Sports
NCAA track and field: 4 BYU women make finals, including program’s 1st flat sprinter
PROVO — Sami Oblad never expected to be where she was Thursday night at the close of the first day of the NCAA Division I women’s outdoor track and field championships in Eugene, Oregon. The senior from Stansbury Park — and a converted volleyball player turned former heptathlete and high jumper — became the first […]

PROVO — Sami Oblad never expected to be where she was Thursday night at the close of the first day of the NCAA Division I women’s outdoor track and field championships in Eugene, Oregon.
The senior from Stansbury Park — and a converted volleyball player turned former heptathlete and high jumper — became the first flat sprinter (100, 200 or 400 meter) to qualify for an NCAA final in BYU women’s track history when she advanced out of Thursday night’s semifinals at Hayward Field.
Oblad, who is scheduled to race in the 400-meter finals Saturday night, clocked the third-fastest time of her career in 51.20 seconds to finish eighth and become the first BYU female sprinter in seven tries to make a final.
“I never expected to be here,” Oblad said after her race. “I’m glad that hard work is paying off, and it’s putting me where I want to be. … I’ve been on the verge of tears all day. I’m very emotional right now.”
Oblad was one of four BYU women to advance to Saturday’s final for one of the premier distance running programs in the country. The others were more natural to the Cougars’ historic legacy, though.
Meghan Hunter broke the two-minute barrier for the third time in her storied career to finish fourth in the 800-meter semifinals in 1:59.96 and advance to Saturday’s final.
Lexy Halladay-Lowry and Taylor Lovell both qualified in the 3,000-meter steeplechase — arguably the university’s most accomplished event, where men’s teammate and U.S. Olympian James Corrigan will race for a championship Friday night.
Halladay-Lowry eased to a third-place time of 9:36.24 as the senior from Meridian, Idaho looks to add a sixth first-team All-America honor, and Lovell after clinching a spot with a personal-best time of 9:37.97 — the No. 3 mark in BYU history.
The duo will compete at 5:38 p.m. MDT Saturday for a spot on the podium, and they’ll be joined by Utah State’s Shelby Jensen.
The sophomore from Saratoga Springs advanced to the first national final of her career in 9:38.01, a fifth-place finish in her heat and 10th overall. Jensen is the first Aggie woman to advance to the finals of an NCAA outdoor championship race since Cierra Simmons-Mecham in the steeplechase final in 2018.
“She executed the race like a pro and responded when girls went by her in the latter half of the race,” Utah State coach Artie Gulden said of Jensen. “She responded and was able to follow them and just compete like crazy over the last two laps.”
SEE YOU SATURDAY
Halladay-Lowry locks in her spot in Saturday’s steeplechase final with a 9:36.24
ESPN+ pic.twitter.com/h5emsNA9sO
— BYU Track & Field/Cross Country (@BYUTFXC) June 13, 2025
Oblad will be the fifth BYU 400-meter runner to race in a final this year, but the first in an open race. The men’s 4×400-meter relay squad — led by Oblad’s fiancé Eli Hazlett — qualified with the last spot in Wednesday’s semifinals to earn a title bid.
“That definitely got me more amped,” Oblad said. “If all my training partners were doing it, then I just had to join them.”
Four BYU women contested finals Thursday, including the 1,500-meter duo of Riley Chamberlain and Carlee Hansen who finished back-to-back. Hansen, the junior from Bountiful who transferred from North Carolina before setting the program record at the NCAA West prelims in 4:07.64, finished 15th in 4:12.35 — officially .08 seconds behind Chamberlain, a junior from Loomis, California.
Both earned second-team All-America honors.
Gretchen Hoekstre added a 21st-place finish in the shot put with a throw of 15.88 meters (52 feet, 1.25 inches), and freshman Tessa Buswell was 21st in the 800 in 2:05.94.
Kelsi Oldroyd became the first-ever All-American from Utah Valley in the javelin with her eighth-place throw of 56.37 meters (184-11), capping a banner season that included a third straight WAC outdoor javelin title and a national semifinal for the third consecutive season.
Utah’s 4×100-meter relay squad, led by Emily Rose, closed out the season just .02 from breaking their own school record, finishing in 43.86.
Morgan Jensen and McKaylie Caesar finished neck-and-neck in the 10,000-meter run in 33:11.05 and 33:34.36, respectively, for 19th and 20th overall.
While Thursday’s competition was mostly about the women, two dozen athletes wrapped up the men’s decathlon. That included BYU junior Ben Barton, who posted a sixth-place finish with 7,777 points for first-team All-American honors.
Barton is the highest-placed finisher in the decathlon from BYU since Curtis Pugsley also placed sixth in 2000. He briefly moved up to second behind Mississippi State star Peyton Bair with a 14.22 110-meter hurdle and a discus throw of 36.86 meters (120-11).
BYU sophomore Jaden Roskelley finished 19th with 7,475 points, including the second-best mark in the discus with a hurl of 45.72 meters (150-0). Bair added to his indoor multi-event national title with a first-place finish and a personal-best 8,323 points with first-place finishes in the 100 (10.25) and 400 (46.00).
The Key Takeaways for this article were generated with the assistance of large language models and reviewed by our editorial team. The article, itself, is solely human-written.
Sports
NCAA 1500m Champion Sophie O’Sullivan On Forging Her Own Path In The Sport Instead Of Chasing Her Parents’ Shadows
My guest for today’s episode as we continue our Washington Huskies takeover is Sophie O’Sullivan. The University of Washington senior won the NCAA 1500m title to cap off a strong collegiate career. For the daughter of Olympic silver medalist Sonia O’Sullivan and renowned coach Nic Bideau, greatness may have been in her genes, but it […]

My guest for today’s episode as we continue our Washington Huskies takeover is Sophie O’Sullivan. The University of Washington senior won the NCAA 1500m title to cap off a strong collegiate career. For the daughter of Olympic silver medalist Sonia O’Sullivan and renowned coach Nic Bideau, greatness may have been in her genes, but it wasn’t always a given.
Sophie didn’t grow up chasing her parents’ shadows. She played other sports in high school, barely trained, and still won races on grit alone. College was a different game. It took years of rebuilding mentally, physically, and emotionally, and in this conversation, she takes us through that progression, the years that shaped her, the lessons from her legendary parents, and how she’s learned to love the grind — whether she’s chasing titles or simply chasing her best.
With a national title, an Olympic appearance behind her, and the World Championships ahead, this is just the beginning.
Host: Chris Chavez | @chris_j_chavez on Instagram
Guest: Sophie O’Sullivan | @sophie.osullivan on Instagram
Produced by: Jasmine Fehr | @jasminefehr on Instagram
Sports
Kent State Volleyball Finalizes 2025 Schedule
Story Links KENT, Ohio — The Kent State volleyball team will play 11 matches during the non-conference portion of the 2025 schedule. Under the leadership of fourth-year head coach Haley Eckerman, the Golden Flashes will begin the season in Boca Raton for the FAU Invitational with matches against host Florida […]

KENT, Ohio — The Kent State volleyball team will play 11 matches during the non-conference portion of the 2025 schedule.
Under the leadership of fourth-year head coach Haley Eckerman, the Golden Flashes will begin the season in Boca Raton for the FAU Invitational with matches against host Florida Atlantic and Western Carolina on Aug. 29, followed by a matchup with Texas Tech on Aug. 30.
Three matches at the Towson-Morgan State Invitational are slated for the second weekend. Kent State will battle New Orleans at Morgan State on Sept. 5. The Flashes will then meet the Bears at 1 p.m. on Sept. 6 and make the short trip to Towson for a 7 p.m. contest.
The following weekend includes matches against UTSA (Sept. 11) and North Dakota (Sept. 12) at North Dakota and a contest at North Dakota State (Sept. 13).
Short trips to Cleveland State (Sept. 18) and Youngstown State (Sept. 19) will conclude the non-conference slate.
The conference schedule, which was announced in March, starts with road matches against Toledo (Sept. 25) and Bowling Green (Sept. 26). The first home matchups at the M.A.C. Center are scheduled against Buffalo (Oct. 3) and Akron (Oct. 4).
Following the 18-match league schedule, the top six teams in the standings will compete in the 2025 MAC Tournament, which will be hosted by Bowling Green from Nov. 21-23.
Season tickets are currently available for purchase on KSUTix.com.
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Sports
Long-time University of South Carolina Deputy Athletics Director retiring
On Wednesday, the University of South Carolina’s athletic department changed in a major way as Associate Athletics Director Charles Waddell retired. The long-time Gamecock had been with the athletic department in Columbia for nearly 20 years. Following a three-sport athletic career at North Carolina (lettering in football, basketball, and track and field), Waddell played in […]

On Wednesday, the University of South Carolina’s athletic department changed in a major way as Associate Athletics Director Charles Waddell retired. The long-time Gamecock had been with the athletic department in Columbia for nearly 20 years.
Following a three-sport athletic career at North Carolina (lettering in football, basketball, and track and field), Waddell played in the NFL before getting involved in sports administration. He also worked for the BIG Ten conference, Fayetteville State University, the Carolina Panthers, and Richardson Sports.
During his two decades in Columbia, Waddell saw South Carolina win seven team national championships (two each for baseball and equestrian and three for women’s basketball), its winningest stretch in its football history, a Final Four run and top-two win totals in men’s basketball, multiple NCAA Tournament runs in men’s soccer, three SEC Championships in women’s soccer, and several individual championships in track and field.
Waddell served under three athletic directors with the Gamecocks: Eric Hyman, Ray Tanner, and Jeremiah Donati.
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From the South Carolina Athletics release:
Intercollegiate athletics have certainly changed a lot in the fifty-plus years since Charles Waddell was a three-sport star at the University of North Carolina more than 50 years ago. Now, South Carolina’s Deputy Athletics Director is retiring and looking forward to the next chapter.
“I’m a team guy, and I like being involved in teams,” said Waddell, who came to South Carolina in 2006 and also served as the sport administrator overseeing a variety of sports, including football, women’s basketball, track and field, men’s basketball, and equestrian. “That’s what college athletics is about. You work with people, and you’re pulling for a common goal. The biggest thing I’ve gained from all these experiences is the people that come into your life, and you develop relationships with. Those relationships turn into friendships.
“Now, I’ll try to get a little more involved with kids in different ways, especially underserved kids and letting them know that they have an opportunity for a good life if they make good decisions. They can achieve more than they think they can sometimes.”
Waddell knows all about achieving at a high level. As a student-athlete, he may have been the Bo Jackson of his era after lettering in football, basketball, and track and field at North Carolina, where he graduated in 1975. He earned the prestigious Patterson Medal as a senior at UNC, which is the highest athletic award at the school. He earned All-ACC honors and All-American honors in football, eventually playing in the NFL with the Tampa Bay Buccaneers, Seattle Seahawks, and San Diego Chargers. Looking back, he can’t help but reflect on the challenges ahead with all the changes in college athletics.
“The growth that we’ve seen in college athletics and the money involved has changed the scope of what it’s all about,” Waddell said. “It’s much more of a business. It was always a business in college, but with the money involved, you now have more people from the outside that are getting involved with the athletes. Unfortunately, you’re probably going to hear more stories of kids who were taken advantage of or have blown opportunities. All the kids that get paid in college now won’t make it in the professional leagues, so this might be the most money they’re making for their entire life. Hopefully, we can get kids to do the right things by investing and setting aside money because their college career may be the pinnacle of their career. They need to have the right leadership and guidance.”
He credits his parents for providing him with great direction and advice early in his life.
“My dad was a janitor, and my mom cleaned houses and then went back to school and became a nursing assistant when I was in high school,” Waddell said. “She went back to junior college so she could provide assistance to other people. They were solid, hard-working, spiritual people. My mom threatened me that if I ever brought in a B for a grade, I wasn’t going to be able to play for my team. My parents gave us a good structure.”
Prior to coming to work for South Carolina Athletics nearly twenty years ago, Waddell worked in administration at Fayetteville State University in North Carolina where he was the Vice Chancellor for Advancement. Before that, he spent nearly a decade as the Director of Marketing and Sponsorships for Richardson Sports in Charlotte and was responsible for marketing and corporate sponsorships for the Carolina Panthers. He had previously worked as Assistant Commissioner for the Big Ten Conference. Among the many things he will miss about working in intercollegiate athletics, is the daily interaction with student-athletes.
“Getting to know the kids and watching games makes you more invested in it,” Waddell said. “You pull for them a little bit more when you know who the kids really are, as well as the coaches and staff. They’re not just co-workers; they’re friends.
“I just wanted to say thanks for the opportunity to come down and work here! It’s been a great run. Looking back at the success we had in our programs during my time here has been off the charts. I spent the most time with football, women’s basketball and track and field. (Former track and field coach) Curtis (Frye), (former football coach) Steve (Spurrier), and (women’s basketball coach) Dawn (Staley) are all hall of fame coaches. It was great being along for the ride with them.”
As he retires, Waddell looks forward to spending more time with family, including his wife, Sandra, his three grown children, and three grandchildren.
“I’m going to hang out and catch up with the family,” said Waddell. “I’ve got the grandboys who are involved with lots of stuff like soccer and basketball and now a little bit of football. Sandra and I might do a little bit of traveling, but most of what we do will be centered around those three grandboys.”
Sports
Brady Ambro Named Head Men’s Volleyball Coach
Story Links Brady Ambro has been named Head Coach of the Baruch College Men’s Volleyball Team. The announcement was made by Baruch College Director of Athletics and Recreation, Heather Mac Culloch on Thursday. A Baruch alumni (’17) and former standout on the court, Ambro returns to the program he once proudly represented. […]

Brady Ambro has been named Head Coach of the Baruch College Men’s Volleyball Team.
The announcement was made by Baruch College Director of Athletics and Recreation, Heather Mac Culloch on Thursday.
A Baruch alumni (’17) and former standout on the court, Ambro returns to the program he once proudly represented. With an established connection to Baruch College and first hand experience competing at the highest level of Division III volleyball, he is well-positioned to lead the Bearcats to an era of more success.
“We are proud to welcome back Brady Ambro as the new Head Coach of Baruch College Men’s Volleyball,” said Heather Mac Culloch. “As a dedicated alumnus, former assistant coach, and a key member of our NCAA tournament teams, Brady brings not only deep experience but also a true passion for the Baruch program. His commitment to excellence and connection to our Bearcat legacy make him the ideal leader to guide the next generation of student-athletes.”
Ambro played for the Bearcats from 2013 to 2016 while earning his Bachelor’s Degree in Psychology. As an outside hitter, he helped lead the team to multiple CUNYAC titles (2013, 2014, 2015) and NCAA Tournament appearances (2013, 2014, 2015), including a trip to the Final Four in 2013 in Rochester. His accolades include the 2016 Baruch College Helen Belden Sportsmanship Award, Team Captain Honors, 2016 Team MVP, and was named a 2016 CUNYAC First Team All-Star.
His coaching resume includes serving as an assistant coach for the Baruch men’s volleyball team during the 2017 and 2018 seasons, as well as coaching
with the International Volleyball Club, where he continued to develop and mentor young athletes.
“I am happy to be back in the ARC Arena as the new men’s volleyball head coach,” said Ambro. “As a former Bearcat, the culture of the program has always inspired and motivated me and I am excited to help lead the next generation of Bearcats to success on and off the court.”
Baruch Athletics is excited to welcome Coach Ambro back to the court. He was a key contributor to the teams continued success during his tenure as a player — now he aims to do so as the team’s head coach.
Baruch Athletics is proud to announce Brady Ambro as the new Head Coach of Men's Volleyball! Ambro is a former standout player, 3-time CUNYAC Champion, and assistant coach who returns to take the top job! For more info, click the link in the bio. @BaruchBearcatAD @CUNYAC #d3vb pic.twitter.com/x4mmwflugF
— Baruch College Athletics (@BaruchAthletics) July 10, 2025
Sports
Women’s Volleyball Announces 2025 Schedule
Story Links SANTA BARBARA, Calif – The UC Santa Barbara Women’s Volleyball team announced their 2025 schedule on Thursday, July 10. The Gauchos are set to face a fierce slate of opponents including four teams with NCAA Tournament appearances – and three of those with wins – in 2024. The team is […]

SANTA BARBARA, Calif – The UC Santa Barbara Women’s Volleyball team announced their 2025 schedule on Thursday, July 10. The Gauchos are set to face a fierce slate of opponents including four teams with NCAA Tournament appearances – and three of those with wins – in 2024. The team is led by Head Coach Matt Jones, entering his third year at the helm of the program.
The Gauchos kick off the season up north with back-to-back matches against San Jose State on August 29 and 30.
The Blue and Gold will stay on the road the following weekend, heading to Los Angeles to play a three-day tournament hosted by USC. The first matchup on Friday will see the Gauchos face the hosting Trojans followed by matches with Creighton and San Diego scheduled for Saturday and Sunday, respectively. The Bluejays are coming off a 2024 NCAA Tournament run where they fell to the eventual National Champion, Penn State, in the Regional Final.
The Gauchos’ home opener comes against Kansas State in The Thunderdome on September 11 as part of a tournament co-hosted with Cal Poly. The Gauchos will look to continue their success from last year when they swept the Wildcats at the K-State Invitational. The following day, Santa Barbara will face Vanderbilt, who is entering its first season since the program was discontinued in 1980. Northern Colorado will be the last match to cap off the weekend in The Thunderdome on Saturday.
Pepperdine will visit shortly thereafter with a match scheduled in Santa Barbara for Tuesday, September 16 in The Thunderdome.
Non-conference play wraps up with a two-day adventure to Dayton for two matches on September 19 against Illinois State and the hosting Flyers, who achieved an NCAA Regional Tournament appearance last season. The next day sees one match against Wright State before heading back to Santa Barbara.
The Gauchos’ second homestand will consist of their first Big West matchups. Cal State Bakersfield and CSUN come to The Thunderdome on September 26 and 27, respectively.
Headed into October, the Blue and Gold are back on the road to continue conference play. October 3 will have the Gauchos going up against Long Beach State followed by a quick jump down to La Jolla to face UC San Diego on October 4.
The first installment of the Blue-Green rivalry takes place the Tuesday after with a visit up north to Cal Poly on October 7. The trip continues across the Pacific the following weekend as the Gauchos take on the reigning Big West Champions, Hawai’i, on their home court on October 12.
Cal State Fullerton comes to town on October 17 for the third weekend of Santa Barbara Volleyball at home. The Gauchos face UC Irvine in The Thunderdome the following day as well.
A Thursday trip up north has the Gauchos facing UC Davis on October 23. The Blue and Gold return home on Saturday, October 18 to go up against the Highlanders of UC Riverside.
The Gauchos begin their rematches with Big West opponents heading into November with trips to Northridge and Bakersfield. Santa Barbara will face the Matadors on October 31 and the Roadrunners on November 1.
November continues with a four-match homestand. The Gauchos will first see action against UC San Diego on November 7. They host Long Beach State in The Thunderdome the following day, November 8.
The Mustangs and the Gauchos face off on Thursday, November 13 to wrap up the Blue-Green rivalry at home. Fans can catch Santa Barbara’s final regular-season home match on Friday, November 14 as the Gauchos take on Hawai’i in The Thunderdome.
The regular season wraps up with road matches against UC Irvine on November 21 followed by Cal State Fullerton on November 22.
The Blue and Gold will look for a top-six finish in the regular-season conference standings to qualify for the Big West Tournament. The tournament is scheduled for November 26-29 in Long Beach with the winner earning an automatic bid to the NCAA Tournament.
UC Santa Barbara Athletics is excited to announce the Men’s Water Polo and Men’s and Women’s Cross Country schedules later this month. Season tickets for fall sports will go on sale the week of July 14. Fans can always find the most recent Gaucho news at ucsbgauchos.com.
Sports
272 Aggies Named To 2024-25 Big West Commissioner’s Honor Roll
– 272 UC Davis student-athletes were named to the Big West 2024-25 Commissioner’s Honor Roll on Thursday, encompassing 18 of the conference’s 19 sponsored sports. To be named to the honor roll, student-athletes must be on a team roster in a Big West-sponsored sport and be eligible for competition. There are three categories on the […]

– 272 UC Davis student-athletes were named to the Big West 2024-25 Commissioner’s Honor Roll on Thursday, encompassing 18 of the conference’s 19 sponsored sports.
To be named to the honor roll, student-athletes must be on a team roster in a Big West-sponsored sport and be eligible for competition. There are three categories on the list based on GPA: Honor Roll (3.00-3.20), With Honors (3.21-3.50), and Highest Honors (3.51-4.00). The Faculty Athletics Representatives (FAR) of each of the 11 Big West institutions submitted their lists to the conference office.
Of the 272 UC Davis student-athletes nominated to the Honor Roll, 133 Aggies earned Highest Honors.
Carter Delaney | Baseball | Highest Honors
Houston Hirchkorn | Baseball | Highest Honors
Bryson Schelp | Baseball | Highest Honors
Avery Thau | Baseball | Highest Honors
Tyler Wood | Baseball | Highest Honors
Matteo Blandino | Baseball | With Honors
Grayson Bonanno | Baseball | With Honors
Jack Castagnola | Baseball | With Honors
Edgar Frutchey | Baseball | With Honors
Evan Gentil | Baseball | With Honors
Alex Gouveia | Baseball | With Honors
Leighton Helfrick | Baseball | With Honors
Nick Leehey | Baseball | With Honors
Mason Lerma | Baseball | With Honors
Jack Meek | Baseball | With Honors
Braydon Wooldridge | Baseball | With Honors
Riley Acosta | Baseball | Honor Roll
Rowen Barnes | Baseball | Honor Roll
Holden Hirschkorn | Baseball | Honor Roll
Ryan Lee | Baseball | Honor Roll
Jaxon Murphy | Baseball | Honor Roll
Caden Pinnick | Baseball | Honor Roll
Carter Speights | Baseball | Honor Roll
Korey Williams | Baseball | Honor Roll
Anna Braun | Beach Volleyball | Highest Honors
Kylie Miller | Beach Volleyball | Highest Honors
Tabitha Mitchell | Beach Volleyball | Highest Honors
Kate O’Steen | Beach Volleyball | Highest Honors
Mia Olen | Beach Volleyball | Highest Honors
Skye Smolinski | Beach Volleyball | Highest Honors
Kendal Steller | Beach Volleyball | Highest Honors
Reese Thai-Sandoval | Beach Volleyball | Highest Honors
Emily Uhrinak | Beach Volleyball | Highest Honors
Naina Urs | Beach Volleyball | Highest Honors
Emily Von Goetz | Beach Volleyball | Highest Honors
Ava Berard | Beach Volleyball | With Honors
Isabelle Comes | Beach Volleyball | With Honors
Reese Fraser | Beach Volleyball | With Honors
Ary Hawes | Beach Volleyball | With Honors
Lindsay Heller | Beach Volleyball | With Honors
Alexandra Leal | Beach Volleyball | With Honors
Shelby Santos | Beach Volleyball | With Honors
Brianna Volpp | Beach Volleyball | With Honors
Kimi Waller | Beach Volleyball | With Honors
Julia Bodor | Beach Volleyball | Honor Roll
Juliana Chapman | Beach Volleyball | Honor Roll
Kirra Martin | Beach Volleyball | Honor Roll
Alexandra Rodgers | Beach Volleyball | Honor Roll
Kaitlyn Smyth | Beach Volleyball | Honor Roll
Nils Cooper | Men’s Basketball | Highest Honors
Lukas Prongos | Men’s Basketball | Highest Honors
Niko Rocak | Men’s Basketball | Highest Honors
Connor Sevilla | Men’s Basketball | Highest Honors
Marsalis Roberson | Men’s Basketball | With Honors
Pablo Tamba | Men’s Basketball | With Honors
Carl Daughtery | Men’s Basketball | Honor Roll
Leonardo DeBruhl | Men’s Basketball | Honor Roll
Ryann Bennett | Women’s Basketball | Highest Honors
Sydney Burns | Women’s Basketball | Highest Honors
Megan Norris | Women’s Basketball | Highest Honors
Tova Sabel | Women’s Basketball | Highest Honors
Avery Sussex | Women’s Basketball | Highest Honors
Theoni Tsami | Women’s Basketball | Highest Honors
Sahana Kanagasabay | Women’s Basketball | Honor Roll
Jade Bai | Women’s Golf | Highest Honors
Lauren Calderon | Women’s Golf | Highest Honors
Vani Karimanal | Women’s Golf | Highest Honors
Elina Kuang | Women’s Golf | Highest Honors
Abigail Leighton | Women’s Golf | With Honors
Skyler May | Women’s Golf | With Honors
Marina Mata | Women’s Golf | Honor Roll
Elvira Rastvortseva | Women’s Golf | Honor Roll
Luke Goodman | Men’s Soccer | Highest Honors
Jason Hsu | Men’s Soccer | Highest Honors
Talin Morgan | Men’s Soccer | Highest Honors
Diego Orosco | Men’s Soccer | Highest Honors
Matiello Rafael | Men’s Soccer | Highest Honors
Ensio Sardans | Men’s Soccer | Highest Honors
Noah Schwengeler | Men’s Soccer | Highest Honors
Marco Smith | Men’s Soccer | Highest Honors
Kevin Welch | Men’s Soccer | Highest Honors
Brandon Won | Men’s Soccer | Highest Honors
Scott Buie | Men’s Soccer | With Honors
Hayden Carlson | Men’s Soccer | With Honors
Andrew Dutra | Men’s Soccer | With Honors
Marcus Garcia | Men’s Soccer | With Honors
Cason Goodman | Men’s Soccer | With Honors
Gabe Haggerty | Men’s Soccer | With Honors
Gavin Leypon | Men’s Soccer | With Honors
Zachary Lillington | Men’s Soccer | With Honors
Cole McLemore | Men’s Soccer | With Honors
Cole Pond | Men’s Soccer | With Honors
Declan Horio | Men’s Soccer | Honor Roll
Ian Ngonethong | Men’s Soccer | Honor Roll
Cole Powell | Men’s Soccer | Honor Roll
Chase Tanon | Men’s Soccer | Honor Roll
Joshlyn Aguirre | Women’s Soccer | Highest Honors
Sydney Bushman | Women’s Soccer | Highest Honors
Keylei Carroll | Women’s Soccer | Highest Honors
Ava Ellingson | Women’s Soccer | Highest Honors
Mckayla Farrell | Women’s Soccer | Highest Honors
Sage Frudden | Women’s Soccer | Highest Honors
Caeley Goldstein | Women’s Soccer | Highest Honors
Megan Gover | Women’s Soccer | Highest Honors
Devyn Simmons | Women’s Soccer | Highest Honors
Taylor Dever | Women’s Soccer | With Honors
Keeley Grove | Women’s Soccer | With Honors
Charlotte Henness | Women’s Soccer | With Honors
Isabella Mayo | Women’s Soccer | With Honors
Lakelee Perkins | Women’s Soccer | With Honors
Viet-Thy Tran | Women’s Soccer | With Honors
Genavieve Fontes | Women’s Soccer | Honor Roll
Ashleigh Garcia | Women’s Soccer | Honor Roll
Kylie Garcia | Women’s Soccer | Honor Roll
Teresa Garcia | Women’s Soccer | Honor Roll
Kylee Redman | Women’s Soccer | Honor Roll
Samantha Ruelas | Women’s Soccer | Honor Roll
Samantha Tristan | Women’s Soccer | Honor Roll
Sofia Anderson | Softball | Highest Honors
Amanda Baldwin | Softball | Highest Honors
Mikaela Buscemi | Softball | Highest Honors
Alyssa Dethlefson | Softball | Highest Honors
Sophia Eftekhari | Softball | Highest Honors
Isabella Holtz | Softball | Highest Honors
Naomi Kalanetra | Softball | Highest Honors
Claire Shelton | Softball | Highest Honors
Vanessa Calvillo | Softball | With Honors
Stefani Ramirez | Softball | With Honors
Rylee Reeves | Softball | With Honors
Caroline Grimes | Softball | Honor Roll
Grace Kilday | Softball | Honor Roll
Marley Panziera | Softball | Honor Roll
Ashley Sawai | Softball | Honor Roll
Brienna Weekes | Softball | Honor Roll
Olivia Anderson | Women’s Swim and Dive | Highest Honors
Gabi Bellin | Women’s Swim and Dive | Highest Honors
Jordan Bindseil | Women’s Swim and Dive | Highest Honors
Christy Douglas | Women’s Swim and Dive | Highest Honors
Karina Giacomazza | Women’s Swim and Dive | Highest Honors
Kayla Gregory | Women’s Swim and Dive | Highest Honors
Ellie Heit | Women’s Swim and Dive | Highest Honors
Ema Klimauskas | Women’s Swim and Dive | Highest Honors
Anagha Kondury | Women’s Swim and Dive | Highest Honors
Elsie Luisetti | Women’s Swim and Dive | Highest Honors
Sophia Mackay | Women’s Swim and Dive | Highest Honors
Katie McLain | Women’s Swim and Dive | Highest Honors
Summer Mitchell | Women’s Swim and Dive | Highest Honors
Ella Palmer | Women’s Swim and Dive | Highest Honors
Malia Panganiban | Women’s Swim and Dive | Highest Honors
Taylor Schwarz | Women’s Swim and Dive | Highest Honors
Ayanna Thompson | Women’s Swim and Dive | Highest Honors
Aileen Zheng | Women’s Swim and Dive | Highest Honors
Leila Busch | Women’s Swim and Dive | With Honors
Madeline Ching | Women’s Swim and Dive | With Honors
Taylor Hansen | Women’s Swim and Dive | With Honors
Lauren Kudo | Women’s Swim and Dive | With Honors
Emily Scheberies | Women’s Swim and Dive | With Honors
Mackenzie Young | Women’s Swim and Dive | With Honors
Elena Gingras | Women’s Swim and Dive | Honor Roll
Haley Hoefer | Women’s Swim and Dive | Honor Roll
Samantha Rhodes | Women’s Swim and Dive | Honor Roll
Leinaala Wong | Women’s Swim and Dive | Honor Roll
Kaveh Taheri | Men’s Tennis | Highest Honors
Ryan Torres | Men’s Tennis | Highest Honors
Perry Di Giulio | Men’s Tennis | With Honors
Lucas Bollinger | Men’s Tennis | Honor Roll
Sam Devries | Men’s Tennis | Honor Roll
Isabella Bringas | Women’s Tennis | Highest Honors
Claire Galerkin | Women’s Tennis | Highest Honors
Mika Ikemori | Women’s Tennis | Highest Honors
Solia Valentine | Women’s Tennis | Highest Honors
Kaia Wolfe | Women’s Tennis | Highest Honors
Penelope Wong | Women’s Tennis | Highest Honors
Maya Youssef | Women’s Tennis | Highest Honors
Polina Marakhtanova | Women’s Tennis | With Honors
Francesca Castro | Women’s Track and Field | Highest Honors
Ashleigh Christy | Women’s Track and Field | Highest Honors
Chiara Fantin | Women’s Track and Field | Highest Honors
Rachel Fruchtmann | Women’s Track and Field | Highest Honors
Dominika Janik | Women’s Track and Field | Highest Honors
Riley Lankford | Women’s Track and Field | Highest Honors
Haley Large | Women’s Track and Field | Highest Honors
Sydney Mccann | Women’s Track and Field | Highest Honors
Kadidja Sangare | Women’s Track and Field | Highest Honors
Aiza Sarwar | Women’s Track and Field | Highest Honors
Trisha Sharma | Women’s Track and Field | Highest Honors
Maya Shinnick | Women’s Track and Field | Highest Honors
Francesca Villain | Women’s Track and Field | Highest Honors
Elizabeth Churchill | Women’s Track and Field | With Honors
Hannah Crone | Women’s Track and Field | With Honors
Sarah Graessley | Women’s Track and Field | With Honors
Lily Holman | Women’s Track and Field | With Honors
Ashpreet Kler | Women’s Track and Field | With Honors
Chinyere Egbuziem | Women’s Track and Field | Honor Roll
Elle Middleton | Women’s Track and Field | Honor Roll
Elizabeth Povey | Women’s Track and Field | Honor Roll
Lauren Spellman | Women’s Track and Field | Honor Roll
Demi Cole | Women’s Volleyball | Highest Honors
Reese Diersbock | Women’s Volleyball | Highest Honors
Kendall Rogers | Women’s Volleyball | Highest Honors
Haden Bones | Women’s Volleyball | With Honors
Ally Chandler | Women’s Volleyball | With Honors
Brooke Hibino | Women’s Volleyball | With Honors
Mia Starr | Women’s Volleyball | With Honors
Olivia Utterback | Women’s Volleyball | With Honors
Ximena Cordero | Women’s Volleyball | Honor Roll
Alexa Hogan | Women’s Volleyball | Honor Roll
Baxter Chelsom | Men’s Water Polo | Highest Honors
Brody Crouch | Men’s Water Polo | Highest Honors
Leonardo Glessmann | Men’s Water Polo | Highest Honors
Timothy Kerr | Men’s Water Polo | Highest Honors
Mac Marr | Men’s Water Polo | Highest Honors
Aleix Beltran | Men’s Water Polo | With Honors
Joshua Davis | Men’s Water Polo | With Honors
Colton Fine | Men’s Water Polo | With Honors
William Nomura | Men’s Water Polo | With Honors
Austin Quick | Men’s Water Polo | With Honors
Oleg Shatskikh | Men’s Water Polo | With Honors
Will Stryker | Men’s Water Polo | With Honors
Waylon Fox | Men’s Water Polo | Honor Roll
JT Kujawa | Men’s Water Polo | Honor Roll
Colin Nicholls | Men’s Water Polo | Honor Roll
Nina Albers | Women’s Water Polo | Highest Honors
Sofia Bozzo | Women’s Water Polo | Highest Honors
Harper Gilbert | Women’s Water Polo | Highest Honors
Lucy Holland | Women’s Water Polo | Highest Honors
Kelly Hungerford | Women’s Water Polo | Highest Honors
Chelsea Johnson | Women’s Water Polo | Highest Honors
Bridget Miller | Women’s Water Polo | Highest Honors
Gianna Nocetti | Women’s Water Polo | Highest Honors
Caroline Oates | Women’s Water Polo | Highest Honors
Sarah Shaw | Women’s Water Polo | Highest Honors
Lillie Vehling | Women’s Water Polo | Highest Honors
Ashley Wallin | Women’s Water Polo | Highest Honors
Eva Baker | Women’s Water Polo | With Honors
Liberty Massman | Women’s Water Polo | With Honors
Madison Sparre | Women’s Water Polo | With Honors
Maddie Sumner | Women’s Water Polo | With Honors
Margo Tempel | Women’s Water Polo | With Honors
Kathryn Westphal | Women’s Water Polo | With Honors
Samantha Yoo | Women’s Water Polo | With Honors
Sarah Ellis-Keller | Women’s Water Polo | Honor Roll
Taylor Gair | Women’s Water Polo | Honor Roll
Ally Smith | Women’s Water Polo | Honor Roll
Muhammed Ahmed | Men’s Cross Country/Track and Field | Highest Honors
Alex Bobowski | Men’s Cross Country/Track and Field | Highest Honors
Michael Cooper | Men’s Cross Country/Track and Field | Highest Honors
Zachary Graeber | Men’s Cross Country/Track and Field | Highest Honors
Caden Hicks | Men’s Cross Country/Track and Field | Highest Honors
Chance Tokubo | Men’s Cross Country/Track and Field | Highest Honors
Ethan Brooks | Men’s Cross Country/Track and Field | With Honors
Hayden Brooks | Men’s Cross Country/Track and Field | With Honors
Nick Herrmann | Men’s Cross Country/Track and Field | With Honors
Jacob Lawrence | Men’s Cross Country/Track and Field | Honor Roll
Emily Allison | Women’s Cross Country/Track and Field | Highest Honors
Hope Bergmark | Women’s Cross Country/Track and Field | Highest Honors
Kirra Fisk | Women’s Cross Country/Track and Field | Highest Honors
Maddie Kackley | Women’s Cross Country/Track and Field | Highest Honors
Cassidy Kajita | Women’s Cross Country/Track and Field | Highest Honors
Fiona McGrath | Women’s Cross Country/Track and Field | Highest Honors
Jocelyn Pacheco | Women’s Cross Country/Track and Field | Highest Honors
Kayla Towne | Women’s Cross Country/Track and Field | Highest Honors
Lauren Villegas | Women’s Cross Country/Track and Field | Highest Honors
Stormy Wallace | Women’s Cross Country/Track and Field | Highest Honors
Natalie Wieland | Women’s Cross Country/Track and Field | Highest Honors
Kiah Aitken | Women’s Cross Country/Track and Field | With Honors
Dani Barrett | Women’s Cross Country/Track and Field | With Honors
Jenna Calvert | Women’s Cross Country/Track and Field | With Honors
Shae Hill | Women’s Cross Country/Track and Field | With Honors
Tauren Mitchell | Women’s Cross Country/Track and Field | With Honors
Kayla Rutz | Women’s Cross Country/Track and Field | With Honors
Brooke Butler | Women’s Cross Country/Track and Field | Honor Roll
Grace Dunham | Women’s Cross Country/Track and Field | Honor Roll
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