Sports
Baseball Pro Niners Update


CHARLOTTE – The 2025 season of professional baseball is in full swing and the 9 Across The Chest is represented better than ever, with 17 Diamond Niners playing in minor league organizations and another seven playing one form of professional baseball or another.
Here’s how our record number of #ProNiners have been doing through the first two months of the baseball season:
Jake Cunningham • OF
Baltimore Orioles • High-A • Aberdeen IronBirds
Cunningham was called up to High-A last year and has spent all of 2025 at the same level with the Aberdeen IronBirds again. He has 23 hits this year with 15 RBIs and a pair of home runs. In May, Cunningham totaled 11 hits for 12 bases while driving in six runs and stealing as many bases. He had a hot stretch in the first half of the month, picking up two separate four-game hitting streaks while having a hit in nine out of a stretch of 11 games.
Ryan Degges • RHP
Philadelphia Phillies • Single-A • Clearwater Threshers
Degges was drafted by the Phillies last year and has gotten his professional career off to a blazing-hot start in Single-A with the Clearwater Threshers. Pitching as a reliever for the 49ers and in the first month of the season, Degges transitioned to a starter in May and posted a 0.78 ERA with 27 strikeouts in 23.0 innings in five starts for the Threshers. He only allowed two runs from a pair of solo home runs while only issuing 13 hits and 15 walks for a 1.22 WHIP in May. Overall, Degges has a 0.81 ERA with 38 strikeouts in 33.1 innings across nine outings for the lowest ERA in the Florida State League among pitchers with at least 30 innings pitched through the end of May.
Donye Evans • RHP
Detroit Tigers • Single-A • Lakeland Flying Tigers • Injured List
Evans landed on the injured list in June last year and was transferred to the full-season injured list ahead of the 2025 campaign. He posted a 2.16 ERA in 25.0 innings across 21 outings for the Tigers organization last year before the injury.
Cam Fisher • OF
Houston Astros • Single-A • Fayetteville Woodpeckers
Fisher began the year in Asheville in High-A but spent most of May in Single-A with the Fayetteville Woodpeckers. He totaled 11 hits last month while driving in 10. Seven of his 11 knocks went for extra bases for a .455 slugging percentage in May, hitting three doubles, three home runs, and a triple. Overall this year, Fisher has 21 hits with four home runs and five doubles.
Nate Furman • INF
San Francisco Giants • Double-A • Richmond Flying Squirrels • Injured List
Furman landed on the injured list in June last year, shortly after being promoted from High-A to Double-A in the Cleveland Guardians organization. He was then traded to the San Francisco Giants in August and has remained on the injured list, starting the year on the 60-day IL.
Spencer Giesting • LHP
Arizona Diamondbacks • Triple-A • Reno Aces
Giesting was called up to Double-A last year and played the first two months of 2025 at that level before being called up to Triple-A with the Reno Aces at the beginning of June. Selected to participate in this year’s Spring Breakout Games during Spring Training, Giesting led the Sod Poodles with 59 strikeouts and a 3.67 ERA in 10 starts for the second-most strikeouts and the eighth-best ERA in all of the Texas League. In his five starts in May, Giesting posted a 3.41 ERA with 29 punchouts in 29.0 innings. He gave up 11 earned runs on 28 hits with only nine walks for a 1.28 WHIP last month. Giesting is currently ranked as the No. 18 prospect in the Diamondbacks organization.
Kaden Hopson • C
Los Angeles Angels • Rookie Complex League • ACL Angels
Hopson made his professional debut on May 8 with the ACL Angels in the Arizona Complex League after signing as a free agent with the Halos last year. He’s seen limited action, with only five games played, but has four hits in nine at bats for a .444 batting average. Two of those hits came in his last appearance on May 24 with a single and a double, to go along with a pair of walks, while driving in four runs during that game.
Wyatt Hudepohl • RHP
New York Mets • Single-A • St. Lucie Mets • Injured List
Hudepohl was placed on the Injured List for the St. Lucie Mets late in May last year and spent the rest of the season there. He has begun his 2025 the same way, beginning this year on the 60-day IL. Hudepohl only pitched in eight games last year, posting a 4.03 ERA with 31 strikeouts in 29.0 innings with one win.
Josh Maciejewski • LHP
Milwaukee Brewers • Triple-A • Nashville Sounds
Maciejewski was drafted by the New York Yankees and made his MLB debut for the Bronx Bombers last year before electing free agency in the offseason. He signed with the Milwaukee Brewers and began the year in Double-A with the Biloxi Shuckers before getting promoted to Triple-A with the Nashville Sounds at the end of May. He’s made two appearances for the Sounds so far and has one win, going 3.0 innings with a strikeout to get the win in his 2025 Triple-A debut, coming against his former team, the Scranton/Wilkes-Barre RailRiders. Maciejewski had a 4.73 ERA with 12 strikeouts in 13.1 innings in May and has a 4.33 ERA with 28 punchouts in 27.0 frames overall this year.
David McCabe • INF
Atlanta Braves • Double-A • Columbus Clingstones
McCabe spent all of 2024 in Double-A and has remained in that level throughout the first two months of 2025, playing for the newly renamed Columbus Clingstones. McCabe holds the distinction of hitting the first home run in Clingstone history when he left the yard on opening day. Also selected to participate in the Spring Breakout Games during this year’s Spring Training, McCabe leads the Clingstones with 10 doubles and is second on the team with a .245 batting average on the year while sitting tied for the fifth-most doubles in all of the Southern League. He collected 16 hits in May while driving in 11 and taking 13 walks, hitting four doubles, one triple, and a home run. McCabe is currently ranked as the No. 17 prospect in the Atlanta Braves organization.
Bryce McGowan • RHP
Colorado Rockies • Double-A • Hartford Yard Goats
McGowan spent all of 2024 in Double-A with the Hartford Yard Goats and is back in Hartford again in 2025. He made nine appearances in May for the Yard Goats, posting a 3.18 ERA with one win and one save in 11.1 innings of work. He had six scoreless outings and totaled seven strikeouts in the month, bringing his season total up to 13 Ks on the year. McGowan is currently having his best professional season so far, holding a 2.55 ERA over 17.2 innings across 15 outings to start 2025, improving his ERA by over 1.50 from last season’s total.
Aaron McKeithan • C
Pittsburgh Pirates • Double-A • Altoona Curve
McKeithan was drafted by the St. Louis Cardinals and spent the first four years of his professional career in the Cardinals organization before being selected by the Pirates this offseason in the minor-league portion of the Rule 5 Draft. He’s spent the entire year in Double-A with the Altoona Curve and has five hits in 15 games played this season. He was on the Development List for the first two weeks of May before making his return to the Curve in the second half of the month, where he scored a pair of runs in the final two games of the month in a series against Portland.
Cole Reynolds • LHP
Chicago Cubs • Single-A • Myrtle Beach Pelicans
Reynolds signed with the Chicago Cubs in the offseason and made his professional debut this year in Single-A with the Myrtle Beach Pelicans. He’s made 12 appearances for the Pelicans with one start this year, holding a 5.67 ERA with 36 strikeouts in 27.0 innings of work. Just in May, Reynolds struck out 17 batters in 13.0 innings across five outings with a 4.15 ERA. May also featured his first professional start, going 3.0 innings while matching his career-high with five strikeouts on May 25 at the Hickory Crawdads. Reynolds and the Pelicans are in the 704 this week as they take on the Kannapolis Cannon Ballers on Tuesday through Sunday (June 3-8) before returning to K-Town again next month for a series July 8-13.
Tony Rossi • RHP
New York Yankees • High-A • Hudson Valley Renegades
Rossi signed with the New York Yankees as a free agent last summer and made his professional debut in Single-A this year before being called up to the High-A Hudson Valley Renegades after just five outings with the Tampa Tarpons. Rossi has yet to allow a run this year, throwing 17.2 shutout innings across the five leagues with 24 strikeouts and only five hits and four walks allowed for a 0.51 WHIP. Rossi pitched in seven games in May, throwing a full inning each time while allowing three hits and recording a pair of games without allowing a baserunner – two of six times he’s done that throughout the season.
Hale Sims • RHP
Chicago White Sox • Single-A • Kannapolis Cannon Ballers
Sims is back in the 704 with the Single-A Kannapolis Cannon Ballers after spending most of last season in K-Town. He had a strong month of May, striking out 11 batters in 13.1 innings with a 3.38 ERA. He issued one walk last month to go with 12 hits for a 0.98 WHIP in May. That was his first and only walk issued this season after starting the year with eight consecutive outings without allowing a base on balls. Overall, Sims has a 4.91 ERA with 18 punchouts in 18.1 innings of work this year. The Ballers have two series at home this month, first hosting Cole Reynolds and the Myrtle Beach Pelicans this week from June 3-8 before returning to Atrium Health Ballpark in two weeks to host Charleston from June 17-22.
Paxton Thompson • RHP
Philadelphia Phillies • High-A • Jersey Shore BlueClaws
Thompson has begun 2025 in High-A with the Jersey Shore BlueClaws after being called up to the level in the middle of 2024. He has a 5.51 ERA in 14 appearances this year, striking out 17 batters in 16.1 innings with only six walks issued. Thompson pitched in seven games in May, only allowing three runs in 9.0 innings last month for a 3.00 ERA with eight strikeouts. He also picked up his second save of the season last month, finishing out the final innings against the Brooklyn Cyclones on May 25 to go 2-2 on save opportunities this year.
AJ Wilson • LHP
Philadelphia Phillies • Single-A • Clearwater Threshers
Wilson finished out the 2024 season in Single-A with the Clearwater Threshers after being drafted by the Philadelphia Phillies last summer and has begun the 2025 campaign in the same spot. He’s made 12 appearances this year and has a 3.57 ERA with 24 strikeouts in 17.2 innings. He’s only allowed nine walks and eight hits this year for a 0.96 WHIP and .138 opponent batting average. Wilson made seven appearances last month and collected his first win of the season, striking out 13 batters in 8.2 innings in May.
NON-AFFILIATED PROFESSIONAL PLAYERS
Trevor Anibal • RHP
Brockton Rox • Frontier League (Independent)
Anibal signed with the New England Knockouts in the Frontier League last year and stayed in the league this year with the Brockton Rox. He made seven appearances in the first month of the Frontier League’s season, going all of May without allowing an earned run. He fanned 12 batters in 8.0 innings of work last month and only gave up two walks and six hits with five unearned runs for a 0.00 ERA and a 1.00 WHIP in the first month of the season.
Jackson Boss • RHP
Gastonia Ghost Peppers • Atlantic League (Independent)
Boss was taken by the nearby Gastonia Ghost Peppers with the 10th overall pick in the Atlantic League draft this spring for his first professional action. Playing for the first time since the 2022 season with the Niners, Boss made his professional debut on April 27 against the York Revolution. Boss has made four appearances this year, with three strikeouts in 2.2 innings.
Jack Dragum • INF
Lincoln Saltdogs • American Association (Independent)
Dragum is back in the American Association for his second season with the Lincoln Saltdogs. A 2024 All-Star Starter for the Saltdogs, Dragum has played in 19 of the team’s 21 games this year. He’s seventh on the team with a .226 batting average with 14 hits, two of which are doubles, and five runs driven in while taking 12 walks to 11 strikeouts. He had four multi-hit games in May, including picking up a pair of knocks in three of his first five games this year.
Aubrey Gillentine • RHP
Mississippi Mud Monsters • Frontier League (Independent)
Gillentine was announced as a signee with the Mississippi Mud Monsters this spring, a new team in the Frontier League. He has not seen any game action this year.
Quinton Martinez • LHP
Hagerstown Flying Boxcars • Atlantic League (Independent)
Martinez spent three years in the Los Angeles Angels organization before being released last summer. He was then taken with the first overall pick in this spring’s Atlantic League draft by the Hagerstown Flying Boxcars. Martinez has pitched in 12 games for the Boxcars this season and has 16 strikeouts in 13.2 innings of work. After a bit of a shaky start to the season he rebounded nicely at the end of May, tossing 8.1 consecutive innings without a run across six appearances, lowering his ERA by 11.13 during that stretch.
Rafi Vazquez • RHP
Southern Maryland Blue Crabs • Atlantic League (Independent)
Vazquez is in the Atlantic League this year with the Southern Maryland Blue Crabs after spending the last two seasons splitting time between the Frontier and Pioneer Leagues. Vazquez is tied for the third-most appearances on the Blue Crabs this year and has 13 strikeouts in 13.2 innings of work with a 4.61 ERA. He logged two wins in May, throwing four innings of shutout baseball with only one hit allowed in those two outings.
Reece Hampton • OF
Party Animals • Banana Ball (Savannah Bananas)
Hampton was taken by the Detroit Tigers in the 2018 season and spent four years in the minors before joining Gastonia in 2021. He then signed on with the Savannah Bananas to play Banana Ball, a new type of baseball game invented by the former Collegiate Wood-Bat team with a focus on zany shenanigans and family fun. The Bananas now play Banana Ball full-time in a Harlem Globetrotters-esque setup, traveling the country playing against their rivals, the Party Animals – of which Hampton is a member, and the Firefighters and Texas Tailgaters. The Bananas are in Charlotte this weekend to take on Hampton and the Party Animals at Bank of America Stadium in a pair of sold-out contests on June 6 and 7.
Sports
No. 2 seed ASU volleyball advances to Sweet 16 in NCAA Tournament
Updated Dec. 5, 2025, 11:15 p.m. MT
One step closer.
No. 2 seed Arizona State volleyball is back in the Sweet 16 for the second time in three seasons.
The Sun Devils defeated Utah State in four sets (25-15, 25-18, 22-25, 25-15) in the second round of the NCAA Tournament at Desert Financial Arena on Friday, Dec. 5.
“It was really special for me,” senior outside hitter Bailey Miller said. “I was one of the only ones last year when we got upset (in the second round), so I think going into it, all the girls just wanted to recognize all the girls who didn’t get to go to the Sweet 16 last year and took it seriously. It was really special.”
ASU’s return to the Sweet 16 offers a sweeter follow-up to last season’s second-round exit after the Sun Devils earned a hosting bid for the first two rounds. As painful as it was for coach JJ Van Niel, he chose not to let last year cloud the current success.
“I don’t reflect back,” Van Niel said. “That’s negative, but it’s just moving forward. Every year is a new shot, but last year was very painful. Mostly, because I didn’t think we played our best volleyball.”
With few players remaining from last year, Van Niel wasn’t sure how ASU’s season would go and if they’d repeat as Big 12 champions and NCAA Tournament hosts. But his team has done both and added more with a Sweet 16 berth.
“I really had no idea this year what we were going to look like,” Van Niel said. “It’s 100% a new lineup and I’m really proud of these kids because they’ve fought and they’ve scrapped. They’ve all gotten better through the year and they’ve earned this Sweet 16, it’s a really special group.”
What was key for ASU was their defense against a scrappy team that rarely went down in one swing. The Sun Devils were up to the task as they benefited from USU’s 21 attack errors.
USU’s strong offense forced ASU’s middle blockers to front the middle, exploiting their right-side players. While the middle blockers didn’t get as many kills as they did in the first round, it opened the floor for Miller, Noemie Glover and Tatum Parrott.
Miller led ASU with 18 kills on .471 hitting and two errors, a stark improvement from her first-round performance. Glover didn’t commit any errors and had 17 kills on .531 hitting. Parrott added 13 kills.
ASU was serving well again as the Aggies sided out 56.3% of the time, including less than half the time in the first set. Miller’s three aces helped ASU finish with a 7-5 advantage in service aces.
“They’re a great offensive team and their middle (blockers) were very active,” Miller said. “We haven’t really seen a lot of that, so it definitely took some adjusting. But in the end, that’s our bread and butter, being able to adjust and be ready.”
The Aggies got their first lead since early in the first set when they started with an 8-5 edge over ASU in the third set. Instead of putting them away like in the first two sets, ASU had trouble against USU’s attack.
As the third set neared the end, neither side scored twice for six consecutive points until USU got a 24-22 lead over ASU. The Aggies then scored off a bad set from ASU’s Sydney Henry.
The Aggies were strong to start the fourth set, but ASU’s 6-0 run midway through the set helped the Sun Devils gain the separation needed and eliminate them.
The Sun Devils will travel to Lexington, Kentucky, and play No. 3 Creighton in the regional hosted by No. 1 seed Kentucky, either Dec. 12 or 13.
ASU capped off an impressive season at home where it went 16-0, and only dropped eight sets in those games.
Reach the reporter at jenna.ortiz@arizonarepublic.com, as well as @jennarortiz on X.
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Sports
Babcock sets record as Pitt women’s volleyball team rolls in 1st round of NCAA Tournament
Olivia Babcock didn’t realize her performance during the first round of the NCAA women’s volleyball tournament gave her the Pitt record for most kills in a season. Babcock knew she met the previous record holder, Wendy Hatlestad, during alumni weekend.
Babcock recorded 13 kills during the Panthers’ 25-10, 25-17, 25-13 win Friday night at Petersen Events Center in front of a crowd of 4,240. Babcock now has 558 kills, going past the single-season record of 555 Hatlestad set in 2003.
“I was talking to her two weeks ago,” Babcock said. “That’s crazy I just met her. But I think it says a lot about how much my team trusts me to take those big rips, and it gives me the opportunity to score and get as many kills as I do.”
Everyone had a good night hitting for the top-seeded Panthers, who advanced to the second round of the NCAA Tournament for the 10th straight season.
The Panthers committed only four attack errors against UMBC (13-12) and finished with a hitting percentage of .551.
“It’s really good to start out and to remind ourselves to maintain high standards,” Babcock said. “Obviously, all of these teams have made it into the tournament because they’re an amazing team, and everyone’s going to bring their best volleyball. I think we just need to make sure that we’re playing our best, too, because, especially in these matches, we don’t wanna slip up and give away a set or a match.”
Pitt (27-4) hasn’t dropped a set in the first round since it beat VCU, 3-1, in 2017 at Penn State.
The Retrievers qualified for the tournament after winning the America East Conference for the fifth time in the past six seasons. Pitt setter Brooke Mosher, who finished with 34 assists, said the Panthers got themselves in system thanks to their good passing.
Blaire Bayless was second for the Panthers with nine kills, and Abby Emch contributed eight.
“That made it really easy for me to spread the ball around and get the middles involved,” Mosher said. “Then, I trusted my teammates to be able to put the ball away.”
Pitt lost the first point of the match after UMBC delivered on a kill by Jalynn Brown. The Panthers responded by scoring the next three points, capping the surge with an ace by Izzy Masten.
UMBC struggled to find holes in Pitt’s defense. The Retrievers hit .129 and were led by seven kills from Hannah Dobbs.
UMBC coach Kasey Crider was happy with how they played.
“We don’t have an Olivia Babcock slayer, so, bummer,” Crider said. “I’ve been to this tournament a few times as a head coach and assistant coach, and I’ve never walked away from the tournament thinking we were the best at the end until today. It still hurts, but there were no regrets.”
Pitt will take on Michigan in the second round Saturday. The Wolverines advanced by beating Xavier. The Panthers are 3-6 all-time against the Wolverines.
Pitt’s only meeting with Michigan in the NCAA Tournament came in 2018, when the Wolverines upset Pitt in five sets at Petersen Events Center.
Mosher, who previously played in the NCAA Tournament with Illinois, said she doesn’t feel any extra pressure playing as the No. 1 seed.
“I think just being in the tournament has its own weight in itself,” Mosher said. “Every game your season is on the line, which is the same no matter who you are.”
Josh Rizzo is a freelance writer.
Sports
Kansas State volleyball vs Nebraska in NCAA Tournament channel, time
Dec. 6, 2025, 6:03 a.m. CT
Kansas State volleyball survived and advanced, and now it will take on the No. 1 team in the country in the second round of the NCAA Tournament.
The Wildcats and Nebraska Cornhuskers will face off at 7 p.m. in the Bob Devaney Sports Center in Lincoln, Nebraska, on Saturday, Dec. 6.
Watch K-State volleyball in NCAA Tournament
Nebraska enters the match 31-0, seeking its first championship since 2017. The Huskers cruised to a three-set win over Long Island.
K-State’s win over San Diego to advance was more dramatic. The Wildcats (18-9, 10-8 Big 12) pulled it off in five sets, while needing to win the fourth to make it possible.
What channel is Kansas State volleyball vs Nebraska on today?
- TV channel: None
- Stream:ESPN+
Kansas State volleyball vs. Nebraska will be available to stream on ESPN+.
Watch K-State volleyball in NCAA Tournament
Kansas State volleyball vs Nebraska time today
- Date: Saturday, Dec. 6
- Start time: 7 p.m. CT
Kansas State and Nebraska will begin at 7 p.m. CT on Saturday, Dec. 6.
Wyatt D. Wheeler covers Kansas State athletics for the USA TODAY Network and Topeka Capital-Journal. You can follow him on X at @WyattWheeler_, contact him at 417-371-6987 or email him at wwheeler@usatodayco.com
Sports
Women’s track and field begins indoor season at M City Classic
MINNEAPOLIS, Minn. – The St. Olaf College women’s track and field team turned in 13 performances that ranked on its all-time performers’ list at the season-opening M City Classic on Friday at the University of Minnesota Fieldhouse.
First years accounted for 11 of the 13 performances that ranked on St. Olaf’s all-time list at the unscored meet, which included teams from the NCAA Division I, NCAA Division II, NCAA Division III, National Association of Intercollegiate Athletics (NAIA), and club levels. In addition to the top-10 list performances, senior Ella Landis posted St. Olaf’s lone first-place finish at the meet by winning the one-mile run in 5:17.28.
In her first collegiate meet, first year Evangeline Sappington broke onto the program’s all-time performers’ list in both the 60-meter dash and 200-meter dash. Sappington was the top Division III finisher and was 10th overall in the 200-meter dash (26.84), while also taking second among Division III competitors and 16th overall in the 60-meter dash. Sappington’s time in the 60-meter dash ranks second on the Oles’ all-time list – just four one-hundredths of a second off the record – and her time in the 200-meter dash is fifth.
Sophomore Izzi Jaeckle clocked in with St. Olaf’s No. 4 time in the 60-meter dash by placing 17th (8.10), while first year Ellie Semple also broke onto the list in 10th with a time of 8.28 seconds to finish 27th. Sophomore Logan Paulsen moved up to seventh on the Oles’ list with a sixth-place performance in the shot put (12.48m, 40′ 11 ½”), while first year Abigal Frei cleared 3.26 meters (10′ 8 ¼”) for a No. 5 all-time result and an eighth-place finish.
First years Svea Frantzich and Claire Stein recorded St. Olaf’s No. 8 and No. 10 scores in the pentathlon by finishing seventh (3,005) and eighth (2,993), respectively. Frantzich tied for third in the long jump (5.44m, 17′ 10 ¼”) and was sixth in the 60-meter hurdles (9.47), which both ranked on St. Olaf’s all-time list. Stein also tied for third in the long jump (5.44m, 10′ 10 ¼”) to highlight her day. First year Annika Walsh was the runner-up in the high jump (1.62m, 5′ 3 ¾”) – fifth all-time – and was seventh in the 60-meter hurdles (9.48) – ninth all-time – as part of a ninth-place finish in the pentathlon (2,881).
St. Olaf will be back in action in 2026 at the Ole Opener at 10 a.m. on Saturday, Jan. 17 at Tostrud Center.
Sports
Second-Screen Golf Experiences : Player Profiles
In addition to offering an on-site fan experience, IRCODE, as a Technology Partner, introduced an interactive viewer experience for fans at home. When players appeared on-screen, viewers used the IRCODE app to scan their screen and instantly accessed a full, interactive profile for shopping their favorite players’ gear, diving deeper into their stories and learning more about the causes that are meaningful to them.
Player Profiles leverages IRCODE’s patented EXACT Match technology and proprietary computer vision, and applies real-time visual recognition to usher in the next generation of second-screen entertainment.
Sports
Catch Saturday’s Basketball and Indoor Track and Field Action
BEREA, Ohio – Fans can follow or watch Saturday’s Baldwin Wallace University basketball and indoor track and field action via live results, statistics or video.
The men’s and women’s indoor track and field teams open the 2025-26 season when it travels to Cleveland to compete in the Spartan Alumni Holiday Classic hosted by Case Western Reserve University inside the Veale Convocation, Recreation and Athletic Center at 11:00 a.m.
Live Results:
https://bwyellowjackets.cc/3MlDQcr
FloCollege On Demand Live Video:
https://bwyellowjackets.cc/3KFq6st
The men’s basketball team travels to New Concord for the first game of a men’s and women’s Ohio Athletic Conference and Hoops for Hunger Food Drive doubleheader against Muskingum University on Performance Court inside the Anne C. Steele Center at 1:00 p.m. Fans can receive free admission to the game with a donation of canned food, a non-perishable item, or a monetary contribution.
Tickets:
https://bwyellowjackets.cc/3WGuwll
Live Statistics:
https://bwyellowjackets.cc/493Gehq
FloCollege On Demand Live Video:
https://flosports.link/47hSw2V
The No. 21 nationally ranked women’s basketball team travels to New Concord for the second game of a women’s and men’s Ohio Athletic Conference and Hoops for Hunger Food Drive doubleheader against Muskingum University on Performance Court inside the Anne C. Steele Center at 4:00 p.m. Fans can receive free admission to the game with a donation of canned food, a non-perishable item, or a monetary contribution.
Tickets:
https://bwyellowjackets.cc/3WGuwll
Live Statistics:
https://bwyellowjackets.cc/49Ist7Q
FloCollege On Demand Live Video:
https://flosports.link/4qu1Fyr
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