Connect with us
https://yoursportsnation.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/07/call-to-1.png

Sports

Twins’ newest team Hall of Famer: Corey Koskie, the volleyball-playing ‘no shot’ from Canada

Published

on


Editor’s note: This article was originally published on Feb. 11, 2022, as part of a series about the most underrated players in Minnesota Twins history. It’s being republished now, in honor of Corey Koskie’s induction into the Twins’ team Hall of Fame on Sunday at Target Field.

Corey Koskie grew up on a farm in Canada, in a community called Anola with a population of 200 or so. He barely played baseball but starred in hockey and volleyball. Koskie was recruited to play goalie for the University of Minnesota-Duluth but opted for a volleyball scholarship from the University of Manitoba. And that was almost the end of his baseball career.

After redshirting as a freshman, he was playing baseball for a summer townball team when John Smith, the head coach for Des Moines Area Community College, persuaded Koskie to switch sports and come to Boone, Iowa. “For some reason I decided to go there and play baseball,” Koskie said years later. “I wasn’t a long shot. I view it as being a no shot.”

After one successful season there, Koskie moved back home to Canada to play for Kwantlen University and the National Baseball Institute in British Columbia, where a Twins scout spotted him. Picked by the Twins in the 26th round of the 1994 draft, Koskie moved methodically up the minor-league ladder, spending a full season at each of four levels despite promotion-worthy performances.

He finally reached Triple A in 1998, at age 25, and hit .301/.368/.539 with 26 homers in 135 games to earn his first career in-season promotion in the form of a September call-up to Minnesota. Despite batting just .138 with 10 strikeouts in his 11-game MLB debut, Koskie broke camp with the Twins the next spring and hit .333/.395/.564 in April to solidify his status as a big leaguer.

However, manager Tom Kelly played Koskie sparingly, opting for veterans Ron Coomer, Brent Gates and Denny Hocking at third base. Koskie’s fielding was a problem. He started just five of the Twins’ first 54 games at third base, his only position throughout five seasons in the minor leagues, with his sporadic playing time coming mostly at designated hitter and even right field.

“I knew there was a reason I wasn’t playing,” Koskie said at the time. “I didn’t want to sit and pout about it.”

With the message received, Koskie worked tirelessly with third-base coach Ron Gardenhire to improve his hands and reaction time. It paid off, as Kelly noticed the strides Koskie was making and gradually gave him more starts at third base. He started 54 of the final 81 games, all of them at third base, and his left-handed bat was in the lineup nearly every day versus right-handed pitchers.

“He has worked his butt off,” Gardenhire said in 2002. “You can’t wish anything but the best for a guy who works like he does. … I had no choice. I was the guy (Kelly) would yell at every time Corey didn’t make a play.”

Hard work leading to improvement isn’t uncommon, but the remarkable aspect of Koskie’s story was how rapidly he progressed and how much room he had to grow from a non-baseball background. He was an average-ish third baseman by his second season, and by 2001 — Kelly’s last year before Gardenhire took over as manager — Koskie was one of the league’s better-fielding third basemen.

Koskie required no such improvement at the plate, hitting .310/.387/.468 as a rookie and topping an .800 OPS in each of his six seasons with the Twins. His offensive profile changed, as Koskie traded some batting average for power, but his production was consistent. In those six seasons, only Chipper Jones, Scott Rolen, Troy Glaus and Eric Chávez had a higher OPS among third basemen.

Koskie led Twins position players in Wins Above Replacement in three of his six seasons and was never worse than third on the team. At his best in 2001 as the Twins returned to relevance, he batted .276/.362/.488 with 26 homers, 65 total extra-base hits, 103 RBIs and Gold Glove-caliber defense. He even stole 27 bases despite a gait that could be charitably described as slow-moving.

He was similarly productive in 2002, 2003 and 2004, playing for Gardenhire as one of the veterans on a squad that broke through with three straight division titles, but Koskie missed time with injuries in each of those seasons. And really, health was the main thing separating a good Koskie season from a great Koskie season, because he always had an .800-something OPS with good defense.

Even when he was young and healthy, Koskie moved at his own leisurely pace, shuffling out to his position in the field each inning and regularly causing false injury alarms for anyone watching what was the baseball-playing equivalent of a grandpa gently getting up from a couch. He’d snap into action, swiping a base or snagging a line drive, then resume his sedate way around the diamond.

Because of his long journey through the minors, Koskie was already 30 in 2003, his fifth full season, and he dealt with nagging back and hamstring injuries that further gave him the look of someone for whom everything was a chore. But he kept producing. Koskie led the division-winning 2003 and 2004 teams in OPS while playing 131 and 118 games.

Koskie slugged .607 with 11 homers and 11 doubles across 37 games in August and September 2004 as the Twins ran away from Chicago and Cleveland for their third straight AL Central title. He kept rolling in the ALDS, hitting .308 with a .474 on-base percentage versus the Yankees, and if not for a bad bounce Koskie would have one of the biggest clutch hits in Twins history.

After winning Game 1 in New York behind seven shutout innings from Johan Santana, the Twins trailed 5-3 in the eighth inning of Game 2. They rallied off Hall of Fame closer Mariano Rivera, cutting the lead to 5-4 as Koskie stepped to the plate with runners on the corners and one out. Luis Rivas pinch-ran for Justin Morneau at first base, putting good speed on as the go-ahead run.

Koskie slashed a Rivera cutter into the left-field corner as Torii Hunter jogged home with the tying run. Rivas was set to claim a lead that could have put the Twins up 2-0 in the series heading back to Minnesota and maybe even forever alter the now-lopsided postseason history between the two teams. Except the ball hopped over the wall for a ground-rule double, halting Rivas.

“They would have scored two (runs), no doubt about it,” Yankees catcher Jorge Posada said afterward.

Instead, Jason Kubel and Cristian Guzmán stranded Rivas at third base and two hours later, in the bottom of the 12th inning, the Yankees evened the series with a walk-off victory. It took Minnesota two decades to win another playoff game, including going 0-13 against the Yankees. Perhaps one bounce could have changed everything, for Koskie and for the Twins.

Koskie’s double off Rivera proved to be the final big hit of his Twins career. He became a free agent after the season and the Twins made little effort to re-sign the 32-year-old, who went home to Canada on a three-year, $16.5 million deal with Toronto. Koskie bought a full-page ad in both local newspapers to thank Twins fans, calling it “the hardest decision our family has ever had to make.”

He had a down season for Toronto in 2005, missing two months with a broken thumb, and that winter the Blue Jays traded Koskie to the Brewers. He got off to a nice start with Milwaukee in 2006, hitting .261/.343/.490 with 12 homers in 76 games, but Koskie fell hard while chasing a pop-up on July 5 and suffered a concussion that ultimately ended his career at age 33. He never played again.

“It was 2 1/2 years of just dealing with this hell,” Koskie said in 2018 of the post-concussion symptoms and numerous setbacks. “It sucked. Everything I (once) could do, I couldn’t do anymore and you didn’t know if you were OK. Everyone would say ‘you look OK,’ but you don’t feel OK. It was a personal hell, and I wouldn’t wish that on my worst enemy.”

In addition to his strong defense at third base and consistently good production at the plate, Koskie was also known as a clubhouse prankster who pulled off his most famous trick on David Ortiz during spring training in 2002. As the story goes, Koskie was upset over some minor offense, so he went into the clubhouse during a game and filled Ortiz’s underwear with peanut butter. Chunky, too.

Later, a freshly showered Ortiz somehow got fully dressed — underwear, jeans, shirt, jacket, shoes — before noticing, at which point it was way too late. Years later, the Twins honored a retiring Ortiz during his farewell stop in Minnesota by having Koskie, Hunter, Gardenhire, LaTroy Hawkins and Eddie Guardado present him with a new jar of chunky peanut butter.

It wasn’t just pranks that made Koskie a popular teammate. Morneau, who later became a Twins leader himself, credits Koskie for taking him under his wing as a wide-eyed kid drafted out of Canada in 1999. They quickly bonded and years later, when Morneau was a top prospect invited to his first major-league spring training, Koskie was there to mentor him. They still play hockey together.

“He looked out for me and checked up on me in the minor leagues,” Morneau told The Athletic last year. “My first big-league camp, I made plenty of mistakes. And he was there just saying, hey, you can’t do this, you can’t do that. There are certain ways you’ve got to conduct yourself. That’s the way the game works. Everyone who’s been there understands. They remember what it’s like to be a rookie.”

Koskie probably remembered that rookie feeling more than most, since his path to the majors was anything but standard and his first manager wasn’t shy about letting him know his fielding wasn’t good enough. In response, he improved his defense as much as anyone in Twins history and emerged as one of the biggest driving forces for the team’s return to prominence in the early 2000s.

Gary Gaetti is almost universally regarded as the greatest Twins third baseman of all time. And for good reason. He spent 10 seasons in Minnesota, starred on the 1987 championship team, won four Gold Glove awards and has the eighth-most homers in Twins history. Gaetti is unquestionably an all-time Twins great and deservedly was inducted into the team Hall of Fame in 2007.

Koskie is, at worst, the No. 2 third baseman in Twins history and has more of a case for the No. 1 spot than most fans would be willing to even consider. Gaetti played four more years and 67 percent more games in Minnesota, yet the career WAR in a Twins uniform is relatively close (27.1 to 22.1) because Koskie was far more consistently an all-around asset.

Gaetti’s production varied wildly from year to year, and he was a notorious free-swinger prone to terrible on-base percentages. He’s most remembered for being a middle-of-the-order slugger on a World Series-winning team, but Gaetti was an above-average hitter relative to the league average in just three of 10 seasons with the Twins, whereas Koskie cleared that bar easily in all six seasons.

TWINS CAREER AVG OBP SLG OPS+ WAR/150

Corey Koskie

.280

.373

.463

116

4.1

Gary Gaetti

.256

.307

.437

100

3.0

Gaetti had a .744 OPS for the Twins at a time when the league as a whole had a .728 OPS. He was great from 1986 to 1988 but almost exactly average overall. By comparison, Koskie posted an .836 OPS for the Twins at a time when the league OPS was .771, and he topped the league-wide OPS by at least 40 points in every season. Koskie was a better hitter than Gaetti, often by quite a bit.

In fact, Koskie was a better hitter than most everyone in Twins history. Among all players with at least 1,500 plate appearances for the Twins, he ranks seventh in OPS (.836), sandwiched between Kirby Puckett (.837) and Morneau (.832). Koskie’s raw numbers are inflated by playing in a high-scoring era, but even his OPS+ — which accounts for that context — ranks 15th in Twins history.

Gaetti is one of the elite defensive third basemen of all time in reputation and numbers, so he has a considerable advantage there even though Koskie was a quality fielder himself. And yet WAR, which factors in batting, fielding and baserunning, gives Koskie a sizable all-around edge over Gaetti per 150 games with the Twins — 4.1 to 3.0. Koskie was worth roughly an extra win per year.

Gaetti’s far lengthier Twins career and superior durability shouldn’t be brushed aside, and it’s absolutely justified to consider “The Rat” as the Twins’ best third baseman. But there’s also a reasonable argument to be made for Koskie, and the fact that would come as a shock to so many fans is evidence for his being vastly underrated. And now Koskie is deservedly joining Gaetti in the Twins Hall of Fame this weekend.

(Photo: Brian Bahr /Getty Images)





Link

Continue Reading
Click to comment

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Sports

Three Owls Kick Off Indoor Track Season with LEC Awards

Published

on


PROVIDENCE, R.I. – Three Keene State College student-athletes honored by the Little East Conference for their achievements accomplished for the week of 12/1-12/7 after the Owls’ first day of competition for the indoor 2025-2026 season.
 
Men’s Indoor Track and Field
 
Junior Tyler Bolaske (Palmer, Mass.) was named the LEC Track Athlete of the Week from his performance at the New Balance Early Bird Invitational at the TRACK on Saturday. Bolaske picked up where he left off from the cross country season with his performance on Saturday as he ran the 5,000 meters in 14:56.89 to finish in ninth in a tough field. Bolaske’s time is currently a top-25 time in Division III as he sits in 22nd after the opening weekend of action to kick off the indoor season.
 
The Owls’ distance medley relay team also took home an LEC recognition as they were named the LEC Relay Team of the Week. The relay team composed of Sean Von Ranson, Aidan Law, Keith O’Donnell, and Nick Terranova won first at the Suffolk Relays on Saturday with a time of 3:37.57, beating the other 13 teams in the event.
 
Bolaske, the Sprint Medley Relay team, and the Owls’ return to action over break at the Middlebury Snowflake Invitational at Middlebury College on Saturday, January 10, at 11:00 AM.
 
Women’s Indoor Track and Field
 
Freshman Ballay Conteh (Concord, N.H.) was named the Rookie Field Athlete of the Week from her first performance of her first indoor track and field season for the Owls at the Suffolk Relays. Conteh recorded a New England Division III qualifying mark in the long jump with her first jump of 3.59 setting the winning mark at the meet.
 
Conteh and the Owls’ return to action over break at the Middlebury Snowflake Invitational at Middlebury College on Saturday, January 10, at 11:00 AM.
 



Link

Continue Reading

Sports

Dec. 3 to Dec. 9 in Athletics

Published

on


Women’s Basketball

The No. 15 women’s basketball team dominated its only game of the week, beating Albertus Magnus College 72-31 on Dec. 3. 

The team wasted no time, jumping to a dominant first-quarter lead 17-8. Chase Anderson ’29 made the first basket of the game, before Laura Mendell ’26, Annie McCarthy ’26, Brielle Renwick ’27, Olivia Soenens ’29, and Sylvia Liddle ’26 followed up with points of their own to close out the first. The second quarter saw huge defensive plays, with Mendell, Renwick, and Avery Myerberg ’29 all registering steals. The Mammoths also got it done at the rim, doubling up on the visiting Falcons 28-14 heading to the half.

In the third quarter, Amherst continued the intensity and relentless play. Amherst scored on its first four possessions of the game, while again holding Albertus Magnus scoreless. Again, it was Mendell, McCarthy, and Anderson putting points on the board. In a true team effort, the Mammoths showcased their depth in the fourth quarter, with contributions coming from some younger faces on the court. Never making it easy, the Mammoths closed out the game, outscoring the Falcons 18-12 in the final quarter, bringing their margin of victory to 41 points.

In the win, Soenens, Anderson, and Liddle all registered double-digit points. Liddle also had a team-high five blocks, while Anderson and Renwick led the team in rebounds with nine and six, respectively. Mendell and Myerberg each dished out three assists as well. As of Dec. 8, the team is 4-0, and after battling Wesleyan on Tuesday, the team is returning home to play Colby-Sawyer College tonight at 7 p.m.

Men’s Basketball

The men’s basketball team picked up a pair of wins at home this week, beating Massachusetts College of Liberal Arts (MCLA) 82-62 on Dec. 3 and Westfield State University 69-65 on Saturday.

The Mammoths got on the board first, thanks to a rebound turned basket from Zane Adnan ’27. MCLA then went on a little run of its own, but Amherst got back in its groove. K.J. Neville ’29 and Nate Pabis ’27 drained back-to-back threes before Neville went to the line for the equalizer. From there, the final five minutes of the first half belong to the Mammoths. Baskets from Marc Garraud ’27, Pabis, Neville, and Johnny McCain ’27 put Amherst up 44-29 heading to the half.

In the second half, the two teams traded points back and forth. Ultimately, however, Pabis’s 16 points in the second half alone overpowered any chance of a comeback from MCLA. Chris Hammond ’26’s two steals to close out the game kept the ball in Amherst’s possession, with Neville and Pabis repeatedly going to the line in the final minutes to keep the Mammoth lead. As time expired, Amherst walked away victorious with a score of 82-62. In the win, Pabis led the way with a career-high 26 points, while Brandon Margolin ’29 snatched up eight rebounds.

On Saturday, the Mammoths clinched their second victory of the week in a nailbiter against Westfield State. Adnan and Hammond were the stars of this show, racking up 35 points together. Along with Elias Chin ’28, the Mammoths built up a narrow 16-13 lead over the visiting owls. The team continued to slowly build up its lead, thanks to points from Hammond, Pabis, Margolin, Neville, and others. Heading into the half, the Mammoths had a commanding 39-28 lead. However, the Owls would not go away easily. A little over six minutes into the second, Westfield State went on a 7-0 lead. The teams were 60-60, tied for the first time in the second half. However, shots from Pabis and Hammond were good, and two successful free throws from Adnan gave Amherst the critical 66-60 lead. The Owls battled back to make it 66-65, but fouled and sent Hammond to the line, who went 2/2 to solidify the Amherst victory 69-65. With the two wins, the team improves to 7-1.

Women’s Swim & Dive

The women’s swim and dive team traveled to Connecticut College this past weekend, beating the Camels 251-106 and Coast Guard 262-99.

The Mammoths showcased their depth, winning the 400-yard Medley Relay, 200-yard Freestyle Relay, 200-yard Medley Relay, and 400-yard Medley Relay. Individually, Penny Lazar ’29 won two events: the 1650-yard Freestyle and 500-yard Freestyle. Her time in the 1650 was 17:16.85, nearly 30 seconds ahead of the next finisher. Ava Insteness ’29 also earned two first-place finishes, in the 200-yard Individual Medley and the 200-yard Freestyle. In the 200-yard IM, fellow Mammoth Hope Taylor ’29 finished right behind Insteness for second place. In the 100-yard Breaststroke, the Mammoths swept the top three spots, thanks to impressive races from Joline Fong ’26, Ava Liu ’28, and Kaya Tray ’28. Fong also recorded her second first-place finish of the day, winning the 200-yard Breaststroke as well. The team went 1-2 in the 100-yard Fly, with Paige Arnold ’27 winning it and Maeve Kelley ’27 touching the wall right after her. In the diving arena, Amherst diver Brooke Ronan ’29 won the 1-meter, while Donna Zhang ’26 took first in the three-meter.

The team takes the rest of the month off from competition, training in preparation to start the new year at Babson College on Jan. 2.

Women’s Hockey

The No. 3-ranked women’s ice hockey team shut out two non-conference teams this week, winning 3-0 against Curry College on Friday and 6-0 against UMass, Boston on Saturday.

In Canton, Massachusetts, the first period between the Mammoths and the Colonels was evenly matched. Curry registered shots early in the frame, calling goaltender Natalie Stott ’26 to action. Amherst created offense of its own with Emily Hohmann ’26, Gretchen Dann ’26, Ayla Abban ’28, and Clare O’Connor ’27 all firing shots on goal, but nothing crossed the goal line. The Mammoths’ defense excelled in the period, preventing the Colonels from generating shot attempts while having the player advantage. Halfway through the second period, Amherst capitalized on the power play after an interference call. Marie-Eve Marleau ’26 broke the deadlock with a goal assisted by Maeve Reynolds ’26 and Bea Flynn ’28. The Mammoths continued to put on pressure in the final minutes of the stanza. Just five minutes into the final period, Sami Lester ’28 controlled the puck and sent a well-timed feed to Calleigh Brown ’29. The forward rifled the puck into the net to double Amherst’s lead. Minutes later, a pass from Malaya Anaba ’29 found Natalie Fu ’27, who netted the third goal for the Mammoths. In the final minutes, Amherst continued to generate changes — even hitting a post — while keeping Curry scoreless, making the final score 3-0.

In the team’s home opener the next day, the first period was once again scoreless against the Beacons. The Mammoths found chances, but nothing found the back of the net. Amherst ended the first stanza with a 15-3 edge in shots on goal. Seven minutes into the second period, Dann broke through the standstill, scoring off assists from Reynolds and Brown. Only 46 seconds later, a pass from Abban found Flynn, who then doubled the lead for the Mammoths. In the final stanza, Amherst’s offense continued to thrive. Three minutes into the frame, Brown shot the puck from the low slot that sailed past UMass Boston’s goalkeeper. Five minutes later, Annabel Raffin ’28 tipped the puck into the net after the initial shot taken by Abban from the crease was blocked, making the score 4-0. Halfway into the period, Carlisle Brush ’27 converted a breakaway opportunity, launching the puck to the top left corner of the net. With the player advantage in the last 14 seconds of the game, Alejandra Ubarri ’26 scored the last goal of the contest off a shot from the high slot, sealing the final victory of 6-0. The Mammoths’ defense stayed strong throughout the game, keeping the Beacons to only 10 shots on goal. Stott saved all 10 to earn her 36th career shutout, which set a new NCAA Division III record.

The team will return to the ice on Jan. 3, facing SUNY Morrisville in the first game of the Mustang Cup Tournament. 

Men’s Hockey

This week, the men’s ice hockey team returned to the ice to face two NESCAC rivals. On Friday, a late goal resulted in a 3-2 loss for the team against Middlebury. The next day, Williams handed the team a 5-2 loss.

On Friday night in Vermont, the Panthers were the first on the board. In the first minutes, Middlebury collected a loose puck behind the Mammoths’ goal and fired a pass to an open Panthers forward in the slot. The one-timer slipped past Amherst goaltender Vincent Lamberti ’29 to make it 1-0. The Mammoths responded quickly, however. Four minutes later, Ray Hou ’28 controlled the puck after a blocked shot and sent it along the boards to Oliver Flynn ’27. The forward skated a pass to the left slot for Romulus Riego de Dios ’29, who rifled a one-timer into the net to tie the game. With less than three minutes left in the first period, Amherst’s offense continued to work even while shorthanded. The sequence started when a long breakout pass from Middlebury was intercepted by Zack Jesse ’27, who made a cross-ice pass to Josh Burke ’25, who was wide-open thanks to an ill-timed change for the Panthers. Burke raced to the goal and netted a wrist shot to the far post to give the Mammoths a 2-1 edge headed into the first intermission. In the second period, both teams continued to play a physical game, recording big hits and racking up penalties. Halfway through the frame, Middlebury broke through the standstill, poking a loose puck past the goalline to even the score. With only 13 seconds into the final stanza, the Panthers capitalized after winning the face-off. Middlebury split Amherst’s forecheck to create an odd-man rush and successfully found the open player who regained the lead for the Panthers. The Mammoths continued to push offensively in the last minutes but could not find the equalizer, falling 3-2.

The next day in Williamstown, Amherst found itself with an early deficit after the Ephs converted on a quick rush off a face-off win and scored off a stick-side shot. Both teams continued to trade shots throughout the rest of the period, but nothing solidified. Early in the second half, the Williams’ power play unit broke through, doubling their lead to 2-0. Only two minutes later, however, the Mammoths fired back. With the puck in their offensive zone, Burke, Flynn, and Jesse wove through the Ephs’ defense, allowing Burke to send a cross-ice pass to Flynn, who buried a goal past the Williams goaltender. Only two minutes into the final period, Jacob Pohl ’27 skated the puck into the zone and sent a pass to Flynn. The forward registered a shot on goal that the Ephs’ netminder saved, but the rebound ricocheted off the back wall and right to the stick of Jesse, who rifled the puck into the goal, tying the game at two apiece. The comeback was stifled quickly, though, as Williams would go on to score four minutes later with the player advantage. Halfway through the third period, the Ephs found the back of the net again. Amherst tried to find more offensive chances with goaltender Lamberti pulled in the final three minutes, but Williams instead scored with the empty net. The Mammoths lost the contest 5-2.

On Jan. 2, the team will play in the Plattsburgh Tour, facing Suffolk University first.

Women’s Track and Field

The women’s indoor track and field team opened its season this week, running in the Colyear-Danville Season Opener and the Wesleyan Indoor Invitational on Saturday.

At the Colyear-Danville meet in Boston, Piper Lentz ’26 finished the mile in 5:02, placing 22nd and earning an automatic qualification for the New England Division III (NED3) Indoor Championships. Finishing closely behind, Zoë Marcus ’27 finished the mile in 5:08 to place 25th. Lentz and Marcus finished as the top Division III runners in the event and were both competing in the mile for only their second time in their collegiate careers. In the 600-meter, Leila Davani ’28 took 11th place with a time of 1:37. Right behind her, Josie McLaughlin ’29’s time of 1:39 earned 12th, while Hannah Adhikari ’28’s 1:40 took 14th. In Middletown, Connecticut, the same day, Katie Greenwald ’29 was the runner-up in the 5,000-meter, finishing in 17:59. Audrey Seeger ’28 finished the event in 18:20 to take fourth place. Marcus, Davani, McLaughlin, Adhikari, Greenwald, and Seeger posted provisional qualifying marks for the NED3 Championships.

On Jan. 16, the team will run again in the Middlebury Winter Classic in Vermont.

Men’s Track and Field

This week, the men’s indoor track and field team split competition between the Track at New Balance Early Bird Invitational and the Colyear-Danville Season Opener on Saturday. 

At the New Balance Invitational in Boston, Carter Bengtson ’29 finished the 5,000-meter in 14:43 in his collegiate track debut. This finish was second out of 40 Division I and III runners, earning Bengtson an automatic qualification for the NED3 Indoor Championships. Across town at the Collyear-Danville meet, Ben Davis ’26 ran to a second-place finish in the 600-meter with a time of 1:19. Finishing as the top Division III runner, Davis also qualified for the NED3 Championships, where he will look to defend his title in the event. In the same race, Jack Stahl ’28 and Cole Thalheimer ’29 claimed 14th and 18th with times of 1:23 and 1:25, respectively. In the 800-meter, Andy Krasner ’29 took 8th with a time of 1:57. Tim Churchill ’29 finished right behind in ninth place in 1:57. Running a personal best, Will Nagy ’26 finished the mile in 4:18, earning 50th place. Finishing 92nd, Henry Dennen ’26 ran the 3,000-meter in 8:25. Stahl, Thalheimer, Krasner, Churchill, Nagy, and Dennen all earned provisional qualifying marks for New Englands in their respective events.

The team will return to the track on Jan. 16 at the Middlebury Winter Classic.

Head of the Herd: Natalie Stott

With the women’s hockey team’s two dominant shutout victories this week, the team remains undefeated, primarily due to Stott’s clean sheets. The Mammoth combined for 25 saves across the two games this past weekend, never letting the puck cross the goal line. These two games marked Stott’s 35th and 36th career shutouts and set a new NCAA record for shutouts. Stott leads the NESCAC with a 0.56 goals against average and earned herself NESCAC Co-Players of the Week honors. For her record-breaking performance this week and consistent phenomenal play, Stott garners this week’s Head of the Herd.



Link

Continue Reading

Sports

Knight to Be Enshrined in ASUN Hall of Fame

Published

on


FORT MYERS, Fla. – Florida Gulf Coast University women’s basketball legend Whitney Knight has been selected to the ASUN Hall of Fame’s 11th induction class, which also includes Lipscomb’s Madi Talbert Artz (women’s cross county/track & field), North Florida’s Dallas Moore (men’s basketball) and North Alabama’s Ivy Wallen Murks (women’s basketball).

The Hall of Fame’s 11th annual induction ceremony is scheduled to take place on Thursday, May 28, 2026, in Jacksonville. Knight, who played for FGCU from 2011-16, becomes the eighth Eagle to earn the ASUN’s highest honor, joining softball’s Courtney Platt, Cheyenne Jenks, and Carmen Paez, baseball’s Chris Sale, Casey Coleman, and Richard Bleier, and volleyball’s Brooke Youngquist Sweat.

Knight’s induction further cements her status as one of the most decorated players in FGCU and ASUN history. A program-defining guard and the first Eagle ever selected in the WNBA Draft, Knight’s impact on the conference and the Green & Blue remains unmatched nearly a decade after her graduation.

Knight was named to the ASUN All-Decade Team following a dominant career in Fort Myers. She became the program’s first WNBA draft pick when the Los Angeles Sparks selected her 15th overall in 2016, just the seventh ASUN player all-time to be drafted. As a senior, she earned Associated Press Honorable Mention All-America recognition while also being selected as one of 30 national candidates for the NCAA Senior CLASS Award, highlighting excellence both on and off the court.

A two-time ASUN Player of the Year (2015, 2016), Knight stands as one of only two Eagles ever to earn three First Team All-ASUN selections, joining FGCU great Sarah Hansen. Her postseason résumé is equally impressive, being named 2015 ASUN Tournament MVP, 2016 All-Tournament Team, 2012 ASUN All-Freshman Team, in addition to a program-record seven ASUN Player of the Week honors.

On the court, Knight was a matchup nightmare whose versatility defined FGCU’s continual rise into a perennial mid-major power. She led the ASUN in blocks (99), steals (64), and three-pointers per game (2.8) as a senior, while also finishing top six in the league in rebounds and double-doubles. She produced eight double-doubles, five 20-point games, and scored a three-pointer in every game she played that season. Her nine-block performance remains one of the most dominant defensive outings in conference history.

Knight finished her career with 1,574 points, 735 rebounds, 333 blocks, 245 assists, and 206 steals, one of the most complete statistical profiles ever recorded by an Eagle. She remains the program’s all-time leader in blocks by a staggering margin while ranking second in career points, field goals made, field goals attempted, three-pointers made, and rebounds.

A four-year force whose two-way production and big-moment performances helped shape the foundation of FGCU’s women’s basketball identity, Knight’s legacy only continues to grow with her selection to the ASUN Hall of Fame.

More information about the ASUN Hall of Fame and the Class of 2026 will be released by the conference in the coming months.

To stay up-to-date on the Eagles, be sure to follow on Instagram and X at FGCU_WBB.



Link

Continue Reading

Sports

Griffin signs with Southwestern track and field | Sports

Published

on


GRANT CITY, Mo. — Worth County senior Andrew Griffin made his college plans official on Tuesday morning in Grant City as the Tiger track star made his signing with the Southwestern Community College track and field program official.

“I’ve always wanted to be an electrician and they have a really good electrical program,” Griffin said. “I also wanted to continue my track career. Southwestern is just a nice small college. I didn’t want to go to a big college where there are lots of people. It makes me feel at home with the small town and small college.”



Link

Continue Reading

Sports

Mountaineer track and field start 2025-2026 season with  record time at the Winston-Salem College Kick-Off – The Appalachian

Published

on


App States track and field started their 2025-26 indoor season at the Winston-Salem College Kick-Off Saturday. 

With the race starting for at the 60 meters, junior Kendall Johnson placed second with a 7.50 finish, just 1 second behind Converse University. Junior Nicole Wells finished 10th in the 60 meters with a time of 7.73. The 800 meter was led by senior Addison Ollendick-Smith who started her season with a fourth place finish with a time of 2:18.09.

The main event for the Mountaineers was the 4×400 meter relay, where they finished first with teammates Wells, senior Damyja Alejandro-Ortiz, senior Daye Talley and junior Jayla Adams, and had a record time of 3:45.76. 

In the pole vault, senior Ava Studney finished first clearing 3.95m and sophomore Abigail Goetz followed and finished fifth in the pole vault with a 3.50m. Freshman Alana Braxton won the long jump with 5.87m and freshman Kelly MacBride finished in the top 10 with 5.31m. The triple jump saw 3 of the women’s teammates finish in the top 6, with Braxton finishing first with 12.32m. freshman Ashlynn Wimberly finished second with 12.14m, and sophomore Jahaila Wright finished with 11.60m. 

In weight throwing, junior Dianna Boykin had a personal best of 14.70m to place eighth and sophomore Emily Edwards followed close behind with a top 10 finish in shotput, 12.17m and weight throw, 14.03m. In the 200 meter, both Adams and Talley finished top five with times of 24.39 and 24.77. 

For the Mountaineers next meet they will be in the UNC-Asheville Collegiate Opener on Jan. 10 at the Tryon International.



Link

Continue Reading

Sports

Witherspoon Earns AVCA All- Region Honors

Published

on


AUGUSTA, Ga. – Augusta junior outside hitter Layne Witherspoon has been named an AVCA All-Region Honorable Mention selection following a standout 2025 campaign in which the Jaguars finished 25–9 and captured the Peach Belt Conference regular-season title.

Witherspoon delivered 346 kills on .295 hitting across 126 sets while adding 168 digs, 84 total blocks, and 433 total points. She tallied 17 double-digit kill performances, highlighted by a season-high 17 kills against Montevallo on Sept. 19 and a 21-point outing versus Francis Marion on Sept. 13. On the defensive side, she posted a season-best 14 digs at Flagler on Oct. 4 and recorded seven total blocks against Georgia College on Oct. 17. She was second on the team with 3.44 points per set.

A consistent presence in Augusta’s front row, Witherspoon helped power the Jaguars to their PBC regular-season championship and another postseason appearance.

Fans of Jaguar Athletics can subscribe to the email listserve by clicking here. Fans can follow Augusta University at www.augustajags.com and receive short updates on Facebook at Augusta University Athletics and on Twitter at @AugustaJags

 





Link

Continue Reading

Most Viewed Posts

Trending