Sports
Donavan Brazier, Josh Hoey go from track wilderness to national championships spotlight
Donavan Brazier went nearly three years away from racing, spending more time on Planet Fitness ellipticals than in track spikes.
For even longer, Josh Hoey was in his own running wilderness: six different coaches since turning pro out of high school in 2018.
Their stories collide in the men’s 800m, arguably the most compelling event at this week’s Toyota USA Track and Field Outdoor Championships in Eugene, Oregon.
The meet starts Thursday, with the 800m final on Sunday (live on Peacock).
National champions and world championships team members will be determined in Eugene, Oregon.
Donavan Brazier’s injury history and return to 800m
The top three in most events, including the men’s 800m, likely make the team for September’s World Championships in Tokyo.
The three fastest two-lappers in American history are entered: Bryce Hoppel (fourth at the 2024 Olympics), Hoey (fourth at the 2024 Olympic Trials, missing the team by one spot) and Brazier, the only American to win a world title in the event.
But that crown came way back in 2019. Six years was a generation ago in the men’s 800m, and in Brazier’s life.
After COVID-19 postponed the Tokyo Olympics by one year, Brazier broke the American indoor record for a third time in February 2021.
But that spring something didn’t feel right in his left ankle. Brazier, determined to race through it in an Olympic year, put off an MRI.
At the trials for Tokyo, he won his first-round heat, placed second in his semifinal and was in second place in the final with 200 meters to go, having won all of his meets since May 2019.
He began looking down at his legs every handful of strides. Six men passed him. He faded to last place (2.32 seconds behind the field). He limped after finishing.
He alluded to an injury minutes afterward in a virtual mixed zone — “some things bugging me, but there’s things that champions overcome, and I couldn’t overcome them,” he said.
Two or three days later, a photo on fellow runner Craig Engels’ Instagram story showed Brazier in the background wearing a protective boot and holding crutches.
The post-trials MRI had revealed a fracture in the ankle. He underwent surgery and returned for the early 2022 indoor season.
But then Brazier needed another surgery — this time on his right foot to repair Haglund’s deformity, a bony growth on the heel where the Achilles’ tendon attaches.
Sydney McLaughlin-Levrone switches events, while Noah Lyles goes for a record-tying U.S. 200m title.
He underwent three total procedures for Haglund’s between July 2022 and late 2023. He didn’t race in 2023 or 2024.
“Single most difficult time?” Brazier asked, repeating an interview question. “I think it’s just the cumulativeness of the unknown, not knowing if you’re going to come back or not. In my brain, I always thought I was going to come back, but there definitely was lingering things like, if I did retire, the sport’s moved on without me.”
Brazier tried to keep running, but only in what he called “little stints” and not enough to merit counting his weekly mileage.
When his foot couldn’t take the pounding, Brazier biked, swam and mounted an arc machine to stay in shape. He became a Planet Fitness member to use gyms in his native Michigan and in Florida, where his fiancée, Ally Watt, plays for the Orlando Pride.
“I tried to almost trick myself into not missing it (track), you know what I mean?” Brazier said. “But then once you come back, you kind of realize how much you did miss it.”
He came back this spring. Brazier flew to Flagstaff, Arizona, a runners’ hub due to its elevation, and trained under coach Mike Smith.
By June, having been relatively pain-free for three months, Brazier was ready to race for the first time since July 2022.
His return meet: the Toad Fest in Brentwood, Tennessee. Brazier called it nostalgic.
He boarded an airplane not to see a doctor or visit a friend, but to compete. He reacted to a starting gun for the first time in years. He won — in 1:44.70, a time that would have made the 2024 Olympic Trials final.
“A lot of it felt natural, kind of like the good old times a little bit,” he said.
The first-place prize was a small statue of a toad sitting on a mushroom. It came from a Wal-Mart. Brazier was told he didn’t have to keep it, but he insisted on bringing it home.
“It was one of the cooler trophies I’ve gotten,” he said. “It’s one of the most meaningful ones, too.”
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From there, Brazier went faster on June 15 (1:43.81) and July 19 (1:43.08).
He goes into nationals ranked third in the U.S. in 2025 by best time behind Hoey and Hoppel. If he’s top three on Sunday, he makes the world team.
“I was just trying to (qualify to race at) USAs,” he said, “but now I feel competitive enough to kind of reach out there and say I would like to try to qualify for teams. Obviously, I know the 800m is no slouch of an event right now.”
Josh Hoey breaks through in 800m in 7th year as pro
Back in 2018, Hoey turned pro out of high school. He was the second male distance runner to do so after Drew Hunter in 2016, according to track media.
Hoey ran at outdoor U.S. trials meets in 2019, 2021 and 2022 and never made it out of the first round.
He had no success with coaches, either, going through five over five years. There were injuries, disagreements on training philosophies and little improvement on his best times as a high schooler outside Philadelphia.
“I’ve had a lot of previous coaches and other people in the community that have said, ‘He’s done. He was good in high school, but he’s kind of cooked,’” he said on the Running Effect podcast.
By late 2023, Hoey stared at the last year of his Adidas contract in 2024 and, possibly, his last year as a professional runner.
Hoey trained in the morning on a track built during the pandemic on an old equestrian field at his family’s farm. Then he dressed up to intern during the day with his dad’s investment firm.
“It had seemed to me (in fall 2023) that I’d missed my window of opportunity, and the past five years of many mistakes and disappointments had run their course,” Hoey once posted on social media. “Despite this, I continued to train because it’s what I’m best at and what I know.”
For his last hurrah, Hoey decided to come up with his own training plan. Then fellow 800m runner and family friend Will Sumner made a suggestion for coach No. 6: his own coach, Australia-based Justin Rinaldi.
Hoey was reluctant. He did his mom a favor and made the call.
“A lot of the ideas that I had about training, that I was going to try and implement for myself, (Rinaldi) elaborated in much better detail,” he told Citius Mag.
Hoey and Rinaldi started a remote working relationship in late 2023.
At the 2024 Olympic Trials, Hoey finished fourth — one spot off the team, by 15 hundredths. Two hours later, he laughed about a placement that many would cry over.
“It felt so ironic, to have come that far and then to get that close, it was ridiculous,” he said of recording a personal best by 1.23 seconds. “I would say it was a really motivating experience, because going into that, there were still a lot of questions about if I was able to compete nationally and especially outdoors. That really kind of confirmed our talent level.”
Hoey re-signed with Adidas through 2028.
After the season, he spent fall 2024 in Flagstaff, altitude training he now credits for success so far in 2025: the world’s second-fastest indoor 800m in history in February and the world indoor title in March.
Team USA’s Hoey captures men’s 800m gold
Josh Hoey of the United States does just enough to win gold in the men’s 800m, securing his first global championship at the World Indoor Championships in Nanjing, China.
In the spring outdoor season, he recovered from norovirus to lower his outdoor personal best twice more.
His 1:42.01 in Monaco on July 11 is the second-fastest time in U.S. history behind Hoppel’s 1:41.67 from the Paris Olympics. It also makes him the world’s second-fastest performer in 2025 behind Kenyan Emmanuel Wanyonyi, the Olympic champion.
“I definitely don’t think that we’ve hit our goals in the 800m this year,” Hoey said, adding he’s eyeing a world outdoor championships medal.
Hoey first met Brazier in 2018, after he turned pro and signed with the same agency.
This week, they could line up in the same outdoor race for the first time since the 2019 USATF Championships — when Brazier was the soon-to-be world champion and Hoey was trying to find his footing as a teenage pro.
“I don’t want to speak for Donovan’s experience, but I definitely understand what it’s like to feel lost and kind of ostracized from competition, and I understand how humbled and focused that can make you,” Hoey said.
Brazier drifted from the sport during his years away. He said he felt no animosity or bitterness, but that he didn’t want to be too involved in case his body wouldn’t let him return to this level.
“It obviously kills me, knowing that I haven’t even made an Olympic team up to this point in my career,” he told Citius. “I think that’s kind of what keeps me up really at night. … If I had made an Olympic team at this point, I might have not even tried to come back. I definitely have certain goals and aspirations I still want to hit, but number one is really just trying to be an Olympian.”
Cole Hocker wants to become the second American man to win a world 1500m title, but that’s not his only 2025 goal.
Sports
Pinterest predicts the biggest Gen Z trends of 2026 | News
If Pinterest could describe 2026 in two words, it would be “ambient chaos.” And that’s because Gen Z has been using the visual discovery platform to carve out more intentional lives, according to the new Pinterest Predicts 2026 report. This means that constantly chasing viral moments is very much out next year.
The annual forecast found that younger users are seeking viral trends less and instead are leaning into softer and slower experiences online. In this 2026 edition, Pinterest compiled over two dozen key trends and styles its users are looking for. No surprise, they all lean towards self-expression and escapism.
“Gen Z is overworked, overscheduled and overwhelmed. They are always planning and scheming how to be more productive with their time, looking for hacks to save little bits of their time and energy. So it is no surprise they’re looking towards a distant past they have only heard of, but probably never
experienced—those “nostalgic” days when life was simpler,” said Vivek Iyyani, founder at Millennial Minds.
Case in point: nearly four in 10 Gen Z users say they look to curate personal identities than copy aesthetics from the posts they save and search on Pinterest. This shift is most evident in the rise of nostalgic, offline behaviours. For example, a fourth of Gen Z and millennial users report rediscovering handwriting letters. Notably, Gen Z in Singapore is four times more likely to engage with pen pals compared to the global average.
Pinterest found three main cultural drivers—emotional comfort, intentional curation, and grounded optimism—influencing next year’s trends. This means that youths are less likely to doomscroll on the platform, but rather engage in designs, looks, and routines that feel personal. For marketers and brands, this suggests that inviting consumers to remix ideas is more effective compared to one-size-fits-all campaigns.
“For brands, this is a unique opportunity to connect with Gen Z at their most creative and decisive moments. Across APAC markets such as Singapore, we see them embracing both reflective aesthetics and bold self-expression,” said Ayumi Nakajima, senior director, content partnerships, APAC at Pinterest.
Here’s a rundown of the 21 biggest trends of 2026, according to Pinterest:
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Cool Blue: Think ice queen, but make it everyday life. This is all about frosty blue tones showing up in icy coats, glacier-inspired nail art, pale-blue cocktails, and even cool-toned wedding palettes. The colour palette shifts away from warm brights to something calmer and more, well, chill.
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Brooched: Maximalism in miniature with brooches, pins and little heirloom-style pieces. Think a suit paired with a statement or sentimental brooch that turns a look from corporate to runway.
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Glamoratti: Imagine 80s luxury power dressing reissued specifically for the chaos on TikTok. Shoulder pads go bigger, tailoring gets sharper, and belts get chunkier. Decadence is back with a love for sculpted silhouettes and high drama.


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Glitchy Glam: The anti-perfect beauty trend. Mismatched nails, off-centre liner, and asymmetric bobs. Symmetry is out for 2026.
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Vamp Romantic: Goth but with a sweet twist. Dark plum lips, inky manicures, and smudged smokey eyes without leaning fully into the goth subculture.
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Scent Stacking: Instead of one signature scent, the in thing is to build a fragrance wardrobe and layer perfumes to create custom combos. There’s a comeback for discovery sets and minis, as more young people get into fragrances and luxury experiences.
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Poetcore: A rebrand of the academia aesthetic with oversized turtlenecks, worn-in blazers, and satchels. This also reflects the broader shift towards hobbies like journaling, reading, and writing.


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Khaki Coded: Think explorer with desert-inspired neutrals in khaki shorts, utility shirts, and field jackets. The idea is to dress like you could walk straight into an expedition, even if you’re just heading to brunch.
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Afrohemian Decor: A fusion of African and boho influences. This means colourful Nigerian textiles, adire fabrics, and Ethiopian wall art. It’s a move away from flat minimalism into homes that feel rooted in culture, craft, and story, with a resort feel.
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Fun Haus: Circus-adjacent interiors with striped ceilings, sculptural furniture, and bold graphic prints. This aesthetic is meant to be playful but grown-up, with a few circus cues in a more neutral base.
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Neo Deco: A contemporary take on art deco. Expect strong geometric patterns and chrome and brass accents. It’s a reaction to bare, beige minimalism. While spaces still look curated and sleek, there’s a sense of old-school glamour reinterpreted for small apartments and modern living.


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Cabbage Crush: The humble cabbage gets its ‘It’ veggie moment. The once-unpopular vegetable is transformed into charred cabbage ‘steaks’ and crunchy wraps. It’s familiar, affordable, and can swing healthy or indulgent.
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Darecations: Travel built around adrenaline. People are searching for rafting, canyoneering, and big sports fixtures as their main activity on trips. Instead of beach holidays, itineraries are structured around bucket-list thrills that look great on camera.
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Mystic Outlands: A travel escapist’s fantasy that features places with a folklore or sci-fi landscape. Think mist-covered Highland valleys, surreal salt flats, and other “ethereal” views. It’s a break from city living, with many looking for unique destinations.
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Gimme Gummy: This one is all about texture you can see and almost feel through the screen. Jelly and gummy aesthetics that are sensory and ASMR-friendly that riles up one’s urge to poke, squish and play with objects.
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Pen Pals: Snail mail gets a revival. Think cute stamps, decorated envelopes, and wax seals. Letters are once again a creative outlet. In Singapore, many younger users are using long-form, handwritten notes as an antidote to DMs.


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Laced Up: The aesthetic features lace-trimmed jackets, crocheted bandanas, and doily-inspired details. Craft and crochet communities get their moment, with more stylised, fashion-forward applications.
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Throwback Kid: Older users recreate their own childhoods for their kids. This means vintage or thrifted children’s clothes, old-school toys, and retro nursery decor.
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Wilderkind: Detailing taken from nature’s playbook with bug jewellery, deer or fawn-inspired makeup, and insect-inspired nail art.
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Operasthetic: Dramatic drapes, heavy fabrics, red and gold palettes. Weddings and parties are expected to borrow from old theatres and cabaret to create a sense of performance, where every detail feels like it’s part of a set.
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Extra Celestial: Alien-core and space aesthetics taken beyond niche fandoms into the mainstream. Think holographic fabrics, iridescent and opalescent finishes. Very much inspired by hyperfuturistic design.
Sports
Creating a Legacy: Maddie Scheier
She had a record-breaking sophomore season that, in the fall, included her first win at the collegiate level when she posted a time of 17:44.22 in the 5K of the FAU Invitational.
She followed that in the spring by setting a new school record in the 3,000-meter steeplechase at the Wake Forest Invitational with a time of 10:48.62. She also recorded the fourth-fastest time in program history in the 3,000-meter run when she posted a 9:50.33.
And as a new season of competition begins to heat up, Scheier is picking up right where she left off as a sophomore.
In September, she set a new Miami record in the 5K with a time of 17:04.48 at the Southern Showcase in Huntsville, Alabama and she she’s determined to keep growing – especially since she really only embraced running late in her high school career.
“I think what I’ve noticed is that because I started later, that now I’m seeing that big improvement that most girls might see in high school,” she said. “It just shows all the hard work from the past couple years, which is really exciting. The jump from my freshman year to sophomore year was huge and I was able to break a lot of records, which was fun. But it’s really meant a lot because I do work really hard and I sacrifice a lot of other things in order to be at my best. So, it’s really cool to see it all come through.”
For Scheier, competing at a high level is second nature.
It had to be, given her family.
Her father, Adam Scheier, is a veteran college football coach who is currently the special teams coordinator at UNLV. Her sister Callie is now an assistant coach and the director of player development for the women’s basketball team at High Point University, where she played and was a two-time conference champion. Sister Riley was a Sunsation at Miami before graduating and is now a cheerleader for the Philadelphia Eagles, while her younger brother, Brady, is taking a postgraduate year before playing football at Princeton.
Competition was always fierce in the Scheier home – but it always came with plenty of support, too.
That, Scheier says, pushed her to become the athlete she is today.
“I just think being around so many good examples and seeing what happens when you put your mind to something and you’re passionate about something, it created a sense of toughness in me,” Scheier said. “I learned how to battle adversity. And also, just having that support system was huge. They’re the ones that support me in every race. They text me good luck beforehand and watch all the races and everything. … It’s just cool having a group of people that I’m so close to that all understand what it means to be a serious athlete and we’re all able to support each other.”
Sports
UC Davis Welcomes Maria Anderson As New Assistant Track & Field Coach
DAVIS, Calif. — UC Davis Track & Field is strengthening its distance program with the addition of Assistant Coach Maria Anderson, a decorated former student-athlete and rapidly rising coach. Anderson brings a strong record of developing all-conference performers, guiding championship teams, and mentoring student-athletes on and off the course.
“We are excited to welcome Coach Maria to our coaching staff,” said Track & Field Head Coach Ngoni Makusha. “Her depth of experience, combined with the passion she showcased at Elizabethtown College and San Francisco State, will be a tremendous asset to our athletes and our program. We look forward to the leadership and enthusiasm she brings.”
Anderson arrives in Davis after spending the 2024 season at San Francisco State, where she coached the men’s and women’s distance squads. Prior to that, she spent six seasons at Elizabethtown College, rising from volunteer coach to Associate Head Coach while helping guide both the men’s and women’s teams to Landmark Conference Cross Country Championships. During her tenure, she coached multiple all-conference and all-region athletes, as well as competitors who qualified for NCAA Division III and Atlantic Regional Championships.
“I’m honored to join the coaching staff at UC Davis and grateful for the opportunity to work with such a talented group of student-athletes and coaches,” Anderson said. “I’m excited to get to work on this upcoming season and look forward to the progress made towards our team goals in the MPSF and Big West Conference.”
As a student-athlete at Elizabethtown, Anderson was a four-time All-Landmark Conference performer in cross country, the 2014 Landmark Conference Rookie of the Year, and helped lead the Blue Jays to four team championships. She also earned two All-Mideast Region honors, captured the 2018 Landmark Conference steeplechase title while setting a facility record, and finished her career as a five-time all-conference honoree in track & field.
Anderson graduated from Elizabethtown in 2018 with a degree in fine arts and earned her master’s in art education from Millersville University in 2022. She also holds A.C.E. personal training certification, USATF Level 1 coaching certification, and is pursuing USATF Level 2 in endurance.
ABOUT UC DAVIS ATHLETICS:
UC Davis, the No. 2 ranked public university by the Wall Street Journal, is home to 40,000 undergraduate students and 12,000 employees. Ranked #1 in Agriculture and Forestry as well as #1 in Veterinary Medicine, UC Davis is located in a true California college town nestled between world-class destinations such as the San Francisco Bay Area, Napa Valley and Lake Tahoe. Over 650 Aggie student-athletes compete in 25 Division I varsity sports, with 16 sports transitioning to the Mountain West Conference beginning in 2026–27.
For more information, visit https://ucdavisaggies.com/.
Sports
Nevada volleyball coach Shannon Wyckoff-McNeal resigns after two seasons with Wolf Pack
Nevada volleyball coach Shannon Wyckoff-McNeal resigned Thursday after two years on job, becoming the third Wolf Pack head coach to step down in the last 11 days.
Wyckoff-McNeal joins baseball coach Jake McKinley and women’s soccer coach Vanessa Valentine is resigning recently. McKinley did so to join the Seattle Mariners’ staff. Wyckoff-McNeal said she stepped down to focus on her family.
“After a lot of reflection and prayer, I have chosen to step away in order to put my family first,” Wyckoff-McNeal said in a news release. “It’s truly heart-wrenching to leave a place and a group of people I care for so deeply. Nevada will always hold a special place in my heart, and I’m grateful for every relationship, every experience and every moment spent here. I want to extend my deepest gratitude to the University of Nevada, President (Brian) Sandoval and Stephanie Rempe for the incredible opportunity to be part of such a special place. My time here has meant more to me than I can express. This is a great university with a tremendous community, and being part of this program has been both inspiring and rewarding. Go Pack!”
Wyckoff-McNeal was hired Dec. 27, 2023 as Nevada volleyball’s 12th head coach, agreeing to a five-year pact that paid $155,000 annually with a $40,000 buyout if she left the school before Dec. 31, 2025. Hunt was hired by Nevada after a successful stint as an assistant coach at Washington State for more than a decade.
Nevada finished second-to-last in the MW in each of Wyckoff-McNeal’s two seasons with the Wolf Pack. In 2024, Nevada went 12-17 overall and 5-13 in the Mountain West. This season, the Wolf Pack was 8-20 overall and 4-14 in league play. Wyckoff-McNeal went 20-37 overall and 9-27 in the MW in two seasons. Her first year was marred by Nevada’s boycott of a match against San Jose State, which drew national headlines as the Wolf Pack players voted against taking the court versus the Spartans, whose team featured a a transgender player.
After making five NCAA Tournament berths from 1998-2005, Nevada volleyball has posted a winning record in just three of the last 20 seasons (2007, 2016 and 2019). It also has suffered from heavy transfers over the last decade, including three of the Wolf Pack’s top potential returners (Haylee Brown, Audrey Jensen and Kinsley Singleton) entering the portal earlier this week.
Nevada said it would conduct a national search for Wyckoff-McNeal’s replacement.
“I would like to thank Shannon for her dedication to the Nevada volleyball program and our student-athletes over the past two years,” Nevada athletic director Stephanie Rempe said in a news release. “I wish her all the best.”
Sports
Boise State to Compete in Spokane Indoor Challenge
BOISE, Idaho – Boise State track and field returns to action on Saturday in the Spokane Indoor Challenge.
Beginning at 10 a.m. MT, the Broncos will compete in 10 field events and 13 running events. In total, over four dozen student-athletes will participate in the challenge.
In last year’s competition, Boise State recorded eight personal records and three season bests. Janiah Brown, who graduated last year, won the women’s one mile.
Live results will be available on MileSplit.com.
NOTABLES
· Head coach Pat McCurry is in his second season at the helm of Boise State’s track and field program. He previously served as an assistant with the Broncos from 2016-18, and also was the head coach at College of Idaho and San Francisco.
· The event will be held in Spokane, Washington, at The Podium.
· Boise State has competed in this event in each of the last three years.
· Last week in Boston, Alex Thompson clocked a personal best with a 7:57.74 in the men’s 3K.
· Kaiya Robertson also recorded a collegiate best with a 9:05.03 in the women’s 3K, the second fastest time in school history.
LINEUPS
Field Events:
Women’s Weight Throw (10:00 a.m. MT) – Amaya Dixon, Alexee Kline, Victoria Lotz, Addy MacArthur, Ruby Sereday, Coco Velasquez
Women’s Long Jump (11:00 a.m. MT) – Nadia Collins, Kenna DeLemos, Gabbie Hasskamp, Alix Mund, Emily Stefan, Love Uzoekwe
Women’s Shot Put (2:30 p.m. MT) – Amaya Dixon, Victoria Lotz, Addy MacArthur, Emily Stefan, Coco Velasquez
Women’s Triple Jump (3:00 p.m. MT) – Nadia Collins, Alix Mund
Women’s High Jump (3:45 p.m. MT) – Gabbie Hasskamp, Jamie Wade
Men’s High Jump (10:00 a.m. MT) – Aayden Simmons
Men’s Long Jump (11:00 a.m. MT) – Harvey Scott, Aayden Simmons, Raekwon Weatherspoon
Men’s Weight Throw (1:15 p.m. MT) – Joseph Garcia, Tyler Grant, Tanner Nett
Men’s Triple Jump (3:00 p.m. MT) – Aayden Simmons
Men’s Shot Put (4:00 p.m. MT) – Joseph Garcia, Tyler Grant, Tanner Nett
Running Events:
Women’s 60m, Qualifying (12:00 p.m. MT) – Priscilla Adu-Gyamfi, Campbell Brintnall, Audrey Kays, Breasia Roberts, Love Uzoekwe
Women’s 60m Hurdles, Prelim (1:00 p.m. MT) – Campbell Brintnall, Gabbie Hasskamp, Emily Stefan
Women’s 60m, Prelim (1:35 p.m. MT) – Priscilla Adu-Gyamfi, Campbell Brintnall, Audrey Kays, Breasia Roberts, Maggie Shirazi, Love Uzoekwe
Women’s Mile (2:40 p.m. MT) – Gabriella Chiara, Emme Hamm, Eliisa Marshall, Brynnli Poulsen
Women’s 300m (3:30 p.m. MT) – Priscilla Adu-Gyamfi, Eloise Bolles, Brooklynn Bright, Ciara Brown, Shyniece Davis, McKenna Murphy, Maggie Shirazi
Women’s 200m (5:00 p.m. MT) – Audrey Kays, Breasia Roberts
Women’s 4x400m Relay (6:40 p.m. MT) – Priscilla Adu-Gyamfi (A1),Eloise Bolles (A2), Brooklynn Bright (A4), Ciara Brown (A3), Gabriella Chiara (B2), Emme Hamm (C4), Gabbie Hasskamp (B1), Eliisa Marshall (C3), McKenna Murphy (C1), Brynnli Poulsen (C2), Maggie Shirazi (C1), Emily Stefan (B3)
Men’s 60m, Qualifying (12:20 p.m. MT) – Raekwon Weatherspoon, Allan McKeraghan
Men’s 60m Hurdles, Prelim (1:20 p.m. MT) – Dax Duggan, Noah Lara, Chase Lawyer
Men’s 60m, Prelim (1:45 p.m. MT) – Allan McKeraghan, Raekwon Weatherspoon
Men’s Mile (2:50 p.m. MT) – Angus Fitzgerald, Shawn Jones, Cody Lucas, Ezra Teeples
Men’s 300m (3:45 p.m. MT) – Cobe Cameron, Trevor Cogley, John Dailey, Dax Duggan, Xavier Fraley, Josh Green, Wade Pollock, DJ Warren Jr.
Men’s 600m (4:45 p.m. MT) – Drew Bradeson
Men’s 200m (5:25 p.m. MT) – Noah Lara, Allan McKeraghan, Harvey Scott
Mixed 4x400m Relay (7:10 p.m. MT) – Josh Green (A1), Trevor Cogley (A3), Chase Lawyer (A6), Priscilla Adu-Gyamfi (A5), Campbell Brintnall (A2), Shyniece Davis (A4)
Sports
After 11 standout seasons, BYU women’s volleyball has an opening at head coach
PROVO — One week after being eliminated from the program’s 14th consecutive NCAA Tournament appearance, BYU women’s volleyball is looking for a new head coach.
Longtime coach Heather Olmstead announced her departure from the university Thursday to pursue “new professional avenues,” according to a department news release.
Considered one of the top female head coaches in college volleyball, Olmstead went 279-55 in 11 seasons with the Cougars.
After taking over following her brother Shawn’s move to the men’s volleyball job, she became the fastest coach to reach 200 Division I wins — doing so in just 225 games — and was the third-fastest coach all-time to 100 Division I wins just 111 matches into her head coaching career.
The former AVCA national coach of the year in 2018 departs BYU after developing 14 All-Americans, 23 All-Region honorees, and nine All-Big 12 honorees while guiding the Cougars from the West Coast Conference, where her players earned 22 all-conference honors.
“Coaching at BYU has been an incredible chapter — one filled with championships, NCAA Tournament runs and record-setting seasons,” Olmstead said. “But the true highlight has always been the people. I’m grateful for every athlete who let me be part of her journey and for the chance to help shape strong leaders, teammates and women who go on to make a difference long after their playing days.
“As I move into this next chapter, I do so with deep gratitude for the BYU community, for the players who trusted me with their development and for the staff who stood beside me through every challenge. I wish this program continued success, and I’m excited for what’s next.”
BYU Athletics is tremendously grateful for Coach Olmstead’s devotion and commitment to BYU Women’s Volleyball and wish her all the best in her future endeavors. pic.twitter.com/q7n4GoZwz1
— BYU Women’s Volleyball (@BYUwvolleyball) December 11, 2025
Olmstead presided over what many consider to be the greatest season in BYU women’s volleyball history in 2018, which included 11 weeks as the No. 1-ranked team in the country, a 27-match win streak, and a No. 4 seed in the NCAA Tournament that took the Cougars to the national semifinals before a straight-set loss to eventual champion Stanford.
“I want to thank Heather for everything she has done to make BYU women’s volleyball great,” BYU athletic director Brian Santiago said in a statement. “She poured her heart and soul into this program and guided incredible teams that have had consistent national relevance and success and represented BYU well. Her student-athletes have gone on to do remarkable things.
“We wish Heather all the best as she pursues new opportunities, and we will open a national search for a new women’s volleyball head coach immediately.”
Olmstead was also a rising coaching star internationally, serving as head coach of the U.S. U21 women’s national team that won the gold medal at the 2025 NORCECA Pan American Cup and 2024 NORCECA Women’s Continental Championships.
She also had experience with the U.S. collegiate national team and was an assist on the U.S. team that won gold in the 2015 Pan American Games.
Olmstead’s departure is the second longtime college volleyball staple to exit her program in the state of Utah, and comes days after legendary Utah volleyball coach Beth Launiere retired following a 31-year career.
But in the weeks since the Cougars’ first-round loss to Big West champion Cal Poly in Los Angeles, the Cougars have seen three key departures to the transfer portal — including a pair of All-Big 12 first-team selections in setter Alex Bower and star freshman Suli Davis.
Sophomore outside hitter Blaykli Bobik, an Arizona native who played in 20 of the Cougars’ 31 matches as a reserve, also entered the portal.
It’s unknown if the portal departures were influenced by or connected to Olmstead’s decision to leave her position.
But Davis, who broke a 40-year-old freshman kills record at BYU with 541 en route to freshman of the year honors by the Big 12 and the AVCA West region, took to her Instagram account to clear up any rumors of animosity between her and Olmstead and the other BYU coaches.
“I love coach Heather and the staff, I love my teammates, and everyone who has helped me at BYU,” she wrote. “I couldn’t be more grateful for them all. … I’m not transferring for those reasons.”
BYU has named associate head coach David Hyte as interim head coach while it conducts what it calls a national search for the program’s next head coach.
The Key Takeaways for this article were generated with the assistance of large language models and reviewed by our editorial team. The article, itself, is solely human-written.
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