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Hillsdale College athletic events to stream on FloCollege beginning with 2025-26 season

Story Links HILLSDALE, Mich. — Hillsdale College athletic games will be available for streaming exclusively on FloCollege beginning this academic year following an agreement between FloSports and the G-MAC.   “Partnering with FloSports marks a significant milestone for the Great Midwest Athletic Conference and reflects the collective efforts of our member institutions […]

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HILLSDALE, Mich. — Hillsdale College athletic games will be available for streaming exclusively on FloCollege beginning this academic year following an agreement between FloSports and the G-MAC.
 
“Partnering with FloSports marks a significant milestone for the Great Midwest Athletic Conference and reflects the collective efforts of our member institutions to produce compelling digital content that has driven demand for wider distribution,” said Great Midwest Athletic Conference Commissioner Tom Daeger. “We’re excited to collaborate with FloSports and their talented team starting in 2025-26 to further elevate the broadcasts our members and the league produce.”
 
Subscribers will be able to watch games live for all 13 G-MAC institutions, as well as games in 14 other collegiate conferences. The platform also features live scores, team interviews, athlete profiles, and more.
 
FloCollege is available online and for download on mobile devices, streaming devices, and smart TVs. FloSports offers yearly and monthly subscription options, with discounts for users with .edu email addresses. Details and subscription options are available here.
 
In addition to watching games on FloCollege, fans also will continue to have access to on-demand video of Hillsdale College events for free on the Great Midwest Digital Network, run by Hudl. Those videos will be available to watch 24 hours after the conclusion of the athletic contest.
 
Further information on the FloCollege partnership, including a full listing of subscription plans and options, will be released on hillsdalechargers.com in mid-August.
 



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Volleyball Reveals Complete Schedule for 2025 Season

NORMAN – University of Oklahoma head volleyball coach Aaron Mansfield announced the 2025 non-conference slate on Wednesday. The Southeastern Conference previously announced the league schedule in April. The ten-game non-conference schedule sees the Sooners playing six games on the road and four matches inside McCasland Field House. OU will also host an exhibition match against […]

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NORMAN – University of Oklahoma head volleyball coach Aaron Mansfield announced the 2025 non-conference slate on Wednesday. The Southeastern Conference previously announced the league schedule in April.

The ten-game non-conference schedule sees the Sooners playing six games on the road and four matches inside McCasland Field House. OU will also host an exhibition match against K-State on Saturday, Aug. 23.

The Sooners officially open the 2025 season at the Wildcat Classic in Abilene, Texas, Aug. 29-30. OU will play a doubleheader against Missouri State and Incarnate Word on Aug. 29 and face host Abilene Christian on Aug. 30.

The following weekend, the Sooners will travel to Fayetteville, Ark., for the Wooo Pig Invitational, Sept. 5-6. OU will face in-state rival Tulsa on Friday and Cal Poly on Saturday.

The start of four straight home games begins on Wednesday, Sept. 10 as the Sooners host Florida State for the SEC/ACC Showdown at the Net.

The home stretch continues with a pair of matches against St. Mary’s on Sept. 12 and 13. The Sooners wrap up non-conference play with a home-and-home against Central Arkansas, hosting the Sugar Bears on Thursday, Sept. 18 and traveling to Conway, Ark., on Sunday, Sept. 21.

SEC play begins at home on Sept. 26 when the Sooners host LSU. OU will face every school once, either home or away, for a 15-match conference schedule. This season will also mark the return of the SEC Volleyball Tournament.

The Sooners will welcome LSU, Ole Miss, South Carolina, Georgia, Auburn, Mississippi State, Alabama and Arkansas to Norman, while traveling to Vanderbilt, Missouri, Texas A&M, Texas, Florida, Kentucky and Tennessee.

Season tickets for the 2025 season are now on sale. General admission season tickets are $45. Single match GA tickets will be $8 when available in August. Tickets can be purchased at SoonerSports.com/tickets or by contacting the Oklahoma ticket office at 405-325-2424. Special group rates are also available by contacting the ticket office.

TV information will be added to the SoonerSports.com schedule page when made available.  

FOLLOW THE OKLAHOMA SOONERS

For updates, follow @OU_Volleyball on Twitter and Instagram, or like Oklahoma Volleyball on Facebook.

 





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Dylan Stewart Named to Bronko Nagurski Preseason Watch List – University of South Carolina Athletics

University of South Carolina Edge rusher Dylan Stewart is one of 60 players listed as a contender for the 2025 Bronko Nagurski Trophy, which recognizes the national defensive player of the year, the Football Writers Association of America announced today. Stewart, a dynamic sophomore edge rusher whose 6.5 sacks last year placed him on the […]

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University of South Carolina Edge rusher Dylan Stewart is one of 60 players listed as a contender for the 2025 Bronko Nagurski Trophy, which recognizes the national defensive player of the year, the Football Writers Association of America announced today.

Stewart, a dynamic sophomore edge rusher whose 6.5 sacks last year placed him on the FWAA’s Freshman All-America team, is on the list hoping to model the success of Kyle Kennard, the Gamecocks’ edge rusher who won the Bronko Nagurski Trophy last season. The 6-5, 245-pounder from Washington, D.C., was a finalist for the Shaun Alexander National Freshman of the Year award and was a member of the SEC All-Freshman team in 2024.

The FWAA and the Charlotte Touchdown Club will announce four finalists for the 2025 Bronko Nagurski Trophy in mid-to-late November, and the winner will be revealed at the Bronko Nagurski Awards Banquet on Dec. 8 in Charlotte, N.C.

Players may be added or removed from the watch list during the course of the season. As in previous years, the FWAA will announce a Bronko Nagurski National Defensive Player of the Week each Tuesday this season. If not already on the watch list, each week’s honored player will be added at that time.

The FWAA All-America Committee, after voting input from the association’s full membership, selects a 26-man All-America Team and eventually the Bronko Nagurski Trophy finalists. Committee members, by individual ballot, select the winner they regard as the best defensive player in college football.

The FWAA has chosen a National Defensive Player of the Year since 1993. In 1995, the FWAA named the award in honor of the legendary two-way player from the University of Minnesota. Nagurski dominated college football, then became a star for professional football’s Chicago Bears in the 1930s. Bronislaw “Bronko” Nagurski is a charter member of both the College Football and Pro Football Halls of Fame.





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Southern Conference Announces Spring Honor Roll

Story Links Spartanburg, S.C. – Western Carolina University was well represented on the 2025 Spring Southern Conference Academic All-Conference team as the league announced its spring semester academic awards list today with 42 Catamounts earning placements. The spring honorees join the 46 student-athletes who collected Fall Academic All-SoCon accolades back in January […]

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Spartanburg, S.C. – Western Carolina University was well represented on the 2025 Spring Southern Conference Academic All-Conference team as the league announced its spring semester academic awards list today with 42 Catamounts earning placements. The spring honorees join the 46 student-athletes who collected Fall Academic All-SoCon accolades back in January for the Fall of 2024.

A combined 500 student-athletes across the SoCon’s 10 full-member institutions and nine affiliate members were named to the spring academic all-conference list which included representation from men’s and women’s basketball, men’s and women’s indoor track and field, rifle, wrestling, men’s and women’s golf, men’s and women’s outdoor track and field, men’s and women’s tennis, baseball, and softball. 

To be eligible, a student-athlete must have at least a 3.3 cumulative grade point average at the end of the semester of competition and have completed at least three semesters academically. The student-athlete must have also competed in at least one-half of the team’s competitions. 

The Catamount baseball team led the way in total representation with nine players earning Academic All-SoCon. Led by Taylor Waitley’s 4.0 GPA, the softball team was second with eight honorees, followed by the women’s track and field team that placed seven on the prestigious academic list.  

Six of the eight members of the 2024-25 Catamount women’s tennis team landed on the Academic All-SoCon team, the top mark in terms of team percentage. Men’s track and field earned four honors, three of which came from the Catamount multi’s squad, while the women’s golf team earned three spots. The men’s golf team and women’s basketball team both earned two nods each, with the men’s basketball team closing out the Catamount academic honorees with Marcus Kell.  

Additionally, on Tuesday, the Southern Conference announced its 2024-25 Academic Honor Roll recipients, with 202 Western Carolina student-athletes earning the academic plaudit. Of the 202, 57 Catamounts earned the prestigious Commissioner’s Medal, with 25 of those boasting an annual 4.0 GPA.

The Southern Conference had 288 student-athletes record a GPA of 4.0, and 846 received the Commissioner’s Medal for the 2024-25 academic year. The conference also had 2,734 student-athletes earn placements on its honor roll, the highest total since the academic honor was first distributed in 1989.

Through 2024-25, a total of 42 Catamount student-athletes collected College Sports Communicators (CSC) Academic All-District honors this year, with three women’s golfers – Annalee Caveney, Elizabeth Lohbauer, and Sadler Miller – each earning WGCA All-American Scholars accolades. Naya Marcil and Isabella DeMarco both collected United Soccer Coaches Scholar All-South Region plaudits back in the fall.

2025 Commissioner’s Medal Recipients (* – 4.0 Student-Athletes):

Becca Campbell * – Women’s Soccer – English Education and English 

AC Carter * – Women’s Basketball – Sport Management 

John Davis * – Men’s Cross Country/Track & Field – Electrical Engineering/Philosophy 

Bethany Dobias * – Softball – Integrated Health Sciences 

Madelynn Duffield * – Women’s Cross Country/Track & Field – Masters in Business Admin 

Erika Gariepy * – Women’s Soccer – Engineering 

Jade Groen * – Women’s Tennis – Criminal Justice 

Bailey Hartsough * – Women’s Volleyball – Integrated Health Sciences 

Ollie Henderson * – Women’s Volleyball – Elementary Education 

Matthew Keener * – Football – Integrated Health Science 

Sara Klemm * – Women’s Cross Country/Track & Field – Elementary Education 

Hannah Kline * – Women’s Track & Field – Psychology 

Hannah Kliner * – Women’s Track & Field – Integrated Health Sciences 

Makenzie Martin * – Softball – Integrated Health Sciences 

Rylie Niemeyer * – Women’s Soccer – Integrated Health Sciences 

Madison Schwarz * – Women’s Tennis – Communication 

Halley Tang * – Women’s Volleyball – Integrated Health Sciences 

Leanne Trudel * – Women’s Soccer – Emergency Medical Care 

Reagan Trumm * – Women’s Basketball – Communication Science Disorders 

Samantha Vibberts * – Women’s Soccer – Integrated Health Sciences 

Jennifer Wagner * – Women’s Track & Field – Elementary Education 

Taylor Waitley * – Softball – Biology and Forensic Science 

Samantha Whitaker * – Women’s Soccer – Finance/Accounting 

Bennett Whitefield * – Men’s Track & Field – Biology 

Trevor Williams * – Men’s Track & Field – Integrated Health Sciences 

Lily Bell – Softball – Business Admin & Law and Marketing 

Andrew Korytoski – Men’s Golf – Integrated Health Sciences 

Courtney Marks – Softball – Management and Marketing 

Avery Mays – Women’s Cross Country/Track & Field – Elementary Education 

Paddy McGonigal – Baseball – Management 

Sadler Miller – Women’s Golf/Track & Field – Interior Design 

Anne Perreault – Women’s Soccer – Management 

Erin Stack – Women’s Basketball – Elementary Education 

Peri Subat – Women’s Volleyball – Accounting and Finance 

Steven Hamby – Football – Integrated Health Science 

Andrea Redondo – Women’s Tennis – Marketing/Sport Management 

Emma Soucy – Women’s Soccer – Integrated Health Sciences 

AJ Colombo – Football – Finance  

Kaden Fuller – Baseball – Integrated Health Sciences 

Natalie Henry – Softball – Marketing and Management 

Bella Hilleary – Women’s Track & Field – Communication 

Sydney Lowe – Women’s Cross Country/Track & Field – Biology 

Peyton Skoglund – Women’s Cross Country/Track & Field – Electrical Engineering 

Lucie Bertrand – Women’s Soccer – Marketing 

Carson Brown – Men’s Basketball – Integrated Health Sciences 

Miranda Watts – Women’s Track & Field – Integrated Health Sciences 

Mabry Bumgarner – Football – Integrated Health Sciences 

Landey Green – Women’s Cross Country/Track & Field – Psychology 

Jasmine Greene – Women’s Track & Field – Integrated Health Sciences 

Christian Roberts – Men’s Track & Field – Construction Management 

Chloe Schwarz – Women’s Tennis – Integrated Health Sciences 

Griffin Guinther – Baseball – Construction Management 

Shaneil Lysight – Women’s Track & Field – Engineering 

Ava Robitaille – Women’s Soccer – Art-Graphic Design 

Sydney Dirks – Softball – Psychology 

Marissa Watts – Women’s Track & Field – Biology 

Eda Yalcinkaya – Women’s Volleyball – Business Administration & Law 

Academic All-Southern Conference Winter/Spring Honorees (by sport):

Baseball: 

Owen Austin – Business Administration and Law 

Hayden Friese – Business Administration and Law 

Griffin Guinther – Construction Management 

Brandon Langley – Psychology 

Cannon Pickell – Health Sciences 

Dusty Revis – Management 

Jack Spyke – Finance 

Wyatt Stanley – Health and Physical Education 

Trent Turner – Finance 

Men’s Basketball: 

Marcus Kell – Construction Management 

Men’s Golf: 

Jace Butcher – Management and Finance 

Andrew Korytoski – Integrated Health Sciences 

Men’s Track & Field: 

Dakota Braucher – Integrated Health Sciences 

Colby Capps – Construction Management 

Austin Cline – Management 

Ethan Hibberts – Construction Management 

Softball: 

Lily Bell – Business Administration and Law 

Sydney Dirks – Psychology 

Natalie Henry – Marketing 

Makenzie Martin – Integrated Health Sciences 

Mattie Mentel – Natural Resource Conservation Management 

Tate Stewman – Business Administration and Law/Marketing 

Taylor Waitley – Forensic Science 

Becka Wonsick – Integrated Health Sciences 

Women’s Basketball: 

Tyja Beans – Biology 

Reagan Trumm – Communication Science Disorders 

Women’s Golf: 

Elizabeth Lohbauer – Nutrition/Dietetics 

Sadler Miller – Interior Design 

Kaitlyn Wingnean – Chemistry 

Women’s Track & Field: 

Leah Butler – Integrated Health Sciences 

Bella Hilleary – Communication 

Shaneil Lysight – Engineering 

Toria Roundtree – Political Science 

Millie Simmons – Psychology 

Raelyn Vadala – Criminal Justice 

Jennifer Wagner – Elementary Education 

Women’s Tennis: 

Jade Groen – Criminal Justice 

Angela Perez – Sport Management 

Andrea Redondo – Marketing and Sport Management 

Isabella Sambola – Psychology 

Madison Schwarz – Communication 

Chloe Schwarz – Integrated Health Sciences 



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Volleyball Announces 2025 Signing Class

KANSAS CITY, MO. – Kansas City Volleyball strengthened its numbers in the offseason as the Roos welcome in 10 new faces ahead of the 2025 season. Included in that group are seven true freshmen as well as two juniors and one graduate student that were added in the transfer portal. To go along with the […]

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KANSAS CITY, MO. – Kansas City Volleyball strengthened its numbers in the offseason as the Roos welcome in 10 new faces ahead of the 2025 season. Included in that group are seven true freshmen as well as two juniors and one graduate student that were added in the transfer portal. To go along with the Roos seven returning players, Kansas City aims to have a strong core of newcomers and familiar faces that are ready to compete in 2025. Single game and season tickets are available now! 

Of the three transfer additions, Chloe Kaminski leads the pack in experience, coming in as a graduate student with two years left of eligibility. Kaminski is a 5’9 libero/defensive specialist who hails from Blue Springs, Mo. and previously played at Oklahoma. The former Sooner racked up 21 service aces in 42 matches played in Norman. 

The Roos were able to poach away junior transfer Alaina Larson from Summit League foe Oral Roberts. Larson is a 5’8 libero/defensive specialist from Hudson, Wisconsin. As a Golden Eagle, Larson recorded 51 service aces and 172 digs in 47 matches played. In 2024, Larson ranked 25th in service aces throughout the whole Summit League with 20 in 24 matches.  

Rounding out the Roos transfer portal additions for 2025 is Lyla Jones who arrived in the spring and has been practicing with the team throughout the offseason. Jones is a 5’7 junior setter who last played at Arkansas-Pine Bluff. In two seasons with the Golden Lions, Jones posted 434 assists and 23 service aces in 42 matches played. 

The Roos will have an influx of young talent coming through the pipeline in the form of seven true freshmen with six different states representing the Roos new first year players. Starting with the lone in-state recruit, Megan Lawson. The 5’5 freshman libero/defensive specialist is from O’Fallon, Mo. and attended St. Dominic High School. 

Moving to the Roos six out-of-state recruits, Clarke Henry comes in as a 6’0 freshman outside hitter from Charlotte, North Carolina. At Independence High School, Henry was the 2024 SWA4A Player of the Year, a two-time SWA4A All Conference athlete and the Independence Volleyball MVP. Henry averaged 3.9 kills per set and a .259 hitting percentage in her high school career. 

Narrowing back in on the Sooner State, Emry Brown arrives as a 6’0 freshman outside hitter from Bartlesville, Okla. and attended Bartlesville High School. Brown was a three-time All Conference First Team member and an All Conference MVP her senior season at Bartlesville. Brown holds her schools record for most career kills, aces and digs. 

Traveling in from the same state, Ashley Nielsen joins the Roos as a 5’9 freshman libero/defensive specialist from Bixby, Okla. Nielsen was a volleyball team captain at Bixby High School and played for two club teams including Ultimate Performance Volleyball Club and Oklahoma Charge Volleyball Club. 

Hailing from the Land of 10,000 Lakes, Mia Weaver joins Kansas City as a 6’0 freshman outside hitter from Minnetrista, Minn., who attended both Minneapolis Southwest High School and Mound Westonka High School. Weaver racked up over 1,000 career kills and was an All State player her senior year. Weaver also led her team in aces and kills all four years of high school. 

Joining the Roos front line in 2025 will be 6’2 freshman middle blocker Stella Smith. The Davenport, Iowa native attended Pleasant Valley High School where she was a MAC Second Team member and helped the Spartans claim the 2024 5A State Championship. Smith is also the younger sister of former Roo standout Raina Smith, who played for KC from 2018-22. 

Adding once again to the front line, the Roos picked up Natalie Ptacek, a 6’0 freshman opposite hitter from Prescott, Wis. Ptacek attended Prescott High School where she racked up over 1,000 kills and 700 digs in her career. Ptacek was also a two-time All-Conference and a team captain for two years as well. 

Kansas City serves up the 2025 campaign on August 29 by taking on Marshall in the Radford Invitational.

 



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Rutgers University Appoints Keli Zinn As New Director of Athletics

Story Links >> Watch 10 a.m. Rutgers University Press Conference Rutgers President William F. Tate IV today appointed Keli Zinn, a collegiate athletics leader with 20 years of power conference experience and a proven track record of transforming championship-level programs, as director of Intercollegiate Athletics for Rutgers-New Brunswick.   The Rutgers Board […]

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>> Watch 10 a.m. Rutgers University Press Conference

Rutgers President William F. Tate IV today appointed Keli Zinn, a collegiate athletics leader with 20 years of power conference experience and a proven track record of transforming championship-level programs, as director of Intercollegiate Athletics for Rutgers-New Brunswick.

 

The Rutgers Board of Governors approved the appointment of Zinn, currently the executive deputy athletic director and chief operating officer at Louisiana State University. Zinn begins her tenure at Rutgers on August 6, 2025.

 

“Keli Zinn brings the strategic drive, operational excellence, and championship pedigree we need right now for Rutgers Athletics,” Tate said. “Her leadership style resonates deeply with Rutgers’ mission – competitiveness on the field, integrity in our practices, and excellence in the student‑athlete experience. She will guide Rutgers into a new era, with forward-looking leadership, tapping into the Rutgers Edge. We are thrilled to welcome Keli and her husband, Nate, to the Scarlet Knights Family.”

 

At LSU, Zinn helped lead the Tigers to unprecedented success: four national championships (gymnastics, women’s basketball, and baseball twice), multiple SEC titles including in women’s track & field and women’s gymnastics, and a top‑10 finish in the Director’s Cup—a measurement of the overall competitiveness of an athletic department—for the first time since 2009. During her tenure, LSU football posted a dominant 10‑win season and won a Western Division title during one of the fastest turnarounds in college football history. She has celebrated 15 national championships and 34 conference championships over the course of her remarkable career.

 

Zinn’s leadership in two power conferences – the Big 12 at West Virginia University and the SEC at LSU – has uniquely prepared her to lead within the Big Ten. At West Virginia, she served as interim athletic director in 2015, becoming the first woman to helm the department, and guided the university through the transition into the Big 12.

 

“I am honored to join Rutgers at this exciting juncture, and I want to thank President Tate and the Board of Governors for this incredible opportunity,” Zinn said. “Where there are challenges, there are also opportunities, and I look forward to working with our campus leaders, student-athletes, coaches, staff, donors, and fans to build on Rutgers’ strong tradition, amplify opportunities to support our athletic programs, maintain top‑tier compliance, and pursue excellence both on and off the field. We will compete with the nation’s best and we will represent the university with integrity and pride in all we do.”

 

Zinn was instrumental in advancing LSU’s Name, Image, and Likeness (NIL) strategy, forging a partnership to produce The Money Game—a documentary series following Tigers student‑athletes, launched on Amazon Prime Video. Her innovative approach secured NIL agreements and fund‑raising growth across multiple sports, positioning LSU as a national NIL leader.

 

“Keli Zinn is a dynamic leader who brings a powerful combination of competitive excellence, strategic acumen, and deep integrity to this role. Her experience operating at the heart of major collegiate athletics, commitment to student-athletes, and proven ability to elevate programs make her the right leader at the right time for Rutgers Athletics,” Board of Governors Chair Amy L. Towers said. “We are excited to welcome Keli and her husband Nate to the Banks and look forward to partnering with her as we build on Rutgers’ proud legacy and drive toward even greater success in the Big Ten and beyond.”

 

Zinn began her career as a compliance assistant in the Big East before gaining progressive experience in compliance, governance, and sport administration at University of Maryland and later serving in multiple senior executive roles at West Virginia University.

 

“With experience in the Northeast, in the SEC, and at land-grant universities like Rutgers, Keli understands the values, mission, and regional pride that defines our community,” said Hollis Copeland, chair of the Board of Governors athletics subcommittee and a standout former basketball player and member of the Rutgers Athletics Hall of Fame. “Keli will help us build a winning tradition that the world will know, and we welcome her and Nate.”

 

Keli Zinn Athletic Director Timeline Graphic

 
Rutgers’ Division of Intercollegiate Athletics is comprised of 24 men’s and women’s varsity sports serving more than 730 student-athletes competing in the Big Ten Conference.  
 

Rutgers is The Birthplace of College Football – Rutgers defeated Princeton 6-4 on Nov. 6, 1869, in New Brunswick. The Scarlet Knights have captured numerous team and individual championships. In addition to consecutive bowl berths in football and recent NCAA tournament bids in men’s basketball, Rutgers has won Big Ten team championships in men’s and women’s soccer and field hockey, while individuals have earned both national and Big Ten titles in track & field and wrestling.
 
Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey, is a leading national research university and the state of New Jersey’s preeminent, comprehensive public institution of higher education. Established in 1766, the university is the eighth-oldest higher education institution in the United States. More than 69,000 students and 27,000 faculty and staff learn, work and serve the public at Rutgers University-New Brunswick, Rutgers University-Newark, Rutgers University-Camden and Rutgers Health. 
 



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