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Edmonds-Woodway Athletic Director Tyler Geving introduces a crowd of family and friends to 17 EWHS senior Warrior athletes signing commitments to their college choices at the EWHS gym on Thursday, June 5. (Photos by Michael Bury) Warriors track and field athlete Nick Manz has committed to Northwest Nazarene University in Nampa, Idaho. E-W soccer teammates […]
Seventeen Edmonds-Woodway student athletes who will be competing at the collegiate level signed their national letters of intent during a ceremony at the high school Thursday afternoon. Teammates, family members and coaches were in attendance to watch as the athletes committed to continuing their athletic careers in college.
The athletes are:
Abby McCorvey – Edmonds College – Softball
Catie Ingalls – Nebraska Wesleyan University – Softball
Kate Baldock – Emerson College – Soccer
Gabbie Martin-Mazzeo – Pomona-Pitzer College – Soccer
Isak Haverlock – Olympic College – Baseball
Josh Akiyama – Shoreline Community College – Baseball
Noah Ushikubo – Northwest University – Track and Field
Nick Manz – Northwest Nazarene University – Track and Field
Luke Adams – Carroll University – Cross Country/Track and Field
Soloman September – Illinois College – Football
Rienna Mostrales – Everett Community College – Volleyball
Adison Oliver – Montana State University – Dance
Madison Morales-Tomas – University of Washington – Dance
Sumire Talik-Martinez – Delaware State University – Equestrian
Simone Bennett – Grinnell College – Swim
Boden Chapek – University of Washington – Rowing
Cameron Hiatt – Dartmouth College – Basketball
GREENWOOD, Ind. (EMUEagles.com) – College Sports Communicators (CSC) revealed its 2024-25 Men’s and Women’s Cross Country/Track & Field Academic All-District teams Tuesday, June 24. Eastern’s men’s and women’s programs combined to see nine named to the list. Student-athletes were required to post at least a 3.50 cumulative GPA and hold at least one mark that […]
Select an option below to continue reading this premium story. Already a Honolulu Star-Advertiser subscriber? Log in now to continue reading. The University of Hawaii Rainbow Wahine volleyball team announced the addition of three more players, including a 6-foot-5 middle whose father is a multi-gold medalist in the Olympics and a Hall of Fame swimmer. […]
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Story Links BOZEMAN, Mont. — Ten members of the Montana State track and field team were named to the CSC Academic All-District teams, the organization announced on Tuesday. The 2025 Academic All-District Men’s and Women’s Track & Field teams, selected by College Sports Communicators, recognize the nation’s top student-athletes for their combined […]
BOZEMAN, Mont. — Ten members of the Montana State track and field team were named to the CSC Academic All-District teams, the organization announced on Tuesday.
The 2025 Academic All-District Men’s and Women’s Track & Field teams, selected by College Sports Communicators, recognize the nation’s top student-athletes for their combined performances on the track, in the field, and in the classroom.
Graduate student Kyla Christopher-Moody, senior Grace Gilbreth, junior Caroline Hawkes, junior Giulia Gandolfi, and junior Hailey Coey were named to the CSC Academic All-District Women’s team.
Senior Rob McManus, junior Elijah Jackman, senior Colby Wilson, senior Owen Smith, and junior Sam Ells were named to the CSC Academic All-District Men’s team.
Montana State posted a banner year in 2024-2025, finishing runner-up in all six conference championships across cross country, indoor track and field, and outdoor track and field.
The Cats broke 12 school records during the indoor season and nine more during the outdoor season, qualifying four entries for the NCAA Indoor Championships and four for the NCAA Outdoor Championships.
Kyla Christopher-Moody, a native of Royal Oak, Michigan, earned her master’s degree in Earth Sciences this year graduating with a cumulative GPA of 3.88. The distance star broke four school records in 2025 and was an All-Big Sky pick in cross country before earning four All-Big Sky honors on the track and competing at NCAA Regionals in the 5,000 meters.
Grace Gilbreth, a native of Bozeman, graduated with a degree in Economics with a cumulative GPA of 3.98. Gilbreth started her year with an All-Big Sky selection in cross country before setting the school record in the 3,000 meter steeplechase this past spring. She ended her big season competing at NCAA Regionals in the steeplechase, finishing 31st.
Caroline Hawkes, a native of San Clemente, California, holds a 3.86 GPA majoring in Food and Nutrition Science. Hawkes earned honorable mention All-American honors after helping the women’s 4×400 meter relay team place 21st at the NCAA Outdoor Track & Field Championships earlier this June and broke the school record in the indoor 400 meters this season, additionally running legs on the school record indoor 4×400 and outdoor 4×400 meter relay teams.
Giulia Gandolfi, a native of Faenza, Italy, holds a 3.99 GPA majoring in Political Science and Economics. Gandolfi earned honorable mention All-American honors after helping the 4×400 meter relay team become the first in program history to qualify for the NCAA Outdoor Track and Field Championships, where they took 21st. Gandolfi ran legs on both the school record indoor 4×400 and outdoor 4×400 meter relay teams.
Hailey Coey, a native of Billings, holds a 3.94 GPA majoring in Business Finance. The junior earned honorable mention All-American honors after placing 20th in the long jump at the NCAA Outdoor Track and Field Championships, Montana State’s first-ever long jumper to qualify for the national meet. Coey also broke three school records in the indoor long and triple jump and outdoor long jump, as well as the Big Sky Conference record in the indoor long jump.
Rob McManus, a senior from Cashmere, Washington, holds a 3.53 GPA in Earth Sciences Geography. McManus earned First Team All-American honors in the 3,000 meter steeplechase outdoors after placing eighth at the NCAA Outdoor Track and Field Championships and Second Team All-American honors in the mile indoors after placing 15th at the NCAA Indoor Track and Field Championships. The distance star also won his second straight Big Sky title in the steeplechase this year and was an All-Big Sky selection in cross country.
Elijah Jackman, a junior from Tigard, Oregon, holds a 3.81 GPA in Business Marketing. Jackman tied for the team lead in points scored at the outdoor Big Sky Championships in May with 18 and was an NCAA Regional qualifier in the hammer, where he finished 25th. Jackman earned three All-Big Sky honors in the throws this season, placing second in both the discus and hammer and third in the indoor weight throw.
Colby Wilson, a senior from Olympia, Washington, graduated with a degree in Mechanical Engineering after holding a 3.79 GPA. Wilson won his fourth and fifth Big Sky titles in the pole vault this season, sweeping the indoor and outdoor conference meets. Wilson also qualified for his third NCAA Championships meet by finishing in the top-16 in the country at indoor nationals by breaking his own school and Big Sky Conference record.
Owen Smith, a senior from Billings, majored in Mechanical Engineering with a 3.75 GPA. Smith finished third in the 3,000 meter steeplechase at the Big Sky Championships to earn All-Big Sky honors and qualified for NCAA Regionals in the event, taking 27th. Smith climbed into the all-time top ten for the Cats in three different events during the outdoor season including the steeplechase, 5,000 meters, and 10,000 meters.
Sam Ells, a junior from Kalispell, holds a 3.71 GPA in Mechanical Engineering. This season, Ells earned All-Big Sky honors and was also an All-Region selection in cross country after placing 24th at the NCAA Mountain Regional. On the track, Ells picked up an All-Big Sky honor with a third place finish in the 5,000 meters.
#GoCatsGo
Story Links SPOKANE, Wash. – Gonzaga Volleyball Head Coach J.T. Wenger announced the signing of Danikah Johnson, an incoming redshirt sophomore and All-Great Northwest Athletic Conference Honorable Mention at Western Washington in 2024. Johnson, a former Mead High School graduate in Spokane, returns to her hometown and will join the Bulldogs […]
SPOKANE, Wash. – Gonzaga Volleyball Head Coach J.T. Wenger announced the signing of Danikah Johnson, an incoming redshirt sophomore and All-Great Northwest Athletic Conference Honorable Mention at Western Washington in 2024. Johnson, a former Mead High School graduate in Spokane, returns to her hometown and will join the Bulldogs this fall as they battle through the ranks in the West Coast Conference.
Danikah Johnson | RSo. | MB | Spokane, Wash. | Western Washington
Johnson signs with Gonzaga after a strong redshirt freshman season at Western Washington, where she earned All-GNAC Honorable Mention while leading the Vikings with a .285 hitting percentage and 1.07 blocks-per-set average. In limited action, Johnson finished second on the team with 48 total blocks, sixth in kills (84, 1.87 kills/set), adding 15 aces at the service stripe. She recorded a season-high 12 kills on three separate occasions, including in back-to-back wins over Montana State Billings and Seattle Pacific, hitting .333 on the week with 14 total blocks on defense. The former WIAA All-State First Team selection and All-GSL First Team honoree will bolster the Bulldogs’ front row in 2025.
“I chose Gonzaga volleyball because of the competitive spirit, and the opportunity to be part of something bigger than myself!”
J.T. Wenger on Johnson: “We are excited to add Dani to the program! Her experience as a student-athlete will complement the program immediately,” Wenger said. “Her versatility as an attacker will be a fantastic asset and she has great lateral speed as a blocker. I’m excited for Dani to get on the gym and join the program!”
Story Links Grand Canyon track and field head coach Tom Flood agreed to a multi-year contract, keeping the Lopes’ founding architect at the helm of a program that he has led to 24 Division I conference championships and a Division II national title. Flood, set to enter his 16th GCU season […]
Grand Canyon track and field head coach Tom Flood agreed to a multi-year contract, keeping the Lopes’ founding architect at the helm of a program that he has led to 24 Division I conference championships and a Division II national title.
Flood, set to enter his 16th GCU season in 2025–26, has built the Lopes into a perennial championship contender since launching the program in 2010. He is GCU’s second-longest tenured active head coach.
“Coach Flood has established a standard of sustained excellence that has become synonymous with GCU track and field,” GCU Vice President of Athletics Jamie Boggs said. “He cares deeply about his student-athletes, the program and GCU, and you can see this in his results. We’re very thankful and excited to have Tom’s leadership guiding the program’s continued rise.”
Under Flood, GCU has won 24 WAC team championships with him earning 26 WAC Coach of the Year honors.
“I feel truly blessed, and I’m extremely thankful for the opportunity for the last 15 years to have started, built and developed a highly successful track and field program at GCU,” Flood said. “While I am very proud of all that this program has accomplished since 2010 — including a national title, two top-three national team finishes, 26 conference titles, 100-plus All-Americans — I feel that this program is just now hitting its stride.”
Flood has overseen a program that has produced more than 220 individual conference champions and advanced 18 athletes to compete at NCAA Division I Championships.
In 2025, GCU won individual championships in 14 events and claimed the WAC Men’s Indoor Track and Field Championships title. Lopes senior sprinter Justin Raines advanced to the NCAA Indoor Championships in the 200-meter dash, while senior teammate Cam Wilmington qualified for the NCAA Outdoor Championships in the 400-meter hurdles.
During the consistent championship success, some of the more impressive stretches of team dominance include streaks of seven consecutive WAC men’s indoor championships (2016-23), four consecutive WAC women’s indoor championships (2016-19), four consecutive men’s outdoor championships (2021-24) and three consecutive women’s outdoor championships (2018-21).
Flood already has a spot in the GCU Hall of Fame as head coach of the 2012 NCAA Division II men’s indoor national champions, leading the program to that title in just its second season of existence. Flood and the team were inducted in February.
“While I may not still be coaching for another 15 years, I’m really excited to direct, lead and be a part of the continued success and to watch the continued growth of both the track and field program and GCU,” Flood said.
Flood’s coaching reputation has been recognized on the national and world stage with a selection to coach USA Track and Field sprinters and hurdlers at the 2022 World Athletics Indoor Championships in Serbia.
Flood began his coaching career at Colorado State and previously trained elite sprinters and hurdlers in Arizona. A former Arizona State jumper, he remains deeply rooted in the Phoenix community and aligns with GCU’s mission.
As long as Major League Baseball has had Rookie of the Year awards, veteran players from outside traditional minor-league structures have been winning them. The first was Brooklyn Dodgers first baseman Jackie Robinson, who took home top honors in 1947 in his age-28 season—with racism and World War II to blame for him not debuting […]
As long as Major League Baseball has had Rookie of the Year awards, veteran players from outside traditional minor-league structures have been winning them.
The first was Brooklyn Dodgers first baseman Jackie Robinson, who took home top honors in 1947 in his age-28 season—with racism and World War II to blame for him not debuting earlier. Boston Braves center fielder Sam Jethroe was 33 in 1950; he’d been a longtime Negro League outfielder for the Cleveland Buckeyes. In 2000, Seattle Mariners pitcher Kazuhiro Sasaki was a 33-year-old NPB lifer.
At 26, Hyeseong Kim, the biggest riser of the past two weeks, is old in virtually no conventional sense. But he has managed to insert his name into the conversation with his younger, Western Hemisphere-trained counterparts. Welcome to this week’s edition of MLB Rookie Watch.
A ho-hum recent stretch (.237/.310/.316) in the past two weeks has diminished his numbers a bit, but put practically no dent in his formidable lead in this race. Consider, for instance, that he’s still hitting .349—second in the AL to New York Yankees right fielder and designated hitter Aaron Judge—with a .390 on-base percentage and .493 slugging percentage. In no world should a rookie who plays in a minor-league ballpark lead the All-Star voting at baseball’s signature fielding position. That’s how good Wilson is.
Narváez helped carry an up-and-down Red Sox team through the season’s early months, and now Boston is returning the favor. Since June 9, Narvaez is slashing .226/.333/.355—but the Red Sox are 6–3 in games he’s played. Offense notwithstanding, his defense is so strong that Carlton Fisk, Tony Peña and Jason Varitek could soon have company as Boston catchers to win Gold Gloves. He’s quietly in a dead bWAR heat with Wilson at 2.3.
On June 10, he briefly threatened to become mortal, giving up six earned runs in a 10–2 loss to the Yankees. No matter: Cameron gamely rebounded with five shutout innings against the Athletics and a solid-if-not-spectacular outing against the San Diego Padres. Pitching is the order of the day for a Royals team looming just out of the AL playoff picture. Look for the 25-year-old changeup artist to continue starring for a plus rotation.
Shane Smith, pitcher, Chicago White Sox; Nick Kurtz, first baseman, Athletics; Jasson Domínguez, left fielder, New York Yankees
Copy and paste—Baldwin remains the king in the Senior Circuit despite modest numbers over the past two weeks. He did perform well in a high-profile rivalry sweep against the New York Mets, going 2-for-7 with two walks and driving in a pair of runs. That’s the kind of series that can help Baldwin win the intangible political component of the voting, but the fickle Braves are doing him no favors. He continues to share dominion over the catching position with ex-All-Star Sean Murphy.
The May 3 debutant barely cleared the 75-plate-appearance threshold for this week’s rankings (he has 83). In an admittedly small sample size, the 26-year-old has raked to the tune of a .372/.410/.538 slash line, two home runs and 12 RBIs. Those are wild numbers for a player whose primary calling card in the KBO League was defense, with four Golden Glove awards to his name in South Korea. He replaces Miami Marlins catcher Liam Hicks, whose numbers over the past two weeks have been a mixed bag.
Durbin takes the spot of Chicago Cubs third baseman Matt Shaw, who plays the same position on a better team with similar numbers. He’s a fascinating player with an odd set of skills: defense (first among NL rookies in dWAR), the foggy art of clutch play (first among NL rookies in win probability added, mostly thanks to a walk-off home run earlier this month), and getting hit by pitches (first among all NL players). The former 14th-round pick out of St. Louis’s brainy Washington University enjoyed a 5-for-13 series against the Minnesota Twins this weekend. Can he keep it up against the lowly Pittsburgh Pirates and Colorado Rockies?
Agustín Ramírez, catcher, Miami Marlins; Ben Casparius, pitcher, Los Angeles Dodgers
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