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High Schoolers Can Now Make Money Like College Athletes, Kind of

An unprecedented era is now here. High school student-athletes, like NCAA competitors and professional athletes, can now make money off of their “Name, Image and Likeness” in Wisconsin. By an overwhelming 293-108 vote, the WIAA (the Wisconsin Interscholastic Athletic Association) approved this tectonic upheaval Friday, April 25 This new reality was unthinkable even a decade […]

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High Schoolers Can Now Make Money Like College Athletes, Kind of

An unprecedented era is now here.

High school student-athletes, like NCAA competitors and professional athletes, can now make money off of their “Name, Image and Likeness” in Wisconsin. By an overwhelming 293-108 vote, the WIAA (the Wisconsin Interscholastic Athletic Association) approved this tectonic upheaval Friday, April 25

This new reality was unthinkable even a decade ago.

Back before profiting off NIL became legal for college athletes between 2019 and 2021, the NCAA’s rules were pretty draconian. The NCAA banned student-athletes from receiving any money or other compensation from schools or boosters. This was so stringently interpreted that, for many years, when schools provided bagels and other breakfast nibbles to their teams, they couldn’t even provide cream cheese or peanut butter. Now, NFL-bound stars like Shadeur Sanders are paid millions from boosters and advertisers.


 

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The NCAA clutched its pearls so zealously about ensuring its 18-23 year old competitors remained amateur (all while leading the multi-billion-dollar business of college sports) that the courts and California’s legislature forced the floodgates open with no guardrails when NIL became the reality.

Every sports talk radio segment talking about the new NIL landscape uses the phrase “Wild, Wild West” at least once. In college, now, there are virtually no rules regarding how student-athletes can make money. Schools aren’t technically allowed to pay recruits – at least for the time being – but they are involved in funneling payments from boosters to recruits so it’s basically the same thing. This is in addition to the potential of earnings through branding and advertising deals.

‘Just the beginning’

With this WIAA ruling, Wisconsin, like the majority of other states so far, is preventing the courts or lawmakers from forcing NIL on its “amateur” athletics ecosystem. In short, these states getting out ahead, aiming to prevent a replay of what’s happening at the college level.

The new rules for high schoolers in Wisconsin are now much more restrictive and planned out.

“We are paving the way for student-athletes in Wisconsin to not only seize the opportunity NIL now offers – but to do so safely, compliantly, and successfully,” Stephanie Grady said in a statement. Grady is a former TV news anchor who now leads Influential Athlete, an NIL-focused coaching firm that consulted with the WIAA through the six months leading up to the Friday’s vote. “This is just the beginning.”


TO BE CLEAR: The WIAA is not actually governmental organization. But it does function like one. It’s a nonprofit, but has an effective monopoly on the policing of organized high school athletics across Wisconsin, overseeing around 90,000 student-athletes every year.


Here are six of the primary rules the WIAA now has in place surrounding NIL. Each, generally speaking, intends to protect schools’ athletics departments from becoming over-encumbered while also protecting the student-athletes from being exploited.

1. Athletes cannot wear their team uniform or apparel representing an athletic conference in relation to marketing opportunities.

2. Students cannot hire agents.

Notably, these first two rules are the opposite of those governing college athletes, who are routinely hiring agents and appearing in school gear via NIL deals.

3. Schools cannot facilitate deals on behalf of students.

4. Students still cannot “promote activities nor products associated with the following: gaming/gambling; alcoholic beverages, tobacco, cannabis, or related products; banned or illegal substances; adult entertainment products or services; (or) weapons.”

5. Payment cannot be contingent on athletic performance. For example, a student-athlete cannot agree to a contract that includes a bonus if their team wins or loses the state championship.

6. Participation in “NIL opportunities” must not interfere with the student-athlete’s academic or athletic obligations. As such, an excuse of “I can’t go to practice today and I have to skip fourth period because I have to go film a commercial” would go against the new bylaws.

A student could lose their ability to participate in school athletics altogether if the rules are broken.

The state of play

While this new beginning is a seismic shift in policy, it should not drastically change things for most every teenaged athlete immediately. In states with legalized NIL for high schoolers, only the most-elite teen athletes have landed any substantive deals. It’s the goal of Grady’s Influential Athlete to work with not only those with their eyes set on the pros, but also to work with any student-athlete who want to make some extra money by connecting with local businesses before college, developing essential life skills along the way.

Grady told MilMag in an interview before NIL’s official passage in Wisconsin, “We (at Influential Athlete) say that ‘NIL isn’t something that happens to you. It is something you now have the opportunity to take advantage of.’”

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Lodge Named Philly-SIDA Academic All-Area Women’s Track & Field Performer of the Year; Deal Awarded Honor on All-Area Team

Story Links PHILADELPHIA — Molly Lodge has been voted the 2025 Philly-SIDA Academic All-Area Women’s Track & Field Performer of the Year. Joining Lodge on the Academic All-Area Women’s Track & Field Team for the third consecutive year is teammate Izzy Deal as a total of 10 student-athletes were honored. The […]

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PHILADELPHIA — Molly Lodge has been voted the 2025 Philly-SIDA Academic All-Area Women’s Track & Field Performer of the Year.

Joining Lodge on the Academic All-Area Women’s Track & Field Team for the third consecutive year is teammate Izzy Deal as a total of 10 student-athletes were honored.

The team is selected by the sports information directors of 30 institutions in the Philadelphia Metropolitan area. To be eligible for Academic All-Area honors, an athlete must be in at least his or her second year at the institution and hold a cumulative grade point average of 3.30 or better.

Lodge was a two-time NCAA Division III Outdoor All-American in the 400-meter hurdles (2024, 25), capping her senior campaign with a series of standout performances. She was named a 2025 USTFCCCA Outdoor All-Region honoree in four events (200 meters, 400 meter hurdles, 4×100 relay, 4×400 relay) and earned Indoor All-Region honors in the 4×400 relay as well.

She was named the Outstanding Track Athlete at the 2025 NJAC Indoor Championships and captured the 2025 NJAC Outdoor title in the 200 meters. She also set school records in the 100 and 400 hurdles this season.

A graduate student in Computer Science, Lodge is a two-time College Sports Communicators (CSC) Academic All-District selection, a USTFCCCA Division III All-Academic Athlete, and received NJAC All-Academic Honorable Mention honors.

Deal, who is earning her Masters in Clinical Mental Health Counseling, scored a pair of All-American honors for the second year in a row in both the javelin and shot at the NCAA Outdoor Championships.

The graduate student earned USTFCCCA All-Region honors in the two events (javelin, shot) as well as being named the 2025 USTFCCCA Metro Region Outdoor Field Athlete of the Year. Deal was also selected the NJAC Outstanding Field Athlete at NJAC Championships for the second year in a row after winning the javelin and shot.

She is a two-time College Sports Communicators (CSC) Academic All-District selection as well as a member of the Chi Alpha Sigma (national student-athlete honor society) and is a Rowan Scholar of Distinction.

The team is consisted of Widener seniors Gabby Nye and Kayla Robinson; Haverford’s Olivia D’Aulerio; Temple’s Amira Green; West Chester’s Annika Hummell; Holy Family’s Ocelia Jones; Adria Retter from Villanova; and Hailey Shreffler from Eastern.

 



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Young U.S. Men’s Squad Opens 2025 VNL with Loss to Ukraine

COLORADO SPRINGS, Colo. (June 11, 2025) – The U.S. Men’s National Team opened the 2025 Volleyball Nations League with a 3-0 (25-22, 25-20, 25-23) loss to Ukraine on Wednesday in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. The U.S. (0-1) will face Iran on Thursday, June 12, at 5 p.m. PDT. Watch the match live on VBTV. Ukraine […]

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COLORADO SPRINGS, Colo. (June 11, 2025) – The U.S. Men’s National Team opened the 2025 Volleyball Nations League with a 3-0 (25-22, 25-20, 25-23) loss to Ukraine on Wednesday in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil.

The U.S. (0-1) will face Iran on Thursday, June 12, at 5 p.m. PDT. Watch the match live on VBTV.

Ukraine is in its first year in VNL and thus picked up its first-ever win against the young U.S. team. First-year head coach Karch Kiraly started 2024 Olympian Jeff Jendryk at middle blocker, Andrew Rowan at setter, Cooper Robinson and Jordan Ewert at outside hitter, Gabi Garcia at opposite, Merrick McHenry in the middle, and Kyle Dagostino at libero. Rowan, Robinson and McHenry were all making their VNL debuts.

From the beginning of the match, Ukraine used a strong serve to keep the U.S. off balance. That, along with several U.S. errors in set one, gave Ukraine the advantage it needed to win 25-22. Robinson led the U.S. in the set with six points on five kills and a block.

The U.S. kept with Ukraine in set two, down just one at 15-14, but Ukraine went on a 10-5 run to win 25-20. Kiraly spoke about his team’s performance in an interview with VBTV after set two.

“We’re just making not smart plays,” he said. “You got a little setter and a big middle, and we hit at the big middle instead of the little setter; pretty simple geometry there. [We have to] clean up our reception game a little, too, and keep the ball on our side of the net more. We’ve got some good hitters to set, but if we’re getting aced or passing over, that doesn’t help us at all. I can’t say I like a lot right now. but this is a part of the process. Everybody’s got to have their first VNL match, and it’s not always going to be pretty. That’s the beauty of the process. There’s lots of ugly and lots of struggle.”

The team responded in set three with better overall play, and jumped out to an early 10-5 lead. Ukraine began to crawl back, scoring four straight to make it 10-9. No one could grab the edge the rest of the match, until Ukraine broke the 23-23 deadlock for a 25-23 win.

Garcia and Robinson both finished the match with 13 points. Garcia had 10 kills, two blocks and an ace, and Robinson had 12 kills and a block. Ewert had seven kills; and McHenry had six points on three kills, two blocks and an ace. Champlin scored four points (one kill, two blocks, one ace), and Rowan had a block.

Ukraine led the U.S. in kills (40-33) and aces (5-3), but the U.S. held the edge in blocks (8-6).

U.S. Men’s Week One Roster for 2025 VNL

No. Name (Pos., Ht., Hometown, College, USAV Region)
3 Mason Briggs (L, 6-0, Long Beach, Calif., Long Beach State, Southern California)
4 Jeff Jendryk (MB, 6-10, Wheaton, Ill., Loyola Univ. Chicago, Great Lakes)
6 Quinn Isaacson (S, 6-2, Plainfield, Ill., Ball State, Great Lakes)
9 Gabi Garcia (OPP, 6-7, San Juan, Puerto Rico, BYU)
10 Kyle Dagostino (L, 5-9, Tampa, Florida, Stanford Univ., Florida)
15 Kyle Hobus (OPP, 6-7, San Pedro, Calif., CSUN, Southern California)
17 Andrew Rowan (S, 6-7, Trabuco Canyon, Calif., UCLA, Southern California)
18 Cooper Robinson (OH, 6-7, Pacific Palisades, Calif., UCLA, Southern California)
19 Patrick Gasman (MB, 6-10, Clovis, Calif., Univ. of Hawaii, Northern California)
23 Nolan Flexen (OH, 6-9, Rio Rancho, N.M., UC Irvine, Southern)
24 Merrick McHenry (MB, 6-7, Bedford, Texas, UCLA, North Texas)
25 Ethan Champlin (OH, 6-3, Oceanside, Calif., UCLA, Southern California)
28 Matthew Knigge (MB, 6-7, New Egypt, N.J., Vassar, Garden Empire)
29 Jordan Ewert (OH, 6-5, Antioch, Calif., Stanford, Northern California)

Head Coach:  Karch Kiraly
Assistant Coach: Luka Slabe
Assistant Coach: Javier Weber
Performance Analyst: Nate Ngo
Physiotherapist: Aaron Brock
Senior Strength and Conditioning Coach: Tim Pelot
Senior Sports Dietitian: Shawn Hueglin
Mental Performance Coach: Andrea Becker
Team Manager: David Dantes
Consultant Coach: Chris McGown
Consultant Coach: Marv Dunphy
Team Doctors:  Eugene Yim, Mark Hutchinson, Michael Shepard, Warren Young

U.S. Men’s Schedule for the 2025 Volleyball Nations League
Matches will be shown live and on-demand on VBTV, CBS Sports Network and Big Ten Network

(All times PDT)
Week 1: Rio de Janeiro, Brazil
June 11: Ukraine def. USA, 3-0 (25-22, 25-20, 25-23)
June 12 at 5 p.m. vs. Iran
June 14 at 9:30 a.m. vs. Slovenia
June 15 at 1 p.m. vs. Cuba



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Türkiye down Germany to halt their historic run of European Championships appearances

Türkiye won a tight clash with Germany 17-16 to take the runners-up spot in Group B. Photo: Medya En For the first time since the inaugural 1926 European Championships, the German men’s water polo team will be missing from the grand stage after they lost their final qualification game on Wednesday. The defeat came in […]

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Türkiye won a tight clash with Germany 17-16 to take the runners-up spot in Group B. Photo: Medya En

For the first time since the inaugural 1926 European Championships, the German men’s water polo team will be missing from the grand stage after they lost their final qualification game on Wednesday. The defeat came in Istanbul, where hosts Türkiye downed them 17-16 in the decisive match. As the 2026 European Championships qualifiers came to a close across the continent, Slovakia, Netherlands, Georgia and France finished first in their respective groups.

European Water Polo Championships
Men’s Qualifications, Day 4

Wednesday 11 June 2025

Group A (Kranj)

Czechia 10-17 Poland
Slovenia 9-19 Netherlands

Standings: 1. Netherlands 12pts, 2. Slovenia 9pts, 3. Great Britain 6pts, 4. Poland 3pts, 5. Czechia 0pts

Group B (Istanbul)

Slovakia 23-8 Finland
Türkiye 17-16 Germany

Standings: 1. Slovakia 12pts, 2. Türkiye 9pts, 3. Germany 6pts, 4. Sweden 3pts, 5. Finland 0pts

Group C (Tbilisi)

Bulgaria 14-13 Switzerland
Georgia 19-9 Israel

Standings: 1. Georgia 9pts, 2. Israel 6pts, 3. Bulgaria 3pts, 4. Switzerland 0pts

Group D (Gzira)

Ukraine 14-13 Portugal
Malta 14-15 France

Standings: 1. France 8pts, 2. Malta 7pts, 3. Ukraine 3pts, 4. Portugal 0pts

Türkiye’s players celebrate qualifying for the European Championships after beating Germany. Photo: Medya En

Germany have always had a presence at the European Championships, sometimes as strong contenders, sometimes as the underdogs, and they’ve (almost) been at the top table every time. When they were not, like in 1947 and in 1950, it was only for political reasons (their entry was denied). Also in 1962, the West Germany team refused to take part at the Europeans in Leipzig, though East Germany played in that tournament. So, to be clear, when they were eligible, and politics didn’t intervene, they have always lined up at the start of the Europeans.

One hundred years after playing at the first European Championships – and grabbing the bronze medal – they now won’t go to Belgrade after losing their decisive qualification match to Türkiye in Istanbul on Wednesday.

Indeed, the writing was already on the wall after their devastating five-goal loss to Slovakia on the opening day. Because of that, it all came down to this last match against the hosts. And the Türks, enjoying all the advantages of playing at home, managed to take the upper hand in a game of several twists and turns.

The lead was changing hands constantly, as the Germans led 2-3, then the home side responded with three connecting goals, then came a German 0-3 rush for 5-6, but at half-time, Türkiye were 8-7 ahead.

Early in the third, after burying two penalties in 56 seconds, the hosts jumped to 11-8 and sat comfortably in the driving seat… Only to see the Germans catching a wave and hitting four goals in a row.

Denis Strelezkij stepped up, as he fired in a hat-trick in 1:43 minutes and Mark Gansen also converted a penalty to make it 11-12 with 1:05 remaining.

The Germans then killed two man-downs and had a six on five to take a two-goal advantage for the first time in the match, but they missed it, which was crucial, as Engin Colak then equalised from the centre.

Just 55 seconds later, Efe Naipoglu scored from action, then, with 3:50 on the clock, Fatih Acar sent the ball home from the penalty line for 14-12.

From that point, it was a back-and-forth game, as Strelezkij pulled one back twice, but the Germans were unable to prevent the Türks from scoring from three connecting possessions.

And once they failed to respond, Atakan Destici’s man-up goal put the Türks into a winning position at 17-14 with 1:27 to play.

Strelezkij tried to create a miracle single-handedly, hitting two goals in 41 seconds for 17-16 – his eigth and ninth of the game – but only 29 seconds remained.

And then it was all over when a red card was given to Zoran Bozic with 11 seconds to go and the Türks celebrated their eighth qualification since 1966 and their first since 2021.

The Germans, after participating in 33 editions, will have to watch the Belgrade action from home.

Germany’s qualification campaign came to a disappointing end for them in Istanbul. Photo: Medya En

Also in Istanbul, Slovakia completed their brilliant set of results with a 23-8 thrashing of Finland, after kicking off with a powerful 7-0 opening period.

Elsewhere, in the other three groups, the two qualifying spots had already been booked the day before, but the top ranks were still to be decided.

Georgia beat Israel with ease in Tbilisi, while the Netherlands did the same against Slovenia in Kranj – with both matches ending with the same scoreline – 19-9.

A bit unexpectedly, the showdown between France and Malta went all the way to penalties, as the favourites France found it surprisingly tough to overcome the hosts.

Malta were 7-3 up early in the third, which was remarkable since many of the French players had returned to Gzira two weeks after playing there for Marseille in the Champions League Final Four (the home players could only dream of reaching similar heights).

The evening clash was an epic battle and one the home supporters will remember for some time, especially as the Maltese were superior for three periods – they were leading 8-6 with eight minutes remaining.

Steven Camilleri’s 6m shot even put them 9-6 ahead with 5:30 on the clock, but the French stepped up in the last few minutes and with 1:17 to go, Thomas Vernoux finally equalised at 9-9.

The hosts weren’t done, though, as Sam Gialanze took back the lead from action with 47 seconds remaining, but Enzo Nardon made it even again, with just 0:25 to play.

Malta earned a late man-up, but they missed it, so the decision was left to the penalties.

In the end, one save made the difference, as Arshak Hovhannisyan made a stop in the second round of the shootout to deny Liam Galea, which was enough for the French to clinch the top spot after a game where they never led in regular time.

Netherlands made few mistakes against Slovenia, as they powered their way to a fourth successive victory in Kranj. Photo: Gorazd Kavčič (Gorazd Kavcic/www.rezultat.si)

Watch all replays of the games on www.euroaquaticstv.com and see all the results/tables by clicking here.

Gergely Csurka for European Aquatics



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2025 NCAA Track and Field Championships

After months of chasing fast times and podium finishes at the regional level, the best collegiate athletes will face off at the ultimate national championship. On Wednesday, June 11, the 2025 NCAA Division 1 Outdoor Track and Field Championships will kick off at Hayward Field in Eugene, Oregon. Here’s everything you need to know, including […]

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After months of chasing fast times and podium finishes at the regional level, the best collegiate athletes will face off at the ultimate national championship. On Wednesday, June 11, the 2025 NCAA Division 1 Outdoor Track and Field Championships will kick off at Hayward Field in Eugene, Oregon. Here’s everything you need to know, including broadcast information and storylines, heading into the NCAA championships this week.

How to Watch the 2025 NCAA Outdoor Championships

The NCAA championships are set to begin on Wednesday, June 11 and continue until Saturday, June 14 with a packed schedule of events each day. The men’s competition will be contested on Wednesday, June 11 and Friday, June 13, and the women’s events will be held on Thursday, June 12 and Saturday, June 14. Each day of the NCAA championships will be broadcast live on ESPN and ESPN2. You can watch every multi event and field event live on ESPN+.

5 Races to Watch at the NCAA Meet

The Men’s 100 Meters

During the NCAA regional championships, a handful of athletes executed breakthrough performances in the east and west, including sprinter Jordan Anthony. The redshirt sophomore from Arkansas, who also plays wide receiver for the Razorbacks, ran a wind-aided 9.75 seconds (+2.1 m/s wind) at the NCAA West First Round in College Station, Texas. The performance is equal to No. 2 on the collegiate all-time list and equal to No. 3 on the U.S. all-time list in all-conditions. He also qualified for the NCAA championships in the 200 meters after running 20.20 seconds.

Anthony’s biggest competitor will likely be Abdul-Rasheed Saminu. The senior from South Florida is also having a breakout season after clocking 9.86 seconds to win the 100 meters at the NCAA East First Round in Jacksonville, Florida. The athlete from Ghana is now ranked No. 2 on the collegiate all-time list for wind-legal times, right behind collegiate record-holder Christian Coleman (9.82). Expect to see a thrilling duel between the two sprint stars this week starting with the first round on Wednesday.

2024 ncaa division i men's and women's outdoor track & field championship

Isaac Wasserman//Getty Images

The Steeplechase

The men’s and women’s steeplechase features two major contenders this year. On the women’s side, Doris Lemngole will aim to continue her streak of NCAA titles. In the fall, the sophomore from Alabama won the NCAA cross-country crown two weeks before breaking the collegiate record in the 5,000 meters. In March, at the NCAA indoor championships, Lemngole won the 5,000 meters and finished second in the 3,000 meters. In April, she shattered the collegiate record in the steeplechase, blazing 9:10.13 at the Wake Forest Invitational.

Though Lemngole is considered the heavy favorite in Eugene, two other athletes have also broken into the collegiate all-time list this season, including Pamela Kosgei of New Mexico (9:15.93) and Lexy Halladay-Lowry of BYU (9:18.05). The rivalry will heat up when the three battle through two rounds of racing this weekend.

The men’s competition will be led by Geoffrey Kirwa, who clocked 8:13.89 at the Bryan Clay Invitational in April. The freshman from Louisville is now No. 2 on the collegiate all-time list, behind long-time record-holder Henry Rono (8:05.4). So far this season, the competitor who’s come closest to Kirwa is Matthew Kosgei of New Mexico, who clocked 8:22.13 at the Stanford Invitational in April. With an NCAA title on the line, will Kirwa live up to the hype in his first championship appearance?

The women’s 800 meters

This year’s championship will feature one of the deepest middle-distance fields in history. So far this season, six women have broken two minutes in the 800 meters, a massive feat for college-aged athletes.

The final will likely be led by Michaela Rose after the senior from LSU notched a 1:58.12 personal best at the LSU Invitational in May. The 2024 NCAA outdoor champion will be out for redemption after finishing fourth at the NCAA indoor championships in March. Meghan Hunter of BYU, Gladys Chepngetich of Clemson, Makayla Paige of North Carolina, Roisin Willis of Stanford, and Smilla Kolbe of North Florida have also gone sub-2 this year. Each athlete is on the top 25 all-time collegiate performers list with Rose now No. 2 behind collegiate record-holder Athing Mu (1:57.73)—setting the stage for a highly anticipated showdown in Saturday’s final.

2024 u.s. olympic team trials track & field day 2

Patrick Smith//Getty Images

The men’s 1500 meters

This year, the men’s 1500 meters features three collegiate record-holders among a handful of all-time standouts.

In December, Ethan Strand opened his indoor track season with a collegiate record in the 3,000 meters, winning the BU Sharon Colyear-Danville Season Opener in 7:30.15. The junior from North Carolina later shattered the collegiate record in the indoor mile, running 3:48.32 in Boston. He’s come close to breaking the record in the 1500 meters—running a 3:33.22 personal best—but that distinction currently belongs to Liam Murphy.

In March, the senior from Villanova blasted 3:33.02 to win Raleigh Relays. In the same race, his teammate Marco Langon and Virginia’s Gary Martin (who is the co-owner of the collegiate record in the indoor mile after equaling Strand’s time in February) also dipped under the previous collegiate record (3:33.74) set by the late Eliud Kipsang in 2022. Abel Teffra of Georgetown will also be in the mix after running 3:33.84, making him No. 6 on the collegiate all-time list.

The women’s 5,000 and 10,000 meters

Until Parker Valby broke 15 minutes for the 5,000 meters last year, no collegian had ever dipped under the elusive barrier in the event. This year, three athletes have already gone sub-15, including distance phenoms Grace Hartman and Pamela Kosgei.

Kosgei, a sophomore from New Mexico, started the trend at the Bryan Clay Invitational, which she won in 14:52.45, just 0.27 seconds shy of Valby’s collegiate record. Halladay-Lowry was right behind her, running 14:52.93, though she will only be competing in the steeplechase this weekend. Two weeks later, Hartman ran her own breakthrough at the Duke Twilight meet. The junior from North Carolina State clocked 14:58.11, a rapid progression after running a season’s best of 15:28 in 2024. Kosgei is now No. 2 and Hartman is No. 4 on the collegiate all-time list of performers in the event.

The duo hold the same respective rankings in the 10,000 meters after Kosgei notched a 31:02.73 personal best and Hartman clocked 31:20.60 at separate meets on the same weekend in March. With 15,000 meters of racing ahead of them in Eugene, who will come out on top in this exciting double?

Headshot of Taylor Dutch

Taylor Dutch is a writer and editor living in Austin, Texas, and a former NCAA track athlete who specializes in fitness, wellness, and endurance sports coverage. Her work has appeared in Runner’s World, SELF, Bicycling, Outside, and Podium Runner.



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Owensville Dutchgirl volleyball camp hosts over 60 future and present athletes

By Will Johnson, Sports Editor Owensville High School (OHS) aged volleyball campers (above) gather for a group photo while middle-school aged campers (below work on serving and spiking. ________________________________________________________________________________ Volleyball Dutchgirls move camp to Owensville Elementary School due to OHS bleacher project Throughout the early part of last week, interested volleyball players going into fifth […]

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By Will Johnson, Sports Editor

Owensville High School (OHS) aged volleyball campers (above) gather for a group photo while middle-school aged campers (below work on serving and spiking.

________________________________________________________________________________

Volleyball Dutchgirls move camp to Owensville Elementary School due to OHS bleacher project

Throughout the early part of last week, interested volleyball players going into fifth grade through high school worked on fundamentals which included serving, setting, spiking and passing. Normally held inside Owensville High School’s main gym, Jamie Ridenhour’s camp was moved over to Owensville Elementary School’s gym due to the current bleacher replacement project at OHS.

 

 





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Summer reading kickoff party set in Rehoboth June 16

The Rehoboth Beach Public Library will hold its Summer Reading Kick-Off Party from 11 a.m. to 1 p.m., Monday, June 16, in the pavilion at Grove Park near the Rehoboth Avenue traffic circle. Entertainment and activities for kids of all ages will include inflatable bowling, giant beach volleyball, cornhole, sack races, parachute races and an […]

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The Rehoboth Beach Public Library will hold its Summer Reading Kick-Off Party from 11 a.m. to 1 p.m., Monday, June 16, in the pavilion at Grove Park near the Rehoboth Avenue traffic circle.

Entertainment and activities for kids of all ages will include inflatable bowling, giant beach volleyball, cornhole, sack races, parachute races and an interactive music class.

Attendees can stop by the summer reading table to register for an adventure-packed program that rewards kids for reading books and attending summer events. All registrants will receive a free book and two tickets for the Wrap-Up Raffle to be held Friday, Aug. 8, when lucky readers will win prizes donated by several generous Rehoboth businesses.

For every 10 books they read, kids ages 11 and under can earn five tickets and a free book; ages 12-18 can earn this prize for reading five books, with the understanding that book length and difficulty increase with reading level. Kids will also receive a ticket for every library summer program they attend.

Shannon Davis, Rehoboth Beach Public Library youth services librarian, said, “We would love to expand on the successful summer we had last year, with 123 summer reading program participants reading over 1,925 books. This year, let’s see if we can make it to 2,000 books.”

Adults can join the fun with adventure bingo cards, which award tickets for doing fun activities around Rehoboth.

Free reading logs will be available for pickup all summer long at the Rehoboth Beach Public Library, 226 Rehoboth Ave. 



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