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Doherty named to Academic All-District Team

Story Links The Edgewood College women’s track & field team has been recognized on the College Sports Communicators Academic All-District Team. Kylee Doherty has landed honors for her outstanding work in the classroom and efforts on the track. In competition, Doherty (Cross Plains, Wisconsin) continued to meet set new distances to […]

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The Edgewood College women’s track & field team has been recognized on the College Sports Communicators Academic All-District Team. Kylee Doherty has landed honors for her outstanding work in the classroom and efforts on the track.

In competition, Doherty (Cross Plains, Wisconsin) continued to meet set new distances to reach for Eagle throws in 2205. The junior punched her ticket to her third NCAA Division III Outdoor Track & Field Championships in the discus and javelin throw. Doherty finished 14th in the discus to claim Second Team All-America honors for the second-straight season. Doherty was named USTFCCCA All-Region in the javelin throw. The Cross Plains native set the Eagle school record in the javelin throw (43.72m) with the fifth longest mark in Division III at the UW-Whitewater Drake Alternative Meet on April 24. Doherty repeated as NACC Champion in the discus throw. In the classroom, Doherty owns a 4.00 GPA as an education and history major.

A release from the CSC on the Academic All-District Teams can be found here.



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Joel Reinhardt – Stanford Cardinal

Joel Reinhardt joined Stanford Football’s staff as the assistant sports performance coach and applied sports science coordinator in 2022. He will oversee Stanford’s sports science and data tracking for Cullen Carroll’s football sports performance staff. Prior to Stanford, Reinhardt worked at UMass as the assistant sports performance coach since 2019. At UMass, Reinhardt oversaw sports science, […]

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Joel Reinhardt joined Stanford Football’s staff as the assistant sports performance coach and applied sports science coordinator in 2022. He will oversee Stanford’s sports science and data tracking for Cullen Carroll’s football sports performance staff.
 
Prior to Stanford, Reinhardt worked at UMass as the assistant sports performance coach since 2019. At UMass, Reinhardt oversaw sports science, practice planning and return to play for football, while also leading all aspects of women’s lacrosse and men’s soccer’s performance training.
 
He previously worked at Nicholls State in Thibodaux, La., where he helped design and implement a comprehensive strength and conditioning program for football. He was also responsible for the implementation of all agility work for the team’s offseason development program. He also worked with women’s track and field, women’s soccer, softball and both tennis programs at Nicholls State, in addition to organizing and analyzing Playertek GPS data.
 
Reinhardt arrived at Nicholls State following an internship with the Minnesota Football program.
 
Reinhardt graduated from Springfield College, where he earned a Master of Science degree in Strength and Conditioning in 2017. While studying at Springfield College, Reinhardt worked as a graduate assistant strength and conditioning coach. He earned his undergraduate degree from St. Olaf College (Northfield, Minn.) in Kinesiology and Exercise Science in 2015.
 
Reinhardt’s strength and conditioning expertise also includes internship tenures with Total Hockey Minnesota (2013), Springfield College Athletics (2015), the UConn Athletic Department (2016) and Western Michigan football (2016).
 
He and his wife, Lauren, were married in 2021.
 



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U.S. Boys U19 National Team Outlasts Colombia in Five-Setter at 2025 Worlds

COLORADO SPRINGS, Colo. (July 26, 2025) – The U.S. Boys U19 National Team won its second consecutive match at the FIVB U19 World Championship with a hard-fought 3-2 (25-19, 19-25, 25-18, 30-32, 15-9) victory over Colombia on Saturday in Tashkent, Uzbekistan. After a day off, the U.S. (2-1) will face Brazil (1-2) on Monday, July 28, […]

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COLORADO SPRINGS, Colo. (July 26, 2025) – The U.S. Boys U19 National Team won its second consecutive match at the FIVB U19 World Championship with a hard-fought 3-2 (25-19, 19-25, 25-18, 30-32, 15-9) victory over Colombia on Saturday in Tashkent, Uzbekistan.

After a day off, the U.S. (2-1) will face Brazil (1-2) on Monday, July 28, at 8 a.m. PT.

The U.S. held a substantial advantage in kills (66-47), while also leading in blocks (9-3) and aces (9-8). Colombia made 15 fewer errors (45-30).

“It was a great learning experience for our guys. You’re on the road, you’re traveling, you’re grinding a little bit and facing a lot of adversity with a lot of things out of their control happening that could have set them off task. We stayed the course,” said U.S. head coach Charlie Sullivan. “I’m really proud of the focus, and even though we had moments where we weren’t sure, we stuck to the plan and the guys did a great job staying together and executing down the stretch. I’m really proud of the set five victory.”

MATCH STATISTICS

Outside hitter Grant Lamoureux led the U.S. for the third consecutive time, taking it to a new level with match-bests of 31 points–25 kills and five aces to go with a block.

Middle blocker Roman Payne scored 16 points on 13 kills, a block and two aces. Opposite William Dryden totaled 11 points on eight kills, two blocks and an ace. Middle Thomas Henige rounded out the team’s double-digit scorers with 10 points on seven kills and a match-high three blocks.

Libero Layton Bluth led all players with 13 digs and added six successful receptions. Setter Lucas Helle contributed six digs with one kill, block and ace. Outside hitter Elan Taylor finished with eight points on seven kills and a block, adding four digs and three successful receptions.

Lamoureux served back-to-back aces to put the U.S. ahead 11-7 in the first set. A Payne ace stretched the lead to five (13-8), and a kill by opposite Corbin Batista put the U.S. ahead 16-9 and forced Colombia to use its second timeout. Payne ended the set with his fourth kill and fifth point. Lamoureux led all players with six points on four kills to go with his two aces.

Cuba scored the first four points of the second set and jumped out to a 10-3 lead. The U.S. used a 5-0 run to close the gap to two points, 14-12, but were unable to get any closer. Lamoureux again scored six points, this time on five kills and his third ace.

The U.S. never trailed in the third set, taking a quick 5-2 lead on a Taylor kill. Colombia pulled within a point, 9-8, but a Dryden kill and two more Lamoureux aces moved the lead back to four points.

Colombia scored twice to cut the lead to three, 21-18, but misplayed an overpass, and a Lamoureux kill made it 22-18. A Helle ace, a Taylor block, and another Lamoureux kill ended the set. Dryden scored six points on five kills and a block, while Lamoureux added three kills to his two aces for five points.

Back-to-back aces completed a 10-1 Colombia run in the fourth set that turned a 6-4 deficit into a 14-7 lead. A Payne ace off the tape and a Henige kill on an overpass ended a 12-5 U.S. run that evened the space at 19. The set was tied 11 more times with the U.S. having four match points and saving three set points before Colombia tied the match at two sets apiece. Lamoureux finished with nine points on eight kills and a block.

Taking advantage of a series of Colombia errors, the U.S. took a four-point lead into the side switch in the deciding set. Lamoureux scored off an overpass and a key up by Helle kept a rally alive that ended with another Colombia error and an 8-4 U.S. lead.

After the teams traded points, Lamoureux delivered a kill off the block and Payne recorded a block for an 11-5 U.S. lead. Lamoureux’s fifth kill of the set made it 14-8. Colombia saved one match point, its fifth of the match, before the U.S. sealed the win.

2025 Boys U19 National Team World Championship Roster

Name (Pos., Ht., Hometown, School, USAV Region)
1 Layton Bluth (L, 5-8, Gilbert, Ariz., Casteel HS, Northern California)
4 Lucas Helle (S, 6-4, Pauline, S.C., Dorman HS, Palmetto)
5 Elan Taylor (OH, 6-4, San Jose, Calif., Valley Christian HS, Northern California)
8 Myles Jordan (OH, 6-5, Houston, Texas, Ridge Point HS, Lonestar)
10 Noah Douphner (OH, 6-6, Stevenson Ranch, Calif., West Ranch HS, Southern California)
12 Rafael Urbina (S, 6-6, Broomfield, Colo., Legacy HS, Rocky Mountain)
14 Aleksey Mikhailenko (OH, 6-8, Mequon, Wis., Homestead HS, Badger)
16 Luc Soerensen (MB, 6-8, Meadville, Pa., Meadville Area Senior HS, Keystone)
19 Roman Payne (MB, 7-0, Carlsbad, Calif., Carlsbad HS, Southern California)
20 Grant Lamoureux (OH, 6-10, Clemmons, N.C., Pepperdine University, Carolina)
21 William Dryden (OPP, 6-7, Los Gatos, Calif., Archbishop Mitty HS, Northern California)
23 Corbin Batista (OPP, 6-7, St. George, Utah, Alta HS, Intermountain)
28 Thomas Henige (MB, 6-9, Glendale, Ariz., Perry HS, Arizona)

Coaches

Head Coach: Charlie Sullivan (Springfield College)
Assistant Coach: Jonah Carson (MVVC)
Assistant Coach: Patrick Shawaryn (Penn State)
Performance Analyst: AJ Ruttenberg (UCLA)
Team Doctor: Dr. Chris Cornell (Coduhi Clinic)
Team Lead: Donovan Martinez (NTDP)

2025 Boys U19 World Championship Schedule
All times Pacific

July 24: Finland def. USA, 3-1 (17-25, 25-17, 25-21, 25-20)
July 25: USA def. Cuba, 3-1 (17-25, 25-19, 25-15, 25-21)
July 26: USA def. Colombia, 3-2 (25-19, 19-25, 25-18, 30-32, 15-9)
July 28: USA vs. Brazil, 8 a.m.
July 29: USA vs. Korea, 8 a.m.
July 30: Playoffs/Round of 16, TBA
Aug. 1: Playoffs/Quarterfinals, TBA
Aug. 2: Playoffs/Semifinals, TBA
Aug. 3: Finals, TBA



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Rocking the Docks honors Unlocke the Light

Rocking the Docks hosted a special benefit concert July 17, in support of the SL24 Unlocke the Light Foundation, an organization dedicated to providing mental health education, resources and support for students and young adults. The event marks the official kickoff of the foundation’s Bump, Set, Light summer awareness campaign. The SL24 Unlocke the Light […]

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Rocking the Docks hosted a special benefit concert July 17, in support of the SL24 Unlocke the Light Foundation, an organization dedicated to providing mental health education, resources and support for students and young adults.

The event marks the official kickoff of the foundation’s Bump, Set, Light summer awareness campaign.

The SL24 Unlocke the Light Foundation was created to honor the life and legacy of Sean Locke, a standout student-athlete who lost his battle with depression. The foundation’s mission is to help young people understand that it’s OK to not be OK, and to connect them with the tools, education and support they need to thrive. SL24 has become a statewide leader in opening wellness centers on school campuses. 

“This is the kind of night where music meets meaning,” said Matt VanBelle, founder of Rocking the Docks. “It’s a chance for our concerts to support an amazing organization, and for a cause that touches so many lives.”

Sean’s House and SL24 have three main objectives – educate, assist and support. 

SL24 equips youth with the knowledge to recognize mental health challenges, find support and take steps toward wellness. SL24 removes barriers to mental health care by connecting youth to specialized resources and offering scholarships to ensure financial access to therapy. SL24 supports by creating Sean’s House and Sean’s Room to provide safe and brave spaces, empowering youth to seek and offer guidance from their peers.

SL24 partnered with CAMP Rehoboth July 18, to host the first Waves of Light open house. The afternoon focused on mental health, community and connection.

The Bump, Set, Light tournament followed July 20, at the Rusty Rudder beach in Dewey Beach, where amateur and pro beach volleyball teams played for glory and to raise funds and awareness of the SL24 Unlocke the Light Foundation.

For more information on Sean’s House and SL24, go to unlockethelight.com.

 



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South Bend Police Athletic League holds 2nd annual Track and Field Showcase

SOUTH BEND, Ind. (WNDU) – Overcast clouds shielded runners at John Adams High School as they lined up along the track for the second annual South Bend Police Athletic League (PAL) Track and Field Showcase. Georgia Wells is a detective with South Bend’s Major Crimes Unit, but on Friday she was PAL’s head track and […]

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SOUTH BEND, Ind. (WNDU) – Overcast clouds shielded runners at John Adams High School as they lined up along the track for the second annual South Bend Police Athletic League (PAL) Track and Field Showcase.

Georgia Wells is a detective with South Bend’s Major Crimes Unit, but on Friday she was PAL’s head track and field coach.

She says this annual showcase allows the athletes to showcase all the hard work they have done throughout the summer and highlight track and field.

“The three age groups that are competing today are 8 and under, 9 to 12 and 13 and up,” Wells said. “We are doing just a little bit of everything. We have shotput, discus, long jump, 100, the relay, 400, 200.”

Wells is a former track and field athlete. Her mother got her into the sport when she was 4 years old. She stayed with it through college, as she ran for Purdue University.

She wants to give these athletes the same experience she enjoyed.

“It is honestly surreal. My friends and I, some of my coaches that I have here on staff, we ran together in youth track,” Wells said. “We may have the running joke of, ‘Oh, we’re the adults now.’ It’s just a blessing to be able to see the younger ones learning coming every day. They take it very seriously and they are very talented, and so we are so immensely proud of them.”

Korey Liddell participated in the PAL program. He says it’s a great program for children to learn about track and field.

He’s got some advice for those youngsters.

“Try to run consistently and remember that there are rest days,” Liddell says. “You can’t just run seven days a week. You may have to have a rest day in between each running day so you don’t wear your body down and you just crash.”



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Panorama volleyball travels to Ames for ISU Volleyball Camp | Raccoon Valley Radio

Panorama volleyball travels to Ames for ISU Volleyball Camp | Raccoon Valley Radio – The One to Count On On Tuesday, the Panorama Panthers volleyball squad traveled to Ames to Iowa State University for the Iowa State University Volleyball camp. The Panthers worked on fundamentals and had […]

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Panorama volleyball travels to Ames for ISU Volleyball Camp | Raccoon Valley Radio – The One to Count On


































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On Tuesday, the Panorama Panthers volleyball squad traveled to Ames to Iowa State University for the Iowa State University Volleyball camp. The Panthers worked on fundamentals and had friendly competition against teams Panorama does not see during the regular season.

The Panthers traveled to Ames for two days, soaking up as much knowledge as possible before the 2025-26 volleyball season begins in August. The Panthers also look to use this knowledge to teach the future generations, as the Panorama varsity volleyball squad will help lead the Panorama Youth Volleyball camp beginning in the first week of August.

Panther volleyball is exactly a month away, as Panorama prepares for their season opener against the Earlham Cardinals on Tuesday, August 26th. Volleyball action is set to begin at 6:30pm from Earlham High School.


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Dept. of Education Opens Probe into Oregon over Trans Athletes

The Department of Education announced an investigation on Friday into the Oregon Department of Education (ODE) due to allegations it allows transgender-identifying males to compete in female sports, in violation of civil rights law prohibiting sex discrimination.  The Department of Education’s Office for Civil Rights opened the Title IX investigation after receiving a complaint from […]

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The Department of Education announced an investigation on Friday into the Oregon Department of Education (ODE) due to allegations it allows transgender-identifying males to compete in female sports, in violation of civil rights law prohibiting sex discrimination. 

The Department of Education’s Office for Civil Rights opened the Title IX investigation after receiving a complaint from the America First Policy Institute (AFPI), a nonprofit that says it seeks to “advanc[e] policies that put the American people first” with guiding principles including “liberty, free enterprise, and national greatness.”

WATCH — President Trump: Having Women Compete with Trans Athletes Is “Demeaning to Women”:

“In the last six months, the Trump Administration has made historic strides in cleaning up the countless failures of the Biden Administration, including the prior Administration’s dedication to gender ideology extremism. Oregon appears to have missed the message: The Trump Administration will not allow educational institutions that receive federal funds to continue trampling upon women’s rights,” Acting Assistant Secretary for Civil Rights Craig Trainor said. 

“If Oregon is permitting males to compete in women’s sports, it is allowing these males to steal the accolades and opportunities that female competitors have rightfully earned through hard work and grit, while callously disregarding women’s and girls’ safety, dignity, and privacy. Title IX does not permit that shameful arrangement, and we will not tolerate it,” Trainor added. 

The AFPI filed its own lawsuit this week against the Oregon School Activities Association (OSAA) on behalf of two Oregon student-athletes who were allegedly punished for silently protesting a transgender-identifying male competing in girls’ sports. 

“Thanks to Secretary McMahon’s leadership, this investigation is moving forward as a vital step toward restoring equal opportunity in women’s athletics,” Executive General Counsel at AFPI Jessica Hart Steinmann said. “Title IX was meant to protect girls — not to undermine them — and we’re hopeful this signals a return to that original purpose.”

READ MORE: Oregon Girls Who Protested Trans Athlete at Track Meet File Lawsuit

AFPI alleged in its complaint that ODE issue guidance specifying that schools must follow Oregon’s nondiscrimination law, which states that “schools are prohibited from excluding gender expansive students from participating in school athletics and activities that align with their…gender identity.”

WATCH — President Trump Signs Executive Order Banning Men from Women’s Sports:

The Department of Education countered in a press release that “state laws do not override federal anti-discrimination laws, and ODE and its member schools remain subject to Title IX and its implementing regulations.” Title IX prohibits discrimination based on sex in education programs and activities receiving federal funding.

AFPI’s complaint specifically alleges that several female high school athletes in Oregon have lost “medal awards, placements, and other competitive opportunities” to males and suffered “heightened stress, intimidation, and emotional distress” in anticipation of competing against them. The AFPI also alleged the ODE “chilled speech and coerced silence” from the female athletes, who were allegedly “explicitly or implicitly told by school authorities not to question or complain about the inclusion of male athletes in girls’ categories.” 

AFPI’s complaint additionally alleges that OSAA, which is the state’s high school interscholastic athletic body, has policies that violate Title IX by allowing students to participate on teams based on “gender identity” rather than biological reality. The Department of Education noted that its OCR opened a Title IX investigation into OSAA in March, as well as Portland Public Schools.

The ODE did not respond to Breitbart News’s request for comment by time of publication.

Katherine Hamilton is a political reporter for Breitbart News. You can follow her on X @thekat_hamilton.





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