Softball: 'Cats use spring break trip to strengthen bond
Spring Break started just a bit early for the Ohio softball team, though playing 10 games during a 10-day span hardly qualifies as a break.
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Spring Break started just a bit early for the Ohio softball team, though playing 10 games during a 10-day span hardly qualifies as a break.
Just before the Ohio softball team’s California road trip, pitcher and designated hitter Emily Wethington broke the school’s all-time record for strikeouts. On the last day of the trip, in the first game of a double-header, the senior broke the all-time record for career home runs.
Watching as the seconds ticked off the clock in Ohio’s 4-2 semifinal loss Tuesday, I kept thinking about what coach Dan Morris said to me at the beginning of the season — this was the most talented hockey team he had ever assembled.
With just three short days until Ohio’s first-round match-up in the American Collegiate Hockey Association National Tournament, Bird Arena was barren.
When the NHL resumed play after the lockout that wiped out the 2004-2005 season, hockey was a different game. Gone were ties, two-line passes and of course neutral-zone traps — the staple of Stanley Cup winners such as the New Jersey Devils and the Dallas Stars.
With the Mid-American Conference Championships just around the corner, the Rick Meindl Last Call was supposed to be little more than a tune-up meet for Bobcats. If their first-place finish at Capital Saturday is any indication, the squad is up and running better than ever.
Last season, Ohio was swept in its season finale —its seniors’ last memories of Bird Arena tarnished as a result.
Editor’s note: This is the last of a three-part series about the hockey team — ranked No. 3 in the American Collegiate Hockey Association — and its top line of Nick Rostek, Michael Schultz and now Jared Fuhs.
Editor’s note: This is the first of a three-part series about the hockey team — ranked No. 3 in the American Collegiate Hockey Association — and its top line of Nick Rostek, Michael Schultz and now Jared Fuhs.
It's never easy to replace a legend, and for Ohio hockey, Paul Marshall is as close as it comes. The former Bobcat goaltender, who graduated last spring, owns almost all the team's career records in net: wins, shutouts, saves, and goals against average.
Few could have predicted the impact Brett Agnew would have this early in his Ohio hockey career.