tech University.

The 2025-26 season will be Miami’s first time playing in the tournament.

To begin 2026, the RedHawks will take on Arizona State for the first time as visitors at Mullett Arena. Then, the University of Omaha-Nebraska Mavericks head to Oxford for the first of two series between the squads in 2026.

A third bye week for the Red and White makes way for five-straight weekends that alternate between home and away. Miami will play St. Cloud on the road and Western Michigan at home, the second series against both teams during the season.

The team’s first and only series against the University of North Dakota Fighting Hawks will take place at Ralph Engelstad Arena on Feb. 13 and 14 before first-year netminder Ethan Dahlmeir returns to Oxford with the University of Minnesota-Duluth Bulldogs the following weekend.

Miami closes out the regular season against Omaha on Feb. 27 and 28 before beginning NCHC tournament play on March 6, with the top four seeds in the conference hosting the best-of-three series, the semi-final and the final.

@jjmid04

middleje@miamioh.edu





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GOSHEN CITY FC

GOSHEN — The bitter wind blowing from the northeast wasn’t the only stinging feeling felt at the Goshen College Soccer Complex on Saturday night. Despite Joao Laranjo’s thrilling game-tying goal at the 86th minute, Goshen City couldn’t capitalize on late momentum after forcing two 15-minute overtime periods. After 120 minutes of action on the pitch, […]

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GOSHEN CITY FC

GOSHEN — The bitter wind blowing from the northeast wasn’t the only stinging feeling felt at the Goshen College Soccer Complex on Saturday night.

Despite Joao Laranjo’s thrilling game-tying goal at the 86th minute, Goshen City couldn’t capitalize on late momentum after forcing two 15-minute overtime periods. After 120 minutes of action on the pitch, they also failed to stop any of the Michigan Rangers’ five penalty shots, dropping the club’s U.S. Amateur Cup first round matchup at home 1-1 (5-4).

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Four San Luis Sidewinders sign with colleges

Four San Luis Sidewinders sign their letters of intent to play college soccer and baseball. SAN LUIS, Ariz. (KYMA, KECY) – A proud day for San Luis High School, as four standout Sidewinder athletes officially signed their letters of intent to continue their athletic and academic careers at the collegiate level. After leading the Sidewinders […]

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Four San Luis Sidewinders sign with colleges

Four San Luis Sidewinders sign their letters of intent to play college soccer and baseball.

SAN LUIS, Ariz. (KYMA, KECY) – A proud day for San Luis High School, as four standout Sidewinder athletes officially signed their letters of intent to continue their athletic and academic careers at the collegiate level.

After leading the Sidewinders on the soccer pitch, captains Luis Garcia and Armando Favela both signed with community college programs.

Garcia, a dynamic midfielder, signed with Mohave Community College. He wrapped up his senior season with 13 goals and 6 assists, earning 1st Team All-State honors and being named Region Player of the Year.

“It’s just like a dream,” Garcia said. “Not what we wanted at the end of the season, but personally being named player of the region and signing with Mohave, it couldn’t be better.”

Favela, a holding midfielder, committed to Mesa Community College. He was recognized as the Desert Southwest Region Defensive Player of the Year after a standout senior campaign.

“Its a wonderful moment,” Favela said. “These past four years have been a great journey. It’s an honor representing San Luis.”

On the girls’ side, Alizey Hernandez will take her talents to Nelson University in Phoenix after earning All-Region honors this season.

“Since I was small, I’ve been wanting to do this,” Hernandez said. “[Phoenix] is definitely a lot bigger than here and I’m ready for that change.”

Cesar Chavira, one of the most decorated baseball players in school history, will continue his career at Cochise College. The four-year varsity catcher has earned First Team All-Region recognition every season since his freshman year.

“It feels great and I’m ready to go and compete,” Chavira said. “I chose Cochise because of the coaching, the practice program and the school’s strong baseball history. It’s a great team and a great fit for me.”

Garcia is looking to study architecture. Favela will study economics and business. Hernandez is looking to study psychology. Chavira is planning to study sports medicine.

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Panthers open 2nd round of Stanley Cup Playoffs vs. Toronto Maple Leafs

SUNRISE, Fla. — The Florida Panthers are heading to the second round of the Stanley Cup Playoffs, where they’ll face off against the Toronto Maple Leafs. The National Hockey League announced that the series will open on Monday, May 5, in Toronto, with puck drop scheduled for 8 p.m. EST. The Panthers advanced after defeating […]

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SUNRISE, Fla. — The Florida Panthers are heading to the second round of the Stanley Cup Playoffs, where they’ll face off against the Toronto Maple Leafs.

The National Hockey League announced that the series will open on Monday, May 5, in Toronto, with puck drop scheduled for 8 p.m. EST. The Panthers advanced after defeating the Tampa Bay Lightning in the first round, winning the series 4-1.

Panthers

Panthers ready for ‘good challenge’ from Maple Leafs

The Carolina Hurricanes are set to open their second-round series against the Washington Capitals on Tuesday, May 6, in Washington. Puck drop is scheduled for 7 p.m. ET.

Meanwhile, the St. Louis Blues and Winnipeg Jets are still battling for a spot in the next round. Their decisive Game 7 in the first round is scheduled for Sunday, May 4, at 7 p.m. ET. The winner will move on to face the top-seeded team in their conference.

As of now, the National Hockey League has not released the complete second-round schedule, with several matchups still to be finalized.





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