College Sports
Simone Biles gives university commencement address
Simone Biles stood on a gold podium, addressed a crowd of thousands and admitted she was a little nervous. Biles then gave a performance several minutes longer than any of her gymnastics routines. She spoke for 12 minutes at the Washington University in St. Louis, giving the commencement address on a rainy Monday. She did […]

Simone Biles stood on a gold podium, addressed a crowd of thousands and admitted she was a little nervous.
Biles then gave a performance several minutes longer than any of her gymnastics routines.
She spoke for 12 minutes at the Washington University in St. Louis, giving the commencement address on a rainy Monday. She did so at Francis Olympic Field, which held competition in several sports during the 1904 St. Louis Olympics.
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The whole speech is here, about one hour and 45 minutes into the ceremony.
“You might think I’m used to the spotlight, but I would probably feel more comfortable if they had allowed me to vault onto the stage or do a little floor routine,” she said with chuckles, drawing applause. “But really, today is your day. While I may be considered an elite athlete, I know that you are elite students.”
Biles was also bestowed an honorary degree of Doctor of Humane Letters.
“I always dreamed of going to college, not just to be part of a collegiate gymnastics team, but to study medicine, to become a children’s nurse or a pediatrician, and to enjoy all the fun of a college campus,” said Biles, who committed to UCLA before turning professional at age 18 and forgoing college gymnastics. “But for me, that dream bumped up against others, and ultimately I chose a different path. But I do think my path and yours have a lot in common, although mine probably included a few more sequins and leotards.”
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Biles last competed at the 2024 Paris Olympics, winning three gold medals and one silver medal. She has repeated this spring that she doesn’t know if she will return to competition to bid for the 2028 Los Angeles Games.
To close her address Monday, she said, “The world doesn’t need you to be perfect. It needs you to be bold. It needs you to care and to keep going even when things don’t go as planned.”
The 2025 Met Gala Celebrating “Superfine: Tailoring Black Style” – Arrivals
Met Gala: Simone Biles, Sha’Carri Richardson, Noah Lyles, Gabby Thomas arrival photos
Simone Biles, Sha’Carri Richardson, Noah Lyles all return to the Met Gala for the first time since 2021.
College Sports
Kansas State University
By: D. Scott Fritchen It doesn’t take long for Kansas State senior Carla Bernat, the recently-crowned Augusta National Women’s Amateur champion, to put into words the significance that the Wildcats — as a team — head into the 2025 NCAA Championship together. “It means everything,” said Bernat, who played last year in the national championship […]

It doesn’t take long for Kansas State senior Carla Bernat, the recently-crowned Augusta National Women’s Amateur champion, to put into words the significance that the Wildcats — as a team — head into the 2025 NCAA Championship together.
“It means everything,” said Bernat, who played last year in the national championship as an individual. “I’m so happy we made it. I’ve been wanting to go to a national championship with my team, so getting it done, I was more nervous on that last hole than I was at Augusta.
“This is everything.”
The K-State women’s golf team will be playing for history when it opens play at the 2025 NCAA Championship on Friday with the first of three stroke-play rounds at Omni La Costa Resort & Spa in Carlsbad, California. Following the third round on Sunday, the field will be cut from 30 to 15 teams for Monday’s final round of stroke play where the eight teams that advance to match play in addition to the individual 72-hole national champion will be determined.
The quarterfinal and semifinal matches will be on Tuesday, while the championship match will be conducted on Wednesday.
Monday’s final round of stroke play and all matches will be shown on GOLF Channel.
“This is what we’ve worked toward all year,” second-year K-State head coach Stew Burke said. “On one hand, it was the expectation, but on the other hand, it’s turning that expectation into reality. That’s the most important thing.”

Burke on Tuesday was named to the watch list for the Jackie Steinmann National Coach of the Year award, presented annually to the top coach in Division I, II, II and NAIA women’s golf. K-State currently holds school records in scoring average (287.40) and top-three finishes (7), while it is tied for first in wins (2) and top-five finishes (9). Nine of the 12 lowest team rounds in school history have come this year.
“We’ve seen we’re able to do cool things,” Bernat said. “I actually think if we just focus on golf, we’re going to do something cool in nationals. We’ve never had a national championship. We have our chance. We might as well take it.”
K-State advanced to its first-ever NCAA Championship by tying for second place in the NCAA Lexington Regional on May 7 in Nicholasville, Kentucky. Bernat, the 2024-25 Big 12 Player of the Year, captured the individual regional title with a 54-hole score of 12-under par 204 to tie a school record matched by fellow senior Sophie Bert, the individual Big 12 Champion.
Bernat enters the NCAA Championship ranked No. 17 in the National Collegiate Golf Rankings after earning a two-shot victory over No. 1-ranked Mirabel Ting and No. 2-ranked Lottie Woad of Florida State.

“It was really nice to beat No. 1 and No. 2 in the world,” Bernat said. “I showed myself that with good mental patience and believing in myself, I can do it.”
Bernat boasts a school-record scoring average of 69.91, followed by Bert (73.09), Nanami Nakashima (73.86), Alenka Navarro (73.84) and Noa van Beek (74.06).
“It’s going to be great to go into it with two players like Carla and Sophie, but in golf it’s your fourth score that counts,” Burke said. “You can have three great scores and a bad fourth score, and that can hold you back a little bit. That’s the team aspect. Those two are leaders and do an amazing job for us, but everybody has stepped up this year. It’s been a total team effort.”

K-State, which was the first team left out of the NCAA Regionals a year ago, is one of the biggest comeback stories in women’s golf this season. The Wildcats have busted their way to sit at the table with traditional notable squads in the game.
“We know there’s a little bit of disrespect,” Burke said. “When a program hasn’t had the history of being great, people are surprised when you do it. Everybody that came here bought into the vision. We’re glad they’re a part of the first team to go to nationals.”
The regionals are finished. Now it’s time for K-State to show the women’s golf world what it can do again.
“We all have the same mindset: ‘Let’s go,'” Bert said. “Let’s show them what we can do. We are indeed at the table, and we can show them what we’ve got. It’s so cool. It’s amazing. We just need to do our jobs.”
College Sports
Keuka Names Jordan Sullivan Head Men's Soccer Coach
Men’s Soccer | 5/15/2025 9:30:09 AM Story Links KEUKA PARK, N.Y. — The Keuka College Department of Athletics has announced that Jordan Sullivan will be the next Head Men’s Soccer Coach for the Wolves. Sullivan comes to Keuka College from Nazareth University, where he was an assistant coach for the Golden Flyers for the past three seasons. […]


Men’s Soccer | 5/15/2025 9:30:09 AM
KEUKA PARK, N.Y. — The Keuka College Department of Athletics has announced that Jordan Sullivan will be the next Head Men’s Soccer Coach for the Wolves.
Sullivan comes to Keuka College from Nazareth University, where he was an assistant coach for the Golden Flyers for the past three seasons.
“I’m incredibly honored to be named Head Men’s Soccer Coach at Keuka College,” said Sullivan. “I’m excited to lead a program that values growth, discipline, and team culture. My focus will be on developing well-rounded student-athletes and building a competitive identity that represents the college with pride.”
At Nazareth, Sullivan led the developmental team as the JV Head Coach. He also assisted the varsity program with game plans and game strategies. Sullivan coached alongside Nazareth Head Coach Matt Tantalo, who previously coached 11 seasons at Keuka College, where he remains the winningest coach in program history.
Outside of Nazareth University, Sullivan has experience working with the Flower City Union (NISA), Rochester Lancers (UPSL), and Monroe Community College (NJCAA DI). With the Union, Sullivan served as head coach and guided the club to their first playoff appearance in club history and went on to win the NISA National Championship.
“Jordan brings the kind of energy and leadership that fuels progress,” said Associate Vice President and Director of Athletics Jon Accardi M’09. “He’s focused on building a connected team, developing our student-athletes, and driving success for the men’s soccer program moving forward.”
Sullivan played collegiately at Roberts Wesleyan University and started his career at Monroe Community College. Prior to that, he played in his native United Kingdom for various semi-pro teams around London. In 2014, he completed his UEFA B license, becoming one of the youngest coaches in the UK to do so.
Sullivan will have a final meeting with the Wolves before the student-athletes depart for summer break. They will return in August for their preseason in preparation for the 2025 campaign starting on August 29 at SUNY Morrisville.
ABOUT THE EMPIRE 8 CONFERENCE
The members of the Empire 8 Conference are committed first and foremost to the pursuit of academic excellence and the league is regarded as an outstanding NCAA Division III conference. The membership has distinguished itself among its peer group for its quality institutions, spirited and sportsmanlike competition, outstanding services and highly ethical policies and practices. Its commitment to serve the educational needs of its student-athletes is the hallmark of the E8. For more on the Empire 8 visit www.empire8.com.
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College Sports
College Hockey Inc » NCAA Division I Hockey Players Continue to Thrive in Classroom
Thursday, May 15, 2025 Both Women and Men Top National Average in Academic Progress Rate Penn State graduating seniors Dylan Lugris, Danny Dzhaniyev, Carson Dyck and Simon Mack (Photo: PSU Athletics). NCAA Division I hockey student-athletes once again performed above the national average academically, according to the annual Academic Progress Rate (APR) data released this […]

Thursday, May 15, 2025
Both Women and Men Top National Average in Academic Progress Rate

NCAA Division I hockey student-athletes once again performed above the national average academically, according to the annual Academic Progress Rate (APR) data released this month by the NCAA.
The women’s hockey four-year average score from 2020-21 through 2023-24 was 993, while men’s hockey scored 986, placing both among the top six among all women’s and men’s sports, respectively. Additionally, men’s hockey’s most recent single-year APR score of 985 for 2023-24 ranked sixth among men’s sports with 50 or more teams.
The APR, created in 2003 to measure Division I schools and teams on their student-athletes’ success in the classroom, awards points to teams based on students’ grades, their progress toward their degree and for staying in school.
One-quarter of the women’s hockey programs (10 of 39) included in the study – Boston College, Boston University, Brown, Colgate, Providence, Robert Morris, Sacred Heart, Minnesota, Minnesota Duluth and Vermont – logged perfect multi-year average APR scores of 1,000. A whopping 90 percent of all women’s hockey teams (35 of 39) included in the study had multi-year scores above the national Division I average of 984.
Ten men’s teams – Augustana, Bowling Green, Canisius, Penn State, Providence, Robert Morris, RIT, St. Lawrence, UMass-Lowell and New Hampshire – had perfect multi-year average APR scores of 1,000. Nearly 60 percent of all men’s programs (37 of 64) included in the study had multi-year APR scores above the national average.
The calculation of APR also rewards teams when former student-athletes return to school to complete their degree. In recent years, National Hockey League players like Nic Dowd (St. Cloud State), Jordan Harris (Northeastern), Jack Johnson (Michigan), Ryan McDonagh (Wisconsin) and Drew O’Connor (Dartmouth) have completed their undergraduate degrees after having left school early to play professionally.
The APR is related – but not identical – to the NCAA’s Graduation Success Rate (GSR), serving in a way as a predictor of GSR success. Women’s hockey had a 97-percent graduation rate in the most recent study, while men’s hockey’s boasted a 93-percent graduation rate, placing both among the top five of women’s and men’s sports, respectively.
For more information, visit NCAA.org.
College Sports
Kansas State University
By: D. Scott Fritchen By chance, Noa van Beek sits at the exact same sturdy dark wood table in a far corner of the Colbert Hills Golf Course clubhouse that she occupied a year ago when all this began. Yes, a little more than a year has passed since the Kansas State women’s golf team […]

By chance, Noa van Beek sits at the exact same sturdy dark wood table in a far corner of the Colbert Hills Golf Course clubhouse that she occupied a year ago when all this began. Yes, a little more than a year has passed since the Kansas State women’s golf team sat together, alone, in front of the TVs, hoping and praying for “Kansas State” to flash upon the screen during the NCAA Women’s Golf Selection Show. It was as excruciatingly horrid as one could imagine — how the TV screen showed each 12-team NCAA Regional field, six regional sites in all, with 72 total teams selected for the postseason.
But not the Wildcats.
K-State was the first team left out.
“Our name didn’t show up, and didn’t show up, and then it went through the last region, and not seeing your name there — we were just quiet,” van Beek says. “Nobody said a word.”
K-State head coach Stew Burke and assistant coach Rinko Mitsunaga saw their first season in Manhattan end unceremoniously as they watched a TV screen together with their new team. They had accomplished so much in their first campaign. Burke, the former K-State assistant coach who was named head coach in June 2023 after four successful seasons as head coach at Tulane, voiced high hopes for the Wildcats from the outset. He sought immediate success. Instant results. Program-changing type stuff. K-State set multiple program records in year one. Then in a flash, the year of rebirth for the women’s golf program instantly crashed with gut-turning finality.
“Stew sent us to the locker room and then he walked in,” van Beek says. “He broke down. And then Rinko. And that made us all break down.”
She pauses.
“That really made us realize how much we wanted it, how much he wanted it, and what we were going to do this year,” says van Beek, who is completing her junior season. “Yeah, that moment definitely did something for this year.”

Tomorrow, the K-State women’s golf team will be at Omni La Costa Resort & Spa in Carlsbad, California, for its first-ever national championship practice round prior to the championship beginning on Friday. Last Wednesday, van Beek and Burke and Mitsunaga and Big 12 Women’s Golfer of the Year Carla Bernat and Big 12 individual champion Sophie Bert and the rest of the Wildcats held a “TICKET PUNCHED” sign at Keene Trace Golf Club after completing the 18th and final hole of the final round of the 2025 NCAA Lexington Regional. The Wildcats tied for second in the regional with Georgia Southern, only behind No. 1 seed Florida State.
van Beek and Bernat got things rolling in the opening round of the regional as each posted a score of 2-under par 70 to begin postseason play in a tie for third place while leading the 66-player field with five birdies apiece. The duo tied for the fourth-lowest individual round in K-State’s NCAA Regional history. van Beek went even par over her first nine holes before tallying birdies on Nos. 2, 4, 5 and 7 for her eighth under-par round this season.
“It felt really good,” van Beek says. “I feel like I could’ve played even better than that and shot a 4-under. My game was very solid that day. I just didn’t make as many putts as I wanted. I was super focused. I knew what I had to do. It felt good.”
It was a shining moment, for sure, for van Beek, who flew overseas from Oene, Netherlands, in hopes of someday seeing hopes and dreams realized as a contributor on a major college golf team. van Beek points to her 3-under par 213 to tie the best 54-hole score of her career at Westbrook Invitational in February, and seventh-place finish — her first top-10 finish in 2025 and third of her career — at the MountainView Collegiate in March, as a couple of her favorite highlights this season. That is, of course, before her opening round in the regional.

van Beek currently ranks 10th in school history with a scoring average of 74.06 this season, and she ranks fourth all-time with a career scoring average of 74.37, and she has a career-high three top-20 finishes this season. She shot a 70 during the final round of the Big 12 Championship to help K-State rise from 11th to fifth overall.
“I had the most work to do on my mental part heading into this season,” van Beek says. “I worked with Stew and Rinko on some technical changes over the winter, and that made me a lot more consistent, too.”
van Beek is grateful for Burke and considers Mitsunaga “one of your best friends,” and like “a teammate that’s not playing.” No doubt the Burke-Mitsunaga duo has taken K-State women’s golf to heights unforeseen by outsiders, but accomplishable in their own minds — a 23-month trek to the table shared by blue-blood programs. Today, a Wildcat sits next to a Seminole, a Longhorn, and a Duck and a Cardinal.

Seem impossible? Nothing is impossible, van Beek learned at age 7. That’s when Noa’s father, Rene, sent her and Fleur, her younger sister by one year, to the golf course to hit a golf ball with a club that was even taller than them. Eventually, they took golf lessons. At age 10, Noa became a member of the Dutch National Team, where she contributed for eight years, most notably helping them to a third-place finish at the 2019 European Girls Team Championship. She also captured runner-up finishes at the 2021 Dutch National Stroke Play Championship U21 and the 2021 Dutch National Open.
“I realized at a very young age that I could do more than golf for fun,” van Beek says. “I said at age 10: ‘I’m going to be a professional golfer.’ I know, crazy story. But the national team put me on that path.”
Noa and Fleur competed, as sisters do, and they began traveling at an early age to play golf. They vacationed with their parents in Turkey and Italy and were used to being away from home. They shared everything, including a desire to compete at the highest level on a major college team.
“Golf was 90% of my life,” Noa says. “I don’t remember life without. Golf isn’t that big in the Netherlands, so when I told people, ‘I’m playing golf,’ they said, ‘Isn’t that for old men, rich men?’ I transferred from a regular high school to Centre for Sports and Education, and I fit in really well. The friends I had around me were all athletes.”
Exactly how did van Beek take that first step toward leaving the Netherlands for the United States?
“My dad is a big golf fan, so he knows every detail,” van Beek says. “He said, ‘That’s actually a really good idea.'”
There was a time when it appeared the dream wouldn’t happen. COVID hit and airlines paused flights, meaning college coaches couldn’t travel and watch prospective recruits in action, including van Beek. It also meant van Beek couldn’t travel to the U.S. to take recruiting visits.
“For me, it was all about the feeling, because I couldn’t do anything else other than listen to what they had to say and see pictures and videos,” van Beek says. “My visit to K-State was coaches walking around with their phone on FaceTime.”
But van Beek was sold on the facilities and academics and on having that “real college experience where sports are really big.”
“K-State,” van Beek says, “was perfect for me.”
Fleur, one year younger than Noa, took her own path. She just finished her sophomore season as a women’s golfer at Missouri.

Noa played in eight events as a freshman and finished third on the team with a 74.67 stroke average and one top-20 finish. She finished second with eight rounds of even or under par and tied for second with 88.89% of her rounds counting toward the team score.
Here’s what van Beek remembers most: “Every time you qualified, you were so nervous, you felt like you were playing in the national championships.”
The day came on May 19, 2023, that Kristi Knight, who had guided the Wildcats since the fall of 1995, announced that she would step away from her position to pursue other professional opportunities. She led the women’s golf program to all five NCAA Regionals (2001, 2002, 2003, 2004 and 2017). The national coaching search found Burke, the former K-State assistant coach under Knight, who was highly successful in four seasons at Tulane. Burke was hired on June 30, 2023.
van Beek is unique on this 2025 women’s golf team. She is the only women’s golfer to play under both Knight and Burke.
“Coach Stew created a group chat and introduced himself,” van Beek says. “Then we did a team call where he officially introduced himself and outlined his plans. From there, it started. But it felt like my freshman year all over again. I just finished my freshman year, and now we were starting again. I was kind of nervous because I wasn’t recruited by that coach, didn’t know him, didn’t know what to expect, but I did my research and knew his past achievements.
“That gave me a lot of trust.”

What did van Beek notice the most?
“They always have a practice plan ready,” she says. “Stew and Rinko work on it together. It’s personalized for you. They look at your stats and what you’re doing so you really know what to work on as an individual. It’s not just regular practice, either. You’re going to work on this and that. That helps us as individual golfers and as a team, too.”
It’s become evident in two seasons. van Beek saw her scoring average improve from 74.67 to 74.59 and she went from one top-20 finish to two between her freshman and sophomore seasons. After a fall break spent playing a golf tournament in Spain – which Burke and Mitsunaga attended – van Beek returned to Manhattan, where “we were very specific with practices and what to work on, every part, physical, technical, mental, every part we did.”
“We worked harder in the offseason than we do in the season because we knew it was so important to make changes and trust the process.”
Then came the end of last season. Then came the devastation.
And now, van Beek sits at the exact same sturdy dark wood table in a far corner of the Colbert Hills Golf Course clubhouse that she occupied a year ago when all this began — when K-State’s name was never called.
It’s a funny thing about memories. Last season’s abrupt ending seemed like a few weeks ago, yet this season’s spring opener at Puerto Rico seemed to be a couple years ago. But, alas, the Puerto Rico Classic held February 2-4 was where this climb began. The Wildcats went on to finish in third place at the Westbrook Invitational, first-place at the MountainView Collegiate, eighth place at the Yale Invitational West, second place at the Silicon Valley Showcase, and fifth place out of 14 participating teams in the Big 12 Championship.
van Beek still remembers the verbal jabs that she and her K-State teammates heard from passersby at the 2025 NCAA Lexington Regional — added fuel as the Wildcats rocketed to tie for a second-place finish.
“Every evening, Stew said, ‘Nobody wants us here,'” van Beek says. “We actually heard people talking about us all the time. We heard, ‘It’s just K-State. They’re not supposed to be here.’ We took it personally. I was like, ‘What are you talking about? We’re No. 27 in the country.’ We were there for a reason. It motivated us.”

This season, van Beek has helped K-State to a school-record 287.40 scoring average, nine of the top 12 team rounds in school history, and five of the top seven team 54-hole scores in school history. The 2025 Wildcats are first in school history with seven top-three finishes, and they have a school record-tying two wins to go along with a school record-tying nine top-five finishes.
They’re loose and ready for the big stage starting on Friday.
“Honestly, I always felt this moment was going to happen,” van Beek says. “I know how hard everybody works and how everybody is growing as individuals. It is the right time, the right moment, and right place for us. It feels like this is what we’re supposed to do.
“We are this good.”
She pauses.
“This shouldn’t be a surprise.”
She pauses again.
“This should be expected.”
She pauses again.
“We want to do the exact same as regionals. Go out and play our hearts out and try to win it. I know we can. Like, I know, people would probably say, ‘You should be happy to be at nationals.’ But we’re going there to play for a national championship.”
van Beek thinks back to her father, Rene, handing her a golf club for the first time at age 7 at home in the Netherlands. The golf club was bigger than her.
And now, Noa holds the club with confidence, carrying pride for the Netherlands and K-State on her sleeve. On Friday, she’ll walk the golf course at Omni La Costa Resort & Spa in Carlsbad, California, as a member of a proud Wildcats’ squad that is competing for its first-ever national championship.
“Golf has shaped me into who I am today,” she says. “I not only want to play golf as well as possible but do everything in life as well as possible. That’s something I’ll take with me forever. I became independent being far away from home. This is where I’m supposed to be. I feel like the little girl, who I was, is going on the right path and doing exactly what she wanted to do.
“I love the Powercat. It just feels very powerful. It feels just as powerful as the Dutch National Team. It’s almost like representing your country. I love to wear it everywhere I go — back home, at international tournaments. I proudly represent K-State.”
This season, K-State, left out of the postseason a year ago, in just its second campaign under Burke has pushed its way to the table with elites in one of the greatest comeback stories in women’s golf this season — and one of the greatest comeback stories in the history of K-State athletics.
van Beek was there. She witnessed the transition and transformation in Manhattan.
Now she hopes to witness even more history: A national championship.
College Sports
Cowgirl Golf set for fifth-straight NCAA Championships
The 25th-ranked Oklahoma State women’s golf team, led by sixth-year head coach Greg Robertson, is prepped for its fifth-straight trip to the NCAA Championships, beginning Friday morning in Carlsbad, Calif. For the second straight year, the Omni La Costa Resort and Spa will serve as host site. Its North Course features a challenging 6,330-yard, […]

For the second straight year, the Omni La Costa Resort and Spa will serve as host site. Its North Course features a challenging 6,330-yard, par 72 layout.
The six-day event begins with 54 holes of stroke play. Following Sunday’s third round, the field of 30 teams will be cut in half. An individual winner will be crowned after Monday’s fourth round, and the top eight schools will compete Tuesday and Wednesday in a match play bracket to determine the NCAA team champion.
This weekend’s forecast calls for cloudy skies and temperatures in the high 60s. The Cowgirls will play in the morning session on Friday and in the afternoon on Saturday with Sunday’s tee times still to be determined.
Tee Times
Round One Tee Times (Hole No. 1)
Round Two Tee Times (Hole No. 10)
- OSU Golfer No. 1 | 2:56 p.m. CT
- OSU Golfer No. 2 | 2:45 p.m. CT
- OSU Golfer No. 3 | 2:34 p.m. CT
- OSU Golfer No. 4 | 2:23 p.m. CT
- OSU Golfer No. 5 | 2:12 p.m. CT
After round two, the tee times will be based on standings for the rest of the stroke play portion of the NCAA Championship.
Coverage
Fans can track live scoring from all six days via Scoreboard and watch live coverage Monday through Wednesday on the Golf Channel. For OSU updates, visit okstate.com and follow @CowgirlGolf on social media.
Meet the Field (30 Teams – Based Off Seeding)
- Stanford
- Arkansas
- South Carolina
- Florida State
- Oregon
- Texas
- Wake Forest
- Arizona State
- Southern California
- Virginia
- Northwestern
- LSU
- Ohio State
- Ole Miss
- Mississippi State
- Kansas
- Florida
- Michigan State
- Vanderbilt
- Oklahoma State
- Kansas State
- UCLA
- Iowa State
- Tennessee
- Georgia Southern
- Oklahoma
- UNLV
- Baylor
- Purdue
- Cal State Fullerton
OSU at the NCAA Championships
- Oklahoma State is making its 26th NCAA Championship appearance, which ranks among the top 10 all-time.
- It’s the Cowgirls 31st national finals appearance overall, including five AIAW Championship bids from the 1970s and 80s.
- OSU has made the NCAA Championship in every full season under sixth-year head Coach Greg Robertson (the 2020 event was canceled by COVID-19). This will be his eighth consecutive appearance overall, factoring in his last three years at Kent State (2017-19).
- OSU owns seven top-5 team finishes, highlighted by national runner-up trophies in 2004 and 2021 and a third-place finish in 1982.
- 11 Cowgirls have placed top-10 on the individual leaderboard, including 2010 champion Caroline Hedwall and 2004 runner-up Karin Sjödin.
Team Notes
- OSU is ranked 25th nationally.
- Three Cowgirls placed among the top-10 at the Gold Canyon Regional to help OSU secure a third-place finish: Grace Kilcrease (T-3), Ellie Bushnell (T-6) and Marta Silchenko (T-8).
- The Cowgirls came within a stroke of the Big 12 team title, falling to Arizona in a three-team playoff that also included Arizona State.
- The Pokes have logged six top 5 showings in 2024-25, highlighted by runner-up finishes at the Dale McNamara Invitational (Oct. 14-15) and the FAU Paradise Invitational (Feb. 3-4). They shot a season-best 15-under-par at the latter.
- The Cowgirls also tied for fourth place at the prestigious Jackson T. Stephens Cup (Oct. 21-23) against a field made up exclusively of teams that all qualified for NCAA Championship play.
The Lineup
- A young Cowgirl lineup includes four underclassmen and one junior.
- Latvia native Marta Silchenko (ranked 77th nationally) missed the fall season to injury but has been a table-setter for the Cowgirls this spring, recording back-to-back top-10 finishes at the Big 12 Championship and the Gold Canyon Regional. She tied for 114th in last year’s NCAA Championship as a true freshman.
- Junior Tulsa transfer Grace Kilcrease is ranked No. 33 on the national list and made the All-Big 12 team following a standout season that includes eight top-10 finishes. She won last September’s Carmel Cup and later broke a school record for low-18 (63). This will be her second NCAA Championship appearance. Last year’s tie for 21stmarked the best individual finish by a Tulsa golfer since 2002.
- Freshman Summer Lee has logged 35 rounds in her freshman season (tied with Kilcrease for the team lead) and has recorded five top-20 finishes, highlighted by a win at the Texas State Invitational.
- Fellow first-year, Tarapath Panya will also be making her NCAA Championship debut. The Thailand-native has netted 25 rounds of experience with a season-best seventh place finish at the Dale McNamara Invitational (the best in a Cowgirl debut since 2018).
- Rounding out the lineup is sophomore Ellie Bushnell, who is fresh off a season-best sixth-place showing at the Gold Canyon Regional. This will be her second NCAA Championship after tying for 101st last year.
- Freshman Lucy Darr will act as the substitute for the Cowgirls. The freshman has carded 57 birdies in 19 rounds in her first year collegiately.
College Sports
Wilkes-Barre Police Department swears in three new officers
WILKES-BARRE — Wilkes-Barre Mayor George Brown, as well as members of city council and the police department, welcomed three new police officers Wednesday during a ceremony at City Hall. Paul Sromovski, 28; Jonathan Mason, 28; and John Owens, 27; were sworn in before friends and family inside city council chambers. The new officers were […]

WILKES-BARRE — Wilkes-Barre Mayor George Brown, as well as members of city council and the police department, welcomed three new police officers Wednesday during a ceremony at City Hall.
Paul Sromovski, 28; Jonathan Mason, 28; and John Owens, 27; were sworn in before friends and family inside city council chambers.
The new officers were all recent graduates of the Act 120 Police Academy at Lackawanna College.
“These men have gone through a rigorous selection process on their journey to becoming officers for the city,” Police Chief Joseph Coffey in his opening remarks.
The new officers bring a variety of experience and education to the department.
Sromovski was born and raised in Wilkes-Barre and is a 2015 graduate of the former Meyers High School. He is a military veteran, having spent four years in the Marine Corps. and previously worked as a correctional officer at SCI Waymart.
Mason was born in New York State and raised in Scranton. Mason is a graduate of Penn State University, with a bachelor’s degree in Administration of Justice and interned at the Wilkes-Barre City Police Department while in college.
Previously, he worked in the Lackawanna County Drug, Probation, Parole and Juvenile Probation departments.
Owens resides in Wilkes-Barre and is a 2016 graduate of the former Coughlin High School. Owens has an associate degree in general studies from Luzerne County Community College. He was previously a service manager at Goodyear Commercial Tire and Service Center.
Before administering the oath of office, Brown said he was honored to swear in more of “Wilkes-Barre’s finest.”
“Wilkes-Barre Police Department is the best in the state, and you prove it every day and every single day. I’m proud of what you do,” the mayor said.
Brown promised the three new officers that they would have the best training and equipment, along with the support of the mayor and the police chief.
Brown also shared an anecdote with the crowd, which he felt summed up the impact the department has on the community.
“I just ran out trying to grab a hamburger, and on my way out, I received a phone call from a friend of mine, and she was crying,” he said.
His friend was in a car accident the previous day, and told the mayor she was “so appreciative” for how the responding officer took control of the scene.
“When I hear these things as a mayor,” he said, “it makes me so darn proud of what you folks do.”
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