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Team USATF Ready to Shine at World Athletics Indoor Championships Nanjing 25

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Team USATF Ready to Shine at World Athletics Indoor Championships Nanjing 25

400
World leader Chris Bailey, the fifth-fastest man in history with a 44.70 at the Tyson Invitational in Arkansas last month, was a comfortable winner at the USATF indoor meet and earned silver last year in Glasgow on the U.S. 4×400 squad. He also has Olympic and World Championships relay gold to his credit and was sixth in the 400 at Paris last summer. Joining him in the red, white and blue is World Indoor Tour winner Brian Faust, who was fourth at the USATF meet, and Jacory Patterson, also a 4×400 silver medalist at Glasgow. Patterson has the fastest 300 time in the world this year at 32.18 and was the USATF runner-up. Baylor’s NCAA silver medalist Nathaniel Ezekiel of Nigeria is the No. 7 all-time world indoor performer at 44.74 and will be a powerful contender for gold, as will Canada’s Christopher Morales Williams, the world indoor record holder at 44.49, and European champion Attila Molnar of Hungary, who has run 45.08 this year.

1500
Norway’s Jakob Ingebrigtsen is the favorite on paper here after setting a world indoor record of 3:29.63 en route to a mile world record of 3:45.14 in France on Feb. 13. He was a double gold medalist at the European Indoors, taking the 1500 and 3000, and he is attempting the same double here. Isaac Nader of Portugal was third behind the Norwegian at the Euro meet and has a PB of 3:32.95, the second fastest entry mark. Sam Prakel was ninth at the 2022 World Indoors and finished second at the USATF meet. He has an indoor PB of 3:35.66. The other American is Luke Houser, a two-time NCAA indoor mile winner for Washington who set his indoor 1500 PB of 3:35.85 earlier this month at Boston. Ethiopia’s Samuel Tefera hasn’t run the 1500 indoors yet this season, but claimed gold at the 2018 and 2022 World Indoor titles. Tefera set an indoor world record of 3:31.04 in 2019, the mark that Ingebrigtsen took down this year. Neil Gourley of Great Britain is a veteran international championship competitor and has a PB of 3:32.48.

Pentathlon
Finland’s Saga Vanninen set the year’s top score with a 4,922-point tally at the European Championships. Her closest challenger on paper is Ireland’s Kate O’Connor, the European indoor bronze medalist at 4,781. USATF champion Timara Chapman put together a 4,555 PB at Ocean Breeze to nab one of the U.S. team spots, with Taliyah Brooks garnering a place based on her world ranking. The combined events entrants were all invited by World Athletics because of their world ranking positions. An Olympian at Paris in the heptathlon last year, Brooks has a pentathlon best of 4,580 from 2017.

60
Celera Barnes captured the national indoor title at Ocean Breeze with a season best 7.11 and was a semifinalist at Glasgow in 2024. She is joined by 2022 World Indoor silver medalist Mikiah Brisco, the third-place finisher at the U.S. championships and fifth at Glasgow last year. The American duo face a potent group of European challengers that is topped by Italy’s Zaynab Dosso, a returning bronze medalist who won the European Indoor title two weeks ago and has a best of 7.01. Poland’s Ewa Swoboda was the runner-up last year and has cracked seven seconds with a 6.98 PB, while Switzerland’s Mujinga Kambundji has the fastest lifetime best in the field at 6.96.

3000
None of the medalists from Glasgow 2024 return, but this race shapes up as a compelling matchup with the third-fastest woman in history, Ethiopia’s Freweyni Hailu, taking on teammate Birke Haylom, the world U20 indoor record holder who turned 19 in January. Hailu has a PB of 8:19.98 thatwas set in February at Lievin, France, while Haylom has run 8:25.37 this year. Shelby Houlihan and Whittni Morgan are the fourth- and fifth-fastest American ever indoors and have the ability to mount the medal stand. Houlihan, fifth in this event at the 2018 world indoor meet, was the runner-up at the USATF Indoors at Ocean Breeze and has a PB of 8:26.66 from 2020, with Morgan setting her PB of 8:28.03 earlier this year to win the Millrose Games. Australia’s Jessica Hull is No. 9 on the all-time world performer list with a PB of 8:24.39 and she earned silver in the 1500 at the Paris Olympics after a fourth-place finish in the 3000 at Glasgow.

800
One of the more exciting duels at the USATF Indoor Championships presented by Prevagen featured Nia Akins and Valery Tobias both dipping under 2:00, with Akins taking the crown in a PB of 1:59.31 and Tobias right on her heels with a 1:59.55 PB effort. They will go against world-leading Tsige Duguma of Ethiopia, the reigning champion, Paris silver medalist, and a 1:58.97 performer this year. St. Vincent’s Shafiqua Maloney is a multi-talented runner and has a season best of 1:59.07 that gave her the Millrose Games win. She was fourth at the Olympic Games in Paris. Prudence Sekgodiso of South Africa is the other entrant with a sub-2:00 clocking in 2025, bringing a best of 1:59.88.

400
Powering to an indoor PB of 50.24 at Glasgow, Alexis Holmes earned bronze in 2024 and is among the favorites in Nanjing after taking the U.S. gold in a season best of 50.51. Also a silver medalist on the American 4×400 last year, Holmes takes on Norway’s Henriette Jaeger, the leading entrant at 50.44, along with training partner Amber Anning of Great Britain, who has clocked 50.57 this year. Rosey Effiong, the U.S. runner-up and an Arkansas teammate of Anning last year, is also a medal contender with a PB of 50.54.

60 Hurdles
One of the highlight events of the Championships, this one features reigning champion Devynne Charlton of the Bahamas, who set the world indoor record of 7.65 to take that gold last year, and returning bronze medalist Pia Skrzyszowska of Poland. Grace Stark was fifth in the 100H at Paris last summer and won the NCAA gold in that event for Florida. She set a lifetime best of 7.75 in the heats and clocked 7.76 in the final to earn silver at the USATF Indoors. Team USATF has three entrants in this event by virtue of Christina Clemons winning the World Indoor Tour title in 2020, and she and Amber Hughes round out a strong U.S. trio. Clemons was the silver medalist at the 2018 World Indoors and boasts a PB of 7.73 from 2018 that puts her fifth on the all-time U.S. indoor performer list. Hughes set her PB of 7.92 in 2024 and is making her global championship debut. The world leader this year is Switzerland’s Ditaji Kambundji, who jetted to a 7.67 to win the European title and move to equal-second on the all-time world performer list. Two other women to watch are 2023 NCAA indoor champion Ackera Nugent of Jamaica and Nadine Visser of the Netherlands both of whom have PBs of 7.72 to rank in the all-time world top 10.

Long Jump
Wunderkind Mattia Furlani of Italy just turned 20 in February and has the best mark in the world in 2025 at 8.37/27-5.5. Furlani was the silver medalist at Glasgow last year and then earned bronze at the Olympics in Paris. Seventh at Glasgow, Will Williams won the U.S. title last month and sports an 8.16/26-9.25 season best. The USATF runner-up, Cameron Crump, needs a return to the 2023 form that saw him blast a PB 8.39/27-6.5 if he wants to be in the medal chase. Solid outdoor marks from Tajay Gayle of Jamaica, the 2019 world outdoor champion, and Liam Adcock of Australia place them in the frame, and another Jamaican, Wayne Pinnock, earned Olympic silver at Paris and is opening his season in Nanjing. Switzerland’s Simon Ehammer, also a talented decathlete, has an outdoor PB of 8.45/27-8.75.

Triple Jump
Reigning Olympic and World Indoor champion Thea LaFond of Dominica and a pair of Cubans top the bill in an event that sorely misses world record holder Yulimar Rojas of Venezuela. LaFond has not yet competed in 2025, but won in Glasgow with a national record 15.01/49-3. Silver behind her went to Leyanis Perez of Cuba, and she will team up with compatriot Liadagmis Povea to give the island nation double medal potential. There is no U.S. entrant in this event.

Pole Vault
Anything can happen in any event, but a loss here by Sweden’s Mondo Duplantis would be a huge upset. A many-time world record setter of late, Duplantis raised his own global standard to 6.27/20-6.75 earlier this year and is a big favorite. Greece’s Emmanouil Karalis has been on a hot streak, too, improving his PB to 6.02/19-9 and tying for the European Indoor title with Menno Vloon of the Netherlands, another medal hopeful. Carrying the flag for Team USATF is Sam Kendricks, thrice a silver medalist at the World Indoors, including at Glasgow last year, and the former American indoor record holder with a PB of 6.01/19-8.5 in 2020. 38-year-old Renaud Lavillenie of France was a world record setter a decade ago, but is still capable of a podium spot based on his season best of 5.91/19-4.75.

800
What can Josh Hoey and Brandon Miller do to improve on the amazing race they ran at the USATF Indoor Championships? Hoey has had a magical 2025 campaign, setting American indoor records at 800 and 1000, and winning the national 800 crown in a record-setting 1:43.24. That made him the second-fastest man in indoor history and put the target on his back here. Miller, an Olympic semifinalist at Paris, moved to No. 9 on that world list with his runner-up 1:44.26 last month and won the 2022 NCAA indoor gold for Texas A&M. Eliott Crestan of Belgium was the bronze medalist at Glasgow and finished second behind Samuel Chapple of the Netherlands at the European indoors, and both men have dipped under 1:45 this season, as has Spain’s Elvin Canales.

NANJING, China – Coming off dominant performances at the 2024 Paris Olympic Games, Team USATF’s contingent for the 20th World Athletics Indoor Championships will look to improve upon the 20-medal effort that saw them quadruple the nearest nation’s tally last year in Glasgow as the first global championship meet of 2025 gets under way Friday at the Nanjing Sports Training Centre.

Men’s Event-by-Event Preview

Pole Vault
Defending champion Molly Caudery of Great Britain has the best entry mark at 4.85/15-11 but will face a stern challenge from a handful of women that includes European champion Angelica Moser of Switzerland and the two athletes who finished behind her at that meet, Tina Sutej of Slovenia and Marie-Julie Bonnin of France. Gabriela Leon won the NCAA outdoor crown for Louisville in 2022, was a World Championships finalist, and was the U.S. runner-up last month. She has a PB of 4.70/15-5, while Emily Grove placed third at the national championships with a season best 4.65/15-3.

Triple Jump
Italy’s Andy Diaz Hernandez, the Paris Olympic Games bronze medalist and formerly of Cuba, exploded to a world-leading 17.71/58-1.25 to win the European indoor gold and he tops the entry list here. Max Hess of Germany also uncorked a big jump at the Euro meet, going 17.43/57-2.25 for silver, and Andrea Dallavalle gave Italy bronze to go with the Diaz Hernandez gold. The NCAA indoor champion for Miami last year, Russell Robinson was an Olympian in 2024 and placed second at the USATF Indoors. Robinson has an indoor PB of 16.86/55-3.75 that he set earlier this season. Two-time World Indoor gold medalist Will Claye is on the Mt. Rushmore of American triple jumping with nine career global medals and seven national titles. Claye set his indoor PB of 17.70/58-1 in winning the World Indoor gold in 2012 at Istanbul and is No. 3 on the all-time U.S. indoor performer list. Reigning champion Hugues Fabrice Zango of Burkina Faso has a career best of 18.07/59-3.5 but was subpar in his only competition this season.

Led by reigning World Indoor champion and world record holder Grant Holloway in the men’s 60 hurdles, the U.S. squad features 2025 world leaders in four events and ten athletes who earned medals at last year’s World Indoors.

1500
Americans took silver and bronze in Glasgow last year, leaving Sinclaire Johnson and Heather MacLean with a monumental task to match that effort in Nanjing. The giant obstacle standing in their way for a spot atop the podium is world indoor record-holder Gudaf Tsegay of Ethiopia. Tsegay set the world record of 3:53.09 in 2021, and she leads the world list in 2025 with a 3:53.92 best. The World Indoor champion in 2022, Tsegay is also a world outdoor champion at 5000 and 10,000, and she took silver in the 3000 at this meet last year. MacLean was third at the U.S. championships but bettered the American record at a last chance meet in Boston on March 2 with a 3:59.60 en route to a world-leading 4:17.01 mile. She was seventh in this event at the 2022 World Indoors. The 2019 NCAA champion in the outdoor 1500 for Oklahoma State, Johnson was sixth at the 2022 world outdoor meet and ran an indoor lifetime best of 4:06.05 to take silver at the USATF indoor meet in February. Tsegay’s Ethiopia teammate, Diribe Welteji, is also a huge  threat for gold with a PB of 3:55.47 and a season best of 3:58.89.

High Jump
Olympic champion and reigning World Indoor gold medalist Hamish Kerr of New Zealand is one of two men in the field to have cleared a PB of 2.36/7-8.75, and he is competing in his first indoor meet of the season after winning his nation’s outdoor title two weeks ago. European indoor champion Oleh Doroshchuk of Ukraine was fourth at Glasgow last year and looks set to mount the podium based on recent form. Doroshchuk leads the world list at 2.34/7-8 and was sixth at the Olympic Games in Paris last summer. Just behind him at the Games was South Korea’s Sang-hyeok Woo, another 2.36/7-8.75 jumper who won the 2022 World Indoor gold and earned bronze last year. Eli Kosiba is the lone American entry and has a PB of 2.30/7-6.5.

60 Hurdles
It begins and ends with Grant Holloway. Undefeated in 76 straight indoor 60H races since 2014, Holloway has two straight World Indoor golds and the world indoor record at 7.27. He cruised to another U.S. title last month in 7.36, which leads the world list in 2025. Emerging Polish star Jakub Szymanski won the European title and has a PB of 7.39, while Cameron Murray set his PB of 7.41 to finish second to Holloway at the USATF meet. Murray was a semifinalist at Glasgow last year. Lorenzo Ndele Simonelli of Italy was the silver medalist in 2024, and France’s Wilhelm Belocian grabbed the runner-up spot at the European indoors behind Szymanski.

High Jump
Only one defeat marred an otherwise perfect slate in 2024 for Ukraine’s Yaroslava Mahuchikh, who broke one of the oldest world records on the books with her 2.10/6-10.75 at the Paris Diamond League meet to take down the mark set in 1987 by Bulgaria’s Stefka Kostadinova. She was relegated to silver at Glasgow by Australia’s Nicola Olyslagers, and those two will go head-to-head again in Nanjing. Mahuchikh won the European title two weeks ago and is the world leader, while Olyslagers is making her season debut. U.S. hopes ride on Vashti Cunningham, who won her 15th national title at Ocean Breeze and was the 2016 World Indoor champion as a teen. Cunningham has an indoor PB of 2.00/6-6.75 and also has a silver from the 2018 World Indoors. NCAA outdoor champion for Kentucky in 2023, Charity Hufnagel was the runner-up at this year’s USATF Indoors with a PB 1.94/6-4.25. 

60
The third-fastest man in history in the event with a PB of 6.40 from 2018, Ronnie Baker won the USATF title last month and has a season best of 6.50. Baker also earned the U.S. an additional slot with his World Indoor Tour victory in 2020, so Coby Hilton and Emmanuel Wells comprise the rest of the American trio. Hilton and Wells both clocked 6.58 at the USATF indoor meet, and Hilton got the nod for the runner-up spot. Both men are making their international championship debuts. This year’s fastest indoor performer at 6.49, Great Britain’s Jeremiah Azu used that time to win the European title. Australia’s Lachlan Kennedy qualified for the meet with an outdoor 6.43 down under and has the best entry mark overall.

3000
Ingebrigtsen’s difficult distance double will require some serious tactical nous in spite of his status as the outdoor world record holder at 7:17.55. He won a pedestrian affair at the European Indoors in 7:48.37, but will be up against Ethiopia’s Berihu Aregawi, a 7:26.20 man who was the silver medalist in the 10,000 at Paris last summer, and Aregawi’s 18-year-old teammate, Biniam Mehary, who set a world U20 record with his 7:29.99 outing in February. Dylan Jacobs is the eighth fastest man in U.S. history with a PB of 7:30.45 at the Millrose Games. Jacobs won the NCAA indoor 5000 for Tennessee in 2023 and was the outdoor NCAA champion at 10,000 in 2022. Former Air Force Academy star Sam Gilman dropped his PB to 7:34.69 earlier this month at Boston and was third at the USATF Indoors. One other dangerous challenger is Ethiopia’s Getnet Wale, the 2020 World Indoor Tour winner who is No. 6 on the all-time world performer list at 7:24.98.

Shot Put
The world lead belongs to Italy’s Leonardo Fabbri at 21.95/72-0.25, but he bombed out in qualifying at the European Indoors. Fabbri was the bronze medalist at Glasgow, though, and earned outdoor world silver in 2023. Those medals along with his outdoor PB of 22.98/75-4.75 make him a solid contender. Two-time World Indoor champion Tom Walsh of New Zealand earned silver last year and has a PB of 22.90/75-1.75. Walsh won the New Zealand national outdoor gold two weeks ago with a season best 21.24/69-8.25. USATF champion Tripp Piperi was eighth at the 2022 world outdoor championships and is poised for his first global indoor competition. Piperi has a PB of 21.74/71-4. U.S. leader Roger Steen threw an indoor PB 21.94/71-11.75 at a small meet in Wisconsin in February to move to No. 10 on the all-time U.S. indoor performer list before taking the runner-up spot at the USATF meet. 

Shot Put
The most-anticipated women’s field event in Nanjing has defending champion Sarah Mitton of Canada, world leader and European champion Jessica Schilder of the Netherlands, and American record holder Chase Jackson vying for the top step on the podium. Jackson bettered her own American indoor record with a 20.24/66-5 toss in Poland in February and followed up with another U.S. indoor title at Ocean Breeze. She has a silver and bronze from previous World Indoor meets, but has yet to match the double World Outdoor golds she achieved in 2022 and 2023. Mitton brings a best of 20.68/67-10.25 into the meet, set at Karlsruhe last month, and Schilder threw a massive PB of 20.69/67-10.75 to win the Euro gold. Because Jackson won this year’s World Indoor Tour, the U.S. has three berths in the shot, and two-time World Indoor finalist Maggie Ewen will seek to improve on a seventh-place finish last year and a fifth-place effort in 2022. Jessica Ramsey, the 2021 Olympic Trials champion, makes her first World Indoor Championships appearance and ranks seventh on the all-time U.S. indoor performer list.

Heptathlon
Sander Skotheim of Norway came away best in a titanic battle at the European Indoors, scoring 6,558 points to move to third on the all-time world performer list. Germany’s Till Steinforth, a redshirt at Nebraska, earned bronze with a PB 6,388, and Johannes Erm of Estonia was fourth with a 6,380 PB. Americans Heath Baldwin and Harrison Williamsearned invitations because of their world ranking in the combined events. Baldwin was the Olympic Trials decathlon champion and placed 10th at the Olympic Games in Paris. He also earned silver in the NCAA indoor heptathlon for Michigan State with a 6,238 PB score. Williams was seventh in the decathlon at Paris after a third-place effort at the Olympic Trials. He has a PB of 6,042 in the heptathlon, set in 2019.

Women’s Event-by-Event Preview

Long Jump
Monae’ Nichols is the top returner after claiming silver at Glasgow, and she won the USATF Indoor Championships last month. Sixth at the Paris Olympic Games, Nichols set her indoor PB of 6.85/22-5.75 at last year’s meet. Spain’s Fatima Diame earned bronze in Glasgow in 2024, but was only fifth at the European Championships earlier this month. Making her international championship debut, Claire Bryant was second at the U.S. championships and has a best of 6.72/22-0.75 this season. The leading entry mark is 6.98/22-10.75 by Anthaya Charlton of the Bahamas, who was fourth at the NCAA indoor meet for Florida.

Sports

Who Was Among This Week’s Faces in the Crowd?

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Each week during the academic year, the NE10 honors Athletes of the Week for all of its 24 sponsored sports while they are in season. Faces in the Crowd shines a spotlight on outstanding on-field performances that didn’t earn Athlete of the Week recognition, while also highlighting academic or community efforts from student-athletes across the league. 

Below are this week’s NE10 Faces in the Crowd.

 


Hope Fox

School
: Southern Connecticut
Sport: Basketball

Fox made history for Southern Connecticut women’s basketball in their NE10 opener against Franklin Pierce. Fox recorded a career-best of nine steals, which is the second-most steals in a single-game in program history and the most since Kiana Steinauer had 10 against Stonehill in 2019. Additionally, Fox’s nine steals are the most recorded in a game in the NE10 this season and third-most in the NCAA.

Jodiann Ebanks

School
: American International

Sport: Track & Field

A Campbell transfer, Ebanks was at the front of the sprints for AIC in the TRACK at new balance Early Bird Invitational.  She won the 60-meter dash and 200-meter dash with her 25.42-second time in the 200-meter race being the fastest in the NE10 and throughout the East Region after the year’s first week of competition.

Ruzgar Christina Boyle

School
: American International

Sport: Basketball

Boyle lost her mind this weekend against Pace, drilling six first quarter threes en route to nine total makes and a new AIC single-game record.  Boyle finish an insane 9-13 from behind the arc va the Setters for a career-high 27 points.  The nine makes are the second-most by a women’s basketball player in DII this winter.

Skyla Lang

School
: Bentley

Sport: Swimming & Diving

Lang won three races at the WPI Gompei Invitational last week, most notably breaking her own school record in the 100 IM at 58.09, which is the fastest time in the NE10 this season.  Lang also won the 400 IM and the 100 Breaststroke. Her time in the 400 IM is the best in the NE10 so far (4:34.02).

Valerii Pidhoretskyy

School
: Adelphi

Sport: Swimming & Diving

Valerii posted personal bests in every race he swam last week, breaking Adelphi records in the 50 Free, 100 Free, 400 Medley Relay, 200 Medley Relay.  He swam the fastest times in the NE10 this season in the 50 Free and the 200 Free Relay while posting the league’s second-best times in the 100 Free, 100 Fly, 200 IM, 400 Free Relay and 800 Free Relay. 

 


This Year’s Faces in the Crowd

Week 1

Anna Daggatt, Saint Michael’s Volleyball

Dillon Labonte, SNHU Cross Country

Jakkai Stith, AIC Football

Jenni Huttunen, Franklin Pierce Soccer

Taylor Leckey, SCSU Field Hockley

Week 2

Alice Bender, Pace Volleyball

Annie Lorenz, Bentley Field Hockey

Isabel Hughes and Claudia Keith, SNHU Soccer

Reese Swanson, Franklin Pierce Field Hockey

Connor Dietz, AIC Football

Jay Kastantin, Assumption Football

Week 3

Dillon Labonte, SNHU Cross Country

Elizjah Lewis, Pace Football

Grace Almeida, Saint Michael’s Volleyball

Lana Mignon De Wet, Adelphi Field Hockey

Paola Soto Burgos, AIC Volleyball

Week 4

Brennah Abilheira-Cargill, Assumption Volleyball

Kerrigan Habing, SCSU Volleyball

Drew Forkner, St. Anselm Football

Khais Milligan, Pace Soccer

Madeline Krepelka, Bentley Field Hockey

Week 5

Connor Dietz, AIC Football

Elizjah Lewis, Pace Football

Kaylise McClure, Mercy Field Hockey

Mackenzie Casey, Adelphi Volleyball

Michael Guarnieri, St. Anselm Football

Week 6

Andrew Surprenant, SNHU Men’s Golf

Isaiah Osgood, Bentley Football

Jessica Evans, Mercy Field Hockey

Sarah Henault, SCSU Volleyball

Sydney DeRoche, Bentley Women’s Soccer

Week 7

Faith Kosiba, Saint Michael’s Soccer

Grace Presswood, Assumption Volleyball

John Giller, SCSU Football

McKenzie Carey, Bentley Field Hockey

Ruby Harrington, Saint Michael’s Field Hockey

Week 8

Avery Frommer, Bentley Field Hockey

Billy Gould, Assumption Football

Kerrigan Habing, SCSU Volleyball

Maya Fisher, SCSU Cross Country

Quinlyn Moll, AIC Field Hockey

Week 9

Isaiah Decias, Bentley Football

Jessica Evans, Mercy Field Hockey

Milagros Zanatelli, AIC Field Hockey

Ryan Rosario, Franklin Pierce Women’s Soccer

Sasha Luzina, Bentley Volleyball

Week 10

Connor Smith, Assumption Football

Jake Croce, Saint Anselm Football

Madeline Chaapel, Adelphi Volleyball

Maggie Burchill, Saint Anselm Field Hockey

Riley Mastowski, Franklin Pierce Hockey

Week 11

Ana Carolina Westerich, Adelphi Volleyball

Dayshawn Walton, Adelphi Basketball

Taeya and Rheyna Steinauer, SCSU Basketball

Will Gomes, Franklin Pierce Football

Amelia Hohos, Saint Anselm Soccer

Week 12

Brady Gaudet, Franklin Pierce Soccer

Dom Santiago, Assumption Football

Elena Coban, Bentley Volleyball

Olivia Crespo, Franklin Pierce Soccer

Will Davies, Saint Anselm Basketball

Week 13

Alvaro Garcia, SNHU Soccer

Jojo Wallace, SNHU Basketball

Kaitlin McDonough, Saint Anselm Basketball

Margaret Montplaisir, Saint Michael’s Basketball

Zee McCown, Assumption Basketball

Week 14

Hope Fox, SCSU Basketball

Jodiann Ebanks, AIC Track and Field

Ruzgar Christina Boyle, AIC Basketball

Skyla Lang, Benltey Swimming

Valerii Pidhoretskyy, Adelphi Swimming


ABOUT THE NE10
The NE10 is an association of 10 diverse institutions serving student-athletes across 24 NCAA Division II sports. Together we build brilliant futures by embracing the journey of every student-athlete.

Each year, 4,500 of those student-athletes compete in conference championships in 24 sports, making the NE10 the largest DII conference in the country in terms of sport sponsorship. Leading the way in the classroom, on the field and within the community, the NE10 is proud of its comprehensive program and the experience it provides student-athletes.

Fans can subscribe via this link to follow NE10 NOW on FloSports this season.  The partnership between the NE10 and FloSports works to provide funds back to the athletic departments of the Northeast-10 Conference in support of student-athletes while promoting the league on a national platform.



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Best IHSA players in Peoria area

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Dec. 10, 2025, 3:45 a.m. CT

Here are the 2025 Journal Star volleyball all-area honorees in alphabetical order, led by player of the year and separated by large-school players and small-school players.

Mia Lamberti, Limestone

Lamberti is the 2025 Journal Star player of the year, becoming the sixth repeat winner in the award’s 36-year history. She helped Class 3A top-ranked Limestone to a 34-3 record and a Mid-Illini Conference championship. The 6-foot junior setter/opposite hitter was named to four all-tournament teams this season, having over 1,000 career kills and assists. Lamberti, who committed to Illinois this past June, recorded 402 kills, 406 assists, 137 digs, 67 aces and 13 blocks. Her individual accolades include American Volleyball Coaches Association third-team all-American, AVCA all-region, Illinois Volleyball Coaches Association first-team all-state and all-Mid-Illini Conference first team.



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Sharp Tabbed All-Northwest Region First Team

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BOISE, Idaho – Redshirt freshman Eliza Sharp was named to the American Volleyball Coaches Association (AVCA) All-Northwest Region First Team on Tuesday, as the AVCA released its all-region honors for all of NCAA Division I.

The honor added to Sharp’s accolade-filled season with the Broncos. The middle blocker was also named Mountain West Freshman of the Year and All-Mountain West. Sharp is the first Bronco to earn all-region first team honors and the conference freshman of the year award in the same season.

Sharp was one of 14 players selected to the All-Northwest Region team and one of three middle blockers. She was also among four freshmen on the all-region squad.

Out of Burlingame, Calif., Sharp averaged 2.21 kills and 1.24 blocks in 113 sets played this past season. Her 250 kills and 140 total blocks were second-best on Boise State while she finished the year with 329.5 points.

She is 31st in the country in total blocks and 50th in blocks per set.



Sharp is the 10th Bronco to earn one of the 14 all-region first team selections in program history.

There were 213 student-athletes recognized across 10 regional teams by the AVCA this year. Each region had 14 first-team all-region honorees and a handful of honorable mentions.

Boise State finished the season 20-11 and reached the semifinals of the Mountain West Volleyball Championship.

 



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Cleaver, Dale, and Prince named AVCA Honorable Mention All-Americans

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HICKORY, N.C.Averie Dale, Kayli Cleaver, and Hadley Prince have each been named to the AVCA Honorable Mention All-America Team. 

This marks the second consecutive All-America honor for Cleaver and Dale, while Prince is making her first appearance on the team. There have now been seven individuals in Lenoir-Rhyne volleyball history who have been named to an All-American team. 

Averie Dale tied the school record with a .399 hitting percentage this season, totaling 245 kills, 31 service aces, and 31 assists. She finished tied for first in the conference and first on the team with a total of 107 blocks, and added 82 digs. 

Kayli Cleaver was the Bears’ go to on the outside, leading the team with 363 kills on a .266 hitting percentage. She totaled double-digit kills in 20 of her 31 matches played and set a new career high with 23 kills in a four set victory at Newberry. 

Hadley Prince is this year’s South Atlantic Conference leader and ranks seventh all-time in Lenoir-Rhyne history with 547 digs. She had double-digit digs in every match this year and had a Lenoir-Rhyne career high of 32 on November 11th at Coker. Her 39 service aces led the team while her 115 assists were fourth. 

 





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Vanderbilt Football | Stowers Awarded 2025 William V. Campbell Trophy®

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LAS VEGAS — Vanderbilt’s Eli Stowers has been named the 36th recipient of the William V. Campbell Trophy® it was announced at the National Football Foundation Annual Awards Dinner presented by Las Vegas.

The Campbell Trophy® ranks as one of college football’s most sought-after and competitive awards, recognizing an individual as the absolute best in the country for his combined academic success, football performance and exemplary leadership. Awarded since 1990, the 24-inch, 25-pound bronze trophy comes with a $25,000 postgraduate scholarship. Stowers was selected from a list of 16 members of the NFF National Scholar-Athlete Class Presented by Fidelity Investments®.

The Denton, Texas, native becomes the first Campbell Trophy® winner from Vanderbilt. He is the school’s fifth NFF National Scholar-Athlete, joining Wade Butcher (1961), Douglas Martin (1974), Andrew McCarroll (1989) and Hunter Hillenmeyer (2002).

Stowers received his undergraduate degree from New Mexico State in 2024, posting a 3.92 cumulative grade-point average, and he completed his master’s degree in finance from Vanderbilt in the spring. A member of the 2024-25 First-Year SEC Academic Honor Roll, he is currently pursuing a master’s of legal studies degree this fall.

During his time at Vanderbilt, Stowers has volunteered at the multiple events at the Monroe Carell Jr. Children’s Hospital and has supported the facility’s Dancing Dores fundraiser while also participating in Social Impact Day with the Pencil Foundation and Metro Nashville Public Schools and assisting at the department’s annual SAAC Holiday Party.

Elected a team captain prior to the start of this season, Stowers has contributed to the Commodores’ 10-2 regular season record with team highs of 62 catches for 769 yards while scoring four touchdowns. He leads all tight ends nationally in receiving yards and is second at the position in the country in receptions after hauling in multiple passes in every contest this season.

Stowers has led the Dores in catches a team-best six times and in receiving yards on four occasions, as he needs only six yards to record the most by a Vandy tight end since the 1996 campaign. He finished with a career-high 146 yards—the second most by a Power 4 tight end this season—on seven catches at No. 20/19 Texas, following up with a career-best 12 receptions for 122 yards in a Homecoming defeat of Auburn.

Stowers is a finalist for the John Mackey Award and is a semifinalist for the Jason Witten Collegiate Man of the Year Award and the Earl Campbell Tyler Rose Award too. He was a semifinalist for the 2025 Lombardi Award™ as well.

Following tonight’s NFF Annual Awards Dinner Presented by Las Vegas, Stowers will be recognized as the 2025 Campbell Trophy® recipient at several other prestigious events. On Friday, Dec. 12, he will be recognized during The Home Depot College Football Awards on ESPN. He will be featured on CBS during halftime of the Tony the Tiger Sun Bowl on Dec. 31, and will be introduced on the field during the College Football Playoff National Championship on Jan. 19 at Hard Rock Stadium in Miami Gardens, Florida.

Stowers and the Commodores will face Iowa—which was 23rd in the final College Football Playoff rankings—on Dec. 31 at 11 a.m. CT in the ReliaQuest Bowl.





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Purdue Fort Wayne coach and alumni reflect on death of former player and friend

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FORT WAYNE, Ind. (WANE) — Purdue Fort Wayne Volleyball has lost one of their own after 2022 graduate Madi Wurster died in a car accident early Monday morning.

Wurster played volleyball at Purdue Fort Wayne from 2018 to 2022 and graduated from South Adams High School, where she played volleyball and basketball.

Steve Florio, Head Women’s Volleyball Coach at Purdue Fort Wayne, said that after receiving tragic news like this, everyone is still in shock.

“It almost didn’t seem real,” he said. “That’s the feedback I’m getting from a lot of our alumni, I’ve been talking with, obviously, very sad and heartbreaking.”

Florio says he has been talking with a lot of alumni since the accident, and says they describe her as “full of life”, a great hugger, a light to everyone, and so much more.

He says he wants to make sure that alumni and player voices were heard during a time like this, as they were some of the closest people to Madi.

“What they have to say about Madi is that she was a beautiful soul, and the world needed somebody like her,” he said. “She was always there for anybody who needed help. She loved all those around her. A lot of the alumni said she was a big light in this world, a great hugger, a great listener, too, and they’re all right about that.”

He adds that Wurster was very strong in her faith and had a tight friend group while at PFW. She had a really big laugh, and she loved to have a good time.

Florio says this has been a loss for the entire Mastodon family, and that this has brought many together to share stories about who Madi was and remember what she meant to all of them.

Her obituary can be found here.



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