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Team USA Coaching Staff Announced for 2026 WBC

CARY, N.C. – USA Baseball today named the Team USA coaching staff for the 2026 World Baseball Classic (WBC). Nine assistant coaches will join Manager Mark DeRosa, who returns to the U.S. dugout for the second consecutive Classic after leading the stars and stripes to a silver medal in 2023. 2023 National League Manager of […]

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Team USA Coaching Staff Announced for 2026 WBC

CARY, N.C. – USA Baseball today named the Team USA coaching staff for the 2026 World Baseball Classic (WBC). Nine assistant coaches will join Manager Mark DeRosa, who returns to the U.S. dugout for the second consecutive Classic after leading the stars and stripes to a silver medal in 2023.

2023 National League Manager of the Year Skip Schumaker will take the reins as bench coach, joined by five-time World Series champ Andy Pettitte (pitching coach) and seven-time All-Star Matt Holliday (hitting coach). Two-time Team USA coach and Los Angeles Dodgers Third Base Coach Dino Ebel returns in the same role while Detroit Tigers Bench Coach George Lombard will be the first base coach.

Former big-league managers Fredi González (assistant manager) and David Ross (bullpen coach) will assist for the U.S., and former MLB All-Stars Brian McCann and Michael Young round out the staff as assistant managers.

“I’d like to welcome David Ross, Skip Schumaker, Matt Holliday, George Lombard, Fredi González, and returning coaches Michael Young, Brian McCann, Andy Pettitte, and Dino Ebel to the team,” said Team USA General Manager Michael Hill. “Together, the baseball knowledge and experience of this group of men is unmatched and I’m looking forward to working with each of them to bring a WBC championship back to the USA.”

In total, the 10-man coaching staff–which features six USA Baseball alumni–has combined for 110 big-league seasons, 24 All-Star Game appearances, and 11 World Series titles. The staff has totaled over 8,500 hits in the big leagues, including 1,025 home runs.

Team USA is looking to capture its second World Baseball Classic title in the sixth installment of the event in 2026. The U.S. took home the title in the 2017 iteration and most recently claimed a silver medal at the 2023 Classic.

The U.S. is a member of Pool B at the 2026 World Baseball Classic, joined by Brazil, Great Britain, Italy, and Mexico. Pool B is scheduled to take place from March 6-11 at Daikin Park in Houston, Texas, the home of the Houston Astros. The top two nations will advance to the quarterfinal round in Houston against the top two finishers from Pool A.

The sixth edition of the World Baseball Classic, which runs from March 5-17, will take place at Daikin Park in Houston, Texas; Hiram Bithorn Stadium in San Juan, Puerto Rico; the Tokyo Dome in Tokyo, Japan, and loanDepot Park in Miami, Florida. The semifinal round (March 15 and 16) and championship game (March 17) will be held in Miami.

2026 World Baseball Classic Team USA Coaching Staff:

Manager: Mark DeRosa
Bench Coach: Skip Schumaker
Pitching Coach: Andy Pettitte
Hitting Coach: Matt Holliday
First Base Coach: George Lombard
Third Base Coach: Dino Ebel
Bullpen Coach: David Ross
Assistant Manager: Fredi González
Assistant Manager: Brian McCann
Assistant Manager: Michael Young

Schumaker, an eleven-year big leaguer and current senior advisor for the Texas Rangers, assumes bench coach duties. Schumaker spent two seasons managing the Miami Marlins in 2023 and 2024, leading the Club to a playoff appearance in his debut season en route to being named National League Manager of the Year. Prior to his career in coaching, Schumaker played in the big leagues from 2005-2015, including eight seasons with the St. Louis Cardinals. He finished his career with a brief stop with the Los Angeles Dodgers in 2013 before playing his final two years with the Cincinnati Reds. Schumaker, who collected 905 hits as a big leaguer, also suited up for Team USA at the Olympic Qualifier in 2006. He began his coaching career as the San Diego Padres’ first base coach in 2018 before becoming the bench coach for the Cardinals ahead of the 2022 season and then making his managerial debut with Miami in 2023.

Pettitte, MLB’s all-time postseason wins leader, reprises his role as pitching coach. Throughout his 18-year career in the Bigs, Pettitte won five World Series titles with the New York Yankees–who drafted the southpaw in the 22nd round of the 1990 MLB Draft–and was a three-time All-Star. He made his debut for the Yankees in 1995, won four world championships in five years from 1996 to 2000, and earned ALCS MVP honors in 2001. Pettitte also won a World Series with the Yanks in 2009 and finished his postseason career with 19 wins, including five in World Series games. He concluded his career with 256 victories and a 3.85 ERA, and his No. 46 jersey was retired by the New York Yankees in 2015. In 2019, Pettitte earned the USA Baseball Volunteer Coach of the Year award after serving as a pitching coach in the inaugural Prospect Development Pipeline (PDP) League.

A three-time USA Baseball alum and seven-time MLB All-Star, Holliday will serve as the hitting coach for the United States. Holliday was selected in the seventh round of the 1998 MLB Draft by the Colorado Rockies and spent his first five big-league seasons with the Club, making three consecutive All-Star game appearances from 2006-2008. He put together three more All-Star campaigns with the St. Louis Cardinals from 2010-2012, receiving MVP votes in two of those seasons. Holliday ended up spending eight seasons with St. Louis before wrapping up his playing career with the New York Yankees and one more season in Colorado. Holliday hit 316 home runs in his 15-year MLB career, batting .299 with an .889 OPS. He also played for Team USA on three separate occasions, competing for the 18U National Team in 1997, the Professional National Team in 2003, and the World Baseball Classic squad in 2006.

Lombard, the bench coach for the Detroit Tigers, will be the first base coach for the United States at the 2026 WBC. Drafted in the second round by the Atlanta Braves in 1994, Lombard spent time in the big leagues with the Braves, Detroit Tigers, Tampa Bay Devil Rays, and Washington Nationals. Lombard’s playing career concluded in 2006, and he began his professional coaching career in 2010 as the hitting coach for the Single-A Lowell Spinners before earning a managerial gig for the Rookie-level Gulf Coast Red Sox in 2011 and 2012. Lombard continued his ascent through the Minor League system, becoming a roving outfield and baserunning coordinator for Boston’s farm system in 2012. He got his first big-league coaching gig as first base coach for the Los Angeles Dodgers in 2015, spending six seasons in that role and capping it with a World Series title in 2020. Following the championship season, Lombard was named bench coach for the Tigers, a role he still currently holds.

Current Los Angeles Dodgers Third Base Coach Ebel will return to Team USA in the same position after serving on staff at the 2023 World Baseball Classic, and more recently, the 2024 Premier12 tournament. Ebel returned to the Dodgers organization as third base coach in 2019 and has helped lead them to five NL West titles and the 2020 and 2024 World Series titles. In his playing days, Ebel signed with the Dodgers as a free agent in 1988 after winning the Division II baseball championship with Florida Southern College; he then spent eight years in their farm system. Ebel served eight years as a manager across multiple Minor League levels for the Dodgers before joining the Los Angeles Angels organization in 2005 as the Triple-A Salt Lake Bees manager. The Angels elevated him to the big leagues as the third base coach in 2006, a position he would hold until being named bench coach in 2014. He returned to Angels third base coach duties again in 2018 before re-joining the Dodgers in 2019.

Ross takes over bullpen coach duties, bringing with him 15 years of playing experience and four seasons as a big-league manager. The former catcher most recently spent four seasons as manager for the Chicago Cubs from 2020-2023, guiding the Club to a playoff appearance in his first season in 2020. Prior to his managerial gig, Ross played for seven teams across 15 years in MLB. He debuted with the Los Angeles Dodgers in 2002 and played there for three seasons. In 2006, Ross posted a career-best season with 21 home runs and 52 RBIs for the Cincinnati Reds and later spent four seasons with the Atlanta Braves from 2009-2012. After winning a World Series with the Boston Red Sox in 2013, Ross concluded his playing career with two seasons with the Cubs, becoming the oldest player in MLB history to hit a World Series home run (39 years old) in Game 7 of the 2016 World Series to help Chicago win its first title since 1908. He was named a special assistant for the Cubs following his retirement and appeared as a baseball analyst on ESPN prior to being Chicago’s manager from 2020-2023.

González will be an assistant manager on DeRosa’s staff, bringing with him a decade of managerial experience. After six seasons as a catcher in the New York Yankees’ system, González began his professional coaching career as manager for the Miami Miracle (A+) in 1990. He joined the Florida Marlins’ organization in 1992 and climbed his way to the big-league staff in 1999, spending two seasons as the third base coach for the Fish. After a stint with the Richmond Braves (AAA) in 2002, González became a coach on Atlanta’s Major League staff in 2003. He earned his first big-league managerial gig ahead of the 2007 season with the Florida Marlins, where he spent four seasons and posted two winning campaigns. In 2010, González was named manager of the Atlanta Braves, a position he held until 2016. He led the Braves to two 90-plus-win seasons and two playoff appearances in his six seasons at the helm. González then returned to Miami as a big-league coach for three years before spending 2020-2024 on Baltimore’s coaching staff.

McCann, a seven-time All-Star, six-time Silver Slugger Award winner, and Team USA alumni, will be an assistant manager under DeRosa. After being selected in the second round of the 2002 MLB Draft by the Atlanta Braves, McCann went on to have a 15-year career in the Bigs, spending 10 of those seasons in Atlanta. He appeared in the MLB All-Star game in six consecutive seasons from 2006-2011, hitting 20 or more home runs in five of those campaigns. McCann, who also had stints for the New York Yankees and the Houston Astros, finished his standout career with 282 home runs and a .262 batting average. The Athens, Georgia, native is the only catcher in MLB history to win a Silver Slugger Award in both the American League and National League. He was a teammate of Team USA Manager Mark DeRosa on the United States roster at the 2009 WBC, batting .333 with six RBIs and a 1.194 OPS. McCann was also a member of DeRosa’s staff in 2023, serving as an assistant.

Young, a perennial All-Star throughout his career, brings 14 seasons of big-league experience to his post as assistant manager. The former infielder was selected in the fifth round of the 1997 MLB Draft by the Toronto Blue Jays and was traded to the Texas Rangers in 2000, where he spent the first 13 seasons of his career and made seven All-Star Game appearances. He was named to the Midsummer Classic every year from 2004 to 2009, playing 135 or more games in each of those seasons. Young collected over 200 hits in six different campaigns, including an MLB-leading 221 in 2005–winning the AL batting title–and 213 in 2011. He played his final big-league season split between the Philadelphia Phillies and the Los Angeles Dodgers in 2013 before retiring at the conclusion of that season. Young, who was inducted into the Texas Rangers Baseball Hall of Fame in 2016 and had his No. 10 retired by the Club in 2019, also played for Team USA in the inaugural World Baseball Classic in 2006 and assisted DeRosa in 2023. He is currently a special assistant to the general manager for the Rangers.

Follow @USABaseball on Facebook, Instagram, and X for all of the up-to-date information on Team USA’s 2026 World Baseball Classic team.

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Women’s Track and Field To Send Eight To NCAA Championships Next Week

Story Links MEDFORD, MA (May 16, 2025) — The NCAA announced the final selections to the 2025 NCAA Division III Outdoor Track & Field Championships next week May 22-24, and the Tufts University women’s track and field squad was awarded with eight entries after a solid outdoor season.  The […]

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MEDFORD, MA (May 16, 2025) — The NCAA announced the final selections to the 2025 NCAA Division III Outdoor Track & Field Championships next week May 22-24, and the Tufts University women’s track and field squad was awarded with eight entries after a solid outdoor season. 

The Jumbos will have first-year Arielle Chechile in the 400 meter hurdles, after the newcomer posted a collegiate-best time on Thursday of 1:00.64 at the MIT Final Qualifier. Chechile’s time is currently the fifth-best among the field of 22 competitors to compete. 

Fellow newcomer Makayla Moriarty ran a 55.21 at the 2025 NEICAA Outdoor Track and Field Championships, and got in as the No. 18 seed in the 400 meter dash. 

The field crew will have a large contingent heading to the SPIRE Institute in Geneva, Ohio, as senior Harper Meek was a last second selection into the field in the high jump after clearing 1.66 meters at the New England Division III Outdoor Track and Field Championships. 

First-year Elysse Cumberland will look to earn another national championship next week in a pair of events, as she qualified No. 5 in the nation in the long jump with a mark of 6.04 meters at the Tufts Sunshine Classic on April 19. She also will be the No. 3 seed in the event she won at Indoors, as her triple jump mark of 12.66 meters at the Sunshine Classic was plenty good enough for a spot in the NCAA field. 

Cumberland will be joined in her two events by senior teammate Jordan Andrew, as the former All-American is seeded No. 5 in the triple jump after a leap of 12.29 meters at the Tufts Sunshine Classic on April 19. Andrew was close to the cutline in the long jump, but her 5.80 meter leap was good enough for the final spot in the field. 

Sophomore Jackie Wells tossed a school record in the javelin on Thursday at the MIT Final Qualifier, as her toss of 42.41 meters was good enough for the 11th-best distance this spring. She will be making her first appearance at the NCAA Championships. 

The long jump and javelin will be contested on Thursday, May 22 while the prelims of the 400 meter hurdles will also be run that day. Meek will compete in the high jump on Friday afternoon at 11:30 a.m., while Moriarty will run in the 400 meter dash prelims on Friday at 3:15 p.m. 

Both Andrew and Cumberland will compete in the triple jump Saturday at 1:45 p.m., while the finals of the 400 meter hurdles and 400 meter dash are Saturday afternoon as well. 

Full entries can be seen HERE.


–JUMBOS–



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Cedar Crest gets defensive, dethrones Manheim Central for first L-L League boys volleyball championship | Boys’ volleyball

Cedar Crest got some payback. Manheim Central did not get a three-peat. And the Falcons — relentless and defensive-minded from the first serve until the final point — raised the Lancaster-Lebanon League boys volleyball championship gold trophy for the first time in program history on Thursday night. Blocking with authority and digging out seemingly everything […]

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Cedar Crest got some payback.

Manheim Central did not get a three-peat.

And the Falcons — relentless and defensive-minded from the first serve until the final point — raised the Lancaster-Lebanon League boys volleyball championship gold trophy for the first time in program history on Thursday night.

Blocking with authority and digging out seemingly everything in sight in the back row, Cedar Crest topped the Barons 3-1 in a sensational finale at Ephrata Middle School. Set scores were 25-18, 25-20, 16-25 and 25-19, as the Falcons snapped Central’s two-year reign over the league — and handed the Barons their first setback this spring.

“Fantastic,” said Cedar Crest’s Jack Wolgemuth, who had 15 kills and 15 digs. “This is what we’ve been pushing for. This is what we’ve had our eyes on since the beginning of the year.”

The Falcons (18-2 overall) finished the job, thanks in large part to a monster defensive effort.

“We had to (defend them),” Cedar Crest coach Monica Sheaffer said. “They’re a phenomenal attacking team. Going into practice I told the guys that if we’re going to beat them, we had to put up a block and read them. We had to play defense. That was our biggest thing.”

Cedar Crest, fresh off its first Section 1 title in program history, was playing in an L-L title match for the first time, and the Falcons soared. Using a 3-0 nonleague setback at Central back in April as motivation — and defending passionately throughout — Cedar Crest got its revenge, withstood the Barons’ third-set punch, and happily accepted the gold medals at center court in front of packed house.

“This means absolutely everything,” said Cedar Crest setter Ryder Rohrer, who teed up 47 assists. “This feels so great. Very, very rewarding”

Aidan Vukovich sparked Cedar Crest in the first set with seven of his 14 kills. It was 15-15 when the Falcons surged; Tate Tadajweski (10 kills, 17 digs) and Wolgemuth had back-to-back kills to spur Cedar Crest’s set-ending 10-3 run and the Falcons had the early momentum, up 1-0 after stuffing the block and dig columns.

“We lost the first one 3-0 to them,” Wolgemuth said. “We did not want to lose the second one. Our defense was something like I’ve never seen before tonight. We picked everything up. Even if we just got a touch. That was going to be the biggest part of the game.”

Cedar Crest, riding momentum and continuing to block and dig at breakneck pace, never trailed in the second set, when Jacob Alnoor had six kills. Alnoor (12 kills, four blocks) also set up set-point when he blocked Central’s all-star middle hitter Landon Mattiace at the net. Alnoor had another block, and Tyler Hackleman’s ace helped the Falcons pull away late in the second for a 2-0 lead.

“Extremely huge,” Rohrer said. “We were able to play loose and play confidently. Having that early lead really helped us.”


L-L Spring Sports Roundtable 2025: Hempfield gets baseball repeat, track and field records fall

Central (17-1) rose to the occasion in the third behind Weston Longenecker, who had five kills and two blocks. After not leading since 5-4 back in the first set, the Barons seized control with a 5-0 run — three points on blocks, two by Longenecker — and Central, the back-to-back-to-back reigning Section 2 champ, closed it out when Reagan Miller (20 kills) had a block, and then he sizzled a kill off a pretty feed from Dylan Musser, who set up 39 assists.

Longenecker had kills on two of the last three points to cap it, and the Barons were within 2-1 and still in it.

But Cedar Crest bolted to a 17-10 lead in the fourth. Central had one last salvo, getting two blocks from Blake Neiles and an ace from Mattiace, who piled up 13 blocks. But the Falcons stopped the bleeding on Tadajweski’s kill. Later, Wolgemuth’s kill set up match point, and Vukovich clinched the title with a kill.

“Blocking and defense, I thought (Cedar Crest) was outstanding,” Central coach Craig Dietrich said. “Everything was hard tonight. Everything. We even struggled to get points in transition. Maybe it was also a lot of motivation from the last time we played them. But hey, they played like champions here tonight. We tip our caps to them.”

Cedar Crest, with plenty of positive momentum, now heads to the District 3 Class 3A playoffs as the No. 3 seed. Central will be the No. 1 seed in the Class 2A bracket — with motivation to get back to the finals after falling there last spring.



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Program-High Five Tigers Qualify For NCAA Track National Championships

Story Links The Colorado College track and field teams will send a program-record five athletes to the NCAA Division III Outdoor Championships next week in Geneva, Ohio.   Juniors Rabbit Barnes and Josh Williams and sophomore Will Shuflit will compete in the men’s competition, while senior Isabel Olson and junior Alison Mueller-Hickler […]

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The Colorado College track and field teams will send a program-record five athletes to the NCAA Division III Outdoor Championships next week in Geneva, Ohio.
 
Juniors Rabbit Barnes and Josh Williams and sophomore Will Shuflit will compete in the men’s competition, while senior Isabel Olson and junior Alison Mueller-Hickler will represent the women’s team at the national meet, May 22-24, at the SPIRE Institute’s track and field facility.
 
Barnes, Shuflit, Olson and Mueller-Hickler will be competing at the Division III Championships for the first time.
 
“It is exciting to see so many individuals qualify for the national championships,” head coach Katie Bretscher said. “It has been a goal of mine to continue to have more athletes from our program qualify.  Each year, it seems like athletes have to run faster than the year prior in order to make the meet.  I’m extremely proud of all of our qualifiers and the work and dedication that it took to get to this level.”  
 
Barnes, the three-time defending SCAC champion in the 1500, will run that race at the national meet. He has the seventh-fastest in Division III and is scheduled to compete in the preliminaries on Thursday, May 22, at 5:35 p.m. (ET).
 
Williams, meanwhile, will run the 400-meter dash for the second consecutive year. The 400 prelims are on Friday, May 23, at 3:00 p.m. (ET).
 
Shuflit has the 12th-best time in the 10K in Division III and will compete in that race on Thursday, May 22, at 8:30 p.m. (ET).
 
Olson qualified for both the 1500 and 5K after setting the school record in each race this season. She is ranked 15th in the 1500 and 23rd in the 5K. The 1500 prelims are on Thursday, May 22, at 5:50 p.m. (ET), while the 5K final is on Saturday, May 24, at 4:25 p.m. (ET).
 
Mueller-Hickler, who has the 10th-fastest 10K time in Division III, will run in that final on Thursday, May 22, at 9:15 p.m. (ET).
 
Colorado College sent a then program-high three athletes to the Division III national meet last season.
 



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Hinsdale Central girls water polo outlasts Metea in the IHSA Sectional Quarterfinals

We’re at Metea Valley for a Sectional Quarterfinal matchup as the fifth-seeded Hinsdale Central girls water polo takes on the fourth-seeded Metea Valley Mustangs. The Red Devils enter with a 16-10 record and a three-game winning streak. Metea also rides a three-game win streak with a 14-13 record on the season. This highlight is sponsored […]

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We’re at Metea Valley for a Sectional Quarterfinal matchup as the fifth-seeded Hinsdale Central girls water polo takes on the fourth-seeded Metea Valley Mustangs. The Red Devils enter with a 16-10 record and a three-game winning streak. Metea also rides a three-game win streak with a 14-13 record on the season. This highlight is sponsored by BMO.

Hinsdale Central girls water polo leads Metea by three at the break

Metea comes out attacking, but Red Devils goalie Allie Tonjes sets the tone early with a great save to keep things scoreless.

Tonjes’ defense sets up the offense. Anna Azeem capitalizes on the other end, giving Hinsdale Central the early 1-0 lead.

But the Mustangs waste no time responding. Makayla Paulding finds the back of the net with help from Lillian Witte, tying it at one.

The Mustangs keep the pressure on. Abigail Hervey scores to give Metea a 2-1 lead with three minutes left in the first.

Just before the quarter ends, another big stop by Tonjes! She quickly pushes the counter, finding Anna Deppe, who ties it up at two at the end of the first quarter.

To open the second, Witte takes it coast-to-coast and finishes past Tonjes to give Metea a 3-2 lead.

But the Red Devils respond with fire. Anna Deppe scores back-to-back goals, flipping the lead back to Central at 4-3 and forcing a Mustang timeout.

Out of the timeout, Hinsdale scores quickly again. Metea answers as Amelia Hervey finds the back of the net, keeping the Mustangs within one at 5-4.

After another Central goal, Tonjes makes another huge save and decides to take matters into her own hands—literally. She scores to close the half as Hinsdale Central leads 7-4 at the break.

Red Devils add onto their lead in the IHSA Sectional Quarterfinal

Starting the second half, Paulding works her magic, drawing Tonjes out and scoring the first goal of the third quarter to give Metea a spark.

The Mustangs force a Central violation and capitalize with a goal from Natalie Kosta. Metea cuts the deficit to 8-6 with four minutes left in the third.

But Central answers again. Chloe Van Houtte fights through the Mustang defense and scores to push the Red Devils’ lead to 10-6 heading into the fourth.

Central starts the final quarter strong. The first shot is deflected, but Deppe is right there for the putback, making it 11-6.

Hinsdale keeps the pressure on. Rashida Moosabhoy goes solo and scores, giving Central a 12-7 lead.

Metea scores one more, but Hinsdale Central hangs on and will now play Naperville North

Metea puts together one final push. Witte scores in the closing minutes, but it’s not enough as Hinsdale Central wins 12-10 to advance to the sectional semifinals.

The Red Devils will now face the top-seeded Naperville North Huskies this Friday, and a spot in the sectional final is on the line.

For more prep sports highlights, visit the Naperville Sports Weekly page.





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Men’s Track and Field to Send Three Athletes to NCAA Championships

Story Links MEDFORD, MA (May 16, 2025) – The NCAA announced the final selections to the 2025 NCAA Outdoor Men’s Track and Field Championships taking place at the Spire Institute in Geneva, Ohio next week May 22-24, and the Tufts University men’s track and field squad picked up a trio of […]

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MEDFORD, MA (May 16, 2025) – The NCAA announced the final selections to the 2025 NCAA Outdoor Men’s Track and Field Championships taking place at the Spire Institute in Geneva, Ohio next week May 22-24, and the Tufts University men’s track and field squad picked up a trio of entries.

Amokrane Aouchiche leads the list of Jumbos competing in the nationwide competition. He will enter into the 10,000m run as the 21 seed. The junior currently holds the second fastest time in Tufts program history and the 22nd fastest time in the NCAA Division III this year.

Josh Wilkie will compete in the second NCAA Division III Championship meet this season after competing in the indoor edition of the contest. The junior  enters as the 10 seed in the 400m hurdles, and holds the fourth fastest time in Tufts program history, as well as the ninth best mark in the NCAA Division III.

Rounding out the list of competing athletes for the Jumbos is yet another junior, Sahr Matturi. He enters into the long jump as the 12 seed following a season that saw him land the 12th best jump in the NCAA Division III and the second longest mark in the team’s history.

All three Jumbos will be in action on Thursday, May 22 as the long jump, 400m hurdles prelims and 10k all take place throughout the day.

Full entries can be seen HERE

 

–JUMBOS–



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Lincoln boys volleyball aces its final test before playoffs

WATCH: Lincoln boys volleyball slips past Pawtucket in four sets Watch as Lincoln boys volleyball takes the match-winning point vs. Pawtucket. PAWTUCKET — The Lincoln boys volleyball team had one more test left, and the Lions aced it. Division II’s top team all season had to go into Pawtucket and turn back a championship-caliber co-op. […]

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PAWTUCKET — The Lincoln boys volleyball team had one more test left, and the Lions aced it.

Division II’s top team all season had to go into Pawtucket and turn back a championship-caliber co-op. If the league title returns to Lincoln for the second time in three years, the Lions certainly showed why on Thursday night.

Lincoln (13-0) strung together six straight points to steal the first set and flashed their dominance in the second frame. The third set belonged to the city co-op, but the Lions rallied in the decisive fourth frame for a 3-1 (25-23, 25-12, 22-25, 25-22) triumph.

“This was our big game right here,” Lincoln’s Tyler Biddle said. “Proving ourselves here was us showing that we’re not just going to let up easy.”

Jacob Lizotte tallied back-to-back winning kills in the first set that saw Lincoln claw back from a 23-19 deficit. The future top seed in the playoffs then stormed to 11-5 and 18-10 leads in the second frame.

Lincoln’s presence at the net, behind Lizotte, Biddle, Jackson Colton, Sebastian DeCubellis and Brian Gugel, was unwavering. Lincoln has plenty of depth to rotate through that Pawtucket, or anyone else in league play, can’t match.

“It felt really good,” Biddle said of the win. “But it was also a huge game. We’ve been coming off of a lot of pretty easy games, so we really had to change the energy fast.”

Said Gugel: “It was an important game on our schedule, but we’re taking every game one at a time. And we’ve got another game tomorrow.”

This stretch of success for Lincoln is no surprise either. After a 14-2 runner-up finish in 2019, Lincoln’s been on a run that will eventually lead them to the D-I ranks. The Lions managed a 2-9 season in 2021 and went perfect in the regular season the following spring. They then brought home the program’s first crown in 2023. Lincoln also nearly pushed top-seeded Cranston West to five sets in the semifinals last year.

“It just proves that we could have gone up to D-I and we deserve that spot,” DeCubellis said of the season. “Hopefully we get moved up eventually. Everybody is all-in.”

Lincoln has three games left to chase perfection. It’ll travel to Woonsocket and West Warwick before hosting Johnston in the finale. They’ve beaten all three teams already, including sweeps against Woonsocket and Johnston.

The Lions will almost certainly finish with the top seed, but that’s no surprise as they lost only six sets to league foes this season. The next test Lincoln will face will likely be at Rhode Island College.

“Both teams, we know that we are the top teams in the division,” DeCubellis said. “We both have that dog in us. But tonight, we outshined them. We played amazing and we knew what we had to do. We studied, we watched our film and it helped.”

Pawtucket will likely finish with the No. 2 seed followed by Central Falls. West Warwick and Westerly might go to the wire for the fourth and fifth seeds in league play. The Bulldogs host D-I’s Chariho on Friday, and win-or-lose, that will help them in the league standings.

But everyone is chasing Lincoln as they have been this spring.

“We just have to play like we did today,” Biddle said. “We need to bring the energy and come off strong from the start.”



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