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2025 NAIA Softball Opening Round Hosts Set

KANSAS CITY, Mo. – The National Association of Intercollegiate Athletics (NAIA) announced on Wednesday the 10 host sites for the 2025 NAIA Softball National Championship Opening Round, which will be played from May 12-15. Site selections were made in part by the NAIA Softball National Championship Selection Committee. The committee is comprised of head coaches and […]

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2025 NAIA Softball Opening Round Hosts Set

KANSAS CITY, Mo. – The National Association of Intercollegiate Athletics (NAIA) announced on Wednesday the 10 host sites for the 2025 NAIA Softball National Championship Opening Round, which will be played from May 12-15.

Site selections were made in part by the NAIA Softball National Championship Selection Committee. The committee is comprised of head coaches and administrators from around the nation, and the process takes into account geography, facilities and host qualification. The application deadline was on April 15, 2025.

The 2025 NAIA Softball National Championship will feature 48 teams, with two opening round sites of four teams and eight that are played in five-team brackets. Each opening round is played in a double elimination format. The winner of each will advance to the NAIA Softball World Series in Columbus, Ga., beginning on May 22, 2025.

2025 NAIA Softball National Championship Opening Round Softball Sites

Host

City

Field

Central Methodist (Mo.) Fayette, Mo. Cox Stadium Complex
Cumberlands (Ky.) Williamsburg, Ky. UC Softball Complex
Georgia Gwinnett Lawrenceville, Ga. Grizzly Softball Complex
Indiana Wesleyan Marion, Ind. Sue Bowman Field
Northwestern (Iowa) Sioux Center, Iowa Open Space Park
Oklahoma City Oklahoma City, Okla. Ann Lacey Stadium
Oregon Tech Klamath Falls, Ore. John & Lois Stilwell Stadium
Our Lady of the Lake (Texas) San Antonio, Texas St. Mary’s University Softball Field
Sciences & Arts (Okla.) Chickasha, Okla. Bill Smith Ballpark
Southern Oregon Ashland, Ore. University Softball Field

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10 cool things about Ellie Cole

For Ellie Cole, the end of 2024 was a whirlwind. In August, she made her Olympic debut in Paris and was the top Australian finisher in women’s 10m platform (placing seventh). In November, she finished high school on a high note in Sydney.  A few weeks later, she stood on the junior world championship podium […]

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For Ellie Cole, the end of 2024 was a whirlwind. In August, she made her Olympic debut in Paris and was the top Australian finisher in women’s 10m platform (placing seventh). In November, she finished high school on a high note in Sydney.  A few weeks later, she stood on the junior world championship podium in Brazil, taking silver in 10m synchro. 

At 18, Cole is just getting started.

In a few years, she might be both an Olympic medalist and an aerospace engineer. 

In April, she revealed her love for science and nine other things that make her unique.

“I was actually named after my parents’ barista, like, one that makes them coffee. They lived together in America, in Hoboken, New Jersey; that’s where I was born. And they had this go-to coffee shop. I don’t know which one. The barista was called Elliot, but they called him Ellie for short. It was a guy. I think they just heard the name and they loved it.  I don’t think I’ve met him, because we moved [to Australia] when I was really young.”


Image Source: Ellie Cole competes in women’s 10m Platform semi final at the Olympic Games -Paris 2024 (Tsutomu KISHIMOTO/World Aquatics)

“My middle name is Zofia, [spelled] with a zed. It’s Ukrainian. It was my great-grandma’s name, on my mum’s side, and she was Ukrainian. Unfortunately, I don’t speak the language, but I’d love to learn. I really want to know another language.”


Image Source: Ellie Cole competes in women’s 10m Platform semi final at the Olympic Games -Paris 2024 (Tsutomu KISHIMOTO/World Aquatics)

“I don’t think I get attached to inanimate objects, actually. Of course, I love my dog, Buddy. He’s so cute. He’s a mix between a golden retriever and a poodle.  He’s very young, like 1½, still very immature, still very playful.  He eats socks. He eats socks SO much!  And he visits the vet way too much. He just eats anything in sight so we have to be really careful with what we leave around the house. It’s very funny.”

“I’ve actually never listened to music in competitions so I never wear headphones before I compete. I listen to music, like, when I’m studying, but not in competition. I’ve always wanted to try it, but just never found the competition that I want to risk making a change like that. I’d rather talk and interact with people so I usually have my coach sitting next to me making jokes. Sometimes it’s the physio. It really depends who’s available.”


Image Source: Ellie Cole competes in the Women’s 10m final at the Olympic Games- Paris 2024 (Clive Rose/Getty Images)

“Ooooh, I don’t know if I have a secret talent.  I’m really flexible! I have really flexible hips. So I can put both of my legs above my head, wrap them. I’ve been able to do that since a really young age. I’ve never had to train it.”

“Oh, karaoke, for sure!  I LOVE karaoke. I love to belt out a good Disney song every once in a while –  something that everyone can sing along to and enjoy as well as me. I know a lot of the words to ‘Moana’ songs and of course the staple: ‘Let It Go.’” 


Image Source: Ellie Cole from team Australia competes at the World Aquatics Diving World Cup- Windsor 2025 (Antoine Saito/World Aquatics)

“I think I’ve gotten two 10s in my life, but they were both at school diving competitions so I don’t know if that counts. One was for a front 2½ pike on 3-meter and one was for a reverse 1½ on 5 meter. I was really excited – especially because I was a platform diver and I got it on 3-meter. I was like, ‘Whoa, this is insane!’  Another time, I was really close to getting one on a reverse 2½  in 10-meter competition in Brisbane, but didn’t. The judge actually came up to me afterwards and was like, ‘I was gonna give that a 10, but I just didn’t.’ And I was like, ‘Why not? Why would you tell me that?’”

“Either high diving or synchronized swimming. I love both because I know people in them. In high diving, [four-time world champion] Rhiannan Iffland trains with us in Sydney. She’s so amazing. She’s so sweet. I really love her. Then, one of my best friends from school does synchronized swimming. I think it’s so insane how they can, like, pull their legs out of the water and, like –  I’ve tried it once, and it’s really hard. So much respect for anyone who can do things like that.”

“In my sporting career, [five-time Olympian] Melissa Wu. Her dedication is just astounding. Watching her from a young age really inspired me. She coached me a little bit when I was starting off as an athlete, then we went to Paris together as teammates last year. We trained in the same city, and so training alongside her on the platforms and having a bunch of conversations was really sweet to get to know her as a person as well as an athlete. She’s retired but she still follows diving and is very much a part of the diving community. Outside of the pool? Probably my mom, Kate Cole. She’s an occupational hygienist and has her own company in Sydney. She’s acted as a big role model throughout my entire life. She’s very dedicated, very hard working. She never gives up. She always has the right thing to say at the right moment.”

“I walked out of high school with an ATAR score that I’m really proud of. ATAR is a number that you get at the end of school, to get you into university. The highest you can get is 99.95.  I got in the high 90s, so I’m very happy.  It has opened a lot of opportunities for me in terms of my tertiary education. I’m currently deciding what to do with that. I am definitely going to do something in engineering. I’m leaning toward mechanical or aerospace. For now, I’m training, travelling a lot, focusing on diving – and  teaching myself to code.  I was like, ‘I need something to fill the time,’ and I thought coding is pretty beneficial to the degree I want, so I was like, ‘It’d be fun!’”

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After a 2

Larry Bowa still remembers the two kids, sons of Philadelphia Phillies catcher Bob Boone, shagging fly balls in the outfield at the old Veterans Stadium. Mike Schmidt, Greg Luzinski and other Phillies of that era hit the ball hard. When the turf at the Vet got wet, the ball would skip. Players feared one of […]

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After a 2

Larry Bowa still remembers the two kids, sons of Philadelphia Phillies catcher Bob Boone, shagging fly balls in the outfield at the old Veterans Stadium.

Mike Schmidt, Greg Luzinski and other Phillies of that era hit the ball hard. When the turf at the Vet got wet, the ball would skip. Players feared one of the kids might get hurt.

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“And they’re catching balls like they’ve been playing in the big leagues for 10 years, catching ‘em on one hop, off the wall,” said Bowa, the shortstop for the Phillies’ 1980 World Series champions. “Right then, you knew, they were going to play somewhere.”

Oh, they played, all right. Bret Boone spent 14 years in the majors, younger brother Aaron 12. They were teammates with the Cincinnati Reds in 1997-98, occasional opponents after that. And on Tuesday night, the remarkable story of the first family in baseball history to produce three generations of major leaguers will enter its next phase.

Bret, 56, will be in the visiting dugout at Yankee Stadium, the newly-hired hitting coach of the Texas Rangers. Aaron, 52, will be in the home dugout, in his eighth season managing the New York Yankees.

The Battle of the Boones, in its latest incarnation.

“It’s been well over 20 years since we had this kind of situation,” Aaron said. “It’ll be a little fun, a little weird looking at him. I’m sure I’ll glance his way a handful of times.”

Brothers being brothers, the competitive juices will stir. As players, their most memorable game against one another took place on May 11, 2000, in Cincinnati, when Bret went 3-for-4 with two homers for the San Diego Padres, only to be topped by Aaron hitting 3-for-5 with a walkoff homer for the Reds.

In their present roles, the emotions are different.

“Once the game starts,” Bret lamented, “I’ve never felt less control of anything in my life.”

And yet, there is no place Bret, the more garrulous of the two brothers and host of the Bret Boone Podcast, would rather be (Bret and Aaron also have a younger brother, Matthew, who played minor-league baseball).

“It’s in our blood,” said Bret’s oldest child, Savannah, who is married to Atlanta Braves shortstop Nick Allen. “We’re surrounded by baseball on all sides.”

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Keeping up with the Boones can be dizzying. Bret and Aaron’s grandfather, Ray Boone, was an infielder who played from 1948 to 1960. Their father, Bob, is third in all-time games caught, behind only Iván Rodríguez and Yadier Molina, and also managed for six seasons, including the Reds in 2003, when Aaron was his third baseman.

The next generation includes Bret’s son, Jacob, a former minor leaguer who is now special projects coordinator in Major League Baseball’s player programs department; Aaron’s son, Brandon, a student offensive assistant for Bill Belichick’s football team at the University of North Carolina; and, last but not least, Allen, known to his father-in-law as “Nicky Knocks” and one of the top defenders in the game.

So who will Savannah root for this week when her father’s team faces her uncle’s?

“I’m pulling for both, but I’ve got to side with my dad at the end of the day for this matchup,” Savannah said. “If they were playing the Braves, obviously I’ve got to go with Nick. It just depends on the circumstances.”

Bret, on the other hand, makes no secret of his motivations.

“When we played against each other, man, I wanted to beat him,” Bret said of Aaron. “But as long as our team won, on the side I’d think, we’re winning, we’re kicking their butt tonight, so I’d kind of like it if Aaron gets a hit right here. Throw in a knock, but still lose.”

And when Bret played against teams his father was managing?

“Same thing,” he said. “Sometimes I’d go to the ballpark and we’d hit early before anybody knew even though he was the manager of the opposing team. Then I loved kicking his butt, too.”


Three weeks ago, the possibility of Bret getting back in uniform this season was nonexistent. If anyone had floated the idea over the Christmas holidays, as the Boone clan gathered in Punta Mita, Mexico, it would have seemed even more absurd.

Not content to lounge by the pool, Bret made his podcast a part of the vacation, interviewing 21 family members for a two-part “holiday special.” Each segment lasted about one hour, 45 minutes. Video was part of the production. No one was excused.


The extended Boone family gathers for a picture during a holiday trip to Mexico in December. (Courtesy of the Boone family)

“It was tough coordinating. I would be like, ‘Aunt Laura, you’re on deck, get ready,’” Bret said, referring to Aaron’s wife. “You’ve got the women wanting to do their hair a little bit and look presentable. The boys, they didn’t really care. They were all sleeping. They’d been surfing. They didn’t give a s— how they looked.”

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Bret delighted in the exchanges, which included some of his nieces and nephews, “wearing me out.” He saved his mother Sue, the family matriarch, for the end, and could sense her pride in the family she and Bob created.

Still, not everyone was thrilled with the all-day affair.

“It was a pain because it took hours, and everyone was rotating through it, and we were wanting to go to the beach and pool and stuff,” Aaron said, smiling.

Bret’s efforts, though, reflected his own passion for family — a passion, Savannah said, that kept him out of baseball for almost two decades following his final season as a major leaguer in 2005.

In his 2016 book, “Home Game: Big League Stories from My Life in Baseball’s First Family,” Bret also acknowledged an alcohol problem helped contribute to the end of his playing career. Aaron said his older brother, “has been through a lot in his life,” but currently is in “a really, really good place.”

Bret had four children with his first wife, Suzi — Savannah, 29; Jacob, 26; and twins Isaiah and Judah, 20. He also has three stepdaughters with his second wife, Krista — Isabella, 26; Analiese, 23; and Malia, 17.

“I know he always wanted to get back in the game. He just didn’t know when the right time was,” Savannah said. “Between me, my siblings and my step-siblings, his house was pretty crowded. He didn’t want to leave. Especially as the boys and the girls were going through high school, he wanted to be there for them.”

Yet, even with the house quieting down, Bret was not looking for a job in baseball, or even thinking about one. He still is incredulous at the way his opportunity with the Rangers arose. The story, in an age when teams operate with all deliberate speed, taking pride in process-oriented decision-making, is nothing short of astonishing.

Throwing out the first pitch before a game at his alma mater, the University of Southern California, Bret ran into Michael Young, the former infielder who is now a special assistant with the Rangers. He asked Young to send his best to Rangers manager Bruce Bochy, his skipper with the San Diego Padres in 2000, and president of baseball operations Chris Young, the former pitcher. Bochy called a few hours later to ask Bret to take over as his hitting coach, and that was that.

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The news caught the family, not to mention the entire baseball world, by surprise.

“I told Aaron before anybody knew and there was a pause on the phone like, ‘Where did this come from?’” Bret recalled. “I said, ‘Aaron, I don’t know. I was just hanging out with my dog on the beach. I didn’t ask anybody for anything.’”

Aaron’s hiring by the Yankees in December 2017 was not as sudden, but also a bit of a shock, for he had never managed at any level. In a follow-up conversation with Bret, he was more composed and enthusiastic about his older brother’s possibility with the Rangers.

“I think you should do it,” Aaron said.

Bret, honoring the Rangers’ request for him to keep the news quiet until the official announcement, initially told only his wife and parents, in addition to Aaron. He then decided to inform Savannah — “my oldest, the princess” — but only after her husband, the Braves’ shortstop, left for the ballpark. Bret has friends with the Braves, including bench coach Walt Weiss. He didn’t want Allen worrying about keeping a secret.

So, when Bret called Savannah, he made her promise not to tell Allen until he got home after the game.

Savannah’s reaction was similar to her uncle’s.

“I was like, ‘Are you kidding?’”


In the days after he joined the Rangers, Bret received well wishes from former teammates and friends in the game. Many expressed excitement over what they perceived as an old-school hire, believing Bret’s perspective as a former player would complement the analytics prevalent in baseball today.

Allen, a current player, said he immediately thought, “it’s a different game now than when he was in it.” But the Rangers aren’t asking Bret to dive into the numbers, knowing their other hitting coaches, Justin Viele and Seth Conner, can cover that aspect. And Bret’s younger brother is an example of someone who successfully navigates both worlds.

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“Aaron’s a better politician than me,” Bret said, joking.

The bigger adjustment for Bret — for any former player who gets into coaching or managing — is the inability to directly impact the outcome of a game.

“When you’re out there (as a player), you’re like, ‘F— it, I might pop a three-run homer,’” Bret said. “But (with the Rangers) I let my boys go and I’m like, ‘All right, get ‘em!’”

Bret said he counseled Aaron through certain difficult periods with the Yankees, telling him, “You can’t stew over what you have no control over.” Once he got back in the dugout, he quickly realized that was easier said than done.

No longer can Bret find solace in defeat by going say, 2-for-4. Every loss, he said, feels like an 0-for-4. Even if the Rangers win 90 games, he will experience 70 or so such nights.


Bret Boone congratulates Rangers outfielder Wyatt Langford following a home run over the weekend. (Raymond Carlin III / Imagn Images)

“When you’re on the outside looking in, it’s easy to talk Aaron off the ledge,” Bret said. “But when you’re the guy on the ledge, now I know what he’s feeling. And I’m not even in the manager position, where everything falls on you. That’s the human side I’m going through right now that I forgot about.”

Allen believes his father-in-law will succeed as a coach because he’s straightforward and upfront, capable of keeping things simple, armed with a sense of humor. In fact, Allen takes it a step further, saying Bret — like his father and younger brother — is “really built to be a skipper.”

Bret isn’t so sure.

“Manager?” he said. “I never thought I’d be a hitting coach.”

Then again . . .

“I always thought, if I went back, managing fits my personality the best,” Bret said. “At this point in my life, I’m open to everything, and I know I’ve got a lot to give. Would I rule out managing one day? Absolutely not. But it’s nothing I’m thinking about right now.”

No, he’s thinking about the Rangers’ next series, their visit to New York. He was excited to see his son Jacob for the first time since Christmas, and planned to spend time as well with Aaron and his family. And of course, he was excited for the games.

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Bret and Aaron have always been close and supportive of each other, except when they’re opponents.

Except this week, when The Battle of the Boones resumes.

“Aaron’s going to want to whup us, and I’m going to want to whup him,” Bret said. “From a team standpoint, that’s kind of the way we’ve always been.”

(Top photo of Aaron, Ray, Bret and Bob Boone at the 2003 MLB All-Star Game: Mark Duncan / Associated Press)

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News – Water Polo Australia

There’s no question volunteers help make water polo happen. This National Volunteer Week, Water Polo Australia celebrates the incredible individuals who give so much of themselves to support our sport and community. Fleur Fotheringham, who recently joined the Water Polo South Australia board last year as Appointed Director, began her journey volunteering her time almost […]

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There’s no question volunteers help make water polo happen. This National Volunteer Week, Water Polo Australia celebrates the incredible individuals who give so much of themselves to support our sport and community.

Fleur Fotheringham, who recently joined the Water Polo South Australia board last year as Appointed Director, began her journey volunteering her time almost five years ago when her son represented South Australia at junior representative level. 

As with many parents who devote their time behind the scenes to support their children in the pool, Fotheringham was just happy to help wherever possible.

“I think it’s really rewarding to be able to support and encourage your child in whatever sport they choose,” Fotheringham said.

“I’m an individual that likes to give my time, and I find it really rewarding and valuable.”

Fotheringham further emphasised the importance of volunteers amongst sporting organisations, noting the crucial role they play at all levels of sport. 

“It’s a really supportive environment. We’re not a big club, we’re not a big state, but the environment and the culture that we have is such a supportive one to all of our players,” said Fotheringham.

Fotheringham recounted the fundraising efforts amongst the local South Australian community to support their youth teams’ participation at the recent Australian Youth Water Polo Championships held in Perth last month.

“We had wine sales, sausage sizzles, chocolate drives, hot cross buns sales, in an attempt to get all of our teams here as youth teams.”

The Water Polo South Australia 16&U Boys Team Manager was grateful for the community spirit and unity shown in aid of their Youth Championships campaign, highlighting the importance volunteers play in nurturing the next generation of water polo stars.

“It’s about what we can do to get them here and to allow them to have the best time possible.”





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Sedric Granger pursues baseball play

Sedric Granger pursues baseball play-by-play dream with the Frisco RoughRiders Posted on: Tuesday, May 20, 2025 < < Back to ATHENS, OH – Sedric Granger ’24 is getting ready to spend his summer living the dream. The 2024 journalism news and information graduate will be doing a media internship with the Frisco RoughRiders, a Double-A […]

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Sedric Granger pursues baseball play

Sedric Granger pursues baseball play-by-play dream with the Frisco RoughRiders

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< < Back to

ATHENS, OH – Sedric Granger ’24 is getting ready to spend his summer living the dream. The 2024 journalism news and information graduate will be doing a media internship with the Frisco RoughRiders, a Double-A affiliate of the Texas Rangers and the 2022 Texas League champions.

“I’ll be doing play-by-play and color commentary for select home games as the number three broadcaster, co-hosting select radio pregame and postgame shows for home games, conducting interviews for the pregame show, video content and written content, as well as live tweeting home games with highlights from the team account, live drop-ins with scoreboard updates and Rangers updates and assisting with media relations responsibilities of the club,” said Granger. “It feels only fitting to me to work with a team in the Rangers system. You can’t spell Granger without Ranger!”

Granger was selected for the internship through the Major League Baseball (MLB) Voices Program and Black Play-by-Play Broadcaster Grant & Scholarship Fund. The MLB Voices Program is an initiative by Major League Baseball in partnership with the Black Play-by-Play Grant & Scholarship Fund that aims to broaden the diversity of play-by-play voices in baseball broadcasts and cultivate the next generation of talent. Participants gain hands-on experience by calling games, receiving mentorship, and developing valuable professional connections. According to the Black Play-by-Play Grant & Scholarship Fund, of the 200+ television and radio play-by-play jobs in Major League Baseball and Minor League Baseball, fewer than five are currently filled by Black broadcasters.

“I am excited for the opportunity to contribute to the Frisco RoughRiders organization and gain new knowledge that will help me continue to grow as a sports communications professional,” said Granger.

Granger has known he wanted to pursue a career in sports play-by-play since high school. Growing up in New Albany, Ohio, Granger would practice his skills on live broadcasts of Ohio State football games giving game updates on Snapchat.

“I decided to go to Ohio University because when I went on my first visit it felt like home,” said Granger. “I experienced a live recording at WOUB and saw the maze of journalism sports media opportunities in Scripps College and at the university. It was all of the things I wanted to do.”

Granger, who was a journalism news and information major, worked at WOUB during his freshman and sophomore years on The Bobcat Sports Showcase, Gridiron Glory and Hardwood Heroes. Throughout his time in Athens, he also worked at WATH Radio, the Southern Ohio Copperheads, and with OHIO Athletics, as an announcer for football and basketball games.

“I used all of that experience to get a full-time job after graduation working for the University of Maryland Eastern Shore as a sports information coordinator,” said Granger. “I announce games, do social media, and work as a liaison for local media for the volleyball and baseball teams. I get to use journalism skills to write recaps and stories with game notes for all of our teams.”

Granger is also a freelance play-by-play broadcaster for MLB.com and the MLB Network. He provided play-by-play for the Andre Dawson Classic, the Hank Aaron Invitational, Arizona Fall League baseball, and a variety of MLB youth events.

“WOUB and Ohio University prepared me so well. I developed the multimedia journalism skills to make me as versatile as possible. I learned video, still photography, writing articles, live broadcasts, and how to call highlights. These are all skills I use every single day and it makes me more employable. I love how many skills WOUB gets you. I can’t thank WOUB enough for giving me that experience.”

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LaMena Leads Outdoor All-RMAC Teams

By: Tim Flynn Story Links COLORADO SPRINGS – Women’s Freshman of the Year Emily LaMena leads 40 total all-RMAC honors for Colorado School of Mines in the outdoor track & field season. The Mines men had 23 student-athletes earn 30 total all-RMAC honors, while 17 Oredigger women received 20 awards. Among […]

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COLORADO SPRINGS – Women’s Freshman of the Year Emily LaMena leads 40 total all-RMAC honors for Colorado School of Mines in the outdoor track & field season.

The Mines men had 23 student-athletes earn 30 total all-RMAC honors, while 17 Oredigger women received 20 awards. Among the honorees are 10 RMAC champions: Everett Delate (110m hurdles), Alex Shaw (steeplechase), Jeremiah Vaille (5,000m and 10,000m), Allison Comer (400m hurdles), Jennifer Jarnagin (hammer), LaMena (steeplechase), Kitt Rupar (discus), Jenna Ramsey-Rutledge (5,000m), Dale Thompson (pole vault), and Avery Wright (heptathlon). 

Competitors earn First-Team All-RMAC honors by finishing first, second, or third in an event at the RMAC Championships, with second-team honors going to finishers four through six. For relays, the winners earn first-team and runners-up second-team honors.

To earn the conference’s Freshman of the Year award, LaMena dominated the RMAC Championships’ 3,000m steeplechase event in April, winning gold by more than 14 seconds. Her run of 10:21.58 at the Stanford Invitational set the Mines program record and ranks #7 nationally as she is one of only three freshmen to qualify for the NCAA Championships in the steeplechase. 

Mines’ all-RMAC honorees are:

FIRST-TEAM ALL-RMAC

Aidan Bennett (pole vault)

Max Bonenberger (3,000m steeplechase)

Everett Delate (110m hurdles*/400m hurdles)

Paul Knight (5,000m)

Holden Murphy (hammer/discus)

Elijah Quinby (400m hurdles)

Loic Scomparin (10,000m)

Alex Shaw (3,000m steeplechase*)

Braden Struhs (10,000m)

Tim Thompson (800m)

Jeremiah Vaille (5,000m*/10,000m*)

Avary Catchings (800m)

Allison Comer (400m hurdles*)

Abbi Gillespie (hammer)

Aani Hardesty (400m hurdles)

Jennifer Jarnagin (hammer*)

Claire Kintzley (triple jump)

Emily LaMena (3,000m steeplechase*)

Kitt Rupar (discus*/shot put)

Jenna Ramsey-Rutledge (5,000m*)

Grace Strongman (1,500m)

Lisa Sutherland (heptathlon)

Dale Thompson (pole vault*)

Avery Wright (heptathlon*/100m hurdles)

SECOND-TEAM ALL-RMAC

Daniel Appleford (5,000m)

Logan Bocovich (5,000m+10,000m)

Alberto Campa (1,500m)

Liam Currie (400m)

Kolby Denke (javelin)

Brock Drengenberg (1,500m)

Dawson Gunn (10,000m)

Vaughn Hafner (decathlon/high jump)

Paul Knight (10,000m)

Kai Miller (pole vault)

Holden Murphy (shot put)

Andreas O’Malley (5,000m)

Franklin Rambo (shot put)

Nick Stade (decathlon)

Arabella Chen (pole vault)

Lexi Herr (5,000m)

Taylor Hindman (pole vault)

Callen Nash (10,000m)

Kitt Rupar (hammer)



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Notre Dame cross country, track and field overcome adversity to achieve success

The Notre Dame cross country team entered 2024 with high expectations, and despite a seemingly endless barrage of untimely injuries and illnesses on both the women’s and men’s sides, emerged from the fall season with impressive achievements. Irish women claim first ACC cross country title, men return to top 10 at nationals For as consistently […]

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The Notre Dame cross country team entered 2024 with high expectations, and despite a seemingly endless barrage of untimely injuries and illnesses on both the women’s and men’s sides, emerged from the fall season with impressive achievements.

Irish women claim first ACC cross country title, men return to top 10 at nationals

For as consistently strong as the Irish women have been since Notre Dame joined the ACC more than a decade ago, an inaugural conference title had long eluded them, with one seemingly indomitable obstacle largely responsible for that gap in the trophy case: NC State, eight-time defending champions entering 2024. But in November, the Irish put an end to that drought on the Wolfpack’s home course, emerging from a tightly contested conference championship race with their first ACC crown.

“That was a great day,” Irish director of cross country and track and field Matt Sparks said about the ACC Championship. “The conference title was something we’ve worked towards for the last 11 years since we’ve been in the ACC. So that was a special day for us.”

The Irish were led throughout the season by a pair of veterans — senior Siona Chisholm and graduate student Erin Strzelecki — who each rose to the occasion and stepped into starring roles at key moments in the season. At the conference meet, it was Chisholm’s sixth-place finish that propelled Notre Dame to a narrow victory.

“Siona and Erin Strzelecki were two [runners] that … we looked for to step up and fill some of that leadership void at the front end of the pack, and both did that in different times of the season,” Sparks said. “Siona carried the weight at the ACC Championship and kind of dragged us to the win that day.”

Three weeks later, it was Strzelecki’s time to shine, leading a severely depleted and shorthanded Irish squad to a 16th place finish at the NCAA Championship while placing 37th individually to earn All-American honors for the second consecutive year.

“To complete those accolades, [we’re] really proud of her. She had a midseason sickness at the pre-national meet where she didn’t run, she was so ill,” Sparks said of Strzelecki. “But then obviously [she] came around just at the right time for the national meet.”

Conversely to the veteran-led women, it was more of a youth movement for the Irish men, partly due to the team’s bevy of talented underclassmen and partly out of necessity, as several of Notre Dame’s established leaders were hampered by injuries.

After placing 14th nationally the previous year — the team’s second consecutive finish outside of the top 10 — the Irish had ambitions of returning to national contention and looked poised to do so for much of the year.

Notre Dame earned a major regular season victory at home in the Joe Piane Notre Dame Invite and followed a sixth-place ACC finish with a win at the NCAA Great Lakes Regional to carry some momentum into the national meet. They made good use of it, fighting to a 10th-place finish at nationals. Like the women, the Irish men were led by an All-American performer, as junior Izaiah Steury was up front for Notre Dame in 24th.

“Really proud of Izaiah, [he] had an amazing national meet,” Sparks said. “He was a little off at the conference meet; I believe he finished better at the national meet than he did at the conference meet … but Izaiah Steury really bought into what he was doing.”

Steury’s performance was backed up by a strong showing from Notre Dame’s young core, with three more Irish runners who will be returning to campus next fall placing inside the top 100 nationally — juniors Ethan Coleman and Daelen Ackley and freshman Drew Griffith.

“We felt like we had a really good blend of upperclassmen that had done some things on an elite level, and then a talented group of [underclassmen] that we were going to count on,” Sparks said. “We really had to lean on the underclassmen.”

O’Brien’s pentathlon three-peat leads the way for Irish track and field

As the Irish shifted their focus to track and field, it was once again time for graduate student Jadin O’Brien to shine. During the indoor season, O’Brien continued her dominance in the pentathlon, claiming a third straight NCAA title while establishing new school and ACC records in the event. Along with fellow graduate students Addison Berry and Alaina Brady, O’Brien helped Notre Dame complete a rare sweep of the podium in the pentathlon at the ACC Indoor Championships.

“That was definitely the sweet spot of the indoor season,” Sparks said about the Irish’s pentathlon conference sweep. “Jadin has won NCAA titles before. She had a great score, won the championship, and we’re extremely proud of the three-peat there. But it was really neat to see all three of them on that podium together, celebrating.”

Also crucial to the Irish women’s strong indoor track season was the performance of graduate student Madison Schmidt, who set a school record in the high jump en route to finishing as ACC runner-up and earning a berth at the NCAA meet.

“She’s been a model of consistency when it [comes] to the championship time of the year,” Sparks said about Schmidt. “She continually jumped high when it mattered most.”

On the men’s side, Notre Dame’s distance group carried their strong cross country efforts onto the track, with Ackley claiming the ACC indoor title in the mile while Coleman impressed with top-five finishes in both the 3k and 5k.

“Daelen has really matured as an athlete. He’s finally very comfortable in what his skill set is and how he needs to execute a race and that really came to fruition at the ACC Championship,” Sparks said. “And then Ethan Coleman has just been a steady rock for us since he got here. Season after season, [he] progressively gets better.”

Another standout in conference competition was freshman Luke Himes, who earned First Team All-ACC honors with a runner-up finish in the shot put.

“That’s a tough event to transition from high school to college. It’s a different-sized weight and it’s a strength-oriented event … and he was able to transition pretty seamlessly,” Sparks said about Himes’ performance in the shot put. “So that’s really exciting for the future, what Luke’s going to bring to the table.”

Now in the midst of the outdoor track and field postseason, the Irish will close out the year with the regional meet at the end of May and the NCAA Championships in Eugene, OR, from June 11-14.





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