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Women's and Men's Track & Field in Pittsburgh, PA for Chatham University

Sector: Chatham University is an Equal Opportunity Employer with a strong commitment to diversity, inclusion, and equity. Persons of color, women, veterans, individuals with disabilities, and members of other underrepresented groups are highly encouraged to apply. Chatham University does not discriminate on the basis of race, color, religion, gender, gender identity, gender expression, sexual orientation, […]

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Women's and Men's Track & Field in Pittsburgh, PA for Chatham University

Sector:
Chatham University is an Equal Opportunity Employer with a strong commitment to diversity, inclusion, and equity. Persons of color, women, veterans, individuals with disabilities, and members of other underrepresented groups are highly encouraged to apply. Chatham University does not discriminate on the basis of race, color, religion, gender, gender identity, gender expression, sexual orientation, age, or national origin.

4 Year Degree

Chatham University welcomes applications for the position of Head Coach, Women’s and Men’s Track and Field.

Collegiate Sports

Location: Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania

Salary Range:

All application materials should be uploaded at the same time at the time of application. The system will not allow applicants to make edits to their applications after submission.

Required Education:

,300 – ,900. 40-hour work week.

How to Apply:
Applications accepted only via www.chatham.edu/careers (direct link is https://chatham.applicantpro.com/jobs/3686316) and follow the instructions to complete the application process. To ensure full consideration, please include:
Posted: 24-Mar-25

Categories: The Head Coach directly supervises the assistant coaches, student support personnel and student athletes. They are responsible for the overall development and maintenance of the Chatham University Track & Field Programs which is a member of the NCAA Division III and the Presidents’ Athletics Conference (PAC). Type: Full-time Head Coach – Women’s and Men’s Track & Field Duties and Responsibilities: includes structural and administrative organization of the program as outlined below.

  • Work collaboratively within the University to plan, organize, implement, and follow up on an extensive on-going recruiting effort through written, verbal, and personal contact with student-athletes and their families.
  • Oversee compliance with NCAA and PAC rules and regulations.
  • Oversee the appointments and supervision of the assistant coaches and support staff for the track & field programs.
  • Coordinate athletic planning, program development and assessment that focus on student athletes’ performances, personal and leadership development:
    • Build a competitive program with strong recruiting both regionally and nationally.
    • Strategically plan and execute scheduling as well as travel arrangements of conference and non-conference meets and to advance the track & field program and maximize use of financial resources.
    • Prepare student-athletes for competition through thorough analysis and breakdown of scheduled conference and non-conference opponents.
    • Develop, recommend, and implement specific training/conditioning programs and skills development programs.
    • Recommend and enforce discipline of student-athletes for infractions of rules, regulations and misconduct.
    • Cultivate alumni and other constituents to further the goals of the track & field program, athletics department, and Chatham University.
  • Oversee budget and resource management for the track & field program.
  • Coordinate athletic events and programs are planned intentionally to enhance campus community and school pride. Ensure proper safety precautions are followed at all times.
  • Ensure adherence to rules, regulations, and policies of all governing bodies (Chatham University, NCAA, and PAC) work in coordination with the Director of Athletics, other coaches, and staff to support and achieve overall goals established by the athletics department.
  • Work with other students, faculty, and staff to support the retention of student athletes and promote teamwork, set high standards, support the academic, personal and leadership development of its students.
  • Perform other duties that may be assigned by the Athletics Director.

Coaching – Track & Field

  • Bachelor’s degree required, master’s degree preferred.
  • Minimum of 2 years of full-time coaching experience in the college level.
  • Computer proficiency.
  • Valid driver’s license.

Details Exact compensation based on candidate skills and experience. Salary: ,300 – ,900 Coaching

  • Cover Letter outlining your qualifications for the position
  • Curriculum Vitae or Resume
  • Contact information for three professional references

Qualifications: Chatham University strives to promote a campus environment that understands and embraces multiculturalism while increasing individuals’ intercultural competence. We actively work to build and sustain a diverse and culturally vibrant campus, which promotes employee and student success and retention. Learn more at: https://www.chatham.edu/mission-and-values/diversity-and-inclusion/index.html.

College Sports

Mulligan like an MVP for P-Bruins

Staff Writer  |  Standard-Times As Hartford Wolf Pack coach John Paddock scouts key members of the Providence Bruins during their Calder Cup semifinal playoff series, he’d be smart to write down the name Tom Mulligan. A 25-year-old New Bedford native who played defense on his high school hockey team, Mulligan set a record this year […]

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As Hartford Wolf Pack coach John Paddock scouts key members of the Providence Bruins during their Calder Cup semifinal playoff series, he’d be smart to write down the name Tom Mulligan.

A 25-year-old New Bedford native who played defense on his high school hockey team, Mulligan set a record this year for assists, but not with his hockey stick. He carries bandages, tape and surgical scissors on his belt.

Mulligan, you see, is the P-Bruins athletic trainer.

“We were thinking about giving him the team MVP,” assistant coach Bill Armstrong said after a recent practice.

“We couldn’t do it, but if anybody deserved an MVP it would be him,” agreed head coach Peter Laviolette. “Tommy’s done a great job, phenomenal.”

When a player misses a game with an injury, the statistician marks it down as one man-game lost for the team.

During last year’s dream season that ended with an AHL championship, Providence lost 76 man-games. This season the P-Bruins exceeded that total by the end of November.

An AHL record 70 players have skated for the P-Bruins this season, and the total of man-games lost climbed throughout the winter like the price on the gas pump.

The P-Bruins current total of man-games lost due to injury alone is around 400. Combine that with suspensions and all the recalls by the similarly-battered Boston Bruins and the total for man-games lost exceeds 830.

“You learn by doing,”‘ Mulligan said.

“If you learn by doing,” Laviolette said, “he should be a genius in the field of medicine by now.”

Mulligan didn’t feel too smart on the final weekend of the regular season when newcomer Mike Sylvia was knocked unconscious during a game at Springfield, Mass. Along with the standard how-many-fingers question, Mulligan asked Sylvia “What’s my name?”

“Then it dawned on me – wait a second,” Mulligan told himself. “He probably doesn’t know my name. I just met him yesterday.”

During the season Mulligan spends seven days a week in the bowels of the Providence Civic Center. On game days he arrives at 8 a.m. and doesn’t go home until 11 p.m. Even on non-practice days, players stroll in for injury rehabilitation and to get their aching muscles massaged.

With hockey players’ ever-growing fear of concussions, the trainer has to be a good listener. Gone are the days when a player gets knocked cold and argues his way back onto the ice in 10 minutes.

“Some guys make a big deal out of the littler things, and some guys don’t pay attention to some things that they should,” Mulligan said. “That’s half the battle, the psychological issue.”

“Tommy’s good with people, that’s one of his strengths outside of being knowledgeable in what he does,” Laviolette said. “He’s a good person and he’s a good communicator. People like Tommy, they respect him. He’s a young kid taking care of guys who are 31, 32 years old.”

“We have a great atmosphere here in the locker room and Tommy’s a big part of it.”

Mulligan’s work load intensified even more this season when the man-games lost spread off the ice.

“We even lost our equipment manager (Vinny Ferraiuolo),” he said. Ferraiuolo had to assist in Boston after its equipment manager, Peter Henderson, was sidelined with an illness.

That left Mulligan with a college intern and half the work of the equipment manager, including sewing holes in hockey socks and new name tags onto jerseys for players being recalled from Greenville, S.C. (ECHL) or signed to tryout contracts.

“They stay here as late or later than we do,” Laviolette said of Mulligan and Ferraiuolo.

After graduating Quinnipiac College in 1997 with a degree in physical therapy, Mulligan interned with the Boston Bruins under fellow Quinnipiac alumnus Tim Trahant and there he fulfilled a life-long dream of meeting Ray Bourque.

“I grew up living and dying by the Bruins,” he said. “When I started in Boston, I had never really met a professional athlete.”

Mulligan was at the Bruins practice facility in Wilmington when Rob DiMaio and other players came into the trainer’s room and introduced themselves.

“He was talking to me like a regular person. It didn’t really faze me, then all of a sudden Ray walks in and I just stood there and froze,” Mulligan said. “He walked out. About five minutes later he comes back in. He walks over to me, taps me on the shoulder, goes ‘Hey, you the new kid?’ I went ‘hum-a-da-hum-a-da…’

“Since I was 5-years-old, he was my idol. For me now, if I see him and say ‘Hey Ray, how ya doing?’ He’d say ‘Tom, how are ya?’ That’s amazing to me.”

Mulligan is glad he joined the P-Bruins when there was ample opportunity to learn the many administrative duties the trainer must perform, including detailed documentation of all treatment for legal purposes.

He realized very early how different this season was going to be.

“In training camp,” he said. “Keith McCambridge had one of his hamstring tendons skated over.” And rookie winger Jeff Zehr came to camp with a recurring knee injury that still threatens his career.

Providence’s season was barely a month old when tough-guy winger Aaron Downey was accidentally stabbed in the groin by teammate Johnathan Aitken’s stick.

Unless they repeat as Calder Cup champions, the gore on the ice that night will be the signature moment of the P-Bruins’ season.

“We were going to sandwich (the defenseman), we were going to knock him off the puck,” said Downey, who crashed together with Aitken and sustained a horrific injury. He thought he had a painful charley horse until blood began squirting out of his leg onto the ice.

“I was going towards Aitken and he wasn’t moving,” Mulligan recalled. “As I maybe got to the faceoff circle I saw this streak of blood… I tried to go underneath (Downey’s hockey pants), I wasn’t sure where it was coming from. I went to his main artery in the groin area and our doctor (Jack Bevivino) came out there. He used his belt as a tourniquet.”

“‘m fortunate that the great doctor in the stands, Jack Bevivino, did what he did,” Downey said. “I’m just fortunate there’s great help here, that’s for sure.”

“Seventy-plus players in and out of the line-up, plus Tommy’s had his hands full all year. We broke the transactions record this year.”

An athletic trainer in the AHL earns anywhere between $25,000 and $40,000 and from $40,000 and $110,000 in the NHL, depending on experience and on which end of the organization is signing the paychecks. Mulligan is signed with Providence.

He hopes in the future for a healthier squad and the lighter schedule that comes with it.

In the meantime, his fianc?e Kellie Charbonneau has been patient. She wasn’t a hockey fan when they met.

“She is now,” Mulligan said. “She’s unbelievably supportive, she knows I love this.”



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US scores 5 goals in middle period to rout Kazakhstan and advance at ice hockey worlds

HERNING, Denmark — After a goalless opening period, the United States proceeded to secure its place in the quarterfinals of the ice hockey world championship with a 6-1 rout of Kazakhstan on Sunday. The Americans are tied with the Czech Republic on 14 points in Group B, trailing leader Switzerland on 16. The U.S. completes […]

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HERNING, Denmark — After a goalless opening period, the United States proceeded to secure its place in the quarterfinals of the ice hockey world championship with a 6-1 rout of Kazakhstan on Sunday.

The Americans are tied with the Czech Republic on 14 points in Group B, trailing leader Switzerland on 16. The U.S. completes its group stage on Tuesday against the Czechs, who have two more games to play.

“I thought we were ready to play out of the gate,” U.S. head coach Ryan Warsofsky said. “We need to continue to build and get ready for what will be a big challenge on Tuesday against the Czechs.”

Despite an unproductive first period in Herning, the U.S. jumped to a commanding five-goal lead in the second.

Frank Nazar broke the deadlock 6:58 into the period with a shot from the left circle above the glove of Sergei Kudryavtsev. The forward added two assists later in the game.

Defenseman Jackson Lacombe wristed a shot from the blue line through heavy traffic to double the lead with 8:14 to go in the second period.

The next two goals came in the span of 58 seconds.

Forward Tage Thompson scored his fifth at the tournament — after receiving a pass from defenseman Zeev Buium — to make it 3-0 with 6:00 left. Matty Beniers increased the advantage to four from the left circle before Michael Kesselring scored with a high shot from a tight angle from the boards 56 seconds before the end of the period.

U.S. defensive star Zach Werenski skated toward the goal before beating backup goalie Maxim Pavlenko who came on at the beginning of the final period.

Goaltender Jeremy Swayman made 16 saves for the U.S.

Switzerland demolished Hungary 10-0 and will play its last Group B game against Kazakhstan on Tuesday.

In Stockholm, a 5-1 victory over Slovakia lifted Latvia to fourth place in Group A.

Also in Stockholm, Austria beat Slovenia 3-2 in a shootout to keep alive its hopes of reaching the quarterfinals for the first time. Austria is tied in fifth with Slovakia in Group A.

The top four teams from each group will advance.

___

AP sports: https://apnews.com/sports



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Luzerne County proposes employee discount for community college classes

Luzerne County government workers would receive a discount on Luzerne County Community College courses through a program under consideration. County Manager Romilda Crocamo said during last week’s council work session the program would help attract and retain employees. Under the proposal, the college and county would each pay 25% of a course. The employee […]

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Luzerne County government workers would receive a discount on Luzerne County Community College courses through a program under consideration.

County Manager Romilda Crocamo said during last week’s council work session the program would help attract and retain employees.

Under the proposal, the college and county would each pay 25% of a course. The employee would be responsible for the remaining 50% and any required class materials and fees.

College Vice President of Finance Erin Herman told council the average three-credit class would cost an employee approximately $225, while the college and county would each pay $112.50.

County Budget/Finance Division Head Mary Roselle said classes must be approved by an employee’s manager. Most county departments have budgeted funds for education and training that could cover the expense, she said.

Councilman Harry Haas said he supports the initiative, describing the community college as the “best deal in town.” Council’s strategic initiatives committee had discussed the need for such partnerships to build staff, he said.

Councilwoman Brittany Stephenson highly praised the initiative and said it is a “tangible” way to bolster the county workforce.

Council must approve the program at a future meeting for it to take effect.

Study commission

The county’s government study commission will meet at 6 p.m. Monday in the county courthouse on River Street in Wilkes-Barre.

The seven-citizen commission is drafting a revised county home rule charter for voters to consider adopting in November.

Agenda topics include continued discussion about the structure and powers of the county election board.

Under the plan, which has not been finalized, the commission would recommend keeping a five-citizen election board but mandating that it has more power, including authority to hire the election director and prepare the annual budget request to county council.

A link to attend the meeting remotely will be posted under council’s online meeting section (scroll down) at luzernecounty.org.

Transportation matches

Council approved two annual county allocations for public transportation last week.

Hazleton Public Transit received a $229,778 county match required for the agency to obtain $2.8 million in state funding. The county Transportation Authority received an $871,609 allocation necessary for its $8.7 million in state operating assistance funds.

Pittston lease

Magisterial District Court 11-01-04 will remain in Pittston City Hall because council approved a lease for two more years.

The county court administration requested the lease renewal, which will cost $3,708 per month for approximately 2,000 square feet on the building’s second floor, or a total of $89,000 over the two-year period, the agenda said.

Correctional services

County council presented a proclamation to the county’s correctional services division last week to commemorate “National Correctional Officers and Employees Week.”

It acknowledged their “difficult and often dangerous assignment of ensuring the custody, safety and well-being” of county inmates.

“These corrections professionals consistently place themselves in danger to protect individuals whom society has generally cast aside,” it said.

Correctional Services Division Head James Wilbur said approximately 400,000 correctional officer hours are required annually to meet minimum staffing levels at the county prison on Water Street in Wilkes-Barre and nearby minimum offenders building on Reichard Street.

“These employees have dedicated their lives to keeping our communities safe,” Wilbur said.

Children, Youth and Families

The agency is collecting cleaning supplies for families in need this month as part of a spring cleaning campaign.

Requested items include spray and floor cleaning products and dish-washing sponges. Products can be dropped off at the county human services building at 111 N. Pennsylvania Ave. in Wilkes-Barre.

Ethics commission

The county ethics commission is seeking proposals from qualified attorneys to provide legal services, according to a posting in the purchasing section at luzernecounty.org.

Under the council-adopted county ethics code, the commission must rely on a panel of outside attorneys to handle the initial stage of complaint investigations. On a rotating basis, the contracted attorneys are assigned cases and must determine within 60 days whether an investigation should be terminated, further investigated or result in the issuing of a formal complaint spelling out alleged code violations.

Due to ongoing recruitment challenges, the commission had only one outside attorney, Qiana Lehman, and she resigned last week.

County Controller Walter Griffith, who was named commission chairman last week, said he is determined to focus on a proposal to revamp the code to address concerns.

Griffith said code changes are necessary regardless of whether voters approve the revised home rule charter in November.

The county study commission’s proposal would require council to keep an ethics commission and code and mandate a council vote within nine months to either ratify or amend the existing ethics code.

The commission is composed of the county district attorney, manager, controller and two council-appointed citizens (one Democrat and one Republican).

Reach Jennifer Learn-Andes at 570-991-6388 or on Twitter @TLJenLearnAndes.



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UW-Oshkosh and UW-Whitewater Headed To NCAA Baseball Super Regionals

Story Links **UW-Oshkosh and UW-Whitewater Sports Information Offices contributed to this recap. MADISON, Wis. –For the fourth consecutive season, two Wisconsin Intercollegiate Athletic Conference (WIAC) baseball teams have reached the Super Regionals of the NCAA Division III Baseball Championship after UW-Oshkosh and UW-Whitewater emerged with regional titles on May 18.   UW-Oshkosh […]

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**UW-Oshkosh and UW-Whitewater Sports Information Offices contributed to this recap.

MADISON, Wis.

–For the fourth consecutive season, two Wisconsin Intercollegiate Athletic Conference (WIAC) baseball teams have reached the Super Regionals of the NCAA Division III Baseball Championship after UW-Oshkosh and UW-Whitewater emerged with regional titles on May 18.

 

UW-Oshkosh (34-14) won the St. Peter, Minn., Regional with a 10-2 victory over University of Chicago (Ill.). The Titans opened regional action with a 34-8 drubbing of UChicago that featured a cycle by Jake Surane and the second-most runs scored in program history. UW-Oshkosh also set a WIAC record with 31 hits in the contest. The Titans then beat Gustavus Adolphus College (Minn.) 15-10. In a rematch with UChicago, UW-Oshkosh fell 7-3 to force a winner-take-all regional title game. The Titans will face UW-Whitewater in a best-of-three Super Regional.

 

UW-Whitewater (42-5) claimed the Adrian, Mich., Regional with a 4-1 win over Adrian College (Mich.) and followed with a 4-3, 11-inning victory over Washington University in St. Louis (Mo.) before the clinching win.

 

UW-La Crosse also represented the conference in regional action. The Eagles opened NCAA action with a 4-2 victory over Bethany Lutheran College (Minn.) and an 8-6 triumph over Claremont-Mudd-Scripps Colleges (Calif.). UW-La Crosse then dropped back-to-back games to Claremont-Mudd-Scripps by scores of 11-2 and 6-2.

 

The Eagles completed the 2025 campaign with a 35-11 record and made their third consecutive NCAA appearance and ninth NCAA in program history.

 

In UW-Oshkosh’s regional-clinching victory over UChicago, the Maroons scored the first run of the game in the fourth inning with a groundout RBI and added another run in the fifth when on a solo home run.

 

After a scoreless sixth inning, Carter Stebane had a run-scoring single to right field, while Jack McKellips brought in a pair of runs with a single up the middle to give the Titans a 3-2 lead.

In the eighth inning, Owen Housinger had a RBI single to leftfield and the Titans tacked on another run when McKellips was hit by a pitch with the bases loaded. Mason Kirchberg had a sacrifice fly to deep left field for a 6-2 advantage.

 

In the ninth inning, Zach Taylor had a sacrifice fly and Stebane ripped a three-run home run down the left field line for a 9-2 lead. Mason Kirchberg added a RBI double to make the score 10-2.

 

Connor Walters pitched a complete game for the Titans, allowing two runs on four hits, while striking out five. He improved to 6-4 on the season.

 

In UW-Whitewater’s regional-clinching win over Adrian, the Warhawks got on the board in the second inning on a sacrifice fly by Dominik McVay.

 

Adrian tied the game in the third inning on their own sacrifice fly, but UW-Whitewater loaded the bases up in the bottom of the third, and had a two-run single from Danny Hopper followed by a run-scoring single from Sam Paden to give the Warhawks a 4-1 advantage.

 

Ben Lee pitched the first seven innings and scattered five hits, while striking out four and allowing one unearned run. He improved to 5-1 on the season.

 

Ethan Wickman pitched 1.2 innings and struck out two, while Jack Hagen got the call on the mound for the final out and recorded his third save of the year.

 

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Matt Brown, paralyzed 15 years ago, is finding his groove

The answer surprised even Brown himself. “While the answer is always yes, it would be harder to hit that reset button than most people think,” Matt Brown said. “Because I wouldn’t be able to do what I’m doing now.” Fifteen years after he was paralyzed after crashing into the boards while playing hockey for Norwood […]

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The answer surprised even Brown himself.

“While the answer is always yes, it would be harder to hit that reset button than most people think,” Matt Brown said. “Because I wouldn’t be able to do what I’m doing now.”

Fifteen years after he was paralyzed after crashing into the boards while playing hockey for Norwood High, Brown believes the accident that robbed him of so much has given him a perspective he never would have had if he hadn’t been paralyzed.

People spend years, sometimes a lifetime, trying to figure out their purpose. What were they put on this earth for?

From his wheelchair, Matt Brown can see higher and further than most. His purpose is, quite simply, to help others.

The Matt Brown Foundation was launched by Brown and his family in the middle of the pandemic.

“Not exactly the optimum time,” he concedes.

Five years later, the foundation is, like Brown himself, finding its groove. It has distributed some $300,000 in grants to people who are living with paralysis, paying for accessible vehicles, home modifications, essential equipment.

Besides donors, an annual golf tournament and the Falmouth Road Race are big fund-raising tools. This year, the foundation gained charity status with the Boston Marathon, allowing it to field runners, opening a new revenue source that Brown hopes will allow it to distribute even more grants to more people.

The grants change little things, changing lives. They renovated a bathroom for a guy on the South Shore who hadn’t been able to shower since his accident a year before. They bought a standing frame for a man so he could be vertical in his Quincy home.

Not long ago, Brown got a call from the folks at the Little Mustangs Preschool Academy in Norwood, about two miles from his house.

One of the students there, a 4-year-old boy, is paraplegic. When his classmates went out to recess, all the boy could do was watch them from his wheelchair, because the playground equipment wasn’t accessible to him.

Brown’s foundation paid for an adaptive swing, and on Tuesday, Brown watched as the boy called his parents over to push him in that swing for the first time.

The boy’s classmates made cards for Brown, thanking him in eight different languages.

“To see that little boy smile,” Brown said, “to see his parents smile, I can’t even explain what that feels like.”

He lives in the house he grew up in, with his parents, Mike and Sue. His parents met in the sixth grade. Sue’s maiden name is Brown, same as Mike’s, so they like to say Mike took her name when they got married.

Matt Brown would like to get a place of his own some day. But he can’t imagine leaving Norwood. The town, and its people, always had his back.

Next month, he’ll be the best man at the wedding of his childhood friend Austin Glaser, a Norwood police officer who was his roommate at Stonehill College. Brown has been working on his speech for ages, trying to get it down from a half-hour to five minutes.

He has also remained close to Tyler Piacentini, the Weymouth High player whose check sent Brown crashing headfirst into the boards at Pilgrim Skating Arena in Hingham in 2010. He never blamed Piacentini, saying it was “just two guys going for the puck.”

Last year, he did doughnuts in his wheelchair on the dance floor at Piacentini’s wedding in Nashville.

On Wednesday, Brown was sitting in his driveway. As he does three days a week, he had just spent more than two hours at the gym at Journey Forward, a nonprofit in Canton that helps those with spinal cord injuries.

He regularly works out there alongside his friends, hockey players who suffered similar spinal cord injuries: Jake Thibeault, who was paralyzed in 2021 while playing for Milton Academy; AJ Quetta, who was paralyzed in 2021 while playing for Bishop Feehan High; and Denna Laing, who was paralyzed in 2015 while playing for the Boston Pride in the National Women’s Hockey League.

“We almost have enough of us for a full line,” Brown deadpans.

Brown was mentored and inspired by Travis Roy, the Boston University player who was paralyzed on his first shift for the Terriers in 1995, whose own foundation raised millions and who died in 2020 at the age of 45.

“We’re all following in Travis’s tire tracks,” Brown said.

In the driveway, Brown’s friend Jack Doherty was talking about speeches he’s lining up for Brown. Doherty has his own story: He died on the ice, a cardiac arrest while playing in a men’s league in Weymouth in 2013. After being clinically dead for seven minutes, Doherty was brought back to life by first responders. He says Brown is one of the most inspirational speakers he’s ever heard.

“When he speaks,” Doherty said, “people want him to speak longer.”

Brown doesn’t want anyone to think he’s some super hero. He’s just a regular guy from Norwood, who’s been able to move on from a life-altering injury with the help of family and friends who never gave up on him, who always inspired him. And so he aspires to inspire others.

It could have gone the other way, he says.

“I could have closed the door, just stayed in my room, give in to that darkness,” he said. “But my friends and family kept me going.”

He turned to look at the house where he ran down the stairs on Christmas mornings. Where he put on his uniform for Little League games. Where he did his math homework.

“When one door closes, not all doors close,” he said. “I have to work hard to find those other doors. But I’ll never stop trying.”

He looked up and down his street and then he said it, his mantra, something that repeats in his head, and he lives by it.

“Never quit,” Matt Brown said. “Overcome. Keep going forward.”


Kevin Cullen is a Globe columnist. He can be reached at kevin.cullen@globe.com.





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Men’s Lacrosse Punches Ticket to NCAA Final Four – Penn State

ANNAPOLIS, Md.- No. 7 Penn State men’s lacrosse earned a 14-12 comeback victory over the reigning back-to-back National Champions Notre Dame in the NCAA Quarterfinals. The Nittany Lions used a 8-0 scoring run over the last two quarters to rally back from a six-goal deficit midway through the third stanza. Penn State earns its third […]

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ANNAPOLIS, Md.- No. 7 Penn State men’s lacrosse earned a 14-12 comeback victory over the reigning back-to-back National Champions Notre Dame in the NCAA Quarterfinals. The Nittany Lions used a 8-0 scoring run over the last two quarters to rally back from a six-goal deficit midway through the third stanza. Penn State earns its third trip to the NCAA Final Four in program history and first since 2023. The Nittany Lions improve to 12-4, while the Fighting Irish finish their season with a 9-5 record.

Matt Traynor had another standout performance with a game high six goals and one assist to total seven points. Ethan Long and Kyle Lehman both produced hat tricks, Long also adding an assist while notching his 100th career point. Liam Matthews and Hunter Aquino each had one goal to complete the PSU scoring column.

Defensively, Jack Fracyon made nine saves between the pipes and collected three ground balls. Alex Ross led the close defense, scooping three ground balls and causing two turnovers. Kevin Parnham, Reid Gills and Jon King all had three ground balls apiece. Gills went 11-26 at the faceoff x to go with histr trio ground balls and also contributed a career best two caused turnovers.

FIRST QUARTER – 3-2 Notre Dame

  • Penn State started the scoring with a goal off the stick of Traynor at the 14:02 mark.
  • Fracyon made two back-to-back saves with the defense supplementing two stops to help their goalie and allow the offense to string together consecutive goals. Aquino used a catch and shoot goal to give PSU a two-goal edge.
  • Following the first timeout of the quarter, Notre Dame won the ensuing faceoff and converted its first goal of the game. The Fighting Irish added two more consecutive goals to take a 3-2 lead.

SECOND QUARTER – 8-3 Notre Dame

  • After an opening faceoff win from Gills, the Nittany Lions offense knotted the score at 3-3 following a ground ball and shot from Long.
  • The Irish sparked a 5-0 scoring run to take a five-goal advantage throughout the remainder of the quarter.

THIRD QUARTER – 12-10 Penn State

  • Traynor got the scoring started once again in the second half, cutting on a feed from Long at the circle.
  • Traynor notched his sixth hat trick of the season with back-to-back goals, this time curling around the crease and shooting from the side.
  • Notre Dame had the answer to push back to a four-goal edge.
  • Despite being hounded by a defender, Lehman found space and nailed a shot from 10 yards out to cut the deficit to three.
  • The Irish answered with three-straight goals including one in a man-up situation to make the score 12-6.
  • Matthews found his first of the day to break up the Notre Dame scoring stretch and ignite what would become an 8-0 scoring run for the Nittany Lions.
  • Long notched his 100th career point to score his second of the day off a feed from Traynor.
  • The senior captain Traynor produced another Sports Center play, diving in the air as he came around the crease to add a fourth goal to his total.

FOURTH QUARTER – 14-12 Penn State

  • The Nittany Lions controlled the fourth quarter both on the field and in the stands, with the PSU fans creating a dominant atmosphere while Penn State held Notre Dame scoreless throughout the comeback.
  • Lehman added two more goals to start the stanza, one from the alley and one following a pass from Aquino.
  • Traynor then had two back-to-back goals of his own, both unassisted. He battled through four defenders to score the first and outworked his defender and went low on the second.
  • Long had the final goal of the game at the six-minute mark to complete his hat trick.
  • The Penn State defense held strong through the remaining minutes of the contest, managing to escape Notre Dame offensive possessions by backing up shots and coming up with crucial ground balls.

POSTGAME NOTES

  • Penn State advances to its third Final Four in program history, all coming under head coach Jeff Tambroni.
  • The Nittany Lions earn their seventh win over the Fighting Irish while ending the back-to-back National Champions’ season.
  • Traynor produced his seventh three-plus-goal outing and second six-plus outing of the season. He has scored a hat trick in both NCAA Tournament games thus far.
  • Long becomes the second current Penn State player to notch 100 career points this season, adding his second hat trick of the season.
  • The six-goal comeback is the Nittany Lions’ largest deficit they climbed back from this season.

UP NEXT

The Nittany Lions face no.1 Cornell at the Final Four in Foxborough, Mass. at Gillette Stadium on Saturday, May 24.



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