Sports
Track and Field returns to Hayward Field for the NCAA Championships – The Minnesota Daily
The 2025 track and field postseason ends where it began, at the University of Oregon’s Hayward Field. After 39 Gophers qualified for the NCAA West Regionals at Texas A&M, 12 moved on to the NCAA Championships — ten from the men’s track and field team and two from the women’s. The first qualifiers of the […]

The 2025 track and field postseason ends where it began, at the University of Oregon’s Hayward Field.
After 39 Gophers qualified for the NCAA West Regionals at Texas A&M, 12 moved on to the NCAA Championships — ten from the men’s track and field team and two from the women’s.
The first qualifiers of the meet came from the men’s 4×100 meter relay team, consisting of senior Devin Augustine, graduate student Kion Benjamin, and juniors Aaron Charles and Zion Campbell.
At E.B. Cushing Stadium in College Station, Texas, the hot and windy atmosphere was much different from Oregon or Minnesota.
To some, like Nigerian native sophomore Charles Godfred, the weather was ideal.
“The weather reminds me of back home,” Godfred said. “Texas, it’s the place I did my PR, and I broke the school record. When I went there, I was like, ‘I know I would do something great.’”
Godfred added that when he saw he hit 8.10 meters on his first long jump attempt, he was shocked. He said his best jumps typically come from the later attempts.
Godfred placed first in the long jump and punched his ticket to the NCAA Championships.
However, the weather was not perfect for senior pole vaulter Jak Urlacher. Urlacher narrowly qualified for his first-ever NCAA Championships, but said he could have done better if not for the wind, which was strong on the easiest bars to pass but died down as he progressed.
“The Texas wind was definitely a big factor,” Urlacher said. “The wind was actually really bad for the first two bars, it was rather frustrating that I already spent so much energy on the previous bars, and then it was kind of more difficult to be able to get over the later ones.”
Sophomore distance runner Ali Weimer also said that the heat was not great, as the distance runners throughout the season often missed the meets that took place in hotter areas. She mentioned that she is excited to go back to the milder climate in Oregon.
“I think one thing is that it was so hot at the regional meet. And in Eugene, it hopefully won’t be, it shouldn’t be,” Weimer said. “I think that that’s one thing that is gonna make our performances even better.”
Senior Dyandra Gray is the only other representative of the Minnesota women’s track and field team to go to the championships.
Since April 30, Gray has consistently beaten her personal record in the 400-meter hurdles, setting a new best almost every week. At the regional meet, she continued her impressive run and set another new lifetime best, earning her first-ever trip to the NCAA Championships.
Junior Hakeem Ford earned his first-ever trip to the Championships as well, in the triple jump. This will be the first time the Gophers send someone to the Championships in triple jump since 1948.
Graduate student Christian Martin earned a ticket to compete in the 110-meter hurdles, a rare occurrence for the Gophers. He is the third Gopher to ever qualify in the 110-meter hurdles.
Finally, the hammer throw duo of senior Kostas Zaltos and sophomore Angelos Matzouranis are going back to Hayward Field after taking first and second place at regionals. Opposite of the Big Ten Championships, Matzouranis placed first and Zaltos second.
The NCAA Championships start Wednesday, June 11 and run through Saturday, June 14.
Sports
World Aquatics Championships: sea races back on in Singapore after water quality delays
The men’s and women’s 10km open water swimming events at the World Aquatics Championships will finally get under way on Wednesday after multiple delays owing to unacceptable levels of E coli bacteria in Singapore’s seas. Initially scheduled for Tuesday, the women’s 10km was called off hours before the expected start after water samples drawn at […]
The men’s and women’s 10km open water swimming events at the World Aquatics Championships will finally get under way on Wednesday after multiple delays owing to unacceptable levels of E coli bacteria in Singapore’s seas.
Initially scheduled for Tuesday, the women’s 10km was called off hours before the expected start after water samples drawn at the race site off Sentosa island, on the southern coast of the city state, showed “exceeding levels” of the Escherichia coli (E coli) bacteria.
The race was then moved to Wednesday morning, hours after the scheduled start of the men’s race, but both were delayed again late on Tuesday after the water quality levels exceeded the “acceptable thresholds outlined in the World Aquatics competition regulation”.
On Wednesday, World Aquatics and the Singapore 2025 Organising Committee said races could proceed at 1pm for the men’s 10km race and 4pm for the women’s.
Water samples showed a significant improvement, organisers said, with levels of E coli falling between the ranges of “good” to “excellent” according to World Aquatics and the World Health Organization (WHO) regulations.

They added that the regular water quality monitoring and testing would continue throughout the competition period.
Sports
Garrett Scantling – Assistant Coach – Staff Directory
Director of Illinois track, field and cross country Petros Kyprianou has announced the hiring of Olympian Garrett Scantling as an assistant coach on Tuesday (July 15). Scantling will primarily assist Kyprianou with coaching the jumps and combined events crews. Scantling finished fourth in the decathlon at the 2020 Tokyo Olympic Games with a score of […]

Director of Illinois track, field and cross country Petros Kyprianou has announced the hiring of Olympian Garrett Scantling as an assistant coach on Tuesday (July 15). Scantling will primarily assist Kyprianou with coaching the jumps and combined events crews.
Scantling finished fourth in the decathlon at the 2020 Tokyo Olympic Games with a score of 8,611 points. He recorded personal bests in the 400m (48.25) and 1500m (4:35.54) as part of that decathlon. To qualify to the Olympics, he won the U.S. Olympic decathlon trials in Eugene, Ore. with a score of 8,647 points.
In 2022 he won two national titles: first in the indoor season at the 2022 US Indoor Championships in the heptathlon with 6,382 points and then later that summer in the decathlon at the 2022 USA Combined Events Championships with 8,867 points. Both point totals are his personal-best scores in their respective disciplines.
Scantling saw great success at the NCAA level competing for the Georgia Bulldogs under Kyprianou. Highlighted by being the national runner-up in the heptathlon at the 2015 NCAA Indoor Championships scoring 6,068 points. In his senior year he earned bronze in the heptathlon at the 2016 NCAA Indoor Championships (5,951 points). His first NCAA medal came in his freshman year where he was the bronze medalist in the heptathlon at the 2013 NCAA Indoor Championships (6,017 points).
In the fall of 2019, Scantling returned to Georgia to work as an assistant coach with Kyprianou on the track and field team, where he stayed until 2021. In 2022 he returned to Episcopal School of Jacksonville where he was the strength and conditioning coach while coaching three sports: football, girls weightlifting and track and field.
Sports
Pair of Beavs Earn Pac-12 Scholar-Athlete of the Year
CORVALLIS, Ore. – 54 Oregon State athletes across baseball and track & field were named to the 2025 Pac-12 Spring Academic Honor Roll. Earning the title of 2025 Pac-12 Women’s Track & Field Scholar-Athlete of the Year and the conference’s Women’s Top Performer of the Year, Oregon State’s Sara Sanders capped off her season […]

Earning the title of 2025 Pac-12 Women’s Track & Field Scholar-Athlete of the Year and the conference’s Women’s Top Performer of the Year, Oregon State’s Sara Sanders capped off her season with an Honorable Mention All-America finish in the javelin. In her first-ever NCAA Championship appearance, the senior placed 18th overall with a mark of 48.47m/159-0 after missing two seasons due to injury. Earning her undergraduate degree in Kinesiology with a minor in Chemistry, Sanders was named to the Pac-12 Spring Academic Honor Roll each year since 2022.
Earning the title of 2025 Pac-12 Baseball Scholar-Athlete of the Year, Wilson Weber was named an All-American and First-Team Academic All-American in 2025, his last year with the Beavers. A catcher, he batted .326 with 15 doubles, 12 home runs and 58 RBI. He earned his degree in business administration while the Beavers were competing in the Men’s College World Series in Omaha.
To be eligible for the Academic Honor Roll, a student-athlete must be on their respective roster with a cumulative GPA of at 3.3 and have served at least one year in residence at the institution.
Baseball
James DeCremer, Political Science
AJ, Hutcheson, Finance
Bryce Johnson, Business Administration
Nelson Keljo, Digital Communication Arts
Jacob Krieg, Psychology
Dallas Macias, Digital Communication Arts
Laif Palmer, Finance
Tyce Peterson, Human Development & Family Science
Chase Reynolds, Animal Sciences
Eric Segura, Business Administration
Andrew Talavs, Communication Studies
Easton Talt, Business Administration
Gavin Turley, Business Administration
Wilson Weber, Business Administration – Scholar-Athlete of the Year
Track and Field
Maryann Ackerman, Forestry
Maya Baechler, Pre-Apparel
Delaney Bahn, Sociology & Psychology
Audrey Biggerstaff, Chemistry
Ruby Broadbent, BioHealth Sciences
Sage Brooks, Mathematics
Gracie Buzzell, Teaching
Erin Cosgrove, Public Health
Erika Cunniam, Nutrition
Eliza Eckman, Environmental Arts & Humanities
Isabelle Esler, Business Information Systems
Mia Fowler, Public Health
Katie Gelston, Mechanical Engineering
Jamie Hamlin, Political Science
Hannah Hernandez, Construction Engineering Management
Ainsley Herron, Public Health
Ellie Hull, Psychology
Lexi Hunt, Sociology
Jada Hurley, BioHealth Sciences
Molly Latincsics, Women, Gender & Sexuality
Kate Laurent, Human Development & Family Science
Claire Lee, Human Development & Family Science
Ruby Lorenz, Animal Sciences
Meagen Lowe, Non-Degree Graduate
Noemi Lundgren, Marketing
Eimy Martinez, Kinesiology
Ava McKee, Teaching
Lilia Montiel, Animal Sciences
Reese Morkert, Kinesiology
Delaney Neufeld-Griffin, Public Health
Riley Patera, Psychology
Abigail Pradere, Environmental Engineering
Grace Proudfoot, BioHealth Sciences
Ellie Quintana, Business Administration
Grace Rubio, English
Sara Sanders, Business Administration – Scholar-Athlete of the Year, Track and Field Performer of the Year
Payton Smith, Kinesiology
Sophia Stubblefield, Business Administration
Sydney van der Zee, Microbiology
Paige Wiley, Computer Science
Kate Yahn, Business Administration
OUR MISSION
Oregon State Athletics strives to Build Excellent Authentic Visionary Student-Athletes (Go BEAVS).
Sports
MLB trying to work out 'logistics' for players to participate in 2028 Olympics in Los Angeles
Commissioner Rob Manfred said Tuesday that Major League Baseball is “trying to iron through (the) logistics” that would allow MLB players to participate in the 2028 Los Angeles Olympics. MLB officials met with Olympic representatives earlier this week and both the league and players have interest in Olympic participation. Here’s what Manfred said about the […]


Commissioner Rob Manfred said Tuesday that Major League Baseball is “trying to iron through (the) logistics” that would allow MLB players to participate in the 2028 Los Angeles Olympics. MLB officials met with Olympic representatives earlier this week and both the league and players have interest in Olympic participation.
Here’s what Manfred said about the 2028 Olympics on Tuesday (via MLB.com):
“I think that the idea of playing in L.A. in ’28, regardless of the merits of the possibility of ongoing Olympic participation in another location, that there’s some merit to it,” Manfred said Tuesday during a Q&A session with the Baseball Writers’ Association of America. “I think it is an opportunity to market the game on a really global stage.”
Tony Clark, director of the Major League Baseball Players Association, similarly said his team is trying to work out a plan.
“We do know players are interested in playing, whether it’s for Team USA or for any number of other teams around the world,” he said. “We’ve got the WBC, which players are telling us they’re interested in playing in, as well. There’s just a lot of conversation that needs to be had sooner rather than later to see how viable this is, but we’re hopeful that we can figure out a way to do it.”
Currently, only amateurs and professional players not on the 40-man roster are allowed to participate in the Olympics. Team USA’s roster in 2020 featured minor-league journeymen, a few top prospects, and several unsigned free agent veterans. Japan’s Nippon Professional Baseball and the Korea Baseball Organization halted their regular seasons so professionals could play in the 2020 Olympics, during which Japan beat USA in the gold medal game.
The schedule and insurance would likely be the biggest logistical issue. The 2028 schedule, released Monday, set games for July 15-20 at Dodger Stadium, which would likely fall around the All-Star break but stretch longer than the typical Midsummer Classic.
The NHL has paused its season for the Olympics in the past and their players will participate in the 2026 Olympics for the first time since 2014. The hiatus was related to insurance, among other things. The NHL wanted the International Olympic Committee to cover the salary of any injured players, the IOC refused, so on and so forth. MLB may also have to work through similar insurance issues.
“There’s nothing more worldwide than the Olympics,” Phillies star Bryce Harper said about the Olympics last year. “I watch the most random sports in the Olympics because it’s the Olympics, and that’s really cool. I love hockey. It’s one of my favorite sports to watch. To see (the NHL) take that three-week break and let those guys go play, that’s another big goal that we should have as Major League Baseball.”
Baseball was a full-time Olympic sport from 1992-2008. Cuba has won three gold medals (1992, 1996, 2004) and South Korea (2008), Japan (2020), and USA (2000) have one gold medal apiece. As a minor leaguer, former Milwaukee Brewers ace Ben Sheets threw a complete game shutout against heavily favored Cuba in the 2000 gold medal game.
Sports
SUMMER FUN: Young swimmers invited to Watford Water Polo’s summer camp
Watford Water Polo and Next Level Swimming Academy are inviting residents to their upcoming summer camp. Boys and girls are welcome to the five-day camp from August 4 to 8. The Cadets camp will take place at Habs’ Girls’ School between 8.45am and 12.30pm. Attendees must be at least nine years old. The U12 and […]

Watford Water Polo and Next Level Swimming Academy are inviting residents to their upcoming summer camp.
Boys and girls are welcome to the five-day camp from August 4 to 8.
The Cadets camp will take place at Habs’ Girls’ School between 8.45am and 12.30pm. Attendees must be at least nine years old.
The U12 and U14 camp will take place at Habs’ Boys’ School from 12.45pm to 5pm. The minimum age is those starting secondary school in September 2025.
The camp costs £124. For more information, please email info@nextlevelswimming.co.uk or watfordwaterpolo123@gmail.com
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Sports
North Dakota Athletics mourns the loss of Dr. Helen Smiley
Story Links GRAND FORKS, N.D. — The University of North Dakota Department of Athletics mourns the loss of former administrator Dr. Helen Smiley, who passed away on Friday, July 11. Smiley started at UND in 1971 and served as an associate athletic director and an assistant professor in the health, physical education and recreation department […]


GRAND FORKS, N.D. — The University of North Dakota Department of Athletics mourns the loss of former administrator Dr. Helen Smiley, who passed away on Friday, July 11.
Smiley started at UND in 1971 and served as an associate athletic director and an assistant professor in the health, physical education and recreation department until 1985. She also served as the interim athletic director in 1984, becoming the first woman to hold that title at North Dakota, and was instrumental in the development of women’s athletics at UND.
Dr. Smiley’s career extended far-and-wide, with leadership roles at the University of Iowa and Western Illinois. Her work earned national recognitions, including being named NACDA Athletic Director of the Year in 2000 and having the Summit League Women’s All-Sports Award named in her honor.
She has been inducted into the the North Central Conference Hall of Fame, the UND Athletics Hall of Fame, the WIU Athletics Hall of Fame and the Summit League Hall of Fame during her storied career.
For more information on North Dakota Athletics, follow on social media @UNDsports or visit FightingHawks.com.
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