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Ohio State Women's Ice Hockey (2022 WCHA Champions, 2022, 2024 National Champions)

Surprised they called that penalty shot. It only seemed like she covered it, rather than swiped it, on super slow motion.
yeah, while she did "cover it" with her glove, it seemed like she swiped it away in one motion. Hard to tell either way, because of the bodies. I'm not surprised it was called, but also I wouldn't have been surprised if it wasn't. Shame it didn't go our way. Hell of a play on the penalty shot, because the goalie had the play 98% of the time, otherwise.
 
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Six Ohio State women's hockey players were selected to the Professional Women's Hockey League Tuesday night in the 2025 PWHL Draft held in Ottawa, Ontario. The players comprise the 48-player draft class which was selected from a pool of 192 draft-eligible players.

Ohio State's 2025 PWHL Draft class is (listed in order of selection):
  • Jenna Buglioni (Eighth Overall/First Round/Seattle): Buglioni is a two-time captain and two-time national champion for the Buckeyes. The program's season and career game-winning goals record holder, Buglioni finished her Ohio State career with 166 points to rank fourth in the program record book. In 2025, she was in the top 10 nationally in faceoff wins and game-winning goals.
  • Kiara Zanon (16th Overall/Second Round/Toronto Sceptres): Zanon played two seasons for the Scarlet and Gray, helping the team to two consecutive national championship game appearances and a title in 2024. Zanon registered 79 points as a Buckeye and finished her collegiate career with 190 points on 75 goals and 110 assists.
  • Makenna Webster (17th Overall/Third Round/New York Sirens): Webster, the 2024-25 Ohio State Athlete of the Year and Big Ten Medal of Honor recipient, spent three seasons at Ohio State and in that time helped the team to a national championship and three title game appearances. She closed her Ohio State career with 100 points and her collegiate career with 151. The St. Louis, Mo. native also played three seasons for the Buckeye field hockey team, leading the program in scoring each season and earned All-America honors the last two seasons.
  • Riley Brengman (26th Overall/Fourth Round/Boston Fleet): Brengman, a two-time assistant captain and national champion for the Buckeyes, played a critical role on the Buckeye blue line for the last five seasons. She skated in 171 games in the Scarlet and Gray sweater, the fourth-most of any Ohio State women's hockey player, and ended her collegiate career with a career-high 19 point season.
  • Maddi Wheeler (27th Overall/Fourth Round/New York Sirens): Wheeler played her graduate season at Ohio State in 2024-25. She finished the year with seven goals, 14 assists and 21 points, including a power play goal in the 3-2 win over Wisconsin in the regular season.
  • Amanda Thiele (42nd Overall/Sixth Round/Boston Fleet): Thiele is the program's all-time winningest goaltender with 73 career wins in her five-year Buckeye career. She was in goal for the program's first national title in 2022 and earned a 5-1 record in NCAA Tournament games. After five seasons at Ohio State, Thiele closed her career as the program record holder for career goals against average (1.76).
 
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OLYMPIC VILLAGE (LITERALLY!) The Ohio State women’s hockey team will have 12 (yes, 12!) representatives at the 2026 Winter Olympics in Milan, Italy. The Buckeyes will be represented on five of the 10 Olympic teams, an absurd number that underscores just how loaded the program has become.
  • Cayla Barnes (graduated in 2024) – USA
  • Hannah Bilka (2024) – USA
  • Andrea Braendli (2022) - Switzerland
  • Joy Dunne – USA
  • Jenn Gardiner (2024) – Canada
  • Sophie Jaques (2023) – Canada
  • Mira Jungåker – Sweden
  • Emma Maltais (2023) – Canada
  • Jenna Raunio – Sweden
  • Natalie Spooner (2012) - Canada
  • Hilda Svensson – Sweden
  • Sanni Vanhanen – Finland
Ohio State has become a powerhouse under Nadine Muzerall, including two national titles and four championship game appearances in the past four seasons, winning titles in 2021–22 (Minnesota Duluth) and 2023–24 (Wisconsin) while falling to the Badgers in 2022–23 and 2024–25.

In the history of NCAA women’s hockey, only five programs have ever won a national championship: Wisconsin (eight), Minnesota (six), Minnesota Duluth (five), Clarkson (three) and Ohio State (two).

This season, the Buckeyes are ranked No. 2 in the USCHO poll behind Wisconsin and sit at 21–3 overall. Their only losses came on the road at Minnesota and in back-to-back home games against the Badgers.

Ohio State’s season will continue without three forwards (Dunne, Svensson and Vanhanen) and two defensemen (Raunio and Jungåker). The Buckeyes are set to host St. Thomas on Friday and Saturday and Minnesota Duluth on Jan. 30 and 31 before traveling to Wisconsin for a two-game series on Feb. 7 and 8.

The 2026 Winter Olympics will open on Feb. 6, with women’s hockey competition running from Feb. 5–19.
 
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Rink Roundup: Ohio State’s women’s hockey team continues to roll in 2026

While the weather is cold outside, Ohio State’s women’s hockey team is red hot on the ice.

Ohio State’s women’s hockey team has come out of the gates strong in 2026. With two wins last weekend over St. Thomas, the Buckeyes have now all eight of the games they have played in the new year.

The last time Ohio State suffered a loss came in their final two games of 2025 when they were beaten by Wisconsin, who is currently the top-ranked team in the country.

In their first game last weekend against St. Thomas, Ohio State almost tasted defeat for the first time this calendar year. The Buckeyes fell behind in the middle of the second period when Whitney Horton of the Tommies scored the first goal of the game.

The score remained 1-0 until Jocelyn Amos tied the game up at the 7:58 mark of the third period. The game would go to overtime, where Amos would score just 38 seconds into the extra session to give the Buckeyes their seventh straight win.

Despite trailing for most of the game, Ohio State controlled most of the action on Friday night, outshooting St. Thomas 47-10. Taylor Kressin started in goal for the Buckeyes in the series opener, pushing her record to 6-0 on the season. In 360 minutes on the ice this season, Kressin has only allowed eight goals.

Ohio State didn’t have to sweat over the result on Saturday, defeating St. Thomas 5-0. Jordyn Petrie opened up the scoring less than two minutes into the game with an unassisted goal. Five minutes into the second period Jocelyn Amos tallied her third period of the weekend.
Joy Dunne and Maxine Cimoroni added second period goals, while Sloane Matthews scored the final goal of the game for the Buckeyes in the third period.

Just like on Friday night, Ohio State only allowed St. Thomas to record 10 shots on goal. Hailey McLeod got the start in goal on Saturday, notching her fourth shutout of the season.

McLeod now has a 13-2 record on the season, posting a 1.50 goals against average, and registering a .922 save percentage in the 16 games she has appeared in. As a team, the Buckeyes are outscoring opponents 119-44 in the 26 games they have played.

With two assists on Friday, followed by scoring a goal on Saturday, Joy Dunne tied Hilda Svensson for the team lead with 44 points this season.
Svensson had an assist in each game last weekend. Dunne leads the team with 25 goals, while Svensson is the team’s leader with 29 assists so far this season. The two skaters are the only Buckeyes with more than 30 points, and they make up two of the five players on the team with at least 10 goals.

Next up for the Buckeyes are games on Friday and Saturday in Columbus this weekend against Minnesota Duluth. Ohio State swept the two games the programs played in November in Duluth. In the first game between the teams, Maxine Cimoroni scored the first goal nearly 10 minutes into the first period.

Joy Dunne extended the lead in the second period before the Bulldogs pulled a goal back in the third. Dunne restored the two-goal lead late in the third period with an empty net tally to secure the 3-1 win.

After playing the first two seasons of her college career with Minnesota Duluth, Hailey McLeod transferred to Ohio State prior to last season. McLeod got the start in goal in the first game of the weekend, stopping 24 shots.

The victory was a bit of revenge for McLeod, who lost in the only game she played against her former team last season, which also happened to be the first game she started for Ohio State.
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