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Change of Leadership Announced for Beach Volleyball Program

COLUMBIA, S.C. — COLUMBIA, S.C. – University of South Carolina Athletics Director Jeremiah Donati announced today that Moritz Moritz will not return as head coach of the Gamecock beach volleyball program. Moritz has been at the helm of the program since its founding in 2013, leading the team through its first competitive season in 2014. […]

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COLUMBIA, S.C. – University of South Carolina Athletics Director Jeremiah Donati announced today that Moritz Moritz will not return as head coach of the Gamecock beach volleyball program. Moritz has been at the helm of the program since its founding in 2013, leading the team through its first competitive season in 2014.

“I appreciate Moritz pouring his heart and soul into the program and the student-athletes,” said Donati. “He has done an excellent job using intercollegiate athletics as a platform to teach life lessons and help develop young women for future success, both on and off the court.”

Under Moritz’s leadership, the Gamecocks achieved numerous program milestones including seven 20-win seasons, two NCAA tournament appearances in 2017 and 2018, three all-Americans and five all-conference individuals. In the national rankings, South Carolina was ranked in 72 polls in a row from March of 2017 through May of 2023.

Before launching the beach volleyball program, Moritz served as an assistant coach for the Gamecock indoor volleyball team during the 2011 and 2012 seasons.

A national search, lead by TurnkeyZRG, will begin immediately.



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Raven Athletics finishes in third place in 2024-25 Heart Commissioners Cup

KANSAS CITY, Mo. – This past week at the annual Heart Business Meetings held on the Graceland University campus in Lamoni, Iowa, Heart of America Athletic Conference Commissioner Nik Rule announced the final standings for the 2024-25 Heart Commissioners Cup. Benedictine Athletics finished in third place with a score of .715, just .001 points behind […]

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KANSAS CITY, Mo. – This past week at the annual Heart Business Meetings held on the Graceland University campus in Lamoni, Iowa, Heart of America Athletic Conference Commissioner Nik Rule announced the final standings for the 2024-25 Heart Commissioners Cup.

Benedictine Athletics finished in third place with a score of .715, just .001 points behind Park University in second place at .716 and .006 points behind 2024-25 Commissioners Cup winner MNU with a score of .721.

“This year’s finals standings show how competitive the Heart of America Athletic Conference remains,” said Benedictine Athletic Director Charlie Gartenmayer. “We are committed to remaining competitive within the conference every year and are excited to get back to work on winning the 2025-26 Commissioners Cup in August.”

MNU earned back-to-back Commissioner Cup wins, which is the highest finish in the standings for Park. Benedictine finished in second place last year and this year, won Heart titles in Football, Men’s Indoor Track, Women’s Outdoor Track, and Women’s Lacrosse. They also won Heart Tournament Championships in Volleyball, Women’s Basketball, and Women’s Lacrosse.

About the Heart Commissioners Cup:
The award, which will be presented by Commissioner Nik Rule to MidAmerica Nazarene this fall on campus, serves as a symbol of athletic excellence in conference-sponsored championships.

The 13 Heart schools earn points throughout the season contributing to the Commissioner’s Cup for their finish in the Heart sponsored sports of: men’s cross country, women’s cross country, women’s volleyball, football, men’s soccer, women’s soccer, women’s basketball, men’s basketball, men’s indoor track & field, women’s indoor track & field, men’s volleyball, men’s wrestling, women’s wrestling, cheer, dance, men’s bowling, women’s bowling, baseball, softball, men’s golf, women’s golf, men’s lacrosse, women’s lacrosse, men’s outdoor track & field and women’s track & field.

Each conference regular season champion for the following sports earned a maximum amount of points based on the amount of teams participating in that sport. Then that number is divided by the amount of teams participating in that sport:

Women’s volleyball, football, men’s soccer, women’s soccer, women’s basketball, men’s basketball, men’s volleyball, baseball, women’s lacrosse, men’s lacrosse, and softball.

For example: Women’s Soccer Regular Season, Missouri Valley earned 13 points out of 13 teams competing, and they earned a 1.00 percentage.

13/13 = 1.00 – Percentage (First Place)

12/13 = .92 – Percentage (Second Place)

The same formula was put in place for the following sports and their finishes by Heart teams in the respective Heart Conference Championships:

Men’s cross country, women’s cross country, men’s indoor track & field, women’s indoor track & field, men’s wrestling, women’s wrestling, cheer, dance, men’s bowling, women’s bowling, men’s golf, women’s golf, men’s outdoor track & field and women’s outdoor track & field.

For example: Cheer Heart Conference Champion, Grand View earned 10 points out of 10 teams competing, and they earned a 1.00 percentage.

10/10 = 1.00 – Percentage (First Place)

9/10 = .90 – Percentage (Second Place)

To compile the final list of the 2024-25 Heart Commissioner’s Cup Standings, each team’s percentage in each sport they compete in was added up and divided by the amount of total sports they compete in. Final results are an average cumulative Heart finish for each institution in every conference sport that they sponsor.

Behind MNU, Park and Benedictine in the final standings was CMU (.627), Mount Mercy (.624), Grand View (.602), Baker (.572), William Penn (.551), Missouri Valley (.473), Peru State (.417), Clarke (.416), Culver-Stockton (.405) and Graceland (.318).

Previous Commissioners Cup winners:
2024-25 MidAmerica Nazarene University
2023-24 – MidAmerica Nazarene University
2022-23 – Grand View University
2021-22 – Grand View University 
2020-21 – Grand View University
2019-20 – Central Methodist University
2018-19 – Benedictine College

www.ravenathletics.com | #UnleashGreatness | www.benedictine.edu



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Lewis and Hatfield Jackson Ready for the NCAA Track and Field& Field Championships

Story Links CAPE GIRARDEAU, Mo. – Luke Hatfield Jackson and Paden Lewis will compete at the 2025 Division One Outdoor Track and Field Championships in Eugene, Oregon. The championships will take place at the University of Oregon at Hayward Field, June 11-14. Both Hatfield Jackson and Lewis will compete on […]

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CAPE GIRARDEAU, Mo. – Luke Hatfield Jackson and Paden Lewis will compete at the 2025 Division One Outdoor Track and Field Championships in Eugene, Oregon. The championships will take place at the University of Oregon at Hayward Field, June 11-14.

Both Hatfield Jackson and Lewis will compete on Friday, June 13th. Hatfield Jackson will compete in the high jump at 4:30 p.m. PT and Lewis will compete at 4:40 p.m. in the discus throw.

At the regionals meet Lewis broke the SEMO discus record with a throw of 193′ 2″ to place 10th and Jackson cleared a height of 7′ 1.5″ for 12th.

The top eight athletes in each event will be rewarded with First Team All-American Honors. The next eight performers will earn Second Team All-American Honors.





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Princeton University

NCAA Outdoor Championships June 11-14 | Eugene, Ore.  Results | Schedule | ESPN+   PRINCETON, N.J. – Closing out an outstanding year, the Princeton women’s track and field team will send three Tigers to Eugene, Ore. for the NCAA Outdoor Championships on June 11-14.    Mena Scatchard will compete in the 1500m, Shea Greene will […]

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NCAA Outdoor Championships
June 11-14 | Eugene, Ore. 
Results | Schedule | ESPN+
 
PRINCETON, N.J. – Closing out an outstanding year, the Princeton women’s track and field team will send three Tigers to Eugene, Ore. for the NCAA Outdoor Championships on June 11-14. 
 
Mena Scatchard will compete in the 1500m, Shea Greene will compete in the javelin, and Georgina Scoot will compete in both the long jump and the triple jump. These three Tigers helped lead Princeton to its third all-time Triple Crown this year while reaching new heights and setting new records individually. 
 
Scatchard, the 2025 indoor NCAA runner-up in the mile, will make her third trip to NCAAs this academic year after competing in both the cross country and indoor track championships. Scatchard, the 2025 Ivy Champion in the 1500m, punched her ticket with a second place finish in her heat in the quarterfinals, clocking in at 4:08.34 to set a new Princeton record. Her time bested her own school record of 4:11.10, set in 2024. Scatchard holds seven records across the Princeton record books, also breaking the records in the 800m and 5000m this season.
 
Greene will make her second outdoor NCAA Championship appearance after breaking her own Ivy League record in the javelin with a throw of 56.91m/186-8″ at regionals. The achievement came just weeks after Greene claimed the Ivy record and the Ivy Championship title in the event at Outdoor Heps. 
 
Scoot will also make her second trip to Eugene, competing in both the triple jump and the long jump after winning the Ivy Championship title in both events this season. Scoot punched her ticket with a sixth-place 6.32m/20-9″ finish in the long jump and an eighth-place 13.04m/42-9½” finish in the triple jump at regionals. At Outdoor Heps, Scoot was named the Most Outstanding Field Performer of the Meet after setting new meet records in both the triple jump and the long jump as she won her titles. For her efforts, she was also named USTFCCCA National Athlete of the Week on May 12th. 
 
The Tigers are led by Head Coach Michelle Eisenreich, in her ninth year at the helm. This year’s Triple Crown marked the first since 2011 and first under Eisenreich’s leadership, capped off with an Outdoor Heps victory that saw the most points ever scored by a women’s team at the meet. 

 



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Assistant Coach, Volleyball in Rochester, MI for Oakland University

Oakland University is a nationally recognized doctoral university of high research activity located on 1,443 acres of scenic land in the cities of Rochester Hills and Auburn Hills in Oakland County, Michigan. The University has 142 bachelor’s degree programs and 138 graduate degree and certificate programs. Academics include programs in the College of Arts and […]

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Oakland University is a nationally recognized doctoral university of high research activity located on 1,443 acres of scenic land in the cities of Rochester Hills and Auburn Hills in Oakland County, Michigan. The University has 142 bachelor’s degree programs and 138 graduate degree and certificate programs. Academics include programs in the College of Arts and Sciences, School of Business Administration, School of Education and Human Services, School of Engineering and Computer Science, School of Health Sciences, School of Medicine and School of Nursing. As an anchor institution in southeastern Michigan, Oakland University is committed to building ongoing and collaborative relationships with the surrounding communities. Community and civic engagement enhances the lives of our students and has a positive impact on our broader community.



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MABC swimming program builds fitness, achievement and community

Regulars to at Andrew ‘Boy’ Charlton Aquatic Centre may have noticed poolside signs allotting lanes for “Squads”. But have you stopped to think that you – or your children – could also be a part of the magic happening in those lanes? Squads are often thought of the domain of swimmers with their eyes on […]

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Regulars to at Andrew ‘Boy’ Charlton Aquatic Centre may have noticed poolside signs allotting lanes for “Squads”. But have you stopped to think that you – or your children – could also be a part of the magic happening in those lanes?

Squads are often thought of the domain of swimmers with their eyes on medals. But at Manly the program is as much for those who swim for fun and for fitness, as those who swim to compete and together they make a tight-knit swimming community,

The program stretches from those in the Junior Squads – young swimmers focused on improving their technique or school carnival success – through to older swimmers in the Fit You Squads, with an eye on the Bold and Beautiful swim at Shelly Beach. 

In between are the elite athletes – swimmers, triathletes, surf lifesavers and water polo players. You might even spot an Olympian, national champions and representative team members and a few members of the Aussie junior swim team.
Plus the club swimmers – who as part of the Manly Swim Club based at the pool – are vying for spots in State and National championship teams. 

Head Coach Justin Rothwell – with an impressive resume of coaching accolades including Commonwealth Games – has built an expert team of trainers and performance coaches dedicated to helping squad members achieve their potential.  

The magic works: with over 80 sessions across morning and afternoon, the Squad program has grown from just 40 swimmers 8 years ago to over 300 hundred swimmers pounding the lanes each week. 

It’s also built an inclusive community. Younger swimmers train with different age groups and weekend club races give parents a shot at racing their kids.  Former Junior Squad swimmers now teach the current crop of wannabees.

The Centre’s facilities are also a great reason the program has been able to thrive: an 25-metre indoor pool and both 50 and 25-metre outdoor pools.  

With opportunities for all swimmers and families to build skills and friends, visit our website for details of levels, try outs, and times as well as to book an assessment.

 



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How Ethan Strand Learned To Win

– Christopher McDougall, Born To Run The 3,996 elementary school children participating in the 2012 Mercedes Kids’ Marathon ought to start streaming in at any moment. The race, held annually in Birmingham, Alabama, is a mile long—the culmination of a marathon’s worth of miles logged over five months during PE classes at local elementary schools. […]

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– Christopher McDougall, Born To Run

The 3,996 elementary school children participating in the 2012 Mercedes Kids’ Marathon ought to start streaming in at any moment. The race, held annually in Birmingham, Alabama, is a mile long—the culmination of a marathon’s worth of miles logged over five months during PE classes at local elementary schools. February weather is in full stride. The temperature gauge reads 32 degrees, but the wind is whipping hard enough to make it feel as cold as 17.

For delighted observers, it’s a cute precursor to the thousands of grown up marathoners and half-marathoners who will fill the streets the next day. But for the children, this is their chance to prove with undeniable evidence that they are the fastest kid in their school.

Every single child will receive a medal when they finish, right after they waltz through a high-five tunnel littered with their favorite heroes. Captain America, the Chick-fil-A cow, and—because it’s ‘Bama—Aubie the tiger and Big Al the elephant.

It’s a joyous scene…Smiles abound, parents cheer, and the kids wander post-finish exhausted and proud of themselves. “Future Olympic stars, today!” exclaims the announcer, audibly beaming.

Which makes it all the more stark when the first two kids come into view and one of them crosses the line in tears, finishing in a dead-heat to get second place.

It makes for quite the picture. The size-too-big shirts, the bright-red K-Swiss Ironman Flow kicks, the sheer joy on the faces of the audience, and Aubie the Tiger cheering them both on. Each child looks as though they’ve never wanted anything more in their life than to win this mile.

The third grader who finishes second, the one in bib #9, is clocked at 6:03—a blazing fast mile time for anybody. But what’s unseen is the fall he took about 400 meters out from the finish. Ran smack into a security guard around the final corner. BAM. He got back up, fought to make up the distance, but the tears were flowing.

It wouldn’t be the last time that kid wearing bib #9 pushed his body to the limit in a race. In fact, that 2012 Mercedes Kids’ Marathon might’ve been the catalyst for Ethan Strand—it wouldn’t make sense any other way.

The Beginning

Strand, now the NCAA record holder in the indoor mile and 3000m, looks back on this day and smiles.

“I remember being so mad and so upset that I lost that,” said Strand, laughing. “It sucked. I was competitive. I wanted to run fast and beat everybody.”

Strand was born in 2002 into a family of runners. Lori, his mother, was a competitive runner for the University of Alabama at Birmingham, and coached for Samford University’s cross country team as Ethan was growing up. Scott, his father, placed 15th in the 2004 US Olympic Trials marathon, was a renowned steeplechase athlete, and is part-owner of a beloved, local chain of run specialty stores called the Trak Shak, where Ethan has worked.

With a background like Ethan’s, it would be easy to chart a linear path between who he was raised by and his current status as one of America’s most promising distance running talents. He might as well have popped out of the womb in trainers, reading off splits and planning out miles.

“He started walking when he was about nine months old,” said Scott. “By the time he was a year, he was running around the yard.”

“When he was probably a year and a half old, you know, we’d go out in the yard, and we had this little grassy slope in our front yard,” remembers Scott. “We just played ‘On Your Mark, Get Set, Go!’ He would start at the top of the yard. And he would say, ‘Marksetgo!’, and he would just run down into my arms.”

Even as a toddler, it was evident how much Ethan enjoyed running. Countless hours were spent running around the house, asking to be timed, up and down the hills. His desire to compete wasn’t solely limited to running, though—dinner had to be finished first, and vacations were just opportunities to bike six miles.

“His personality very early, showed that he loved competing and competition,” recalled Lori. “And we always tried to make it very fun for him for as long as we could.”

Lori and Scott made a point not to force their children into following directly in their footsteps, running or not. In the debate of nature or nurture, Ethan’s desire to run seemingly stemmed from both.

“He’s always been very passionate about winning in anything, soccer, baseball, recreational basketball—everything,” laughed Lori. “He’s very passionate about being the best he can be, in whatever he does.”

As he “graduated” from the Mercedes Kids’ Marathon, Ethan stayed active. Travel soccer and running fought for preeminence for years. It didn’t hurt that he was great at both.

“I would finish [cross country] practice in middle school, I’d run 15 to 20 minutes, maybe do some hill sprints, and then I’d go and have a two-hour soccer practice,” said Ethan. “I think it really hit me that I needed to choose one when I won a state championship my freshman year.”

The Vestavia Hills track team, due to its size or its exclusivity, mandated that if a runner played another sport, they had to run on the JV team. Ethan didn’t want to run JV. As a high school freshman he won his first two state titles in the highest division of Alabama outdoor track by running a one-mile race in 4:21.28 and a two-mile race in 9:30.26—and there was no looking back.

Ethan gives particular credit to the runner in third place of that two mile, James Sweeney, a senior on the Vestavia Hills team who ended up running at Butler University.

“To have someone who doesn’t really know me, watches me run a little bit, and is then very invested in what I’m doing was super cool,” said Strand. “I don’t feel like most people get that … so to have a teammate that was like that right away was super cool, super helpful.”

For Scott, the teammate support system can’t be underappreciated.

“James would come to the house and pick him up and they’d go do the long run,” said Scott. “So James was the one that also helped Ethan be accountable at that young age.”

“We joked ‘Good job, James, you developed Ethan to the point where he’s now beating you.’”

A Short List of Ethan Strand’s High School Accolades

Ethan’s sophomore year continued the momentum, winning a state title in cross country, a state title in the indoor mile, and a state title in the 800 meters, 1600 meters, and 3200 meters at the outdoor meet.

Junior year cross country saw major improvements with a state title, 6th place at Foot Locker Regionals, and 29th place finish at Foot Locker Nationals—leading to Strand’s first Alabama Gatorade XC Runner of The Year award. Track and field wasn’t contested due to the COVID-19 Pandemic.

Senior year cross country saw Strand take 12th at the state meet but 14th at the RunningLane National Championship. He also ran 14:36.88 for the 5k at the Southern Showcase, breaking the state record and leading to his second Alabama Gatorade XC Runner of the Year Award. He continued his dominance in indoor and outdoor track, winning the state titles for the 800, 1600, and 3200 meter races for both seasons, along with a national title at the Adidas Indoor National mile.

For those counting, that’s 14 individual titles at the highest level of competition in the state of Alabama. Ethan Strand graduated from Vestavia Hills in Alabama a bonafide star, and it was time to become a Tar Heel.

Running with The Heels

For Ethan, a prep runner with an absurd amount of promise, the coaches came calling. But recruitment during a pandemic followed an unorthodox schedule.

Zoom meetings were the litmus tests for a program. Athletes could have conversations with coaches, but in-person visits with coaches weren’t permitted. With the uncertainty around pandemics and programs, there wasn’t a more disorienting time to make life-changing decisions.

“We got it narrowed down between Carolina and Virginia,” remembers Scott. “[Ethan’s] like, ‘There’s nothing that I don’t like about Virginia either, you know.’ I think it was just a gut feeling.”

Heading the two programs were two of the best coaches in the game: Chris Miltenberg for the University of North Carolina and Vin Lananna for the University of Virginia.

Prior to taking over at UNC, Miltenberg made a name for himself at the helm at Stanford, which enjoyed great team success under his guidance. Beyond the team aspect, Miltenberg has a track record of developing the best high school athletes into the best college and professional athletes—like Grant Fisher, Sean McGorty, and Emily Infeld.

However, running for Vin Lananna, the then-president of USA Track and Field and head men’s coach for the 2016 Rio Summer Olympics, was just as appealing. When it came time to make a decision, it wasn’t easy.

“It was very difficult to tell Vin Lananna that he wasn’t coming to Virginia,” said Scott. “He’s a legend, so it’d be like telling Bear Bryant, you’re not going to Alabama.”

But Ethan did. Maybe it was because he’s an Auburn fan, and Auburn fans have no problem with telling Bear Bryant no. Regardless, he committed to UNC. Senior year followed, and upon graduation, he was officially a Tar Heel.

Ethan realized, as many high schoolers do upon graduation, that he had some growing to do.

“Coming out of high school, I could grind it out because I wanted to win,” said Ethan. “But I really wasn’t that strong.”

When Ethan talks of strength, he primarily speaks of mileage. As a high-school runner, building too much mileage can mean burnout—too much too soon, and any hope of long-term development flies out the window. In this area, and many others, Ethan ascribes his success to Coach Miltenberg.

“You take a kid who, coming out of high school, is not strong, and I feel like most college coaches, their first instinct is to just throw a ton of mileage at him and hammer him into the ground and say ‘It’s either going to stick and he’s going to be really good, or it’s not,’” said Ethan. “So Coach Milt had a lot of patience with me. And I think that patience has paid off.”

Sheer will and determination (along with good workouts and training, of course) propelled Ethan to this point. But to get him over the hump, he had to trust something beyond his control. Coach Miltenberg was up to the task.

“I think what we do better than anybody, is being really, really dialed in on and connected to each of our people,” said Miltenberg. “That’s what we enjoy the most, that individualization, fine tuning, and connecting.”

Some of that fine-tuning and connecting meant trusting the first two years would be about building a base. For Strand, that meant being okay with a 12th place finish in the 2023 NCAA Outdoor 1500m, and finishing 45th in the nation the following cross country season. These were great results, but they weren’t where he wanted to be.

In 2024, his patience paid off.

2024 USA Olympic Track and Field Trials

If you’re a USA track and field athlete hoping to get to the Olympics, you have to go through the Trials. For the 1500m racers, it means running three races in the span of four days—designed to whittle the entire field down to the three top metric milers in the nation.



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