Soccer
Soccer Recap
Suggested Video St. Mary’s win bumped their record up to 4-1. As for Grace Christian, they now have a losing record of 2-3. Both teams are looking forward to the support of their home crowds in their upcoming games. St. Mary’s will take on Cary Academy at 3:30 p.m. on Thursday. As for Grace Christian, […]


Suggested Video
It may have taken extra minutes to finish the job, but St. Mary ultimately got the result they hoped for on Friday. They had just enough and edged out the Grace Christian Crusaders 5-4. The high-scoring effort was just what the Saints needed considering they were shut out in their previous match.
College Sports
Durant's Lily Ruiz signs with Austin College
DURANT, Oklahoma (KTEN)- Durant senior Lily Ruiz signed with the Austin College soccer team on Thursday to continue her career on the pitch. However, her time as a Lady Lion isn’t over just yet. They’ll face Claremore in the playoffs next Tuesday. 3


DURANT, Oklahoma (KTEN)- Durant senior Lily Ruiz signed with the Austin College soccer team on Thursday to continue her career on the pitch.
However, her time as a Lady Lion isn’t over just yet. They’ll face Claremore in the playoffs next Tuesday.
College Sports
Tolton girls' soccer beat Osage at Columbia College
COLUMBIA − Father Tolton girls’ soccer hosted the Osage girls’ soccer team. The game was played at Columbia College. In the first half, Osage number four, Samantha Deibel scored the first goal of the game. Tolton was able to get a free kick penalty. Number 13, Ava Martin scored on the free kick and helped Tolton […]


COLUMBIA − Father Tolton girls’ soccer hosted the Osage girls’ soccer team. The game was played at Columbia College.
In the first half, Osage number four, Samantha Deibel scored the first goal of the game.
Tolton was able to get a free kick penalty. Number 13, Ava Martin scored on the free kick and helped Tolton tie the game. Tolton’s defense kept Osage scoreless through the rest of the game.
Tolton’s number 16, Sierra Poehlmann scored a goal herself. Tolton won the game, 3-1.
Osage plays Southern Boone on Monday and Tolton plays in the central Missouri soccer invitational Friday and Saturday.
College Sports
San José State women's soccer brings in trio of freshmen and one transfer
SAN JOSE, Calif. — San José State women’s soccer has signed four athletes for the upcoming 2025 season: Paige Fry, Alexi Ames, Mercedes Cioffi, and Taejah Aitken signed with the program, as announced by head coach Sonia Curvelo. “I look forward to adding four players to our program under my leadership. Each player will have an immediate impact […]


SAN JOSE, Calif. — San José State women’s soccer has signed four athletes for the upcoming 2025 season: Paige Fry, Alexi Ames, Mercedes Cioffi, and Taejah Aitken signed with the program, as announced by head coach Sonia Curvelo.
“I look forward to adding four players to our program under my leadership. Each player will have an immediate impact and will play a significant role in building a championship program. Each of the players are motivated to develop their game and put in the effort and work needed to win championships and compete in the NCAA Tournament. They are very disciplined in their academics and are great leaders on and off the field.”
Paige Fry, Goalkeeper, Fort Collins, CO/ Fort Collins HS / Sam Houston State
- A transfer from Sam Houston State, where as a freshman, she played in five games, making seven saves.
- 2024-25 Conference USA Women’s Soccer Commissioner’s Honor Roll and 2024 Sam Houston State Dean’s List
- 4-year varsity letter winner and selected as team captain at Fort Collins HS.
- All-conference selection in both soccer and basketball
- Played club soccer for the Colorado Rapids Youth Soccer Club
Alexi Ames, Defender, South Jordan, UT/Bingham HS
- Four-year letter winner at Bingham High School and team captain
- 1st Team All-Region honors
- Freshman Player of the Year in 2021 and MVP in 2024 as voted by her coaches.
- Honor roll student at Bingham HS
- Played club soccer for Utah Avalanche ECNL 06/07 and competed in the 2023 UYSA National Championships.
Taejah Aitken, Midfielder, Montreal, Quebec, Canada / Cegep Vanier
- Played on the Semi-Pro Lake Shore team playing in Quebec’s League 2
- Captain on the Quebec Regional Team
- Member of Quebec regional team from 2022-24
- Academic Honor Roll student from 2022-24
- Plans to study Business Administration with a concentration in Sports Management
Mercedes Cioffi, Midfielder, Mississauga, Ontario, Canada/Lorne Park Secondary School
- 2023 Junior Athlete of the Year
- Charity Shield Champion in 2023
- Invited to the 2023 Ontario Soccer Provincial Screening
- 2022 MVP for senior girl’s soccer at Lorne Park
- An honor roll student
College Sports
ACA's Jordan signs with Covenant College
Chloe Jordan never thought she’d be part of a signing ceremony to continue playing her favorite sport in college. “For the longest time, I thought that I was not going to play college soccer,” she said. “I’m definitely so blessed to have the opportunity to do so.” × This page requires Javascript. Javascript is required […]


Chloe Jordan never thought she’d be part of a signing ceremony to continue playing her favorite sport in college.
“For the longest time, I thought that I was not going to play college soccer,” she said. “I’m definitely so blessed to have the opportunity to do so.”
High School Sports
APS welcomes David Bahr as new head girls soccer coach
APS welcomes David Bahr as new head girls soccer coach Published 2:59 pm Thursday, May 1, 2025 David Bahr Austin Public Schools has announced the hiring of David Bahr as the new head coach of the Packers girls soccer program. Bahr brings over three decades of experience, leadership, and player development to the Austin sidelines. […]

APS welcomes David Bahr as new head girls soccer coach
Published 2:59 pm Thursday, May 1, 2025
- David Bahr
Austin Public Schools has announced the hiring of David Bahr as the new head coach of the Packers girls soccer program.
Bahr brings over three decades of experience, leadership, and player development to the Austin sidelines.
Bahr’s coaching journey spans high school, youth, and club soccer — most recently serving as the head boys soccer coach at Byron High School from 2018-2024, where he led the program to a Section 1AA Championship and State Tournament appearance in 2021.
He holds a combined high school varsity coaching record of 222-247-33 and has been recognized multiple times as section and state Coach of the Year.
“I am very excited to get back to coaching High School Girls, after spending the last 15 years coaching High School Boys,” Bahr said. “Austin provides the perfect home with great school administrators, first class facilities and a great fan base. All the ingredients to develop a top-notch program. I can’t wait to get started.”
“Coach Bahr’s experience, passion for the game, and commitment to student-athlete development stood out clearly in our search process,” said Katie Carter, AHS activities director. “He brings a rare combination of deep tactical knowledge, program-building experience, and a genuine heart for mentorship. We are thrilled to welcome him to the Austin Athletics family.”
From 2001–2009, Bahr led the Mayo High School girls’ varsity team to two conference championships and earned five National Academic Team Awards. His tenure with Kasson-Mantorville boys soccer from 2010–2015 saw the program achieve its most successful run in school history, culminating in Bahr being named Minnesota State Coach of the Year in 2015.
Outside of coaching, Bahr served in the Army National Guard as a medical corpsman and has been deeply involved in volunteer work across multiple youth sport boards and community soccer initiatives for more than 30 years.
His coaching philosophy emphasizes character, leadership, tactical intelligence, and academic excellence.
College Sports
A Personal Reflection on Sports
As the school year comes to a close, Swarthmore athletes begin to clear out of their team locker rooms and reflect on their respective season. Cleats, jerseys, sneakers, hair bands – these everyday items trickle out of the Field House day by day, creating space for our mind and bodies to recuperate. So … what […]

As the school year comes to a close, Swarthmore athletes begin to clear out of their team locker rooms and reflect on their respective season. Cleats, jerseys, sneakers, hair bands – these everyday items trickle out of the Field House day by day, creating space for our mind and bodies to recuperate. So … what do sports mean to us? After a semester of reading, writing, and editing dozens of articles and interviews, the question often crosses our minds. Sports, at various levels and commitments, have simultaneously created and shaped our current senses of self. From the inception of sports in our lives, they have become an outlet, a friendship, a shared laugh in between the gruel of conditioning, and empowerment through gaining and growing fitness levels or muscles. Whether it be through the experiences shared on the Swarthmore women’s soccer team, the hours-long travelling between games, or the childhood moments practicing with our tired but loving parents, we have shared pieces of life that tether us together. Sports, and everything in between, serve as reminders that we have passed through identical doors that open to uniquely trodden paths. Similar, but different.
I stepped onto campus for the first time in August, when the heat threatened to suffocate and humidity stuck shirt to skin. With anticipation to begin the next big milestone of my soccer career, I unpacked my gear into the team locker room with all 30 of my teammates doing the same seemingly monotonous task. When we finished, cubbies were stuffed with backpacks and back-up cleats, post-it notes and pens, loose hair ties and phone chargers. Turf beads that had slithered their way indoors infested the floors. An actual stray brick propped our locker room door slightly ajar at all times. This locker room would be the room where I would meet my closest friends, hopefully lifelong buddies. This would be the room where I would laugh and joke and scream to pre-game music. But this, too, would be the room where we’d change in silence after a tough loss or I would solemnly reflect about a poor performance. In this room would be moments where I would wonder if I was good enough to play college soccer in the first place. The locker room would be a place where parts of me would live and integral parts of me would be questioned. This locker room, in some ways, is alive and breathing.
How can 30 young women from all hometowns and backgrounds transform a foreign space into a lived-in home? How do strangers from far away places just “be” together?

Honestly, after all my years of involving myself in sports, I’m still not sure. However, I know that the basis of our connection, of the threads that sew us together, has transcended beyond our commitment to play soccer for the Garnet. Sports do more than just turn people into good athletes and fans; they morph the potential of an individual into a relationship. More than high fives and post-game hugs, we see each other through the joys and pains of sports because we walk through the same doors that lead us forward in our athletic journeys. Similar, but different.
If you look closely enough, you’ll see that moments of shared life go beyond just sports. To our readers and writers, if there is anything to take away from this article, it is to live in the things you love to be and do. Immerse yourself, make yourself at home! Reorganize the furniture and hang portraits and paintings, repaint the walls and put flowers in vases! Find your people, in sports or not, and grow to live with them in a space that grows uniqueness in togetherness. Similar but different!
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