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Today — 8 March 2026Main stream

St. Bonaventure coach Mark Schmidt is retiring after 19 seasons

Two-time Atlantic 10 men’s basketball coach of the year Mark Schmidt announced he is retiring after his 19th season at St. Bonaventure, ending one of the most successful tenures in school history.

Schmidt made the announcement on Saturday, following a regular-season ending 68-63 loss to Davidson. The 63-year-old will stay on to coach St. Bonaventure (15-16, 4-14) in the conference tournament that opens on Wednesday in Pittsburgh.

At 339-254, he is the winningest coach in Bonnies men’s basketball history. Schmidt took over in 2007-08, and transformed a program still reeling in the wake of a recruiting scandal that led to coach Jan Van Breda Kolff’s dismissal following the 2002-03 season.

“I’m a lucky guy. To be able to be the head coach at St. Bonaventure for 19 years is an honor,” Schmidt said. “When I first got the job, I remember someone telling me I was going to be here for three or four years and then I was going to be selling insurance. And that didn’t happen.”

He then credited former athletic director Steve Watson and school president Margaret Carney for placing their faith in hiring him after an 82-90 record in six seasons at Robert Morris.

“They allowed me to coach, they allowed us to build a program. And I think what we’ve done is pretty good, it’s pretty cool,” Schmidt said. “This program is back to being credible.”

Under Schmidt, St. Bonaventure posted seven 20-win seasons, including a program-best 26-8 finish in 2017-18. He earned conference coach of the year honors in both 2016 and 2021.

The Bonnies qualified for NCAA Tournament berths in 2012, 2018 and 2021, in which they went a combined 1-3. Their 65-58 win over UCLA in a First Four game in 2018 was the Bonnies first tournament victory since the Bob Lanier-led team reached the Final Four in 1970.

His departure comes two years after the program hired former EPSN NBA reporter and St. Bonaventure alum Adrian Wojnarowski to serve as general manager. Wojnarowski is expected to oversee the search for Schmidt’s replacement.

“I’m 63-years-old and it’s time to move. My family has sacrificed for 37 years,” Schmidt said, noting he wants to spend time with his wife traveling the world. “I couldn’t ask for a better 19 years. I’m not leaving because of anything that has happened. It’s just time.”

The Bonnies also earned three NIT berths and in 2020-21 won the A10 regular-season and tournament titles for the first time in the same season.

Before Schmidt, St. Bonaventure went a combined 24-88 in four years under Anthony Solomon. From North Attleboro, Massachusetts, Schmidt has a career coaching record of 421-344.

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Yesterday — 7 March 2026Main stream

Sabres are 'finally' playoff contenders and they're buyers instead of sellers at NHL trade deadline

BUFFALO, N.Y. (AP) — Rasmus Dahlin doesn’t recall being this excited on NHL trade deadline day.

Having endured only losing during his previous seven seasons in Buffalo, the Sabres captain was practically giddy — “I’m fired up,” he said after practice Friday — about the team adding rather than unloading talent to what’s become a bona fide playoff contender.

“It’s a new thing for me. It feels like back in the days of Frolunda,” Dahlin said, referring to his days as a teenager playing for the Swedish Elite League team a decade ago.

“I mean, this is why you play hockey. This is what it should feel like,” he added. “This is the beginning for something great. I’m happy we’re finally here.”

Emphasis on finally.

A franchise in the midst of an NHL-record 14-year playoff drought is showing signs of an upward trajectory.

Buffalo entered the day tied with Tampa Bay atop the Atlantic Division standings and added depth to strengthen its playoff run. The surging Sabres are on a 26-5-2 roll following a 5-1 win over Pittsburgh on Thursday night.

The moves

General manager Jarmo Kekalainen, who took over in December, completed trades on Thursday to acquire defensemen Luke Schenn and Logan Stanley from Winnipeg and center Sam Carrick from the New York Rangers. Kekalainen then completed another trade with Winnipeg by adding journeyman forward Tanner Pearson on Friday.

And he did so without altering the Sabres' roster, with defenseman Jacob Bryson the only regular to depart.

“We have faith in the group. We don’t want to disrupt something that’s going really well — the chemistry, they have fun together, they believe in each other, they trust each other,” Kekalainen said. “But they’ve also put the work in. I think they’re all realizing it’s been paying off.”

The four players add experience — Schenn is a two-time Stanley Cup-winner — and grit to a young team whose players, for the most part, have never been in the thick of a playoff race.

“It’s exactly what we need,” said Dahlin, the No. 1 pick in the 2018 draft. “It’s unbelievable. We’re doing our job and he’s doing his job — Jarmo’s doing a great job.”

Kekalainen joined the Sabres as a senior adviser in May, and took over after Kevyn Adams was fired in mid-December. The 59-year-old from Finland previously spent 11 seasons as Columbus’ GM and carved out a reputation for making bold, aggressive moves.

Parayko deal falls through

He took that approach in the week leading up to the trade deadline, which included Buffalo agreeing to a framework of a trade to land St. Louis defenseman Colton Parayko. The trade fell through when the Canadian Olympian invoked his no-trade clause to stay in St. Louis.

Kekalainen declined to go into much detail on Parayko, saying he doesn’t comment on what he called “unfinished business.” The vetoed move didn’t stop him from pursuing other trades to reward the Sabres for their run of success.

“They’ve earned all the help we can give them as management,” Kekalainen said.

Buffalo’s 37 wins are already one better than the team's total last year and the most through 62 games since the Sabres had 41 over that span in 2006-07. It was the same season in which the Sabres last won a playoff round in reaching the Eastern Conference finals before losing to Ottawa.

Ruff's return

Lindy Ruff was the coach then and is now in the second year of his second stint in Buffalo.

“When I took the job, I said I wanted them to love being a Buffalo Sabre and love playing hockey,” Ruff said.

“We’ve learned a lot as a group through adversity, and we’ve got a long ways to go,” he added. “But the group has really come together, and it’s a tribute to all those guys in the room.”

Roster notes

Carrick is expected to join the team as early as Saturday, when Buffalo hosts the Nashville Predators. ... The former Jets players’ arrivals are uncertain, due in part to visa issues. ... Kekalainen said forward Juri Kulich will miss the remainder of the season while being treated for blood clots. Kulich has been out since early November. Kekalainen isn’t certain how much time he’ll miss in saying: “The doctors are hopeful this will get resolved before we prepare for next season.”

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AP NHL: https://apnews.com/hub/nhl

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