Latest news with #Pioneers


Boston Globe
2 days ago
- Sport
- Boston Globe
Sixth sense: St. John's (Shrewsbury) baseball erupts for 11-run sixth inning, avenging title-game loss to BC High
Get Starting Point A guide through the most important stories of the morning, delivered Monday through Friday. Enter Email Sign Up At separate points in the 49-minute bottom of the sixth, the Pioneers (17-5) had five, then seven runners reach base in a row. Owen Miller, Jackson Lucarelli, Gabe Terlato, and Secrist all reached twice in the frame. Advertisement 'You don't draw it up like that, for sure,' St. John's coach Casey Cummins said. 'I would've liked the 11-spot in the first inning maybe, nerves-wise. I can't say enough about the toughness this team showed.' Related : The Eagles (12-10) pounced early with an RBI single from Tommy O'Donnell in the first, then three runs in the second capped by Sam Bushley's RBI double. But the Pioneers rallied with a four-run second, sending 10 batters to the plate to tie it — a number that looked quaint by the day's end. Advertisement After the Eagles scored in three straight innings, the Pioneers needed to respond. They worked five walks, knocked six hits, and two of the outs in the sixth inning were productive sacrifice flies. 'When we're down in innings, I tell them to be a little bit more patient,' Cummins said. 'Let's not help them out. We need baserunners, and at that point we took advantage of our eye, our zone, and made it hurt when it counted. 'I probably had a sick feeling in my stomach for 11 months,' Secrist said. 'It's still not gone, but just great to beat them.' The Pioneers will host No. 10 St. John's Prep (14-8) in the quarterfinal, at a date and time TBD. St. John's Prep 5, Wachusett 2 — Will Shaheen grabbed the win for the No. 10 Eagles (14-8) against No. 26 Wachusett (11-11), fanning six, while James Willett picked up the save with a strikeout. Tyler Spear led Prep's offense with two hits, three RBIs, and a run, Willett scored twice, and Connor Durney tallied a hit and an RBI Division 2 State Mansfield 4, Woburn 0 — Junior Jack Peabody twirled 11 strikeouts in a complete-game effort, surrendering four hits and two walks as the No. 5 Hornets (14-9) buzzed into the quarterfinals over No. 21 Woburn (13-9). Darrian Sanders powered Mansfield with three hits, including a triple. Advertisement Plymouth North 3, Billerica 0 — Junior Liam Pearson recorded three strikeouts and allowed five hits and two walks in a complete-game effort for the top-seeded Eagles (18-4) in their second-round win over No. 17 Billerica (11-11). Matthew Nardone and Jake Novak had a hit and an RBI each. Reading 2, Hopkinton 0 — Grady Ventura tossed a flawless game, going seven innings, striking out seven, and giving up only one walk and one hit as the No. 2 Rockets (19-3) advanced to the quarterfinals over No. 15 Hopkinton (15-8). Somerset Berkley 7, Melrose 4 — Luke Thornton manufactured a game-high three hits, singling in the first, third, and sixth innings, and Kyle Sherman Jr., Hayden Teasdale, Alex Crook, and Liam Meehan all picked up RBIs in the second-round win for the No. 6 Raiders (16-6) against No. 22 Melrose (13-9). Division 3 State Bishop Stang 4, Hanover 3 — The No. 5 Spartans (15-5) got on the board early after Matt Burt singled to center and Nolan Donaldson grounded into a fielder's choice, each scoring a run. Brock Winslow extended Stang's lead to 4-1 in the bottom of the second, and Burt earned the win, going five inning with three strikeouts, a walk, six hits allowed, and two earned runs in the second-round defeat of No. 12 Hanover (13-7). Foxborough 5, Falmouth 2 — Senior righthander Nolan Gordon hurled three strikeouts and relinquished six hits and one earned run as the No. 3 Warriors (15-8) made it to the quarterfinals over No. 14 Falmouth (13-7). Henry Griffin led the offense with two hits, a run, an RBI and a walk, and Gordon added a hit. Advertisement Sandwich 8, Gloucester 2 — Joe Coughlan's nine-strikeout day and Ty Creighton's two hits and four RBIs propelled the No. 7 Blue Knights (17-5) to the quarterfinals over No. 10 Gloucester (20-2). James Niemiec and Coughlan each recorded two hits and an RBI. Mike Puzzanghera can be reached at


Business Journals
15-05-2025
- Business
- Business Journals
A pioneering institution: Butler County Community College, where careers are commenced and futures are formed
expand On a blustery spring day, Megan Coval wastes no time leading a band of first-time visitors across the handsomely rustic Butler County Community College main campus. In her first week as the college's president, the seasoned higher education professional is swift in expressing her confidence in BC3, as it is widely known. 'BC3 very quickly developed a good reputation,' Coval states. 'We had flexible classes where you could work and come at night, and so we grew to expand with that interest in mind.' Go West Her assurance in the employees, board of trustees, and friends of BC3 is well-placed. 'This past fall we had roughly 2,200 students taking credit courses, and nearly 16,000 on the noncredit side,' Coval states. Employing a workforce of over 500, BC3 has a nearly $30 million annual operating budget. Tuition comprises $12 million of the total, with county and state monies adding the rest. And the college's very active Education Foundation supports special projects for the school. The local community steps up wonderfully also. 'Every year, for either big capital projects or things like scholarships or one-off projects, we have an incredibly generous community,' Coval adds. Chartered in 1965, BC3 opened their doors the following year. Four wood-and-stone structures comprised the original main campus. They remain, forming the core of the current 13-building campus, which has spread out in all directions across the 330-acre grounds. 'We were the first community college in western Pennsylvania, a big point of pride for us, and it's the genesis of our mascot and our name, the Pioneers,' Coval states. A new hand at the helm On March 19, 2025, in a 15-0 vote, BC3's board of trustees appointed Coval as the college's ninth president, elevating her from her interim president post. She started at BC3 in September 2021, to fill the role of executive director of the BC3 Education Foundation and external relations. Coval brings considerable experience in higher education, leadership, and government relations outside of her BC3 work. Prior to the college, she served as vice president of policy and federal relations at the National Association of Student Financial Aid Administrators in Washington, D.C. and, previous to that, she was director of government relations for the U.S. Department of Education's Advisory Committee on Student Financial Assistance. Coval holds a master of education degree in higher education administration with a policy focus from The Pennsylvania State University and a bachelor of arts degree in political science with a communication arts minor from Allegheny College. Education for everyone Today, BC3 offers certificates and associate degrees in business and information technology, liberal arts, education and behavioral sciences, nursing and allied health, and in science, technology, engineering and mathematics (STEM). Additionally, five associate degrees and nine certificate and workplace certificates are offered fully online. 'The associate of arts and science degrees are really our transfer elsewhere,' Coval states. BC3 offers noncredit courses as well. 'Those encompass continuing education, recertification, reskilling, or upskilling,' Coval says. 'Noncredit is more flexible. If there's a business looking for a certain type of training, we can put together for them apart from our academic programming.' 'Our noncredit programs, like our workforce training in business, public safety and industrial safety, and our personal enrichment courses that we call 'Lifelong Learning,' are for community members of all ages." Farmers National Bank — partners in regional education Farmers' relationship with the college goes back decades. 'The bank has provided full-platform banking services for BC3 including treasury management, card management, depository services, building financing and liquidity credit lines since 2010, and we have been partners in other endeavors long before that,' states William Marsh, Farmers Senior Vice President, Market President, Pennsylvania. 'On the community side, we have a tremendous relationship with Farmers,' Coval adds. 'Farmers has for years been the title sponsor of our annual golf outing, the major fundraising event of our year. Kyle Hilfiger, from our local Farmers branch, sits on the organizing committee and works the event.' William Marsh agrees. 'We regularly participate in and support annual student activities like their investment club and foundation donations,' he continues. 'Farmers considers the college a community partner.' President Coval also is a member of the local Farmers Community Advisory Board. 'Having a seat at that table is incredibly important to BC3,' she states. 'We're training and educating the people who work in the industries sitting around the table with us. Today, a college president's role has to focus more on being proactive and connecting with those representatives.' The sky's the limit On this crisp afternoon students waste no time scurrying across the BC3 campus. After all, there are classes to get to, lab work to accomplish, careers to establish. Coval is in her element. 'This is a very meaningful position to be in because I am back in my hometown, working in a field I care deeply about. Providing quality, accessible and affordable higher education to individuals, allowing them a better chance at a higher quality of life.' To see how Farmers can help your business, reach out to William Marsh, Farmers Senior Vice President, Market President, Pennsylvania at WMarsh@ Or 844-800-2193. About Farmers Founded in 1887, Farmers National Banc Corp. is a diversified financial services company headquartered in Canfield, Ohio, with $5.2 billion in banking assets. Farmers National Banc Corp.'s wholly-owned subsidiaries are comprised of The Farmers National Bank of Canfield, a full-service national bank engaged in commercial and retail banking with 62 banking locations in Mahoning, Trumbull, Columbiana, Portage, Stark, Wayne, Medina, Geauga and Cuyahoga Counties in Ohio and Beaver, Butler, Allegheny, Jefferson, Clarion, Venango, Clearfield, Mercer, Elk and Crawford Counties in Pennsylvania, and Farmers Trust Company, which operates trust offices and offers services in the same geographic markets. Total wealth management assets under care at March 31, 2025 are $4.3 billion. Farmers National Insurance, LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of The Farmers National Bank of Canfield, offers a variety of insurance products.


Edmonton Journal
14-05-2025
- Sport
- Edmonton Journal
FLAMES RETOOL TRACKER: Could Carter King be solution at centre?
Article content A born-and-raised Calgarian who had captained the NCAA powerhouse while playing on the power play, penalty kill and serving as the Pioneers' first-line centre? Yeah, that sort of sounds like a potential X-Factor, doesn't it? David Carle, the Pioneers head coach, has watched King develop over four years in one of American college hockey's elite programs and fully believes he can make an impact at the pro level. 'He's going to gain the coach's trust with his consistency and trustworthiness on the ice,' said Carle, whose name has consistently come up during NHL head coaching searches over the past few years. 'That'll be how he gets his foot in the door and then his offence will continue to grow at that level, as well.' The Pioneers head coach has seen lots of his players go on to pro careers and, this year alone, King saw former teammates like Zeev Buium and Bobby Brink playing with NHL teams.


Calgary Herald
14-05-2025
- Sport
- Calgary Herald
FLAMES RETOOL TRACKER: Could Carter King be solution at centre?
Article content The Denver Pioneers have provided a consistent pipeline of NHL talent for years. Article content Now, the question around Calgary is whether Carter King might be next. Article content For a Flames team that is short on young depth at the centre position, it was a big deal that they managed to convince the 23-year-old to put pen to paper on a contract when he finished his time at the University of Denver this spring. Article content Article content A born-and-raised Calgarian who had captained the NCAA powerhouse while playing on the power play, penalty kill and serving as the Pioneers' first-line centre? Yeah, that sort of sounds like a potential X-Factor, doesn't it? Article content Article content David Carle, the Pioneers head coach, has watched King develop over four years in one of American college hockey's elite programs and fully believes he can make an impact at the pro level. Article content 'He's going to gain the coach's trust with his consistency and trustworthiness on the ice,' said Carle, whose name has consistently come up during NHL head coaching searches over the past few years. 'That'll be how he gets his foot in the door and then his offence will continue to grow at that level, as well.' Article content The Pioneers head coach has seen lots of his players go on to pro careers and, this year alone, King saw former teammates like Zeev Buium and Bobby Brink playing with NHL teams. Article content So, could he be next? Article content There are a few things that repeatedly come up when hockey people talk about King. They talk about his impressive faceoff abilities, his sky-high hockey IQ and his work on special teams — especially the penalty kill. Article content Article content And those attributes are absolutely a big part of what sets him apart. Article content Article content He took more faceoffs than anyone in the National Collegiate Hockey Conference this past season, winning 54.4% of the 979 draws he took. When you consider that the Flames had the third-worst faceoff percentage (46.2%) in the NHL last season, his proficiency could obviously become attractive. Article content 'We always tell our centremen, 'You win faceoffs, you're gonna play. The coach wants to win faceoffs, so get really good at that,'' Flames director of player development Ray Edwards said. 'And he's a good student of the game. He studies it and wants to learn. So we're expecting Carter to have a great summer and be ready to go and have a great camp and see where it takes him.' Article content Faceoffs alone won't get King into the NHL lineup, of course, but nobody is saying that's the only attractive part of his game. Article content And while there's been a lot of focus on his penalty-killing and two-way instincts, Carle watched as King evolved over his four years with the Pioneers, who won two NCAA championships in his time with the program.


CBS News
06-05-2025
- Sport
- CBS News
David Carle signs multi-year extension as head coach of Denver Pioneers men's ice hockey team
Head coach David Carle is continuing his commitment to the University of Denver Pioneers men's ice hockey team, and the university in turn. A multi-year contract extension was reached between Carle and the university's athletics program Monday. BOSTON, MASSACHUSETTS - APRIL 09: Denver Pioneers Head Coach David Carle looks on after the Pioneers defeat the Minnesota State Mavericks 5-1 in the 2022 NCAA Division I Man's Ice Hockey Championship game at TD Garden on April 09, 2022 in Boston, Massachusetts. Maddie Meyer / Getty Images "I am honored to have the University's support for our hockey program over the last seven years and into the future," Carle said in the press release. "Without their support and the support of our fans, alumni and donors, nothing that we have accomplished would have been possible. The resources we have established have had a direct impact on the daily lives of current and future Pioneer hockey student-athletes, and we continue to raise the bar for success with these commitments." The Pios team remains one of the premier men's college ice hockey programs in the country, and Carle has sparked that competitiveness in the Pioneers hockey players. According to the press release, "Along with the extension, Carle is also committing to a multi-year major gift pledge to support current and new initiatives within the hockey program. Carle will be the first Denver Athletics head coach to join the department's Gold Standard Society. His gift will directly support the Murray Armstrong Hockey Student-Athlete Enhancement Fund and the Athletics Excellence Fund" Over the past seven seasons, Carle has been the unwavering bench boss for the Pios, and it resulted in two national championships in 2022 and 2024 respectively.