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Jade Brown, 4x400m Relay Advances to NCAA Championships in Eugene

Story Links COLLEGE STATION, Texas – The Arizona Wildcats women’s track and field team sent five more athletes to the NCAA Outdoor Track & Field Championships Saturday.   Arizona sends 16 total athletes (7 women, 9 men) to the 2025 NCAA Outdoor Championships at Hayward Field in Eugene, Oregon, June […]

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COLLEGE STATION, Texas – The Arizona Wildcats women’s track and field team sent five more athletes to the NCAA Outdoor Track & Field Championships Saturday.
 
Arizona sends 16 total athletes (7 women, 9 men) to the 2025 NCAA Outdoor Championships at Hayward Field in Eugene, Oregon, June 11-14. Jade Brown and the 4x400m Relay of Ava Simms,  Keilee Hall, Camila Aguilar-Perez, and Antonia Sanchez Nunez punched tickets during the final day of the West First Round in College Station, Texas.

Brown punched her ticket to the finals after posting an 11.07 (wind-legal PR) in the 100m, marking the second-fastest time in the 100m in program history. Falling just short of her time (11.05), which is the all-conditions school record that she set in the 100m first round of the NCAA West First Round. 

The 4x400m Relay (Simms, Hall, Aguilar-Perez, Sanchez Nunez) tied the sixth-fastest time in program history, after finishing with a team best time of 3:32.56 to punch their ticket to the finals. That time bested their previous team best (3:33.88), which was set at the Big 12 Outdoor Championships.

 

NCAA Championships Qualifiers – Women

Jade Brown – 100 Meters (7th, 11.07 – 2nd in program history)

Simms, Hall, Aguilar-Perez, Sanchez Nunez – 4x400m Relay (8th, PB: 3:32.56)

Jenica Bosko – Long Jump (10th, 6.42m/21-3/4)

Tapenisa Havea – Shot Put (12th, 16.25m)

 

NCAA Championships Qualifiers – Men

Zach Landa – Shot Put (1st; 20.06m/65-9 ¾)

Jesse Avina – Javelin (5th; PB: 72.48/237-9)

Zach Extine – 110m Hurdles (5th; 13.23)

Reinaldo Rodrigues – Long Jump (10th; 7.71m/25-3 ½)

Youssef Koudssi – Discus (11th; 58.75m/192-9)

James Onanubosi, Brian Limage, Isaac Davis, Tyson Tippett – 4x100m Relay (11th; 39.33)

Other Results – Day 4

Simms, McKenna Watson, Dakota Minor, Brown: 13th (program record: 43.96) – 4x100m Relay

Antonia Sanchez Nunez: 14th – 400m Hurdles (57.41)

Jade Brown: 18th – 200m (23.38)

Mackenna Orie: 18th – Discus, 53.52m (175-7)

Taylen Wise: 18th – 100m Hurdles (personal best: 13.22)

Ava Simms: 20th – 400m (53.32

McKenna Watson: 21st – 100m (11.39)

McKenna Watson: 22nd – 200m (23.61)

Tapenisa Havea: 25th – Discus, 52.41m (171-1)

 

The Wildcats will be back in action from June 11 to 14 at the 2025 NCAA Outdoor Track & Field Championships at Hayward Field in Eugene, Oregon.

 

FOLLOW THE WILDCATS!

Fans can keep up with the latest in Arizona Cross Country and Track & Field by following us on Facebook (ArizonaTrack), X (@ArizonaTrack), Instagram (@arizonatrack), and YouTube (@arizonawildcatstrack).

 



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Cuts to the soul of track and field

A track and field team is an eclectic bunch of athletes. You have skinny distance runners, training on their own, sometimes far away from the track. You have sprinters. These guys are fast, and sometimes it seems as if they spend more time fiddling with their starting blocks than practicing. You have pole vaulters, perhaps […]

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A track and field team is an eclectic bunch of athletes. You have skinny distance runners, training on their own, sometimes far away from the track. You have sprinters. These guys are fast, and sometimes it seems as if they spend more time fiddling with their starting blocks than practicing.

You have pole vaulters, perhaps the quirkiest of the bunch — which might be what it takes to run down a path, plant a pole in a pit and try to hurl yourself over a bar 18 feet off the ground. 

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You have the jumpers, versatile athletes who, in addition to jumping, often run relays and even the 100-meter dash, the 200, the 400.

You have the hurdlers, who aren’t quite fast enough to run the 100 and 200 but are skilled enough to run 110 meters and jump over 10 barriers without stumbling. 

And you have the throwers. Big. Thick. Strong. Muscular. They’re usually uber competitive, but most are teddy bears once a competition is over.  

I can tell you all about these dynamics because I was a college distance runner at Division III SUNY Brockport. And when I saw the recent news that Washington State will focus its track and field program on distance running only, I was dismayed. Sure, the Cougars will keep their track team, but this means they will no longer have a field team. They’ll recruit athletes who can run cross country, along with the 800, 1,500, 3,000 steeplechase, 5,000 and 10,000 meters in the winter and spring. If you run the 200 or are a long jumper, scratch WSU off your list.

There are several other schools that have track but no field, and with the House settlement now approved, look for more to make the same decision as Washington State. The situation could get even worse, and entire track and field programs could be eliminated as schools adapt to the world of revenue sharing and calculate what they must sacrifice to field competitive football and basketball programs. 

Just look at Washington State, which seems to be using House to reduce costs in its athletic department. The Cougars, still reeling from being orphaned when the Pac- 12 collapsed, are desperate to find a home for football and basketball, and to do this with full fervor, their calculations may have told them that field should be dropped. 

And now that Washington State has broken the seal, how many more schools will follow?  Track and field is not a revenue sport; it costs universities money to keep it going. But every four years, at the Olympics, it’s the most watched competition, and team USA is expected to excel.  

We want gold medals in the 100 and 200. We have dominated the 110-meter hurdles for decades, Al Oerter won the discus in four straight Olympiads (1956, 1960, 1964, 1968), and shot putter Ryan Crouser is the three-time defending Olympic gold medalist and the consensus greatest at his sport in the world.

It will be tough to dominate, however, if there are fewer programs to train future Olympians. But if this happens and the US fails to shine, the pundits will still ask what’s wrong. Most won’t have any idea that schools like Washington State no longer support field. 

When I look back at my time as a track and field athlete, it’s not the competitions that stand out. It’s the bond shared with the sprinters, jumpers, hurdlers, throwers and vaulters. I remember chiding the sprinters, remember them saying they got tired watching distance runners do interval after interval on the 400-meter oval. Most of all, I remember the camaraderie that existed between an unusual cast of characters.

The bus rides were even more fun: 5 a.m. wake-ups on Saturday mornings to catch the bus to Alfred, to Cortland, to Geneseo, to Plattsburgh. The rides were quiet, with most of us sleeping or focusing on the upcoming events. We would stop, grab a quick bite and continue with a little more noise. 

Rides home were much livelier — loud, fun and sometimes off-color. The sprinters and throwers usually sat in the back and were quite guarded about allowing visitors. I learned a lot about people and life on those bus rides, and that’s something that will stick with me much longer than how I did in the 5,000 meters at the Geneseo Invitational. 

Sadly, that will no longer happen at Washington State. It’s unfortunate on so many levels. The focus in college is to get a degree, but character development and maturation are vitally important. 

Sports like track and field are different from football and basketball. When you go to an invitational, your event can last anywhere from 11 seconds to 33 minutes, but you’re there for eight to 10 hours. When not competing, you’re talking with your teammates as well as with athletes from other schools. It’s a time to make friends, network and so much more. 

That’s being taken away because football (and basketball) teams need more money. I think what Washington State is doing is shortsighted, but I understand. That doesn’t make it any easier to swallow.

Track and field isn’t the same without field.  

Nicknamed “The Almanac,” by a fellow freshman at SUNY Brockport for his penchant for sports history, John Furgele follows every sport there is. When not following sports, he works in nursing and teaching to pay the bills and stays busy with his son and two daughters. 



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Princeton University

Full Schedule PRINCETON, N.J. – Highlighted by seven home matches and three tournaments, the Princeton University women’s volleyball team announced its 2025 schedule Tuesday afternoon. Along with three tournaments (James Madison, Towson/Coppin State/Penn State), the Tigers host seven matches inside Dillon Gymnasium. 2025 opens for Princeton at the JMU Tournament in Harrisonburg, Virginia, from Sept. […]

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Full Schedule

PRINCETON, N.J. – Highlighted by seven home matches and three tournaments, the Princeton University women’s volleyball team announced its 2025 schedule Tuesday afternoon.

Along with three tournaments (James Madison, Towson/Coppin State/Penn State), the Tigers host seven matches inside Dillon Gymnasium.

2025 opens for Princeton at the JMU Tournament in Harrisonburg, Virginia, from Sept. 5-6, where the Tigers will face Lehigh, Bellarmine and the Dukes.

Following the JMU Tournament, Princeton will play at the Towson/Coppin State Tournament from Sept. 12-13. Opponents include both Towson and Coppin State along with Iona.

Non-conference play wraps up in State College, Pennsylvania, from Sept. 19-20. The Tigers will take on defending National Champion Penn State, who ended 2024 with a 35-2 record, a 19-2 Big Ten record and its eighth national title in program history, along with Central Michigan.

Ivy League play opens inside Dillon Gymnasium on Oct. 3 and Oct. 4 against two opponents who joined Princeton at the 2024 conference tournament, Brown and Yale. The Tigers then travel north to face Dartmouth in Hanover, New Hampshire, on Oct. 10 then Harvard in Cambridge, Massachusetts, on Oct. 11.

Princeton returns to Dillon Gymnasium to host Cornell on Oct. 17, Columbia on Oct. 18 and the University of Pennsylvania on Oct. 24.

Four consecutive road matches follow; Yale (Oct. 31), Brown (Nov. 1), Columbia (Nov. 7) and Cornell (Nov. 8). Regular season play ends at home against Harvard on Nov. 14 and Dartmouth on Nov. 15.

Postseason play begins with the Ivy League Tournament, hosted by the No. 1 seed, from Nov. 21-23. The NCAA Tournament starts with the first and second rounds from Dec. 5-7, then regionals from Dec. 12-15 and the National Championship from Dec. 19-22.

The Tigers, who won the 2024 regular season championship and earned the No. 1 seed at the Ivy League Tournament, will aim to return to the NCAA Tournament in 2025. Led by three-time Ivy League Coach of the Year Sabrina King, the Tigers return three-time All-Ivy selection Lucia Scalamandre, two-time All-Ivy selection Sydney Draper and 2024 All-Ivy selection Jackie Onyechi. The trio will be joined by seniors Valerie Nutakor and Ella Bunde, juniors Sydney Bold, Erin McNair and Ava Harrington, sophomores Sylvia Bunde, Ashtyn Sims, Ashley Duckworth and Nicki Gaito along with the incoming Class of 2029.



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Big East, ESPN team up again on a 6-year digital media rights deal Big East, ESPN team up again on a 6-year digital media rights deal

The Big East Conference has signed a new, six-year digital media rights agreement with ESPN, conference officials announced Tuesday. The Big East Conference has signed a new, six-year digital media rights agreement with ESPN, conference officials announced Tuesday. Financial terms of the deal were not disclosed. Under the agreement, ESPN will add hundreds of live […]

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The Big East Conference has signed a new, six-year digital media rights agreement with ESPN, conference officials announced Tuesday.






The Big East Conference has signed a new, six-year digital media rights agreement with ESPN, conference officials announced Tuesday.

Financial terms of the deal were not disclosed.

Under the agreement, ESPN will add hundreds of live Big East events, including “a minimum of 75 women’s basketball and 200 Olympic sports events,” which will stream on ESPN+ annually beginning in the 2025-26 academic season.

The extra events will also include a minimum of 25 non-conference games annually for Big East men’s basketball.

The deal comes as ESPN plans to offer its flagship programming on an as-yet unnamed direct-to-consumer digital streaming platform, which it expects to launch this fall. The new platform will be separate from but include its current ESPN+ digital offering, which shows some sports and non-live sports content.

The deal reunites the Big East Conference with ESPN, which held the broadcast rights to the conference from 1980 to 2013. It fills a gap for the sports and entertainment network that was left after it lost the media rights to the Big Ten conference to CBS, Fox and NBC in 2022.

“This exciting partnership with ESPN reinforces our commitment to placing Big East teams front and center on the leading digital sports platform,” Big East Commissioner Val Ackerman said. “Streaming on ESPN+ gives all 22 of our sports — especially women’s basketball and Olympic sports — the visibility they’ve earned and the access our fans expect.”

“We’re pleased to welcome the Big East back to ESPN,” said Nick Dawson, ESPN senior vice president, programming and acquisitions. “This agreement returns one of the country’s premier conferences and its tradition of excellence to ESPN platforms.”

The deal with ESPN comes just over a year after the 11-team conference announced a new six-year TV deal that begins with the 2025-26 season. That deal was estimated at $480 million, with annual rights payments to each school in the range of $75 million to $80 million per year.

That new contract includes coverage on Fox Sports (Fox, FS1, FS2), as well as on NBC Sports (NBC, Peacock) and TNT Sports (TNT, TBS, truTV and Max).



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University of Richmond

RICHMOND, Va. – Six University of Richmond student-athletes were named to the 2024-25 Virginia Sports Information Directors (VaSID) Academic All-State Team. To qualify, student-athletes must be sophomores in academic standing with a minimum 3.25 cumulative grade point average. The VaSID All-State Team recognized 216 student-athletes representing 36 institutions across the Commonwealth of Virginia.   Richmond’s honorees […]

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RICHMOND, Va. – Six University of Richmond student-athletes were named to the 2024-25 Virginia Sports Information Directors (VaSID) Academic All-State Team. To qualify, student-athletes must be sophomores in academic standing with a minimum 3.25 cumulative grade point average. The VaSID All-State Team recognized 216 student-athletes representing 36 institutions across the Commonwealth of Virginia.
 
Richmond’s honorees include women’s basketball’s Addie Budnik, swimming and diving’s Katie Chignell, women’s cross country and track and field’s Laurel Kurtz and Morgan Lyons, baseball’s Brady O’Brien and men’s lacrosse’s Joe Sheridan.
 
Budnik earned her fourth straight VaSID Academic All-State honor. A master of business administration major, she led the Spiders to a historic season. Budnik helped Richmond win back-to-back Atlantic 10 regular season titles and earned the program’s first-ever NCAA Tournament win, a dominant 74-49 victory over Georgia Tech in Los Angeles. She was named to the A-10 All-Conference Second Team and All-Academic Team, the College Sports Communicators Academic All-District Team and was honored as the VaSID Defensive Player of the Year. Budnik closed her career ranked third on Richmond’s all-time scoring list with 1,897 points.
 
Chignell earned her first All-State laurel after helping the Spiders to a runner-up finish at the Atlantic 10 Championships. The health studies major won gold in the 400 free relay, setting a new program record with a time of 3:19.32, and placed fifth in the 800 free relay. She also contributed with several top-15 finishes in the finals.
 

Kurtz, a leadership and rhetoric & communication major, earned A-10 All-Conference First Team honors for the second straight year in cross country. During the indoor season, she helped Richmond finish second at the Atlantic 10 Championships with a seventh-place finish in the 5,000 meters. At the outdoor A-10 Championships, she placed seventh in the 10,000 meters. She capped her career with a gold medal in the 10K at the Outdoor IC4A/ECAC Championships.
 
Lyons, a health studies major, helped the Spiders to a runner-up finish at the Indoor A-10 Championships, contributing to medals in two relay races. She helped Richmond win silver in the distance medley relay with a time of 11:38.63 and gold in the 4×800 relay with a time of 9:03.23. At the Outdoor A-10 Championships, she again earned gold in the 4×800 with a time of 8:47.46. In her final collegiate race, she helped Richmond win gold in the 4×800 at the Outdoor IC4A/ECAC Championships.
 
O’Brien, a data analytics major, finished the regular season ranked ninth in the nation with a .777 slugging percentage and 11th in both home runs (20) and RBIs (72). A 2025 Dick Howser Trophy semifinalist, he ended the season with a 22-game on-base streak, 25 multi-hit games and 19 multi-RBI games. He was named to the A-10 All-Academic Team in May and also earned CSC Academic All-District and ABCA/Rawlings NCAA Division I All-Atlantic Region Second Team honors.
 
Sheridan, a biochemistry and molecular biology major, helped lead the Spiders to a regular season and Atlantic 10 Championship title. He also contributed to Richmond’s first NCAA Tournament win, a 13-10 victory over North Carolina in Chapel Hill. Sheridan earned USILA All-America Honorable Mention, Inside Lacrosse All-America Honorable Mention, First Team All-Atlantic 10, A-10 All-Academic honors and was named the A-10 Tournament Most Outstanding Performer. 
 



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Meet the Vandal: Koen Makaula

Story Links MOSCOW, Idaho – Summer is in session, the Vandals are coming back to town, and the schedule has been released. Live volleyball is closer than we think.  As summer training rolls on, Vandal fans get the opportunity to meet the newcomers taking the court for Idaho Volleyball in time for […]

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MOSCOW, Idaho – Summer is in session, the Vandals are coming back to town, and the schedule has been released. Live volleyball is closer than we think. 

As summer training rolls on, Vandal fans get the opportunity to meet the newcomers taking the court for Idaho Volleyball in time for the 2025 season. Since the end of last year, ten newcomers have arrived in Moscow from the transfer portal and high school levels. Three of which enrolled in time for the spring, which leaves seven to make their Idaho introduction. 

First up among the new members of the Vandal family is Koen Makaula.

MEET KOEN

A rising junior middle blocker originally from Kailua, Hawaii, Koen becomes the second Vandal on the 2025 roster to hail from the Aloha State. Finishing her prep career at Punahou School in 2023, she committed to the University of Nevada.

As a freshman with the wolfpack, Koen played in 32 total sets, earning an ATK% of .417 alongside six kills and four blocks against Boise State that November, all season highs. She finished her first college season with totals of 25 kills, 22 total blocks, 11 digs, and 36.5 total points, according to Nevada Athletics.

In her sophomore campaign, Makaula took it up a notch from ’23, appearing in 48 sets and helping the Wolfpack on offense and defense. She recorded a season-high three total blocks vs. Oregon State early in the year, followed by a career-high eight kills and nine points the next day vs. Cal State Bakersfield. She would end her second season in Reno with 31 kills, 19 blocks, and eight digs in 48 sets played.

Now a rising junior entering her first season in black and gold, Koen provides valuable Mountain West experience and looks to bring success to Moscow, a task she is excited for.

“I feel very grateful and excited to rep the Vandals, and I am so ready to be a part of this culture and make the most of this opportunity that [head] coach Romana [Redondo Kriskova] has blessed me with,” said Makaula. 

A culture is building among Vandal Volleyball, and the newest members of the family are taking notice. 

“I was drawn to Idaho because of the sense of belonging I felt after having many conversationgs with the coaches and girls on the team. Coach Ro got to know me on a personal level first, which I really appreciated.”

FOLLOW THE VANDALS

To stay up to date with Vandal Volleyball, follow the team on Instagram (vandalvolleyball), X (IdahoVolleyball) and visit govandals.com



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36 Wolves Receive GNAC FAR Scholar-Athlete Award

Story Links 2024 25 GNAC-Wide FAR Award Recipients PORTLAND, Ore. — Western Oregon Athletics had a total 36 student-athletes receive the GNAC Faculty Athletic Representative (FAR) Scholar-Athlete Award Tuesday. The GNAC FAR Scholar-Athlete Award – presented by Barnes & Noble College – recognizes the incredible dedication […]

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PORTLAND, Ore. — Western Oregon Athletics had a total 36 student-athletes receive the GNAC Faculty Athletic Representative (FAR) Scholar-Athlete Award Tuesday.

The GNAC FAR Scholar-Athlete Award – presented by Barnes & Noble College – recognizes the incredible dedication to academics student-athletes hold. It honors all student-athletes of NCAA-affiliated teams – including Football, a Lone Star Conference team – who have achieved a cumulative grade point average at or above 3.85.

For the 2024-2025 Academic Year, Western Oregon had a total 36 student-athletes receive the award (26 female, 10 male), with 11 being repeat recipients. Women’s Track & Field teammates Amity Deters and Lindie Larson led the repeat Wolves – each receiving their fifth honor. Six Scholar-Wolves held a stunning 4.0 – the highest GPA possible – and are highlighted below in bold.

You can read the GNAC’s press release and view the complete list of conference award recipients with the links below.

GNAC-Wide list of award recipients | GNAC Release

 

 































WOU Female FAR Scholar-Athlete Recipients
Name Sport Academic Major Year GPA Hometown
Ally Beavers Soccer Business Sr. 3.85 Puyallup, Wash.
Taylor Brasfield Track & Field Business Fr. 3.91 Corvallis, Ore.
* Finley Buman Volleyball Environmental Science Jr. 4.00 Phoenix, Ariz.
*** Katie Chapman Track & Field Exercise Science Sr. 3.99 Lowell, Ore.
Jordyn Conrad Soccer Mathematics Sr. 3.94 Vancouver, Wash.
**** Amity Deters Track & Field Chemistry Sr. 3.99 Amity, Ore.
** Olivia Flack Track & Field Education Sr. 3.99 La Pine, Ore.
Sidney Friesen Volleyball Business Fr. 4.00 Salem, Ore.
Mya Fry Track & Field Interdisciplinary Studies Jr. 3.99 Salem, Ore.
Charlotte Gardner XC/Track & Field Biology Fr. 4.00 Newport, Ore.
* Kilinoelehua Helm Volleyball Exercise Science Jr. 3.93 Keaau, Hawaii
Maya Helmen Track & Field Business So. 3.91 Clatskanie, Ore.
Emma Higashi Soccer Public Health Jr. 3.97 Mililani, Hawaii
Kate Klobas Volleyball Business Fr. 4.00 Tillamook, Ore.
**** Lindie Larson Track & Field Social Science Sr. 3.94 Redding, Calif.
Alecia Lemeza Track & Field Exercise Science So. 3.99 Salem, Ore.
Malena Mathis Volleyball Business Fr. 3.95 Salem, Ore.
Amelia Merritt XC/Track & Field Business So. 3.93 Camas, Wash.
Ali Millspaugh Volleyball Public Health Fr. 3.96 Vancouver, Wash.
* Jessica Morgan Softball Business Sr. 3.98 Lewistown, Mont.
Gracie Nelson Softball Exercise Science Fr. 4.00 Kuna, Idaho
Kate Ronning Softball English Studies Sr. 3.98 Keizer, Ore.
Guinevere Rydberg Track & Field Psychology Sr. 3.93 Yakima, Wash.
Ciona Wells Basketball Public Health Fr. 3.96 Tacoma, Wash.
Lainie Wheeler Track & Field Business Fr. 3.91 Grants Pass, Ore.
Kameron Wimsatt Soccer Exploratory Studies Fr. 3.89 Redmond, Wash.

 















WOU Male FAR Scholar-Athlete Recipients
Name Sport Academic Major Year GPA Hometown
Kyle Babcock Football Criminal Justice Sr. 3.88 Springfield, Ore.
* Ethan Bothwell XC/Track & Field Business So. 3.91 Hillsboro, Ore.
Carson Evenson Football Business Fr. 3.86 Salem, Ore.
David Garcia Soccer Computer Science Fr. 3.85 Salem, Ore.
Michael Gibson III Football Business Jr. 3.89 Canby, Ore.
Dominic Hankins Football Exercise Science Sr. 3.91 Klamath Falls, Ore.
* Elwood Hosking XC/Track & Field Public Health Sr. 4.00 Phoenix, Ore.
* Nathan Hurtado Soccer Exercise Science Sr. 3.99 Tucson, Ariz.
** James Lackey Track & Field Exercise Science Sr. 3.97 Newport, Ore.
Braydon Olson Basketball Business Fr. 3.90 Chehalis, Wash.

***** – Six-Time FAR Award Recipient | **** – Five-Time FAR Award Recipient | *** – Four-Time FAR Award Recipient | ** – Three-Time FAR Award Recipient | * – Two-Time FAR Award Recipient

What is a FAR?

A faculty athletic representative (FAR) is a member of the faculty at an NCAA member institution who has been designated to serve as a liaison between the institution’s faculty and the athletic department. The FAR serves as a representative of the institution in conference and NCAA affairs. The role of the FAR is “to ensure that the academic institution establishes and maintains the appropriate balance between academics and athletics.” Western Oregon’s FAR is Amy Hammermeister Jordan.


 



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