I watched the game. The headline is accurate.
SInce I started law school in 1994, I have seen Harvard men's hockey shit a lot of beds. Today's game is an order of magnitude worse than the sum of all the others.
#ECACHockey
Breaking: The NCAA D1 Cabinet met and further discussed the hockey model today.
Sources say the NCAA will adopt hockey’s proposed model, where the eligibility clock begins the season following an athlete’s 19th birthday or college enrollment, removing HS graduation.
Every single hockey coach was in favor of counter-proposal, including those who probably would've benefited without it. You can't get whole body to agree the sky is blue.
Big kudos to hockey commissioners, with assist from entire hockey community in North America, including NHL. This was total common sense. Basically same as column I wrote 6 weeks ago.
Was preoccupied today, but this is a major win for both college and junior hockey, but most importantly a win for the players. They won’t be forced into decisions earlier than they need to be. Stunning is an understatement. Getting other sports on board was HUGE.
Earlier this week, Will Smith and I released a new Stimson Center report on the war in Iran as part of the "Is War Worth It?" project.
We examined the stated US objectives, whether the US achieved them, and the costs (direct and indirect) of the conflict.
Our conclusion: the Iran War is worse than a failure. It's a strategic calamity with no notable achievements and potentially trillions in direct and indirect costs to the US and global economy.
Iran’s nuclear capacity is broadly unchanged, its missile force largely intact, its hard-liners empowered, its leverage over the Strait of Hormuz enhanced, and U.S. munitions stockpiles depleted.
How did we come to that conclusion?
We actually took into account how the Trump administration publicly tried to justify the war -- and then took a deep dive look at the costs of the war. https://t.co/yR28eZwbnT
Rising senior forward Ryan Walsh has been named captain of @CornellMHockey for the upcoming 2026-27 season.
Walsh will be the 20th player to serve as a multi-year captain and the seventh to serve as a solo captain multiple times.
#YellCornell
https://t.co/b6whxOyrku
Cornell's Georgia Schiff brings a gritty game and experience in full-contact to the PWHL draft. For @TheHockeyNewsW, we spoke about her training and the Cornell community. Also, being from Ithaca, @CornellWHockey is my hometown team, so this was extra fun.
https://t.co/O8zZQaZI8E
This is so corrupt that the lawyers who crafted this should be disbarred & removed, the acting AG who signed it should be disbarred & removed, and the president who orchestrated it all should be impeached & removed & finally at long last made irrelevant.
Staggering corruption
Regardless of whether Democrats have the votes, a member of Congress should introduce a privileged impeachment resolution. Shine a light on the egregious corruption and get Trump apologists on the record.
After more than 250 bylines as a student journalist, this is my last one.
Bidding my farewells to Cornell, student journalism, Cornell hockey and, most importantly, @cornellsun:
https://t.co/CHE1zKuhxV
It is with deep sadness that we share the passing of Johan Nilsson, the founder of Elite Prospects and the person whose curiosity and passion for hockey planted the seed for everything we have built together.
Born on the 9th of April 1981, Johan founded Elite Prospects in December 1999 at just 18 years old. What started as a vision driven by a deep love of hockey grew into the world’s leading hockey platform, a testament to the kind of person he was. Johan had a rare combination of qualities: sharp intellect, deep knowledge, and a kindness that made everyone around him feel valued.
He could dive into the most complex problems with calm and clarity, and he brought that same thoughtfulness to the people he worked with every day. For the past nine years, Johan faced a battle with colon cancer with the same calm and strength that defined everything he did.
His love of hockey was never just about the game. It was about understanding it fully, honestly, and in all its detail. That drive is woven into the DNA of Elite Prospects, and it will continue to shape the future of what we do.
To know Johan was to be quietly inspired by him. We are all immensely grateful that we got to work alongside someone like him. Our deepest condolences go to his family and loved ones. He will be greatly missed, by all of us and by the global hockey community. Johan leaves behind his beloved wife and two children, aged two and eight.