Track and field state finals recap
A recap and some of the outstanding performances from the outdoor track and field championships.
A recap and some of the outstanding performances from the outdoor track and field championships.
Kirsten Nielsen Hartig (Oakland County). A Michigan judge with an alleged history of mistreating staff and upsetting prosecutors has been barred from hearing felony cases and can only oversee small claims and landlord-tenant cases. According to an order obtained by Law&Crime, 52nd District Court Chief Judge Travis M Reeds stripped Judge Kirsten Nielsen Hartig of […]
Kirsten Nielsen Hartig (Oakland County).
A Michigan judge with an alleged history of mistreating staff and upsetting prosecutors has been barred from hearing felony cases and can only oversee small claims and landlord-tenant cases.
According to an order obtained by Law&Crime, 52nd District Court Chief Judge Travis M Reeds stripped Judge Kirsten Nielsen Hartig of the ability to oversee criminal matters.
“All General Civil, Landlord Tenant, and Small Claims actions filed in the [district] will be assigned to Judge Kirsten Nielsen Hartig,” the order says.
Meanwhile, all “criminal and civil infraction ordinance violations,” as well as “all felony cases” will be assigned to another judge, the order said. The order takes effect on May 27.
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The order does not give a reason for the action in the court that handles cases in the Detroit suburbs of Troy and Clawson but Hartig has a history of misconduct allegations, according to local reports.
“The order was issued to ensure fairness in the courtroom,” Oakland County spokesperson Bill Mullan told The Detroit News.
The Detroit Free Press reported Hartig’s rulings in 2022 sparked Oakland County Prosecutor Karen McDonald to appeal to a higher court. McDonald claimed Hartig dismissed cases against a trio of alleged armed robbers as retribution for a scheduling conflict. The appeal alleged Hartig “has a long-standing practice of seeking to impose her own personal view of what the law should be via the criminal cases before her,” McDonald wrote, according to the Free Press.
McDonald also noted that Hartig’s decisions were repeatedly overturned on appeal.
Hartig in a statement to the Free Press at the time chalked up McDonald’s beef to election year politics and said she only dismissed the case because the prosecutor refused to show up to a court hearing in person, despite knowing that’s what the judge expected.
“They didn’t do their job and now they’d like to blame the judge for enforcing the law,” Hartig said in a statement at the time, according to the Free Press. “That’s no surprise, and neither is the attempt by political opponents to pile on.”
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Also in 2022, a former court administrator sued the county, alleging that Hartig created a hostile work environment and that the administrator was fired for complaining about it, the Detroit News reported. While Hartig was not personally named in the lawsuit, the administrator alleged after she returned from medical leave the judge made it clear that she had to report to her daily “unless you’re unconscious.”
Hartig also made the administrator stand up in front of a courtroom full of people where she accused her of mismanaging grant funding, the lawsuit said. The Free Press reported the court administrator settled for $100,000 in 2023.
According to Hartig’s biography, she was elected to the district court bench in 2010. It says she “currently presides” over the district’s Recovery Treatment Court.
Starting on Wednesday, June 11, the final sporting event on the 2024-25 Alabama Crimson Tide athletic calendar will officially begin, as a total of 20 athletes from the program will travel across the country to Eugene, Oregon for the 2025 NCAA outdoor track and field championships. An annual event, Eugene will be the host site […]
Starting on Wednesday, June 11, the final sporting event on the 2024-25 Alabama Crimson Tide athletic calendar will officially begin, as a total of 20 athletes from the program will travel across the country to Eugene, Oregon for the 2025 NCAA outdoor track and field championships.
An annual event, Eugene will be the host site to many of the top college track and field athletes across the nation this week, as well as the location where numerous national champions will officially be decided.
Among that group of athletes, there are some, as mentioned previously, that come from Alabama who could end up winning a national title when all is said and done.
Here is how to watch the 2025 NCAA outdoor track and field championships this week, as well as which Alabama athletes will be participating.
The 2025 NCAA outdoor track and field championships will be held Wednesday, June 11 through Saturday, June 14, taking place from Hayward Field in Eugene, Oregon.
All four days of the 2025 NCAA outdoor track and field championships will be available via livestream on ESPN+, as well as Fubo, which offers a free trial to new subscribers. Every day will also be broadcast live on ESPN networks.
Watch NCAA outdoor track and field championships live on Fubo (free trial)
Watch NCAA outdoor track and field championships on ESPN+
Men
Women
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DURHAM, N.C. – A school-record 17 athletes are set to compete for Duke track and field as the Blue Devils look to cap an impressive all-around season with a bang at the NCAA Outdoor Championships this weekend. The four-day national meet is slated for June 11-14 at Hayward Field in Eugene, Oregon. COVERAGE INFO: […]
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To stay up to date with Blue Devils cross country and track & field, follow the team on Twitter, Instagram and Facebook by searching “DukeTFXC.”
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What’s on the track at Hayward Field in 2025? Hayward Field will play host to a wide variety of track and field events in 2025. The best of the best in collegiate track and field have descended upon Eugene this week for the NCAA Outdoor Track & Field Championships at Hayward Field. The four-day meet […]
What’s on the track at Hayward Field in 2025?
Hayward Field will play host to a wide variety of track and field events in 2025.
The best of the best in collegiate track and field have descended upon Eugene this week for the NCAA Outdoor Track & Field Championships at Hayward Field.
The four-day meet flip-flops between the men’s competition on June 11 and June 13, and the women’s competition on June 12 and June 14.
“I love this meet and I love that it’s at Hayward, where it should be,” Oregon coach Jerry Schumacher said. “I wouldn’t trade it for a thing.”
Where: Hayward Field
When: June 11-14
Complete four-day schedule
Chris Hansen covers University of Oregon football, men’s basketball, track and field, cross country and softball for The Register-Guard. You can reach him at chansen@registerguard.com and you can follow him on X @chansen_RG
Track and field state finals recap Updated: 11:18 PM EDT Jun 10, 2025 GLENBURN ELEMENTARY. HIGH SCHOOL SPRING SPORTS TOURNAMENTS ROLLED ON TODAY WITH HIGH SCHOOL TRACK AND FIELD TAKING CENTER STAGE. ANXIOUS ATHLETES HAD TO WAIT AN EXTRA THREE DAYS TO COMPETE DUE TO RAIN ON SATURDAY. THE CLASS A MEET TOOK PLACE AT […]
Track and field state finals recap
GLENBURN ELEMENTARY. HIGH SCHOOL SPRING SPORTS TOURNAMENTS ROLLED ON TODAY WITH HIGH SCHOOL TRACK AND FIELD TAKING CENTER STAGE. ANXIOUS ATHLETES HAD TO WAIT AN EXTRA THREE DAYS TO COMPETE DUE TO RAIN ON SATURDAY. THE CLASS A MEET TOOK PLACE AT LEWISTON AND BLUE DEVILS SENIOR RYKER PARADIS PARADIS HAD A GREAT DAY. HE WON BOTH THE BOYS SHOT PUT AND DISCUS EVENTS. SOUTH PORTLAND’S ARNAUD SIOHO WHO HAS BATTLED INJURY FOR MOST OF THE SEASON, WON THE LONG JUMP AND TRIPLE JUMP EVENTS. CARTER ENGLEMAN OF WINDHAM ALSO WON MULTIPLE EVENTS. HE TIED FOR FIRST IN THE POLE VAULT AND WON THE 110 METER HURDLES. ANDRE CLARK WON THE 100 AND 200 METER DASHES AND HELPED MARSHWOOD SET A RECORD IN THE 4 BY 100 METER RELAY. ALI CARTER OF FALMOUTH WON THE 400 METER DASH AND ANTOINE DUBE OF GORHAM WON THE 300 METER HURDLES. ON THE GIRLS SIDE, CASSIDY HARDY OF MOUNT BLUE WAS SEEDED THIRD IN THE JAVELIN BUT WON WITH HER BEST THROW OF THE SEASON. TAYLA PELLETIER OF WINDHAM WON THE TRIPLE JUMP BY NEARLY THREE FEET OVER THE NEXT COMPETITOR. ON THE TRACK, JENNI FLYNN OF LEWISTON EDGED ANNELIESE COLLIN OF PORTLAND IN THE 100 METER HURDLES, BUT COLLIN CAME BACK AN HOUR LATER TO WIN THE 300 METER HURDLES. EMERSON FLAKER FROM SCARBOROUGH SPRINTED HER WAY TO WINNING THE 200 AND 400 METER DASHES AND HER TEAMMATE LAUREL DRISCOLL WON THE 16 HUNDRED METERS. THE BANGOR GIRLS AND SOUTH PORTLAND BOYS ARE LEADING THE TEAM SCORES. BUT DUE TO WET CONDITIONS NEAR THE HIGH JUMP AREA THAT EVENT DID NOT TAKE PLACE AND WILL BE TOMORROW AT EDWARD LITTLE HIGH SCHOOL STARTING AT TWO. THE CLASS B MEET TOOK PLACE IN BAR HARBOR. VICTORIA ZANDAN OF GREELY WINS THE GIRLS 100 METER HURDLES AND ALSO WON THE LONG JUMP. STEPHEN PIERRE FROM LEAVITT WOULD WIN THE BOYS RACE AND ALSO WIN THE LONG JUMP TITLE. IN THE GIRLS 100 METER DASH, AVERY BARITEAU OF FRYEBURG ACADEMY WON IN 12 POINT SIX NINE SECONDS. HISTORY WAS MADE IN THE GIRLS 16 HUNDRED METERS. SHEALYN BROCHU OF MORSE SET A NEW STATE RECORD. SAM LAVARDIERE OF LAKE REGION PULLED AWAY TO WIN THE BOYS RACE. GREELY WON THE BOYS AND GIRLS TEAM TITLES. THE CLASS C MEET TOOK PLACE AT MESSALONSKEE HIGH SCHOOL IN OAKLAND. BUCKSPORT’S HALEY ROSE WINS THE GIRLS 200 METER DASH. GEORGE STEVENS ACADEMY WENT ONE TWO IN THE BOYS RACE WITH ROWAN GAGNE TAKING FIRST. LISBON’S JACOB ROBERTSON WAS THIRD. TEANNE EWINGS OF HOULTON WON THE GIRLS 32 HUNDRED METER RACE BY NEARLY 45 SECONDS. THE BOYS RACE WAS MUCH CLOSER WITH BEN ARSENAULT OF ORONO BEATING OUT DESMOND ROBINSON OF CARRABEC
Track and field state finals recap
A recap and some of the outstanding performances from the outdoor track and field championships.
A recap and some of the outstanding performances from the outdoor track and field championships.
1 / 2 BYU’s James Corrigan (214) will compete in the steeplechase at the NCAA Track and Field Meet in Eugene, Ore., on Wednesday, June 11, 2025. Courtesy BYU Athletics 2 / 2 BYU’s Meghan Hunter will compete in the 800 meters at the NCAA Track and Field Meet in Eugene, Ore., on Thursday, June […]
All the hard work and training comes down to three days in June.
The BYU men’s and women’s track teams are headed to Eugene, Ore., and fabled Hayward Field for the NCAA Championships. putting their individual excellence on the line against the best athletes in the country.
The men will compete on Wednesday and Friday and the women on Thursday and Saturday. The decathlon for the men will be held on Wednesday and Thursday.
Ben Barton and Jaden Roskelley will represent the Cougars in the decathlon on Wednesday and Thursday. Roskelley enters the 10-event gauntlet as one of four competitors to have scored at least 8,000 points this season joining Nebraska’s Till Steinforth, Mississippi State’s Peyton Bair and UC Santa Barbara’s Brad Thomas. He won the Robison Invitational earlier this season where he set six personal bests en route to scoring 8,000 points. Barton returns to the national meet for the first time since 2023 when he finished eighth with the 7,815 points. The senior is coming off the best decathlon of his career at the Big 12 Championship where he won the title scoring 7,865 points, making him the seventh-best performer in the event in program history.
James Corrigan returns Hayward Field in hopes of bringing home the Cougars fifth 3,000-meter steeplechase national title. The junior finished ninth at last year’s edition of the championships at Hayward Field running 8:29.61 in the final after having the fastest time in the prelims. He would return to the same track two weeks later to finish third at the U.S. Olympic Trials and join former teammate Kenneth Rooks as an Olympian.
The native of Los Angeles, Calif. hasn’t lost a steeplechase race this season as he won his heat at the NCAA West Preliminary Round in 8:31.79. He also won his second consecutive Big 12 title running a season-best 8:22.20 in Lawrence, Kan.
Danny Bryant earned First Team All-American honors in the shot put at last year’s as the senior finished fourth with a throw of 20.02m/65-8.25. He best throw of the season came at the Big 12 Championships where he finished fourth with a toss of 19.84m/65-1.25.
Luke Grundvig had the 39th fastest 5,000-meter time in the west region but races aren’t run on paper as the junior ran a personal best time of 13:34.63 to secure the final time qualifier. It will the American Fork natives first appearance at a national championship after previously finishing 41st (5,000m) and 38th (10,000m) at the West preliminary round.
Joey Nokes and Creed Thompson will compete in the 10,000-meters after securing a Top 16 finish in College Station. Nokes, a senior from Riverton, is the eight-fastest Cougar to ever circle the track for 25 laps having run 28:05.38 in 2023. He will make his first appearance at the outdoor championships having never finished higher than 25th at the West Preliminary Round prior to his 10th place finish where he ran 28:21.04.
Thompson will also be competing at outdoor nationals for a first time after earning First Team All-American honors indoors thanks to an eighth-place finish in the 5,000-meters. He is the sixth-fastest 10,000m runner in program history after running 28:04.15 at the 2023 Bryan Clay Invitational just 10 seconds faster than he ran to finish ninth at this seasons Bryan Clay.
Eli Hazlett, Josh Taylor, Trey Jackson and Jonah Heimuli will have more meet to continue rewriting the record books. The quartet are the second-fastest 4×400-meter relay in program history after running 3:03.05 at Mt. SAC Relays in April. They had the eighth-fastest time in Texas after securing a runner-up finish at the Big 12 Championships with the fifth-fastest time in program history, 3:03.62.
The BYU women’s track and field team will send nine athletes with 10 total entries across seven events to the NCAA outdoor championships in Eugene, Oregon. This marks the program’s largest number of entries since 2004, when it also qualified 10. BYU is tied with Texas Tech for the 10th-most entries among Division I programs headed to Eugene.
Leading the way is senior Meghan Hunter, who broke the 1:59 barrier in the 800 meters twice during May. She posted a personal best of 1:58.95 to win the NCAA West Preliminary Round, making her the third-fastest collegian in NCAA history in the event. Hunter will compete in Thursday’s semifinal round, looking to earn a spot in Saturday’s national title race. Joining her in the 800m is freshman Tessa Buswell, the only BYU freshman woman to qualify for nationals. She is one of just four freshmen in the 24-woman field.
In the 3000 meter steeplechase, senior Lexy Halladay-Lowry won the NCAA West Preliminary Round with a time of 9:23.03. Her personal best of 9:18.05 ranks No. 2 all time at BYU and makes her the fifth fastest performer in collegiate history. She will race in Thursday’s semifinal with her sights set on Saturday’s final. Teammate Taylor Lovell also advanced in the event, running 9:42.83 for the fourth fastest mark in program history as she looks to improve on her ninth place finish at the 2024 outdoor championships.
Carlee Hansen broke the BYU school record in the 1500 meters, previously held by 2021 NCAA champion Anna Camp-Bennett (4:08.53), with a time of 4:07.64 to qualify for her first NCAA outdoor meet. She’ll be joined by Riley Chamberlain, who qualified with a 4:08.42. The two will race in Thursday’s semifinal round.
Senior sprinter Sami Oblad will compete in the 400 meters. She holds the BYU record at 50.49 and advanced to Eugene with the fifth-fastest time at the West Preliminary (51.29). Oblad races in Friday’s semifinal for a spot in Saturday’s final.
In the 5000 meters, junior Jenna Hutchins was the fifth-fastest qualifier from the West Region at 15:49.95. Her personal best of 15:16.95 ranks No. 3 in program history. Hutchins previously earned First Team All-America honors with a sixth-place finish in the 10,000m at this year’s NCAA outdoor meet.
Senior thrower Gretchen Hoekstre will return to her home state of Oregon to compete in both the shot put on Thursday and the discus on Saturday. Hoekstre holds BYU’s school record in the discus at 57.04m/187-2 and is just 25 centimeters shy of breaking the school’s 27-year-old shot put record with a mark of 17.46m/57-3.5.
Events will be streamed live on ESPN+ with some finals shown on television on ESPN and ESPN2.
Summer 2025 is signaling a remarkable wave of milestones in women’s sports. After a strong-performing 2024 that saw equal representation between women and men at the Olympics for the first time in history as well as standout college stars Caitlin Clark and Angel Reese making their much-anticipated WNBA debuts, women athletes have only continued to […]
Summer 2025 is signaling a remarkable wave of milestones in women’s sports. After a strong-performing 2024 that saw equal representation between women and men at the Olympics for the first time in history as well as standout college stars Caitlin Clark and Angel Reese making their much-anticipated WNBA debuts, women athletes have only continued to build on their momentum. In fact, this year, the growth potential for women athletes is expected to be even more impressive.
According to reporting from Axios, there are now eleven women’s sports bars across the U.S., a significant feat considering there was only one just three years ago. More locations may be on the horizon, as The Sports Bra, the world’s first sports bar dedicated exclusively to women’s sports, plans to expand into four more U.S. cities. In addition to being a popular place to watch women’s games, many women’s sports bars have developed into robust community hubs that welcome sports fans from all backgrounds.
ROSEMONT, ILLINOIS – SEPTEMBER 28: Haylie McCleney #28 of Team Piancastelli hits a home run in the … More
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MLB also recently announced in a press release plans to invest in the Athletes Unlimited Softball League (AUSL). MLB commissioner Robert D. Manfred called the investment “an opportunity to support softball’s long-term growth and expand our engagement with these outstanding athletes and their fans.” This marks MLB’s first-ever partnership with a women’s professional sports league and is expected to accelerate the AUSL’s growth by helping cover operational costs and broadcasting AUSL games on MLB Network.
And just last month, sources told The Athletic that the WNBA’s New York Liberty was estimated to be valued at $450 million, a record-valuation in women’s sports and well over double its estimated valuation just a year ago. Only a few days prior, Chelsea FC Women announced that Alex Ohanian, Reddit co-founder and husband of Serena Williams, bought a minority stake in the club at a price that would value the team at $326 million. In an interview with the BBC, Ohanian stated that the treble-winning club will one day be a “billion-dollar franchise” (Chelsea FC Women is fresh off an undefeated season in the Women’s Super League, won the Women’s League Cup earlier this year, and recently lifted the FA Cup trophy after a 3-0 victory against Manchester United).
Women are also excelling on the international sports stage. In March, Kirsty Coventry was elected as the first woman president of the International Olympic Committee (IOC), and FIFA just confirmed the expansion of the Women’s World Cup from 32 to 48 teams for 2031.
These achievements only scratch the surface of the many ways women’s sports are poised to thrive in summer 2025. It’s no surprise, then, that Deloitte has projected the global value of women’s sports to exceed $2 billion this year. However, unlocking this industry’s full potential will require addressing significant gaps in pay equity.
Despite countless strides forward, women athletes remain severely underpaid, often requiring them to take on outside jobs that limit their time to train and focus on their sport. In its report titled, “Beyond the Game: Exposing the Economic Realities of Professional Women Athletes,” sports marketing and sponsorship platform Parity found that over half of women athletes earn no net income after accounting for sports-related costs, and 74% hold other jobs in addition to having intense training schedules. Gender pay disparities even exist among the highest-paid athletes. Forbes reports that Coco Gauff, the highest-paid woman athlete, falls nearly $20 million short of making its list of the 50 highest-paid athletes for 2025 (a list currently composed entirely of men).
From local women’s sports bars to growth on the global stage, the appetite for women’s sports is clear. Unfortunately, much like when this author covered the business wins of women’s sports in 2024, to meet that demand and achieve true pay equity requires increased investment, brand partnerships, and media engagement. Men’s professional sports have had a century-and-a-half-long head start, so naturally, women’s sports have a lot of catching up to do, and while each step forward matters, slowing down isn’t an option. To reach the full potential of women’s sports, we’ll have to pick up the pace.
The good news is, progress is continuing to be made. In addition to the MLB’s investment in the AUSL, others are seizing the opportunity to invest in women’s sports and are cashing in. New ventures, like Ariel Investments’ Project Level, are being created specifically to fund women’s sports initiatives. Brands are also beginning to forge partnerships with men’s and women’s leagues, such as Airbnb’s partnership with both the men’s and women’s Tour de France for the next three years. And CBS Sports recently announced that it has acquired the rights to the UEFA Women’s Champions League, with all matches for this year’s season streaming on Paramount+.
With rising investment, growing fan enthusiasm, and heightened global visibility, the foundation is being laid for a future where women are fully supported both on and off the field. Still, empowering women athletes to reach their full potential depends on closing persistent gaps in pay, media coverage and funding. If this summer is any indication, the world is ready not just to celebrate women’s sports, but to take the next step to ensure women athletes receive the level of recognition, resources, and compensation they have earned.
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