Sports
Missions' Ripken Reyes named Texas League Player of the Week
SAN ANTONIO — Minor League Baseball announced that San Antonio Missions outfielder Ripken Reyes is the Texas League Player of the Week for the week of June 9-15. Reyes ripped the Sod Poodles in Amarillo, going 6-16 (.375) with three triples, a home run and 10 RBIs—the most across all Double-A baseball this week. He […]


SAN ANTONIO — Minor League Baseball announced that San Antonio Missions outfielder Ripken Reyes is the Texas League Player of the Week for the week of June 9-15.
Reyes ripped the Sod Poodles in Amarillo, going 6-16 (.375) with three triples, a home run and 10 RBIs—the most across all Double-A baseball this week. He also walked four times, stole a base, scored seven runs and put down a game-tying suicide squeeze bunt. At one point, Reyes tripled three times within four at bats, including twice with the bases loaded. He became the first player at the Double-A level dating back to 2005 to hit bases-clearing triples in back-to-back games.
For Reyes, this is the first weekly award of his career. The 28-year-old is in his sixth professional season with the San Diego Padres after they drafted him in the 30th round of the 2019 Major League Baseball (MLB) Draft. Reyes began 2025 with Triple-A El Paso, where he hit .269 in a pair of stints with the Chihuahuas. He rejoined the Missions on Tuesday, June 10, just in time to begin his tear through Amarillo.
The switch-hitter has played 328 games with the San Antonio Missions over the past four seasons, sporting a .239 batting average with 41 doubles, 12 triples, 11 home runs, 123 RBIs and 55 stolen bases. In 2023, Reyes set the single- season Minor League Baseball record when he was hit by 49 pitches while with the Missions. Reyes, a true utility man, has played every position for San Antonio except catcher and pitcher.
Reyes was born in Bremerton, Washington, but he grew up in Stockton, California. He played three seasons at the University of California, Berkeley, where he obtained his bachelor’s degree in English. He then finished his collegiate baseball career at the University of San Diego, where he graduated with his master’s degree. While he plays professionally, Reyes continues to pursue a PhD in Leadership Studies from the University of San Diego.
Reyes becomes the third Missions player to win Texas League Player of the Week in 2025. He joins Devin Ortiz, who won the award for the week of March 31-April 6, and Francisco Acuña, who won the last time the Missions played in Amarillo during the week of April 21-27.
The Missions used the production from Reyes to claim an electrifying series win in Amarillo, leaving them 1.5 games behind the Frisco RoughRiders for first place in the Texas League South with just six games left in the first half. The RoughRiders and Missions began a crucial series against each other on Tuesday at Nelson Wolff Stadium in San Antonio.
For more information on an action-packed homestand, call 210-675-7275, or visit samissions.com.
Sports
Great American Conference issues scholar, sportsmanship awards
The Great American Conference named Harding University’s record-setting basketball star Sage Hawley as its 2024-2025 Female Scholar Athlete of the Year on Wednesday, according to a news release. Hawley became the fourth Lady Bison to receive the honor, tying with East Central University for the most honorees in league history. Hawley joins fellow former Bisons […]

The Great American Conference named Harding University’s record-setting basketball star Sage Hawley as its 2024-2025 Female Scholar Athlete of the Year on Wednesday, according to a news release.
Hawley became the fourth Lady Bison to receive the honor, tying with East Central University for the most honorees in league history.
Hawley joins fellow former Bisons basketball players Kristen Celsor and Arielle Saunders, who won in 2013-2014 and 2014-2015, respectively.
Harding’s track and field All-American Anna Kay Clark claimed the award last year.
Hawley won her second College Sports Communicators Academic All-America honor in 2025. She earned a 3.79 GPA in information systems as a graduate student.
Earning GAC Tournament MVP honors, Hawley led the Lady Bisons to a 69-52 win against Southeastern Oklahoma. The net cutting victory was Harding’s first GAC Championship since 2017.
Hawley became a two-time All-American after finishing her career as just the third player in NCAA Division II history with at least 2,300 points and 1,300 rebounds.
2024-2025 GAC Female Scholar Athlete of the Year nominees
Softball
Northwestern Oklahoma State’s Ashley Low (volleyball, softball and track and field), University of Arkansas-Monticello’s Kyann Woods and East Central’s Taylor Spence.
Soccer
Ouachita Baptist’s Abbey Moore and Southwestern Oklahoma State’s Anna Bager.
Basketball
Henderson State University’s Bobbi Bazzle, SAU’s Marlee Bright and Southern Nazarene’s Hannah Giddey.
Cross Country, Track and Field
Arkansas Tech’s Mackenzie Epperson, Oklahoma Baptist’s Sophia Strange and Southeastern Oklahoma’s Emma Berry.
Male Scholar Athlete of the Year
The Great American Conference named Southern Nazarene track and field athlete Colter Bufford as its 2024-2025 Male Scholar Athlete of the Year on Wednesday, a news release said.
Bufford became the second Crimson Storm track and athlete to win the honor. He captured Southern Nazarene’s first GAC title in the javelin. While at the GAC Championships, he broke the meet record and the school record with a mark of 67.35 meters.
Bufford ranked No. 14 in the nation in the event while qualifying for the NCAA Championships.
Bufford has a 4.0 GPA in biochemistry, serves as president of Tri Beta and is the treasurer for Alpha Epsilon Delta.
Oklahoma State Senator Kristen Thompson and Oklahoma Representative Nicole Miller awarded Bufford citations for research over dissolved organic matter. Bufford recently conducted medical research for the Oklahoma Medical Research Foundation.
2024-2025 GAC Male Scholar Athlete of the Year
Football
UAM’s Ryan Williams, Arkansas Tech’s Peyton Henderson, East Central’s Seth Spady, Harding’s Jake Dugger, Southwestern State’s Isaac Foster’s, Southeastern State’s Damien Brown and SAU’s Matthew Whitten.
Baseball
Henderson State’s Cayden Davis and Northwestern State’s Will Kates.
Tennis
OBU’s Ramon Strassmann.
Cross Country, Track and Field
Oklahoma Baptist’s Carson Kardokus.
Sportsmanship awards
The GAC announced its sportsmanship awards as chosen by the league’s head coaches based on a point system on Tuesday.
The GAC’s Student-Athlete Advisory Committee, in 2012, initiated a sportsmanship award to be presented for all team sports, the release said. The winning school will receive a banner similar to the one presented to GAC tournament championship winners when the sportsmanship award winners are announced.
GAC Commissioner Will Prewitt said the goal of programs is to promote good sportsmanship among its teams, fans and all involved with the events.
“These awards emphasize the NCAA Division II focus on sportsmanship and game environment. We could not be prouder of what these programs have put forth on the field and in ways that aren’t necessarily reflected in the outcome,” Prewitt said in the release.
ArkansasTech
Arkansas Tech won in women’s golf and for the first time in school history in men’s golf, becoming only the second school to win both awards in the same season in GAC history.
The Golden Suns’ cross country team also captured their first sportsmanship award.
OBU
For the Tigers, both football and softball earned back-to-back sportsmanship awards, and both sports won their fourth sportsmanship awards in school history.
The Tigers collected their first for women’s track and field.
Arkansas Tech and OBU each claimed three sportsmanship awards.
Harding
The Bisons garnered the award for both men’s and women’s soccer and became the first GAC school to win for both sports in the same season.
The honor represents the 11-in-13 seasons for Harding’s women’s team and the first-ever for the Bisons men’s team.
Northwestern State
The Rangers join Arkansas Tech, OBU and Harding as the only GAC schools to secure multiple sportsmanship awards for the year.
The Rangers won their second-straight men’s track and field sportsmanship awards and the first-ever sportsmanship award for women’s basketball in Northwestern State history.
Southwestern State
Southwestern State volleyball received recognition for the fifth-straight year, and sixth time overall, for a sportsmanship award.
Southeastern State earned its fifth sportsmanship award for men’s basketball in school history.
Henderson State
Henderson State claimed a sportsmanship award for women’s tennis for the fourth time.
Southern Nazarene
Southern Nazarene baseball secured its second sportsmanship award.
East Central
East Central men’s cross country won the program’s first sportsmanship award.

Sports
Vote for the top returning volleyball player in the Savannah area in a poll
Volleyball is ready to get started in the Greater Savannah area as high school teams are preparing for the season, with regular games set to get started in August. There is no shortage of talent in the area as several teams seem primed to make postseason runs. Savannah Arts is coming off its first trip […]
Volleyball is ready to get started in the Greater Savannah area as high school teams are preparing for the season, with regular games set to get started in August.
There is no shortage of talent in the area as several teams seem primed to make postseason runs. Savannah Arts is coming off its first trip to the state finals and will be in the hunt again in Class 2A.
St. Vincent’s, Savannah Christian, Calvary Day and Savannah Country Day are looking to make some noise in the Class A-3A Private School classification.
Richmond Hill, Effingham County and South Effingham have produced talented teams in recent years, and St. Andrew’s had a memorable season in the GIAA last year.
We recently published a list of the top returning high school volleyball players in the Greater Savannah area for the 2025 season. Here’s a chance for readers to weigh in and select their favorite in an open poll with no restrictions on the voting. The poll will close on Monday, Aug. 4, at 11 a.m.
Here are the candidates.
Talia Johnson, Richmond Hill, sr., OH
Clara Vorel, South Effingham, sr., MH
Kaylyn Gill, St. Vincent’s, sr., S/OH
Kinsey Prado, Calvary Day, sr., OH
Sophie Chu, St. Vincent’s, sr., libero
Maggie Allen, Savannah Arts, sr., libero
Grace Duffie, Richmond Hill, sr., S
Iracena Manlove, South Effingham, sr., libero
Ellie Ayala, Savannah Arts, soph., OH/S
Carinne Cason, Savannah Christian, soph., S
Khloe Jesswein, St. Andrew’s, soph., MB
Alaina Moultrie, Calvary Day, sr.
Myla Shippy, Habersham School, soph., OH
Brownette Olson, Habersham School, sr., OH
Georgia McBride, Calvary Day, sr., libero
Jordyn Powell, Effingham County, jr., OH
Bella Giaquinto, Effingham County, sr., libero
Abbey Zellner, Habersham School, jr., S
Katie Swezey, Islands, sr., S
Taylor Young, Jenkins, sr., MB
Emily Carter, Jenkins, jr.
Abigael Edovard-Lucile, Johnson, jr.
Kailah King, Richmond Hill, jr., MH/OPP
Lily Ritzema, Richmond Hill, sr., OPP/OH
Sam Lehto, Savannah Arts, sr., OH
Charlotte Brown, Savannah Arts, jr., MB
Ella Brooking, Savannah Christian, sr., MB
Olivia Aliotta, Savannah Country Day, jr., OH
Boots Buckler, Savannah Country Day, sr. S
Leah Magana, South Effingham, jr., S
Morgan Stringer, South Effingham, jr., OH
Grace Dare, St. Andrew’s, jr., S
Megan Warren, St. Vincent’s, sr., MB
Addison Grayson, St. Vincent’s, sr., OH
Briana Tuten, St. Vincent’s, sr., OH
Dennis Knight covers sports for the Savannah Morning News. Contact him at Dknight@savannahnow.com. Twitter: @DennisKnightSMN
Sports
2025 CWRU Women’s Track and Field Outdoor Season Recap
Story Links The Case Western Reserve University women’s track and field team had a pair of conference champions and totaled eight All-University Athletic Association honors during the 2025 outdoor season. Graduate student Michaela Burkhauser and senior Rachel Ginn both brought home gold for the Spartans at the 2025 UAA Outdoor Championships […]

The Case Western Reserve University women’s track and field team had a pair of conference champions and totaled eight All-University Athletic Association honors during the 2025 outdoor season.
Graduate student Michaela Burkhauser and senior Rachel Ginn both brought home gold for the Spartans at the 2025 UAA Outdoor Championships held at the Icahn Stadium in Manhattan, New York. On the first day of the competition, Ginn won the hammer throw with a toss of 50.61 meters, a personal best mark. Graduate student Ailean Duffie placed second in the event with a heave of 48.86 meters to receive All-UAA honors for the second time in her career. Burkhauser thew the discus at least three meters further than the rest of the competition, taking the UAA title in the event with a toss of 45.06 meters. Earlier in the meet, she placed second in the shot put, giving her two All-UAA honors at both the indoor and outdoor championships. Junior Michelle Lee placed second in the discus throw to earn her third career All-UAA award.
Overall, CWRU placed fourth in the conference for the second consecutive year and third time since the 2022 championship. Sophomore Holly Schreiber was on the conference podium for the first time in her career, placing second in the pole vault by clearing 3.57 meters. Participating in her first career conference championship, first-year Sarah Viveiros received the silver medal in the javelin throw with a toss of 38.46 meters. On the track, junior Ayla Grabenbauer placed third in the 3,000-meter steeplechase with a time of 11:00.94, picking up her first career All-UAA honor.
Burkhauser (discus throw), Ginn (hammer throw), Grabenbauer (3,000-meter steeplechase), and Schreiber (pole vault) each received All-Great Lakes Region recognition for their achievements at the conference meet by placing in the top five among schools in the region in their events.
CWRU performed well at the Sparky Adams Invitational hosted by Baldwin Wallace on April 18 and 19. The team placed third out of 12 teams with 111.0 points with season-best times or marks in five events. At the end of the season, junior runner Lauren Iagnemma recorded the third-fastest time in program history and 42nd-fastest time in Division III in the 5,000-meter run (17:03.07) at the Harrison Dillard Twilight, also hosted by BW.
In the classroom, five members of the team were honored by the College Sports Communicators as members of the Academic All-District Team. They included Ginn, Grabenbauer, Iagnemma, Schreiber, and junior Ashley Novak.
Members of the CWRU women’s track and field team received the following individual honors during the 2025 outdoor track and field season:
The following were top times/marks by Spartan track and field athletes during the outdoor 2025 season:
100-Meter Dash
|
Riley Friedman
|
12.80
|
Sparky Adams Invite
|
200-Meter Dash
|
Riley Friedman
|
26.19
|
UAA Outdoor Championships
|
400-Meter Dash
|
Melanie Taylor
|
59.77
|
Wooster Invite
|
800-Meter Run
|
Arianna Holbrook
|
2:14.96
|
Sparky Adams Invite
|
1,500-Meter Run
|
Lauren Iagnemma
|
4:38.59
|
Mount Union Last Chance Meet
|
5,000-Meter Run
|
Lauren Iagnemma
|
17:03.07
|
Harrison Dillard Twilight
|
10,000-Meter Run
|
Becca Liaw
|
39:51.54
|
UAA Outdoor Championships
|
100-Meter Hurdles
|
Gabby Alphonse
|
17.09
|
UAA Outdoor Championships
|
400-Meter Hurdles
|
Eyoha Teshome
|
1:10.57
|
Sparky Adams Invite
|
3,000-Meter Steeplechase
|
Ayla Grabenbauer
|
11:00.94
|
UAA Outdoor Championships
|
4×100-Meter Relay
|
Sarah Ball, Melanie Taylor, Gabby Alphonse, Riley Friedman
|
51.15
|
Sparky Adams Invite
|
4×400-Meter Relay
|
Siena Kannenberg, Julia Hluck, Arianna Holbrook, Melanie Taylor
|
4:08.92
|
Bob Kahn Invite
|
4×800-Meter Relay
|
Melanie Taylor, Julia Walko, Lauren Iagnemma, Julia Hluck
|
9:36.42
|
UAA Outdoor Championships
|
High Jump
|
Jordan Su
|
1.49m
|
Sparky Adams Invite
|
Pole Vault
|
Holly Schreiber
|
3.57m
|
UAA Outdoor Championships
|
Long Jump
|
Jordan Su
|
5.19m
|
W&L Track Carnival
|
Triple Jump
|
Jordan Su
|
11.06m
|
W&L Track Carnival
|
Shot Put
|
Michaela Burkhauser
|
13.43m
|
SPIRE Last Chance Meet
|
Discus Throw
|
Michaela Burkhauser
|
45.06m
|
UAA Outdoor Championships
|
Hammer Throw
|
Rachel Ginn
|
50.61m
|
UAA Outdoor Championships
|
Javelin Throw
|
Sarah Viveiros
|
38.94m
|
Gator Goldberg Invite
|
Sports
Georgia Southern hosts more than 300 at Volleyball Skills Camp
The success of Georgia Southern volleyball has been spilling into the summer. The Eagles are coming off a season in which they went 22-7, including going a perfect 14-0 at home and, for the second straight season, head coach Chad Willis took the Eagles to the postseason. Recently, Willis saw a record number of more […]

The success of Georgia Southern volleyball has been spilling into the summer.
The Eagles are coming off a season in which they went 22-7, including going a perfect 14-0 at home and, for the second straight season, head coach Chad Willis took the Eagles to the postseason.
Recently, Willis saw a record number of more than 300 high school players and teams come to the Georgia Southern campus to participate in their sixth annual summer team camp.
“It’s great to see the level of talent and teams that have been coming here for three or four years in a row,” Willis said. “To see their growth as teams and the trust they put in us to come back every year says a lot. It’s a great chance to give back to the community and to continue to foster relationships with coaches and players from throughout the state and beyond.”
This was actually the third camp the Eagles have hosted this summer, as they had their all-skills camp in June and then their college ID camp a couple of weeks ago. The most recent camp was to teach skill training and to allow the teams to go up against each other in friendly competition. Willis said the camps are not only a way to pass on knowledge to area teams but they also use them for recruiting purposes.

– photo by JOSH AUBREY/staff
“Obviously our college ID camp is the main camp for identifying talent, but we also see a lot this week with our team camp,” Willis said. “We have over 300 kids from Georgia and South Carolina here for three days so you get to expose them to our campus but we also see some younger age talent we get a chance to evaluate as well.”
Many of the teams in town came from at least a few hours away. The team with the shortest bus ride to Hanner was Statesboro High. Head coach Bob Massee and Willis have a great relationship and he feels it’s important for his team to get in as much work as they can in the off season.
“This is actually the first time in 15 years I have been able to bring our team to a camp in the summer,” Massee said. “We are seeing a lot of drills and are able to play a lot of games against other teams we don’t normally see too much. Coach Willis runs a smooth camp with plenty of opportunities for learning as well as playing which is great for our team.”
Helping to work the camps are members of the Eagle volleyball team. Willis feels this is a great opportunity for the players to not only understand where the coaches are coming from, but he thinks by teaching it also helps the players work on their fundamentals.
“Sometimes I feel we get as much as the players that are here watching and learning from us,” said Eagle outside hitter Sam Bowron. “It is cool to see how some of the drills we are teaching them can really improve a team just by doing it for a few hours. I never got a chance to go to a camp like this when I was in high school but I think something like this would have been great and we take a lot of pride in working with these players here.”
The Eagles open the season Aug. 23 as they take on South Carolina in an exhibition game at 7:00 at Enmarket Arena in Savannah.
Sports
Alcoa clothing company creates shirts for MiLB teams across the US
Alcoa-based clothing company GoTeez formed a partnership with the Knoxville Smokies, which has helped them create shirts for more than 70 MiLB teams. ALCOA, Tenn. — At the Knoxville Smokies baseball shop, you can be in and out in less than five minutes, with a t-shirt made in East Tennessee. That same thing can now […]


Alcoa-based clothing company GoTeez formed a partnership with the Knoxville Smokies, which has helped them create shirts for more than 70 MiLB teams.
ALCOA, Tenn. — At the Knoxville Smokies baseball shop, you can be in and out in less than five minutes, with a t-shirt made in East Tennessee. That same thing can now be said at more than 75 other baseball teams across the Minor League Baseball organization.
Jeff Shoaf is the Vice President of the sports division at GoTeez clothing company.
“Once we did a lot of July 4th shirts for some teams, we added eight teams just in at the end of June,” he said.
Almost a decade ago, Shoaf said they were only making shirts for four nearby minor league baseball teams. Now they have a license with the MiLB that allows them to print shirts for all teams.
“Last year we were able to get the total up to around 40, 45 teams. Now we’re around 75 teams that we work with in Minor League Baseball,” said Shoaf.
Shoaf credited the expansion to the partnership that first formed with the Knoxville Smokies in 2016.
“We got a license for the Smokies, the Lookouts, the Knights and the Hickory Crawdads, and so we were local licenses for those four teams and then. Basically, every year I’d ask, you know, ‘Hey, can I get the full license? Can we get the full license for all the minor league teams?’ and each year it was like, ‘No, no, no,'” Shoaf said.
When the Smokies ownership started buying teams in the newly formed Appalachian Baseball League, the Smokies deal helped GoTeez finally get the licensure they needed to sell to all MiLB teams.
“They’re the ones that went to bat with us with the Appy League and the guys from Major League Baseball to say these guys are good,” Shoaf said.
The partnership has not only helped GoTeez, but the Smokies, as well.
“Anything I need, they’ll drop off just right before the game. It’s nice to be able to drive 30 minutes to just go sit down with Jeff if I need to, and we can talk through designs or styles,” Smokies merchandise manager Kenny Clawson said.
Shoaf said the work is not done yet.
“If we get all 120 teams buying from us, that’ll be great, but then there’s also all those other teams out there, all those other leagues that we can still hit and say, ‘Hey, we did, we’ve done it for these guys, we can do it for you,'” Shoaf said.
Sports
NYC Polo Bar workers used drugs on shift, sexual harassment rampant: lawsuit
An exclusive Manhattan nightspot that’s counted Meghan Markle, Kamala Harris and Leonardo DiCaprio as customers is a hotbed for sexual harassment among employees — who used spray bottles to take cocaine during their shifts and had a rating system for good-looking customers, a bombshell lawsuit alleges. The swanky Polo Bar, a bar and restaurant owned […]

An exclusive Manhattan nightspot that’s counted Meghan Markle, Kamala Harris and Leonardo DiCaprio as customers is a hotbed for sexual harassment among employees — who used spray bottles to take cocaine during their shifts and had a rating system for good-looking customers, a bombshell lawsuit alleges.
The swanky Polo Bar, a bar and restaurant owned by fashion icon Ralph Lauren and located on East 55th Street at Fifth Avenue, has a “toxic culture … and rampant drug use and alcohol consumption at work,” a veteran former server claimed in a federal lawsuit.
Male bosses groped underlings under the guise of checking their uniforms and managers and servers often openly used cocaine, Frank Nobiletti claimed in court papers.
One server allegedly sold the drug on-site, and workers “regularly mixed cocaine with water in a spray bottle and used that bottle to ingest cocaine” through their skin “during service,” he contended in the legal filing.
Michael Lewis, the bar’s events manager, and Darnell Dodson, its international hospitality directory, both touched Nobiletti, 42, inappropriately at different times, he alleged.
Dodson was known to hire only attractive men, even if they had zero experience, “hoping to have a sexual relationship with them,” Nobiletti claimed in the lawsuit. “Male employees who had a sexual relationship with him … would receive preferential treatment.”
Workers also allegedly played a twisted “Rating Game” where “women customers are rated based on attractiveness.
“The male servers frequently made offensive and graphic sexual comments about the women customers,” the suit alleged.
Since opening in 2015, Polo Bar has been one of the most exclusive celebrity haunts in the Big Apple. The establishment is popular with bold faced names like Tom Hanks, Bill and Hillary Clinton, George Clooney, and U2’s Bono.
Its menu boasts caviar and potatoes for $145, pan-seared Dover sole for $80, and even $18 pigs in a blanket. One of its cocktails, The Family Reserve — which contains Jose Cuervo Reserva de la Familia Extra Añejo Tequila, D.O.M. Benedictine and Brandy, Crème de Cacao, and Amaro Averna — will set you back $50.
Nobiletti claimed he “faced terrible sexual harassment” and was fired in February 2024 after he complained human resources.
Supervisors told him he was being let go “for drinking at work even though, since the Polo Bar opened in 2015, management and staff regularly drank alcohol and used illegal drugs during work hours with little to no consequences for such actions,” he said in the legal papers.
“While the restaurant and its hard-working staff do everything they can to ensure that their guests have a first class experience, defendants completely failed to guarantee that their employees had a safe and legal work environment,” he said in the July 22 filing.
In a statement to The Post, Polo Bar said: “We have high standards for how employees conduct themselves and no tolerance for misconduct, so we take swift action when these standards are not met. This includes Mr. Nobiletti’s termination that was based on clear evidence of his misconduct. Because we take all employee-related concerns seriously, we thoroughly investigated Mr. Nobiletti’s allegations and determined they have no merit.”
Nobiletti is seeking unspecified damages. His attorneys declined to discuss the case. Lewis and Dodson could not be reached for comment.
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