Nicole Haase

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For Gophers, women’s Frozen Four remains special →

March 21, 2019 by Nicole Hensch in Sports, Features/Profiles

HAMDEN, Conn. — There is no Division I women’s hockey team as successful as Minnesota. The Gophers have eight national titles and have made 12 straight NCAA tournaments.

So, in a lot of ways, Minnesota is exactly where it expects to be as they prepare to face Cornell in an NCAA semifinal Friday at 3 p.m. Still, the Gophers know none of this is assured. For nearly half the women on the roster, this will be their first Frozen Four.

Minnesota lost their NCAA quarterfinal game to Wisconsin last year, ending a string of six straight Frozen Four appearances, and senior Kelly Pannek is the only member of this team that has won a national title.

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March 21, 2019 /Nicole Hensch
National Championship, ncaa, Women's Hockey, women's sports, Sports, St. Paul Pioneer Press
Sports, Features/Profiles

Syracuse women’s hockey falls to Wisconsin in first-ever NCAA Tournament →

March 16, 2019 by Nicole Hensch in Sports, Women's Hockey

Madison, Wis. – The Syracuse women’s hockey season came to an end with a 4-0 loss to No.1 Wisconsin on Saturday.

The Orange had something of a miracle run to close their season and earned their first College Hockey America conference tournament title and first NCAA berth, but for its efforts it received a return trip to Madison to face the top team in the country.

After having lost to Wisconsin in early December 6-1 and 9-1, Syracuse coach Paul Flanagan focused on slowing the game down and worked to try to prevent the Badgers from getting to the front of the net. The Orange finished the game with 21 blocks, and junior Ady Cohen made a career-high 43 saves.

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March 16, 2019 /Nicole Hensch
NCAA, women's hockey, college hockey, National Championship, game story
Sports, Women's Hockey

10 Indisputable Reasons Why Milwaukee Is the Best City on Earth, by a Totally Unbiased Local →

December 12, 2018 by Nicole Hensch in Travel, Food, Favorite Pieces

Slowly but surely the rest of the world is starting to discover what those of us here in Milwaukee have known all along: this city is awesome. Out-of-towners tend to think of Milwaukee in a narrow box informed by Cheeseheads, “That 70’s Show” and preconceived notions about the Rust Belt, but they couldn’t be more wrong.

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December 12, 2018 /Nicole Hensch
Travel, Food, Favorite Pieces

NCAA Highlight: Sarah Potomak →

October 24, 2018 by Nicole Hensch in Sports, Features/Profiles, Women's Hockey

Had she made the Canadian Olympic team, Sarah Potomak would have been the youngest player on the team by two years. Though making the team so young would have been a stretch, it's also something Potomak imagined was within her grasp over her last couple of seasons.

She made her debut with the senior team in 2015, winning silver with Canada at the Four Nations Cup. She was a fixture of the senior team in 2017, winning silver at the IIHF Women's World Championships and had high hopes – and expectations of herself – when she was named to the centralization roster prior to Pyeongchang.

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October 24, 2018 /Nicole Hensch
Victory Press, feature, Hockey Canada, Women's Hockey, Sports
Sports, Features/Profiles, Women's Hockey

Tariffs, China and American Ginseng: A Case Study in Wisconsin →

October 23, 2018 by Nicole Hensch in Food, Favorite Pieces, Features/Profiles

Marathon County is ground zero for the American ginseng industry, growing 98 percent of the country’s crop. But that may be in jeopardy if buyers start to walk away from deals in response to Chinese import tariffs.

Driving through central Wisconsin, it’s impossible to miss the shade structures that go on for acres through this somewhat remote part of America’s heartland. After miles and miles of livestock and corn, the farmland here looks different. Wooden stakes hold up mesh fabric to create the 80 percent shade that ginseng needs to grow. Originally foraged in forests, this niche crop is cultivated by recreating the tree cover environment in which it thrives.

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October 23, 2018 /Nicole Hensch
wisconsin, food, Modern Farmer, feature
Food, Favorite Pieces, Features/Profiles

NCAA Highlight: Cayla Barnes →

October 09, 2018 by Nicole Hensch in Sports, Features/Profiles, Women's Hockey

Cayla Barnes' second freshman year at Boston College is likely going to go very differently than her first.

She has started her red-shirt freshman season at Boston College after winning gold with Team USA at the Pyeongchang Olympics. Heading into last year, Barnes enrolled at BC after not being named to the initial USA centralization roster. She played in five games for the Eagles before she got a surprise phone call asking her to join Team USA in Tampa.

Barnes left school on October 28 and, less than two weeks later, tallied two goals and an assist with the national team as they took gold in the Four Nations Cup. Just more than four months later, Barnes was suiting up for the Olympics as the youngest player on the team, having just turned 19 in early January.

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October 09, 2018 /Nicole Hensch
Victory Press, Women's Hockey, ncaa, feature, USA Hockey
Sports, Features/Profiles, Women's Hockey

NCAA Highlight: Annie Pankowski →

October 03, 2018 by Nicole Hensch in Sports, Features/Profiles, Women's Hockey

When the Wisconsin Badgers took to the ice to open their season last Friday, it had been 551 days since Annie Pankowski had put on her familiar white sweater with a large red W on the front.

Taking a year off of college and deferring eligibility in an Olympic year isn't that unusual – her teammate Emily Clark did the same thing in order to play for Canada in Pyeongchang. The 18-plus months of toil and sacrifice had a payoff for Clark as she won silver with Team Canada.

Not so for Pankowski, who was cut from Team USA in early December, just 64 days before the team's first game in Pyeongchang.

When Team USA named their roster for centralization in May 2017, there were 23 women on the roster – the number of players they were allowed to take to Pyeongchang. It was an unusual move to not have a larger pool of players that would be whittled down during the residency process, and many assumed that this roster was the one that would eventually and officially become the Olympic team. Then, in November, three additional players were added to the roster and it was clear cuts would need to be made prior to leaving for the Olympics.

It was a frustratingly familiar situation for Pankowski, who was one of the last two players cut from the Team USA roster prior to the 2014 Sochi Olympics. Then still in high school and the youngest player on the roster, Pankowski had come to terms with that cut. Before her 2018 experience, she referred to the 2014 cut as "The Setback" and said it helped her learn what it was like to go through adversity, which seems almost laughable now.

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October 03, 2018 /Nicole Hensch
Victory Press, feature, ncaa, USA Hockey, Women's Hockey
Sports, Features/Profiles, Women's Hockey

NCAA Highlight: Kassidy Sauve →

September 24, 2018 by Nicole Hensch in Sports, Features/Profiles, Women's Hockey

In the course of Kassidy Sauve's four years at Ohio State, the program had three head coaches, nine assistant coaches, and four goalie coaches. She committed to two different coaches before she stepped on the ice as a rookie. Her body has taken a beating. As the last of the players and closest friends that she started her Ohio State experience with graduated and moved on, Sauve, who graduated from Ohio State in May, began to consider that there might be other options for her.

The previous few seasons had left her emotionally, mentally, and physically drained. She was feeling a bit lost and disconnected. She normally takes time after the hockey season away from the ice to rejuvenate, but that had become difficult for her. So she reached out to the NCAA to be granted release and gather all the information she needed to start to consider transferring. The more she thought about the benefits, the more it felt like the right decision.

"There was a lot of reasons to go and obviously, there's a lot of reasons to stay to. It wasn't an easy decision. There are so many things that contributed to this decision," she said. "I had no idea what I was getting into. I kind of just took the gamble and hoped for the best."

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September 24, 2018 /Nicole Hensch
feature, Victory Press, Women's Hockey, ncaa, Sports
Sports, Features/Profiles, Women's Hockey

What It’s Really Like to Live in a Mountain Resort Town →

September 24, 2018 by Nicole Hensch in Travel

“When people are vacationing in the place that you call home it serves as an instant reminder of how fortunate you are to live there."


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September 24, 2018 /Nicole Hensch
Travel

This Wisconsin City Knows How to Put on a Party →

September 14, 2018 by Nicole Hensch in Travel

Live music, huge events and recreation on and off the water have earned Oshkosh a reputation for fun.

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September 14, 2018 /Nicole Hensch
oshkosh, livability, wisconsin
Travel

NCAA Highlight: Kelly Pannek →

September 13, 2018 by Nicole Hensch in Sports, Features/Profiles, Women's Hockey

In December 2016, Kelly Pannek had never been invited to a senior camp with USA Hockey. Fifteen months later, she won an Olympic gold medal. Her coaches at the University of Minnesota weren't planning on her missing the 2017-18 collegiate season. It wasn't that they didn't think she was skilled enough–it was just practically unheard of to have a player go from outside the pool of prospective players to Olympic roster in such a short time.

The timeline is actually even more compact than that. Though Pannek was invited to her first senior level camps–the December 2016 development camp–she was not put on the roster for the series between the US and Canada that took place that month. Her first senior level tournament was at the 2017 IIHF Women's World Championships, where Team USA won gold.

It all happened so fast that Pannek said she didn't really ever have time to freak out or get too far in her own head about it, though she said her family had a bit of a gut-check for her when they saw the speed of play at the World Championships, worrying if Kelly was prepared for what she was getting into. She didn't tally any points that tournament, but was had nine shots on goal. Less than a year later, she was winning Olympic gold.

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September 13, 2018 /Nicole Hensch
Victory Press, Women's Hockey, ncaa, feature, Sports
Sports, Features/Profiles, Women's Hockey

6 Cities That Support Women’s Sports →

September 04, 2018 by Nicole Hensch in Sports

From basketball to soccer to hockey, these great cities give female athletes the wild fandoms they deserve.

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September 04, 2018 /Nicole Hensch
livability, women's sports
Sports

5 Once-In-A-Lifetime Adventures That Are Easily Accessible From Anchorage →

July 31, 2018 by Nicole Hensch in Travel

Anchorage isn't just a great place to visit, it's the perfect home base for travelers (and residents) looking to check some major adventures off their bucket lists.

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July 31, 2018 /Nicole Hensch
alaska, travel, livability
Travel

9 Reasons to Move to Wausau, WI →

July 13, 2018 by Nicole Hensch in Travel

If you're looking for small town charm and big city amenities in one of the most beautiful parts of the country, add Wausau to your list.

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July 13, 2018 /Nicole Hensch
livability, wisconsin, travel
Travel

6 Cities With Summers So Amazing You (Almost) Forget How Cold the Winters Are →

June 25, 2018 by Nicole Hensch in Travel

It's hard to picture these cities without snow on the ground. But take our word for it: their summer alter egos are sunny, gorgeous and full of fun things to do.

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June 25, 2018 /Nicole Hensch
livability, travel
Travel

Moving to Milwaukee? Here’s Everything You Need to Know →

June 14, 2018 by Nicole Hensch in Travel, Food

From climate to cost of living to the coolest neighborhoods, here's all the info you need about living in Milwaukee — straight from a local.

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June 14, 2018 /Nicole Hensch
Travel, Food

Hockey Humanitarian Award finalist spotlight: For Minnesota’s Peters, the extraordinary is just part of daily life →

March 22, 2018 by Nicole Hensch in Features/Profiles, Sports, Women's Hockey

Peters is one of five finalists for the 2017-18 Hockey Humanitarian Award, which is presented annually to college hockey’s top citizen for his/her service contributions to their team, school and community. The winner will be announced at the 2018 NCAA Men’s Frozen Four in St. Paul, Minn., in April.

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March 22, 2018 /Nicole Hensch
ncaa, Women's Hockey, college hockey, feature, Hockey Humanitarian
Features/Profiles, Sports, Women's Hockey

Women’s hockey: Gophers blitzed by Wisconsin 4-0 in NCAA quarterfinals →

March 22, 2018 by Nicole Hensch in Sports, Women's Hockey

MADISON, Wis. – For the first time since the 2010-11 season, the University of Minnesota women’s hockey team has been knocked out of the NCAA tournament in the quarterfinal round.

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March 22, 2018 /Nicole Hensch
ncaa, Women's Hockey, wiscosin, St. Paul Pioneer Press, college hockey
Sports, Women's Hockey

Colgate 4, UW women 3 (2OT): Badgers' season ends with Frozen Four loss →

March 22, 2018 by Nicole Hensch in Sports, Women's Hockey

MINNEAPOLIS - The Wisconsin women’s hockey team’s season ended in heart-breaking fashion late Friday night as they lost, 4-3, in two overtimes to Colgate at Ridder Arena.

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March 22, 2018 /Nicole Hensch
NCAA, Women's Hockey, wisconsin, college hockey, Milwaukee Journal-Sentinel
Sports, Women's Hockey

Boston College’s Daryl Watts wins 2018 Patty Kazmaier Award →

March 18, 2018 by Nicole Hensch in Sports, Women's Hockey

MINNEAPOLIS — Boston College freshman forward Daryl Watts has been awarded the 2018 Patty Kazmaier Memorial Award.

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March 18, 2018 /Nicole Hensch
ncaa, Patty Kazmaier, college hockey, Women's Hockey
Sports, Women's Hockey
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