Month: April 2019

Home / Month: April 2019

The Chinese electronics giant Huawei has filed a lawsuit against the United States government, challenging Washington’s decision to ban federal agencies from using its products.

The suit, filed with the federal court in Texas, alleges that the ban on Huawei products, passed as part of a defense spending package last year, is unconstitutional and is part of the Trump administration’s campaign of political and economic pressure against China.

“This ban not only is unlawful but also restricts Huawei from engaging in fair competition, ultimately harming US consumers,” Huawei’s Rotating Chairman Guo Ping said in the statement. “The US Congress has repeatedly failed to produce any evidence to support its restrictions on Huawei products.”

Washington continues to insist it views Huawei products as a potential security threat, arguing that the Chinese government can use the tech giant as a spying tool. Huawei has consistently denied the allegations, accusing the US of failing to produce any evidence of the company’s supposed wrongdoings.

The tech giant maintains that the US government specifically singled out two Chinese firms – ZTE and Huawei – in its National Defense Authorization Act. Such a provision in the NDAA, Huawei alleges, violates the US Constitution and illegally bans federal agencies from buying its products.

The US concerns about Huawei products, and its pressure on European allies to exclude the company from the participating in their 5G mobile network developments, just happen to coincide with Washington’s own push for dominance on the global communications market. At the same time, Washington is seeking to extradite Huawei CFO Meng Wanzhou from Canada, to prosecute her for ‘violation’ of its sanctions against Iran.

Like this story?

LOUISVILLE, Ky. –Minnesota’s Amber Fiser has been selected as the Louisville/Slugger NFCA Division I National Pitcher of the Week, while Stanford’s Teaghan Cowles and North Carolina State’s Brigette Nordberg shared the Player of the Week honors for games played Feb. 25-March 3.

Fiser was 3-0 with a 0.33 ERA and 37 strikeouts in 21 innings of work. She surrendered just two runs, one earned and held her opposition to a .129 batting average. The junior from Van Horne, Iowa fanned 12 and walked two in a one-hit shutout of Drake. In her second start against the Bulldogs, Fiser struck out 13 and allowed a run in a three-hit complete-game effort. She capped off the week with a complete-game win over then-No. 19 James Madison. Fiser fanned the first eight Dukes of the game and finished with 12 for the contest.

Cowles, who hails from Ridgefield, Wash., was a tough out over the weekend. Reaching base safely in 16 of 18 plate appearances, she hit .818 with a .889 on-base percentage and slugged 1.455. Cowles recorded a pair of triples, a home run, two RBI and 11 runs scored. Against Montana, the junior outfielder went 3-for-3 with four runs scored, a double, homer and two RBI. Cowles scored four more times, drew three walks (two intentional) and was 2-for-2 versus Cal Poly.

Nordberg had a monstrous week at the dish, clubbing eight home runs, driving in 19 runs and slugging 2.323. She hit .750 with 12 hits, 13 runs scored, 37 total bases and an .826 on-base percentage. On Feb. 25, Nordberg left the yard three times against Murray State and launched two more on Feb. 27 at Charlotte, driving in six runs in each contest. The Exton, Pa. native was the first NCSU player to hit five homers over a two-game stretch and the second to record three in a game. Nordberg hit two more, registered four RBI and scored three times versus Campbell.

2019 Honorees
Player / Pitcher
March 5-  Teaghan Cowles, Stanford & Brigette Nordberg, North Carolina State / Amber Fiser, Minnesota         
Feb. 26-   Cali Harrod, Florida State / Giselle Juarez, Oklahoma
Feb. 19-   Tristen Edwards, Nebraska / Keely Rochard, Virginia Tech 
Feb. 12-   Caitlyn Nolan, Virginia Tech / Kelly Barnhill, Florida           

Selected Top Performances
Jessie Harper, Arizona- .350, 5 HR, 10 RBI, 1.100 SLG, .409 OBP, walk-off HR vs. JMU, GW HR vs. Minnesota; Meghan Beaubien, Michigan– 2-0 vs. top 5 teams, 1.50 ERA, 3 R, 9 H, 4 BB, 8 K, 14 IP; Marissa Guimbarda, Furman- .522, 6 HR, 12 RBI, 1.302 SLG; Sierra Lange, George Washington- 4-1, 1.09 ERA, 30 K, 2 SHO, .444, 3 2B, HR, 4 RBI, .778 SLG, .500 OBP; Kylan Becker, Ole Miss- .647, 2B, 3B, HR, 7 RBI, 7 R, 5-6 SB, .684 OBP, 1.000 SLG; Christina Biggerstaff, USC Upstate- 3-0, 0.28 ERA, 28 K, 1 R, 10 H, 4 BB, 25 IP; Rachel Garcia, UCLA- 1-0, 0.00 ERA, 2 BB, 14 K, , .069 opp. BA, 10 vs. Florida; Kennedy Sullivan, Western Kentucky- 3-0, 1.31 ERA, no-hitter vs. Evansville (17 K), 31 K, 7 BB, .158 opp. BA; Devin Wallace, North Carolina State- 3-0, 0.74 ERA, SHO, 23 K, 2 BB, 19 IP; Lauren Buchanan, Colorado State- .571, 2 HR, 8 RBI, 1.571 SLG; Mary Haff, Arkansas- 4-0, SV, 0.62 ERA, 34 K, 1 BB, 22.2 IP; Kyana Mason, Missouri State- .688, 11 H, 2 HR, 8 R, 7 RBI, 1.188 SLG; Jenny Behan, Purdue- .529, 3 HR, 9 RBI, 5 R, .600 OBP, 1.176 SLG; Caroline Hedgcock, Wisconsin- .429, 2 HR, 9 RBI, .929 SLG; Taran Alvelo, Washington- 1-1, 1.56 ERA, 12 H, 33 K, SHO, .179 opp. BA, 18 IP; Tara Trainer, Indiana- 3-1, 0.26 ERA, 2 SHO, 1 ER, 31 K, .188 opp. BA, 27 IP.

The growth of jobs in emerging industries, such as IT and engineering, is set to disproportionately hurt women and the progress made in reducing pay inequality.

That’s according to a new report from the World Economic Forum (WEF). It found that despite the fact the gender pay gap (the difference between average earnings for men and women) has been narrowing over recent years, there’s still 202 years ahead before the compensation parity is finally reached.

The process could get even lengthier if progress is not made in bringing more women into the workforce, said WEF.

Rosie the Riveter, 1942 World War II Poster. We Can Do It! Vintage World War II poster by J. Howard Miller © Global Look Press

“We’re looking at these big, structural changes, which I think are creating a drag on what was a stronger momentum before towards gender equality,” Saadia Zahidi, managing director and head of social and economic agendas at the World Economic Forum, told CNBC.

READ MORE: Mapping the world’s most robot-aided nations

The gender gap is three times larger in the highly-technical Artificial Intelligence (AI) industry than in other sectors, with women making up just 22 percent of the workforce.

That is not only harmful for advancing pay parity and gender equality more generally, but also creates issues for the technology itself, said the report. If AI is programmed almost exclusively by men, there’s a risk that gender biases will slip into the machines, too.

“It is absolutely crucial that those people who create AI are representative of the population as a whole,” said WEF’s head of Artificial Intelligence and Machine Learning, Kay Firth-Butterfield. A lack of diversity means “we’re not actually reflecting the population and we have a huge problem,” she added.

READ MORE: Artificial intelligence to contribute $16 trillion to global GDP by 2030

The WEF report pointed out that some industries and institutions are making progress in encouraging more women to become involved in emerging technologies. Those are the education and healthcare sectors and non-profits, where the talent pool of women in AI outweighed men.

© Global Look Press / Guido Kirchner

“The diversity — including gender diversity — of views among innovators is vital to ensuring the economic opportunities created by AI do not increase existing gender inequalities, and that new AI systems serve the needs of society at large,” the report said.

For more stories on economy & finance visit RT’s business section

WALNUT, Calif. – Vicky Gutierrez’s three-run home run in the sixth lifted Mt. San Antonio College over Palomar College 5-4, to earn its first CCCAA State Softball Title since 2009. 

After the Comet took a 4-2 advantage in the fifth, Gutierrez blasted the game-winning long ball to left to give the Mounties the lead for good at 5-4.

Full Release

Jessica Olvera entered the circle in the top of the sixth and after a pair of singles sat down the final six outs to second the victory. Olvera (10-1) would earn the win.

It’s the fifth State Championship for the Mounties in their program’s history, and the first under Rojas. 

Sarah Fisher took the fourth pitch of the game and sent it over the leftfield fence for a 1-0 Palomar lead. Amanda Esquivel evened the contest at 1-1 with a RBI single in the third. 

Michelle Santiago lifted a fly ball to left that was deep enough for Caitlyn Felina to score from third and give the Mounties their first lead of the day 2-1

The Comets regained the lead, 4-2, thanks to Alicia Garcia’s three-run home run to left.

Santiago, would finish 1-for-1 with a run and an RBI, earning State Tournament Most Valuable Player honors. Felina would finish 2-for-2 with a run, and Gutierrez was 1-for-3 with the three-run blast. 

For Palomar, Fisher finished the weekend with the highest batting average of any player after going 3-for-4 with a pair of runs and an RBI. Kyle Pignone would go 2-for-3, and Allie Hughen was 2-for-2, as all three were named All-Tournament selections.

– Courtesy of CCCAA

Wall Street sees oil price recovery in 2019

April 4, 2019 | News | No Comments

Click:wps官网下载

Investment banks have had to recalibrate their oil price forecasts for next year after prices plunged by more than a third from early-October highs.

As 2019 is drawing nearer, Wall Street has staked up the latest price projections—and there’s good news and there’s bad news for everyone watching investment banks’ estimates.

The good news for bulls is that the major investment banks expect oil prices next year in a range whose low end is higher than the current $45 for WTI Crude and $54 for Brent Crude.

The bad news for bulls and bears alike is that banks—as usual—warn that their projections might not turn out right because there will be a lot of uncertainties in the oil market next year that could tip oil prices either way.

Free fall: Oil slips to lowest since 2017 as fears over economic slowdown rattle market

The monthly The Wall Street Journal poll of 13 investment banks at the end of December showed that experts had drastically cut their Brent Crude price forecasts for 2019 compared to last month’s expectations. Investment banks now expect Brent Crude to average $69 a barrel next year, down from a $77 per barrel projection in the November poll.

Following the oil price slide in November that continued into December, the EIA revised down in its December Short-Term Energy Outlook (STEO) its 2019 price forecasts for Brent and WTI to $61 and $54, respectively, both slashed by $11 a barrel compared to the forecast in the November STEO.

Most of the largest investment banks have higher oil price forecasts than the EIA, according to data compiled by CNBC. For Brent, the major banks predict prices in 2019 at between $60 and $72.60 a barrel, with only Citi forecasting an average Brent price lower than EIA’s estimate—$60 a barrel. WTI Crude price forecasts range from $49 at Citi to $66.40 at JP Morgan Chase, with most estimates falling in the $55-66 range.  

The most bearish of investment banks, Citi, expects OPEC and allies’ production cuts in 2019 to encourage more US oil production that would “almost certainly” lead to more sell-offs in oil next year, according to Citi’s global head of commodities Ed Morse.

READ MORE: Russia’s largest LNG project kicks into high gear

Other banks see the production cuts stabilizing oil prices, but they cite other uncertainties in the market as possible key drivers next year. Bearish unknowns include the pace of demand growth in view of the still unresolved US-China trade war (that may not be resolved at all after the trade-war truce ends in March), the pace of global economic growth, and the pace of Chinese oil demand growth.

Bullish factors include OPEC and allies’ deal succeeding again in drawing down inventories, and the US not renewing waivers for Iranian oil customers when the current waivers expire in early May 2019.

According to Barclays’ head of energy markets research, Michael Cohen, the US Administration will base its ‘waivers-or-not’ decision on the oil prices at the time it has to take the decision.

“If prices stay in the low $60s, the Trump administration would have even more leeway not to grant waivers,” Cohen told CNBC.

“In our view, only if prices spike above the $80 level would the US not enforce continued significant reductions in Iran’s ability to export,” Barclays’ Cohen reckons.

Energy consultancy Wood Mackenzie has a base-case projection of Brent averaging $66 a barrel in 2019, but has identified five key uncertainties that could derail its base-case forecasts.

“Brent over US$80/bbl always seemed too good to last, defying the fundamentals,” Wood Mackenzie said earlier this month.

According to WoodMac’s Chairman and Chief Analyst, Simon Flowers, the five risks and uncertainties are: economic slowdown and subsequent lower oil demand growth; upside to production for US shale; Iran and the US waivers; the compounding effect of five consecutive years of the oil industry underspending on conventional drilling and projects; and the changes in the refining margins, differentials, and crude grade needs in view of the International Maritime Organization’s (IMO) sulfur cap on marine fuels coming into force on January 1, 2020.  

As always, lots of uncertainties surround the oil price predictions. Forecasts for 2019 are no different.

This article was originally published on Oilprice.com

There’s conflicting predictions from Canada’s two most famous forecasting groundhogs, with Wiarton Willie heralding an early spring while Subenacadie Sam claims there will be six more weeks of winter.

The mayor of the Town of South Bruce Peninsula, which includes the community of Wiarton, announced Willie’s prediction on stage with Premier Doug Ford on Saturday morning.

Where did Groundhog Day come from anyway? Story continues below.

Folklore has it that if a groundhog sees its shadow on Groundhog Day, it will retreat into its burrow, heralding six more weeks of cold weather. But spring-like temperatures are thought to be on the way if no shadow is seen.

Willie was backed up by the most famous American groundhog, Punxsutawney Phil.

But Shubenacadie Sam, Nova Scotia’s Groundhog Day darling, grudgingly clambered out of his shelter just after dawn, saw his shadow, and retreated into hiding.

Tabitha Cox, head nature interpreter at the wildlife park where Sam lives, said about 200 people came out to the park in frosty weather to watch the furry forecaster make his prediction.

“I heard some booing,” she said. “People love it or hate it with winter.”

The wildlife park has held Groundhog Day events for the past 30 or so years, and Cox says there’s a “Shubenacadie Sam family” of groundhogs that are used to make their forecasts.

The human weather experts say the odd ritual has a terrible record when it comes to predicting the weather.

In his book, “The Day Niagara Falls Ran Dry,” climatologist David Phillips cites a survey of 40 years of weather data from 13 Canadian cities, which concluded there was an equal number of cloudy and sunny days on Feb. 2 — and during that time, the groundhogs’ predictions were right only 37 per cent of the time.

But Cox said that despite the hit-or-mostly-miss nature of these forecasts, it’s important to keep the tradition alive for Canadians who want to have some fun and blow off some mid-winter steam.

“I think it’s just because it’s something fun in the dead of winter,” she said. “(There’s) not much else going on, Christmas and New Year’s are well over, Easter’s still a long way away. It’s just a chance to have some fun.”

Last year, Sam predicted a quicker onset of warmer weather, while Willie forecast six more weeks of winter.

LOUISVILLE, Ky. – The NFCA and its Board of Directors have decided to honor Melinda Fischer’s hard work and dedication to the Association and the sport of softball by naming the Distinguished Service Award after the longtime Illinois State head coach. The Melinda Fischer Distinguished Service Award encompasses all the qualities that Fischer has shown throughout her years of commitment and service to the NFCA.

“I am deeply humbled and honored to have the Distinguished Service Award named after me,” said Fischer. “This was totally unexpected… a WOW factor! I’m a big believer in giving back and helping with the Convention is one way which I could help the NFCA and the sport I love.”

Fischer, the first recipient of this award in 2002, has devoted decades of service to the NFCA. With regards to her 25 years of volunteering at the NFCA Convention, Fischer’s emphasis has been onsite schedule organization and planning, along with the oversight of food and beverage. She is always one step ahead. Her hard work and expertise in those areas are keys to the event’s success.

“Melinda is so deserving of this honor,” said NFCA Executive Director Carol Bruggeman. “She has dedicated decades of service to the NFCA in a variety of roles.  Most notably, Melinda has worked tirelessly in planning, organizing, and executing our annual Convention. Her expertise and attention to detail have helped the Convention thrive over the years. Melinda is selfless and serves with a giving heart, expecting nothing in return. There is no one more deserving of having her name permanently etched into the NFCA Distinguished Service Award.”

The NFCA Hall of Famer has served in several capacities with the NFCA, including First Vice President (1993-97), chair of the Division I All-America Committee and director of the NFCA Division I Leadoff Classic. Fischer has served multiple times on the All-America Committee and returns to the post of Mideast Region representative for the 2019 season.

“I have worked with two amazing Executive Directors – Lacy Lee Baker and Carol Bruggeman – who along with their tremendous staffs have dedicated their efforts to putting forth the best Conventions every year,” Fischer stated. “They are tireless workers from whom I’ve learned so much, which makes me even more grateful and appreciative of their efforts. It has been a fun 25 years of meeting new people and witnessing the growth of our Association.  Fond memories of the past and exciting dreams of the future.  Thank you. This is truly an amazing honor!”

On the field, Fischer is entering her 34th season at the helm of the Redbirds. She is just one of 22 NCAA Division I head coaches to have won 1,000 games with at least 10 years of Division I head coaching experience. To top that, the winningest coach in Illinois State Athletics history is only one of nine NCAA Division I head coaches to win 1,000 contests at one institution. Fischer’s 1,074 career victories, spread out among 35 previous seasons as a collegiate head coach (at both Eastern Illinois [1979-80] and Illinois State [1986-present]), rank her as the 16th-winningest coach in NCAA Division I softball history and the eighth-winningest active head coach.

A new mechanism to allow “legitimate trade” with Iran, which was set up by France, Germany, and the UK this week, doesn’t change anything for European companies, according to independent journalist Luc Rivet.

He told RT that European companies and others cannot feel confident that they could do business with Iran without being subject to US sanctions.

“I don’t know what companies will make use of that mechanism to sell to Iran,” he said, adding that it’s very dangerous for the companies if they are caught working in Iran.

Europe mentions that medical equipment could be sold through this way, says Rivet.

“Who produces this equipment? You think that Siemens will sell to Iran? Never, because they sell to America many other things as well… And Siemens is afraid of losing the American market.”

He explained that an “incredible number of companies” won’t have anything to do with Iran, including the banking sector, the oil and gas sector, and others.

Even small companies will hesitate to sell anything to Iran at risk of being caught, according to Rivet. They can do that through other channels, like via Turkey, he said.

The journalist added: “It’s much easier for Chinese and Russian companies to make deals with Iran. The Europeans are scared in an incredible way. The companies are afraid by ricochet of being in the eye of the storm with the Americans.”

“That’s very dangerous for European companies, he repeated, adding: “I don’t know anybody who will dare to go with this Instex system.”

For more stories on economy & finance visit RT’s business section

TORONTO — A serial killer who preyed on men from Toronto’s gay village has pleaded guilty to eight counts of first-degree murder.

Bruce McArthur, who had been set to stand trial next year, entered the guilty plea during a hearing in a Toronto courtroom.

The 67-year-old self-employed landscaper was arrested in January 2018.

Police eventually charged him with first-degree murder in the deaths of Selim Esen, Andrew Kinsman, Majeed Kayhan, Dean Lisowick, Soroush Mahmudi, Skandaraj Navaratnam, Abdulbasir Faizi, and Kirushna Kanagaratnam.

The victims went missing from the gay village between 2010 and 2017.

The LGBTQ community had long said someone was targeting men who were vanishing from the city’s gay village.

Watch: ‘Mixed feelings’ after Bruce McArthur’s guilty plea. Story continues below.

In November 2012, police launched Project Houston to investigate the disappearances of 42-year-old Faizi, 40-year-old Navaratnam and 58-year-old Kayhan. They closed the probe in April 2014 after being unable to identify a suspect in their disappearances.

In the summer of 2017, police launched a separate investigation known as Project Prism into the disappearances of 49-year-old Kinsman and 44-year-old Esen. Within months, McArthur came on the police radar, according to court documents.

On Jan. 17, 2018, investigators uncovered evidence alleging McArthur was responsible for both Kinsman and Esen’s deaths, along with the deaths of other unidentified people.

The next day, police arrested McArthur at his apartment and charged him with the murders of Kinsman and Esen. They brought cadaver dogs the following day to a property nearby where McArthur, a self-employed landscaper, stored his equipment, court documents said.

Over the next three months, investigators made several grisly discoveries at the residential property in midtown Toronto, eventually finding the dismembered remains of seven men in large planters.

The remains of an eighth man were found in a large compost pile in a ravine behind the home, police said.

Partway through their investigation, police also made the rare decision to release a heavily edited photograph of a dead man in a bid to identify him. A month later they said the man in the photograph was Kanagaratnam.

Lead investigator Insp. Hank Idsinga said the McArthur probe was the largest forensic examination in the force’s history.

Forensic officers spent four months scouring McArthur’s apartment — they seized 1,800 exhibits and snapped more than 18,000 photographs of the scene. They also searched more than 100 properties where McArthur worked across the Toronto area.

The force’s cold case squad is currently investigating a series of homicides in the 1970s related to men with ties to the gay village, but Idsinga has said they’ve found nothing to link those to McArthur.

LOUISVILLE, Ky. – The musical chairs continued as North Georgia is the sixth consecutive new No. 1 in the 2019 NFCA Division II Top 25 Coaches Poll. The NightHawks (26-6) received 11 first-place votes and 393 points to return to the top spot, a ranking they held the final three weeks of the 2018 season.

UNG knocked off a pair of ranked teams – then-No. 21 Wingate, then-No. 2 West Florida – to start the week. They rolled into Peach Belt Conference play, sweeping UNC Pembroke and Francis Marion in a pair of league doubleheaders.

Central Oklahoma, which received the other five first-place votes, continued to rise, reaching No. 2 after a pair of Mid-America Intercollegiate Athletics Association doubleheader sweeps of Lindenwood and Lincoln. The four triumphs extended the Bronchos (24-1) winning streak to 20 games, second longest in program history.

West Florida dipped one spot to No. 3 following a 5-2 week. The Argos (27-4) defeated then-No. 21 Wingate, Montevallo twice and then-No. 9 Valdosta State twice. No. 4 Chico State inched up one position with a 3-1 road record versus Cal State Dominguez Hills in California Collegiate Athletic Association play.

No. 5 Southern Arkansas, No. 6 West Texas A&M, No. 8 Grand Valley State and No. 10 University of Alabama in Huntsville all made positive jumps, while No. 7 Concordia Irvine and No. 9 Carson-Newman fell in the Top-10.

The Muleriders (22-6) bounced back with a four-game sweep at East Central in a Great American Conference series. The Lady Buffs (22-6) posted a 4-1 mark, winning two games at Metro State and two of three versus Lone Star Conference foe Texas A&M-Commerce. The Lakers (16-2) swept a doubleheader from then-No. 19 Cedarville, while the Chargers (22-7) went 3-1 in Gulf South Conference play. UAH finished off a sweep of Lee and then took two of three at West Georgia.

The seventh-ranked Eagles (19-3) fell from the No. 1 spot after a 4-2 week. CUI split four games against Hawai’i Pacific and posted two wins over Stanislaus State. The No. 9 Eagles (14-1) dropped their first game of the 2019 season, splitting at Queens (N.C.) in South Atlantic Conference play.

Joining the poll for the first time this season are No. 23 Lincoln Memorial and No. 24 Western Oregon. The Wolves (12-4) are joined at No.24 by Angelo State, making a return following one-week hiatus. The 23rd-ranked Lady Railsplitters have won 13 of their last 14 contest, which included a split with then-No. 20 Wingate over the weekend.

2019 NFCA Division II
Top 25 Coaches Poll – March 20 (Week 5)

Rank

School

Totals

2019 Record

Previous Week

1

North Georgia (11)

393

26-6

3

2

Central Oklahoma (5)

379

24-1

4

3

West Florida

367

27-4

2

4

Chico State

343

18-5

5

5

Southern Arkansas

324

22-6

6

6

West Texas A&M

315

22-6

8

7

Concordia Irvine

293

19-3

1

8

Grand Valley State

286

16-2

10

9

Carson-Newman

272

14-1

7

10

UAH

256

22-7

14

11

Texas A&M Kingsville

247

23-4

12

12

Florida Tech

220

23-7

11

13

Valdosta State

182

17-7

9

14

Texas A&M-Commerce

176

21-8

15

15

Wayne State University

174

17-4

16

16

UC San Diego

171

18-6

13

17

Augustana

159

16-4

18

18

Colorado Mesa

144

20-6

17

19

Southern New Hampshire

103

14-4

22

20

Indianapolis

84

19-7

24

21

Mississippi College

81

20-6

23

22

Winona State

48

13-3

25

23

Lincoln Memorial

43

23-5

NR

24

Angelo State

35

22-9

RV

24

Western Oregon

35

12-4

RV

 

New to Poll: No. 23 Lincoln Memorial, t-No. 24 Angelo State, t-No. 24 Western Oregon

Dropped Out:No. 19 Cedarville, t-No. 20 Wingate, t-No. 20 Cal State San Bernardino

Receiving Votes: Cedarville (33), Georgian Court (10), Tarleton State (10), Cal State San Bernardino (5), Ashland (3), Central Washington (1), Nova Southeastern (1).

The 2019 NFCA Division II Top 25 Coaches Poll is voted on by 16 NCAA Division II head coaches with two representing each of the NCAA’s eight regions. Records reflect games played through March 17.

The 2019 NFCA Division II Top 25 Poll is voted on by 16 NCAA Division II head coaches with two representing each of the eight NCAA regions. Records reflect games played through March 17, 2019.