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2025 MHSAA Division 1 boys track & field finals

KENTWOOD, Mich. — It was a day of fast times and broken records at East Kentwood High School on Saturday as the best boys track and field athletes across Michigan competed in the Division 1 MHSAA state finals. The most impressive record of the day came from Belleville senior Will Jaiden Smith — and he […]

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2025 MHSAA Division 1 boys track & field finals

KENTWOOD, Mich. — It was a day of fast times and broken records at East Kentwood High School on Saturday as the best boys track and field athletes across Michigan competed in the Division 1 MHSAA state finals.

The most impressive record of the day came from Belleville senior Will Jaiden Smith — and he only started hurdling last season.

Smith’s time of 13.35 broke the all-time state record in the event, besting the previous record of 13.48 set by Thomas Wilcher back in 1982.

“It feels great,” Smith said. “I worked for this since last year. Last year, I got fourth and that was my first year hurdling. I called it last night. I said 13.35. You see the board right now? 13.35 right there, so it’s well deserved. I want to thank my coach and I want to thank all my teammates. They pushed me to this.”

Despite the fast time, Smith’s victory was in question at the finish line because he battled teammate Schmar Gamble, a junior, all the way to the end as he finished with a time of 13.36.

On top of that, senior teammate Timothy Pinard finished fourth with another sub-14 time of 13.82. It was Rochester Adams senior Michael Wilkerson who broke up a Belleville sweep with a time of 13.78 in third.

“I love all of it,” Smith said. “All my teammates going 13. My coach (is) the first coach ever in Michigan history to coach three in the same race all go under 14 seconds. I love it. It’s great.”

The dominance by Belleville in the 110 hurdles was a microcosim of the meet as a whole as Belleville claimed its first track and field state championship in school history with 57 points.

Belleville coach Candice Price knew she could count on her star hurdlers to come through.

“No pun intended, Will was willing to go out there and show out (and) Shamar, who’s loved this sport forever.” Belleville coach Candice Price said. “The real star was somebody like Timothy Pinard, who sat out his junior year and had never been to a state meet. His PR was 15 seconds (before this year) and he ran 13.82 today.

“I knew my big guys wanted to perform. They want scholarships, they want follow backs from from LSU and all those big things. But today, I saw them executing and I didn’t see the times until people started texting me… For them to come out here and perform, it was magical.”

After finishing third last year but just three points behind first place, Belleville left no doubt this season by being 12 points clear of the 35 points for runner-up Northville.

In just her third season as Belleville’s coach, Price also became the first woman head coach to win a boys track and field state championship.

“I was a champion and I was bred to be a champion,” Price said. “But I knew I had to make them believe they could be champions.”

Along with Smith’s record-setting win in the 110 hurdles, he also won the 300-meter hurdles in 37.79 and placed fifth in the 200 with a time of 21.65.

Smith and Gamble were also part of the champion 4×100 team as they joined Ray-mond Smith and Peyton Trammer to run 41.85. Gamble claimed another title in the 4×200 with Pinard, Trammer and JeVon Martin with a time of 1:26.50.

Price was a three-time individual state champion in the 100-meter hurdles from 2001-2003 to as a member of two state championship teams for Ann Arbor Pioneer. Known as Candice Davis back then, she held the 100-meter hurdle state record time of 13.66 for 14 years before it was first broken in 2017.

Although she initially wanted to coach for Pioneer or Ann Arbor Huron in some capacity, the opportunity eventually presented itself at Belleville. She joined the football staff and took the head position with the boys track team. The rest is history.

Price said she is grateful for the belief and support the Belleville community has given her. While Price was ready to coach the sport she thrived in, she had to learn the personal sacrifices of opening weight rooms at 5 a.m., making sure she had snacks for her athletes who were hungry at practice.

Meanwhile, people were watching her children so Price could have a chance to build a culture of her own at Belleville.

“I was like, if I can just get these football guys to understand that explosion and speed that’s going to take them to college — guys like Elija Dotson (a University of Michigan football freshman) believed in me… it’s magical.”

MHSAA D1 track and field state finals

Detroit Catholic Central’s Samson Gash wins the 100m at the MHSAA D1 track and field state finals at East Kentwood High School on Saturday, May 31, 2025.(Devin Anderson-Torrez | MLive.com)

GASH CLAIMS 100-METER TITLE IN FIRST SEASON

Samson Gash said he had heard so many people tell him how fast he was on a football field. Because of hip injuries during his freshman and sophomore track seasons, Gash never had a chance to prove how fast he was.

Gash proved he was fast, indeed, on Saturday. In fact, he proved he was faster than everyone else.

Gash, a junior, capped his first full track season with Detroit Catholic Central by winning the 100-meter dash in a time of 10.41, which set a new all-division MHSAA state finals record.

Gash surpassed the old record of 10.44 set by Clint Allen of Muskegon Orchard View in 2006. While a time of 10.4 still exists in the MHSAA finals record books — set by Jackson’s Corey Pryor in 1987 — that time was recorded by electronic timing.

“I mean, it feels good,” Gash said. “Just all credit to my coaches and stuff like that. They’re just pouring into me every single day and my teammates are pushing me and really supporting me.”

The win was also against one of the fastest fields in state history as Novi’s Chance McNeill narrowly lost to Gash with a time of 10.42. Jeremy Dixon, the defending state champion, was third in 10.45.

“I was talking with those guys and they’re great dudes,” Gash said of his competition. “They were congratulating me and wishing me luck. They’re great runners, for sure.”

MHSAA D1 track and field state finals

Beverly Hills Groves’ Ray Glory Ejoyokah throws a discus the MHSAA D1 track and field state finals at East Kentwood High School on Saturday, May 31, 2025.(Devin Anderson-Torrez | MLive.com)

HAPPY BIRTHDAY, MOM

Beverly Hills Groves senior Ray Glory Ejoyokah couldn’t have cut it any closer.

With one throw left in the opening round of the discus event, Glory Ejoyokah had yet to land a disc within the throwing boundaries and was at risk of leaving states as a senior without a measurable distance.

As the top seed entering competition, Glory Ejoyokah managed to chuck a mark of 179-feet-3 on his final throw of the opening round to advance to the finals.

The only issue with that was Midland senior Maxwell Stoecker also threw exactly 179-feet-3 and it came down to who had the next-best throw. That turned out to Glory Ejoyokah as his first throw of the final round was 170-6. Stoecker gave a strong effort in the final round but he couldn’t match his opponent with a mark of 168-feet-7.

After fouling on his first two throws at states last year, its clear Glory Ejoyokah has found a way to thrive among drama.

“I’m happy to end this way,” Glory Ejoyokah said. “I was on my toes. My mind was all over the place. It was really just straight work. I’m really just blessed to be in this position.”

After winning his state title, Glory Ejoyokah had one message he wanted to share:

“Happy birthday to my mom,” he said.

Northville boys 4x800 team

Left to right: The Northville boys 4×800 team of Rece Grezak, Ryan Stojov, Ethan Powell and Ben Hartigan won the 2025 Division 1 state finals with a time of 7:41.24.Jared Purcell | japurcell@mlive.com

NORTHVILLE MAKES HISTORY IN 4×800

Northville became the first time in D1 finals history to win four consecutive championships in the 4×800-meter relay. The team of senior Rece Grezak, junior Ryan Stojov, senior Ethan Powell and junior Ben Hartigan battled with Clarkston throughout the entirety of the race.

After Clarkston’s sophomore stud Wendell Childs opened the race with the lead and a split of 1:53.25, Stojov closed the gap for Northville and even took the lead by the end of his leg by splitting 1:53.94.

“My job was to try and get the baton and stick near him in eyesight as close as I can and not go out too fast and burn all of my energy,” Stojov said. “Just slowly chip away at it.”

Powell ran a 1:56.60 on the third leg but held a narrow deficit after Clarkston’s Cayden DeGrendel ran a 1:56.27 going into the final exchange.

That’s when Hartigan took over and closed in 1:53.53 to edge Clarkston with a winning time of 7:41.24 while Clarkston was close behind in 7:42.90.

“I lost my leg but I was able to keep it close,” Powell said. “Ben was just able to bring it home.”

SOPHOMORES BATTLE IN DRAMATIC 1600

The 1600-meter run came down to a battle of sophomores who are familiar foes as Luka Hammond of Grand Haven clocked a time of 4:09.69 to edge Caden Livermore of Grandville, who finished second in 4:10.17.

Livermore had beaten Hammond at the region championships and again at the Distance Night Under the Lights at Houseman Field meet a week prior to states.

This time, however, Hammond got the win when it mattered most.

“Last hundred, I just ran as hard as I could,” said Hammond, who also recorded a new personal-best time in the process.

Division 1 Lower Peninsula track and field state championships

Kalamazoo Central’s Jeremy Dixon reacts after winning the 100m race with a time of 10.72 during the Division 1 Lower Peninsula track and field state championships at East Kentwood High School on Saturday, June 1, 2024.Julian Leshay Guadalupe | MLive.com

DIXON GETS REDEMPTION IN 200

Despite setting a new personal-best of 10.45 seconds in the 100-meter dash, Kalamazoo Central’s Jeremy Dixon failed to defend his title in the event with a third-place finish.

Yet, Dixon made up for the disappointment by winning the 200-meter in 21.11. Novi’s Chance McNeill was only a hundredth of a second behind in second with a 21.12.

“I was really running with determination,” Dixon said. “I felt like I had it, but it was super close though. I just wanted to be sure and look at the scoreboard, but it was super close… It feels great. Nothing like it.”

2024 MHSAA Cross Country Championships: Division 1 boys

Ann Arbor Pioneer’s Beckett Crooks runs during the Division 1 boys race at the MHSAA Cross Country Championships at Michigan International Speedway in Brooklyn on Saturday, Nov. 2, 2024.Devin Anderson-Torrez | danderson-torrez@mlive.com

CROOKS STEALS A TITLE

Ann Arbor Pioneer junior Beckett Crooks could hardly believe it when he crossed the finish line as the state champion in the 3200-meter run. Not many others could believe it too.

After all, Crooks had never qualified for the state championships as a freshman or sophomore. Despite it being his first state championship experience, Crooks shocked everyone with massive personal best of 9:00.80 to win the title with a furious kick in the final 200 meters.

“I did not think it was going to happen,” Crooks said. “I was just going to stay third with my seed time and I did not think I was going to win it.”

His previous best before the race was 9:11.25. However, he has never broken 9:26 in all of his other races.

Crooks kicked past Milford junior Kyle O’Rourke, who finished in 9:06.54. Crooks’ sophomore teammate, Kamari Ronfeldt, was third in 9:08.99.

“It felt awful,” Crooks said of his final 200 meters. “It was the hardest thing I’ve ever done, but it was definitely worth it.”

MHSAA D1 track and field state finals

Belleville’s Will (Jaiden) Smith wins the MHSAA D1 track and field state finals at East Kentwood High School on Saturday, May 31, 2025. Smith set a state record with the win. His teammate, Belleville’s Schmar Gamble placed second.(Devin Anderson-Torrez | MLive.com)

DIVISION 1 ALL-STATE

100 Meters D1 – Finals

Place, Name, Result (Wind), School

1, 11, Samson Gash, 10.41a (1.4)PR, Detroit Catholic Central

2, 11, Chance McNeill, 10.42a (1.4), Novi

3, 12, Jeremy Dixon, 10.45a (1.4)PR, Kalamazoo Central

4, 12, Noah Sanders, 10.68a (1.4), Beverly Hills Groves

5, 12, Jason Hamilton II, 10.70a (1.4), Troy

6, 11, Brody Kelsey, 10.71a (1.4), Utica Eisenhower

7, 12, Carson Guysi, 10.71a (1.4)PR, Hudsonville

8, 10, Keiavion Korenstra, 10.72a (1.4)PR, Grand Haven

100 Meters D1 Adaptive – Finals

1, 9, Cooper Shain, 15.56a (2.6)PR, Macomb L’Anse Creuse North

2, 10, Owen Moerdyke, 16.38a (2.6)PR, South Lyon

3, 12, Luke Bowman, 19.74a (2.6)SR, New Baltimore Anchor Bay

4, 10, Liam Nolan, 1:04.25a (2.6)PR, FHN GR Forest Hills Nort…

200 Meters D1 – Finals

1, 12, Jeremy Dixon, 21.11a (1.6), Kalamazoo Central

2, 11, Chance McNeill, 21.12a (1.6), Novi

3, 11, Samson Gash, 21.36a (1.6)PR, Detroit Catholic Central

4, 12, Jason Hamilton II, 21.59a (1.6), Troy

5, 12, Will (Jaiden) Smith, 21.65a (1.6), Belleville

6, 10, Andrew Willemsen, 21.67a (1.6), Grand Haven

7, 10, Kane Morris, 21.67a (1.6)PR, Portage Northern

8, 12, Devin James, 21.79a (1.6), West Bloomfield

9, 11, Rondre Austion, 22.13a (1.6), Oak Park

200 Meters D1 Adaptive – Finals

1, 9, Cooper Shain, 34.22a (1.2), Macomb L’Anse Creuse Nor…

2, 10, Owen Moerdyke, 34.35a (1.2), South Lyon

3, 12, Luke Bowman, 36.98a (1.2)SR, New Baltimore Anchor Bay

400 Meters D1 – Finals

1, 12, Brody Leyendecker, 47.96aPR, Byron Center

2, 11, Rodney Endsley, 48.22a, Walled Lake Western

3, 11, Kinley Poole, 48.51a, Ann Arbor Huron

4, 11, Rondre Austion, 48.62a, Oak Park

5, 12, Demari Caldwell, 48.84a, Oak Park

6, 11, Nick Coleman, 49.08aPR, Saginaw Heritage

7, 10, Caleb Ross, 49.15aPR, East Lansing

8, 12, Aydan Myers, 49.16a, Detroit Cass Tech

400 Meters D1 Adaptive – Finals

1, 12, Luke Bowman, 1:15.91a, New Baltimore Anchor Bay

2, 9, Cooper Shain, 1:16.09aPR, Macomb L’Anse Creuse North

3, 10, Owen Moerdyke, 1:29.63aPR, South Lyon

800 Meters D1 – Finals

1, 10, Wendell Childs, 1:50.71aPR, Clarkston

2, 11, Greg Myers, 1:51.36aPR, Ypsilanti Lincoln

3, 12, Caden Karcher, 1:54.79aPR, Rockford

4, 12, Rece Grezak, 1:55.14aPR, Northville

5, 12, Logan Mullan, 1:55.29aPR, Northville

6, 11, Preston VanOeffelen, 1:55.30aPR, Greenville

7, 10, Maddi Duke, 1:56.16a, Temperance Bedford

8, 11, Ryan Stojov, 1:56.97a, Northville

1600 Meters D1 – Finals

1, 10, Luka Hammond, 4:09.69aPR, Grand Haven

2, 10, Caden Livermore, 4:10.17a, Grandville

3, 11, Jackson Lam, 4:14.24a, Kalamazoo Loy Norrix

4, 12, Jack Chadwick, 4:18.95a, Plymouth

5, 11, Ryan Stojov, 4:19.31a, Northville

6, 12, Ben Mussen, 4:19.62a, Plymouth

7, 9, Lucas Mullan, 4:19.89a, Northville

8, 10, Liam Wierzba, 4:21.22a, Traverse City West

3200 Meters D1 – Finals

1, 11, Beckett Crooks, 9:00.80aPR, Ann Arbor Pioneer

2, 11, Kyle O’Rourke, 9:06.54a, Highland-Milford

3, 10, Kamari Ronfeldt, 9:08.99aPR, Ann Arbor Pioneer

4, 12, Seth Conner, 9:09.72aPR, Jenison

5, 10, Jack MacGregor, 9:13.24aPR, Howell

6, 10, Brandon Cloud, 9:13.81aPR, Northville

7, 12, Taye Levenson, 9:19.41a, Bloomfield Hills

8, 12, Ethan Powell, 9:22.52aSR, Northville

110m Hurdles – 39″ D1 – Finals

1, 12, Will (Jaiden) Smith, 13.35a (2.0)PR, Belleville

2, 11, Schmar Gamble, 13.36a (2.0)PR, Belleville

3, 12, Michael Wilkerson, 13.78a (2.0)PR, Rochester Adams

4, 12, Timothy Pinard, 13.82a (2.0)PR, Belleville

5, 10, Shukuru Makechi, 14.13a (2.0)PR, East Kentwood

6, 12, Jonah Konarz, 14.32a (2.0)PR, New Baltimore Anchor Bay

7, 12, Angelo Finnie Jr., 14.42a (2.0)PR, West Bloomfield

8, 12, Michael Piggee Jr., 14.48a (2.0)SR, Muskegon

300m Hurdles – 36″ D1 – Finals

1, 12, Will (Jaiden) Smith, 37.79a, Belleville

2, 11, Caleb Washington, 37.91aPR, Detroit Catholic Central

3, 12, Phillip Burney, 38.48aPR, Oak Park

4, 12, Ashton Brann, 38.53a, Ann Arbor Huron

5, 11, Mason Darke, 38.65a, Muskegon Reeths-Puffer

6, 12, Michael Wilkerson, 38.72a, Rochester Adams

7, 10, Shukuru Makechi, 38.95aPR, East Kentwood

8, 11, William Patterson, 38.98a, Detroit Catholic Central

4×100 Relay D1 – Finals

1, 12, Ray-mond Smith, 41.85a, Belleville – A

, 12, Will (Jaiden) Smith

, 11, Peyton Trammer

, 11, Schmar Gamble

2, 10, Andrew Willemsen, 41.88a, Grand Haven – A

, 10, Keiavion Korenstra

, 12, Will Korenstra

, 12, Alex Dixon

3, 12, Kyle Mark, 42.14a, Hudsonville – A

, 12, Markel Chatman

, 12, Ty Ykema

, 12, Carson Guysi

4, 11, Ronnie Hill, 42.22a, Sterling Heights Stevens…

, 11, Landon Porter

, 12, David Keel

, 10, John Taylor

5, 10, Elijah Trombley, 42.23a, TC Central (Traverse Cit…

, 12, Asher Paul

, 11, Carter Gle

, 12, Scott Goodwin

6, 11, Reece Pippin, 42.28a, Novi – A

, 9, Trent Jackson-McGowan

, 12, Noah Munji

, 11, Chance McNeill

7, 11, Melvin Messan, 42.30a, Portage Northern – A

, 12, Vaughnzell Tyus

, 12, Ryan Mauwa

, 11, Ty Oaks

8, 11, Samson Gash, 42.31a, Detroit Catholic Central…

, 11, Dylan Gamnje

, 11, William Patterson

, 11, Caleb Washington

4×200 Relay D1 – Finals

1, 11, Schmar Gamble, 1:26.50a, Belleville – A

, 11, Peyton Trammer

, 12, JeVon Martin

, 12, Timothy Pinard

2, 10, Andrew Willemsen, 1:26.85a, Grand Haven – A

, 10, Keiavion Korenstra

, 12, Alex Dixon

, 12, Ethan Hoffmeyer

3, 12, Xavier James, 1:27.03a, Brighton – A

, 12, Sam Meriweather

, 11, Brayden Platt

, 12, Luke Bellino

4, 11, Curtis Whitfield, 1:27.10a, Kalamazoo Central – A

, 11, Jeremiah Marshall

, 12, Maurice Streeter

, 12, Jeremy Dixon

5, 12, Kyle Mark, 1:27.19a, Hudsonville – A

, 12, Markel Chatman

, 12, Carson Dykstra

, 12, Carson Guysi

6, 11, Rondre Austion, 1:27.21a, Oak Park – A

, 10, Alex Patterson

, 12, Phillip Burney

, 12, Demari Caldwell

7, 11, Cooper Mitchell, 1:27.34a, Byron Center – A

, 10, Connor Nealon

, 12, Parker Holford

, 12, Brody Leyendecker

8, 12, Kayson Legg, 1:27.52a, Walled Lake Western – A

, 10, Timon Dogan

, 12, Troy Temple

, 11, Rodney Endsley

4×400 Relay D1 – Finals

1, 12, Phillip Burney, 3:15.52a, Oak Park – A

, 12, Demari Caldwell

, 10, Alex Patterson

, 11, Rondre Austion

2, 11, Cooper Mitchell, 3:16.19a, Byron Center – A

, 12, Xavier McCallum

, 12, Blake Teunissen

, 12, Brody Leyendecker

3, 12, Ashton Brann, 3:16.85a, Ann Arbor Huron – A

, 12, Chase Lockhart

, 10, Nolan Prevost

, 11, Kinley Poole

4, 11, Ben Hartigan, 3:17.85a, Northville – A

, 11, Reece Mooradian

, 12, Haithem Al-Zoubi

, 12, Rece Grezak

5, 12, Julian Farrell, 3:20.06a, Troy Athens – A

, 12, Myles Linden

, 11, Tony Jordan

, 10, Ethan Bieniek

6, 12, Angelo Finnie Jr., 3:22.44a, West Bloomfield – A

, 12, Raymond Crawford

, 12, Julian Brenner

, 12, Devin James

7, 9, Jack Walden, 3:22.67a, Saline – A

, 10, Cruz Hanson

, 9, Wes Rogan

, 9, Chanon Palmer

8, 11, Hank Hornung, 3:22.69a, Clarkston – A

, 12, Micah Chaney

, 12, Gabe Van Goor

, 10, Wendell Childs

4×800 Relay D1 – Finals

1, 12, Rece Grezak, 7:41.24a, Northville – A

, 11, Ryan Stojov

, 12, Ethan Powell

, 11, Ben Hartigan

2, 10, Wendell Childs, 7:42.90a, Clarkston – A

, 12, Jaxson Nowik

, 12, Cayden DeGrendel

, 12, Joshua Ellingsworth

3, 12, Brady Millington, 7:49.08a, Brighton – A

, 11, Zach Wyderko

, 12, Elijah Forbord

, 10, Blake Kulesza

4, 11, Quinn Davis, 7:49.83a, Ann Arbor Pioneer – A

, 11, Beckett Crooks

, 11, Theo Sacks-Thomas

, 10, Kamari Ronfeldt

5, 11, Adrian Clarke, 7:50.74a, Plymouth – A

, 12, Ben Mussen

, 11, Lucas LaPointe

, 12, Jack Chadwick

6, 9, Oskar MacArthur, 7:51.72a, Ann Arbor Skyline – A

, 11, Adam Repp

, 11, Zeke Lafferty

, 11, Kyle Krasan

7, 9, Wes Rogan, 7:53.16a, Saline – A

, 12, Collin Eckermann

, 10, Carter Mitton

, 12, Saman Meshinchi

8, 11, Aron Gal, 7:54.03a, Grand Haven – A

, 11, Liam Schamper

, 12, Ben Eisnor

, 10, Luka Hammond

Shot Put – 12lb D1 – Finals

1, 12, Garrod Alexander, 64′ 1.25″, Walled Lake Central

2, 12, Maxwell Stoecker, 58′ 10.25″, Midland

3, 12, Dominic Weatherly, 58′ 9″PR, Harrison Twp. L’Anse Cre…

4, 12, Grayson Byam, 55′ 4.75″PR, Saginaw Heritage

5, 12, Spencer Beckeman, 54′ 3.5″, Rochester Hills Stoney C…

6, 12, Hudson Pant, 54′ 3″SR, Cedar Springs

7, 11, Christopher Brownlee, 53′ 8.25″PR, Swartz Creek

8, 12, Liam Takace, 53′ 6.75″, Portage Central

Shot Put – 12lb D1 Adaptive – Finals

1, 12, Luke Bowman, 20′ 3.25″, New Baltimore Anchor Bay

2, 9, Cooper Shain, 13′ 2″PR, Macomb L’Anse Creuse Nor…

Discus – 1.6kg D1 – Finals

1, 12, Ray Glory Ejoyokah, 179′ 3″, Beverly Hills Groves

2, 12, Maxwell Stoecker, 179′ 3″PR, Midland

3, 12, Conrad Squitieri, 172′ 0″, Grosse Pointe South

4, 12, Ty Ellis, 171′ 2″, Grand Ledge

5, 11, Cameron Gramzow, 170′ 7″, New Baltimore Anchor Bay

6, 12, Dominic Weatherly, 168′ 4″, Harrison Twp. L’Anse Cre…

7, 11, Andre Neumann, 165′ 7″, White Lake Lakeland

8, 12, Dewayne Williams III, 163′ 3″PR, Warren DeLaSalle

High Jump D1 – Finals

1, 12, Giovanni Charles, 6′ 8″, Walled Lake Central

2, 12, Zechariah Jones, 6′ 6″PR, Grand Ledge

3, 11, Drelen Lillard, 6′ 6″PR, Novi

4, 12, Deon Robertson, 6′ 6″, Woodhaven Brownstown

5, 10, Blake Jones, 6′ 6″PR, Saginaw United

6, 12, Sam Abdalla, 6′ 3″, FHN GR Forest Hills Nort…

6, 12, Liam Bell, 6′ 3″PR, Highland-Milford

8, 12, Alexander Emory, 6′ 3″, Wyandotte Roosevelt

Pole Vault D1 – Finals

1, 11, Reece Emeott, 16′ 0″PR, East Kentwood

2, 10, Grady Myers, 15′ 3″PR, FHN GR Forest Hills Nort…

3, 11, Sean Cinzori, 15′ 3″, Plymouth

4, 12, Asher Paul, 15′ 0″, TC Central (Traverse Cit…

5, 11, Ben Lievense, 14′ 9″PR, Salem

6, 12, Odin Gulledge, 14′ 6″, Novi

7, 12, Trevor Boyer, 14′ 6″PR, Greenville

8, 12, Daniel Scott, 14′ 6″PR, Greenville

Long Jump D1 – Finals

1, 12, Quincy Isaac, 24′ 11.5″ (-0.8), Canton

2, 12, Nick Henson, 22′ 8.75″ (1.4)PR, Woodhaven Brownstown

3, 11, Jhavon Alexander, 22′ 8.5″ (1.3), East Kentwood

4, 12, Trey Sloothaak, 22′ 4.75″ (-0.1), Zeeland West

5, 11, Jeremiah Armstrong, 22′ 1.75″ (1.5)PR, Ann Arbor Huron

6, 11, Michael Aimery, 22′ 0.25″ (0.3), Holt

7, 12, Carson Guysi, 21′ 11.75″ (0.8), Hudsonville

8, 10, Ryan Varner, 21′ 11.75″ (0.0), Utica Eisenhower

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High School Sports

From Olney to the Nationals

With the Washington Nationals trailing the Colorado Rockies 3-2 in the bottom of the 11th inning on June 19, outfielder James Wood stood at home plate, awaiting another pitch. He got a gift — a 90 mph splitter that hung over the inside half of home plate. Wood swung, using his 6-foot 7-inch frame to […]

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From Olney to the Nationals

With the Washington Nationals trailing the Colorado Rockies 3-2 in the bottom of the 11th inning on June 19, outfielder James Wood stood at home plate, awaiting another pitch. He got a gift — a 90 mph splitter that hung over the inside half of home plate.

Wood swung, using his 6-foot 7-inch frame to launch the ball 430 feet over the center field wall at Nationals Park for his first walk-off home run of his career.

Reliever Seth Halverson headed for the dugout as soon as Wood made contact. He didn’t have to turn and watch the ball to know his pitch had cost his team the game against the struggling Nationals.

As Wood rounded third base, he tossed his helmet onto the side of the field and broke into a big smile before he jumped onto home plate, a rare show of emotion for the stoic young left fielder.

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That game highlighted just one of this season’s many moments of stellar play for the Olney native – who marked another milestone by earning a spot in Monday’s Major League Baseball (MLB) home run derby and Tuesday’s All-Star Game in Atlanta for his outstanding start to the 2025 season.

A year after donning a Nationals uniform, Wood is considered not just the team’s best player, but one of MLB’s best outfielders. At the all-star break, he is ranked eighth in the major leagues in on-base plus slugging, a statistic used to measure hitters’ effectiveness at hitting for power and avoiding outs. In his first full season in the league, Wood trails only a select few star players such as the Yankees’ Aaron Judge and the Dodgers’ Shohei Ohtani in this category.

Wood, who is 22 and under 200 games into his career, said he often has to reflect on where he is as he plays in his first full season with the Nationals.

“Every road trip going to a new stadium, whether I do it before the game or after the game driving home, I just look back … it’s kind of crazy to think about: This is the life we live,” Wood told Bethesda Today during a June phone interview.

Growing up in MoCo

Born in Adventist Healthcare Shady Grove Medical Center in Rockville, Wood grew up in Olney — an important distinction that his dad, Kenny Wood, says game announcers and Google fail to make, upsetting his son’s local fans.

“When they announce where he’s from, it says Rockville, right? That’s really the hospital, [and] people in Olney get upset,” says Kenny Wood, who remains there with his wife, Paula Wood.

James Wood is the youngest of the couple’s three children and has two older sisters, Kayla, 26, and Sydney, 25. Playing sports was a big part of growing up in the Wood family; Kenny Wood was a standout Division 1 basketball player at the University of Richmond, and is a member of the Virginia school’s athletics hall of fame.

Following in their dad’s footsteps, all three kids played basketball. Sydney Wood remembers competing with her brother from a young age on the basketball court and then marveling as his baseball skills developed.

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“Whenever he was first playing, we’d watch his games and be like, ‘Hit a home run! Hit a home run!’ … I guess we thought he could just do whatever he wanted,” said Sydney Wood, who went on to play Division 1 college basketball at Northwestern University in Illinois. “I feel like we always saw pretty early on that he was different and he was special.”

While playing on a recreational basketball team coached by his dad during elementary school, James Wood also played for a travel baseball team, the Olney Pirates, which no longer exists. The Pirates were coached by a father of Wood’s teammates, who emphasized having fun and having his players try different positions, according to Kenny Wood.

“That was a big thing for him to start off from a baseball standpoint,” Kenny Wood said of his son. “I think that kind of gave him a good way to start, [a] good grounding in baseball, to realize what’s important at that age.”

James Wood said many of his best memories of growing up in Olney revolve around playing with the Pirates.

“I feel like I was really fortunate, that my travel ball team was the same group of guys more or less for five or six years,” Wood said. “We won a lot and winning is fun. We scored a lot of runs — that’s fun, too. A lot of [my favorite memories] come with that group of guys.”

Wood left Montgomery County Public Schools in middle school to attend Landon School, a private boys school in Bethesda, before transferring to St. John’s College High School (SJC) in Northwest D.C. and playing for the Cadets, a local athletics powerhouse coached by brothers Mark and Kevin Gibbs. The Cadets’ baseball team has won the Washington Catholic Athletic Conference nine out of the last 10 years, according to the Washington Post.

Kevin Gibbs told Bethesda today in an email that his son had played basketball with James Wood on the team’s coached by his dad while growing up. That’s when Gibbs had witnessed Wood’s physical prowess and raw talent.

“As he got into eighth grade we made a big push to have him attend St. John’s,” Gibbs wrote. “I told Mark [Gibbs] that he would be the best player to ever come out of SJC.”

Upon arrival at St. John’s, Wood quickly found his way on to the varsity baseball and basketball teams, where he made a big impression.

“I can remember a game against [Baltimore private school] Gilman early in his sophomore year when he pinch-hit late and blasted a home run over the batting cages in centerfield, dead into the wind. Everyone’s jaw just dropped,” Gibbs wrote.

Despite his son’s growing prestige on the baseball field, Kenny Wood believed James should continue to play multiple sports. The elder Wood recalled hearing that advice from ESPN MLB analyst and Bethesda native Tim Kurkjian when his son was 11.

“[Kurkjian] just said ‘have him play basketball for as long as he can, even though he loves baseball’,” Kenny Wood said. “You want him to stay active and want him to stay athletic, using different muscles and body parts, and you don’t [want him to] get burnt out.”

Gibbs wrote that he would always send college coaches clips of James Wood dunking on the basketball court as well as baseball highlights to demonstrate his explosiveness.

At the conclusion of Wood’s sophomore year at St. John’s, he transferred to IMG Academy in Bradenton, Florida, a training factory for elite high school athletes.

Gibbs was sad to lose Wood, whom he described as a great player and person. “James was also a terrific kid,” Gibbs wrote. “He was humble, considerate and nice to everyone. He worked hard and never complained when things didn’t go his way.”

Wood returned home to Olney when the COVID-19 pandemic caused the academy to shut down during the spring of his junior year. With his dad and sister’s help, Wood followed a training program provided by the academy’s coaches and trainers, he put on about 25 pounds of muscle, filling in his previously lanky frame.

Later that summer, James went to Atlanta to try out for Under Armour’s All-American game  and work out with some of the other top recruits in the high school class of 2021. That’s where Kenny Wood began to realize just how far his son could go.

“We go into the [batting] cages and I’m watching them hit, [then] I’m watching James. I’m watching them run, [then] I’m watching James,” Wood said. “I kind of had a thought like, all right, if these guys are top five or 10 in the class, where the heck is he?”

James Wood parlayed that experience into a strong senior year showing at IMG. He then decided to forego his previous college commitment to Mississippi State University and to enter the 2021 MLB draft, where he was selected by the San Diego Padres in the second round.

Wood laces a hit for the Olney Pirates (Courtesy of the Wood Family)

Returning home

After just more than a year playing for the minor league teams in the Padres organization, James Wood and his family received some shocking news.

Wood had been traded to the Nationals as part of a blockbuster deal that sent the Nationals’ then 23-year-old mega-star Juan Soto to San Diego. Wood said his reaction wasn’t what many assumed.

“Definitely a lot of uncertainty, I mean I think a lot of people expected me to be super thrilled and happy …. I was, but it took some time,” Wood said.

Kenny Wood said he thought his son needed time to get over the idea that the Padres were willing to let him go.

“Even though it’s coming home, you almost don’t think about that at first,” Kenny Wood said. “You think about, ‘Oh, shoot. This team doesn’t want me.’ ”

James Wood’s uncertainty didn’t show on the baseball diamond. In 2023, his first full year with the Nationals’ minor league affiliates, he hit 26 home runs and stole 18 bases, moving from the High-A team in Wilmington, Delaware, to the Double-A team in Harrisburg, Pennsylvania, about a quarter through the season.

He started 2024 with the Nationals’ Triple-A team in Rochester, New York. Fans soon began to realize the player who seemed like one small element of the Soto trade could end up being the next face of the franchise. In 52 games, Wood posted a batting average of .353 with an on-base percentage of .463, earning him a call-up to the big leagues on July 1, 2024, according to Baseball Reference.

Wood began to gain traction not just among Nationals fans, but across the league for his power, towering height, and athleticism. In the second half of the 2024 season, he showed flashes of how good he could be, while adjusting to the highest level of baseball.

Wood said the opportunity to resume working with a hitting coach he bonded with while in high school, Gerardo “Coach G” Caceres, a former professional baseball player in Venezuela where he was born and raised, helped him adjust.

He credits Caceres for creating a training environment in which he felt comfortable to be himself and could grow, making it an easy choice to continue training with Caceres when he returned to the D.C. area.

“I just feel like we grow together and we have fun together,” Wood said. “It’s a good environment — he might be the only one that likes to work harder than me.”

No matter how successful Wood is, Caceres said he’s not afraid to tell him the truth.

“A lot of people, they’re afraid to talk to him … I’m not,” Caceres said. “Everybody’s talking about the great things he’s doing. I’m like, ‘God, your strike percentage is really high. You need to bring it down.’”

Caceres said while fans and analysts credit Wood’s physical attributes, like size and speed for his success, he is one of the smartest players that Caceres has ever coached. When Wood was getting frustrated because he kept rolling grounders to the first and second basemen, Caceres told him to start trying to rip balls to left field.

“At some point he applied that in the minor leagues, and that’s when he became a .300 hitter,” Caceres said.

Wood now has one of the most powerful opposite-field swings in baseball. His work with Caceres has caught the attention of his teammates, and the coach said he now trains other players in the Nationals’ organization such as infielders Trey Lipscomb and Nasim Nuñez.

Low-key attitude

In contrast to his attention-demanding power, Wood remains soft-spoken maintaining a similar facial expression whether he strikes out or slams a home run to center field.

“I think people think he doesn’t have a personality because he’s quiet, but he’s really funny,” Sydney Wood said. “I think it’s easy for people to make that assumption, just because of how he carries himself.”

Wood laughed at his sister’s assessment, but said he’s not concerned about what others think about his personality.

“People close to me know what type of person I am,” Wood said. “That’s the most important thing to me.”

Despite his stoic nature, Wood is now a role model for local kids who love baseball. He is considered the Nationals’ most electric player, generating raucous applause every time he comes up to bat when team plays at home. His No. 29 jersey is becoming an increasingly common piece of apparel in the metro area.

Wood and his family are still adjusting to that reality.

“It’s pride, it’s honor,” Kenny Wood said. “Seeing our last name out there, people buying it and investing their hard-earned money into getting a jersey to kind of represent him.”

James Wood said he is looking to expand his influence off the baseball diamond. He mentors a group of young Black baseball players in the area, meeting with them to check in on their development on and off the field. He wants to figure out more ways to give back to the community that turned him into a star.

“As I’m getting older, I’d like to find ways other than just on the field to make an impact,” Wood said. “If I can do that, that will be great.”

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MLB Draft 2025 Scouting Report For JoJo Parker to Blue Jays at Pick No. 8

With the No. 8 overall pick in the 2025 draft, the Toronto Blue Jays selected shortstop JoJo Parker out of Purvis High School in Purvis, Mississippi. Ahead is a closer look at what he brings to the table as he starts his pro career, along with a highlight reel and a pro comparison to provide […]

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MLB Draft 2025 Scouting Report For JoJo Parker to Blue Jays at Pick No. 8

With the No. 8 overall pick in the 2025 draft, the Toronto Blue Jays selected shortstop JoJo Parker out of Purvis High School in Purvis, Mississippi.

Ahead is a closer look at what he brings to the table as he starts his pro career, along with a highlight reel and a pro comparison to provide further context for what his future might hold.

Born: 8/8/2006 (18 years old)
Height: 6’2″
Weight: 200 lbs

Stats: 37 G, 158 PA, .465/.665/1.010, 26 XBH (13 HR), 35 RBI, 30 SB

One of the best all-around offensive players in the 2025 prep class, Parker offers a 60-hit, 55-power profile and is coming off a huge spring that earned him Mississippi Gatorade Player of the Year honors.

He does a great job consistently finding the barrel and uses plus bat speed to generate all-fields power. His batted-ball data has ticked up as he has continued to add strength to his frame, and there is still room for him to add more in the coming years.

However, unlike fellow top-tier high school shortstops Eli Willits and Billy Carlson, Parker is not a sure thing to stick at the position.

He should get a chance to prove himself at the position to begin his pro career, and a strong arm and good internal clock help him maximize his otherwise average tools, but the focus will be on getting his bat to the big leagues.

A move to second base, third base or even a corner outfield spot could be in his future, but he has the offensive upside to be a clean fit wherever he moves on the diamond, and it’s his offensive game that will be his ticket to top prospect status and a future in the big leagues.

His twin brother, Jacob Parker, is a power-hitting outfielder who ranked No. 116 on Baseball America’s predraft prospect rankings.

Pro Comparison: Ketel Marte

Originally developed as a shortstop, Ketel Marte also spent some time in center field before settling in as the D-backs’ primary second baseman, but the focal point of his game has always been his offensive production.

It also took Marte some time to fully realize his power potential, as he was a plus hitter who grew into his pop, and that could be the same offensive trajectory that Parker takes early in his pro career.

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Prestige Wrestling 7/13/2025 Combat Clash '25 Results

On Sunday, July 13th, Prestige Wrestling returned to Portland, OR for it’s big event, “Combat Clash ’25.” The event streamed live on the Prestige Wrestling YouTube Channel. The main event of the show saw Alan Angels put the Prestige World Championship on the line against Judas Icarus inside a Steel Cage. We also saw the […]

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Prestige Wrestling 7/13/2025 Combat Clash '25 Results

On Sunday, July 13th, Prestige Wrestling returned to Portland, OR for it’s big event, “Combat Clash ’25.” The event streamed live on the Prestige Wrestling YouTube Channel.

The main event of the show saw Alan Angels put the Prestige World Championship on the line against Judas Icarus inside a Steel Cage.

We also saw the Midnight Heat put their Prestige Wrestling Tag Team Championships on the line against the Dark Order, Drexl go to war with Su Yung, Cody Chhun meet Jordan Oliver, Man Like DeReiss, and Mustafa Ali in a four-way battle, The IInspiration in tag team action against Brooke Havok and Elayna Black, Matt Brannigan go one-on-one with Matt Cardona, and so much more. Check out the full results down below.

  1. Combat Clash Invitational Battle Royal: Elliot Tyler wins the battle royal, last eliminating JAIDEN
  2. Winner is The Special Guest Referee for Main Event: Travis Williams def. Jordan Cruz
  3. Matt Brannigan def. Matt Cardona
  4. The IInspiration (Cassie Lee & Jessica McKay) def. Brooke Havok & Elayna Black
  5. Cody Chhun def. Jordan Oliver, Man Like DeReiss, & Mustafa Ali
  6. Drexl def. Su Yung
  7. Prestige Wrestling Tag Team Championships: Midnight Heat (Eddie Pearl & Ricky Gibson) (c) def. Dark Order (Evil Uno & John Silver) to retain the Prestige Wrestling Tag Team Championships
  8. Prestige Wrestling World Championship Steel Cage Match: Judas Icarus def. Alan Angels (c) to win the Prestige Wrestling World Championship

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Photo highlights from match day 3 at the Women's Euro 2025 soccer tournament

This gallery, curated by AP photo editors, shows highlights from match day 3 at the Women’s Euro 2025 soccer tournament in Switzerland. Follow AP visual journalism: AP Images blog: http://apimagesblog.com Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/apnews X: http://twitter.com/AP_Images AP soccer: https://apnews.com/hub/soccer 1

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Photo highlights from match day 3 at the Women's Euro 2025 soccer tournament

This gallery, curated by AP photo editors, shows highlights from match day 3 at the Women’s Euro 2025 soccer tournament in Switzerland.


Follow AP visual journalism:

AP Images blog: http://apimagesblog.com

Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/apnews

X: http://twitter.com/AP_Images


AP soccer: https://apnews.com/hub/soccer

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Kade Anderson highlights four Tigers selected on day one of the 2025 MLB Draft

BATON ROUGE, La. (WGNO) – LSU pitcher Kade Anderson highlights four Tigers selected on night one of the 2025 MLB Draft. Anderson was selected third overall to the Seattle Mariners. You can read more here. Advertisement Advertisement Advertisement LSU right-handed pitcher Chase Shores was selected by the Los Angeles Angels as the 47th overall pick […]

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Kade Anderson highlights four Tigers selected on day one of the 2025 MLB Draft

BATON ROUGE, La. (WGNO) – LSU pitcher Kade Anderson highlights four Tigers selected on night one of the 2025 MLB Draft.

Anderson was selected third overall to the Seattle Mariners. You can read more here.

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LSU right-handed pitcher Chase Shores was selected by the Los Angeles Angels as the 47th overall pick in the second round of the MLB Draft.

Shores, a redshirt sophomore from Midland, Texas, made a strong return to the mound in 2025 after missing the 2024 season due to Tommy John surgery.

In his comeback season, he finished with a 5-3 record and two saves in 23 appearances (nine starts), posting a 5.09 ERA. Over 63.2 innings, Shores walked 31 batters and struck out 70.

His standout performances came in the postseason, where he played a crucial role in LSU’s run to the College World Series title. Shores pitched in four of LSU’s five CWS games, delivering 7.0 relief innings, allowing only three earned runs on five hits, with no walks and eight strikeouts.

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Notably, he earned the save in Game 2 of the CWS Finals on June 22 against Coastal Carolina, throwing 2.2 scoreless innings to secure LSU’s National Championship. In that appearance, he allowed just one hit, no walks, and struck out four batters.

LSU standout right-hander Anthony Eyanson was selected by the Boston Red Sox with the 87th overall pick in the third round of the 2025 MLB Draft on Sunday night.

A junior from Lakewood, California, Eyanson delivered a dominant 2025 campaign. He posted a 12-2 record with a 3.00 ERA over 20 appearances (18 starts), tallying 108 innings with 152 strikeouts, 36 walks, and a .218 opponent batting average.

Recognized as a First-Team All-American and Second-Team All-SEC selection, Eyanson finished third in the nation in strikeouts. Eyanson led the SEC in wins (12).

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Eyanson played a key role in LSU’s College World Series title run, earning the win in Game 2 of the Finals against Coastal Carolina. In that outing, he threw 6.1 innings, allowing three runs on seven hits with one walk and nine strikeouts.

In the same round, LSU junior outfielder/designated hitter Ethan Frey was chosen by the Houston Astros with the 119th overall pick, marking the fourth LSU player selected on Sunday.

A native of Rosepine, Louisiana, Frey had a strong 2025 season at the plate, hitting .331 with 15 doubles, one triple, 13 home runs, 50 RBIs, and 43 runs scored. He was a key contributor during LSU’s championship run, scoring a team-high six runs in the College World Series while posting a .391 on-base percentage.

Frey delivered LSU’s first run in Game 2 of the CWS Finals against Coastal Carolina with an RBI double, helping the Tigers secure a 5-3 win and the national championship.

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For the latest news, weather, sports, and streaming video, head to WGNO.

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VIDEO

[embedded content]Watch Marietta (Ga.) Wheeler small forward Colben Landrew playing for Game Elite at the Adidas 3SSB Palmetto Road Championship. Landrew averaged 18.0 points, 6.5 rebounds, 2.3 assists and 1.2 steals in six games, helping to lead Game Elite to a title by scoring the most points on the team throughout the tournament and finishing with […]

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VIDEO


Watch Marietta (Ga.) Wheeler small forward Colben Landrew playing for Game Elite at the Adidas 3SSB Palmetto Road Championship.

Landrew averaged 18.0 points, 6.5 rebounds, 2.3 assists and 1.2 steals in six games, helping to lead Game Elite to a title by scoring the most points on the team throughout the tournament and finishing with a 6-0 record. 

Landrew is considered a four-star prospect with a 91-grade and the 62nd-best in the class, No. 24 small forward according to 247Sports.

Miami recently expressed interest in Landrew.

Christopher Stock has covered the Miami Hurricanes since 2003 and can be reached by e-mail at stock@insidetheu.com and on Twitter @InsideTheU.

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