World champion Kaysha Love, three-time Olympic champion Kaillie Humphries-Armbruster and five-time Olympic medalist Elana Meyers Taylor were named to the U.S. World Cup bobsled team Saturday, as the Americans began shaping their roster for this winter's Milan-Cortina Games.Also making the team: a three-time NCAA indoor track champion for Notre Dame, a former Dartmouth football player and a Division II school's assistant athletic trainer - someone who hadn't seen a bobsled until a few weeks ago.
Former Dartmouth football player Quinten Arello, who had a rookie minicamp opportunity with the Tennessee Titans last year, was one of 12 men's push athletes picked for the team.
Find Arello's Dartmouth football bio HERE.
More from the ESPN story:
Being on the national team doesn't automatically assure sliders of an Olympic roster spot, but being part of (the) selections is a big step toward securing a place on that team.
Among the others chosen was former Princeton tailback Charlie Volker, a 2022 Olympic bobsled veteran.
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There's a little more about a former Dartmouth wide receivers coach who has gone on to to big things under the headline, Can Cortez Hankton keep the WRU tradition alive at Ohio State? Find the story HERE.
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With the FCS national championship game slated for Monday night the winners of the Walter Payton Award (FCS offensive player of the year) and Buck Buchanan Award (defensive player of the year) were announced and the Ivy League was represented on both ballots.
Youngstown State quarterback Beau Brungard won the Payton Award with Penn wide receiver Jared Richardson finishing tied for 23rd in the voting, while Harvard quarterback Jaden Craig and Yale running back Josh Pitsenberger tied for 25th.
Mercer defensive end Andrew Zock won the Buchanan Award with Yale safety Abu Kamara 15th in the voting and Harvard safety Ty Bartrum tied for 27th.
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EXTRA POINT
I just stumbled across a box of old ticket stubs from major league baseball, NBA and NHL games I attended growing up, as well as tickets from concerts I went to starting when I was in college. It's a nostalgic trip down memory lane and I can't help but think how you can't stick an e-ticket into an old wooden cigar box and find it all these years later.