Connect with us

High School Sports

Best of the best

The graduating class of 2025 has been around for quite a few of Georgia Athletics’ proudest moments. Here is a look at some of the greatest moments from Georgia Bulldogs sports over the past four years. Football finally gets it done, twice Georgia Football head coach Kirby Smart kisses the College Football Playoff National Championship […]

Published

on

Best of the best


The graduating class of 2025 has been around for quite a few of Georgia Athletics’ proudest moments. Here is a look at some of the greatest moments from Georgia Bulldogs sports over the past four years.

Football finally gets it done, twice







Kirby Smart with National Championship Trophy

Georgia Football head coach Kirby Smart kisses the College Football Playoff National Championship trophy on Jan. 10, 2022 after the Bulldogs won the title. (Photo/ Kathryn Skeean, kskeean@randb.com)


Football has always reigned supreme at Georgia, and so the cries over Georgia’s 41-year-long championship drought only grew louder as it got further from 1980. Finally, the Bulldogs won the national championship after Kelee Ringo’s pick six sealed the deal over Alabama in Georgia’s 33-18 win to cap off the 2021 College Football Playoff. Kirby Smart had officially brought a national title home to his alma mater. The cathartic win only got sweeter the following season after Georgia returned to the mountaintop and demolished TCU 65-7 in 2022’s title game. For a town like Athens where football is king, back-to-back football championships are about as good as it gets.

Simone Biles in the Classic City







250117_LM_ugavsboisestategymnastics_024.jpg

Olympian Simone Biles poses with the Georgia gymnastics team during the UGA vs. Boise State gymnastics meet at Stegeman Coliseum in Athens, Georgia, on Friday, Jan. 17, 2025. Georgia won 196.825-193.600. (Photo/Laney Martin: @LaneyMartinPhotography)




Simone Biles, one of the greatest athletes of all time, made an appearance in Athens in 2025 at Georgia’s Jan. 17 home-opening gymnastics meet against Boise State. Co-head coach Cécile Canqueteau-Landi is a longtime coach of Biles, and the 11-time Olympic medalist came to support her coach in her first home meet for the Bulldogs. Georgia defeated Boise State 196.825-193.600 with Biles in attendance.

Tennis picks up some hardware







tennis ita courtesy 11/12

Georgia tennis player Aysegul Mert, Georgia tennis player Guillermina Grant during Georgia’s match during the 2024 ITA Sectionals at the Dan Magill Tennis Complex in Athens, Ga., on Saturday, Nov. 9, 2024. (Ethan Levine/UGAAA)


Georgia’s tennis program has long been one of the school’s most decorated. In May 2023, Georgia tennis player Ethan Quinn won the NCAA singles championship. He became just the third Bulldog in history to bring home the individual title and turned pro shortly after. Georgia’s women’s tennis team was also busy in the last four years, winning its seventh national championship at the ITA National Team Indoor Championship final in February 2025. The team is aiming to cap off its season with an NCAA championship in mid-May.

Basketball goes dancing







20250225_MRM_UGABKvsFlorida0029.jpg

Scenes Georgia center Somtochukwu “Somto” Cyril (6) and Georgia guard Tyrin Lawrence (7) hug after a men’s NCAA basketball game against Florida at Stegeman Coliseum in Athens, Georgia, on Tuesday, Feb. 25, 2025. Georgia won 88-83. (Photo/Mady Mertens; @madymertensphotography)




A day some Georgia fans never thought would come happened this past March when the Georgia men’s basketball team qualified for its first NCAA tournament berth since 2015. Now, the game itself didn’t exactly go swimmingly for Georgia, as the team was swiftly crushed by Gonzaga 89-68 after a disastrous start to the game left them trailing 30-5. Nevertheless, it was a critical step forward for a program that has seen numerous rebuild attempts in recent years. Georgia’s 12-1 start to the season in 2024-25 was its best since 1930. Also, in 2022, Georgia’s women’s basketball team advanced to the second round of the NCAA tournament before losing to the Caitlin Clark-led Iowa Hawkeyes.

Baseball advances to Super Regional







240601_MRM_UGAvsUNCW004.jpg

Georgia senior Corey Collins (6) celebrates home run with redshirt sophomore Charlie Condon (24) during game four of the NCAA Athens Regional between UNCW and Georgia at Foley Field in Athens, Georgia, on Saturday, June 1, 2024. Georgia won 11-2. (Photo/Mady Mertens; MadyMertensPhotography)




Georgia baseball had one of its best years in program history in 2024, finishing 43-17 in head coach Wes Johnson’s first year leading the team. Charlie Condon won the Dick Howser Trophy, awarded to the best player in college baseball, after hitting .410 and mashing 62 home runs in the season. Corey Collins was also an All-American. The team advanced to the Athens Super Regional for the first time since 2008 after losing the last five regionals that it played in. The Bulldogs nearly reached their first College World Series since 2008, but were eliminated by NC State. Though Condon and Collins have since moved on to the pros, Georgia reloaded with talent and is in pursuit of a deeper run this season.

Equestrian brings another title to Athens







equestrian 4/20

Georgia rider Catalina Peralta during Georgia’s meet against South Carolina at the UGA Equestrian Complex in Bishop, Ga., on Saturday, Feb. 22, 2025. (Courtesy/Sofia Yaker/UGAAA)


Football wasn’t Georgia’s only national champion. The equestrian team won the 2025 national title, the program’s first since 2021 and eighth overall. Kennedy Buchanan and Catalina Peralta both received dual discipline selections, headlining the 11 Bulldogs receiving honors after the victory. The win came on the heels of head coach Meghan Boenig’s induction into the National Collegiate Equestrian Association Hall of Fame.

Continue Reading
Click to comment

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

High School Sports

Stateline girls high school sports shine throughout 2024

Published

on

Stateline girls high school sports shine throughout 2024


Continue Reading

College Sports

Unforgettable Opening Act

NASHVILLE, Tenn. — At the start of the academic year, Vanderbilt Chancellor Daniel Diermeier encouraged students to remember they are part of a community “doing remarkable things.” With a common purpose and relying on long-held values, he reminded them, today’s students have the opportunity to set new standards of individual and collaborative excellence.   Vanderbilt student-athletes […]

Published

on

Unforgettable Opening Act

NASHVILLE, Tenn. — At the start of the academic year, Vanderbilt Chancellor Daniel Diermeier encouraged students to remember they are part of a community “doing remarkable things.” With a common purpose and relying on long-held values, he reminded them, today’s students have the opportunity to set new standards of individual and collaborative excellence.  

Vanderbilt student-athletes spent the ensuing months showing the campus, conference and country just how remarkable Commodores can be.    

Compete against the best? Lead the way? Live up to a legacy?  

No matter the circumstances, each victory and accolade spoke to the same theme, the statement growing louder as team after team and athlete after athlete met the moment.  

This is who we are. This is what we do. This is Vanderbilt.  

“This memorable year is further proof of what is possible for Vanderbilt Athletics,” said Candice Storey Lee, vice chancellor for athletics and university affairs and athletic director. “Across each of our sports, Vanderbilt student-athletes, coaches and staff competed with a tireless commitment to reaching the full heights of their potential. Commodores challenged each other to grow, and what they achieved, together, challenges all of us to be relentless in pursuit of even better days.”    

From every corner of the Frist Athletics Village to the fairways of Vanderbilt Legends Club and beyond, from the Birmingham Bowl to an SEC title in Hoover to NCAA Tournaments aplenty, Vanderbilt student-athletes and teams transformed 2024–25 into a year that will live long in the memory and a blueprint for even bolder ambitions ahead.  

“I commend our student-athletes, coaches and staff on their hard work and remarkable achievements,” Diermeier said. “Working together to make each other better as a paradigm of radical collaboration, Vanderbilt student-athletes set new standards of excellence and brought us together as sports uniquely can. They remind us of what it means to dare to grow. As we embrace new models that support excellence in education, research and athletics alike, underscored by our recent launch of Vanderbilt Enterprises, we remain proud but not satisfied.”   

Championship Collaboration 

Nearly 75 percent of Vanderbilt programs either competed in NCAA Championships or bowl games or saw student-athletes advance to NCAA Championships.  

In some cases, success meant going where no Vanderbilt team had gone before. When E. Bronson Ingram Chair in Football Clark Lea’s team memorably defeated No. 1 Alabama on Oct. 5, the 40-35 victory marked the first time in program history that the Commodores took down the nation’s top-ranked team.  

Soon thereafter, head coach Darren Ambrose’s women’s soccer team secured the program’s first Sweet 16 appearance by eliminating No. 1 seed Florida State in Tallahassee, Florida, in the second round of the NCAA Tournament  

And for the first time ever, Vanderbilt’s football and men’s and women’s basketball teams were all ranked nationally during the same academic year.  

Success also required reclaiming ground. Proving itself far more than a one-week wonder, football reached its first bowl game since 2018 and claimed its first bowl title since 2013 by outlasting both Georgia Tech and inclement weather in the Birmingham Bowl.  

In head coach Mark Byington’s first season, men’s basketball defeated four top-15 opponents for the first time since the 1980s. And when head coach Shea Ralph’s women’s basketball team reached the NCAA Tournament for the second season in a row, it meant that men’s and women’s basketball shared March Madness for the first time since 2012.  

Success also requires maintaining established excellence, something that is harder than ever as competition grows more fierce. Head coach Tim Corbin’s VandyBoys won the SEC Tournament for the fifth time overall, the fourth time under Coach Corbin and the third time in the past six tournaments—en route to a national-best 19th consecutive NCAA Tournament.  

Remarkably, the VandyBoys don’t even have sole possession of the longest postseason streak on campus: Head coach John Williamson led women’s bowling to the NCAA Tournament for the 19th consecutive season.   

Thomas F. Roush, M.D., and Family Men’s Golf head coach Scott Limbaugh led his team to the NCAA Championships for the 11th consecutive year, while the women’s golf team turned a stirring regional comeback into a fourth consecutive trip to the NCAA Championships.  

Individual Inspiration   

What was the most Vanderbilt moment of the year? The celebration that spilled into the Cumberland River? Back-to-back basketball wins against Tennessee in the span of scarcely 24 hours? There are many worthy candidates. But it’s hard to do better than Mikayla Blakes setting an NCAA Division I women’s basketball record for most points in a game by a true freshman—and then breaking it two weeks later with 55 points against Auburn, to set the women’s record for all freshmen and any SEC player 

Maybe it was women’s tennis’ Célia-Belle Mohr becoming the first student-athlete in that championship-winning program’s history to be honored as a five-time All-American. The Frenchwoman swept to singles and doubles honors alongside freshman Sophia Webster.  

Proud but not satisfied, indeed.  

As the conference and the country took notice, Vanderbilt earned respect. Blakes earned the Tamika Catchings Award as the nation’s best freshman. Lea’s peers honored him as SEC Coach of the Year, and mesmerizing quarterback Diego Pavia was named SEC Newcomer of the Year.  

Mark H. Carter and Family Vanderbilt Men’s Basketball Head Coach Mark Byington was named 2025 Skip Prosser Man of the Year in recognition of his success on the court and his exemplary moral integrity. 

Even the architect got in on the action: Lee was a recipient of the National Association of Collegiate Directors of Athletics AD of the Year Award and one of five finalists for the Sports Business Journal Athletic Director of the Year.  

Mark H. Carter and Family Vanderbilt Men’s Basketball Head Coach Mark Byington was named 2025 Skip Prosser Man of the Year in recognition of his success on the court and his exemplary moral integrity. 

Even the architect got in on the action: Lee was a recipient of the National Association of Collegiate Directors of Athletics AD of the Year Award and one of five finalists for the Sports Business Journal Athletic Director of the Year.  

Community Building  

Commodore Nation was front and center throughout the year. Fans filled FirstBank Stadium to capacity for five of football’s seven home games. Memorial Magic took on new life—and new decibels—throughout basketball season. Around Nashville and across the country, text message chains blew up and old friends reconnected as the Dores thrived.  

That’s the power of sport, its ability to bring people together. But as the past year proved, that’s a two-way street. The power of a community brought Vanderbilt to new heights.  

Vanderbilt dedicated the state-of-the-art Huber Center for men’s and women’s basketball, made possible by George and Cathy Huber and legions of Commodore fans who continue to support Vandy United, part of the Dare to Grow campaign.  

Alumnus Mark H. Carter, who spent some of his favorite undergraduate hours in Memorial’s student section, endowed the men’s basketball head coaching position.  

Former Vanderbilt All-American and NFL standout Casey Hayward committed the largest- ever philanthropic gift by a football alumnus who played professionally.  

Vanderbilt supporters didn’t just come along for the ride in 2024–25. They fueled the rocket.  

Now, a new year awaits. And with it, following final approval of the House settlement, a new era of collegiate athletics. Even as Commodores reached new competitive heights this past year, preparations continued to lead the way and create the conditions for success in the new model. In May, Vanderbilt appointed global hospitality leader Markus Schreyer as CEO of the new Vanderbilt Enterprises, which has an initial focus on enhancing Vanderbilt Athletics resources, support for student-athletes and the fan experience. 

From the opening serve of volleyball’s first home game on Wyatt Lawn, 2025–26 is again sure to be a year unlike any other.  

Because more than anything, 2024–25 proved that we’re just getting started. 

Continue Reading

High School Sports

Summit Community Gardens highlights their summer camps

Executive Director of Summit Community Gardens/EATS Helen Nadel discusses their ongoing summer camps, emphasizing the importance of connecting kids to land stewardship and outdoor activities. Upcoming events include dinners with local chefs, family activities and a farm-to-fork fundraiser at the Pendry on September 3. 1

Published

on

Summit Community Gardens highlights their summer camps

Executive Director of Summit Community Gardens/EATS Helen Nadel discusses their ongoing summer camps, emphasizing the importance of connecting kids to land stewardship and outdoor activities.

Upcoming events include dinners with local chefs, family activities and a farm-to-fork fundraiser at the Pendry on September 3.

Continue Reading

High School Sports

Seymour keeps state title hopes alive with 5

GRAND CHUTE (NBC 26) — Seymour kept its historic run alive Wednesday, topping Aquinas 5–2 to advance to the WIAA Division 2 state championship game. Brady Poch put Seymour on the board early with an RBI single to center in the top of the second, scoring Brandon Poch for a 1–0 lead. Watch the highlights […]

Published

on

Seymour keeps state title hopes alive with 5

GRAND CHUTE (NBC 26) — Seymour kept its historic run alive Wednesday, topping Aquinas 5–2 to advance to the WIAA Division 2 state championship game.

Brady Poch put Seymour on the board early with an RBI single to center in the top of the second, scoring Brandon Poch for a 1–0 lead.

Watch the highlights here:

Seymour keeps state title hopes alive with 5-2 win over Aquinas

Aquinas answered in the bottom half. The Blugolds tied it on a passed ball before Ryan Johnson delivered a sacrifice fly to center, giving Aquinas a 2–1 advantage.

Seymour responded in the third. With the bases loaded, Micah Byers drew a walk to bring in the tying run and make it 2–2.

Carson Staffeldt broke the tie in the fifth with an RBI double to right, scoring Cayden Staffeldt to put the Thunder back in front, 3–2.

In the sixth, pitcher Xavier Salzman helped his own cause with a two-run single that slipped through the infield, bringing home Colten Nieland and Jordan Thompson to extend the lead to 5–2.

Salzman also starred on the mound, striking out five over five innings. Seymour finished with 11 hits and committed no errors in the win.

The Thunder will face New Berlin Eisenhower in the Division 2 championship Thursday at 3 p.m

Continue Reading

High School Sports

Highlights

Close Get email notifications on {{subject}} daily! {{description}} Email notifications are only sent once a day, and only if there are new matching items. 1

Published

on

Highlights

Continue Reading

College Sports

Adou Thiero is an explosive athlete and could be a second-round steal – Liberty Ballers

Before the 2025 NBA Draft, we’ll take an in-depth look at different prospects here at Liberty Ballers and try to figure out which players would be the best fit for the Sixers at Nos. 3 and 35. Next up in this series is Arkansas’ Adou Thiero. Arkansas star Adou Thiero had a breakout year in […]

Published

on

Adou Thiero is an explosive athlete and could be a second-round steal - Liberty Ballers

Before the 2025 NBA Draft, we’ll take an in-depth look at different prospects here at Liberty Ballers and try to figure out which players would be the best fit for the Sixers at Nos. 3 and 35. Next up in this series is Arkansas’ Adou Thiero.

Arkansas star Adou Thiero had a breakout year in the SEC during his junior season playing under John Calipari in Fayetteville after transferring in after two seasons at the University of Kentucky. Often viewed as and mocked as an early second-round prospect, I believe Thiero can return top-20 if not lottery value if he can develop in a couple of key areas.

Let’s take a look at what gives Thiero such significant upside as a potential legitimate two-way difference maker.

Profile

Stats (PER 40 Min):

21.9 PPG

8.5 REB

2.7 AST

2.4 STL

1.3 BLK

54.5% FG

60.5 TS%

25.6% 3PT (2.3 3PA)

68.6% FT (9.4 FTA)

Team: Arkansas

Year: Junior

Position: Forward

Height: 6’7 12 (In Shoes)

Weight: 218 lbs

Wingspan: 7’0

Born: May 8, 2004 (21 years old)

Hometown: Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania

Strengths

Athleticism

Thiero is a truly nuclear athlete even by NBA standards. Whether it’s blowing by defenders off the bounce with a lightning quick first step, skying through the air for gravity-defying slams, or seemingly coming out of the rafters to erase shot attempts, Thiero’s athleticism pops in basically every aspect. He was 46th in the country in total dunks with 45 made on the season despite only playing 27 games and only 51% of Arkansas’ total minutes on the season as he was limited with injuries. That is an astounding number for a 6-foot-7 wing.

Defense

Thiero is an excellent defensive playmaker posting 3.7 stocks per 40 Minutes, an outstanding level of defensive playmaking for a wing prospect.

Arkansas was significantly better on defense as a team with Thiero on the floor, good for 98 points per 100 possessions conceded with Thiero on and plummeted to 106.4 points per 100 conceded with him off the floor. Teams shot worse from all over the floor with his presence on the court. He is a force as a secondary rim protector and weakside shot blocker due to his 7-foot wingspan and special vertical athleticism. Thiero does a great job of contesting without fouling at the rim, at times walling up with two hands or swatting away shots emphatically.

His outlier quickness and quick hands coupled with his 6-foot-7, 218-pound frame makes him a stifling on-ball defender. Thiero plays with a relentless motor and always has to be accounted for as he is looking to jump passing lanes, chase down players for steals and deflections, and wreak havoc as an off-ball defender.

Driving/Rim Finishing

Over 55% of Thiero’s attempts at the rim were self-created and he finished over 58% of his rim attempts in the half court and 61.6% at the rim overall. His blur of a first step and grab-and-go ability in transition make him a difficult cover as a driver and play finisher especially when he gets a head of steam.

Thiero scored on 1.017 points per possession on his half court attempts this past season at Arkansas which puts him in the 82nd percentile, per Synergy. He also displays excellent floater touch which is a great counter to have to his driving and one that will be greatly needed — especially early in his career as he looks to improve as a jump shooter.

Thiero is also an outstanding weapon as a cutter off the ball where he ranked in the 97th percentile at 1.641 points per possession and finished 84% of his field goals on basket cuts.

Rebounding

Thiero has pulled down 8.7 rebounds per game per 40 minutes throughout his college career. During the 2024-2025 season with the Razorbacks, he put out an impressive 7.7 ORB%, a lot of those ending in put-back points for Thiero by way of layups and put-back dunks. We have seen how important extra possessions and rebounding are throughout the NBA playoffs. Thiero is a legitimate weapon on the glass from the forward spot.

Foul Drawing

Thiero posted a 69.2% free throw rate which is higher than any of the projected first-round prospects coming from the NCAA this season. Thiero uses his first step, strength, and creative rim finishing to apply constant pressure on the rim and get himself to the line at a high rate. This is an important trait for Thiero to help him bring offensive value and generate easy scoring opportunities.

Potential Swing Skill

Playmaking

Thiero’s 1.1 Ast/TO ratio is not going to jump off the page but as you dig deeper into the tape and his profile you will see that there is some untapped playmaking upside. Thiero was a point guard in his high school days as he was just 6-foot tall his junior season and that flashes at times throughout his college film as well. Thiero’s 14% assist rate is a solid number given his archetype. He has showed the ability to make passes on the move, throw skip passes with both hands, passes to rollers out of pick-and-roll, and hit quick extra passes to shooters and cutters as well.

There may be more there than we have seen to this point and improvements to either his handle or shooting could allow him to bend defenses more and leverage some of his passing chops as well.

Areas of Concern

Shooting

Thiero at this time is a complete project at as a shooter. He made just 21 threes in 72 games in his college career at a pedestrian 28.4% clip. Thiero also is a below average free throw shooter for his archetype shooting just 71.1% from the line in his career. While the form on his jumper does not seem to be broken, he has failed to knock it down with any kind of consistency or efficiency. Thiero’s floater touch, rim touch, and flashes of pull-up shooting from two give some optimism for his potential development as a shooter, but it is best to view it as a complete work in progress at this stage.

Overall

Adou Thiero is one of the most underrated prospects in the 2025 NBA Draft. His defensive impact, defensive versatility, S tier athleticism, elite play finishing capabilities, relentless motor, and intriguing ball skills make him a top-20 prospect in this class — with potential to be even more if he lands with the right team to utilize and find value in his current skillset while he looks to develop as a shooter.

Thiero’s shooting development will ultimately determine his ceiling while his other skills give him avenues to immediate role player value in the right system. Given the Sixers’ excess of perimeter shooting, Thiero could slot into a nice role as a transition scorer, driver, cutter, defender, and rebounder and he should be near the top of Sixers wish list early in the second round.

Continue Reading

Most Viewed Posts

Trending