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Zilliken Earns All-Big 12 Beach Volleyball Honors

Story Links DALLAS – The Big 12 Conference announced the beach volleyball end of year awards and all-conference accolades on Wednesday (April 30). Arizona sophomore Ashlyn Zilliken received All-Big 12 honors after pairing with Madeline Walker to post a 21-8 record this season at the No. 3 spot in the lineup.  It […]

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DALLAS – The Big 12 Conference announced the beach volleyball end of year awards and all-conference accolades on Wednesday (April 30). Arizona sophomore Ashlyn Zilliken received All-Big 12 honors after pairing with Madeline Walker to post a 21-8 record this season at the No. 3 spot in the lineup. 

It is the first conference honor for the native of McKinney, Texas, who led the team in wins on the year. The 21 victories are tied for eighth-most in program history in a single season, including wins over No. 1 TCU, Cal Poly, Boise State and Pepperdine. 

2025 Big 12 Beach Volleyball Awards

Pair of the Year – Anhelina Khmil and Ana Vergara, TCU

Freshman of the Year – Sofia Izuzuiza, TCU

Scholar-Athlete of the Year – Kylie Pitzak, Utah

Coach of the Year – Hector Gutierrez, TCU

 

Big 12 All-Conference Team

Ashlyn Zilliken, Arizona

Daniella Kensinger, Arizona State

Ava Kirunchyk, Arizona State

Samaya Morin, Arizona State

Daniela Alvarez, TCU

Maria Gonzalez, TCU

Hailey Hamlett, TCU

Anhelina Khmil, TCU

Tania Moreno, TCU

Ana Vergara, TCU

Bella Vezzani, Utah

 



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The X’s Have It – North Carolina A&T

Story Links GREENSBORO – It was a big season for North Carolina A&T men’s track and field, culminating on Thursday with two postseason outdoor track and field awards from the Coastal Athletic Association (CAA) for two of its student-athletes. Sophomore Xavier Partee claimed CAA Men’s Field Athlete of the Year. Sophomore teammate […]

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GREENSBORO – It was a big season for North Carolina A&T men’s track and field, culminating on Thursday with two postseason outdoor track and field awards from the Coastal Athletic Association (CAA) for two of its student-athletes.

Sophomore Xavier Partee claimed CAA Men’s Field Athlete of the Year. Sophomore teammate Xzaviah Taylor captured CAA Men’s Athlete of the Year.

Taylor earned second-team All-American honors from the United States Track and Field Cross Country Coaches Association (USTFCCCA) in the 400H. Taylor advanced to the NCAA East Prelims in 2024 in the 400H, but this season, he elevated to a new level. He won CAA outdoor titles in the 400H, 400m and he helped the 4×100 team finish second.

Taylor entered NCAA nationals with the best qualifying time coming out of the NCAA East Prelims in the 400H, running a time of 49.18 to break the program record. Additionally, he ran on the 4×400-meter relay team that won at the prestigious Drake Relays.

“It means a lot to me,” said Taylor. “I went through a couple of struggles my freshman year, learning how to run my races. Coming into my sophomore year, I made a conscious effort to put in the work. I focused on my craft. I did what I had to do, and I came to conference, and I doubled. It showed how much work I put in over the years.”

In addition to having a twin brother who excels at track, his father, Angelo Taylor, was a three-time Olympian and three-time world champion in the 4×400 relay. Therefore, he fully understands the journey and is going through the process to reach his ultimate goals.

“I just need to compete more, and having competed at NCAA nationals helps,” said Taylor. “I have to compete against the best even more. That was my first time there in my individual event, so it was a little nerve-wracking for me.

Taylor also acknowledged how much fun he had at nationals competing against the nation’s best.

“It showed me how much experience they had and that they had to wait their turn. The guy who won finished fifth two years ago, then he finished second the next year, and then, of course, this year, he won. It showed me he put in the work and just stayed patient.”

XAVIER PARTEE

Partee also has a father with a familiar name. Derrick Partee is a 2000 graduate of North Carolina A&T and the head boys basketball coach at Ben L. Smith High School in Greensboro. Xavier said there is no question he comes from a basketball family. He planned to become a walk-on for the A&T men’s basketball team upon becoming a student at A&T.

Then, by some random chance, someone encouraged him to try track and field during his senior year at Smith High School. Partee started with the high jump, but he wasn’t sold on the event. Therefore, someone suggested the triple jump. Bingo!! That led Partee to come across another familiar name and face in the Triad area Roy “Spaceman” Thompson.

Thompson is the former legendary director of track and field at A&T and a former track and field athlete at A&T who has coached a few jump champions over the years.

“Shout out to Space,” said Partee. “He showed me so much about the event. I fell in love with it.”

During his freshman outdoor season, Partee finished second in the triple jump at the 2024 CAA Outdoor Track and Field Championships. Before winning the CAA indoor championship in the triple jump in 2025, Partee jumped 51 feet, 1 ¾ inches, at Texas Tech’s Corky Classic to finish eighth.  

“To go from 49 (feet) to skip 50 and go to 51, I wondered if it was a fluke,” said Partee.

He wondered about that for a while. Partee opened the outdoor season by sustaining an injury at High Point University during the Aggies outdoor track and field opener, forcing him to miss a month. When he returned, the Aggies were hosting the Aggie Invitational at Johnson Track. It was no fluke. Partee jumped 50 feet, 10 ½ inches, to win the event.

“I religiously rehabbed my hamstring injury every day,” Partee said. “Then, to do that, my first meet back, I believed I could really be something happen in this event.”  

Partee jumped 52 feet, 4 ¾ inches at the NCAA East Prelims to qualify for nationals as a sophomore. He finished 17th nationally at nationals, jumping 50 feet, 3 ¼ inches.

“I really haven’t had a second to sit with it,” said Partee about being named CAA Men’s Field Athlete of the Year. “Right now, I just feel ready for the next step. I feel ready for next year. We put in a lot of work obviously to get here, so I’m excited about getting back to work to see how much better we can do.”





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Looking ahead to Orioles' draft with Jim Callis

SCROLL DOWN TO READ ARTICLE Jim Callis is a senior writer for MLB.com. He covers prospects and ahead of next month’s draft, spoke about the Orioles and what their strategy might be on July 13th. This interview has been edited for brevity. Question: How does this draft class look as compared with past years? Jim […]

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Looking ahead to Orioles' draft with Jim Callis

SCROLL DOWN TO READ ARTICLE

Jim Callis is a senior writer for MLB.com. He covers prospects and ahead of next month’s draft, spoke about the Orioles and what their strategy might be on July 13th.

This interview has been edited for brevity.

Question: How does this draft class look as compared with past years?

Jim Callis: “I think it’s a little down compared to past years. You don’t have the top-of-the-draft-type talents. The last couple of years we’ve had a bunch of guys that we’d say would be overall No. 1 picks in most years

“In 2023, it was Paul Skenes and Dylan Crews and Wyatt Langford, Max Clark and Walker Jenkins. Last year, it was even more: Travis Bazzana,  Charlie Condon and Chase Burns and Hagen Smith, Nick Kurtz, JJ Wetherholt and Jac Caglianone.

“This year, I don’t think anyone has separated themselves from the pack. The strength undoubtedly is that there are a lot of high school shortstops and high school infielders

Q: Is this a good year for the Orioles to have three picks in the top 31 and six in the top 100?

Callis: “I think it’s always good to have extra draft picks. They’re not picking at the top, so I actually think you could argue that the guy they get at 19 might not be that much different than the guy they get at No. 9. You have those extra picks at the end of the first round, and that helps, too.

“Any scout will tell you there’s always talent in the draft, and it’s the team’s job is to go out and find it, and the thing the Orioles have going for them is that they don’t pick before 19, but because of those extra picks, they have  the fifth-highest draft pool in baseball. It’s only $500,000 behind the number one team. They have as much spending power as any team in baseball and can do some damage with it.”

Q: The Orioles have to restock the farm system because so many prospects have either graduated to the major leagues or been traded. Do you think they’ll draft for specific need with those first three picks or for the best available player?

Callis: “I think they’ll probably go best available player the way their draft board is lined up. You know this regime has not spent very many early picks at all on pitchers. The flip side is that the team needs pitching more than anything at both the major league level and the minor league level,

“I’m not convinced that they’re necessarily going to change that. I would be kind of surprised if they took a pitcher with one of those three first picks, especially at 19, but I do think it’s probably best player available because I think the way they line up their boards.”

Q: But isn’t there pressure on them to take a pitcher because it’s such an obvious need?

Callis: “If you look at what the organization needs, they still have a bunch of young hitters, and they’re trying to figure out how to get them in the lineup at the same time. Samuel Basallo is still in Triple-A. The pitching staff is kind of old and not really effective. I don’t think they have that many guys on the pitching staff under 30 years old playing major roles at the big league level.

“I don’t know that the owner is saying: ‘Hey, go get some pitching.’ They haven’t drafted that way, so I don’t think the front office is going to say we have to get more pitching.

“I think the pressure is more on the outside, and people saying, ‘They need to get some pitching. I don’t think they feel some internal pressure, like, ‘hey, we need to draft some pitchers.’ If you look at their philosophy, it clearly is, ‘we’re not going to spend high picks on pitchers, and we’ll find out the ways to find them. All things being equal, it would make sense that two of those first three picks to be pitchers. This regime has just not drafted many pitchers in the first three rounds.”

Q: How would you rate the Orioles’ farm system?

Callis: “It’s not as strong as it used to be, and that’s natural. It’s very hard to sustain a top farm system when you’re winning at the big league level. Instead of picking in the top five and having those huge bonus pools, you’re picking around 20, and you have less international money. You’re making trades like the Corbin Burnes trade, and you’re giving up prospects.

“It’s very rare to see a team win at the big league level and continue to sustain a top-shelf farm system. Coming into the year, we had the Orioles ranked as our No. 15 farm system. I haven’t contemplated farm system rankings because the draft’s approaching but they’d probably be down a little bit.

“Coby Mayo, who was ranked in our top 15 prospects, has graduated, out of rookie status, out of prospect status. It’s a farm system with one top 100 prospect, and that’s Samuel Basallo, who is one of the best hitters in the minor leagues, and he’s interesting.

“There’s Enrique Bradfield. He’s interesting. We have him as the No. 2 prospect, and he’s kind of polarizing. He can definitely run, steal bases and play a good center field, but there’s mixed opinions of how much impact he has on the bat. Chayce McDermott is kind of a rough year. He has a good arm. Vance Honeycutt, last year’s No. 1 pick. He had probably the best tools on the college side of the draft, but he’s hitting .185 in High-A, and they were swing-and-miss concerns with him.

“The farm system isn’t at that level where it was the best farm system in baseball. There have been some positive developments. [Aberdeen right-hander] Michael Forret has pitched pretty well. That’s a positive development. They need more of them. They’re kind of in the contender status of farm systems.”

Q: Considering those last two drafts, was it that they were drafting lower or did the Orioles lose their touch?

Callis: “Nobody has a good draft year after year. When you’re picking No. 1 and you have a huge bonus pool, you can take Adley Rutschman and you can push Gunnar Henderson down to your second-round pick. You can’t do that at 19 or at 22 or wherever they’re picking.

“It’s early, but last year’s draft does not look great right now. Vance Honeycutt is really struggling, and to be honest, there were swing-and-miss concerns with him. [Second pick in 2024] Griff O’Ferrall isn’t really hitting, and he was a glove-first shortstop. I don’t think we thought he’d be hitting .207 in High-A.

“[Second rounder] Ethan Anderson had an OK year at Virginia, and he’s struggling a little bit in High-A, too. You could argue guys are being pushed aggressively, too. Coming out of the ACC, you should be able to handle High-A in your first year, also.

“I wouldn’t say that last year’s draft is in the books, and we know what it is, but it’s not looking very good right now. The guys who made the good picks in prior drafts. I wouldn’t say they’ve lost their mojo.

“If you want a positive development, there’s a guy they spent extra money on in the 16th round, Nate George, who’s a really athletic high school kid from Illinois. He’s played really well. He might be a nice late-round find. It’s still early, but you would hope that your ’24 draft class was looking better than it has been in ’25.”

Call for questions: I answer Orioles questions most weekdays. Please send yours to: [email protected].

O’s VIDEOS FROM AROUND THE WEB





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Johnson Named Men’s Outdoor Track and Field Coach of the Year

Track & Field | 6/26/2025 5:59:00 PM Story Links GREENSBORO – Allen Johnson pulled off the double on Thursday by winning Coastal Athletic Association (CAA) Men’s Outdoor Track and Field Coach of the Year three months after winning CAA Men’s Indoor Coach of the Year. The conference announced its postseason honors on […]

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Track & Field | 6/26/2025 5:59:00 PM

GREENSBORO – Allen Johnson pulled off the double on Thursday by winning Coastal Athletic Association (CAA) Men’s Outdoor Track and Field Coach of the Year three months after winning CAA Men’s Indoor Coach of the Year. The conference announced its postseason honors on Thursday.
 
“I’m humbled, really,” said Johnson. “It is a time of reflection. To realize where the program was when I got here in 2022. Looking back on the journey we undertook in 2023 and seeing what we have accomplished to date is humbling.
 
There were so many trials and tribulations along the way, which was unbelievable. If it weren’t for the type of student athletes we have in this program, this wouldn’t be possible. It wasn’t for the kind of coaches I have on this staff, this wouldn’t be possible. If it weren’t for the type of people I work with in athletics and at the university, this wouldn’t be possible. I didn’t do this alone. I have had a lot of help.”
 

Johnson led the Aggies to the 2025 CAA men’s indoor and outdoor track and field championships, winning the outdoor title at A&T’s Marcus T. Johnson Track. The Aggies won the outdoor title by 36 points over Monmouth, claiming titles in the 400 meters, 800m, 400-meter hurdles, triple jump, shot put, and the 4×400-meter relay.
 
In addition, the Aggies took the top four spots in the 400m, the top three spots in the shot put, and the top two spots in the 800m and the 400H. Johnson then sent 14 male student-athletes to the NCAA Division I East Preliminary Round at the University of North Florida’s Hodges Stadium in Jacksonville, Fla.
 
Xzaviah Taylor (400H, 4×100, 4×400), his twin brother Isaiah Taylor (110H, 400H, 4×100), Partree (triple jump), Correy McManus Jr. (4×100), Jaeden Gumbs (4×100), Brandon Nya (4×100), Elijah Thomas (4×400), Caleb Gurnell (4×400), and Dyimond Walker (4×400) all advanced to the 2025 NCAA Outdoor Track and Field Championships at the University of Oregon’s Hayward Field in Eugene, Ore.
 
 





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Big Ten and Big 12 partner with PayPal to manage student athlete payments

Five-year deal agreed with Big 12 reportedly receiving US$100m Arrangement includes sponsorship elements PayPal keen to work with other regulations amid changing regulations Digital payments provider PayPal is working with the Big Ten and Big 12 college sports conferences to help them manage payments to student athletes now permitted under National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) […]

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Big Ten and Big 12 partner with PayPal to manage student athlete payments

  • Five-year deal agreed with Big 12 reportedly receiving US$100m
  • Arrangement includes sponsorship elements
  • PayPal keen to work with other regulations amid changing regulations

Digital payments provider PayPal is working with the Big Ten and Big 12 college sports conferences to help them manage payments to student athletes now permitted under National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) rules.

For more than a century, US colleges were prohibited from directly or indirectly paying students to reward their involvement with official sports programmes despite NCAA members generating billions of dollars in broadcast, matchday and commercial income.

However, since 2018, student athletes have been allowed to profit from their name, image and likeness (NIL) and last month a US$2.8 billion settlement paved the way for direct payments through revenue sharing agreements. This settlement compensates past athletes for their efforts and permits NCAA Division I schools to distribute up to US$20.5 million to student athletes each year.

The Big Ten and Big 12’s deals with PayPal will both facilitate and commercialise this new reality. Under the terms of the five-year deals, payments will begin on 1st July 2025, with funds will be distributed directly to student PayPal accounts.

PayPal will also become the preferred payment partner at selected schools while the company’s Venmo social payments platform will serve as the presenting partner for the Big Ten Rivalry Series. Venmo will also serve as the official partner for the Big 12 Conference across football, basketball and Olympic sports championships for both men and women.

“We are thrilled to enter into this landmark partnership with PayPal and Venmo,” said Big 12 commissioner Brett Yormark. “As we embark on a new era of college athletics, aligning with a global leader like PayPal will unlock a wealth of opportunities for the Big 12. This partnership will also empower our student-athletes to receive payments through a secure, trusted platform they already know and use.”

“We look forward to partnering with PayPal to ensure a secure, rapid and reliable way for student-athletes to receive institutional payments as we welcome in this new era in college athletics,” added Big Ten commissioner Tony Petitti.

Financial terms have not been disclosed, but PayPal’s deal with the Big 12 is believed to be worth nine figures, while PayPal has confirmed it is in discussions about similar arrangements with other conferences. CBS Sports reports that the Big 12 and PayPal had previously been in discussions over title sponsorship.

“We’re proud to help lead this transformation in college athletics by making it easier and faster for student-athletes to receive funds and continue to bring trusted and innovative commerce solutions to the heart of campus life,” said Alex Chriss, PayPal chief executive. “From receiving institutional payments to making everyday purchases, we’re helping student-athletes, families, and schools engage in new ways that are modern, secure, and built for the future.”

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Muscle Beach History Pop-Up Exhibit to be Presented at Pier 360 Festival

Visitors can view historical photographs, explore iconic stories, and watch a short documentary highlighting its athletic legacy The Santa Monica Conservancy will present a special exhibition, “The History of Muscle Beach,” at the Museum of Beach Life pop-up on the Santa Monica Pier this weekend, offering a look at the birthplace of America’s physical fitness […]

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Visitors can view historical photographs, explore iconic stories, and watch a short documentary highlighting its athletic legacy

The Santa Monica Conservancy will present a special exhibition, “The History of Muscle Beach,” at the Museum of Beach Life pop-up on the Santa Monica Pier this weekend, offering a look at the birthplace of America’s physical fitness boom, organizers announced.

The free event, part of the Pier 360 Beach Festival, runs from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. on Saturday, June 28, and Sunday, June 29, at 200 Santa Monica Pier. Visitors can view historical photographs, explore iconic stories, and watch a short documentary highlighting the athletic legacy of Muscle Beach, which opened in the 1930s. The exhibition, curated by local icons including Rich Wilken and Jeff Ho, also features surf and paddle memorabilia, tracing the origins of two-person beach volleyball and mainland paddleboard racing.

A special presentation is scheduled for 11:30 a.m. on Saturday, with Steve Ford, curator of MuscleBeach.net and spokesperson for the Muscle Beach Alumni Association, discussing the history of Muscle Beach Santa Monica and Muscle Beach Venice. The exhibit celebrates the site’s renewal over decades and its ongoing influence on fitness enthusiasts.

The Museum of Beach Life honors the pier’s impact on Southern California beach culture, showcasing legendary figures who shaped its active lifestyle. The event is open to all, with no registration required.



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Women’s Track and Field Sweeps Annual Illinois Athletic Awards for Second-Straight Season

Story Links CHAMPAIGN, Ill. – The Fighting Illini women’s track and field team has won all three University of Illinois Annual Athletic Awards including Athlete, Newcomer and Freshman of the Year as voted on by Illinois head coaches and DIA executive staff for the second-consecutive season. Long jumper Tacoria Humphrey […]

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CHAMPAIGN, Ill. – The Fighting Illini women’s track and field team has won all three University of Illinois Annual Athletic Awards including Athlete, Newcomer and Freshman of the Year as voted on by Illinois head coaches and DIA executive staff for the second-consecutive season.

Long jumper Tacoria Humphrey earned the title of Dike Eddleman Female Athlete of the year on the heels of earning All-America honors and Big Ten Champion status during both the indoor and outdoor seasons.

She won her Big Ten Indoor title with the third-furthest long jump in NCAA Indoor history, 6.94m (22-9 1/4). This mark is also the Big Ten, program and B1G Indoor Championships record. Following this performance she was named to The Bowerman Watch List, only the third Illini woman ever to be named to that prestigious list. She finished the indoor season with a silver medal at the NCAA Indoor Championships, the highest finisher ever in program history.

In the outdoor season she won her second-consecutive Big Ten Outdoor title to become a three-time Big Ten Champion. At the NCAA Outdoor Championships, she became an All-American in her fourth-place finish which is the highest finish in program history. She’s only the program’s second All-American in the event as the last was 43 years ago with Becky Kaiser on Illinois’ first NCAA-qualifying team in 1982.

Humphrey is the fifth consecutive recipient from the Illini women’s track & field program to earn the Eddleman award, and the third of coach Petros Kyprianou‘s three-year tenure. She is the 23rd winner overall from track since the Illinois Female Athlete of the Year award was first presented in 1977. Track & Field has the most selections among Illini women’s sports programs.

Shot putter Abria Smith was named Illinois Newcomer of the Year from her incredible growth in her first year in the Illini throws program. Working with coach  J.C. Lambert she improved her personal best by over three meters from 15.84m (51-11 3/4) to 18.92m (62-1). Her 18.92m heave is not only a program record, but it’s the 14th-furthest throw in NCAA Outdoor history.

She finished the outdoor season as the shot put national runner-up, throwing 18.85m (62-1 1/4), to become the highest finisher ever in program history. A month prior she became the Big Ten Outdoor Champion in the shot put throwing 17.95m (58-10 3/4), the program’s first B1G Outdoor Champion shot putter since Olympic medalist Ashley Spencer in 2009.

During the indoor season Smith earned All-America honors with her program-record throw of 17.99m (59-0 1/4) to place seventh at the NCAA Indoor Championships after a fourth-place finish at the Big Ten Indoor Championships with a mark of 17.87m (58-7 1/2).

Smith is the second consecutive member of the Illini women’s track & field program to earn Newcomer of the Year, joining 2024 honoree Darja Sopova.

Melissa Wullschleger was tabbed Illinois Freshman of the Year to go along with her Big Ten Freshman of the Year honor. She became a first-team All-American in the heptathlon with a program record 5,928 points in her fourth-place finish at the NCAA Outdoor Championships. She’s the program’s third-ever All-American in the event and the first since Carmel Corbett in 1996. As part of her school-record breaking score, Wullschleger also threw the program’s third-furthest javelin, 44.20m (145-0), to propel her into the top-4 at the national meet.

A month prior to the national meet she took fourth in the heptathlon at the Big Ten Outdoor Championships with 5,749 points. During the indoor season she placed seventh in the pentathlon at the Big Ten Indoor Championships with the program’s fourth-highest score of 3,984 points.

Wullschleger is the 11th Freshman of the Year for the Illinois women’s track & field program and the second-consecutive one following teammate Elizabeth Ndudi’s selection in 2024.



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