Sports
6 Lopes earn AVCA Top Flight honors
Story Links Grand Canyon University’s beach volleyball program continues to gain national recognition as three Lopes pairs earned AVCA Top Flight Awards, as announced Friday by the American Volleyball Coaches Association (AVCA). The Top Flight program, now in its seventh year, honors beach pairs who compete in at least 15 matches […]

Grand Canyon University’s beach volleyball program continues to gain national recognition as three Lopes pairs earned AVCA Top Flight Awards, as announced Friday by the American Volleyball Coaches Association (AVCA).
The Top Flight program, now in its seventh year, honors beach pairs who compete in at least 15 matches together at a specific flight and win at least 75 percent of those contests. In 2025, 88 pairs from 45 schools across NCAA Divisions I, II, III, NAIA, and Two-Year Colleges were recognized for their elite performances.
GCU’s honorees spanned three different flights:
Flight 3: Jessica Drake (redshirt junior) and Becca Drake (sophomore) compiled a dominant 20–3 record, showcasing consistent synergy throughout the season.
Flight 4: Sophia Hladyniuk (senior) and Karynn Garrow (sophomore) led the way with a 21–6 mark.
Flight 5: Madi Bogle (senior) and Regan Holmer (redshirt junior) finished their season at 20–5.
“We made a huge jump up in the rankings this year and were competitive with virtually every team in the country,” GCU head coach Abra Rummel said. “The success of these three pairs was instrumental in that success. I am very proud of their commitment to GCU beach volleyball, and am so excited for the future of a team returning so much of its very talented starting lineup.”
Grand Canyon Beach Volleyball capped off the 2025 season with a 23–11 overall record, highlighted by eight victories over nationally ranked opponents. The Lopes climbed to a No. 13 national ranking in the most recent AVCA Coaches Poll. The team’s success was fueled by standout individual performances, including two All-Conference selections and six players earning AVCA Top Flight All-American honors across three different flights. The combination of national recognition, elite wins, and postseason accolades underscored a very successful campaign this season.
Sports
Best finish for men’s track and field at the NCAA Championships in decades – The Minnesota Daily
The NCAA Championships ended in Eugene, Oregon at Hayward Field on Saturday, along with the track and field season. The Gophers men finished seventh, their highest finish since 1948. The Gopher women did not have enough athletes in attendance to place as a team, but they saw good performances from redshirt sophomore Ali Weimer and […]

The NCAA Championships ended in Eugene, Oregon at Hayward Field on Saturday, along with the track and field season.
The Gophers men finished seventh, their highest finish since 1948. The Gopher women did not have enough athletes in attendance to place as a team, but they saw good performances from redshirt sophomore Ali Weimer and graduate student Dyandra Gray.
Weimer became the first female Gopher runner to run the 10K in under 33 minutes. Her performance at the NCAA Championships broke her own school record that she set back in February.
Earlier in the season, after Weimer set her first school record, she mentioned how special it was to her.
“The school record is kind of life-changing in its own way just because we’ve had so many great women come through our program,” Weimer said. “To be able to compete with those names and represent yourself in a way too.”
Gray placed 22nd in the 400 meter hurdles to end her career with the Gophers, but earned her first-ever All-American finish in her career. She is only the third from the Gophers women’s track and field team to do so in the 400 meter hurdles.
The men’s track and field team earned the most points from Greek hammer throwers graduate student Kostas Zaltos and sophomore Angelos Mantzouranis.
The two hammer throwers once again had a 1-2 finish. Zaltos took first, with his first and last NCAA gold medal.
In an interview with KSTP before the championships, Zaltos said that he was not too worried about the competition at the NCAA Championships.
“The results are talking by themselves,” Zaltos said. “We are already doing the best.”
After Zaltos claimed the gold medal, he reaffirmed what he already knew to be true.
“Today I had the best series of my career,” Zaltos said. “I’ll take that. I am excited for the future. (Angelos and I) are the best duo of all-time in NCAA history. We are very excited about that.”
Zaltos threw a lifetime best at his final meet with the Gophers at 78.08 meters.
Mantzouranis said in an interview after his performance that he felt like it was not his day, after throwing 77.96 meters and winning silver, only 0.65 meters shorter than his personal best.
Other notable performances came from sophomore Charles Godfred, who placed fourth in the long jump, and the 4×100-meter relay team, which earned seventh place, as well as first-team All-American honors.
The Big Ten champion relay team was able to finish a program-best seventh, even with an injury to senior Devin Augustine in the last stretch of the race, which forced him to slow down.
Sports
Ichika Kajimoto untouched in 3k knockout sprints in Setúbal
Japan’s Ichika Kajimoto successfully bided her time in winning the women’s 3k knockout sprint event on the last day of the World Aquatics Open Water Swimming World Cup stop in Setúbal, Portugal. Kajimoto paced herself to perfection, winning the 1500m and 1000m rounds, before out-sprinting the likes of open water veterans Caroline Jouisse and Lea […]

Japan’s Ichika Kajimoto successfully bided her time in winning the women’s 3k knockout sprint event on the last day of the World Aquatics Open Water Swimming World Cup stop in Setúbal, Portugal.
Kajimoto paced herself to perfection, winning the 1500m and 1000m rounds, before out-sprinting the likes of open water veterans Caroline Jouisse and Lea Boy. Kajimoto swam 6:41.60 to win the last 500m ahead of France’s Jouisse (6:43.50) and Germany’s Boy (6:44.40).
“I’m happy and it was an exciting race”
Kajimoto was the national champion in the 400m, 800m, and 1500m freestyle earlier this year at the Japan National Championships and has never won a medal at a global event. Kajimoto has competed at the World Juniors in 2022 as well as the World Aquatics Championships in Doha 2024, but this is just her third appearance at the World Cup.
Boy, the winner from Ibiza, tried to control the pace in the final, replicating her strategy from the last World Cup, but Kajimoto was not having it, perfecting her line and each turn. Although the conditions were a bit more wavy than the men’s race, Kajimoto’s smooth and controlled stroke played to her advantage.
“Yeah, it’s a nice new format,” Boy said. “We like to swim it this way and not only 10k round for round, for round. It’s a little bit more special.
“The course here is a little bit different to the other site. We don’t have very (many) waves this time, so it was very nice. And the sun was out, so the water was cold, but with the sun it’s okay.”
The temperature of the water was up to 20 degrees Celsius during the women’s race as opposed to the 18.5 it was for the men. Even with a later start time than usual of 2:00 p.m. the water was a bit chilly, favouring the swimmers with more short-hand speed.
Boy and Kajimoto shared the podium in Ibiza in April, with the German winning and the Japanese in third.
Jouisse, the bronze medallist from the 10k yesterday, upgraded to silver today, her first of such colour individually at the World Cup.
Image Source: Caroline Jouisse, left, and Lea Boy, right, joined gold medallist Ichika Kajimoto, centre, on the podium (World Aquatics)
“I’m really happy about the ten kilometres and I always want to perform in the ten kilometre because that’s the Olympic event,” Jouisse said. “So, that’s my main focus. The three kilometre is new, so I’m discovering it every time and I try a new strategy every time. So, it didn’t work out in Ibiza, it worked out in the national and it worked out today as well. So, I’m kind of glad because every time I did something different.”
Rising American star Brinkleigh Hansen (6:47.00) just missed the podium in fourth, and she will be making her senior international debut this summer at the World Aquatics Championships in Singapore at age 15. Since 2001, the United States has always had a breakout high school girl on the Worlds team the year after the Olympics, and Hansen appears to be the next one after she was world junior champion last year in the 5k at age 14.
Monaco’s Lisa Pou (6:49.10) also competed in the final in fifth, ahead of China’s Tian Muran (6:51.90) and Great Britain’s Ella Dyson (6:52.80).
Japan’s Airi Ebina (6:53.90), Spain’s Angela Martinez Guillen (6:54.00 and Portugal’s Mafalda Rosa (7:05.20) also competed in the final.
Image Source: The Women’s 3km Knockout Sprint concluded the World Aquatics Open Water Swimming World Cup in Setúbal (World Aquatics)
The attention now shifts to the World Aquatics Championships in Singapore on July 15 with the women’s 10K.
“Training, training, training,” Boy said of what is next before the World Championships. “We stay at home and go six days before the first race to Singapore, and now it’s just time for training.”
The final World Aquatics Open Water Swimming World Cup race will be in Golfo Aranci, Italy, on October 10 & 11.
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Sports
Texas A&M track and field wins the Outdoor National Championship
Texas A&M returned for the 17th time to the iconic Hayward Field in Eugene, Oregon, for the annual NCAA Outdoor Track and Field Championships from June 11-14. Heading into the final competition of the season, both the men’s and women’s teams were ranked No. 2 by the U.S. Track & Field and Cross Country Association […]

Texas A&M returned for the 17th time to the iconic Hayward Field in Eugene, Oregon, for the annual NCAA Outdoor Track and Field Championships from June 11-14.
Heading into the final competition of the season, both the men’s and women’s teams were ranked No. 2 by the U.S. Track & Field and Cross Country Association Poll. Combined, the teams competed with 22 athletes across 24 events at the championships and walked away with three gold, three silver and two bronze medals.
In a thrilling final men’s 4x400m relay to close out the men’s side of the competition, senior Hossam Hatib, senior Cutler Zamzow, senior Kimar Farquharson and anchor runner redshirt senior Auhmad Robinson sealed the deal for the Aggies with a season-best 3:00.73 mark for the silver medal. The men tallied up 41 points to tie for the NCAA Outdoor Championship with University of Southern California, the win they’ve been searching for since tying for the championship with the University of Florida twelve years ago.
The women’s final rankings also came down to the women’s 4x400m relay, behind seniors Kennedy Wade, Camryn Dickson, Jasmine Montgomery and Jaydan Wood who snatched the final five points for A&M with a season-best 3:27.11 time and a fourth place finish. The team earned first team All-America honors, and helped the entire women’s team to a 43-point total and a third overall final rank in the national championship.
The first Aggie to earn points for the men was junior Alexsandr Solovev, the nation’s top collegiate pole vaulter. Solovev struck gold in the men’s pole vault final, clearing a school record and personal-best 5.78 meters on his third and final attempt at the staggering height. With a new collegiate-leading mark, Solovev added 10 points to the team tally and a first team All-America honor to his resume.
Senior Sam Whitmarsh completed his collegiate career on a high, earning the second gold for the Aggies in the men’s 800m final. Whitmarsh finished in 1:45.86 seconds, earning his second first team All-America honor of his career.
Junior Winny Bii was crowned with her gold medal in the women’s triple jump, leaping 13.96 meters to earn first team All-America honors. Bii had a very consistent season, earning silver at the Southeastern Conference Outdoor Championships, fourth at NCAA Indoor Championships, and gold at the SEC Indoor Championships to cap her junior season.
The 400m hurdle duo of seniors Ja’Qualon Scott and Bryce McCray earned 11 valuable points in their event final. Scott crossed the finish line in a personal-best 48.29 seconds, earning a silver medal and a first team All-America honors. McCray finished sixth overall with a personal-best 49.52 mark, earning three points for the team and first team All-America honors.
Junior Jaiya Covington finished in the national runner-up spot in the women’s 100m hurdles, grabbing a silver medal with a 12.93 mark and a first team All-America honor.
The bronze medal count was added to by the women’s 4x100m relay team consisting of sophomore Jasmine Harmon, Dickson, senior Bria Bullard and Montgomery. The team ended their season on a high with a season-best 42.89 mark and first team All-America honors.
Freshman Sofia Yakushina — the current NCAA No. 1 in women’s heptathlon — landed on the national podium with a bronze medal to complete her freshman season. Yakushina started strong in the 100m hurdles, placing fourth overall in 13.53 seconds. She finished eighth overall with a 1.69-meter jump in high jump, 19th overall with an 11.46-meter throw in shot put and fourth overall with a 24.02 mark in the 200m to finish the first day of competition ranked eighth overall with 3,492 points.
Yakushina fought back on the final day winning her first event, leaping a personal-best 6.47 meters for 997 points in the long jump. She finished ninth overall in both the javelin throw and 800m with a throw of 40.38 meters and a time of 2:14.93 seconds to secure her podium finish. The freshman walked away from her first NCAA Outdoor National Championship with some new hardware, a first team All-America honor and a 6,058 point performance.
The final first team All-America honor for the men’s team was awarded to Robinson, who finished seventh overall in the men’s 400m final in 46.07 seconds.
A school record was broken again over the week by freshman Debora Cherono in the women’s 3000m steeplechase. The newly minted first team All-American ended her first collegiate season with a personal-best 9:32.10 in the final, taking down her previous school record from the semifinals a mere two days before.
The last women’s first team All-America honor was awarded to Montgomery in the 200m final, finishing in fifth overall in 22.61 seconds..
As the sun set on Hayward Field, it marked the end of the 2024-25 NCAA D1 Track and Field season, and a remarkable result for Texas A&M. Cross country will hit the ground running in the fall and track and field will return in January 2026.
Sports
Treasure State track and field athletes exit NCAA Nationals with honors
EUGENE, OR — Eight athletes represented Montana at the NCAA Outdoor Track and Field National Championships in Eugene, Oregon with seven for Montana State University and three from the Treasure State. After back-to-back seasons exiting Eugene in the semifinals and with Second-Team All-American honors, MSU’s Rob McManus made his first finals appearance in his third […]

EUGENE, OR — Eight athletes represented Montana at the NCAA Outdoor Track and Field National Championships in Eugene, Oregon with seven for Montana State University and three from the Treasure State.
After back-to-back seasons exiting Eugene in the semifinals and with Second-Team All-American honors, MSU’s Rob McManus made his first finals appearance in his third trip to nationals for the men’s 3000m steeplechase.
McManus joins former Bobcat and Bozeman native Duncan Hamilton as First Team All-Americans in the steeplechase. The senior finished in eighth place with a time of 8:25.83.
Harvey Cramb competed in the men’s 1500m. The Australian sophomore finished in 12th in semifinal heat, 17th overall with a time of 3:44.57 and earned Honorable Mention All-American honors.
Montana State women made program debuts in two events.
Junior Hailey Coey became the first-ever Bobcat to compete in the long jump at nationals. The Billings West product took 20th place with a leap of 6 meters (19 feet, 8.25 inches) and earned Honorable Mention All-American honors.
MSU also sent its first-ever relay team to Eugene to compete in the 4x400m relay. The team of junior Peyton Garrison, junior Caroline Hawkes, freshman and Corvallis native Olivia Lewis, and Italian junior Giulia Gandolfi finished in seventh in their semifinal heat, 21st overall with a time of 3:36.70.
Each of the four Bobcats earned Honorable Mention All-American honors.
Seeley-Swan alum Klaire Kovatch made her nationals debut for Colorado State University in women’s discus. The redshirt junior did not record a mark with fouls on all three attempts, but Kovatch exits her time in Eugene with Honorable Mention All-American honors.
Sports
Texas A&M Athletics
EUGENE – The Texas A&M women’s track & field team secured a third-place finish at the NCAA Championships Saturday evening at Hayward Field. An individual national champion and runner-up finisher highlighted the individual performances. Winny Bii headlined an action-packed day, capturing A&M’s first NCAA title in the women’s triple jump. The junior hit the ground […]

Winny Bii headlined an action-packed day, capturing A&M’s first NCAA title in the women’s triple jump. The junior hit the ground running, leaping 13.96m/45-9.75 on her first attempt to capture the lead. Bii’s opener held throughout the entire competition, landing her at the top of the podium for the championship crown.
The women’s 4x100m relay quartet of Jasmine Harmon, Camryn Dickson, Bria Bullard and Jasmine Montgomery set the tone on the final day of the season and put the team on the scoreboard, taking third in the event with a season-best time of 42.89.
Debora Cherono held the momentum for the Maroon & White, as the standout steeplechase freshman broke her own school record for the fifth time this season with a time of 9:32.10 to place fifth in the event, dropping her semifinal time by a staggering 10 seconds.
Jaiya Covington continued to separate herself as one of the nation’s premier short hurdlers, as the Aggie junior ran out of lane seven in a stacked event and crossed the line in 12.93. This was Covington’s first NCAA outdoor individual final and delivered eight points to the total.
Yakushina capped off her historic rookie campaign, as she finished third in the women’s heptathlon with 6,058 points. The freshman added on to her day one total (3,492 points) starting in the long jump where she won the event with a personal-best leap of 6.47m/21-2.75 which jumped her to No. 4 in the A&M record books. She followed that up with ninth in the javelin (40.38m/132-6), leaving only the 800m on deck. Yakushina concluded her seven-event competition placing ninth in the 800m in 2:14.93 to ensure her third-place overall finish.
Montgomery added her second First Team All-America honor of the evening in the 200m, as the junior clocked a time of 22.61 which was good for fifth in the final.
Concluding the championships for the Maroon & White was the 4x400m team consisting of Latasha Smith, Dickson, Montgomery and Jaydan Wood. The group ran a season-best time of 3:27.11 to capture fourth in the event and secure the final five points for the women’s team to place third in the championships with 43 points.
To learn more about Texas A&M Track & Field/Cross Country, visit 12thMan.com and follow @aggietfxc.
Sports
USA Junior Men Lose To Hungary Late 13-12 At U20 World Championships
Story Links Zagreb, Croatia – June 15 – The USA Men’s Junior National Team lost to Hungary 13-12 today at the U20 World Championships. Ryder Dodd and Jonathan Carcarey led the team in scoring with three goals each while Charles Mills went for nine saves in the cage. Team USA returns to action […]

Zagreb, Croatia – June 15 – The USA Men’s Junior National Team lost to Hungary 13-12 today at the U20 World Championships. Ryder Dodd and Jonathan Carcarey led the team in scoring with three goals each while Charles Mills went for nine saves in the cage. Team USA returns to action tomorrow as they conclude group play with a meeting against Montenegro at 11:30am et/8:30am pt. All matches are scheduled to stream live on the World Aquatics YouTube. Live statistics will be available for every match from MicroPlus Timing Services.
Hungary opened the scoring in this one but Carcarey tied the game moments later on a man-advantage. Ryan Ohl gave Team USA its first lead before Hungary leveled the score with 1:31 to play. Landon Akerstrom had a response on the ensuing possession, giving the United States a 3-2 lead after one. The Hungarians opened the second quarter scoring nearly three minutes in but that was all they could manage in the period. Team USA rallied for three goals in the final 2:33 of the half courtesy of Dodd (2) and Carcarey to hit the halftime break up 6-3.
Hungary flipped this match on its head in the third, outscoring Team USA 6-2. They opened the period with three straight scores to tie the game before William Schneider put the Americans back in front midway through the frame. Hungary retook the lead with back-to-back goals and then Dodd knotted things with 1:11 to go but the European side beat the buzzer when they scored on a counter attack to head into the fourth up 9-8. Things would stay within a single goal for the entire fourth quarter as the two sides traded scores. Carcarey, Benjamin Liechty, Schneider, and Bode Brinkema dented the twine for the United States leaving the score all square at 12-12 with 2:45 remaining. From there, each team had attempts sent away and possessions lost to turnovers before Hungary called timeout with 0:13 to play. On its final possession, Hungary earned an exclusion with 0:04 left and sent the game-winner into the back of the net with just 0:01 on the clock to come away with the 13-12 win.
Team USA went 6/12 on power plays and 0/1 on penalties while Hungary went 3/9 on power plays and 2/2 on penalties.
Scoring – Stats
USA 12 (3, 3, 2, 4) R. Dodd 3, J. Carcarey 3, W. Schneider 2, R. Ohl 1, B. Brinkema 1, B. Liechty 1, L. Akerstrom 1
HUN 13 (2, 1, 6, 4) C. Lugosi 3, O. Leinweber 2, B. Balogh 2, M. Zeman 2, A. Toth 1, A. Peocz 1, V. Varga 1, Z. Porge 1
Saves – USA – C. Mills 9 – HUN – G. Szabo 8
6×5 – USA – 6/12 – HUN – 3/9
Penalties – USA – 0/1 – HUN – 2/2
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