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Colorado's Arapahoe Basin hosts extreme skiing competition, event could be in next Winter Olympics

Some of the best extreme skiers in the world recently gathered at a Colorado mountain for an event that might end up in the Winter Olympics someday. Arapahoe Basin hosted the International Freeskiers & Snowboarders Association’s Challenger Series for three days last week. It took place on the ski area’s steep and difficult East Wall. […]

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Colorado's Arapahoe Basin hosts extreme skiing competition, event could be in next Winter Olympics

Some of the best extreme skiers in the world recently gathered at a Colorado mountain for an event that might end up in the Winter Olympics someday.

Arapahoe Basin hosted the International Freeskiers & Snowboarders Association’s Challenger Series for three days last week. It took place on the ski area’s steep and difficult East Wall.

Among the dozens of competitors was Reid Litwiller, who lives in Blue River, Colorado.

“There are some, like, nerves going through your veins,” the 18-year-old said.

He described freeride skiing as “basically anything rocky, anything with snow on it, like way up high that looks really gnarly and sketchy? We’ll go and ski that.”

Not every competitor made it through the chutes and jumped over the rocks without crashing. A fair share of skiers and riders struggled on the technical slope. It’s a calculated risk each time down that balances pushing athletes to extremes while not pressuring them to get into trouble.

“You are not being given points to accept more risk or to have close calls. In fact, you actually get penalized and you’re not going to do well in the competitions,” said IFSA Sport Advisor Brennan Metzler.

It’s judged more like gymnastics or diving: how hard is the run and the tricks you did, and how well did you do it?

And things are heating up in the sport.

“Now we’re seeing a lot more tricks, meaning 360s, 720s, back flips. And yes, yesterday we saw a double back flip landed, and that’s what it takes,” Metzler said.

The winner of the competition gets crowned the best in the Americas and goes on to the World Championships, which could lead to another global stage.

“The big Olympic word is being dropped. So the sport is growing. It’s going to get a lot of attention. And so it’s really fun for us here in Summit County to be able to host one of the championship events,” Metzler said.

The event is a showcase for what makes some mountain-dweller Coloradans so special: their skills, their bravery and their guts.

“We started with that old mining culture in the past, and I feel like without these resorts, we would have turned into a ghost town,” Litwiller said.

Event organizers said they are hoping to bring the competition back to A Basin in future years.

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Navy Water Polo Star Earns Spot on Prestigious USA Junior National Roster

Kiefer Black has had an exceptional start to his college career with the Navy Midshipmen. He has played for their polo team for the last two seasons and is going into his junior year. He will now have the honor to represent his country after a stellar start as a Midshipmen. The USA Junior National Team […]

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Kiefer Black has had an exceptional start to his college career with the Navy Midshipmen. He has played for their polo team for the last two seasons and is going into his junior year. He will now have the honor to represent his country after a stellar start as a Midshipmen.

The USA Junior National Team will start action on June 14 in the World Aquatics Men’s Junior World Championships in Zagreb, Croatia. After a week of hard fought action between countries a winner will be crowned.

The U.S. will be competing in Pool A against Croatia, Hungary, and Montenegro the Naval Academy announced. 

During their 2024 season the Mids went 22-10 overall and 10-4 in the Mid-Atlantic Water Polo Conference (MAWPC). Black played in all 32 games as their lead attacker and had a total of 171 points, the next closest on the team was Michael Heller with 63.

In the 32 games he played he had 185 shots, next closest was Luka Sekulic with 100 and assisted on 77 goals. The next closest to him in assists was Austin Kahn with 32. 

With a stellar sophomore season he added more awards to his list of personal recognitions. He finished the year earning Association of Collegiate Water Polo Coaches Honorable Mention All-American, First Team All-MWAPC, and First Team MWAPC All-Tournament Team. 

It is no surprise that Black had such an exceptional season after a strong start to his career as a freshman. The list of accolades he acquired in his rookie season is quite impressive. 

As a freshman Black led the team in total points, goals, and assists (125/68/57). He was then named an ACWPC Honorable Mention All-American, MAWPC Rookie of the Year, MAWPC First-Team, among other personal accolades.

There had only been 12 players in school history who had amassed 100 points in a season prior to his arrival and he has now done it twice. His 171 points in 2024 is now second all-time behind Doug Munz in 1994. Third most belongs to Paul Pedrotty who had 137 in 2012 and fourth most belongs to Black during his freshman season. 

The 6-foot-7 sophomore out of San Diego, Calif., has been a consistent and hard to defend attacker. Expect him to make a difference during this tournament.



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One last hurrah for seniors at the Illinois vs. Missouri track meet | Sports

QUINCY — As Amick McClelland closes out her high school track and field career, she gets one last hurrah at Flinn Stadium. McClelland took part in the Missouri vs. Illinois track meet as part of the team from the Land of Lincoln, capping it off with a win in the girls 1,600-meter run. “I made […]

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QUINCY — As Amick McClelland closes out her high school track and field career, she gets one last hurrah at Flinn Stadium.

McClelland took part in the Missouri vs. Illinois track meet as part of the team from the Land of Lincoln, capping it off with a win in the girls 1,600-meter run.



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Coey reaches NCAA Nationals, breaks ground for MSU long jump

BOZEMAN, Mont. — Montana State University’s Hailey Coey got the national party started in College Station, Texas, becoming the first Bobcat to qualify for the NCAA Outdoor Track and Field Championships in Eugene, Oregon. But Coey more importantly is making history as Montana State’s first athlete to compete in the long jump at nationals. “I’m […]

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Montana State University’s Hailey Coey got the national party started in College Station, Texas, becoming the first Bobcat to qualify for the NCAA Outdoor Track and Field Championships in Eugene, Oregon.

But Coey more importantly is making history as Montana State’s first athlete to compete in the long jump at nationals.

“I’m super honored to represent MSU on the national stage, especially being the first long jumper in school history,” Coey said. I’m super excited and hope I do a well job representing us.”

Coey has exploded onto the long jump scene in her junior campaign.

She broke the MSU program record twice this season, with her farthest leap of 6.49m (21 feet, 3.5 inches) at the Bengal Invitational in Pocatello, Idaho, also ranking No. 2 all-time in the Big Sky Conference.

“This year, she just got to an incredibly high level. She’s got so many jumps over 21 feet, so consistent,” MSU head track and field coach Lyle Weese said about Coey’s season. “To get Hailey into the NCAA Championships is so exciting and she’s definitely deserved it for the level she’s been at since she started jumping back in January.”

Coey took second in long jump in the Big Sky Outdoor Track and Field Championships in back-to-back seasons, but came out of Sacramento lacking confidence. She dealt with an injury that didn’t allow her to compete in the triple jump at the conference meet, but took flight at the NCAA West Regional.

The second-farthest jump of Coey’s career at 6.44m (21 feet, 1.5 inches) placed her eighth and booked her ticket to Eugene.

“At our conference meet, I had hurt my hamstring during long jump on the first day, so I wasn’t able to compete the second day,” Coey said. “After that, my confidence was pretty low, but then seeing that I was able to come back and jump my second-best jump of my life at regionals helped a lot.”

But a trip to nationals is also an opportunity for the Billings West product to not only represent MSU, but the Treasure State on the national stage.

“I’m really glad that I’m able to do it and be the first in school history again,” Coey said. “I’m really glad it’s someone from Montana that’s able to represent Montana State.”

Coey becomes the 13th Bobcat woman to reach the NCAA Championships, but won’t be the only female making the trip from Bozeman. Montana State’s 4x400m relay team is also competing, proving how much the MSU women’s program has elevated this season.

“I think we probably have the best MSU women’s team in school history,” Coey said. “It’s really exciting to be a part of this team, and to see all of my fellow teammates excel and have great successes.”

“It’s really built upon itself,” Weese said on the success of the MSU women. “It’s been that situation where they’ve raised each other’s ability level, but to see so many school records from every event group is really an exciting thing for our program, and also that so many of them will be back for future years.”

Coey competes in the long jump at the NCAA Outdoor Track and Field Championships in Eugene on Thursday at 5:40 p.m. PST.



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Navy Water Polo Star Earns Spot on Prestigious USA Junior National Roster

Kiefer Black has had an exceptional start to his college career with the Navy Midshipmen. He has played for their polo team for the last two seasons and is going into his junior year. He will now have the honor to represent his country after a stellar start as a Midshipmen. The USA Junior National Team […]

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Kiefer Black has had an exceptional start to his college career with the Navy Midshipmen. He has played for their polo team for the last two seasons and is going into his junior year. He will now have the honor to represent his country after a stellar start as a Midshipmen.

The USA Junior National Team will start action on June 14 in the World Aquatics Men’s Junior World Championships in Zagreb, Croatia. After a week of hard fought action between countries a winner will be crowned.

The U.S. will be competing in Pool A against Croatia, Hungary, and Montenegro the Naval Academy announced. 

During their 2024 season the Mids went 22-10 overall and 10-4 in the Mid-Atlantic Water Polo Conference (MAWPC). Black played in all 32 games as their lead attacker and had a total of 171 points, the next closest on the team was Michael Heller with 63.

In the 32 games he played he had 185 shots, next closest was Luka Sekulic with 100 and assisted on 77 goals. The next closest to him in assists was Austin Kahn with 32. 

With a stellar sophomore season he added more awards to his list of personal recognitions. He finished the year earning Association of Collegiate Water Polo Coaches Honorable Mention All-American, First Team All-MWAPC, and First Team MWAPC All-Tournament Team. 

It is no surprise that Black had such an exceptional season after a strong start to his career as a freshman. The list of accolades he acquired in his rookie season is quite impressive. 

As a freshman Black led the team in total points, goals, and assists (125/68/57). He was then named an ACWPC Honorable Mention All-American, MAWPC Rookie of the Year, MAWPC First-Team, among other personal accolades.

There had only been 12 players in school history who had amassed 100 points in a season prior to his arrival and he has now done it twice. His 171 points in 2024 is now second all-time behind Doug Munz in 1994. Third most belongs to Paul Pedrotty who had 137 in 2012 and fourth most belongs to Black during his freshman season. 

The 6-foot-7 sophomore out of San Diego, Calif., has been a consistent and hard to defend attacker. Expect him to make a difference during this tournament.





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Unstoppable: Thornton leads Maple Mountain to back-to-back state titles | News, Sports, Jobs

1 / 5 Maple Mountain’s Trey Thornton reacts during a Region 7 boys volleyball match against Springville on Tuesday, April 29, 2025. Harold Mitchell, Special to the Daily Herald 2 / 5 Maple Mountain’s Trey Thornton (28) holds up the 5A Boys Volleyball State Championship trophy at the UCCU Center on Saturday, May 10, 2025. […]

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1 / 5

Maple Mountain’s Trey Thornton reacts during a Region 7 boys volleyball match against Springville on Tuesday, April 29, 2025.

Harold Mitchell, Special to the Daily Herald

2 / 5

Maple Mountain’s Trey Thornton (28) holds up the 5A Boys Volleyball State Championship trophy at the UCCU Center on Saturday, May 10, 2025.

Courtesy Jeff Porcaro, Maple Mountain Sports

3 / 5

Maple Mountain’s Trey Thornton serves the ball in a high school boys volleyball match against Orem during the 2025 season.

Courtesy Jeff Porarco, Maple Mountain Sports

4 / 5

Maple Mountain’s Trey Thornton (28) takes a swing against Wasatch in the 5A boys volleyball state finals at the UCCU Center in Orem on Saturday, May 10, 2025.

Jeff Porcaro, Maple Mountain Sports

5 / 5

Maple Mountain’s Trey Thornton (8) takes a swing against Springville’s Nolan Snead (left) and Evan Straw in a Region 7 boys volleyball match on Tuesday, April 29, 2025.

Harold Mitchell, Special to the Herald


Growing up in Alabama, 12-year-old Trey Thornton’s introduction to volleyball came through his three sisters, who all played, and a number of other girls on teams where he learned the game.

Thornton eventually grew to 6-foot-7, moved to Utah and helped created a very special legacy for the boys volleyball program at Maple Mountain High School.

Thornton was part of two state championships in the Beehive State and totaled 851 kills over that two-year span. His dominant, confident and complementary play has earned him the Daily Herald’s Valley Player of the Year for 2025.

Thornton said he sometimes practiced with the Maple Mountain girls team when he first arrived in Utah. That team, led by twins Marley and Morgan Pratt, won the 2023 5A state title. In Alabama he often played with Merritt Beason, who became an All-American and team captain for the Nebraska women’s volleyball team from 2021 to 2024.

Thornton credits time he’s spent playing volleyball with girls as a key to his all-around game.

“Ball control is something girls have on us,” Thornton said. “We might have more athleticism, where we can jump higher and hit harder, but their technical skills are so good. I can tell you it’s way harder passing on a girls net than on a men’s net because of their float serves. That’s really helped my control a lot.”

Maple Mountain has won 42 straight matches against Utah opponents and posted a 29-1 record in 2025. Thornton had 422 kills (he had 429 last season) which is 4.7 kills per set. He raised his hitting percentage from .364 to .431 and totaled 49 aces, 43 total blocks and 169 digs.

In the 5A state semifinals against Alta and future BYU teammate Corbin Batista, Thornton totaled 25 kills in a 3-1 victory. He added 21 kills and hit .421 as the Golden Eagles swept Wasatch in the finals.

“Trey can hit and block really well, but one of the things that’s overlooked generally and one of the skill sets that sets him apart is his ball control,” Maple Mountain coach Napoleon Galang said. “His defense and passing is really good. If we asked him to be a libero, he’d be the best libero on the team.

“He really grew into his game this year. His IQ with his offense just skyrocketed. He added smart tips and deep pushes to the corner, just any kind of shot he needed to score. He added so much to his tool belt offensively and had 10 different ways to score, not just five.”

Two summers ago, Thornton moved to Utah and was introduced to his future teammates at a casual get-together where the group played pickup beach volleyball in a backyard. That was the start of a many friendships that would carry him through the transition of the move to Utah.

“Trey is a very quite and humble kid,” Galang said. “He doesn’t celebrate loudly and just shows what he is by the way he played. It’s cool to see that from such a high-caliber player. He lets his skills speak for him.”

Thornton had plenty of help from talented teammates in winning back-to-back state titles, including 6-7 junior setter Taft Hillman and 6-6 senior middle Manase Storey. Thornton, Hillman and Storey mentored younger players such as junior Matheus Borges and freshmen Kimball Olsen and McKay Beattie as they worked to replace key teammates who graduated from the 2024 state champions (Mac Hillman, Gavin Pricer).

“I think our team had a great sense of self,” Thornton said. “We knew our identity and we were just a family. We knew that we had each other’s backs every game. Every day at school we were always looking out for each other. We’re really good friends and translated into our game play because we trusted everyone to do everything for the right reasons to reach our goals.”

Thornton — whose mother, Alisha Griffiths, played basketball at BYU in the early 2000’s — will begin his Cougar career as a counselor at the school’s volleyball camps this spring and summer and intends to play for Shawn Olmstead in 2026.

“I would say the culture at BYU is very special,” he said. “I could feel it even before I went on my official visit. We went to one of the women’s volleyball games. It was sold out and I had kind of that ‘aha!’ moment. I was meant to be here. It’s where I’ve been led and I’ve always dreamed of playing there. The coaching is some of the best around. They really care about their players.”

Copyright © 2025 Ogden Newspapers of Utah, LLC | www.heraldextra.com | 1200 Towne Centre Blvd. STE 1058, Provo, UT 84601



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Legacy’s Rafa Urbina named BoCoPreps player of the year – Boulder Daily Camera

When Rafa Urbina first watched UCLA volleyball in its 2018 national championship loss to Long Beach State, it set him on a path toward dominance in the sport, not just in Colorado, but on the national scale. He decided then and there that wanted to be just like those players. This week, the recent Legacy […]

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When Rafa Urbina first watched UCLA volleyball in its 2018 national championship loss to Long Beach State, it set him on a path toward dominance in the sport, not just in Colorado, but on the national scale.

He decided then and there that wanted to be just like those players.

This week, the recent Legacy graduate trained with USA Volleyball in preparation for the U19 World Championships in Uzbekistan, which are slated to begin on July 24. Once he wraps that up, he’ll join UCLA, which won national titles in 2023 and 2024. The Bruins house the winningest men’s volleyball program ever, having raked in 21 championships since 1970.

Naturally, that talent at the setting position earned him the BoCoPreps boys volleyball player of the year, and he nabbed a similar honor from CHSAA in the 5A division. He wrapped up his one and only season at Legacy — after the Adams 12 district team moved there from Thornton — with 731 assists, and ended his entire high school career with 2,033.

His road to an already illustrious volleyball career first began when his older sister, Alexandra, started playing. He was 7 at the time, and picked up the sport himself four years later. She now plays beach volleyball at Santa Clara University.

“We’re a competitive family,” Urbina said. “I just wanted to be better than her, and so that’s how that started. I guess that’s kind of what sparked my love for the game. It’s just in our nature. I guess we want to win. I mean, we would always play Mario Kart or video games at home on the Wii. We’d always just want to beat each other. We always make everything like a little competition.”

His father, Jorge, was right there alongside him and Alexandra from the very beginning. Jorge served as the head coach for the Lightning this year, and they won two matches at the Class 5A state tournament before bowing out in the third round of the consolation bracket.

Legacy's Rafael Urbina (left) and Caden Ulibarri attempt a block on Coronado's Gavin Mason during the Lightning's regional tournament match against Coronado on May 2, 2025. (Alissa Noe/BoCoPreps.com)
Legacy’s Rafael Urbina (left) and Caden Ulibarri attempt a block on Coronado’s Gavin Mason during the Lightning’s regional tournament match against Coronado on May 2, 2025. (Alissa Noe/BoCoPreps.com)

Jorge pushed Rafa to focus on playing setter early on, noting that “he had good hands.” He knew he had a better chance of succeeding at the position, given the low volume of kids that choose it from the get-go.

“What I helped him with was with the fundamentals of the game of how to play, how to hit, how to pass, how to set,” Jorge explained. “That was the start, basic fundamentals, same thing I did with my daughter. Once you learn the fundamentals, then the rest of the game comes to you naturally.”

Over the past couple of years, Rafa has taken his skills all the way out to Campbell, Calif., to compete with the Bay to Bay traveling volleyball club, with the hopes of elevating his game even more. Once he wraps up at Worlds, he’ll join a college program that is already teeming with talent.

He hopes he can leave his mark early on, whatever that may look like.

“The current starter, he’s a senior and he’s elite,” Rafa explained. “He’s on the senior national team. He’s won two national championships (in) his three years, so it’s going to be hard to knock him off his role. I just want to be the best at my role, whatever my role is, and be the best man I can be in order to make us successful.”

Best of the rest

While Urbina headlined the small contingent of volleyball players from Broomfield and Boulder counties, he wasn’t the only one to make waves on CHSAA’s all-state teams. His teammate, senior Elisha Thao, joined him on 5A’s honorable mention list thanks to his 249 digs and 23 aces.

Niwot, also in 5A, earned a second-team nod for junior libero Charlie Kirtland, who ended his season with 124 digs. Junior middle blocker/outside hitter Diego Kheng secured a spot on honorable mention thanks to his 112 kills and 64 digs.


View a list of Prep sports and high school teams we cover.



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