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30 MLB Prospects With Improved 90th Percentile EV, Miss Rates & Chase Rates In 2025

Baseball is a constantly-evolving sport, in part because it’s the one game where players can change their entire archetype in a single offseason. Adjustments to swings, approaches and physical strength can see players return to play out of the offseason new and improved. We’re now around a quarter of the way through the minor league […]

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30 MLB Prospects With Improved 90th Percentile EV, Miss Rates & Chase Rates In 2025

Baseball is a constantly-evolving sport, in part because it’s the one game where players can change their entire archetype in a single offseason. Adjustments to swings, approaches and physical strength can see players return to play out of the offseason new and improved.

We’re now around a quarter of the way through the minor league season in 2025. Many of our metrics have standardized at this point, giving us some signal to identify true skill gainers.

Below, we’ll take a look at 30 players who have improved their miss rate, chase rate and 90th percentile exit velocity the most. The sample size for each category is a minimum of 50 plate appearances, and all of the names listed have samples larger than that in each of the last two seasons. While imperfect, this sample does give us some understanding of how players adjusted over the offseason.

90th Percentile Exit Velocity Gainers

One of the stickiest exit velocity metrics, 90th percentile EV gives us an idea of a hitter’s high-end power by looking at their top 10% exit velocities. This correlates to game power and, ultimately, slugging percentage.

Below is the list of the 10 hitters who increased their 90th Percentile EV the most:

player org age level bats 2024 90% EV 2025 90% EV 90% EV Diff
Nick Peoples WSH 20 Low-A S 105.7 114.2 8.5
Lyle Miller-Green CWS 24 Low-A R 103.3 110.6 7.3
Davis Diaz ATH 22 Low-A R 97.1 104.2 7.1
Adrian Rodriguez AZ 21 Low-A R 96.2 103.2 7
Dillon Lewis NYY 21 Low-A R 102.4 109.3 6.9
Dante Nori PHI 20 Low-A L 94.5 101.3 6.8
Eddie Micheletti Jr. TOR 23 High-A L 98 104.8 6.8
Drew Gilbert NYM 24 Triple-A L 100.7 107.3 6.6
Luis Peña MIL 18 Low-A R 99.9 106.5 6.6
Caden Powell HOU 21 Low-A R 103 109.4 6.4

Our biggest EV gainer is the Nationals Low-A outfielder Nick Peoples, a 2022 12th-round pick who’s struggled over the first three seasons of his professional career. Peoples has shown absurd raw power early, but it has not come with production, as he’s hitting just .200/.273/.389 on the season.

Luis Peña has been one of the true breakout stars of 2025. After a strong showing in the Dominican Summer League last year, Peña has shown a significant increase in power in 2025. This portends well for future power development, as Peña boasts strong plate skills to go along with this newfound power. It’s a perfect combination of traits for a burgeoning prospect. 

We covered Mets prospect Drew Gilbert last week and noticed his much-improved data in 2025. More than any hitter listed in this section, Gilbert has turned his added EV into increased production. He is not only showing improved exit velocities but also excellent angles on contact and plus plate skills. He’s been very unlucky on balls in play, but taking a look under the hood, I anticipate Gilbert’s numbers will begin to climb in the coming weeks. 

Astros 2024 sixth-round pick Caden Powell cracks the list, as the juco standout has put together a very solid showing in his professional debut, albeit against Low-A competition. While swing-and-miss is very much a concern, there’s legitimate impact in Powell’s bat, and his .200 isolated slugging is a testament to that. 

Miss Rates Improvers

Despite the influx of advanced information made available for player evaluation in modern baseball, at the end of the day, the ability to simply get the bat on the ball is still an important foundational skill. While one doesn’t need to be an elite contact hitter to be a productive or even star player, there is a baseline of contact important for all archetypes of hitters.

Below, we’ll look at 10 hitters who are making more contact at the highest rates in 2025:

player org age level bats 2024 miss% 2025 miss% miss% diff
Vance Honeycutt BAL 21 High-A R 42.70% 26.20% 16.50%
Jordan Sprinkle CWS 24 High-A R 30.00% 15.90% 14.10%
George Wolkow CWS 19 Low-A L 46.70% 32.70% 14.00%
Braden Barry TOR 23 Low-A R 31.90% 17.20% 14.70%
Yordys Valdes CLE 23 Triple-A S 36.00% 21.50% 14.50%
Bernard Moon CIN 20 Low-A R 31.50% 17.10% 14.40%
Jorbit Vivas NYY 24 Triple-A L 25.00% 11.10% 13.90%
Kaden Hollow SD 24 Low-A L 28.80% 15.00% 13.80%
James Tibbs III SF 22 High-A L 32.10% 18.90% 13.20%
Tommy White ATH 22 High-A R 29.00% 16.50% 12.50%

This list features a trio of day-one 2024 draftees: Vance Honeycutt, James Tibbs and Tommy White. Of all the players on the list, the added bat-to-ball ability for Honeycutt might be the most welcomed sign. That said, it has not led to a reasonable strikeout rate, as he is still striking out in 37.1% of his plate appearances. Of the three, only White has turned his skill gain into production, as he’s hitting .299/.390/.467 so far in 2025.

After putting together a nice 2024 in spite of concerning strikeout rates, George Wolkow is showing far more reasonable swing-and-miss in 2025. It hasn’t culminated in improved production, however, as he’s still only hitting .203/.288/.341, but Wolkow’s strikeout rate is down from 40.3% in 2024 to 31.3% in 2025. This improvement shows in the contact rates, as Wolkow went from having swing-and-miss that was a true dealbreaker to showing enough contact for his power to play. That’s yet to happen, but time till tell if the improved contact unlocks more game power for the 6-foot-7 slugger. 

Jorbit Vivas has seen time in 15 games with the Yankees this season, and while the production in the majors has been underwhelming, he’s showing improved contact skills this season in Triple-A. He’s walked in 12.9% of his plate appearances while striking out in just 6.9%. This outlier strikeout-to-walk ratio is exactly what Vivas needs to take another step towards a future full-time MLB role.

Chase Rate Improvers

While power and bat-to-ball ability are important, the ability to identify balls and strikes while attacking the right pitches is paramount. Often, the biggest gains in production year over year are the product of an improved approach. While chase rate doesn’t fully capture all the elements of approach, it does give us a good idea of which hitters are aggressive and which are passive.

Below, we’ll look at 10 hitters who have improved their chase rates the most in 2025:

player org age level bats 2024 chase% 2025 chase% chase% diff
Wilman Diaz LAD 21 High-A R 33.30% 16.10% 17.20%
Christian Moore LAA 22 Double-A R 29.20% 13.00% 16.20%
Tre Richardson STL 23 High-A R 26.10% 10.70% 15.40%
Emaarion Boyd MIA 21 High-A R 33.20% 18.30% 14.90%
Robert Moore PHI 23 Double-A S 28.70% 13.80% 14.90%
Tommy White ATH 22 High-A R 38.80% 24.00% 14.80%
Adrián Sugastey SF 22 Double-A R 45.70% 31.00% 14.70%
Victor Rodrigues LAD 20 Low-A R 28.10% 13.70% 14.40%
Ivan Brethowr CHC 22 High-A R 29.90% 15.50% 14.40%
Ryan Ritter COL 24 Triple-A R 34.90% 21.00% 13.90%

After two years of sub-10% walk rates for Emaarion Boyd, he’s showing a much-improved approach in 2025. With the improvement in chase rate, he’s seen his year-over-year walk rate increase from 6.8% in 2024 to 14.5% in 2025. This gain in approach has resulted in a 114 wRC+, a 20-point increase from last season.

The son of former Royals president of baseball operations Dayton Moore, Robert Moore was a standout at Arkansas who took some time to find his sea legs as a professional. This season, Moore is enjoying a career year to start with Double-A Reading, hitting .235/.353/.439 for a 125 wRC+. His 15.7% walk rate is a direct result of improved swing decisions, and it’s having a positive impact on his production despite poor luck on balls in play.

Tommy White makes his second appearance in this article, as his swing decisions have improved tremendously this season. White’s approach was a pock mark on his profile entering the draft, but in his first full professional season, he looks to be answering those questions emphatically. 

On a team loaded with stars, the Dodgers’ Victor Rodriguez is enjoying an under-the-radar breakout season. He’s hitting .253/.431/.360 with a 22.5% walk rate to a 12.7% strikeout rate. While the power has been underwhelming, Rodriguez’s ability to get on base is noteworthy. 

One of the more under-appreciated prospects in the upper minors at the moment is Ryan Ritter. A strong infield defender, Ritter can play all over the dirt, and over the last two seasons, he has shown improvements at the plate, too. Year-over-year, Ritter has improved his swing decisions tremendously, and it’s showing up in his production. Over 40 games with Triple-A Albuquerque, he is hitting .265/.397/.503—good enough for a 122 wRC+. He’s walking at the highest rate of his career while striking out at the lowest rate. Everything is clicking for Ritter at the moment, as he is showing above-average plate skills and power at the highest level of the minors. 

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Muskego’s Fourth Straight Title Among Four Girls State Soccer Champions

MILWAUKEE, Wis.  –  The WIAA Spring Tournament Series concluded with the crowning of girls soccer champions in four divisions with hot and gusty wind conditions at Southeast Sales Powersports Stadium at Uihlein Soccer Park Saturday. Top-seeded Muskego (21-0-2) becomes just the third program to win four championships in a row following a 1-1 tie and […]

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MILWAUKEE, Wis.  –  The WIAA Spring Tournament Series concluded with the crowning of girls soccer champions in four divisions with hot and gusty wind conditions at Southeast Sales Powersports Stadium at Uihlein Soccer Park Saturday.

Top-seeded Muskego (21-0-2) becomes just the third program to win four championships in a row following a 1-1 tie and a 3-0 advantage in a shootout over third-seeded Madison West (16-3-3) in the Division 1 final.

Following a scoreless first half, the Warriors scored an unassisted goal at the 44:56 point of the second half. Kiara Muech found the right side of the goal off a rebound from a shot at the top of the box. The Regents evened the score at 74:26 on an unassisted goal by Elsie Watson after controlling a loose ball in the box and lifting it over the goalkeeper.

Muskego had the only shot on goal in the two overtime periods, which was saved, requiring the shootout to determine the champion.

Savannah Mittelstaedt was the winning goalkeeper for the Warriors, allowing the one goal in regulation while making four saves. She also stopped the three attempts in the shootout. Adah Lambeck allowed one goal and made one save in the game for the Regents. Nola Maughan and Catherine Arnold each had a game-high two shots on goal for Madison West.

Madison West had an 8-7 edge in shots, including a 5-2 advantage in shots on goal. The Regents also had a 7-2 advantage in corner kicks.

Muskego wins the program’s fifth State championship overall in its 10 tournament appearances, and Madison West finished runner-up in its 13th experience at State.

Second-seeded Brookfield Central (14-5) edged top-seeded Pewaukee (13-9) 2-1 to claim the State title in Division 2.

Quality shots were hard to come by in a scoreless first half, but Dylan Romero of Brookfield Central broke through to break the tie at 46:30 in the second half with a shot into the left side of the goal off a nifty assist from Megan Rauch inside the box. The Pirates tied the game at 1-1 with a goal by Hannah Sorkness that crossed the box inside the left post following a pass from Peyton Stading. The Lancers regained the lead at 68:58 when Alexandra Rossi fired an unassisted shot from 12 yards out into the right side of the goal, which proved to be the game-winner.

Pewaukee had a slight advantage in shots at 13-11, but Brookfield Central had an 8-7 edge in shots on goal. The Pirates also had the advantage in corner kicks at 5-3. Charlotte Vaughan led all players with four shots for the Lancers. Rossi and Kara Delisle each had a pair of shots on goal. Annie Robinson made six saves in goal and allowed one score to be credited with the victory. Kylie Rameker and Addi Burkemper each attempted three shots to lead the Pirates in that category. Allison Dykstra made four saves in goal and allowed both goals.

Brookfield Central won its seventh State championship in its 15th tournament appearance. Pewaukee finished runner-up in its first State experience.

Catholic Memorial (20-2-1), the top seed in the bracket, defeated second-seeded Edgewood (15-4-2) in the Division 3 championship game, 4-2.

Edgewood led 1-0 following a goal by Lauryn Matenaer at 25:21 in the first half. Her shot from the left wing crossed over into the right side of the goal off an assist by Natalie Cavanaugh. Catholic Memorial tied the game before halftime at 34:29. Margaret Sisk knocked in a shot within the box on a deflection off the crossbar on a shot by Claire Weber, who was credited with the assist.

The second half began with a flurry of scoring, beginning with a goal by Weber just 26 seconds into the period off an assist from Sisk, and then Julia Rothermel scored Catholic Memorial’s third goal less than two minutes later at 42:07 on a header off a corner kick by Weber. Edgewood reduced its deficit to 3-2 at 44:23 on Matenaer’s second score of the game on a pass into the box by Sonoma Bever, which was directed into the goal. The same combination on CMH’s third goal struck again on a corner kick at 45:10 of the second half to account for the final score.

Catholic Memorial had a decided advantage in shots at 18-7, shots on goal at 9-5 and corner kicks, 8-0. Rothermel recorded a game-high five shots, and Weber had three shots on goal, scoring once and distributing two assists to lead CMH. Jenna Welsch was credited with the win in goal, yielding two goals and making three saves. Matenaer led Edgewood with two goals on three shots. Sonoma Bever also had three shots–two on goal–and an assist. Caroline Onderak started in goal for Edgewood and played the first 34:29 of the game, surrendering a goal and making five saves before leaving the game with an injury. Madeline Cavanaugh was issued the loss in goal, yielding three goals with no saves in 45:31 minutes played.

CMH won its membership-leading 11th State championship in the 17th appearance by the Crusaders. Edgewood, also nicknamed the Crusaders, finished runner-up in its eighth State experience.

In Division 4, top-seeded Xavier (20-3-1) captured the crown with a 2-0 win over third-seeded Ozaukee/Random Lake (13-7-4) in the tournament final.

The Hawks put the first goal on the board at 3:56 in the first half. Sydney Neilitz placed a grounder into the net at the right corner from straight away with an assist from Kate Jannette for a 1-0 Xavier lead.

Xavier added an insurance goal at the 54:48 in the second half. Helayna Krueger scored an unassisted goal from the left side of the box that caromed off the right post and into the goal for a 2-0 Hawks’ lead.

The Xavier defense stymied the Ozaukee/Random Lake offense by allowing just one shot attempt in the game and no shots on goal. The Hawks recorded an overwhelming advantage in shots at 12-1, including 9-0 lead in shots on goal. Neilitz and Kayla Standish each had a game-high four shots on goal for Xavier. Abigail Anderson was the winning goalkeeper without having to make a save. 

The Hawks attempted eight corner kicks, and Ozaukee/Random Lake was held without an attempt.

Rebecca Kraemer played the entire game in goal for Ozaukee/Random Lake, allowing two goals and making seven saves.

Xavier won the State championship for the fourth time– the first in Division 4–in the Hawks’ 12th appearance in the tournament. Random Lake/Ozaukee finished runner-up in its first appearance as a co-op program.



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High school transfers, realignment and new sports with Rob Cuff

SALT LAKE CITY (KUTV) — High School sports continue to evolve. Rob Cuff, Executive Director of the Utah High School Activities Association, joined David James to talk about the changing landscape of prep sports. The UHSAA has recently sanctioned championships for Boys and Girls Lacrosse, Boys Volleyball as well as Girls Wrestling and Golf. He […]

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High School sports continue to evolve. Rob Cuff, Executive Director of the Utah High School Activities Association, joined David James to talk about the changing landscape of prep sports.

The UHSAA has recently sanctioned championships for Boys and Girls Lacrosse, Boys Volleyball as well as Girls Wrestling and Golf. He says people are advocating for several other sports including water polo, rodeo and hockey. Listen to Rob’s thoughts on the growth of e-sports and pickleball.

Prep players transfer more than ever and Cuff says there is a new policy that has just been put in place. He also talks about the increasing impact poverty has had on region realignment policies.

Rob also represents the UHSSA on the Utah Sports Hall of Fame Board and he has the details on the Hall’s upcoming benefit golf tournament. Visit the Hall in the City Creek mall and watch the interview here.

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Five-star OT Jackson Cantwell wins National Under-20 shot put championship

While Jackson Cantwell already secured his commitment to the Miami Hurricanes, he continues to dazzle in track and field. This time, he won the Under-20 national shot put title in the Nike Outdoor Nationals in Eugene, Oregon. Despite being the youngest competitor, Cantwell won by throwing a six-kilogram shot 69 feet, eight inches away. Meanwhile, […]

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While Jackson Cantwell already secured his commitment to the Miami Hurricanes, he continues to dazzle in track and field. This time, he won the Under-20 national shot put title in the Nike Outdoor Nationals in Eugene, Oregon.

Despite being the youngest competitor, Cantwell won by throwing a six-kilogram shot 69 feet, eight inches away. Meanwhile, North Dakota freshman Ethan Thomas finished second with a throw of 68 feet, 7 ¾ inches. Oregon’s Ben Smith (66’ 10 ¾”) and Ole Miss commit Ashton Hearn (64’ 5”) came in third and fourth, respectively.

Jackson Cantwell aspired to break the competition’s national record. Still, winning gold is a nice consolation for the On3 Class of 2026’s top college football prospect. He adds this accomplishment to his Missouri high school track and field shot put and discus throw state titles. If everything goes well, the 6-foot-7 offensive tackle could follow his parent’s footsteps and be a future Olympian.

Meanwhile, Cantwell helped the Nixa Eagles high school football team reach the Missouri Class 6 state championship but lost to DeSmet Jesuit, their only loss in 14 games last season. However, the Eagles finished the year as Missouri’s top-ranked team, based on the On3 Composite Team Rankings.

After the Nike Outdoor Nationals, he returns to Nixa for his senior high school football season, hoping to win a state title this time. As his mission stays the same, so too is his On3 Industry Ranking compared to other high school football seniors. His 98.77 mark is slightly over Georgia commit Jared Curtis for the number one spot. Likewise, his NIL value is estimated at $1.9 million.

The Hurricanes are lucky to welcome Jackson Cantwell, who, as On3’s Charles Power wrote, is a “Big-framed offensive tackle with eye-popping athleticism and functional strength as a high school underclassman.”



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Canadian women fall 3-2 to Belgium in Volleyball Nations League

By Canadian Press on June 22, 2025. ISTANBUL — Canada’s women’s volleyball team fell 3-2 (22-25, 25-13, 21-25, 25-22, 18-16) to Belgium in Volleyball Nations League action on Sunday. The Canadians were ahead 2-1 before Belgium stormed back to win the final two sets. Hilary Johnson led Canada with 21 points, including five blocks. VNL […]

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By Canadian Press on June 22, 2025.

ISTANBUL — Canada’s women’s volleyball team fell 3-2 (22-25, 25-13, 21-25, 25-22, 18-16) to Belgium in Volleyball Nations League action on Sunday.

The Canadians were ahead 2-1 before Belgium stormed back to win the final two sets.

Hilary Johnson led Canada with 21 points, including five blocks.

VNL rookie Anna Smrek followed with 19 points, with four blocks and two aces.

Canada earned more points from blocks (17-10) and aces (6-5). However, Belgium held the advantage in attack points (70-57) and surrendered fewer points to errors (21-26).

It was Belgium’s second straight win, climbing to 13th in the VNL standings at 3-5. Canada (2-6), meanwhile, is 15th.

This report by The Canadian Press was first published June 22, 2025.

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Allyson Felix Takes On Nike In New Documentary 'She Runs The World'

On the track, staying in her lane was essential for Olympic champion Allyson Felix, the most decorated track and field athlete of all time. To stray outside the lines would mean instant disqualification. Off the track, Felix faced a different kind of pressure to stay in her lane – keeping on good terms with her […]

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Allyson Felix Takes On Nike In New Documentary 'She Runs The World'

On the track, staying in her lane was essential for Olympic champion Allyson Felix, the most decorated track and field athlete of all time. To stray outside the lines would mean instant disqualification.

Off the track, Felix faced a different kind of pressure to stay in her lane – keeping on good terms with her primary sponsor, Nike. As for many top athletes, an endorsement deal with the company – the largest shoe and athletic apparel maker in the world – meant financial security in a career that by its nature is fleeting.

It came as shocking news, then, when Felix publicly took on the company in 2019, writing a New York Times op-ed that criticized the corporation’s maternity policies governing its roster of female stars.

“I’ve been one of Nike’s most widely marketed athletes. If I can’t secure maternity protections, who can?” she wrote. “If we have children, we risk pay cuts from our sponsors during pregnancy and afterward. It’s one example of a sports industry where the rules are still mostly made for and by men.”

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Allyson Felix competes in the Women's 400m Final at the Tokyo 2020 Olympic Games on August 6, 2021

Her story of incredible success in track and field, and her battle with Nike, is told in the documentary She Runs the World, directed by Perri Peltz and Matt O’Neill. It just screened at the Bentonville Film Festival in Arkansas after holding its world premiere June 5 at Tribeca Festival.

“I was the type of athlete who I just put my head down,” Felix observed during a Q&A at Bentonville moderated by Deadline. “I did try to stay in my lane for so long. I was a people pleaser. I didn’t want to ruffle feathers. And so this idea of speaking out was so uncomfortable, but I think the one thing that really gave me that push and that courage was becoming a mother — and becoming a mother to a daughter. It made me see the world in a different way and that there really was a need behind speaking out. It was still terrifying and uncomfortable and all those things, but there was definitely purpose behind it.”

In 2017, Felix’s Nike contract came up for renewal. Then 32, Felix understood she couldn’t hope to dominate her sport much longer. So did Nike, which offered her a 70 percent pay cut.

“They thought I was just done,” Felix says in the film. “I felt discarded.”

Olympic champion Allyson Felix

Clauses were built into the proposed contract incentivizing Felix if she kept reaching podiums, and penalizing her financially if she didn’t. Complicating matters for Felix, she very much wanted to become pregnant with her husband, Kenneth Ferguson. Recovering from a pregnancy would postpone attempts to rack up more medals, jeopardizing her income. It’s a dilemma, of course, that male athletes don’t encounter.

Olympic gold medalist Joanna Hayes says in the documentary, “Pregnancy in sports has been the kiss of death.”

As the film documents, tense negotiations continued between Felix, her older brother Wes Felix – who manages her career – and Nike. Ultimately, brother and sister were able to get the company to slightly improve its offer, but Nike wouldn’t spell out in the contract that it was offering specific protections tied to maternity. The clear inference is that Nike didn’t want to establish a precedent for other women athletes in its stable.

“For someone like Allyson, as she said, staying in her own lane, being the good girl, doing the right thing — to go up against a company like that, it’s phenomenal,” executive producer Tonya Lewis Lee observed at the Q&A. “And not only that, I mean she got them to change their policy.”

As the New York Times reported, within only a few months of Felix publishing her op-ed, following “broad public outcry and a congressional inquiry, Nike announced a new maternity policy for all sponsored athletes… The new contract guarantees an athlete’s pay and bonuses for 18 months around pregnancy. Three other athletic apparel companies added maternity protections for sponsored athletes.”

Matt O’Neill, the co-director, calls what Felix achieved a major win.

“As you see as Allyson tells the story, and as you see as we tell the story, Nike does the right thing and the needle is moved and the industry changes,” he said. “Few people do the right thing every time right off the bat. And I think it is a success story for everybody that the industry can change, and change is possible, and things move in the right direction.”

O’Neill said Nike has not commented publicly on the film since its world premiere at Tribeca.

“There hasn’t been a reaction to the film itself [from the company],” he commented. “But we went to Nike with a series of questions [during production] because there’s lots of things that are said in the film, and we wanted to have their point of view on things that were said. And based on that conversation, nothing changed in the film.”

Allyson Felix with her daughter Camryn at the U.S. Olympic Track & Field Team Trials on June 20, 2021

Felix, now the mother of two – a boy and a girl – retired from competition in 2022, going out on top with gold at the World Championships in the 4 × 400-meter relay. That meet, fittingly, was held in Eugene, Ore., where the Nike empire was born.

“I’ve been a very private person for the majority of my life and so it really was so different and a big decision to decide to do this,” she said of participating in the documentary. “Did I want to be this vulnerable? Did I want to share this story? And I think the answer that kept coming back was just I feel like it could help. I feel like it could have some impact.”

L-R Allyson Felix, English Gardner, Tianna Bartoletta and Tori Bowie celebrate after winning gold in the Women's 4 x 100m Relay Final at the Rio 2016 Olympic Games on August 19, 2016

During her career, Felix won multiple golds in solo events and in relays – the latter being the very definition of a joint endeavor. Speaking of She Runs the World, she keeps the focus on the production as a whole.

“This is an incredible team to get to work with,” she said. “They just put me at ease; it was very comfortable through the years that they followed me and I think it was able to translate really, really well. But I think that was the whole difference is just the team and how amazing they are.”

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Orioles minor league recap 6/22

Triple-A: Norfolk Tides 7, Memphis Redbirds (STL) 3 Chayce McDermott has had a terrible season, but last night wasn’t too bad. He gave up just one run in five innings, which is good. He walked four, which is not good. But compared to the rest of his year so far, it’s a big improvement and […]

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Orioles minor league recap 6/22

Triple-A: Norfolk Tides 7, Memphis Redbirds (STL) 3

Chayce McDermott has had a terrible season, but last night wasn’t too bad. He gave up just one run in five innings, which is good. He walked four, which is not good. But compared to the rest of his year so far, it’s a big improvement and hopefully something to build on. Before last night, in three starts since coming off the injured list, McDermott had given up 18 runs in 10.2 innings.

The Tides got on the board in the first inning with doubles from Terrin Vavra and Jeremiah Jackson. They followed with two three-run innings to run up the score. The lineup had big games from the players you want to have big games. Heston Kjerstad, back in the lineup after fouling a ball off his knee, doubled and tripled. Samuel Basallo had two hits with a double, and knocked in three runs. And Jud Fabian knocked in two with a double and a sac fly.

Box Score

Double-A: Erie SeaWolves (DET) 2, Chesapeake Baysox 0

The Baysox were held to just three hits, all singles. Creed Willems, Douglas Hodo, and Reed Trimble did the honors. Williams also walked and got his first stolen base of the year. The team had four walks total, but didn’t have a single inning with more than on runner on base at the same time.

Levi Wells started and completed three innings with one run allowed. He struck out only one. Raúl Alcantara was charged for the other run thanks to a sacrifice fly after he was pulled. He had loaded the bases on two walks and a single.

Box Score

High-A: Aberdeen IronBirds 7, Brooklyn Cyclones (NYM) 3

Aberdeen starter Luis De León continued to struggle with control. He walked four in 4.2 innings but only allowed two hits. One run scored on him in the first inning when he hit the first batter, walked the second, allowed both to steal, and then gave up a single. In the fifth, he hit the same guy, who then came around to score on a sac fly.

The offense scored a run in the first inning on a single from Leandro Arias. Arias knocked in Griff O’Ferrsll, who had singled and stolen second. They then poured it on in their five-run fourth inning. Anderson De Los Santos got the fun started with a two-run homer. The Shorebirds followed by loading the bases for Angel Tejada, who walked to score the third run of the inning. Two more runs scored on a Vance Honeycutt single.

Box Score

Low-A: Hickory Crawdads (TEX) 6, Delmarva Shorebirds 4

Michael Caldon started for the Shorebirds and was pulled in the third inning after giving up a home run, a double, a single, and a walk. His final line: 2.2 IP, 5 H, 2 R, 1 ER, 2 BB, 2 K. Jack Crowder took over and was decent for three innings before falling apart. Two walks followed by two singles resulted in a three-run inning for the Crawdads.

The Shorebirds jumped out to a two-run lead in the first inning on a home run by 19-year-old Nate George. George knocked in the team’s third run on a triple, then scored on a ground out by Yasmil Bucce.

Leadoff batter Fernando Peguero had two hits and stole two bases.

Box Score

Today’s Schedule

  • Norfolk @ Memphis, 2:05. Starter: Thaddeus Ward
  • Chesapeake @ Erie, 1:35. Starter: TBD
  • Aberdeen vs Brooklyn, 2:05. Starter: Michael Forret
  • Delmarva @ Hickory, 2:00. Starter: Chase Allsup
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