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Prospect Watch

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Prospect Watch

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Welcome to Prospect Watch, CBS Sports’ regularly scheduled check-in on the minor leagues. For those new to the Watch, we publish this feature every other week, alternating between the American and National League farm systems. 

This go around, we’re focusing on some strong early season performers for AL organizations. We did the same exercise for their NL counterparts back on May 2.

Let’s get to it. 

The A’s took a gamble on Jump last summer, popping him with the 73rd overall pick after injuries limited him to 18 collegiate starts. He’s validated their faith to date, compiling a 1.95 ERA and a 8.5 strikeout-to-walk ratio in seven High-A appearances. Jump is a shorter lefty with a plunging arm action who gets far down the mound, creating a tough angle on the opposition when he elevates his low-to-mid-90s fastball. To wit, the data I have on him from spring suggests he imparts more than 17 inches of induced vertical break on his heater from a release height around 67 inches; for reference, that would put him in company with the likes of Freddy Peralta and Yoshinobu Yamamoto, among others. If he stays healthy, he’ll be an interesting arm to track.

I’m giving Hiraldo this spot over more notable prospects because he has the opportunity to become a fun story. Originally a Diamondbacks farmhand, he spent the last few years in assorted indy leagues. The Orioles signed him to a minor-league pact last fall, and have rushed him through their minor-league system. Hiraldo has a steep release point and, predictably, a vertical-based arsenal built around a mid-90s fastball. If Baltimore’s pitching staff continues to struggle, I could see them tapping Hiraldo for an audition later this summer.

Anthony, the best prospect entering the spring, has the highest OPS of any qualifying Red Sox minor-league hitter. Not only is his average exit velocity over 95 mph, but he’s drilled three balls over 112 mph. If he were in the majors, his maximum exit velocity this season would rank alongside, oh, Yordan Alvarez and Gunnar Henderson. Not bad, not bad at all. The Red Sox have resisted the urge to play Anthony at first base. Even if they maintain their resolve on that front, I think he’s going to force their hand to find a spot for him in the lineup.

Elko just received a promotion to the majors, but he’s getting the nod here anyway after batting .348/.431/.670 with 10 home runs in 31 Triple-A games. He’s a right-right first baseman nearing his 27th birthday, so you can probably figure out the score — for posterity’s sake: he’s prone to striking out because of his patient approach and his lackluster bat-to-ball skills. At the same time, he has legitimate thunder. Nearly all of his home runs were launched to center or the opposite field, and he’s cleared the 114 mph mark on two separate occasions already. It’s not as though the White Sox lineup has a particularly high standard to meet, so there’s no reason not to give him a look.

Doughty was a personal favorite heading into last summer’s draft despite being a prep right-hander. The Guardians popped him at No. 36, which I think offsets some of the risk that comes with this profile. Whatever the case, the polished Doughty doesn’t have the shiniest ERA to date. What he does have is the best strikeout-to-walk ratio among his affiliate’s starters. That may seem unimpressive, but mind you: he’ll play the entire season at 19, making him the youngest pitcher on the staff. 

Those Pete Crow-Armstrong comparisons that have been applied to Clark since his amateur days hit a little different now, huh? Clark is holding up his end by hitting .300/.433/.425 with seven more walks than strikeouts over his first 31 High-A games despite being more than a couple of years younger than his average opponent. He still needs to improve against left-handed pitching, but you have to be pleased with how things are going for the former No. 3 pick.

Gordon, like Elko before him, just made his big-league debut. He’s a tall lefty with a face that looks like someone went into Photoshop and combined Justin Verlander with Matt Harvey’s. Anyway, he releases the ball from a lower arm slot, giving him an east-west (or is it west-east?) arsenal. Gordon threw five pitches with decent regularity in the minors, including a pair of low-90s fastballs. His best bat-misser is a slider that generated nearly 30% whiffs in Triple-A. He has a chance to establish himself as a back-end starter in the majors.

Caglianone was one of the most interesting players in last year’s draft, and that remains the case now that he’s batting .324/.400/.563 over 36 Double-A games. While performing so well at the separating level for real prospects should be encouraging, I’ll note that he continues to employ a swing-happy approach that has resulted in twice as many strikeouts as walks. If you had an issue with that aspect of his game last summer, I’m not sure there’s been much reason to change your mind. Conversely, if you adored Caglianone’s raw strength and feel for loud contact, then I think you’re more than justified in imagining him as something like the Royals’ answer to Yordan Alvarez.

The Angels don’t offer many compelling candidates. Nicholson, a 10th-round pick from last summer, gets the spot here because he’s hit .284/.436/.505 with nearly as many walks as strikeouts in 32 High-A games. Nicholson has legit pop, having homered to both fields; unfortunately, he’s shown some serious problems with left-handed pitchers. He’ll turn 25 come August, so the clock is already ticking.

As with Nicholson, McCusker is not the kind of player you would traditionally think of as a prospect. He’ll turn 27 in May and he has fewer than 100 Triple-A games to his credit. Unlike Nicholson and the Angels, I’m exercising my creative liberty here out of desire rather than obligation. While McCusker has some serious swing-and-miss issues that will limit him to a Quad-A perception, he’s also listed at 6-foot-8 and has the power to match. He’s hammered eight balls over 110 mph already, including a 115 mph home run just a few days ago. There are few things more fun in baseball, no matter the level, than a big man who hits the ball this hard.

Lombard, New York’s first-round pick in 2023, won’t celebrate his 20th birthday until June. That hasn’t prevented him from batting .299/.469/.421 with 10 extra-base hits, 14 stolen bases, and three more walks than strikeouts against High- and Double-A competition. Depending on how he fares the rest of the season, there’s a real chance he’ll be knocking on the big-league door before the end of his age-21 campaign. 

I ranked Montes as the second-best prospect in the Mariners system because of his middle-of-the-order upside. He’s making good on that declaration, hammering High-A pitching to the tune of a .266/.387/.547 slash line with seven home runs across 34 games. Montes has pole-to-pole strength, albeit in addition to some serious swing-and-miss tendencies. He’s also whiffing on a full one-third of his offerings. That’s not ideal. If there is a positive here, it’s that Montes has the kind of slugging and on-base capacity to atone for a high strikeout rate. He’s also playing the duration of this season at age 20, which, if nothing else, affords him additional time to up his bat-to-ball skills.

For those who find Kinney’s name familiar, he was a supplemental round choice back in 2021. He missed the entirety of the 2022 season after injuring his shoulder during spring training. Last year, he made up for lost time by hectoring High-A pitchers. So far this season, Kinney is doing the same at the Double-A level, hitting .296/.333/.536. He’s a left-handed batter with plus raw strength (he’s homered several times to left field already) who is a skilled enough defender to remain on the dirt. Do note that while Kinney’s topline statistics don’t show a platoon split, he’s whiffed on more than 40% of his swings versus lefty pitchers to date, suggesting he’ll probably become more of a most-days player in the majors.

Davalillo is a short right-hander with a good splitter who ought to find himself en route to Double-A sooner rather than later. I write that because he’s struck out more than 37% of the batters he’s faced to date while walking just 4.9% of them. Oh, and he has a ground-ball percentage over 55%. It’s hard to do much better than that.

Nimmala has been a personal favorite dating back to his draft cycle in 2023. At the rate he’s going, a lot of other people are going to grow fond of his game, too. Nimmala has hit .277/.354/.515 with seven home runs and 10 other extra-base hits across 32 High-A games. Granted, he’s done that while striking out more than twice as often as he’s walked, and while whiffing more frequently than I would consider ideal. I’m willing to cut him some slack at this point given that he’s a 19-year-old shortstop playing against competition that is on average three years his senior. 

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Kansas women’s volleyball vs Miami (Fl.): NCAA tournament final result

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Updated Dec. 5, 2025, 8:26 p.m. CT



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Former UH volleyball player, youth coach accused of producing child porn

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HONOLULU (HawaiiNewsNow) – A former youth volleyball coach who played on the University of Hawaii men’s volleyball team was arrested and charged with production of child pornography, allegedly with a former player.

The U.S. Attorney’s Office, District of Hawaii, announced Friday that Elias David, 37, of Waimanalo, was charged by criminal complaint on Dec. 3.

He was employed as a firefighter for the Department of Defense and worked at Joint Base Pearl Harbor-Hickam, Federal Fire Station 9.

According to the criminal complaint filed by the FBI, a 17-year-old told her aunt she was having sexual intercourse with David, who was a family friend and her volleyball coach since she was 13 years old.

Court documents said the teen’s relationship began with David in 2023 after a volleyball trip to Las Vegas. She was 16 at the time.

The teen told investigators that David was providing extra training to prepare her for college. She also admitted to engaging in different types of sexual contact with David that including oral and vaginal sex, documents said.

She also said that their sexual activities occurred at the fire station where he worked, at a nearby warehouse, as well as at David’s home and vehicle, documents said.

David was arrested in July of 2024 for sexual assault in the second degree. He waived his Miranda rights and was interviewed.

During his interview with investigators, David said they “began to develop feelings for each other and ‘fell in love,’” and admitted that he and the teen engaged in a sexual relationship, documents said.

David said that the romantic phase of the relationship began around March 2023, and admitted to ordering ride share services for the teen so she could leave her house to meet him at or near his workplace, documents said.

Investigators said they found 97 graphic videos of the two of them on her phone and 78 emails referring to ride share trips and GPS location data.

David played for the University of Hawaii men’s volleyball team in 2009.

If convicted, he could face up to 30 years in prison.



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Iowa State Tops St. Thomas, Advances to Second Round

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MINNEAPOLIS, Minn. – No. 23 Iowa State (23-7, 12-6 Big 12) won in five against St. Thomas (21-10, 11-5 Summit) in the NCAA Championship First Round Friday night. No. 5-seed ISU advances to the second round to meet the winner of No. 4-seed Minnesota vs. Fairfield tomorrow at 7 p.m.

After St. Thomas took the first 25-21, ISU answered outhitting UST .552-.143 in the second to tie up the match with a set score of 25-13. The Cyclones took the match lead after another dominant set score of 25-16, but St. Thomas would win the fourth 25-21 to extend the match to a fifth. ISU used a 7-0 run in the fifth to flip the momentum and seal the victory.

Big 12 Libero of the Year Rachel Van Gorp was her usual self and had her third-straight match with 20 or more digs, ending the night with a career-high 33. The total is the second-most in an NCAA Tournament match by a Cyclone, and most since 2012. It was also match No. 35 in a row with double-figure digs and her 50th-career match in double figures.

Iowa State had a dominant night at the service line, serving to the fourth 10-plus ace match this season, and 28th of Christy Johnson-Lynch‘s career with 12 through the night. ISU was led by Nayeli Ti’a with five aces to tie the NCAA Tournament school record, while Van Gorp had four, now the second-most in a tournament match.

Alea Goolsby had her 15th match this season with 10-plus kills, leading ISU with 15. Ti’a delivered 14 kills for her 13th match this season with 10-plus, and Lilly Wachholz (12) and Amiree Hendricks-Walker (10) made for four in double figures.

SET ONE

At 6-6, Morgan Brandt tricked St. Thomas with a setter kill while Tierney Jackson served up an ace but UST followed to again knot the score. The Tommies flipped the lead at 11-10 and took the next two as Iowa State called the first timeout. Ti’a slammed down her second kill out of the timeout, but St. Thomas kept with the lead reaching 20 first (20-17). ISU cut its deficit to one at 22-21, but the Tommies ended the first on a run of three for the set win.

SET TWO

Ti’a had a no-doubt kill to make it 1-1, while the Tommies denied ISU the lead while going up 4-2. Goolsby’s third kill tied it, and the Cyclones took their first lead at 6-5 on a block. UST flipped the advantage in its favor briefly, but ISU set out on an 11-0 run to take it right back and run ahead 18-8. A Brandt ace put the Cyclones at set point and an attack error by the Tommies sealed the set at 25-13. ISU did not have a single attack error in the frame.

SET THREE

Back-to-back aces by Ti’a brought Iowa State ahead 6-2, while Ti’a delivered another bringing the scoreboard to 9-2. Goolsby’s seventh kill at .400 capped a Cyclone run of seven on the next play, but a UST scoring run of four came soon after as the Tommies came within three (13-10). Iowa State had a run of four of their own to keep command of the lead, while the Cyclones took the match lead on Goolsby’s 10th kill at 25-16.

SET FOUR

A 4-0 scoring run took the Tommies ahead 7-3 as ISU then called an early timeout. Iowa State would go on to knot the score at 13s on yet another ace by Ti’a, while a UST attack error gave ISU its first lead of the set. That lead was not safe as the Tommies went ahead 19-15 to cause Iowa State’s final timeout of the set. The Cyclones had a late run of three, but St. Thomas pushed on to force a fifth at 25-21.

SET FIVE

Iowa State took the first point on a kill by Ti’a, but St. Thomas followed going ahead 5-2. ISU did not let up, hitting a run of four to take a 6-5 lead and cause a UST timeout. The run stretched to seven as Iowa State switched sides with the lead of 8-5, and Goolsby capped the run next with a kill. ISU would go on to win it 15-8 after a St. Thomas service error.



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Updates, highlights as Wisconsin advances with sweep vs North Carolina

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9:43 pm CT December 5, 2025

See some highlights from Wisconsin’s NCAA tournament win vs North Carolina

John Steppe

9:39 pm CT December 5, 2025

Mimi Colyer’s stats vs. North Carolina in second round of NCAA tournament

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  • 22 kills
  • 5 attack errors
  • 42 total attacks
  • .405 hitting percentage
  • 13 digs
  • 3 blocks

9:37 pm CT December 5, 2025

Wisconsin vs. North Carolina NCAA tournament final stats comparison

John Steppe

  • Kills: Wisconsin 60, North Carolina 37
  • Hitting percentage: Wisconsin .365, North Carolina .233
  • Service aces: Wisconsin 2, North Carolina 0
  • Service errors: North Carolina 5, Wisconsin 8
  • Digs: Wisconsin 56, North Carolina 40
  • Total team blocks: North Carolina 6, Wisconsin 5

9:33 pm CT December 5, 2025

Wisconsin coach Kelly Sheffield comments on Badgers’ NCAA tournament win vs. North Carolina

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2025 NCAA volleyball tournament: Bracket, schedule, results

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Dec. 5, 2025Updated Dec. 6, 2025, 12:22 a.m. ET



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Saddle Up: No. 3 Badgers advance to Regional Semifinals

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MADISON, Wis. – The No. 3 seeded Wisconsin volleyball team punched their ticket to the Regional Semifinals for the 13th consecutive season with their second sweep in as many days, this time defeating North Carolina (25-14, 25-21, 27-25) in the Second Round of the NCAA Tournament. 

UW maintained their momentum from their First Round battle right away in set one, putting together a 15-9 advantage with a potent attack on the offensive end. 

The Badgers (26-4) were able to close out the first frame behind a 4-0 run, highlighted by a pair of kills turned in by outside hitter Mimi Colyer. Setter Charlie Fuerbringer was able to cap it off with a kill of her own, tallying eight between the pair of matches this weekend. 

After a back-and-forth affair to begin the second set, Wisconsin found some separation by winning four-of-five rallies to build a 12-7 lead. The Tar Heels provided a quick response to bring it within 18-17 with the help of their physical block. 

Outside hitter Una Vajagic and right side Grace Egan each racked up a kill to force a North Carolina (22-9) timeout. Egan wrapped up the set two with another kill, as the Badgers went on to win three of the four last points. 

Wisconsin and the Tar Heels continued to trade points throughout the majority of the third set, which saw 19 ties and 10 lead changes. Colyer accumulated her 20th kill of the match in the process—giving UW a narrow 14-13 lead at the midway point of the set. 

Vajagic recorded six kills in the set, providing a spark on the offensive side of the ball. The redshirt sophomore continued to excel for the Badgers, concluding the match with 12 kills on a .435 hitting percentage. 

Late in the set, North Carolina fought back to force extra points by winning three-straight points. Outside hitter Trinity Shadd-Ceres and libero Maile Chan entered late and made an instant impact, highlighted by a block from Shadd-Ceres and a pair of digs turned in by Chan. UW made one final push to officially advance in the NCAA Tournament, led by a resilient effort on the defensive end—converting on a trio of kills to wrap up the match. 

Colyer, in her final match at the UW Field House, ended a lengthy rally with a kill to seal the victory. The senior finished with 22 on the evening, the 11th time this year where she has accumulated 20 or more. The five-time Big Ten Player of the Week also earned her eighth double-double of the season, adding 13 digs. 

Egan joined Colyer in the double-double department, emerging as a staple on the defensive end with 11 digs, complemented by her 11 kills. Libero Kristen Simon put together another standout showing defensively as well, totaling a team-high 16 digs. The freshman added eight assists to wrap up a strong week of play in her NCAA Tournament debut. 

On the front line, Fuerbringer led the way with 43 assists—powering the Badgers to a hitting percentage of .365 (60 – 14 – 126) against one of the strongest blocks in the country. 

Middle blocker Carter Booth was one of the beneficiaries, turning in her third-straight errorless match with eight kills on 16 attempts. After tonight’s performance, Booth will enter Texas swinging .540 (27 – 0 – 50) in her past three matches. 

 

Straight from the Court

Head Coach Kelly Sheffield (on continuing to build confidence down the stretch): “It’s earned through work. Confidence is earned by the work you put in; it’s earned by how you talk to yourself. It’s been something that these guys have worked a lot on, not just having an individual confidence, but a collective confidence.” 
(On the performance of outside hitters Una Vajagic and Mimi Colyer): “These two hitting over .400 against one of the best blocking teams in the country is just a ridiculous number. They got some blocks on us, but we stayed aggressive and we continued to accelerate and hit good shots and know when to be patient.”
Outside Hitter Mimi Colyer (on playing one last time in the Field House): “Coming to Wisconsin has been the best decision I have ever made. This program and this fan base is just so special. Just the love that we have for each other and the love this fan base has for each other is just so special. It’s incredible, there’s nothing like it.”
Outside Hitter Una Vajagic (on building on her first postseason run): “I feel it was great tonight, playing with my team and having their backs all of the time was such a huge thing for me. Just with them behind me, I felt super confident and I’m so excited.” 
 

Notes:

  • With the 3-0 sweep over North Carolina, Wisconsin will advance to the NCAA Regional Semifinals for the 23rd time in program history and 13th-consecutive season under head coach Kelly Sheffield.
  • The victory also moves Wisconsin to 72-29 all-time in the NCAA Tournament, and 21-5 in the Second Round of the tournament.
  • The Badgers had three players with double-figure digs, Kristen Simon (16), Mimi Colyer (13), and Grace Egan (11).
  • Senior Mimi Colyer recorded her eighth double-double of the season and 44th of her career with a 22 kill, 13 dig performance.
  • Right Grace Egan totaled her fourth double-double of the season, eighth of her career with an 11 kill, 11 dig performance.
  • Wisconsin also had three players with double-figure kills, Colyer
  • Wisconsin totaled 56 digs, tying a season-high for most digs in a three-set match.
  • With 57 assists, Wisconsin totaled it’s second-highest assist mark for the season in a three-set match.
  • For the 16th consecutive match, Colyer totaled double-figure kills at 23, and her 11th match with 20 or more kills this season. She also tied Ellen Chapman (2013) in program history for most consecutive matches with double-figure kills.
  • In consecutive nights, senior Carter Booth recorded another error-less match. She tallied eight kills on 16 swings for a .500 hitting percentage.

Up Next: The Badgers will await their next opponent in the Regional Semifinals down in Austin, Texas. The date and time for the match is still to be determined.





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