Sports
BACK-TO-BACK: Men’s Track & Field Wins 2nd Straight Outdoor Title, SWAC Track Trifecta
Story Links BATON ROUGE, La. – The Texas Southern men’s track & field team made history once again with its second consecutive SWAC Outdoor Championship Tuesday night. TSU won the title with 136 total points as they held off a late charge from Jackson State. With the win, TSU becomes […]

BATON ROUGE, La. – The Texas Southern men’s track & field team made history once again with its second consecutive SWAC Outdoor Championship Tuesday night.
TSU won the title with 136 total points as they held off a late charge from Jackson State. With the win, TSU becomes the first SWAC men’s track & field program since 2001-02 and 2002-03 to win back-to-back trifectas (cross country, indoor/outdoor track & field).
TSU started off day one (Sunday) strong as Jalen Walker won the hammer with a throw of 195-1 feet followed by Blaine Nunn’s personal-best and third-place mark of 177-1 feet. Trevon Hill would place seventh after a throw of 164-3 feet. Malachi Byrd finished third in the javelin as he threw 167-04 feet while Jaden Brooks placed fifth (164-03) and Hill seventh (160-0).
In the Sunday night distance run, Manuel Garza and Gael Flores placed fourth (32:52.57) and seventh in the 10,000 (33:46.57) to earn seven points.
On Monday, the throwing unit shined again as Walker (52-7.25), Hill (51-6.25) and Nunn (51-2.25) finished (2-3-4) in the shot put. Byrd returned to the podium with a second-place finish in the decathlon as he won the 110-meter hurdles while placing second in the shot put, pole vault, long jump, 1,500 and 400-meter runs. In the nightcap, David Livingston earned his first career SWAC Championship in the steeplechase as he ran 9:39.38. Jeremiah Barrera placed third in the event after running 9:53.60.
Adam Hines started off the third and final day of competition by winning his second straight SWAC Pole Vault Championship as the sophomore jumped 15-5.75 feet. Ian Charles (13-6.25) and Byrd (13-0.25) also picked up points as they placed fifth and seventh, respectively. Walker and Brooks placed fourth (154-01) and sixth (149-05), respectively in the discus while Braylon Carr finished sixth in the triple jump (49-05).
Brandon Adolphus finished fifth in the 1,500 with a personal-best time of 3:58.91 while Donyea Jarmon placed sixth (14.21) in the 110-meter hurdles. Isaac Henderson (10.44) placed fifth in the 100 while David Livingston (15:37.58), Manuel Garza (15:55.7) and Gael Flores (16:38.92) combined to earn 11 critical points in the 5,000 as they finished third, fifth and eighth, respectively.
Several individuals will await their next destination as the NCAA West Regionals will take place in College Station, Texas May 28-31.
Sports
Matt Fisher is The Star’s Boys Volleyball Player of the Year for 2025
Matt Fisher is no stranger to high school sporting success. A year ago, he celebrated with his Camarillo High teammates after winning a CIF-Southern Section Division 4 baseball championship. Fisher then made a decision that would completely change the trajectory of his athletic career. He decided to focus solely on volleyball. A year later, Fisher […]

Matt Fisher is no stranger to high school sporting success.
A year ago, he celebrated with his Camarillo High teammates after winning a CIF-Southern Section Division 4 baseball championship.
Fisher then made a decision that would completely change the trajectory of his athletic career.
He decided to focus solely on volleyball.
A year later, Fisher is the Coastal Canyon League co-MVP, the best player on the area’s top-ranked boys volleyball team and The Star’s Boys Volleyball Player of the Year for the 2025 season.
“Last year was kind of my first glimpse at (the award), knowing that I am right there,” said Fisher, who made The Star’s All-County First Team last season. “I got to tell my mom, both my parents, my grandparents — that was a cool feeling.”
For Fisher, becoming a full-time volleyball player was a return to the family business.
Dan Fisher, his uncle, is the head volleyball coach at the University of Pittsburgh and was named the 2024 American Volleyball Coaches Association Division I National Coach of the Year. Fisher grew up around the sport, but only found his passion for it later.
“All I really knew was baseball,” Fisher said. “Volleyball just kind of started to creep into my life.”
In a short time, Fisher put together quite the career at Camarillo.
He ended his senior season as the program record-holder for assists in a single season after recording 562 this spring. He also amassed 115 kills, 31 solo blocks and 22 aces this season.
Those marks, awe-inspiring on their own, are made all the more impressive when Fisher’s injury history is taken into account.
Playing at an open gym in December, Fisher felt a sudden, debilitating pain in his back. He was diagnosed with a pars defect — stress fractures in his spine — as well as disc displacement.
“The next few days after that initial game, I was barely able to get out of bed,” Fisher said. “I wasn’t able to move, bend down, anything. It was excruciating pain.”
The senior was seriously limited early in the season, only playing a few rotations per match with seriously limited mobility. Four months of physical therapy helped finally get him back on the court.
Fisher’s injury showed just how integral he was to Camarillo’s play, but it also pushed every member of the team to rely on one another, according to head coach Stephen Zavala.
“In the very beginning of the season, everyone looked for Matt — ‘Matt is going to get us out of this slump,’ ” Zavala said. “He said, ‘It’s not a one-man show. It requires six people on the court.’ He really built that trust.
“We held him back, didn’t want him to play in the front, jumping, too much. Once he came back, we let the reins go and he was going at it.”
Some of Fisher’s best performances came during Camarillo’s tournament play, helping lead the Scorpions to a sixth-place finish at the vaunted Karch Kiraly Tournament of Champions at Santa Barbara High.
“He popped off,” Zavala said. “He was there to prove something.”
Fisher’s stellar play continued into Coastal Canyon League play, where he had 57 assists, 18 kills and four solo blocks in a win over Oak Park. The big outing demonstrated the senior’s most impressive skill: picking apart an opposing team’s blocking scheme, piece by piece.
That skill paired nicely with Camarillo’s stable of athletic hitters like Stanley Filiaga and Breck Bray, whom Fisher credited with helping lead the program to a successful season.
“Without the hitters, there is no success,” Fisher said. “It came through hard work with the hitters, being able to connect with them and figure out what they need to be successful, how to get them open, what they are most comfortable with. All the props to them — they were amazing this season.”
Camarillo earned a co-league championship with Royal and reached the CIF-Southern Section Division 3 playoffs, where the Scorpions lost to Santa Monica in five sets in the first round to end their season with a 20-6 record.
Every aspect of Fisher’s game, from his on-court skills to his leadership and even in his respect for the sport, evolved while he played for the 2024 Boys U19 National Team last year, he said.
“You are representing the country,” Fisher said. “Not just your high school, not just maybe your city, not your club, but the country. Everybody that lives in the USA.”
When Fisher returned from that experience, he was a different player, according to Zavala.
His focus was no longer just on becoming the best player he could be, but also on helping his team to evolve and reach their goals.
“From Day 1 to the end of the season, it was, ‘How can we make everyone better?’ ” Zavala said. “Matt implemented that.
“Even our third on the bench, he was trying to make that guy better so that he makes the No. 2 better, who makes the No. 1 better. It was full circle, from beginning to end. I think that was what really made this team very, very special this year.”
Fisher, who will continue his academic and volleyball career at Concordia University in Irvine next year, said he hopes the improvement Camarillo showed over the past four years can be an inspiration for other players and teams.
“As long as you put in the work and as long as you put faith in the system and your coaches, you will succeed,” Fisher said. “There is so much success to happen and so much untapped potential in every single player. I just hope that we were able to show that is a possibility. Success is a possibility, no matter where you start.”
The Star’s All-County Boys Volleyball Second Team
- Cooper Barrus, Thousand Oaks
- Breck Bray, Camarillo
- Mateo Hernandez, Moorpark
- Brody Gallagher, Oak Park
- Cameron Judd, Oaks Christian
- Max Mechtenberg, Ventura
- Matthew Currey, Westlake
- Tucker Prosser, Royal
- Curran Pendergraft, Oaks Christian
- Joseph Richardson, Hueneme
- Brandon Romero of Channel Islands
- Jayden Wallace, Foothill Tech
- Elijah Haigh, Foothill Tech
- Thomas Salie, Thousand Oaks
- Adael Perez, Rio Mesa
Dominic Massimino is a staff writer for the Star. He can be reached at dominic.massimino@vcstar.com. For more coverage, follow @vcsdominic on Twitter and Instagram.
Sports
Track and field places nine on CSC Academic All-District team
Story Links WALTHAM, Mass. – Nine members of the Brandeis men’s and women’s cross country and track and field teams have been named to the College Sports Communicators Academic All-District At-Large teams. Honorees on the CSC Academic All-District teams must be at least sophomores in academic standing with a grade-point […]

WALTHAM, Mass. – Nine members of the Brandeis men’s and women’s cross country and track and field teams have been named to the College Sports Communicators Academic All-District At-Large teams.
Honorees on the CSC Academic All-District teams must be at least sophomores in academic standing with a grade-point average of 3.50 or higher. For track and field, they also must rank among the top 50 in the region in an individual event or among the top 50 at the NCAA Regional Cross Country Championships.
The Judges’ honorees for the 2024-25 season are:
WOMEN
Alisha Anderson – Junior – Pole Vault – Denver, Colorado – 3.95 GPA – Biology major
Kyra Au – Senior – XC/Distance – Great Neck, New York – 3.76 GPA – Business / Environmental Studies double major
Hannah Bohbot-Dridi – Senior – Hurdles/Sprints – Mountain View, California – 3.54 GPA – Politics major
Aïana Colas – Junior – High Jump – Strasbourg, France – 3.97 GPA – Biology major
Zada Forde – Senior – Cross Country/Distance – Amherst. Massachusetts – 3.83 GPA – Sociology / Environmental Studies double major
MEN
Lucas Dia – Senior – Steeplechase/Distance – Montclair, New Jersey – 3.58 GPA – Computer Science / Economics double major
Lin Lin Hutchinson – Senior – Jumps – Portland, Oregon – 3.79 GPA – American Studies / Independent Interdisciplinary Studies double major
TJ Showstead – Junior – Heptathlon/Decathlon – Plymouth, Massachusetts – 3.77 GPA – Chemistry major
Matthew Yue – Junior – Sprints, Long Jump – Vancouver, British Columbia – 3.72 GPA – Applied Mathematics / Computer Science major
Sports
Kenzie Foley Becomes First SCSU Volleyball Alumna To Go Pro
ST. CLOUD (WJON News) — A former standout St. Cloud State University volleyball player has signed a contract to play professionally. Former outside hitter Kenzie Foley of Sergeant Bluff, Iowa has signed a professional contract with a team in Germany. Foley becomes the first St. Cloud State Volleyball alumna to sign a professional contract. She was 2021 […]

ST. CLOUD (WJON News) — A former standout St. Cloud State University volleyball player has signed a contract to play professionally.
Former outside hitter Kenzie Foley of Sergeant Bluff, Iowa has signed a professional contract with a team in Germany.
Foley becomes the first St. Cloud State Volleyball alumna to sign a professional contract.
She was 2021 American Volleyball Coaches Association (AVCA) DII National Freshman of the Year and 2023 AVCA DII National Player of the Year
She helped guide the Huskies to four straight NCAA Tournaments for the first time in program history.
SCSU head coach Chad Braegelmann.
“She’s a competitor and loves sports – the atmosphere, challenging herself and being part of a team are all very important to her. This experience, and others like it will come from our team success. If we don’t win matches and have a competitive team these opportunities don’t present themselves as readily. We hope she’s one of many others going forward to get this opportunity.”

She was named the 2024-25 St. Cloud State Female Senior Athlete of the Year, which is awarded annually to the top female Husky.
Foley is set to begin her professional career in Suhl, Germany this fall.
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Beach Volleyball W/M Semi Final
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Sports
Big Ten, Big 12 Enter Into Partnership With PayPal, Venmo
Student-athletes in the Big Ten Conference and Big 12 Conference have a new way to receive their compensation, as the two college sports conferences entered into a partnership with PayPal and Venmo. The agreement follows a recent court ruling in the House vs. NCAA settlement allowing colleges to pay student-athletes directly. Current NCAA athletes are […]

Student-athletes in the Big Ten Conference and Big 12 Conference have a new way to receive their compensation, as the two college sports conferences entered into a partnership with PayPal and Venmo.
The agreement follows a recent court ruling in the House vs. NCAA settlement allowing colleges to pay student-athletes directly. Current NCAA athletes are eligible to receive up to $20.5 million from individual schools, while former collegiate athletes are eligible to receive up to $2.8 billion in compensation.
Big Ten and Big 12 universities will be able to send payments directly to students via PayPal, which in turn empowers them to take advantage of the payment company’s ecosystem to pay for their tuition, buy books from the university bookstore, and make purchases for extracurricular activities, such as tickets to a sporting event.
“We’re proud to help lead this transformation in college athletics by making it easier and faster for student-athletes to receive funds, and we continue to bring trusted and innovative commerce solutions to the heart of campus life,” said Alex Chriss, president and CEO of PayPal, in a statement. “From receiving institutional payments to making everyday purchases, we’re helping student-athletes, families, and schools engage in new ways that are modern, secure, and built for the future.”
“We look forward to partnering with PayPal to ensure a secure, rapid, and reliable way for student-athletes to receive institutional payments as we welcome in this new era in college athletics,” Big Ten commissioner Tony Petitti added.
“We are thrilled to enter into this landmark partnership with PayPal and Venmo,” said Big 12 commissioner Brett Yormark in a statement. “As we embark on a new era of college athletics, aligning with a global leader like PayPal will unlock a wealth of opportunities for the Big 12. This partnership will also empower our student-athletes to receive payments through a secure, trusted platform they already know and use.”
Additionally, the partnership includes Venmo becoming the presenting partner of the inaugural Big Ten Rivalry Series, which encompasses football, men’s basketball, and women’s basketball.
Venmo will also serve as the official partner of the Big 12 Conference across Big 12 football, basketball, and Olympic sports championships for both men’s and women’s teams. And the Venmo brand will be seen across all 16 institutions’ athletic events.
The PayPal-owned peer-to-peer social payments platform will collaborate with the Big Ten and Big 12 to facilitate acceptance for real-world campus spending, including purchases at bookstores. Students will also be able to earn in-store and onlikne rewards if they choose to also sign up for the Venmo Debit Mastercard. And they will be able, for a limited time, to earn up to 15% cash back from select national brands.
Sports
Athletic Head Coach (Track & Field and Cross Country) in Mesa, AZ for Mesa Community College
Details Posted: 26-Jun-25 Location: Mesa, Arizona Type: Full-time Salary: $52,525 – $68,282/annually, DO Categories: Coaching Coaching – Cross Country Coaching – Track & Field Sector: Jr. Collegiate Sports Preferred Education: 4 Year Degree Under the direction of the Athletic Director, the Athletic Head Coach will provide supervision, direct coaching instruction. Serve as head Women’s and […]

Details
Posted: 26-Jun-25
Location: Mesa, Arizona
Type: Full-time
Salary: $52,525 – $68,282/annually, DO
Categories:
Coaching
Coaching – Cross Country
Coaching – Track & Field
Sector:
Jr. Collegiate Sports
Preferred Education:
4 Year Degree
Under the direction of the Athletic Director, the Athletic Head Coach will provide supervision, direct coaching instruction. Serve as head Women’s and Men’s Cross-Country coach and head women’s and men’s Track and Field Head Coach to develop, implement, and maintain the college’s Cross Country/Track and Field program. Responsible for but not limited to: meet success; revenue generation for the athletic department; academic achievement, and public relations; including but not limited to; academic support, and academic leadership for the student-athletes, coaching, scouting, scheduling, recruiting, study hall monitoring, mentoring, travel coordination, teaching sportsmanship, life skills, discipline enforcement, and program administration.
Bachelor’s Degree from a regionally accredited institution in physical education, sports management, sports coaching, kinesiology, recreation therapy, athletic training, sport psychology, or another field related to athletics or sports, management, communications, health, coaching, or a similar discipline, and four (4) years of experience as an athletic coach, preferably at the college level, which includes recruiting experience and two (2) years of senior level or lead experience.
OR
An equivalent combination of education and experience sufficient to successfully perform the essential duties of the job such as those listed above, unless otherwise subject to any other requirements set forth in law or regulation.
About Mesa Community College
Mesa Community College is the largest of 10 colleges in the Maricopa County Community College District. Our seven-member governing board and chancellor provide leadership for the district. Dr. Richard Daniel serves as president of Mesa Community College, supported by a senior leadership team and guided by our mission, vision and values.
Connections working at Mesa Community College
https://ncaamarket.ncaa.org/jobs/21449668/athletic-head-coach-track-field-and-cross-country
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