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Princeton University

PRINCETON, N.J. – Preparing to compete in 14 events, the Princeton men’s track and field team will head to Jacksonville, Fla. for the NCAA East First Round to be held Wednesday, May 28th through Saturday, May 31st.  16 Tigers were individually selected to compete in 13 events, with Princeton sending a squad for the 4×400 […]

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PRINCETON, N.J. – Preparing to compete in 14 events, the Princeton men’s track and field team will head to Jacksonville, Fla. for the NCAA East First Round to be held Wednesday, May 28th through Saturday, May 31st. 

16 Tigers were individually selected to compete in 13 events, with Princeton sending a squad for the 4×400 relay as well. 

The selections continue an impressive year for Princeton, as the Tigers won the Ivy Outdoor Heptagonal Championship to complete their second-consecutive and 12th all-time Triple Crown earlier this month. 

At Outdoor Heps, Princeton boasted five individual championships as Greg Foster won the long jump and the 110 hurdles, while Jackson Clarke won the 200, Harrison Witt won the 1500, and Casey Helm won the discus. 

Just this season, the Tigers have rewritten the school record books, setting new records in six events while making the top-10 leaderboards with 22 other performances. 

A pair of Tigers qualified for regionals with top-5 marks. Foster ranks first on the NCAA East Qualifying List and third nationally in the long jump with a mark of 8.10m/26-7″ from the Virginia Challenge on April 18. Helm ranks third regionally in the discus after throwing 63.37m/207′ 11″ at the Penn Relays for a new program record. His mark puts him at seventh in the nation. 

Witt, a 2025 Second Team All-American in the indoor mile, ranks 12th in the East and 22nd in the country in the 1500m after running 3:37.22 at the Larry Ellis Invitational. His time set a new program record. 

Seb Clatworthy also ranks 12th regionally in the high jump after clearing 2.16m/7′ 1″ at Outdoor Heps, while Joe Licata ranks 12th in the shot put with a throw of 19.24m/63′ 1.5″ at Penn Relays.

Rounding out the Tigers in the region’s top 20, Jackson Shorten comes in at 13th in the 3000m steeplechase. Sam Rodman’s school record-breaking 800m performance of 1:46.85 put him at 14th in the region. 

First-year distance phenom Jacob Nenow ranks 19th in the 10000m after running 28:23.60 at the Sam Howell Invitational, breaking Princeton’s record in his first collegiate competition in the event.

After a dominant outdoor season, the Tigers head to Jacksonville ready to compete for punched tickets to the NCAA finals in Eugene, Ore. next month.

Full list of Tigers competing at the NCAA East First Round:

100m: Jadon Spain

200m: Jackson Clarke

400m: Joey Gant

800m: Samuel Rodman

1500m: Harrison Witt, Connor McCormick

5000m: Myles Hogan

10000m: Jacob Nenow, Nicholas Bendtsen

400mH: Chris Paige

4×400 Relay 

High Jump: Seb Clatworthy

Long Jump: Greg Foster (#1 seed, 8.10m)

Shot Put: Joe Licata

Discus: Casey Helm, Avery Shunneson

Hammer: Asher Robbins

 



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Olympic Champions Use Random Body Parts For Wild Jump Sets

Getty Image Audio By Carbonatix David Ahman and Jonatan Hellvig are the reigning Olympic champions in beach volleyball. The Swedish duo rolled through the knockout round at the Paris Games to win the gold medal. They continue to fool everybody with their wicked jump sets! Ahman and Hellvig recently collaborated with Norwegian beach volleyball athlete […]

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David Ahman Jonatan Hellvig Beach Volleyball Jump Sets
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David Ahman and Jonatan Hellvig are the reigning Olympic champions in beach volleyball. The Swedish duo rolled through the knockout round at the Paris Games to win the gold medal.

They continue to fool everybody with their wicked jump sets!

Ahman and Hellvig recently collaborated with Norwegian beach volleyball athlete and content creator Joel Kristian Nicolaysen to throw up some of the wildest jump sets you will ever see. They used random parts of their bodies to set up for the kill with unconventional form. It is equally as ridiculous and unnecessary as it is impressive. More the latter than the former.

For those who do not know, a “set” in volleyball is typically the second of three contacts that a team makes with the ball on a returning offensive sequence. The main goal of the “set” is to float the ball in the air for the hitter to attack into the opposing side of the court. Pretty straightforward.

A jump set is a little bit different but it serves the same purpose. Whichever player makes the second contact for his or her team jumps in the air before he or she contacts the ball and releases the set. It allows the setter to run a quicker offense by setting the ball at a higher point of contact. There is less distance between the setter’s hands and the hitter’s spike reach.

As you can see from the last two highlights, jump sets are most commonly used indoor. David Ahman and Jonatan Hellvig break that trend. They use the jump set on every point possible.

To jump set on a beach court is not easy but the Swedes have it down. Their use of the jump set adds an additional element to their offense by keeping their opponents guessing. The blocker leaves his feet at the net when it looks like they are going to attack before the ball is flicked out to the poles.

The defense doesn’t know what to do. If the blocker doesn’t jump on the second ball, Ahman and Hellvig swing on an empty net. If the blocker does jump, it leaves the empty net for whichever Swedish player received the first ball.

It is nearly impossible to stop.

As David Ahman and Jonatan Hellvig continue to evolve the game of beach volleyball through their sets, they decided to see just how creative they can get. The Swedish duo recently debuted some of the craziest sets you will ever see alongside the Sandy Boys of Norway. That includes an open-hand pistol, fake-spike set, header, chest pass, jumping bump set and the double jump set. (Those are not official names. I made them up!) Take a look:

I don’t know if any of those trick sets are legitimate options during a live beach volleyball match but it would be pretty cool to see them try. Ahman and Hellvig would be even more unstoppable than they already are if they were able to work some of these crazy jump sets into competition!





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Young Squash Pair Embrace Asian Challenge

KUCHING: National squash player Harith Danial Jefri is embracing the underdog role as he makes his senior debut at the 2nd Asian Doubles Squash Championships 2025, set to take place from June 23 to 26 at the Sarawak Squash Centre. The Miri-born athlete, a two-time Malaysia Games (SUKMA) mixed doubles gold medallist, will reunite with […]

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KUCHING: National squash player Harith Danial Jefri is embracing the underdog role as he makes his senior debut at the 2nd Asian Doubles Squash Championships 2025, set to take place from June 23 to 26 at the Sarawak Squash Centre.

The Miri-born athlete, a two-time Malaysia Games (SUKMA) mixed doubles gold medallist, will reunite with long-time partner Nathalie Sim — the pair who clinched titles at both the 2022 and 2024 SUKMA.

Now representing Malaysia on a bigger stage, Harith said the goal is to gain experience and test themselves against Asia’s top senior players.

“There’s no expectation for both of us since it’s our first senior and Asian tournament.

“We’re going in as wild cards, I think we just want to gain more exposure and experience playing with the senior players,”he said.

Despite having just one training session together before the tournament — Harith having just returned from the UK and Nathalie from the US, he is optimistic that their chemistry will shine through.

“Our pairing goes back to SUKMA. We’ve won gold twice together. So the chemistry is already there — it’s just about sharpening our shots and getting into rhythm,” Harith told reporters when met at the centre on Saturday (June 21).

The pair are seeded third, where they will face top seeds Hong Kong, as well as the Philippines and Chinese Taipei. Only the top two pairs will qualify for the Round of 16.

“It’ll be tough, but I think we have a chance to make it through the group. That’s the goal, reach the knockout rounds and just enjoy it from there,” he said.



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Utah State Track and Field Has 10 Student-Athletes Named to CSC Academic All-District Team

LOGAN, Utah — Utah State track and field had 10 student-athletes named to the College Sports Communicators (CSC) Academic All-District team, it was announced by the organization on Tuesday.   Sophie Chandler, Logan Garnica, Logan Hammer, Shelby Jensen, Marshall Rasmussen, Javin Richards, Brianne Smith, Emma Thornley, Camren Todd and Krysthina Vlahovic earned recognition for their […]

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LOGAN, Utah — Utah State track and field had 10 student-athletes named to the College Sports Communicators (CSC) Academic All-District team, it was announced by the organization on Tuesday.
 
Sophie Chandler, Logan Garnica, Logan Hammer, Shelby Jensen, Marshall Rasmussen, Javin Richards, Brianne Smith, Emma Thornley, Camren Todd and Krysthina Vlahovic earned recognition for their excellence in competition and in the classroom.
 
Chandler, a junior from Santa Clara, Utah, has a 3.94 GPA majoring in management. She is a two-time Academic All-MW honoree and MW Scholar-Athlete. During the 2025 campaign, Chandler finished fifth in the heptathlon and sixth in the pentathlon at the MW Championships and ranks sixth and ninth, respectively in Utah State history in the events. The Snow Canyon HS product ended the season ranked 43rd in the NCAA West region in the heptathlon.
 
Garnica, a junior from Springville, Utah, completed his bachelor’s degree in psychology this spring with a 4.0 GPA. Garnica earned the NCAA Elite 90 Award at the 2024 NCAA Cross Country Championships, awarded to the top scholar-athlete competing at the NCAA championships. He is also a four-time Academic All-MW and MW Scholar-Athlete recipient, as well as a CSC Academic All-District honoree in 2024. Garnica earned second-team all-conference honors in cross country and ranked ninth in the NCAA West region in the 3,000-meter steeplechase. He broke the Utah State record in the 3,000-meter steeplechase in 2025 and ranks in the school’s all-time top-10 in the indoor 3,000 meters and 5,000 meters.
 
Hammer, a junior from Nampa, Idaho, has a 3.59 GPA majoring in veterinary science. He has earned three career All-American honors in the pole vault, including first-team honors at the NCAA Indoor Track and Field Championships and second-team honors at the Outdoor Track and Field Championships in 2025. Hammer, who has earned two Academic All-MW honors and one MW Scholar-Athlete award in his career, swept the conference titles in 2025 and broke the Utah State records in the indoor and outdoor pole vault. The Columbia HS graduate finished the 2025 outdoor season ranked third in the NCAA and 13th among all Americans in the pole vault.
 
Jensen, a sophomore from Saratoga Springs, Utah, became the first USU woman to earn All-American honors since 2018, earning first-team accolades with her seventh-place finish in the 3,000-meter steeplechase at the 2025 NCAA Division I Outdoor Track and Field Championships. A data analytics major currently holding a 3.85 GPA, Jensen is also a three-time Academic All-MW honoree and a MW Scholar-Athlete in both track and field and cross country. She broke the school record in the 3,000-meter steeplechase three times in 2025, including both her races at the national championships.
 
Rasmussen, a junior from Meridian, Idaho, graduated this spring with his bachelor’s degree in computer engineering with a 3.94 GPA. In his career, Rasmussen has earned two Academic All-MW honors and two MW Scholar-Athlete awards. The Compass Honors HS product had a breakout 2025 campaign, earning two MW silver medals in the indoor and outdoor pole vault and setting the school’s seventh-best marks all-time in each event. He finished the 2025 season ranked 47th in the NCAA West region in the outdoor pole vault.
 
Richards, a junior from Perry, Ohio, has a 3.73 GPA majoring in computer science. The multi-event standout finished the 2025 campaign ranked 27th in the outdoor pole vault and 36th in the decathlon in the NCAA West region. Richards, the MW bronze medalist in the outdoor pole vault, is a two-time MW Scholar-Athlete and an Academic All-MW honoree. He ranks second in Aggie history in the heptathlon, fourth in the decathlon and outdoor pole vault and sixth in the indoor pole vault.
 
Smith, a sophomore from Palmdale, California, has a 3.85 GPA majoring in sociology. She advanced to her first-career NCAA West First Rounds in 2025, finishing 40th in the 10,000 meters. The Quartz Hill HS product is a three-time Academic All-MW honoree and a two-time MW Scholar-Athlete. She ranks fifth and 10th in USU history in the 10,000 meters and 5,000 meters, respectively.
 
Thornley, a senior from Layton, Utah, graduated this spring with her bachelor’s degree in kinesiology with a 4.00 GPA. She earned USTFCCCA All-Academic Cross Country honors in 2023 and 2024 and is both a six-time MW Scholar-Athlete and a five-time Academic All-MW recipient. Thornley broke the Utah State record in the 5,000 meters and moved to third all-time in the 10,000 meters during the 2025 campaign. She also earned career-best finishes at the NCAA Cross Country Mountain Regionals (22nd) and in both the 5,000 meters (28th) and the 10,000 meters (30th) at the NCAA West First Rounds.
 
Todd, a graduate senior from Kaysville, Utah, completed his master’s degree in civil and environmental engineering this spring with a graduate GPA of 3.87. He claimed All-American honors in cross country in 2024, finishing 25th at the national championships. Todd, a two-time recipient of the NCAA Elite 90 Award, has also earned two USTFCCCA Academic All-American honors, eight MW Scholar-Athlete awards and six Academic All-MW honors in his career. The Davis HS product broke the Utah State record in the 10,000 meters and finished the season ranked 21st in the NCAA West region in the event.  
 
Vlahovic, a junior from Surrey, British Columbia, Canada, has a 3.78 GPA majoring in technical communication and rhetoric. She earned Academic All-MW honors in 2023 and 2024 and MW Scholar-Athlete accolades in 2024. Vlahovic, who ranks ninth among all Canadians in the 100-metres hurdles in 2025, placed 46th in the event at this season’s NCAA West First Rounds. The product of Fraser Heights Secondary School ranks third in Aggie history in the 100-meter hurdles and the 60-meter hurdles.
 
Fans can follow the Utah State track and field programs on X at USUTF_XC, on Facebook at USUTrack and on Instagram at USUTF_XC. Aggies fans can also follow the Utah State athletic program on X at USUAthletics or on Facebook at Utah State University Athletics.  

-USU-





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U.S. Men’s National Team Ready for 2025 VNL Week Two Action

COLORADO SPRINGS, Colo. (June 24, 2025) – Four Olympians headline the U.S. Men’s National Team roster for the second week of Volleyball Nations League (VNL), taking place June 25-29 at NOW Arena in Hoffman Estates, Ill. This week marks the U.S. Men’s first appearance on home soil since 2023, when Anaheim, Calif., hosted a leg […]

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COLORADO SPRINGS, Colo. (June 24, 2025) – Four Olympians headline the U.S. Men’s National Team roster for the second week of Volleyball Nations League (VNL), taking place June 25-29 at NOW Arena in Hoffman Estates, Ill.

This week marks the U.S. Men’s first appearance on home soil since 2023, when Anaheim, Calif., hosted a leg of the VNL tour. NOW Arena previously welcomed VNL action in 2018 and hosted the Finals in 2019.

The U.S. will face China, Canada, Poland and Italy, and tickets are still available for three of the four U.S. matches. U.S. vs. Poland is sold out, and U.S. vs. Italy is near capacity.

GET TICKETS TO WATCH THE U.S. MEN COMPETE JUNE 25-29 IN HOFFMAN ESTATES, ILLINOIS

The U.S. is 2-2 after the first week. Poland sits atop the VNL standings at 4-0, while Italy is 3-1, and Canada and China are 2-2.

Three-time Olympian Erik Shoji, 2024 Olympian Micah Ma’a and 2020 Olympian Kyle Ensing will all make their 2025 season debuts in Hoffman Estates. They join 2024 Olympian Jeff Jendryk to anchor a talented and experienced roster.

Returning from week one are libero Kyle Dagostino, middle blocker Matt Knigge; opposites Gabi Garcia and Kyle Hobus; outside hitters Cooper Robinson, Ethan Champlin and Jordan Ewert, and setter Quinn Isaacson.

Outside hitter Jacob Pasteur and middle blocker Shane Holdaway join the VNL lineup for the first time this year. Pasteur debuted in 2022, while Holdaway will appear on a U.S. Men’s National Team roster for the first time.

The U.S. Men are currently ranked No. 6 in the world and have medaled four times in VNL history, including silver medals in 2019, 2022 and 2023 and bronze in 2018.

Volleyball Nations League features the world’s top 18 men’s teams clashing over three weeks of preliminary play, with the top eight advancing to the Final Round.

U.S. Men’s Week One Roster for 2025 VNL

No. Name (Pos., Ht., Hometown, College, USAV Region)
4 Jeff Jendryk (MB, 6-10, Wheaton, Ill., Loyola Univ. Chicago, Great Lakes)
5 Kyle Ensing (Opp, 6-7, Valencia, Calif., Long Beach State Univ., Southern California)
6 Quinn Isaacson (S, 6-2, Plainfield, Ill., Ball State, Great Lakes)
7 Jacob Pasteur (OH, 6-4, Westminster, Md., Ohio State Univ., Chesapeake)
9 Gabi Garcia (OPP, 6-7, San Juan, Puerto Rico, BYU)
10 Kyle Dagostino (L, 5-9, Tampa, Florida, Stanford Univ., Florida)
12 Shane Holdaway (MB, 6-6, Huntington Beach, Calif., Long Beach State, Southern California)
14 Micah Ma’a (S, 6-3, Kaneohe, Hawaii, UCLA, Aloha)
15 Kyle Hobus (OPP, 6-7, San Pedro, Calif., CSUN, Southern California)
18 Cooper Robinson (OH, 6-7, Pacific Palisades, Calif., UCLA, Southern California)
22C Erik Shoji (L, 6-0, Honolulu, Hawaii, Stanford Univ., Aloha)
25 Ethan Champlin (OH, 6-3, Oceanside, Calif., UCLA, Southern California)
28 Matthew Knigge (MB, 6-7, New Egypt, N.J., Vassar, Garden Empire)
29 Jordan Ewert (OH, 6-5, Antioch, Calif., Stanford, Northern California)

Head Coach:  Karch Kiraly
Assistant Coach: Luka Slabe
Assistant Coach: Javier Weber
Performance Analyst: Nate Ngo
Physiotherapist: Aaron Brock
Senior Strength and Conditioning Coach: Tim Pelot
Senior Sports Dietitian: Shawn Hueglin
Mental Performance Coach: Andrea Becker
Team Manager: David Dantes
Consultant Coach: Chris McGown
Consultant Coach: Marv Dunphy
Team Doctors:  Eugene Yim, Mark Hutchinson, Michael Shepard, Warren Young

2025 Volleyball Nations League Schedule for Week 2
NOW Arena
Hoffman Estates, Illinois
All times PDT; Matches will be shown live on VBTV and either CBS Sports Network or Big Ten Network

June 25 at 5:30 p.m. vs. China
June 26 at 5:30 p.m. vs. Canada
June 28 at 5:30 p.m. vs. Poland
June 29 at 5:30 p.m. vs. Italy

Week 1 Results
June 11: Ukraine def. USA, 3-0 (25-22, 25-20, 25-23)
June 12 USA def. Iran, 3-2 (19-25, 21-25, 25-21, 25-23, 17-15)
June 14 Slovenia def. USA, 3-1 (25-22, 27-25, 20-25, 25-23)
June 15 USA def. Cuba, 3-1 (25-22, 25-18, 18-25, 25-23)



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Noah Syndergaard signs a minor league deal with the Chicago White Sox

CBS News Live CBS Sports HQ Live Noah Syndergaard will attempt to make a comeback with the Chicago White Sox, who have signed the veteran right-hander to a minor league deal. Syndergaard has reported to the team’s spring complex in Glendale, Arizona, the White Sox confirmed Tuesday. The 32-year-old last pitched in the majors in […]

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Noah Syndergaard signs a minor league deal with the Chicago White Sox

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Noah Syndergaard will attempt to make a comeback with the Chicago White Sox, who have signed the veteran right-hander to a minor league deal.

Syndergaard has reported to the team’s spring complex in Glendale, Arizona, the White Sox confirmed Tuesday.

The 32-year-old last pitched in the majors in 2023, when he was cut by Cleveland. He went 2-6 with a 6.50 ERA in 18 combined starts for the Guardians and Los Angeles Dodgers that year.

Nicknamed “Thor” for his long blond hair and 6-foot-6 frame, Syndergaard debuted for the New York Mets in 2015 and won a World Series start that season. He was an All-Star in 2016, but injuries have sidetracked his career.

Syndergaard is 59-47 with a 3.71 ERA in eight major league seasons.

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Cardinal Ritter’s Kyndall Spain is the All-Metro girls track and field athlete of the year

Paul Halfacre | Post-Dispatch Read about the St. Louis area’s top high school girls track and field athletes and their accomplishments from the 2025 season. Tiffany Spain was as far from the finish line as she could have been. But the Cardinal Ritter track and field coach had her trusty stopwatch in hand and […]

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Meet the 2025 All-Metro girls track and field team

Read about the St. Louis area’s top high school girls track and field athletes and their accomplishments from the 2025 season.

Tiffany Spain was as far from the finish line as she could have been.

But the Cardinal Ritter track and field coach had her trusty stopwatch in hand and her keen eyes were fixed on the runner in the middle of the track.

“I have always watched her hurdles races from the back side of the track,” Spain said. “For the past four years, I’ve never watched a race on the home side where everybody else is, maybe it’s because it’s my kid, but I always watch on the back side.”

As the gun sounded, Spain’s finger clicked on the watch and she watched as her standout hurdler and daughter, Kyndall Spain, glided over the hurdles at Jefferson City High School.

With each beat of her heart, Tiffany Spain wouldn’t allow herself to exhale.

She held her breath for 13.37 seconds. 

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“I turned around, looked at the jumbotron, and it said 13.37, and everybody was looking at me and congratulating me, because they know that’s my kid,” Tiffany said. “I was just like, hell yeah, it was so exciting, because she’s been working at this. I was elated. I was excited, I was hype. I was amped. I was a little big-headed then, yeah, that’s my kid.”

From the other side of the track, Kyndall let out an exultant scream of triumph that mirrored her mother’s excitement.

“Oh, I was happy,” Kyndall said. “I don’t know, I was expecting a PR, but I wasn’t expecting that (time). I just wanted to win and run a faster time than I’ve been running all season.”







Brusca Strohbach Ladue Invitational

Cardinal Ritter’s Kyndall Spain in the Brusca Strohbach Ladue Invitational on Saturday, April 23, 2022 at Ladue High School in Ladue, Mo. Paul Halfacre, STLhighschoolsports.com




The All-Metro girls track and field athlete of the year, Kyndall Spain capped her senior season most impressively. Not only did she blaze to state championships in the 100- and 300-meter hurdles races, but she also posted times that ranked among the best nationwide.

Her 13.37 in the 100 hurdles set a new Class 5 state meet record and was tied for the sixth-fastest time in the nation this season. 

Not long after, the University of South Carolina signee set a new Missouri all-classes state meet record with a 40.80-second time in the 300 hurdles. It was the fifth-fastest time by a high schooler this year in the U.S.  

Kyndall was a three-time state champion in the 300 hurdles (2023-25). She joined Aniyah Brown (100 meters, 2021-22, 2024) as the only three-time state champions in a single event for the Lions. Kyndall also captured back-to-back titles in the 100 hurdles, the first Cardinal Ritter athlete to do that since Valarie Whitted in 2017-18. 

All those accolades came under the watchful eye of her mother, and Kyndall acknowledged it will be a transition to hear new coaching voices calling out and pushing her, but she’s ready for the change that will come with running on the NCAA Division I stage.

“I love my mom, but I’m excited to be by myself, experience adulthood,” Kyndall said. 

Tiffany flashed a grin when she heard that sentiment.

“It’s kind of nerve-wracking, but in the same token, you want them to grow and blossom and become who they are meant to be,” Tiffany said. “As a coach, I’m excited because I’m excited to see exactly what she does without me being her coach. I’m excited to see how they pour into her.”

Part of what attracted Kyndall to South Carolina was what the coaching staff had to offer her. 

The idea of being in a new place didn’t hurt, either.

“I wanted to be as far away from home as I could,” Kyndall said. “I love the coaches. I liked the environment there, and I just really felt at home on my visit.”







Kydnall 2.jpg

Cardinal Ritter’s Kyndall Spain runs during the 1600-meter relay on Saturday at the MSHSAA Class 5 Track and Field Championships. Cardinal Ritter won the Class 5 team title as well. 




Not that she has any hatred toward St. Louis. If she ever got a tattoo, Kyndall said the St. Louis Arch or some St. Louis iconography would feature heavily in it.

Just the pull to strike out on her own was too much for her to ignore. And the chance to go against some of the best hurdlers in the country in the Southeastern Conference excites her.

“You’ve got to be able to prove it,” Tiffany said. “I think one of the reasons she picked South Carolina is because it’s a pro program. If she wants to go pro, this is what you have to do. She’s going to have to be in the back. I want her in that heat. I want her in that smoke.”

Kyndall had offers from programs throughout the nation but opted to join the Gamecocks, whose roster also includes Raytown South alum Zaya Akins. 

South Carolina finished seventh in the team standings at the NCAA Outdoor Championships earlier this month. Missing from the team score were both the hurdles events. 

Something Kyndall hopes to change.

“That’s my goal,” Kyndall said. 

While she won’t be there as her coach, Tiffany is expecting to be in the stands, trading her coach’s hat for just being a proud parent and fan.

“I’m going to be at every track meet,” Spain said. “I want her to look in the stands and say, ‘There are my parents. That’s my mom and my dad. They’re here to support me.’ I want her to hear my loud mouth. I want her to see my face. I want to be able to give her a hug before and after, win, lose or draw.”


Meet the 2025 All-Metro girls track and field team

Read about the St. Louis area’s top high school girls track and field athletes and their accomplishments from the 2025 season.


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Nick Zimmerman did a bit of everything for SLUH: All-Metro water polo player of the year


Riley Nelson takes charge for Edwardsville: All-Metro spring softball player of the year


Clayton’s Noah Gou made a strong impression: All-Metro boys tennis player of the year


De Smet’s Massey had championship pedigree: All-Metro boys volleyball player of the year



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