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Update the books | Penn State track and field ends season in record-breaking fashion | Penn State Track & Field News

Hundreds of fans, athletes and coaches cheered on as the national championship banner was unveiled at the 2025 Penn State National Open, revealing Cheickna Traore’s 2024 NCAA Track and Field Outdoor National Championship 200-meter victory. Fast forward a year later, and while the Nittany Lions won’t have a new championship banner hung from the indoor […]

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Hundreds of fans, athletes and coaches cheered on as the national championship banner was unveiled at the 2025 Penn State National Open, revealing Cheickna Traore’s 2024 NCAA Track and Field Outdoor National Championship 200-meter victory.

Fast forward a year later, and while the Nittany Lions won’t have a new championship banner hung from the indoor track, several athletes have pushed themselves one step closer to earning one.

The 2025 track and field season saw its share of highs and lows, from seven school records to a handful of Penn State’s top athletes being injured.

Freshman phenom Ajani Dwyer made his name known in the first meet of the indoor season, running the second-fastest 60-meter time in school history during his first collegiate race.

His 6.55-second personal best didn’t stand for long, as Dwyer soon tied the 6.54-second school record at the U.S. Championship where he finished sixth.







Ajani Dwyer Sprint

Sprinter Ajani Dwyer runs the 60-meter dash at the Nittany Lion Challenge.




In the outdoor season, Dwyer came within 0.01 seconds of breaking the 100-meter record, but after suffering an injury at the Big Ten championship, his postseason hopes were ruined.

However, he wasn’t the only freshman men’s sprinter to break a school record this season.

In the final meet of the indoor regular season, Jake Palermo took the track and carved more than one second off his 400-meter personal best. The Rochester, New York, native put himself atop the record books with a time of 45.65 — his best of the season.

Three months later at the NCAA East First Round, Palermo set an outdoor personal-best 45.88. Two days later in the finals, he ran another personal-best with a time of 45.75 seconds, but missed the NCAA championship by one place.

Collectively, the men’s sprint squad crushed expectations in the men’s 4x400m, running a season-best at the NCAA East First Round to advance to the NCAA championship.







Penn State Tune Up, Palermo runs

Jake Palermo (5) runs on the track during the Penn State Tune Up event inside the Penn State Multi-Sport Facility on Friday, Feb. 21, 2025 in University Park, Pa. 




The group followed with another season-best and No. 3 time in school history in the NCAA championship prelims, securing second team All-American status.

Graduate student Zoey Goldstein made the most of her fifth year at Penn State. She entered the NCAA East First Round seeded 45th, but ran sub-53 seconds for the first time in her career, setting a personal-best 52.56 and the fifth-best time in Penn State history to earn her spot in the finals.

During the indoor season, freshman Tayissa Buchanan made a name for herself, becoming the team’s go-to 600-meter runner following a seventh-place finish at the Big Ten championship.

At 800 meters, school record-holder Hayley Kitching extended her record, running 2:01.14. She also came within two seconds of a school record in the 1,000-meters. However, she sustained an injury prior to her outdoor campaign.

Allon Clay, Olivier Desmeules, Yukichi Ishii and Darius Smallwood were a force to be reckoned with during the indoor season, with Desmeules earning Penn State’s only Big Ten championship in the men’s 600m.

Smallwood set the No. 3 time in the 600m and the No. 2 time in the 800m, while Ishii set the No. 3 time and Desmeules the No. 4 time in the 800m.

In the outdoor season, Handal Roban, who was coming off an injury, Desmeules and Clay earned bids to the NCAA East First Round. Roban and Clay advanced to the NCAA championship, finishing in 14th and ninth place, respectively.

Senior Florence Caron continued to impress in just her second season in the NCAA, furthering her own records in the indoor and outdoor 5,000-meters and the 10,000 meters. Caron competed at the NCAA championship in each event.

Multi-event athlete Maddie Pitts dominated the pentathlon and heptathlon, competing in both at the NCAA championship, as she continued to climb the record books at Penn State, moving to No. 3 all-time in the pentathlon and No. 5 in the heptathlon.

MORE TRACK AND FIELD COVERAGE


Penn State's Handal Roban breaks 800m St. Vincent and the Grenadines record

Less than a week after the NCAA championship, Handal Roban is back at it again.

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Colombia senator, 39, dies weeks after being shot at campaign event | Politics News

Presidential hopeful Miguel Uribe was shot in Bogota on June 7 during a rally and underwent multiple surgeries before his death. Colombian presidential hopeful Miguel Uribe, who had been fighting for his life since he was shot in June during a campaign event, has died, according to his family. Uribe, a 39-year-old senator and a […]

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Presidential hopeful Miguel Uribe was shot in Bogota on June 7 during a rally and underwent multiple surgeries before his death.

Colombian presidential hopeful Miguel Uribe, who had been fighting for his life since he was shot in June during a campaign event, has died, according to his family.

Uribe, a 39-year-old senator and a potential presidential candidate from the right-wing opposition, was shot in Bogota on June 7 during a rally and underwent multiple surgeries before his death.

“I ask God to show me the way to learn to live without you,” his wife, Maria Claudia Tarazona, wrote on social media. “Rest in peace, love of my life, I will take care of our children.”

Uribe enjoyed a rapid political rise, becoming a recognised lawmaker for the Democratic Centre party. He was seeking to run in the 2026 presidential election.

A 15-year-old boy was arrested at the scene with a “9mm Glock-type firearm” and has pleaded not guilty after being formally charged on June 10 with attempted murder, the prosecutor’s office said. Five other suspects have also been arrested.

“Today is a sad day for the country,” Colombian Vice President Francia Marquez wrote on X.

“Violence cannot continue to mark our destiny. Democracy is not built with bullets or blood, it is built with respect, with dialogue,” she said.

‘Security beefed up’

President Gustavo Petro had previously blamed an international crime ring as being behind the attack on Uribe, without providing details or evidence, and has beefed up security for government officials and opposition leaders since it happened.

The assassination is reminiscent of political violence in Colombia during the 1980s and 1990s, when four presidential candidates were murdered in separate attacks blamed on drug cartels allied with right-wing paramilitary death squads.

Uribe’s death also adds to his family’s fraught history, with relatives prominent in Colombian politics.

His mother, journalist Diana Turbay, was killed in 1991 during a botched rescue mission after she was kidnapped by the Medellin cartel, headed by drug lord Pablo Escobar.

Meanwhile, Uribe’s maternal grandfather, Julio Cesar Turbay, served as Colombia’s president from 1978 to 1982, while his paternal grandfather, Rodrigo Uribe Echavarria, headed the Liberal Party and supported Virgilio Barco’s successful 1986 presidential campaign.

Uribe was elected to Bogota’s city council at 25. In 2016, at 30, he was appointed city government secretary, the youngest person to hold the position. He resigned from that post in 2018 to launch an unsuccessful bid for mayor of Bogota as an independent.

In the 2022 legislative elections, Uribe led the Senate slate for the Democratic Center party with the slogan “Colombia First”, winning a seat in the chamber.

There, Uribe cemented his role as one of the primary opposition voices to Petro, criticising the government’s peace strategy aimed at ending Colombia’s six-decade armed conflict.

Former right-wing President Alvaro Uribe, leader of the Democratic Center party with no relation to the deceased senator, called Miguel Uribe “a hope for the homeland”.

Uribe leaves behind his wife, a young son and three teenage daughters of his wife from a previous marriage.



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Southeast High Track Star Joins Grand View

Southeast High School graduate Kannon Tippetts has signed to run track at Grand View University in Iowa. Tippetts was a two-time Class 1A state champion in the open 400 meters. He was also part of a state champion relay, earned three all-state awards in his track and field career, and participated in the state track […]

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Southeast High School graduate Kannon Tippetts has signed to run track at Grand View University in Iowa. Tippetts was a two-time Class 1A state champion in the open 400 meters. He was also part of a state champion relay, earned three all-state awards in his track and field career, and participated in the state track championships all four years for the Cyclones.

Back in May, Tippetts defended his title in the Class 1A boys’ 400 meters with a personal best time of 50.60 seconds back in Casper. Kannon was the top qualifier and only runner under 52 seconds in the prelims, and then captured first place by 0.36 seconds. He also ran on Southeast’s 1A runner-up Sprint Medley Relay.

In 2024, Tippetts won his first state title in the 400 meters at 50.77 seconds. Kannon was also part of the Cyclones’ state championship 4×400 meter relay. They had a time of 3:38.63. Tippetts also won the 1A East Regional crown in the 800 meters.

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Tippetts also played football and basketball at Southeast High School. He also participated in an open indoor track invite at Chadron State College in 2022 and 2023. Kannon received all-conference honors on the basketball court in the 2024-25 season.

Grand View University is in Des Moines, IA. The Vikings compete at the NAIA level of collegiate athletics and are members of the Heart of America Athletic Conference (HAAC).

2025 Boys State Track & Field Meet Day #3

2025 Boys State Track & Field Meet Day #3

Gallery Credit: Frank Gambino

2025 State Track Meet Day #3 Part 2

2025 State Track Meet Day #3 Part 2

Gallery Credit: Shannon Dutcher





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WOU volleyball’s Takatsuka promoted to associate head coach

Story Links MONMOUTH, Ore. — Western Oregon volleyball’s Kellen Takatsuka has been promoted to associate head coach. Takatsuka enters his fourth year with the Wolves volleyball program, beginning as a graduate assistant in 2022 before serving as assistant coach the last two seasons. He also served as. graduate assistant for the WOU women’s […]

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MONMOUTH, Ore. — Western Oregon volleyball’s Kellen Takatsuka has been promoted to associate head coach.

Takatsuka enters his fourth year with the Wolves volleyball program, beginning as a graduate assistant in 2022 before serving as assistant coach the last two seasons. He also served as. graduate assistant for the WOU women’s basketball program from 2021-23.

“I first want to thank our Executive Director of Intercollegiate Athletics Randi Lydum for her support as we promote Coach Kellen to associate head coach,” WOU volleyball head coach Kaiao Nahale-a said. “With her guidance we were able to make this change and we are undoubtedly a better program for it. … Kellen has been a vital piece to the puzzle and an outstanding leader for our team over the past four seasons. He is no doubt one of the youngest, yet strongest, coaches in the country. Our program is excited to continue upward and onward and this change will help us do so.”

On the volleyball side, Takatsuka helped WOU to the most wins for the program since 2012 in 2024 as the Wolves went 15-12 overall as the Wolves have improved in victories each season since his arrival.



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August Storm Runs Off With Gulfport’s Fresh Sand

About a month after Gulfport replaced the sand next to the Casino, an Aug. 10 unnamed storm washed some of it out again.Photo by Cameron Healy The National Weather Service alerted Gulfport residents a Flash Flood Warning around 9 p.m. Aug. 10. The community woke up to damaged beach volleyball courts once again, despite the […]

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A beach covered with debris.
A beach covered with debris. About a month after Gulfport replaced the sand next to the Casino, an Aug. 10 unnamed storm washed some of it out again.
Photo by Cameron Healy

The National Weather Service alerted Gulfport residents a Flash Flood Warning around 9 p.m. Aug. 10. The community woke up to damaged beach volleyball courts once again, despite the City laying new sand down back in July.

Streets throughout Gulfport, including in the Stetson and Tangerine neighborhoods, experienced the forewarned flash flooding despite having some distance —both horizontally and vertically— from the bay. 

Runoff from the flood reopened old wounds at the corner of 54th Street and Shore Boulevard. Streams gashed open the municipal beaches. Downtown businesses took on water. 

How Did We Get Here?

“Basically, we’re just getting sand for $185,000?” Vice Mayor April Thanos asked at the July 1 Gulfport City Council meeting.

“It’s 1,400 tons of sand,” Public Works Director Tom Nicholls said in reply.

Council passed the resolution to buy those truckloads of sand. The sand was then used to fill in damage left from Hurricanes Helene and Milton.

The Gulfport Gecko statue stands over damaged beach.
The Gulfport Gecko statue stands over damaged beach. The beach volleyball courts next to the Gulfport Casino after Hurricane Milton in October of 2024.
Photo by Cathy Salustri

The Gulfport Gecko statue stands above washed-out beach.
The Gulfport Gecko statue stands above washed-out beach. The same beach next to the Casino after the unnamed storm of Aug. 10, 2025.
Photo by Cameron Healy

And it All Goes Downhill From There

On the evening of Aug 10, a flash flood drenched Gulfport, putting Florida’s new no-wake law to the test for the first time. The water that wasn’t drunk by the stormwater system ran south to the Gulf.

“It ran off pretty quick because we were at a low tide,” Tom Nicholls, Gulfport’s Public Works director, said. “[The runoff] eroded some of our sand. It also did some undermining at 54th [Street] and Shore [Boulevard].”

The runoff water cut channels through the new sand near the Casino and right through both volleyball courts. The fast water Nicholls mentioned overpowered the yellow turbidity barriers designed to keep the sediment from sweeping out to sea. The barriers are rated to hold up to 5 feet per second of current and were overwhelmed.

Two gouges cut through a beach expose underground infrastructure.
Two gouges cut through a beach expose underground infrastructure. Two streams gouged through the recently laid sand, exposing underground infrastructure and overpowering the barrier meant to retain the beach.
Photo by Cameron Healy

Beach Recovery Recovery

“I’m still waiting on an Army Corps of Engineers permit to do the final beach restoration to get it all done. I’m going to have to add some more sand, obviously, to that,” he said.

In the meantime, Sam Anany, a Gulfport Public Works employee, went out around 9:30 a.m. Aug. 11 on a backhoe with a giant comb attachment to rake out the municipal beach.

He said that his goal was to remove any uneven ground where people could trip, especially important where people play volleyball. Anany said his work was a morning-of, temporary fix.

“They sent me to put a Band-Aid on it,” he said.

A sign hangs on a fence that reads "Danger: Construction Area. Authorized personnel only."
A sign hangs on a fence that reads "Danger: Construction Area. Authorized personnel only." The beach volleyball courts had still not reopened to the public before it washed out again.
Photo by Cameron Healy

The City is still bidding out the reconstruction at the corner of 54th Street and Shore Boulevard, and until the street and sea wall are rebuilt, water can flow through unobstructed.

“Having the sea wall done would have made it better,” Dakota Barrows, one of the Public Works employees tasked with clearing debris near O’Maddy’s and Williams Pier.

At 10 a.m. Aug. 11, the crew was clearing out bricks, rogue watercraft, and other debris around the potable water line that services the casino.

A backhoe digs out debris at the corner of 54th Street and Shore Boulevard.
A backhoe digs out debris at the corner of 54th Street and Shore Boulevard. Gulfport’s Public Works Department mobilized the morning after the storm to clear debris.
Photo by Cameron Healy

Until the City bids and builds a sea wall and the Army Corps of Engineers permit allows the City to finish the job at the beach, Public Works can only refill hemorrhaged sand and hope for fair weather.

“If we have this type of rain events, there’s not a whole lot we can do at this point,” Nicholls said.

Close your eyes and make a wish. As of the morning after the storm, Aug. 11, 111 days remain until hurricane season ends.

Wet Opens in Downtown Gulfport

The unnamed rain of Aug. 10 also found its way into downtown Gulfport businesses. Not a week open, V-Roll braced for impact by damming under its doors, but received no water.

Further south and lower in elevation, Stormrunners Tavern, Tommy’s Hideaway, Gulfport Beach Bazaar, and the temporarily closed Neptune Grill all had water on their floors in the morning.

A cautioning sign warning about wet floors.
A cautioning sign warning about wet floors. Stormrunners Tavern took on some water the morning of Aug. 11, but “just squeegeed it out.”
Photo by Ethan Perelstein

Stormrunners, with its epoxy floors, had to “just squeegee it out” before opening on the 11th, according to Manager Jason McKennon.

Manager Debbie McHugh started mopping at 8:30 a.m. at Tommy’s Hideaway and didn’t open until the afternoon.

Water covers the floor, with clothes racks and displays of the Beach Bazaar on the walls.
Water covers the floor, with clothes racks and displays of the Beach Bazaar on the walls. Gulfport Beach Bazaar prevented most of the flooding after seeing water on The Gabber Newspaper cameras.
Photo by Mike Hooper

Beach Bazaar’s General Manager Mike Hooper came in the night of the storm to sandbag the large gaps under their doors, having seen water on The Gabber Newspaper’s live feed of the Beach Boulevard. Employee Mike Morris said three staff members (all named Mike) mopped until lunchtime, with no stock damaged.

Help From Public Works

Nicholls suggested residents to call Public Works with any questions or concerns about storm drainage. Public Works checks all the storm drains every day; however, they can’t be everywhere at once.

“Just give me a call and we’ll get out to check it,” he said.

Call Gulfport Public Works at 727-893-1089.


We’re the calm during the storm. No hype, only help!

Bookmark The Gabber Newspaper‘s storm coverage page for quick access to relevant tropical storm updates. No hype, no guessing, just updates on shelters, sandbags, and closures. Sign up for text alerts to get real-time guidance and prep advice when there’s a named storm heading our way. Also, check out our downtown Gulfport and beach web cams.

Support The Gabber Newspaper

Your donations are tax-deductible to the full extent of the law. The Florida Community News Fund is a program administered by the Florida Press Foundation, tax ID #59-2449377, a 501 (C) (3) organization. All donations made at this link go to The Gabber Newspaper through the Florida Press Association, a 501(c)(3).

Please support local news and The Gabber Newspaper!



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MXCTF | Meet the New Gaels

Story Links MORAGA, Calif. — In year three of the Coach Harlan Lopez era for Saint Mary’s Men’s Cross Country and Track put up historic numbers. The Gaels won their first cross country meet under Coach Lopez’s guidance, the 2024 Pacific Invitational, took home their first top-five conference finish under his tutelage, […]

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MORAGA, Calif. — In year three of the Coach Harlan Lopez era for Saint Mary’s Men’s Cross Country and Track put up historic numbers. The Gaels won their first cross country meet under Coach Lopez’s guidance, the 2024 Pacific Invitational, took home their first top-five conference finish under his tutelage, and saw five program records fall on the track. Coach Lopez is primed for another solid season with 19 returning student-athletes, but has also brought in a stellar recruiting class of 18 new Gaels.


“Our 2025 recruiting class is not only the biggest class we have ever had but the fastest.” noted Coach Lopez, “The 18 new athletes coming in are divided evenly between 9 freshmen and 9 transfers which sets up the program for immediate success as well as building for the future. The hope is our transfers can contribute to team success right away as well as help guide these freshmen to be team leaders in a few years. With this 2025 class we have high hopes for team success moving forward and bringing Saint Mary’s cross country to a new level.”  

Let’s meet these new runners for the Gaels Men’s Cross Country and Track programs:

Kyle Byrne | 6-2 | Grad Student | Cal State East Bay | Oakland, Calif. 

PRs: 50.44 (400m), 1:53.87 (800m), 4:11.13 (1500m), 27:28.3 (XC 8K), 35:41.1 (XC 10K)

Accomplishments: 2023 NorCal JuCo 800m Champion, 2019 Oakland Section Cross Country 4th Place Finisher 

Projected Major: Counseling 

Why He Chose Saint Mary’s: “The amazing academics and beautiful campus.”

Luke Davis | 5-7 | Freshman | Douglas HS | South Lake Tahoe, Calif. 

PRs: 55.09 (400m), 2:00.04 (800m), 4:07.74 (1500m), 4:24.29 (Mile), 9:05.43 (3000m), 9:36.02 (Two Mile), 16:09.4 (XC 5K)

Accomplishments: 2024 USATF All-American (3000m), 2024 Nevada State Cross Country Championship 6th Place Finisher, 2025 Nevada State Track and Field Two Mile 4th Place Finisher

Projected Major: Sports Psychology

Why He Chose Saint Mary’s: “I loved the location, and I really liked Coach Harlan’s training style!”

Quinn Davis | 6-0 | Freshman | Del Norte HS | San Diego, Calif. 

PRs: 2:13.89 (800m), 4:38.74 (Mile), 10:01.47 (Two Mile), 16:22.5 (XC 5K)

Accomplishments: Helped Del Norte HS to the 2024 San Diego Section Cross Country Title

Projected Major: Business Administration

Why He Chose Saint Mary’s: “I enjoy the team culture.”

Divan Du Plooy | 6-0 | Junior | South Plains College | Jeffreys Bay, South Africa

PRs: 3:45.94 (1500m), 4:08.43 (Mile), 8:02.49 (3000m), 14:23.45 (5000m), 9:10.65 (3000m Steeple), 23:15.2 (XC 8K)

Accomplishments: Namibian National Record Holder in the indoor mile, 3000m and 3000m Steeple Chase

Projected Major: Kinesiology 

Why He Chose Saint Mary’s: “They just have the best environment and faculty, and the coach is really really intelligent in what he says and the way he approaches training.”

Jon Fielding Stogner | 5-10 | Grad Student | Lee University | Birmingham, Ala.

PRs: 2:00.15 (800m), 3:55.89 (1500m), 4:23.22 (Mile), 8:22.67 (3000m), 14:15.10 (5000m), 31:12.54 (10,000m), 24:27.9 (XC 8K)

Accomplishments: 2024 Gulf South Indoor Championship 5000m 3rd Place Finisher, 2024 Gulf South Outdoor Championship 4th Place Finisher

Projected Major: Business Administration

Why He Chose Saint Mary’s: “The tight knit culture, supportive coaching staff and upwards trajectory of the program.”

Joel Fischer | 5-9 | Junior | Mount San Antonio College | Hesperia, Calif. 

PRs: 2:05.32 (800m), 4:12.85 (1500m), 8:53.76 (3000m), 15:24.67 (5000m), 31:34.59 (10,000m), 25:12.8 (XC 8K)

Accomplishments: 2025 South Coast Conference 10,000m Champion

Projected Major: Kinesiology

Why He Chose Saint Mary’s: “To complete at a higher level while obtaining my degree in Kinesiology.”

Adam Kehe | 6-0 | Freshman | Cleveland HS | Portland, Ore. 

PRs: 1:55.69 (800m), 4:12.94 (1500m), 17:18.3 (XC 5K)

Accomplishments: 2025 Portland Interscholastic League 800m 3rd Place Finisher

Projected Major: Economics

Why He Chose Saint Mary’s: “Great Location, Good Environment, Smaller School with D1 Status.”

Jack McGuire | 5-10 | Freshman | Junipero Serra HS | Burlingame, Calif. 

PRs: 2:05.23 (800m), 4:27.46 (Mile), 9:38.47 (Two Mile), 15:53.2 (XC 5K)

Accomplishments: 2024 CIF State Cross Country Meet Qualifier 

Projected Major: Business Administration

Why He Chose Saint Mary’s: “For the team culture!”

Emmanuel Moes | 5-9 | Sophomore | University of Oregon | Kingston, Wash. 

PRs: 4:22.87 (1500m), 16:52.99 (5000m), 17:07.7 (XC 5K)

Accomplishments: 2023 Olympic League Cross Country Championship 8th place finish

Projected Major: Kinesiology 

Why He Chose Saint Mary’s: “To grow as a runner and as a student, and it felt like a good fit overall.”

Jacob Schuetze | 5-11 | Freshman | San Luis Obispo HS | San Luis Obispo, Calif. 

PRs: 54.29 (400m), 2:04.96 (800m), 4:29.03 (Mile), 9:44.33 (Two Mile), 16:17.6 (XC 5K)

Accomplishments: 2023 Cross Country Second Team All-Central Coast Athletic Association, Member of the San Luis Obispo HS Program Record 4x800m and Distance Medley Teams

Projected Major: Environmental Science

Why He Chose Saint Mary’s: “I really liked the team environment and the campus and thought it was the overall best fit for me.”

Anthony Sharp | 6-1 | Freshman | Damonte Ranch HS | Reno, Nev. 

PRs: 56.71 (400m), 1:57.82 (800m), 4:13.79 (1500m), 4:24.34 (Mile), 10:29.31 (Two Mile), 16:05.0 (XC 5K)

Accomplishments: 4* Nevada State Qualifier for Cross Country, 1* Nevada State Qualifier for Track

Projected Major: Biochemistry/Biology

Why He Chose Saint Mary’s: “Location was close to home, they are a D1 program, I appreciated the opportunity to be a part of the High Potential Program, and the school’s great academics.”

Nick Shoemaker | 6-5 | Freshman | Prospect Ridge Academy | Thornton, Colo.

PRs: 2:01.05 (800m), 4:29.03 (Mile), 10:11.27 (Two Mile), 16:38.3 (XC 5K)

Accomplishments: All-Metro League and All-State Runner

Projected Major: Business Administration

Why He Chose Saint Marys: “I loved the campus and the atmosphere.”

Alan Solari | 5-11 | Junior | Diablo Valley College | Concord, Calif.

PRs: 25.39 (200m), 51.39 (400m), 1:53.14 (800m), 3:56.70 (1500m), 4:26.28 (Mile), 9:58.99 (Two Mile), 15:31.4 (XC 5K)

Accomplishments: 2024 Big 8 Cross Country Champion, 2023 and 2024 First Team All-NorCal Cross Country, 2024 NorCal 1500m Champion

Projected Major: Finance

Why He Chose Saint Mary’s: “For its welcoming atmosphere, strong academics, and excellent cross country program.”

Oisin Spillane | 6-5 | Grad Student | Tulsa | Tralee, Kerry, Ireland 

PRs: 4:16.11 (Mile), 8:17.02 (3000m), 14:40.29 (5000m), 9:04.60 (3000m Steeple Chase), 25:28.3 (XC 8K), 31:32.0 (XC 10K)

Accomplishments: 2022 IUAA 3000m Steeple Chase Champion, 2022 and 2023 Irish U23 3000m Steeple Chase Champion, 2023 Irish U-23 National Cross Country Champion, 2024 Irish Universities 3000m Steeple Chase Champion

Projected Major: Business Analytics

Why He Chose Saint Mary’s: “The location, beautiful weather and post grad opportunities. I am also excited to be part of an emerging team!”

Zack Springer | 5-11 | Freshman | Las Lomas HS | Walnut Creek, Calif. 

PRs: 23.94 (200m), 52.26 (400m), 1:57.86 (800m), 4:38.0 (Mile), 5-8 (High Jump), 16:25.1 (XC Three Mile)

Accomplishments: Member of the Las Lomas HS 4x800m program record setting team

Projected Major: Business Administration

Why He Chose Saint Mary’s: “I appreciated that the campus was close to home.”

Aiden Tarantino | 5-10 | Redshirt Sophomore | Azusa Pacific | Carmel, Calif.

PRs: 58.15 (400m), 2:03.40 (800m), 4:08.58 (1500m), 4:22.39 (Mile), 9:43.34 (Two Mile), 25:12.0 (XC 8K)

Accomplishments: 2* First Team All-Central Coast Section Cross Country

Projected Major: Finance

Why He Chose Saint Mary’s: “Because of my existing relationship with Coach Harlan, as I believe he will help prepare me to be the best runner I can be.”

Foster Wilfong | 5-8 | Grad Student | Furman University | San Antonio, Tex. 

PRs: 1:57.30 (800m), 3:52.62 (1500m), 4:12.20 (Mile), 8:06.90 (3000m), 9:04.08 (Two Mile), 14:32.03 (5000m), 32:13.96 (10,000m), 9:18.10 (3000m Steeple Chase), 24:19.1 (XC 8K), 31:54.4 (XC 10K)

Accomplishments: 2022 SoCon 3000m Steeple Chase 5th Place Finish, 2023 SoCon 1500m 4th Place Finish, 2025 SoCon Indoor 3000m 5th Place Finish 

Projected Major: Business Administration

Why He Chose Saint Mary’s: “I wanted to compete and live in the Bay Area.”

Jackson Woolf | 5-11 | Freshman | Lincoln HS | Portland, Ore. 

PRs: 2:05.52 (PR), 4:10.94 (1500m), 4:38.27 (Mile), 8:52.78 (3000m), 9:33.28 (Two Mile), 16:32.21 (5000m), 15:31.2 (XC 5K)

Accomplishments: Helped his team to a District Cross Country Title and a Fourth Place Finish at the State Championship, 3rd Team All-District

Projected Major: Undeclared

Why He Chose Saint Mary’s: “The campus atmosphere and the feeling of community on the team.”

#GaelsRise



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High Energy Highlights First Week of Fall Camp for Vandal Volleyball

Story Links MOSCOW, Idaho – As the calendar turned over into August, Idaho Volleyball officially reported for the start of fall camp.  Just three weeks of practice, lifts, and a scrimmage separate the Vandals between report date and the season opener at the Vandal Volleyball Invitational in Memorial Gym. Heading into her […]

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MOSCOW, Idaho – As the calendar turned over into August, Idaho Volleyball officially reported for the start of fall camp. 

Just three weeks of practice, lifts, and a scrimmage separate the Vandals between report date and the season opener at the Vandal Volleyball Invitational in Memorial Gym. Heading into her second year leading the program, head coach Romana Redondo Kriskova put together a recruiting class featuring talent from many levels of college volleyball, on top of some highly touted incoming freshmen.

A critical aspect of the roster is the five experienced returners in Madu Fontes, Chiara Gennari, Natalia Wielgus, Zuzanna Whitman, and Ada Isik. Each of these earned valuable time on the court last season and provide familiarity with the regime and culture building within the program. 

Koen Makaula (Nevada), Cayton White (Gardner-Webb), Kailee Wakatake (UC San Diego), Kyriah Trefren (Academy of Art) Sara Hiebert (Molloy), and Sarah Sullivan (Butler CC) make up the transfer class for the Vandals, each having logged time on the court at their previous institutions and provide a lot of options for the coaching staff. 

Last but certainly not least, Chloe Sanders, Aleina Manaois, Gabi Smith, Csenge Krakoczki and Kiana Greer highlight the incoming freshman class from all corners. From as close to Moscow as Washington and Montana to as far as Hungary, students around the world are buying in to what is brewing at Idaho. 

With a week and change of practices under their built, Redondo Kriskova is enthused by what she has seen from her group. The practices are spirited and the work is being put in, as the Vandals are chomping at the bit to get to the season.

“Fall camp is going great,” said the head coach. “Even though we have eleven newcomers, the gym is loud and nobody could tell that these players have known each other only a couple weeks. I’m very pleased with the energy, coachability, and work ethic that these players have and bring in every day. Can’t wait for the season to start and see what this team can accomplish.”

The full Vandal Volleyball schedule has been released, with the annual intrasquad Black and Gold Scrimmage taking place on Aug. 23, followed by a free kids clinic open to K-4th grade to follow. Fans who wish to register their children for the clinic must return a signed waiver form to assistant coach Ben Kasun at bkasun@uidaho.edu. Waiver forms are available for download HERE. 

FOLLOW THE VANDALS

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

 



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