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USA Swimming Foundation Releases Community Impact Grants

USA Swimming, the national governing body for swimming in the United States, and its philanthropic arm, the USA Swimming Foundation, today announced the 2025 Community Impact Grant recipients. Nine additional USA Swimming member clubs will be receiving a $5,000 grant, eligible for renewal annually for up to three years. This year, 30 programs have received […]

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USA Swimming, the national governing body for swimming in the United States, and its philanthropic arm, the USA Swimming Foundation, today announced the 2025 Community Impact Grant recipients. Nine additional USA Swimming member clubs will be receiving a $5,000 grant, eligible for renewal annually for up to three years.

This year, 30 programs have received $150,000 in funds to provide aquatic programming, support diverse coaches, and create competitive opportunities locally. This round of grants, funded by philanthropic giving, brings the total number of programs supported to 51, with a total impact of $540,000 distributed nationwide.

“USA Swimming and the USA Swimming Foundation are proud to continue to support funding opportunities to underserved communities to gain access to swimming,” USA Swimming Managing Director of Sport Development Joel Shinofield said. “USA Swimming clubs are community assets that provide children competitive swimming opportunities in neighborhoods, towns, and cities across the United States, and this funding allows them to expand those opportunities.”

The USA Swimming Foundation introduced the Community Impact Grant program in 2020 with the goal of providing access to competitive swimming for underrepresented swimming communities, supporting diverse coaches, and uplifting municipal community swim club programs within USA Swimming clubs. They focus on three areas of support:

  • Creating partnerships between USA Swimming clubs and a facility or recreational organization that does not currently have a club;
  • Supporting USA Swimming clubs led by women and/or diverse individuals; and
  • Partnering USA Swimming clubs with Historically Black Colleges and Universities to create competitive programs for youth in campus pools.

Congratulations to the following programs who will be receiving 2025 Community Impact Grant funding:

Click here for the full list of Community Impact Grant funding recipients.

For more information on USA Swimming’s Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion efforts, please visit https://www.usaswimming.org/diversity.

To learn more about USA Swimming Foundation, please visit https://www.usaswimming.org/foundation.

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— The above press release was posted by Swimming World in conjunction with USA Swimming. For press releases and advertising inquiries please contact Advertising@SwimmingWorld.com. 



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Lenda and Glenda Hill Stadium and TFO Partners Field to host Wood Bat League team

Story Links Lenda and Glenda Hill Stadium and TFO Partners Field will be busy this summer, as the Hillsdale College baseball facility will be the home site for a summer wood bat league team in June and July. The Michigan Monarchs of the Great Lakes Summer Collegiate League will call Hillsdale home, […]

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Lenda and Glenda Hill Stadium and TFO Partners Field will be busy this summer, as the Hillsdale College baseball facility will be the home site for a summer wood bat league team in June and July.

The Michigan Monarchs of the Great Lakes Summer Collegiate League will call Hillsdale home, playing 22 games at Lenda and Glenda Hill Stadium and TFO Partners Field over the next two months, starting with a 4:35 PM contest against the Flag City Sluggers this Sunday, June 8.

The GLSCL is one of the oldest summer collegiate leagues in the United States, having been in operation annually since 1987 and operating with teams in Michigan and Ohio. Teams are made up of NCAA Division I and II college athletes who join the squads over the summer after the conclusion of their playing seasons. Top-end talent plays in the GLSCL, as 100 future MLB players have appeared in the league over its history, and the league averages 25 MLB draftees or signees among its alumni every year.

The Monarchs roster this summer will include Division I baseball players from Michigan State, Ohio State, Eastern Michigan, Western Michigan, Oakland, Toledo, Illinois-Chicago and Cal St. Northridge, as well as Hillsdale College pitcher Andrew George and several Division II, Division III and Junior College players. The team will be coached by Hillsdale College alumnus and current baseball assistant coach Cody Kanclerz.

You can find a full schedule for the Monarchs, including home dates in Hillsdale, at this link. 



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Empire 8 Announces 2025 Men’s Outdoor Track & Field Award Winners and All-Conference Selections

Men’s Outdoor Track and Field | 6/3/2025 9:58:28 AM Story Links The Empire 8 Conference announced its 2025 Men’s Outdoor Track & Field All-Conference awards on Tuesday, June 3. The awards are voted on by the league’s head coaches.   Graduate student Charlie Wilson of SUNY Geneseo was named the […]

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Men’s Outdoor Track and Field | 6/3/2025 9:58:28 AM



The Empire 8 Conference announced its 2025 Men’s Outdoor Track & Field All-Conference awards on Tuesday, June 3. The awards are voted on by the league’s head coaches.
 
Graduate student Charlie Wilson of SUNY Geneseo was named the 2024-25 Empire 8 Outdoor Track Athlete of the Year., Wilson, a native of Romeo, MI, earned runner-up honors in the 10,000-meter run at the 2025 NCAA Division III Men’s Outdoor Track and Field Championship, crossing the finish line in an all-time Empire 8 record time of 29:21.43 to earn First Team All-American honors. He also shattered the Empire 8 record and qualified for nationals in the 5,000-meters with a time of 14:08.50 at the Widener Final Qualifier on May 12. He would go on to finish 12th in the 5,000-meters at the NCAA Championships and earn Second Team All-American honors. Wilson was also a USTFCCCA All-Niagara Region selection in both the 5,000- and 10,000-meters.
 
Junior Brandon Kaplan of St. John Fisher University was named the 2025 Empire 8 Outdoor Field Athlete of the Year. Kaplan, a native of Grahamsville, NY, earned NCAA Second Team All-American honors in the hammer throw. Kaplan was the 2025 Empire 8 Outdoor Champion in hammer throw, setting an all-time Empire 8 mark with a throw of 60.87 meters. He was named the Empire 8 Outdoor Championship Field Athlete of the Meet. Kaplan also won the hammer throw at the All-Atlantic Region Championships from Williams College. He is the fourth St. John Fisher student-athlete to earn E8 Outdoor Field Athlete of the Year accolades.
 

Ellis Urgent of Utica University was named the 2025 Empire 8 Outdoor Track & Field Rookie of the Year. Urgent, who hails from Cornwall, NY, enjoyed a tremendous debut for the Pioneers, winning the long jump at the E8 Championship, with a leap of 7.24 meters, which was a personal best. He also won long jump titles at the Utica Spring Invite, RPI Capital District Invitational and Cortland Classic, while finishing third at the All-Atlantic Region Championships. Urgent also earned USTFCCCA All-Niagara Region honors in the event and finished the season tied for 23rd nationally in the event. He is Utica’s third straight Empire 8 Rookie of the Year recipient and seventh in program history.
 

SUNY Geneseo head coach Chris Popovici and his staff of assistant coaches Dan Moore, Christian Johnson, Kieran Sheridan and Gwen Shepardson was named the 2025 Empire 8 Coaching Staff of the Year. The Knights won their first Empire 8 Outdoor Track & Field Championship in decisive fashion. Overall, Geneseo had 26 different student-athletes earn All-Conference honors, while Charlie Wilson (10,000-meters), Ryan Hagan (1,500-meters) and the 4 x 400-meter relay team of Arjun Ojha, Sam Belmont, Giancarlo Di Fava, and Jacob Miller earned NCAA First Team All-American honors. The Knights shattered four E8 Outdoor Track and Field Championship records and five overall league marks in 2025.
 
The Empire 8 first, second and third team all-conference selections were determined at the championship meet on May 2-3 from Eunice Kennedy Shriver Stadium, hosted by SUNY Brockport.
 

One member of each team was named that institution’s representative on the 2025 Men’s Outdoor Track & Field Sportsman of the Year Team. The Empire 8 Conference emphasizes that “Competing with Honor and Integrity” is an essential component of a student-athlete’s experience in conjunction with an institution’s educational mission. These honorees have distinguished themselves and consistently exhibit the critical traits as outstanding sportsmen.
 
2025 Empire 8 Men’s Outdoor Track & Field Award Winners
 
Track Athlete of the Year: Charlie Wilson, Gr., SUNY Geneseo
Field Athlete of the Year: Brandon Kaplan, Jr., St. John Fisher
Rookie of the Year: Ellis Urgent, Fr., Utica
Coaching Staff of the Year: SUNY Geneseo, led by head coach Chris Popovici
 
Empire 8 Sportsman of the Year
Jayden Noel, Sr., Alfred (Brooklyn, NY/Automotive)
Jeremy Chen, Jr., SUNY Brockport (Latham, NY/Shaker)
Andrew Kent, Jr., SUNY Geneseo (Cazenovia, NY/Cazenovia)
Cody Bazemore, Fr., Hartwick (Bel Air, MD/Bel Air)
Ben Allen, Jr., Houghton (Elmira, NY/Elmira)
Jack Healy, So., Nazareth (Naugatuck, CT/Naugatuck)
Brandon Clarke, Sr., Russell Sage (Freeport, NY/Freeport)
Cole Fuller, Sr., St. John Fisher (Derby, NY/Lakeshore)
Tristan Vargo, Sr., Utica (East Aurora, NY/Orchard Park)
 
2025 Empire 8 Men’s Outdoor Track & Field Championship All-Conference Selections
 
100-Meter Dash
First Team: Derek Grimshaw, So., SUNY Brockport – :11.00
Second Team: Evan Kurtz, Sr., Houghton – :11.01
Third Team: Jack Towns, Fr., SUNY Geneseo – :11.00
 
110-Meter Hurdles
First Team: Brendan Style, Sr., SUNY Geneseo – :14.87
Second Team: Jeremy Chen, Jr., SUNY Brockport – :14.99
Third Team: Jackson Gloskey, Jr., SUNY Geneseo – :15.17
 
200-Meter Dash
First Team: Jacob Miller, Jr., SUNY Geneseo – :21.85
Second Team: Corinthian Reed, Fr., St. John Fisher – :21.88
Third Team: Jack Towns, Fr., SUNY Geneseo – :22.14
 
400-Meter Dash
First Team: Jacob Miller, Jr., SUNY Geneseo – :47.24 (Championship Record)
Second Team: Corinthian Reed, Fr., St. John Fisher – :47.76
Third Team: Arjun Ojha, Fr., SUNY Geneseo – :48.26
 
400-Meter Hurdles
First Team: Jeremy Chen, Jr., SUNY Brockport – :54.18
Second Team: Ayden Grinion, Jr., SUNY Brockport – :54.45
Third Team: Timothy Smith, So., SUNY Brockport – :54.47
 
800-Meter Run
First Team: Matthew Sheehan, Sr., SUNY Geneseo – 1:52.16
Second Team: Owen Arbocus, So., SUNY Brockport – 1:53.54
Third Team: Connor Hitt, Fr., SUNY Geneseo – 1:53.62
 
1,500-Meter Run
First Team: Ryan Hagan, So., SUNY Geneseo – 3:49.78 (Championship Record)
Second Team: Jonathan Zavala, Sr., SUNY Brockport – 3:50.05
Third Team: Connor Hitt, Fr., SUNY Geneseo – 3:51.17
 
3,000-Meter Steeplechase
First Team: Emerson Comer, So., SUNY Geneseo – 9:04.73 (Championship Record)
Second Team: Pierce Young, So., SUNY Geneseo – 9:12.02
Third Team: Bennett Melita, So., Utica – 9:19.34
 
5,000-Meters
First Team: Emerson Comer, So., SUNY Geneseo – 14:28.20 (Championship Record)
Second Team: Pierce Young, So., SUNY Geneseo – 14:30.44
Third Team: Charlie Wilson, Gr., SUNY Geneseo – 14:31.24
 
10,000-Meters
First Team: Micah McCulley, Sr., SUNY Geneseo – 32:45.73
Second Team: Justin Thang, Sr., SUNY Geneseo – 32:45.81
Third Team: Mike Taranto, So., SUNY Geneseo – 35:48.04
 
4 x 100-Meter Relay
First Team: Trey Feirman, So., Andrew Kent, Jr., Jack Towns, Fr., Jackson Burton, Jr., SUNY Geneseo – :41.92
Second Team: Kevin Brown, Fr., Michael Durski, Jr., Aaron Ottenwalder, Jr., Derek Grimshaw, So., SUNY Brockport – :41.95
Third Team: Chris Ganley, Fr., Shane Wallace, Fr., Ethan Kain., Gr., Robert Lowry IV, Fr., Utica – :42.31
 
4 x 400-Meter Relay
First Team: Arjun Ojha, Fr., Dawson Wadsworth, So., Jacob Miller, Jr., Matthew Sheehan, Sr., SUNY Geneseo – 3:15.29 (Championship Record)
Second Team: Michael Durski, Jr., Jeremy Chen. Fr., Cole Ferris, So., Ayden Grinion, Jr., SUNY Brockport – 3:18.21
Third Team: Brady Bishop, Sr., Adam Johnson, Fr., Michael Prentice, Fr., Corinthian Reed, Fr.., St. John Fisher – 3:19.69
 
4 x 800-Meter Relay
First Team: Amos Bixler, Jr., James Eustace, Sr., Henry Sardina, Fr., Aidan Fish, Sr., Houghton – 7:56.56
Second Team: Ethan Kenyon, Sr., Michael Puglisi, Jr., Cade Eells, Sr., Gavin McAllister, Jr., Nazareth – 8:00.33
Third Team: Luke Dacey, Fr., Owen Sweet, Fr., Brian Kenny, Jr., Aidan Glynn, Sr., SUNY Geneseo – 8:02.08
 
Pole Vault
First Team: Hayden Penna, So., St. John Fisher – 4.90 meters (Championship Record)
Second Team: Oren Welch, Fr., St. John Fisher – 4.80 meters
Third Team: Daniel Reinhart, So., SUNY Brockport – 4.70 meters
 
High Jump
First Team: Louis Pinto, Jr., Utica – 1.96 meters
Second Team: Bryant DePaull, Jr., St. John Fisher – 1.93 meters
Second Team: Jack Valentine, Fr., SUNY Brockport – 1.93 meters
 
Long Jump
First Team: Ellis Urgent, Fr., Utica – 7.24 meters
Second Team: Bryce Roberts, Fr., SUNY Brockport – 6.78 meters
Third Team: Cody Bazemore, Fr., Hartwick – 6.71 meters
 
Triple Jump
First Team: Manuel Sepulveda, So., St. John Fisher – 14.58 meters
Second Team: Dennis Bobbitt, Fr., SUNY Brockport – 13.94 meters
Third Team: Sean Stewart, Sr., SUNY Geneseo – 13.78 meters
 
Shot Put
First Team: Hunter Logan, Gr., Utica – 15.79 meters
Second Team: Ray Trottier, So., SUNY Geneseo – 15.35 meters
Third Team: Graeden Heichberger, Fr., Nazareth – 15.18 meters
 
Discus Throw
First Team: Daniel Davis, Fr., St. John Fisher – 40.43 meters
Second Team: Paul Hayes, So., SUNY Geneseo – 40.23 meters
Third Team: Duncan Harbin, So., SUNY Brockport – 40.22 meters
 
Hammer Throw
First Team: Brandon Kaplan, Jr., St. John Fisher – 60.87 meters (Championship Record)
Second Team: Spencer Borghardt, Jr., Utica – 56.17 meters
Third Team: Joshua Talbot, Jr., Utica – 55.74 meters
 
Javelin Throw
First Team: Kaiden Simpson, Sr., Russell Sage – 50.87 meters
Second Team: Alexander Kolpien, Fr., St. John Fisher – 50.23 meters
Third Team: Allen Reome, So., SUNY Brockport – 49.15 meters
 
Decathlon
First Team: Jack Pomykaj, Jr., Nazareth – 6,173 points (Championship Record)
Second Team: Daniel Pagan, Fr., SUNY Geneseo – 6,105 points
Third Team: Tyler Miller, Sr., SUNY Brockport – 5,767 points
 
 
ABOUT THE EMPIRE 8 CONFERENCE
The members of the Empire 8 Conference are committed first and foremost to the pursuit of academic excellence and the league is regarded as an outstanding NCAA Division III conference. The membership has distinguished itself among its peer group for its quality institutions, spirited and sportsmanlike competition, outstanding services and highly ethical policies and practices. Its commitment to serve the educational needs of its student-athletes is the hallmark of the E8. For more on the Empire 8 visit www.empire8.com.
 
EMPIRE 8 SOCIAL MEDIA
YouTube – Facebook – Twitter – Instagram
 





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10 cool things about Juan Manuel Calaya Hernandez

In the 120-year history of diving at the Olympic Games, Mexico has only earned one gold medal.  Last summer in Paris, Juan Manuel and Osmar nearly won the nation’s second. Instead, they took silver by a tiny margin. It’s hard to believe that they had just teamed up a few months earlier. Image Source: Silver […]

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In the 120-year history of diving at the Olympic Games, Mexico has only earned one gold medal.  Last summer in Paris, Juan Manuel and Osmar nearly won the nation’s second. Instead, they took silver by a tiny margin.

It’s hard to believe that they had just teamed up a few months earlier.


Image Source: Silver Medalists Juan Manuel Celaya Hernandez and Osmar Olvera Ibarra of Team Mexico at the Diving medal ceremony at the Olympic Games -Paris 2024 (Quinn Rooney/Getty Images)

Juan Manuel knew he wouldn’t be diving in Paris with his 2021 Tokyo Olympic partner, Yahel Castillo even though they had been 2019 World Championship bronze medalists and placed fourth in Tokyo together. By 2024, Juan Manuel just assumed he’d compete in 3m synchro with Rodrigo Diego Lopez.

“Surprise, surprise. It didn’t happen,” Juan Manuel says now. “I guess it was meant to be.”

At some point, Lopez moved on to compete with Osmar, but after the pair’s dismal ninth-place showing at the Berlin World Cup in late March of 2024, their coach Ma Jin decided to let Juan Manuel dive with Osmar.  

It was smart, because less than one month later, the new duo finished second at the 2024 Super Final in Xi’an China.

Still, there was no guarantee that they’d be partners in Paris. To determine who would dive with whom in men’s 3m synchro at the Games, Mexico held a trial one month before Paris.

“We had to compete 24 times – the whole list – and figure out who was best suited for the event,” he said.

The two men were nearly the same height (168 and 170 cm) and weighed nearly the same (69 kg), but the two men had different hurdles back then.

Osmar jumped up slightly earlier than Juan Manuel while Juan Manuel would take an extra step to gain power to propel himself to the same height on takeoff.

They found subtle ways to compensate for that and earned the right to represent Mexico in men’s 3m synchro in Paris – but China’s  Long Daoyi and Wang Zongyuan won Olympic gold by a whisper (2.07 points).

This spring, however – with newly matching hurdles – Juan Manuel and Osmar finally found gold at the 2025 World Cup in Guadalajara – a full 17.07 points ahead of a new pair from China.

A week later, Juan Manuel answered some less-technical questions to help fans get to know him better.

“Nothing. Out of respect, we kind of say, ‘Good luck,’ to each other beforehand, but after that, there’s still a language barrier so…”


Image Source: Juan Manuel Celaya Hernandez and Osmar Olvera Ibarra compete at the Olympic Games-Paris 2024 (Quinn Rooney/Getty Images)

“Well, I was going to be named ‘Orlando,’ like Florida, but at the very last moment, my dad went to my mom and said, ‘Can he be named Juan Manuel, like me?’  She agreed. At home, my nickname is Meme (pronounced “MEH-may”). I’m Meme the third, actually. It comes from Manuel.  My grandfather, my dad, and myself are all Juan Manuel.”

“Very few people know that I used to draw. I would draw animals, realistic stuff. It’s been a while, but I still have my drawings and supplies.”


Image Source: Juan Manuel competes in the World Aquatics Diving Wolrd Cup – Windsor 2025 (Antoine Saito/World Aquatics)

“It was in Montreal, at a CAMO invitational. The dive was a 405 on a 5-meter board and I was maybe 12 years old. The guy that gave it to me was Arturo Miranda, the coach of Spain now. He used to coach Canada also.” [The Cuban-born Miranda also competed for Canada at the 2008 Beijing Olympics where he placed fifth in 3m synchro with Alexandre Despatie. Miranda and Despatie were also the 2007 world championship silver medalists.]

“Disco. I like to dance. I don’t sing.”

“Swimming. When I started competing for LSU (Louisiana State University), I really got into the swim races held before or after our events. We’d have dual meets, so I started to pick up on things. A couple of my teammates used to do a dive relay. We were all right for divers, I guess.”


Image Source: Caeleb Dressel reacts after winning the Men’s 100m butterfly at Olympic Team Swimming Trials-2024 (Al Bello/Getty Images)

“Caleb Dressel. I like the tattoos, definitely. But I got to see him swim and break many NCAA records and world records because we were in college at the same time. [Dressel competed for the University of Florida and is a nine-time Olympic gold medalist from the US.] It’s always fun to see him. He’s my role model.”

“I graduated LSU in May 2022 with a major in civil engineering and two minors: transportation engineering and business administration. I wanted to do paleontology when I was a kid because I liked dinosaurs. Then I grew up a bit and changed to marine biology. When I grew up even more, I started thinking about the [potential] income as a biologist or paleontologist [and switched again]. Civil engineering was the only major left to try in which I would make enough money to support a family. Plus, math and science were my forte[s] and my family is full of engineers so it seemed like a good backup plan. Unfortunately for my engineering career, I’m alright at diving so I don’t have any work experience yet. Maybe I could start when I’m done with the sport, but we’ll see.”

“First, my mom, Liliana Hernandez, because she always wanted excellence for me. She always pushed me to do better at everything. In diving, it’s Osmar and our coach, Ma Jin. Osmar pushes me to my limits every single day in practice. So does Ma Jin.”

“I’ve got to say, it’s the Olympic medal, the 2024 silver. Right now it’s in a safe deposit box at a bank in Mexico.”

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Track and Field: Two Commodores punch tickets to NCAA Outdoor Championships

Vanderbilt Track and Field had seven athletes compete at the NCAA East First Round at Hodges Stadium in Jacksonville, Florida, from May 29-31. While there were six quarterfinal qualifications, two Commodores — Allyria McBride and Falon Spearman — punched tickets to the NCAA Outdoor Championships from June 12-14.  Day 1 Vanderbilt earned six qualifications to […]

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Vanderbilt Track and Field had seven athletes compete at the NCAA East First Round at Hodges Stadium in Jacksonville, Florida, from May 29-31. While there were six quarterfinal qualifications, two Commodores — Allyria McBride and Falon Spearman — punched tickets to the NCAA Outdoor Championships from June 12-14. 

Day 1

Vanderbilt earned six qualifications to the quarterfinals in both the 100-meter and 400-meter hurdles. Falon Spearman started things for the Commodores, recording a school record of 13.03 seconds in the 100-meter hurdles and automatically qualifying for the quarterfinals. Devyn Parham and Santana Spearman also advanced to the next round with times of 13.23 and 13.36 seconds, respectively. 

Madyson Wilson, Falon Spearman and McBride each advanced to the quarterfinals of the 400-meter hurdles. McBride earned the automatic spot after finishing second in her heat with a time of 56.64 seconds. Falon Spearman and Wilson both turned in personal-best times of 57.64 and 58.09 seconds, respectively. Joy Moorer just missed out on the quarterfinals, finishing with a time of 58.55 seconds. 

Day 2

McBride and Spearman qualified for the NCAA Outdoor Championships later this month after two excellent performances in the quarterfinals. 

“It was a great meet,” director of cross country and track and field Althea Thomas said. “To see two people who just missed [qualifying for nationals] last year come back with the absolute willpower to make it happen this year was great.”

Falon Spearman clocked a time of 13.13 seconds in the 100-meter hurdles, just 0.10 seconds shy of her performance the previous day. Santana Spearman recorded a personal-best time of 13.23, but it was just outside the time needed to advance to nationals. 

In the 400-meter hurdles, McBride came fifth in the quarterfinals with a new PR of 55.65 seconds. Falon Spearman also clocked a personal-best time of 57.26 seconds to finish her NCAA postseason run.

“We had a lot of personal bests, a lot of firsts for Vanderbilt, having six people running individual races,” Thomas said. “It was a good meet for the program. It’s always great when Vanderbilt is going to be represented on the national level. And we have two seasoned hurdlers who are very hungry.”

McBride and Falon Spearman will compete at the NCAA Outdoor Championships from June 12-14.



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Great Day Improvements Named Newest Official Partner of Minor League Baseball for 2025 Season

CLEVELAND–(BUSINESS WIRE)–Jun 3, 2025– Great Day Improvements, a national leader in home improvement, has been named an Official Partner of Minor League Baseball™ (MiLB) for the 2025 season. Through the yearlong partnership, Great Day Improvements will connect with fans through in-stadium activations, digital media campaigns and consumer promotions across 29 Minor League Baseball clubs. × […]

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Great Day Improvements Named Newest Official Partner of Minor League Baseball for 2025 Season

CLEVELAND–(BUSINESS WIRE)–Jun 3, 2025–

Great Day Improvements, a national leader in home improvement, has been named an Official Partner of Minor League Baseball™ (MiLB) for the 2025 season. Through the yearlong partnership, Great Day Improvements will connect with fans through in-stadium activations, digital media campaigns and consumer promotions across 29 Minor League Baseball clubs.

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Lagoon Living Trend Makes Waves In North Texas Real Estate – Local Profile

At Windsong Ranch, you can spy sunseekers strolling along white sand beaches as electric turquoise waters from a vast lagoon lap their feet. Atop the oceanic ripples, kayakers plunge their paddles into deep waters as paddleboarders skim across the surface in full view of those loafing in sand-lodged lounge chairs or spiking serves on the […]

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At Windsong Ranch, you can spy sunseekers strolling along white sand beaches as electric turquoise waters from a vast lagoon lap their feet. Atop the oceanic ripples, kayakers plunge their paddles into deep waters as paddleboarders skim across the surface in full view of those loafing in sand-lodged lounge chairs or spiking serves on the beach volleyball court. 

Squint hard, and you can almost see schools of prismatic tropical fish scattering near the water’s edge. Grab the snorkel and beach booties. Drop-shift into a daiquiri-fueled haze, and it’s easy to imagine the panicked scramble of swimmers racing to escape a shark’s dorsal fin slicing through the diminutive ripples. 

No, this isn’t Punta Cana, the Caymans or even Newport Beach. It’s the rich landlocked Blackland Prairie in Prosper along U.S. Highway 380. 

***

Windsong Ranch is a 2,030-acre master-planned residential expanse with 3,324 upscale single-family homes. Its amenity portfolio is bursting at the seams with a café, tennis, pickleball and basketball courts, a two-acre lake, a mountain biking course, 30 miles of trails, a splash park and an outdoor living room with a fireplace. Opened in 2014, this residential Shangri-La installed a five-acre sand-framed freshwater lagoon in 2019.

“One of the features of our brand is lots of amenities,” says Craig Martin, founder and CEO of the Tellus Group, the firm that acquired this housing mecca from Terra Verde Group in 2019. “It’s like having a cruise director in our neighborhood.”

wsr_lagoon_2387_p
Windsong Ranch Photo courtesy of credit Tellus Group

He tells me that the lifestyle programming in Tellus Group communities is as important as the amusements, with marine amenities dominating due to the blistering Texas swelter. The water amusement bug is spreading rapidly across Collin County. And Beyond.

Think of Windsong Ranch as the sudden drawback of seawater from the beach just before a tsunami strikes. A massive surge of beach-inspired residential and recreational developments is about to sweep across North Texas: AnaCapri in Anna. The Venetian in Celina. Sicily in Princeton. Cannon Beach in McKinney. The lazy river and pool complex at Mosaic in Celina. 

Land-locked Collin County is being flooded with master-planned residential and resort-style communities that showcase multi-acre sandy beach lagoons, river and lake complexes, and surfing pools. 

Developers like Dallas-based Megatel Homes, Plano-based Tellus Group, and Arizona-based Cole Cannon are sinking big bucks into exploiting their potential.  

“Water is relaxing to a lot of people,” says Marcus Moffit, adjunct professor of real estate at the University of North Texas’ G. Brint Ryan College of Business. “The mental benefit of being around a body of water has that draw. And then you have the recreational component.”

Like Windsong Ranch, many of these developments feature artificial lagoons that mimic the shallow saltwater pools separated from the sea by a low sandbank, barrier island or coral reef. Artificial lagoons are rapidly becoming a driving force in community development, with dozens of these projects underway across the state of Texas. Many of these pools are created by Miami-based Crystal Lagoons, a pioneer in manmade lagoon technology. Gallon per gallon, these massive pools require far fewer chemicals and consume significantly less energy than traditional swimming pools. Thing is, you just need lots of gallons to fill these lagoons. 

The Tellus Group’s Martin says he drew inspiration for the Windsong Ranch lagoon from the Crystal Lagoon at the Du Monte Resort in Cabo San Lucas, a sprawling 10-acre saltwater pool overlooking sand dunes stretching to the Pacific Ocean. But lagoons are just one aspect of this water-centric trend. Mosaic, the Tellus Group’s 760-acre, 1,500-home development in Celina, features a lazy river and pool complex along with lakes spoked with fishing piers. The project is set to open in July of 2025.

“The lazy river is going to be an epic, cool water feature,” boasts Martin.

lazy-river-at-mosaic-celina
Mosaic, Photo courtesy of The Tellus Group

Meraki, another lazy river project in Forney, is also in the Tellus torpedo tubes, set to launch in the fall of 2025. But there’s more. Arizona-based developer Cole Cannon is planning a $200 million, 35-acre mixed-use destination project at Stacy Road and State Highway 121 in McKinney, aimed at bringing ocean waves to Collin County. Dubbed Cannon Beach, the development will showcase a boutique hotel, high-end restaurants, retail and office spaces, salons, med spas, and a 4-acre surf lagoon. He describes it as the intersection of lifestyle and adrenaline.

“I call it an experiential resort,” Cannon says. “A major fun zone.”

Catering to both beginners and experienced surfers, the surf lagoon is equipped with adjustable wave technology to create customized grinders. The resort offers lounge areas, cabanas with food service and cliff diving in addition to surfing. Slated to open in 2027, Cannon Beach is the Texas version of a similar surfing project that Cannon recently spearheaded in Mesa, Arizona.  

But what happens when the blistering Texas heat dissipates, and winter breathes an icy chill into the towering waves of Cannon Beach?

“Surfers are very resilient people,” Cannon insists. “If there is a way, they will surf it… I have no concern, even with snow on the ground, that the surf pool won’t be very popular.”

During the North Texas winter months, Cannon Beach will deploy a series of in-ground hot tubs to create a lava hot springs milieu with steaming bodies of water. So, a surfer who just got out of the surf pool, can peel off their wetsuit and jump into the hot tub or enjoy a bonfire.

Cannon says he’s long wanted to bring the surfing life to North Texas, citing the demographics and growth potential. He’s not alone. 

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Cannon Beach, McKinney. Photo courtesy of Cole Cannon

“I think it’s really in this area of the country, people who live here… they are just more adventurous in how they recreate,” says Michael Kowski, president & CEO at the McKinney Economic Development Corporation. “I would submit that people would fly here from all over the country to enjoy it. Surfers are no longer just located on the coasts.” 

Fireside Surf, a surf-themed restaurant and wave pool in The Colony, offers landlocked surfers, bodyboarders, and body surfers deep-water waves up to six feet high. Opened in 2024, the complex offers aquatic enthusiasts the Splash Lounge at Fireside Surf, a full bar and restaurant that features cuisine crafted from ingredients from the world’s top surfing spots.

“I actually think it’s a global trend, particularly in warm environments,” says Cannon. “Surf technology has gotten to a commercially feasible level.” 

Kowski adds that people and companies have been relocating to Texas from coastal communities for decades. Thus, the explosion in water-based community development makes sense. Yet it isn’t clear when many of these master-planned lagoon and pool complexes will open.

“Sicily is under construction, says Princeton Planning Manager Craig Fisher of the Megatel Homes project. “They’ve received a permit for the lagoon, but they haven’t really begun construction. It was supposed to be done by the end of last year, 2024… and it’s still just a dirt field.” 

This oceanic playground trend extends far beyond Collin County. Megatel Homes is planning SoHo Square in Dallas, Bellagio in Forney and Santori in Seagoville, each boasting a large lagoon. 

But perhaps the hyperactive apex of this flurry of waterborne leisure is reached by the Sapphire Bay Resort in Rowlett, a $1.5 billion mixed-use development emerging on the shores of Lake Ray Hubbard. Led by Sapphire Bay Partners, a group that includes Gillenwater Development and Suntex Marinas, the expansive project features upscale housing, a hotel, restaurants, retail, office space, a 7-acre lagoon, a surf pool with 7-foot waves, a lazy river pool complex, and a 3,200-seat concert venue. 

After hiccups that included a change in developers and a fire at the project’s under-construction apartment complex in late 2023, Sapphire Bay is projected to fully bloom in all of its aquatic glory between 2026 and 2027. The North Texas sluice gates are unleashing a gush.  


North Texas’ pseudo-beach love may have its roots in the unlikeliest of places: Dallas City Hall. In 1978 when famed architect I.M. Pei’s Dallas City Hall opened, residents unleashed a torrent of criticism. They scoffed at the Brutalist structure’s dramatic overhanging cantilevered façade. They ridiculed the plaza, the vast, largely useless space in front of the building. 

The pacifier? Dallas City Hall Beach Day. City officials had tons of sand trucked in and dumped around city hall’s plaza fountain to create a lapping shoreline motif. They followed this up by installing lifeguard stands. On a hot summer day in 1984, hundreds of Dallasites showed up to splash, swim, and cool-off in front of Pei’s inverted layer cake architecture in what is perhaps the weirdest Texas PR stunt ever devised. The sands of City Hall Beach Day wreaked havoc on the fountain’s pumps for months afterward. 

But the seemingly absurd actualization of the region’s beachfront obsession prompts another question: why does the Dallas-Fort Worth metroplex even exist? This tract of semi-arid temperate grassland, interspersed with tree-lined creeks and shrublands, really has no reason for being. There’s no major port, no navigable river and no entrance to a mountain pass to justify an urban metropolis. That only fueled the audacity of the area’s early trailblazers. In 1891 a group of prominent Dallas citizens formed the Trinity River Navigation Company, a firm that launched a near century-long failed drive to make the Trinity River navigable with the goal to create a waterway for sea-going vessels from Galveston Bay to an envisioned port in Dallas.

If it weren’t for the shrewd maneuvering of early Dallas leaders, this expanse of Blackland Prairie ground wouldn’t support anything but cotton and scrub grass for cattle grazing, much less a metropolitan area. In the late 19th century, they brought the railroads. In 1914, leaders secured the Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas, one of 12 regional banks in the Federal Reserve System.

Thanks to this pioneering resilience, this prairie land has blossomed into the most populous metropolitan area in Texas and the Southern United States. It serves as a thriving hub for energy, finance, real estate, healthcare, manufacturing, retail and telecommunications. This historical metamorphosis underscores the uncanny ability of the people in the Dallas-Fort Worth area to create something big and bold out of nothing. 

In the 1970s, the region’s leaders transformed vast stretches of scrubland into Dallas-Fort Worth International Airport, a premier hub that consistently ranks among the top ten airports globally for international connectivity. In the early 1980s, future Texas billionaire Henry Ross Perot envisioned a sprawling business park in Collin County’s vast openness to house the future headquarters of his company, Electronic Data Systems. That commercial complex would eventually attract other corporate giants and trigger a wave of explosive growth in Plano and the Collin County cities on its northern rim. 

With the influx of money, people, and assets comes a thirst for recreation and perhaps a permanent vacation. By creating manmade lagoons and surf pools, developers tap this long-held craving, providing residents of this inland expanse with a Caribbean lifestyle — without enduring the hassle of airport security for a trip to the beach.  

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Princeton Lakes Photo courtesy of Mark Cohen

Like Dallas City Hall, the city of Princeton pioneered this North Texas water-leisure craze long before beachy lagoons, lazy rivers, and surf pools were carved from its rich soil. Established in 1999, Princeton Lakes is a private residential community featuring four interconnected lakes specially designed for competitive water skiing. These lakes range in length from about 1,900 to 2,300 feet and have a width of 330 feet. They include slalom and jump courses along shorelines engineered to minimize motorboat wake backwash into the courses.  

Each of Princeton Lakes’ approximately 40 waterfront homes includes a boat dock. Many residents compete in local, regional, and national water skiing competitions, and the community hosts several American Water Ski Association (AWSA) tournaments each year.  

“It’s one of the nicer communities we have in town,” says Princeton’s Fisher. 

Mark Cohen, an avid water skier, purchased a lot in 2014 and began building a home in Princeton Lakes in 2016 before relocating from Plano. 

“I’ve skied all over Texas and this is one of the top ski lakes in the state,” he says. “If I was on a public lake today, I’d be petrified of being run over or hit by another boat…It’s totally private. You can’t beat it.”

Who knew this North Texas water-skiing locus even existed? I was first introduced to this slalom spray subdivision while indulging in a classic Texas ritual: drinking beer. I was sipping a selection of craft brews at Big Spray Brewery, little glass cups of Driver Buoy Blond, Long Line Pale Ale, and Deep Water Porter served on a flight board shaped like a water ski. 

Residents of Princeton Lakes and water-skiing enthusiasts, Big Spray founders Doug and Evelyn Abbott billed their pub as a restaurant serving house-brewed suds poured from taps with handles shaped like water skis. Opening in December of 2020, Big Spray Brewery shuttered in October of 2023 after nearly three years in operation. While the concept sounds cool, the merging of craft brew froth and wake backwash struggled to maintain its footing.

What is driving the trend towards housing and mixed-use developments that showcase elaborate water features in North Texas? Several factors contribute to this trend, including land availability and a growing demand for luxury, resort-style living evoking an ocean escape. 

“There’re always people looking to try something new,” says UNT’s Moffitt. “So, developers are asking, ‘What can I do to differentiate my product from what’s out there?’ The goal is to create a destination, otherwise you’re just another community… It’s a driver for people to want to come to your town, to your development.”

McKinney’s Kowski agrees. He says people from North Texas are well-traveled and are eager to cross borders to experience something interesting. So why not keep that taste for the interesting focused on the home front?

“Part of our strategy in McKinney is to give people more and more reasons not to leave here,” he says. “Cities have been branding themselves as live, work and play for generations. In McKinney, we take that mantra pretty seriously.”

But perhaps the most potent impetus propelling this North Texas movement toward surf and sand is the inflow of companies and people from California, the surfing and beach culture capital of the U.S. Major firms pulling up stakes from California and sinking them in North Texas include Toyota of North America, McKesson Corporation, Charles Schwab and Xerox. These companies and their employees are drawn here by lower taxes and living costs, less restrictive regulation, bigger bang-for-the-buck housing, and a robust networking culture that’s second to none. I relocated here myself from the San Francisco Bay Area decades ago for these same reasons.

And let’s not forget the harsh COVID-19 pandemic restrictions imposed by the Golden State, measures that devastated countless livelihoods and businesses not named The French Laundry. Between 2020 and 2024 alone, 175 companies moved to Texas, with 55 percent of them coming from California — an escape from sunny Alcatraz. 

With these crowds come their leisurely lifestyle and the sand between their toes, and real estate developers eager to make lagoon livin’ a reality.

This story originally appeared in the May/June 2025 issue of Local Profile. To subscribe, click here.

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