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NORMAN  —No. 2 overall seed, Oklahoma Softball (48-7), will host No. 15 overall seed Alabama (40-21) in the 2025 Super Regionals as the teams vie for a spot in the Women’s College World Series.  GAME SCHEDULE – ALL TIMES CT Game 1 | Friday, May 23 at 4 p.m.  Game 2 | Saturday, May 24 […]

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NORMAN  —No. 2 overall seed, Oklahoma Softball (48-7), will host No. 15 overall seed Alabama (40-21) in the 2025 Super Regionals as the teams vie for a spot in the Women’s College World Series. 

GAME SCHEDULE – ALL TIMES CT

Game 1 | Friday, May 23 at 4 p.m. 

Game 2 | Saturday, May 24 at 2 p.m.

Game 3 | TBD (if necessary game)

HOW TO FOLLOW

Game one will be broadcast on ESPN2, while Saturday’s game will be available on ESPN. A radio broadcast will be offered on The Franchise 2 1560 AM and 103. FM. Live stats will be available on statbroadcast.com.

MAY I?

The Sooners are 246-70 in May in head coach Patty Gasso‘s 31 seasons with the Sooners, while turning in a 92-8 record in the program’s eight championship seasons. 

50 WINS

The Sooners are looking for 50 wins for the ninth consecutive season … the last time OU hasn’t reached that milestone was in 2015 … OU is 48-7 on the season and on a five game winning streak. 

NCAA SUPER REGIONAL SNAPSHOT

The Sooners are 159-52 all-time in the NCAA Tournament … the Sooners are 6-6 against Alabama in the NCAA Tournament and … 13 of OU’s 21 games against Alabama have been played in the postseason … 10 of those games have taken place in Oklahoma City … OU and Alabama have never played in Norman .. the Sooners are hosting their 12th super regional … OU has notched 16 consecutive wins in super regional play … Oklahoma and Alabama met in the 2015 Super Regionals in Tuscaloosa … OU is playing its sixth super regional against a current member of the SEC … OU is 46-9 against current SEC teams in the NCAA Tournament … Oklahoma is looking for its 18th Women’s College World Series and ninth in a row.

LOWRY’S SEASONING

Audrey Lowry has pitched four consecutive scoreless outings, while also retiring the last 15 batters that she’s faced dating back to May 2 at Florida. During the SEC Tournament she earned the win and retired nine consecutive batters against No. 6/7 Arkansas. 

TWENTY-WON

Righty Sam Landry went 3-0 last weekend, spinning three innings of work in all of OU’s wins. Landry is 22-4 on the season, ranking first among all active pitchers in the nation with 85 career wins.

PICK YOUR POISON

Kasidi Pickering hit three home runs and drove in nine runs during the regionals last weekend. She hit a grand slam and also homered twice in the same game, posting the 10th two-home run game by a Sooner in NCAA Regionals history. Pickering is hitting .476 (20-for-42) in 17 NCAA Tournament games, while homering nine times and driving in 22 runs. She’s had a two-homer game in two different contests this season. 

ALL-REGION HONORS

Eight different Sooners earned NFCA Midwest All-Region honors. It’s the sixth time that OU has had eight honorees for a single season, tied for a program record. Sam Landry, Gabbie Garcia, Ella Parker and Kasidi Pickering earned first team recognition, while Nelly McEnroe-Marinas and Cydney Sanders were tabbed to the second team. Ailana Agbayani and Abigale Dayton took home third team honors. 

SEC RECORD BOOK WATCH

The Sooners hit an SEC Tournament single game record six home runs in the 8-6 win against No. 6/7 Arkansas in the semifinals May 9. OU also set the record for biggest comeback win in SEC Tournament history, overcoming a 6-1 deficit.

PFP QUEEN

Sam Landry gets to just about everything in the circle. The right-handed pitcher leads the SEC among hurlers with 49 assists.

COMEBACK KIDS

With the 8-6 win against No. 6/7 Arkansas, the Sooners earned their 17th comeback victory on the season. The comeback win in the SEC Championship Semifinals was OU’s largest comeback since 2018.

BRINGING OUR BOOM

Oklahoma has 110 home runs this season, becoming the first program to hit at least 100 home runs in six straight years. Gabbie Garcia leads the way with 18, while 13 Sooners have at least two.

MAGIC NUMBER

Oklahoma is 41-0 when scoring at least six runs. The Sooners earned three run-rule wins on the weekend during regionals, bringing Oklahoma to 22 such victories this season. 

ALL-SEC                           

Oklahoma earned nine different All-SEC honors, with Coach Gasso being named SEC Coach of the Year and Sam Landry was tabbed Newcomer of the Year. 

RANKED GAMES

The Sooners have played 24 games against ranked teams this season, going 20-6 in such contests. The Sooners earned three sweeps against top 15 programs, including a sweep against No. 3/2 Texas – OU’s first ever three game sweep against a top five team. 

The Sooners have outscored top 25 teams, 157-108. Freshman Gabbie Garcia has paced the Sooners with nine home runs and 30 RBIs in 82 at-bats against ranked teams this season. Sam Landry has fanned 81 batters and gone 10-4 with a 2.28 ERA in her 18 appearances against ranked teams.

ACTIVE CAREER LEADERS

The Sooners have a number of players in the top ten among active leaders in a variety of statistical categories, particularly between the arms of Isabella Smith and Sam Landry

-Wins: Sam Landry (first in DI – 85), Isabella Smith (second in DI – 79)

-Innings pitched: Isabella Smith (sixth in DI – 649.3)

-Appearances: Sam Landry (sixth in DI and NCAA – 149), Isabella Smith (seventh in DI and NCAA – 140)

-Strikeouts: Isabella Smith (fifth in DI and 15th in NCAA – 682) 

-Home runs: Cydney Sanders (7th in DI – 56)

-Walks: Cydney Sanders (4th in DI – 152)

THE GIFT OF GAB

Freshman infielder Gabbie Garcia is tied for 6th among all freshmen in Division with 18 home runs. She was named D1Softball Freshman of the Week March 11 and April 8 as well SEC Player of the Week March 18. Earlier this season she became the first OU freshman since Jocelyn Alo to homer in five consecutive games. April 30 she was named to the top spot of the Softball America Shortstops rankings.

AND IT’S OUT OF THE PARK(ER)!

Sophomore Ella Parker is heating up over the past three weekends, having hit safely in 13 of the last 15 games. She’s homered in six of the last ten games, hitting half of her total for the year beginning in the Texas series. 

BALANCE IS KEY    

One of the greatest assets of the OU offense this year has been its balance. The Sooners have six players with at least 11 home runs, with Gabbie Garcia pacing the way with 18 and Kasidi Pickering with 17. 

SYD & CYD

Sydney Barker and Cydney Sanders have combined for six of OU’s 12 RBIs in the SEC Tournament. 

PERFORMING UNDER THE BRIGHT LIGHTS

Nelly McEnroe-Marinas has hit 11 of her 14 home runs in SEC play. She’s had a multi-home run series against South Carolina, Arkansas, Missouri and Mississippi State, and also homered against Alabama and Texas. In total she’s homered against every SEC team OU has faced this season outside of Tennessee and Florida.

BIG BATS

OU has homered in 45 of 55 games this season. Oklahoma has hit five home runs three times, while setting a season high with six homers against Arkansas May 9. Two different players have had streaks of four games in a row with a home run or better.

FRESHIES

Oklahoma freshman have combined to hit 50 of Oklahoma’s 110 home runs, paced by 18 from Gabbie Garcia and 14 from Nelly McEnroe-Marinas. Five different OU freshmen have hit at least two home runs.

NATIONAL NODS

Senior pitcher Sam Landry and sophomore outfielder Kasidi Pickering were both named to the USA Collegiate Softball Player of the Year Top 25 list Wednesday, April 30.

ALL-SEC SOONERS

The Oklahoma Sooners made some noise in the all-tournament team listing. Six Sooners combined for nine total honors. Sam Landry was named SEC Newcomer of the Year, First Team All-SEC and to the all-defensive squad. Kasidi Pickering and Nelly McEnroe-Marinas made the first team. Gabbie Garcia was tabbed to the second team and all-defensive squad, while Ailana Agbayani was also a second team pick. Head Coach Patty Gasso was named SEC Coach of the Year in her first season in the league.

HAWAII FIVE-0

Junior second baseman Ailana Agbayani is coming off her first SEC Player of the Week honor April 29 after hitting .750 (6-for-8) with a grand slam, three runs five RBIs and two walks. Agbayani tied a career high with five RBIs in OU’s 7-6 win against No. 3/2 Texas Friday, April 25. She was also named Softball America Star of the Week that same week. All four of her home runs have either come against ranked teams or in postseason play. 

IT’S PERFECT!

The Sooners have spun two perfect games this year between the arms of Isabella Smith and Sam Landry. Smith posted a five-inning perfect game in an 8-0 win against Cal Baptist in her first-ever start with OU. She became the only pitcher in program history to post a perfect game in a debut. Landry followed that up with a five-inning perfect game at No. 23/24 Baylor later in February. 

ROLL CALL!

Oklahoma Softball set program records for series attendance and single game attendance for a regular season series at Love’s Field during the sweep of Texas April 25-27. A total of 13,734 fans saw the series, while game three’s attendance reached a record, 4,609 at Love’s.

RECORD SWEEP

OU has swept four SEC series this year (South Carolina, Arkansas, Mississippi State and Texas), with the latest being a record-setting sweep against No. 3/2 Texas April 25-27. OU’s series sweep against the Longhorns marked the program’s first-ever three-game sweep against a top-five team.

JERSEY COMBOS

OU has worn five different jersey combinations this season and the records in each are in (note credit to Sooner Tracker). 

-White jersey/crimson pants: 10-2

-White jersey/white pants: 8-2

-Crimson jersey/crimson pants: 13-2

-Crimson jersey/white pants: 4-0

-Anthracite: 13-1

CYDNEY SLAMDERS

Cydney Sanders has played in the most games among active Sooners, logging 228 for her career and 167 for her time at Oklahoma. Sanders’ 56 career homers features 33 during her time in Norman, two of which came in the same inning against St. Thomas April 3. She was the first Sooner to do so since Alynah Torres homered twice in the same frame against UT Arlington March 20, 2024. Sanders also surpassed 100 career walks at OU, standing at 109 right now.

USA TEAM

Associate head coaches Jennifer Rocha and JT Gasso were both tabbed to the U.S. Softball Women’s National Team Coaching Pool as announced Monday, May 5. Also on the national scale, OU head coach Patty Gasso was named United States Olympic & Paralympic Committee College Coach of the Year April 29. 

SEC COMMUNITY SERVICE TEAM

Junior lefty Kiertson Deal was named to the SEC Softball Community Service Team Tuesday, May 6, becoming the first-ever Sooner Softball player to take home the award in the program’s first year in the league. The honor is given to student-athletes that have given back to their community with efforts off the field. In the circle Deal has spun two complete games against top-10 teams this year, doing so in the Saturday game against No. 10/9 Tennessee (7-1 win) and No. 3/2 Texas (7-2).

21 IS NO. 1

Sooner righty Sam Landry was picked first overall in the first-ever Athletes Unlimited Softball League Draft Saturday, May 3. Landry is set to play for the AUSL Volts, joining OU alumnae Tiare Jennings on the team.

KEEPIN’ IT 100

Oklahoma has seen a number of players surpass the “100 milestone” in a variety of statistical categories this year, including:

Sam Landry reached 100 strikeouts this season (April 9 vs. OSU)

Kasidi Pickering reached 100 career hits (April 9 vs. OSU)

Ella Parker surpassed 100 career hits (February 28 vs. Marshall), 100 starts and 100 runs (April 26), as well as 100 RBIs (April 27)

Isabela Emerling reached 100 career RBIs (March 26 at Wichita State)

Cydney Sanders eclipsed 100 RBIs at OU (April 3 vs. St. Thomas)

Cydney Sanders surpassed 100 walks at OU (April 26 vs. Texas)

Kasidi Pickering surpassed 100 runs (May 17 vs. Cal)

Kasidi Pickering surpassed 100 RBI (May 18 vs. Cal)

 



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STEM of Sports Academy Presented by National Grid

In Summer 2024, Syracuse University’s Athletic department, in strategic partnership with Micron Technology, launched the STEM of Sports Academy; a pioneering initiative designed to foster early interest in STEM education by integrating it with one of the most engaging cultural touchpoints among youth, sports. The program serves as both an educational experience and a […]

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In Summer 2024, Syracuse University’s Athletic department, in strategic partnership with Micron Technology, launched the STEM of Sports Academy; a pioneering initiative designed to

foster early interest in STEM education by integrating it with one of the most engaging cultural touchpoints among youth, sports.


The program serves as both an educational experience and a long‐term workforce development strategy, with a focus on students from Syracuse’s urban core and underrepresented

communities. In its pilot year, the academy not only achieved its core objectives, but it delivered promising results that justify significant expansion and further support.

Strategic Alignment and Program Rationale:

The STEM of Sports Academy directly supports Corporate Sponsors and Syracuse University priorities in the following areas:

  • Access and Inclusion: The program is intentionally inclusive, welcoming students regardless of prior academic performance or athletic participation.
  • K–12 Pipeline Development: It initiates a structured engagement pipeline into higher education and high‐growth STEM career paths.
  • Community Engagement: It strengthens the civic footprint and positions sponsors and Syracuse University as proactive leaders in regional youth development in STEM.
  • Workforce Readiness: It aligns with national and state‐level objectives for STEM talent development, particularly in advanced technology and semiconductor sectors.

“This initiative makes STEM accessible by connecting it to students’ lived experiences. It’s a compelling model for community impact and workforce development.”
— Professor Cindy Smith, Curriculum Director, College of Engineering and Computer Science

Program Implementation:

In summer 2024, Syracuse University Athletics hosted three 1‐day, coeducational STEM immersion sessions at the Lally Athletics Complex. Each session welcomed 50 students, with

one day exclusively for female participants. Programming was designed and led by faculty from the College of Engineering and Computer Science, in collaboration with Syracuse student-athlete

leaders.

Core Activities Included:

  • Engineering through Play: The Egg Drop Challenge taught basic design and testing principles.
  • Sports Technology Labs: Students explored real‐time impact sensors and athletic performance software.
  • Physics of Movement: Sessions in running and jumping mechanics connected physics to daily life.
  • Mentorship and Exploration: Campus tours and student‐athlete interactions offered exposure to collegiate life.

“Students were not passive learners; they were collaborators, thinkers, and designers. It transformed how they view both education and career possibilities.”
— Salatha Willis, Associate Athletics Director

Quantitative Outcomes ‐ Key Metrics from 2024 Post‐Program Survey (98 responses):

  • 91% reported increased interest in STEM disciplines.
  • 87% indicated a better understanding of STEM concepts.
  • 79% expressed interest in pursuing STEM courses or careers.
  • The majority found the real‐world applications of STEM both relevant and inspiring
  • Over 90% rated the instructors and student‐athlete mentors as highly effective.
  • Participants engaging in the Egg Drop Challenge which measures impact while encouraging creativity and engineering.

The data confirms that when STEM content is contextualized through sports, students not only retain more, but they want to learn more. This level of impact was particularly notable given the
program’s inclusivity: no prior STEM or athletic experience was required, ensuring accessibility to all students regardless of background.

Future Programming Vision:

The STEM of Sports Academy is not an endpoint. It is the foundation for a scalable, multi‐year STEM learning ecosystem designed to serve students through high school graduation and into post-secondary and workforce pathways.

Planned Pipeline Progression:

1. STEM of Sports Day Academy + High School Visits (9th–10th grades)

2. Summer College Non‐Credit STEM Academy (10th–11th grades)

3. Summer College STEM for Credit Program (11th–12th grades)

4. Pre‐College STEM Internships (Graduating seniors)

5. College Transition Program (First‐year university support)

In 2025, 20 students from the 2024 pilot will receive full scholarships for the weeklong STEM of

Sports Summer College Experience.

Partnership & Investment Strategy:

The pilot year was made possible by seed funding and programmatic support from Micron Technology. In 2025, National Grid is expected to assume the role of primary sponsor, enabling

the program to expand while maintaining Micron’s critical involvement in mentorship and semiconductor career exploration.

“Micron’s partnership with Syracuse University Athletics and the College of Engineering reflects our commitment to inspiring the next generation of STEM leaders in Central New York.”

— Dr. Kim Burnet, Micron Social Impact and Community Engagement



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Daily Hampshire Gazette – UMass hockey: Minutemen land NHL prospect, two more for Class of 2029

The UMass hockey team’s 2025-26 roster continues to take shape as three more recruits were announced to be joining the Minutemen this past week. Vaclav Nestrasil, A.J. Lacroix and Lukas Klecka were all confirmed as the newest members of the Class of 2029 by UMass athletics. Nestrasil will begin his college career with the most hype of the […]

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The UMass hockey team’s 2025-26 roster continues to take shape as three more recruits were announced to be joining the Minutemen this past week.

Vaclav Nestrasil, A.J. Lacroix and Lukas Klecka were all confirmed as the newest members of the Class of 2029 by UMass athletics.

Nestrasil will begin his college career with the most hype of the three as the Prague, Czechia product will almost certainly be selected in this month’s NHL Draft and could even be chosen as high as the first round. Standing at 6-foot-6 and weighing 186 pounds, Nestrasil totaled 55 points in 86 games across two seasons during the regular season and playoffs with the United States Hockey League’s (USHL) Muskegon Lumberjacks.

“Vaclav is a right-shot forward that can play both center and wing,” Minutemen head coach Greg Carvel said in a statement released by UMass athletics. “He possesses an elite skill set at his size, has great vision and makes great plays with the puck.  He goes to the net and uses his size and ability to score goals around the net. Fans will enjoy watching Vaclav develop over the years.”

Nestrasil won the Clark Cup championship with the Lumberjacks this past season, along with incoming recruit Jack Galanek.

Lacroix is the latest recruit from the Brooks Bandits of the British Columbia Hockey League to make his way to the Pioneer Valley. Lacroix, who hails from Livingston, New Jersey, helped the Bandits to the BCHL championship by tallying 11 goals and 28 points in 44 games.

“A.J. is the type of kid you win with,” Carvel said. “He is a great teammate and is very coachable. He is a big power forward who can really shoot the puck and can play in a lot of different situations on the ice. A.J. has spent time playing in the top junior leagues in North America and has had success at every level. His on-ice ability and high character off the ice will be a great addition to our forward group next season.”

Cale Makar, most notably, played his junior hockey with the Bandits before suiting up for the Minutemen in 2017-18.

Article continues after…

Klecka was the first of the three names to be announced this week and the Bratislava, Slovakia native will cross the Atlantic Ocean for his first taste of North American hockey when he arrives in Amherst this fall.

Klecka put up impressive numbers over three seasons with Södertälje SK J20 in Sweden, securing 104 points in 144 career games. Klecka was also teammates with current Minuteman forward Daniel Jencko on the Slovakian World Junior Championship team this past winter in Ottawa.

“Lukas played this past season in Sweden and featured on the Slovakian World Junior team,” Carvel said. “He will bring a lot of pace, skill and compete to our team next season.”

UMass’ incoming freshman class is up to six names as of Friday afternoon, with five of them being forwards.

Injuries force Michael Cameron to retire

In an unexpected update, UMass hockey’s sports information director, Jillian Jakuba, confirmed on Twitter/X that Michael Cameron will not return to the Minutemen next season, citing “a medical retirement.”

Cameron is not listed on UMass’ 2025-26 roster on its website and Jakuba clarified the rising senior’s future status when one fan suggested the omission was an error.

Cameron dealt with multiple injuries in 2024-25 and missed the final 11 games after suffering an injury at Boston College on February 14.

In 87 career games with the Minutemen, Cameron compiled 29 points.



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‘Steel City Dog’ helping hot dog sales sizzle at U.S. Open

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Men’s ACHA Division 1 Hockey Reveal Schedule for 2025-2026 Campaign; Includes 22 Home Contests

Story Links 2025-26 ACHA MD1 Hockey Season Schedule ADRIAN, Mich. – The Adrian College Men’s ACHA Division 1 hockey program has revealed the team’s upcoming schedule for the 2025-2026 season. After finishing with a total record of 32-4-2 and a conference record of 10-0 in […]

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ADRIAN, Mich. – The Adrian College Men’s ACHA Division 1 hockey program has revealed the team’s upcoming schedule for the 2025-2026 season.

After finishing with a total record of 32-4-2 and a conference record of 10-0 in 2024-25, the Bulldogs collected the program’s thirteenth Conference Regular Season crown and ninth Conference Playoff championship. To add to their historical success, Adrian captured the inaugural GL6 Conference Playoff Championship last season, defeating Calvin University on home ice. The Bulldogs later went on to the 2025 ACHA Men’s Division 1 National Tournament in St. Louis, Missouri where they defeated No. 11 Calvin University, No. 3 Ohio University, and No. 1 Minot State University before making their third consecutive appearance in the national championship game, where they eventually fell to No. 2 UNLV.

The 2025-26 agenda begins with an exhibition scrimmage at the Arrington Ice Arena on Tuesday, September 9 when the Bulldogs will take on the USPHL’s Toledo Cherokee at 7:30 PM. The official start to the regular season will begin during Adrian College Homecoming Week, on the road against Trine University of ACHA Men’s Division 2 on September 18. The Bulldogs will then return home on Friday, September 19 to the Arrington Ice Arena to take on the Thunder again at 7:00 PM for the team’s home opener and the beginning of a ten-game home-stand. A week later, the Bulldogs welcome Northwood University to the Arrington Ice Arena for a two-game set on September 25-26, before home weekends against the University of Pittsburgh (10/3-4), Liberty University (10/10-11), and Syracuse University (10/17-18), before beginning a home-and-home series with Ohio University on October 23-24. The Bulldogs will then continue at home through October and into November, hosting Saginaw Valley State University (10/29-30) and Niagara University (11/6-7).

The Great Lakes Six Hockey Conference (GL6) will enter its second season of existence in 2025-26, with the original six members competing, along with the addition of a seventh school in Hope College, who will be transitioning from ACHA Division 3 to Division 1. The Bulldogs kick-off conference play by traveling to Roosevelt University on November 14-15, and will continue the conference slate with home-and-home match-ups against Davenport (11/20-21), Purdue Northwest (12/4-5), Hope College (1/15-16), Calvin University (1/22-23), and Grand Valley State University (2/12-13) before the conference playoff tournament takes place February 17-20. The GL6 Conference Playoff Tournament site is to be determined.

Other key contests on the 2025-26 schedule include the team’s annual trip to Lynchburg, Virginia where the Bulldogs will battle long-time rival, Liberty University. Those two contests will take place January 30-31 and will be streamed live on ESPN+. After returning from Viriginia, the Bulldogs will then take on the University of Toledo in a home-and-home series on February 5-6.

We are really happy with how this year’s schedule came out,” stated Head Coach, Gary Astalos. “We have added a few national qualifying teams to this year’s schedule with the hopes that this will significantly increase our strength of schedule points in the national rankings.”

The Bulldogs will be hosting two Adrian Over Thirty Hockey Association (AOTHA) and Adrian Youth Hockey Association (AYHA) Nights during the season at the AIA, with the first one on September 26 versus Northwood University and the second on January 22 versus Calvin University. In addition, a Military Appreciation Night will be held on October 10 when the Bulldogs face-off against rival Liberty University at home. On February 5, the Bulldogs will honor their Senior Class of 2026 in a Senior Night ceremony ahead of a 7:00 PM game against the University of Toledo at the Arrington Ice Arena.

 

Upon the completion of the 2025-26 regular season and the 2026 GL6 Conference Playoff Tournament, the Bulldogs will then prepare for the 2026 ACHA National Championships, set to be hosted in St. Louis, Missouri from March 12-17 at the Centene Community Ice Center. 2026 will mark the fourth time since 2022 that the ACHA National Championship Tournament will take place at the CCIC; the official practice facility of the NHL’s St. Louis Blues. Before the Bulldogs embark on their national tournament journey, they will host Indiana Tech University at the Arrington Ice Arena for a tune-up game at 7:00 PM on February 26.

To view the full 2025-2026 Adrian College Men’s ACHA Division 1 Hockey schedule, click HERE or visit the Men’s ACHA Division 1 Hockey page on the Adrian College Athletics website. For more on the Men’s D1 Bulldogs, be sure to follow along throughout the season on social media, @AdrianMD1Hockey.

 



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Taylor Swift and Travis Kelce Do Matching Sweatsuits for a Surprise Stanley Cup Final Date Night

Photo: Getty Images Their appearance comes after frenzied media reports that the couple had gotten married—with wooly evidence, or even a peep out of a woman very capable of crafting her own romantic narrative. And since the news broke that Swift has successfully bought back her masters, she’s been out socializing with her set. Selena […]

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NFL player Travis Kelce and singer Taylor Swift are seen during the first period of Game Four of the 2025 Stanley Cup...

Photo: Getty Images

Their appearance comes after frenzied media reports that the couple had gotten married—with wooly evidence, or even a peep out of a woman very capable of crafting her own romantic narrative.

And since the news broke that Swift has successfully bought back her masters, she’s been out socializing with her set. Selena Gomez joined Swift for a girl’s night out at Monkey Bar in New York, nailing Upper East Side style: Swift in a black Gucci two-piece set and Gomez in a sleek beige Ulla Johnson suit. Swift’s other GNO was with Dakota Johnson, at her usual haunt, Via Carota, donning the dress-of-the-moment, a floral fit-and-flare number from Dôen.

Taylor Swift Dakota Johnson Jesse Johnson Austin Swift

Photo: TheImageDirect.com

Taylor Swift and Selena Gomez arrive for a girls only dinner in NYC WEB EMBARGO DO NOT PUBLISH BEFORE JUNE 2 2025 AT 745...

Photo: Backgrid

And NFL season is fast approaching, so Swift is likely considering her WAG style with longtime stylist Joseph Cassell Falconer, who has styled her stage looks and game day fits. If her evening at the hockey is anything to go by, more Area and Chanel can be expected. Last season, Swift turned out to support her Kansas City Chiefs boyfriend with a maximal arsenal of accessories, mixing bold sporty styles with more fashion-forward details. Think: A Chanel bucket hat and CC logo earrings, as well as a custom “87” necklace in honor of Travis Kelce’s jersey number. Standout looks included a Penny Lane coat (in Chiefs red, of course), a sparkling Dion Lee corset and hotpants under a leather Chiefs bomber, a Vivienne Westwood dress with platform boots, and a Versace double denim moment.

Taylor Swift arrives at the Houston Texans and Kansas City Chiefs NFL game

Photo: Icon Sportswire (Getty Images)

Image may contain Taylor Swift Clothing Shorts Adult Person Hat Accessories Jewelry Necklace Bracelet and Footwear

Photo: Getty Images

Swift and Kelce looked to have a great night despite the Edmonton Oilers beating out the Florida Panthers. As the game went to sudden death, the Midnights singer was spotted telling Kelce: “My heart was like…” and patting her hand rapidly to her chest. Following this rare date night, Kelce will likely be back to training before the NFL season kicks off again in September.

Now she’s got her masters back, summer—and summery dressing—is all for Taylor Swift to play for.





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MSU Board of Trustees appoints new provost and two college deans

Michigan State University approved three major academic appointments during its June 13 Board of Trustees meeting in Traverse City, including a new provost and deans for the College of Arts and Letters and the College of Agriculture and Natural Resources. Starting August 4, Laura Lee McIntyre will step into the role of Provost and Executive […]

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Michigan State University approved three major academic appointments during its June 13 Board of Trustees meeting in Traverse City, including a new provost and deans for the College of Arts and Letters and the College of Agriculture and Natural Resources.

Starting August 4, Laura Lee McIntyre will step into the role of Provost and Executive VP for Academic Affairs. McIntyre currently serves as the dean of the College of Education at the University of Oregon where she was praised by President Kevin Guskiewicz for fostering “a collaborative culture” that strengthened advising, graduate enrollment, scholarship opportunities and research output.

McIntyre is a licensed psychologist and board-certified behavior analyst whose research focuses on early childhood autism, family-school partnerships and behavioral health support for underserved families. 

In a podcast interview on MSU Today with Russ White, McIntyre said she was drawn to MSU because she found her own values reflected in the university’s land-grant mission, commitment to public service and global impact.

“As I dug into the mission… I really fell in love with the impact of the institution, certainly, and partnerships with the entire state, but also beyond,” McIntyre said on the podcast. “I’m passionate about the role of public higher education, especially today.”

As she prepares to begin her role in August, McIntyre told MSU Today that she plans to go on a “listening tour” to better understand MSU’s culture, challenges and strengths.

“Our strengths are our people,” she said. “It’s important for me to get to know as many people as I can, as quickly as I can, and hear from folks directly.”

McIntyre further described her leadership style in the podcast as grounded in listening and trust-building.

“I think of trust as a byproduct. It’s not a prerequisite,” she said. “It’s a byproduct of relationships, of communication and transparency.”

McIntyre will succeed Interim Provost Thomas Jeitschko, who has served in the role after Teresa Woodruff was named interim president in 2023, following former MSU President Samuel Stanley’s resignation. At the meeting, Guskiewicz credited Jeitschko for leading MSU through a critical period that included a 10-year accreditation review, the transition to a new student information system and the launch of the general education modernization initiative.

In recognition of his service, Jeitschko was granted the title of Provost Emeritus.

Also approved was Thomas Stubblefield as the new dean of the College of Arts and Letters (CAL), effective July 1. Stubblefield joins MSU as the 12th dean of CAL from the University of Rhode Island, where he serves as a professor of Art and Art History and associate dean of the College of Arts and Sciences.

Guskiewicz said in the meeting that Stubblefield “brings excellent experience” and will work alongside him as they work through a period of structural change, including the recently approved merger with the Residential College in the Arts and Humanities (RCAH) and CAL.

“I’m committed to a smooth transition with RCAH and CAL and I think we’ll look back in a year from now and many who are concerned about this will, in fact, feel much better,” Guskiewicz said.

Stubblefield replaces Yen-Hwei Lin, who has held the interim position since June 2024.

Prior to his role at the University of Rhode Island, Stubblefield held several academic and administrative positions at the University of Massachusetts Dartmouth, including associate dean, director of faculty development, and associate professor of art history and media studies. 

Matt Daum was also named Associate Provost and Dean of the College of Agriculture and Natural Resources (CANR) effective June 13, after serving as interim for the past year. He previously led MSU’s School of Packaging, a program with national recognition.

At the meeting, Guskiewicz said Daum had “done a great job as interim dean” and expressed confidence that he will “take our CANR to new heights.”

Daum succeeds Kelly Millenbah, who has served as dean and interim dean since 2022.

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