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Aaron Judge hits 2 homers in his return to the Sacramento area

WEST SACRAMENTO, Calif. (AP) — Aaron Judge celebrated his return to the Sacramento area by hitting two home runs Saturday in a losing effort for the New York Yankees against the Athletics to extend his major league leading total to 14. Judge is playing in the Sacramento area for the first time since college in […]

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Aaron Judge hits 2 homers in his return to the Sacramento area

WEST SACRAMENTO, Calif. (AP) — Aaron Judge celebrated his return to the Sacramento area by hitting two home runs Saturday in a losing effort for the New York Yankees against the Athletics to extend his major league leading total to 14.

Judge is playing in the Sacramento area for the first time since college in New York’s first visit to the A’s temporary home near California’s capital.

Judge was born in Sacramento and grew up not far away in Linden and had many friends and family in the crowd of 12,113 at the minor league park that is hosting the A’s.

“It just felt like being home,” Judge said after the Yankees’ win Friday night. “Any time we play the A’s, that’s always something that’s familiar to me and close to home, to me. It was special.”

After going 1 for 4 with a walk and two near homers in the series opener, Judge granted A’s owner John Fisher his wish Saturday in an 11-7 loss by the Yankees.

He led off the fourth inning with a homer off JP Sears and then connected again to lead off the sixth against Justin Sterner to the delight of the Yankees fans in attendance, many of whom chanted “MVP! MVP!”

“Not surprising,” Yankees starter Carlos Rodon said. “Once again putting on great swings like he always does. Really good player.”

The second homer gave Judge 14 on the season and gave him 41 career multi-homer games — fourth most in Yankees history.

Judge leads the majors in batting average (.396), on-base percentage (.486), slugging percentage (.772) homers and RBIs (37).

When the A’s announced their plans last season to play in this minor league park, Fisher said he was excited to see what players like Judge could do in a stadium known for offense.

“We’re excited to be here for the next three years playing in this beautiful ballpark, but also being able to watch some of the best players in baseball, whether they be Athletics players or Aaron Judge and others launch home runs out of this very intimate, the most intimate ballpark in all of Major League Baseball,” he said.

The ball carried well for everyone with the teams combining for six homers — including a go-ahead, three-run shot by Shea Langeliers for the A’s that pitcher Fernando Cruz was shocked carried over the wall.

Cruz said he went to back up home plate, assuming it would be a potential sacrifice fly only to see the ball carry out.

“It’s the same for all of us,” Cruz said. “It’s the same for the other team, the same for me, the same for my other teammates. Just have to come back tomorrow and do the same thing, pitch and locate a little better.”

Games at this stadium that had previously been solely used in the Triple-A Pacific Coast League have had a combined 2.75 home runs per game — up more than 40% from the rate of homers hit last season at the Oakland Coliseum.

“I’m sure as the summer builds up and the heat builds up, the PCL is known for that,” Yankees manager Aaron Boone said about the way the ball carries. “I’d be speaking out of turn if I said I knew how this place is going to play throughout. Today was a little different throughout.”


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USA topples world champion Hungary in U20 semifinals

Overview In the classification 5-8 semifinals, Serbia ripped through Italy 21-16 and Montenegro, with just one win before today, scored the 13-13 equaliser that sent the match to a sudden-death penalty shootout that required 15 shots before winning 21-20. In the classification 9-12 semifinals, Australia held off Iran 17-13 and Germany pummelled China 20-2. Both […]

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Overview

In the classification 5-8 semifinals, Serbia ripped through Italy 21-16 and Montenegro, with just one win before today, scored the 13-13 equaliser that sent the match to a sudden-death penalty shootout that required 15 shots before winning 21-20.

In the classification 9-12 semifinals, Australia held off Iran 17-13 and Germany pummelled China 20-2.

Both final classification matches went to a penalty shootout to decide the winners.

In the classification 17-18 decider, Colombia won 21-18 after the match was locked at 17-17 and for 19th place, South Africa beat New Zealand 16-15 after being locked at 13-13 at the final buzzer.

Day 8 Schedule

Classification 15-16
Match 55. 09:00. Argentina v Kazakhstan
Classification 13-14
Match 56. 10:30. Brazil v Canada
Classification 11-12
Match 57. 12:00. Iran v China
Classification 9-10
Match 58. 13:30. Australia v Germany
Classification 7-8
Match 59. 16:00. Italy v Greece
Classification 5-6

Match 60. 17:30. Serbia v Montenegro
Classification 3-4
Match 61. 19:00. Hungary v Croatia
Classification 1-2
Match 62. 20:30. United States of America v Spain

Match Reports

Classification 1-4 Semifinals

Match 54, HUNGARY 16 UNITED STATES OF AMERICA 18 (5-4, 5-5, 3-3, 3-6)


Image Source: Peter Castillo (USA) and defender Martin Toth (HUN)/Aniko Kovacs/World Aquatics

Two superstars in the making and plenty of support around them — USA’s Ryder Dodd and Hungary’s Oliver Leinweber. They have 46 goals between them in Zagreb with Dodd heading the tallies with 26 goals. They were on fire today and for the Hungarians, their captain was inspirational with five field goals and two from the penalty line. Olympic bronze medallist Dodd scored his first goal late in the second quarter and ended with three goals from penalty fouls. The focus was on this incredible pair but they needed support in what they did. USA was 9-5 down midway through the second quarter and USA went 13-7 from that point. The fact that head coach Jack Kocur had a handful of players back from two years ago, was a major factor, while many of that 2023-winning Hungarian squad now play on the senior team. This was one of the most fascinating matches of the tournament and one with the most meaning.

Hungary went 2-0 up, 3-1, 5-2 before USA fired in the last two of the period for 5-4. Leinweber already had two goals. A Hungarian triple, with a third for Leinweber, plus a trade, meant Hungary was well placed at 9-5. Landon Akerstrom loved playing the top position and scored two on extra for 9-7 down. This drew Dodd and Hungary’s Mor Benedek to the penalty lines for 10-8. Akerstrom was not finished yet, blasting from the point position and needing VAR to confirm his shot made it across the line, 0:33 from halftime.


Image Source: Jon Carcarey (USA) defends Martin Toth (HUN)/Aniko Kovacs/World Aquatics

Hungary’s 10-9 advantage was wiped at the top of the third with Peter Castillo accepting a ball at three metres in front on extra. Dodd bar-downed from the top for 11-10 in front for the first time at 6:36. Vince Varga and Dodd traded before Leinweber rocketed in a long shot and drove down the right to score to regain the Hungarian lead at 13-12, which was the final-break position.

Bode Brinkema threaded the needle with a pass to a smothered Dodd on the left drive for 13-13 a minute into the final quarter. Castillo did a repeat of before and Dodd converted from the five-metre line for a 15-13 advantage. Ryan Ohl took his first shot of the match and speared in a winner for 16-13 at 3:42. Leinweber scored from the top on extra and then with a six-metre shot to narrow the margin to one at 2:38. Brinkema pulled the trigger from nine metres for 17-15 at 2:13. Both teams went to timeouts. Hungary put in seven field players and failed to score with the result a USA steal and a Dodd shot from 15m into an empty goal for 18-15 at 0:27. Varga scored in frustration from a six-metre shot, but at four seconds left on the clock, USA had won a history match 18-16.


Image Source: Maxim Cseh (HUN)/Aniko Kovacs/World Aquatics

Match Heroes
USA’s Dodd with his six goals for USA giving him 26 for the week. Akerstrom and Castillo scored three each. For Hungary, Leinweber was inspirational with his seven goals but it won’t earn a gold medal. He has 20 goals. Varga was next best with three goals.

Turning Point
From 9-6 behind halfway through the second quarter, USA levelled at the start of the third. USA did not have its first advantage until midway through the third period and Hungary snatched it back. With less than six minutes remaining, USA levelled, led and stayed in front until the end.

Stats Don’t Lie
USA scored six from 16 on extra and Hungary four from seven. Hungary put away all four penalty shots and USA three. Hungary won the steals 7-6 but USA shot more at 35-28.

Bottom Line
It was USA’s day and time. With an experienced group from 2023 who won bronze, the carrot was there for a higher medal, which it has achieved. Champion Hungary slipped, leaving much of the heavy lifting to captain Leinweber.

Match 53, SPAIN 13 CROATIA 11 (5-3, 1-3, 2-3, 5-2)


Image Source: Oier Aguirre (ESP) and Ante Jerkovic (CRO)/Aniko Kovacs/World Aquatics

Spain rightfully took its place in the gold-medal final despite surviving a violence foul that saw it play four minutes one man down in the second quarter. This allowed Croatia to level the score. However, Spain held its momentum and worked through the match with a positive lead. That was until late in the third quarter where Croatia pleased the crowd with the 9-8 advantage. It took Spain five minutes to draw level, retake the lead in the last three minutes and surge to victory.

Spain was inspired by Oier Aguirre and Tomas Perrone, son of Ricardo Perrone, the long-standing Spanish international, and nephew of superstar Felipe Perrone, with whom he has played alongside in his club. Spain began like it wanted the win with three goals, the third from Aguirre on penalty. Goals were traded with Perrone driving down the right post to score for 4-1. Maro Susic responded on extra. At 1:20, Samuel Garcia gained an expulsion from the match for allegedly hitting his opponent in the head. It was deemed violence and earned a four-minute suspension for the team. Susic buried the penalty but Perrone interrupted the flow with a six-metre-foul shot for 5-3 at 0:55. Vlaho Pavlic, one of the stars in Zagreb, converted a penalty foul and Ante Jerkovic scored his second with a lob from the deep right for the last extra-man goal of the suspension. Croatia had made it 3-1 in this time and levelled at five. Aguirre and Pavlic swapped goals for 6-6 at 4:29, which became the halftime score.

In the third period, Aquirre and Pavlic traded twice with Aguirre on extra and Pavlic from the penalty line for 8-8. The packed crowd rose when Mislav Curkovic received a long cross pass as he climbed high to drag the ball down into goal for Croatia’s first lead of the match at 9-8. Pavlic and Perrone traded goals early in the third period. Spain went to a timeout and the plot was to score goals quickly. The answer from the players was Aguirre levelling on penalty; left-hander Albert Sabadell converting extra and Eudald Flaque banging one in from the top on extra for 12-10 with just 1:11 left on the clock. Both teams called a timeout to no effect on the scoreboard. At 0:43, Saul Granados gained a quick pass to the left-post position to score on extra for 13-10 and an insurmountable lead. Pavlic took exception and fired in a six-metre-foul shot seven seconds later but Spain retained the ball, gained an ejection and played out time for victory, much to the dismay of the packed house.

Match Heroes
Spain’s Aguirre (21) with five goals and Perrone (14) with three. Sabadell added two for 13 in Zagreb. Pavlic (CRO) nailed four penalty goals in his six, to elevate him to 26 goals — the best in the competition. Jerkovic (12) and Susic (11) grabbed two each.


Image Source: Eudald Flaque (ESP)/Aniko Kovacs/World Aquatics

Turning Point
The violence foul posed a big threat to Spain, although the four-minute suspension period favoured Croatia 3-1. Spain had the goals in the bag to soak up this problem. Croatia taking the 9-8 lead and Spain addressing this hurdle at 11-10 up.

Stats Don’t Lie
Spain converted four from 10 on extra and defended nine from 13. On penalties, Spain scored both and Croatia five. On steals, Spain led 7-5 but was pipped on shots at 33-32.

Bottom Line
Spain is undefeated and deserves a spot in the final. Croatia suffered the one loss to Hungary. Its comeback today was admirable but not enough.

Classification 5-8 Semifinals

Match 51, ITALY 16 SERBIA 21 (3-4, 3-4, 5-6, 5-7)


Image Source: Strahinja Krstic (SRB) defends an Italian/Aniko Kovacs/World Aquatics

Serbia was the silver medallist two years ago and this year it will face off for fifth against Montenegro, its former ally and neighbour. Serbia was never headed and always looked n control in a high-scoring match. Serbia went to 3-1 with Italy equalising at 3-3. There was only one other time that Italy levelled — in the second quarter — as Serbia used all its guns with nine players scoring. Serbia was 4-3 up at the quarter where seven different players made the sheet. Serbia led 5-3 and 6-4 before Italy made it 6-6 at 1:20. Two goals in the final minute had Serbia 8-6 up at halftime. Filip Novakovic, Vuk Conkic and Vuk Andelic were the double scorers for Serbia while Enrico Tringali Capuano had a pair for Italy.


Image Source: Enrico Tringali Capuano (ITA)/Aniko Kovacs/World Aquatics

Serbian captain Andrija Jaukovic and Italy’s Tommaso Cora traded two goals each before Andelic, Jaukovic and Novakovic created a five-goal margin in less than two minutes. It moved to 14-9 before Francesco Casavola and Miljan Dokanovic were caught fighting in front of goal, earning red cards. Cora and Alessandro Gullotta trimmed the margin to three by the final break. Cora gave Italy the first goal of the fourth period before Augusto Massa was red-carded. Goals were swapped and then a three-goal burst by Serbia opened the match up at 18-13, Novakovic scoring the first two. The see-saw effect of scoring took place until the final buzzer with Giorgio Giacomone grabbing two and Gullotta picking up his third.

Match Heroes
Novakovic
netted five times, Jaukovic four and Andelic three for Serbia with goalkeeper Mihailo Gosic taking 10 saves. For Italy, Giacomone (14), Tringali Capuano (13) and Cora (15) all scored four goals. Gullotta (17) added three to his tally.


Image Source: Mihailo Gosic (SRB)/Aniko Kovacs/World Aquatics

Turning Point
Serbia building on the first two quarters eased out to four-goal margins in the third period.

Stats Don’t Lie
Serbia landed 10 goals from 18 on extra to Italy’s seven from 15. On penalties, Serbia scored all four and Italy two. Italy stole the ball 10 times to four and led the shooting at 35-34.

Bottom Line
Serbia, historically, is slightly better than Italy and in Zagreb, Italy has not performed to its normal standard. Serbia has been hunting for scalps and today’s was a just reward.

Match 52, MONTENEGRO 21 GREECE 20 in sudden-death penalty shootout. FT: 13-13. Pens: 8-7 (3-2, 3-4, 5-5, 2-2)


Image Source: Montenegro v Greece/Aniko Kovacs/World Aquatics

Greece led three times and Montenegro twice, but it was the Montenegrins who levelled in the final period to force the shootout. All players scored in the first rotation and then Greece missed its last two and Montenegro one, but the final shot from Nebojsa Petrovic found its mark and his team won through to the fifth-place play-off.

Greece started two up thanks to Georgios Nikolaidis, only to lose the lead by quarter time. Montenegro stretched it to 5-2 soon after the restart, leaving a lot of work for Greece. Unbelievably, Greece levelled at six by halftime and continued the onslaught in the third period.

 


Image Source: Danilo Stupar (MNE) shoots against Lazaros Vekris (GRE)/Aniko Kovacs/World Aquatics

Apostolos Georgaras opened like he finished the second period, with a penalty goal. Orestis Zervoudakis picked up his second at centre forward and Greece was 8-6 ahead. Goals were traded as Greece made a poor pass and it was snapped up for a Montenegrin goal before Andreas Bitsakos scored his second, on counter, needing VAR to confirm. Meldin Hadzic was the recipient of the “mistake” goal and he added a third to his tally from two metres. Danilo Stupar equalised with four goals trading to 11-11 at the final break. Petrovic climbed high on the left post to secure an extra-man goal and the 12-11 lead for Montenegro. Greece swiftly retook the lead but suffered a major blow when Georgaras was red-carded. Ivan Markovic jumped on a rebound to score on extra at 3:44 and despite three timeouts and Bitsakos’ bar-hitting, last-gasp shot, neither side could cross the line, sending the match to a shootout, which Montenegro won.

Match Heroes
Hadzic
topped the scoring with three goals for Montenegro with Stupar (12), Janovic (11) and Markovic sending in two each. Andrija Bjelica made 11 saves in goal. For Greece, Georgaras (15) scored three goals before being ejected and Bitsakos (10), also scored three. Nikolaidis and Zervoudakis netted two each. Lazaros Vekris made 12 saves in goal.


Image Source: Captain Milan Nikaljevic (MNE)/Aniko Kovacs/World Aquatics

Turning Point
Greece led three times and Montenegro twice. The match was tied seven times. Really, it came down to the last Montenegro goal and then the shootout.

Stats Don’t Lie
Montenegro went four from 11 on extra and Greece five from 13. Greece scored the only two penalty goals while Montenegro won the steals 11-6 and shot 38 to 34.

Bottom Line
Greece lost in a shootout to Serbia and lost to Montenegro who had only one win before today, compared to Greece’s two.

Classification 9-12 Semifinals

Match 49, IRAN 13 AUSTRALIA 17 (2-5, 2-4, 5-3, 4-5)


Image Source: Iran versus Australia/Aniko Kovacs/World Aquatics

Australia led from start to finish with the early three-goal margin generally kept throughout. Both teams played well and Iran’s swift responses kept Australia honest. Australia won the first period after a “get-to-know-you” passage of play in which penalties were king. The first three goals came from penalty and the last with three in favour of Australia. Harry Tucker was the only dual scorer giving Australia its first and fourth goals. The second period again favoured Australia with captain Harper Stewart scoring on extra and from a six-metre-foul shot with the buzzer about to sound. Daniel Magasanik and Mohammadtaha Samaei traded penalty goals at the start of the period and midway through Iran had a penalty attempt saved by Oliver Purcell. Tucker scored his third on extra and in the dying seconds, Arshi Abdollahifar powered in a shot from the wide right for 9-4 down.


Image Source: Harry Tucker (AUS)/Aniko Kovacs/World Aquatics

Goals were traded at the top of the third period with another trade to 11-6. Arman Shams for his second and Mohammadmehdi Jafari narrowed the gap to three and had a penalty attempt stopped. Magasanik and Shams swapped for what was the final-break score — 12-9. Goals were traded twice at the start of the fourth period and then Australia rattled in three straight — Tucker tucked in between Magasanik goals. That was 17-11 inside the final two minutes, sealing the match, if not the result. Shams and Mehrab Golestanirad narrowed the gap to 17-13 for Australia.

Match Heroes
Australia’s Tucker and Magasanik scored four each and Stewart three. Magasanik lifts to 17, Stewart 12 and Tucker 10 in overall shooting. For Iran, Shams now has 17 goals after four today. Goalkeeper Amirhossein Amirian dragged down nine saves.


Image Source: Mohammadtaha Samaei (IRI)/Aniko Kovacs/World Aquatics

Turning Point
Australia lifting from 2-2 to 5-2 at the first break, which gave the Aussies some needed confidence.

Stats Don’t Lie
Australia and Iran provided the perfect extra-man count for the first time this tournament. Iran scored five and Australia four. The Aussies converted five from six on penalty and Iran two from four. Australia stole the ball 11 times to four and shot 34 to 25.

Bottom Line
Australia moves into the play-off for ninth while Iran has to settle for the 11-12 classification match. Both have moved up the ladder from 2023 with Australia 11th on that occasion and Iran 15th.

Classification 17-18
Match 48, SINGAPORE 18 COLOMBIA 21 in penalty shootout. FT: 17-17. Pens: 1-4 (5-5, 6-2, 3-7, 3-3)


Image Source: Enrique Olano (COL)/Aniko Kovacs/World Aquatics

Singapore threw away a five-goal third-quarter advantage to allow Colombia to level at 14 by the end of the period and force Singapore to equalise at 17 and go to a penalty shootout. The ultra-reliable Singaporean shooters went awry in the shootout, scoring once and having two saved as Colombia sent in four for the 21-18 victory.

Colombia went to a 2-0 advantage only for Singapore to snatch the lead at 3-2. Colombia grabbed it back for 4-3 and Singapore redressed the imbalance for 5-4 with Colombia equalising through a penalty rebound by Enrique Olano inside the final minute for 5-5. What a dramatic period with Matthias Goh and Joshua Ong scoring twice for Singapore and Juan Zuluaga twice for Colombia. Ong scored a third at the top of the second quarter with Felipe Merino equalising for his second. Ong, Jaycus See and captain Cayden Loh took Singapore out to 9-6. A Colombian timeout yielded nothing with Singapore sending in two more thanks to Goh and Yifa Xie with a missile from the halfway line for 11-6. Zuluaga pulled one back from the penalty line for 11-7 at halftime.


Image Source: Joshua Ong (SGP) and Juan Zuluaga (COL)/Aniko Kovacs/World Aquatics

Loh scored on extra to give Singapore a comfortable five-goal advantage at the top of the third but Colombia was ready to pounce. Zuluaga and two from Olano made inroads to the difference. Yong Jun Chow and Ong on extra regained the four-goal lead. That difference lasted only two minutes as Colombia drew level with a 7-2 period and Zuluaga on five goals. Goals were traded to 16-16 with Merino having his penalty attempt saved. Ong buried the ball in the net off a long cross pass to the left and Merino scored off the right-hand-catch position, both inside three minutes for 17-17. Singapore took a timeout and lost the ball at centre. Colombia turned the ball over at the other end. Singapore lost the ball. A six-metre shot seemed poorly taken but it was saved and Singapore went to its second timeout at 0:18. Singapore threw a bad pass and Colombia took a timeout at 0:07. Colombia hesitated and did not take a shot, sending the match to a shootout.

Match Heroes
Colombia’s Zuluaga, who joins the 20-goals club, and Olano (12) scored five each and Merino (15) four. Goalkeeper James Quintero made just three saves in the match and two crucial saves in the shootout. For Singapore, Ong top-scored with six goals to lift him to 21 for the week. Goh nabbed four (16) with Ivaac Lee landing a magnificent 15 saves.

Turning Point
The five-goal advantage given up by Singapore and the penalty shootout.


Image Source: Yifa Xi (SGP) and Juan Zuluaga (COL)/Aniko Kovacs/World Aquatics

Stats Don’t Lie
Colombia scored two from three on extra to Singapore’s four from four. Colombian converted six from 10 on penalty and Singapore three from three. Colombia made 11 steals to seven and shot 37 times to 27. A lot can be read into these stats. Singapore is more accurate with its shooting during real time.

Bottom Line
Colombia was 16th in 2013, its last attendance. Singapore was 21st in 2007, the last time it competed at this level. It certainly showed it has become a leading nation, especially in Asia.

Classification 19-20
Match 47, NEW ZEALAND 15 SOUTH AFRICA 16 in penalty shootout. FT: 13-13. Pens: 2-3 (3-3, 3-4, 4-3, 3-3)


Image Source: Isaac Schuler (NZL) defends Warwick Field (RSA)/Aniko Kovacs/World Aquatics

In a match where the score was level 11 times and where South Africa led seven times and New Zealand four, it was the team with the better statistic who came through — South Africa — but it was in a penalty shootout where the real action occurred. New Zealand levelled the match at 13 with five seconds left on the clock, sending it to a shootout for 19th position. South Africa missed its first two and New Zealand its last three as both goalkeepers were exceptional, making five saves in all and South Africa winning the clash of the Southern Hemisphere Commonwealth nations 16-15.

South Africa had the better start, slipping to 3-1 by midway through the first quarter with Marc Smith dominating at centre forward with two goals for five goals in Zagreb. New Zealand came back in the last 90 seconds with Liam Dodunski, who along with captain Cole Phillips played this tournament two years ago, working at the left-post position and Ashwyn Keshvara from the penalty line, his second of the clash. Timothy Young converted a penalty and Keshvara replied for his third from the left post off a long cross pass from captain Phillips. Phillips stole the ball, swam the length of the pool to score and took his team into the lead for the first time. Young responded from the top with a missile into the bottom right and Keshvara was gifted the ball in front of goal unguarded to score for the 6-5 advantage. Nick Pearce blasted from the right-hand-catch position when the goalie was unsighted and Young converted a penalty to give South Africa the 7-6 halftime lead.


Image Source: Nicholas Searle (RSA) defends Cole Phillips (NZL)/Aniko Kovacs/World Aquatics

Smith continued South Africa’s heroics at centre while Jacob Clements replied from the top for the Kiwis. South Africa called a timeout, lost the ball and Phillips scored off a six-metre-foul throw for 8-8. Michael Rodgers converted a penalty foul to give New Zealand the lead for the third time. Goals were swapped with Phillips making it four leads  with his third goal. Connor Flinn turned at centre for 10-10, seven seconds from the last break. Warwick Field scored his second after the first-quarter penalty goal, rocketing the ball in from the top, creasing the right post. Rodgers replied on extra and Smith pounced on a loose rebound to score his fourth and South Africa’s sixth lead. New Zealand went to a timeout and scored off the play with Dodunski firing the ball in from five metres. New Zealand won and lost a penalty challenge and Young regained the lead for the seventh time with the successful conversion, at 1:59. New Zealand took a timeout with no joy but it did regain the ball soon after and Phillips set himself up at the top on extra-man attack and drilled the ball into the net for 13-13 — the 11th tied score — with five seconds left on the clock, which led to the shootout.

New Zealand shot first and scored the first two; South Africa had the first two stopped by Zach Martin. New Zealand had its next three stopped by Nathan Jacob while three shots went in, giving South Africa the 16-15 victory.


Image Source: Jax Martin (NZL)/Aniko Kovacs/World Aquatics

Match Heroes
South Africa’s Smith was best in pool with four goals, the same score as Young who was the team’s best shooter with 10 while Field scored twice for nine. Phillips and Keshvara scored four each for the Kiwis with Rodgers and Dodunski two each. Rodgers topped the team with 16 goals and Phillips had 13.

Turning Point
So many by both teams, but South Africa took the lead more times and perhaps deserved the victory. New Zealand’s last-gasp goal to go to the shootout was the biggest turn-up.

Stats Don’t Lie
South Africa converted all five penalty chances to New Zealand’s two from three but it only converted one from four on extra compared to two from three. New Zealand won the steals 12-10 and outshot South Africa 31-27.

Bottom Line
It was one step down for South Africa from two years ago with New Zealand slipping from 17th in 2023.





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Princeton University

PRINCETON, N.J. – The Princeton men’s track and field team swept the U.S. Track & Field and Cross Country Coaches Association (USTFCCCA)’s Mid-Atlantic Outdoor Regional Awards, the organization announced Friday.  Sam Rodman was named Track Athlete of the Year, Greg Foster was named Field Athlete of the Year, Robert Abdullah was named Assistant Coach of […]

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PRINCETON, N.J. – The Princeton men’s track and field team swept the U.S. Track & Field and Cross Country Coaches Association (USTFCCCA)’s Mid-Atlantic Outdoor Regional Awards, the organization announced Friday. 

Sam Rodman was named Track Athlete of the Year, Greg Foster was named Field Athlete of the Year, Robert Abdullah was named Assistant Coach of the Year and Jason Vigilante was named Head Coach of the Year. 

Princeton men’s track and field was the only program, men’s or women’s, to sweep the awards. 

Rodman was named Track Athlete of the Year after finishing fourth at the NCAA Outdoor Championships in the 800m. Rodman lowered his PR time throughout the season, clocking in at 1:46.27 in Eugene to become a First Team All-American.

Earlier in the season, Rodman won silver in the 800 at Outdoor Heps, and ran a leg of the 4×400 squad that won silver as well. 

Foster was named Field Athlete of the Year after earning First-Team All-America honors in the long jump at the NCAA Outdoor Championships. Foster jumped 7.80m/25-7.25″ in Eugene to finish seventh.

At Outdoor Heps, Foster won his fifth and sixth Ivy titles in the long jump and the 110 hurdles. Earlier this season, Foster set a new PR in the long jump, clearing 8.10m/26-7″ at the Virginia Challenge.

Along the way to the podium at Hayward Field, Foster was mentored by Abdullah, in his ninth year as assistant coach at Princeton. Abdullah coached the Tiger sprinters, hurdlers and jumpers, who combined for 85 points at Heps, winning three events. 

Abdullah helped his athletes qualify for eight events at the NCAA East First Round, with Foster making it all the way to All-American status.

The Princeton program is led by Vigilante, in his second year as Head Coach. Under his leadership this year, the Tigers won their second-consecutive Triple Crown – completed with a dominant win at Outdoor Heps.  

Over the course of the 2025 season, the Tigers boasted five individual Ivy League champions, 16 regional qualifiers, six new program records, a 4×400 Ivy League record and two First Team All-Americans.

The USTFCCCA’s Regional Awards were voted on by member coaches following the 2025 NCAA Outdoor Championships in Eugene last weekend. 

 



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Women’s Track & Field Athletes Achieve Solid Showings at U20 Nationals

EUGENE, ORE.- Two Bucknell student athletes from the women’s track and field programs competed at the USATF U20 National Championships on June 19-20. Madison Fowler and Alexandra Lea faced off against some of the finest young athletes in the country and held their own to continue the Bucknell tradition of excellent summer campaigns.  Results Fowler […]

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EUGENE, ORE.- Two Bucknell student athletes from the women’s track and field programs competed at the USATF U20 National Championships on June 19-20. Madison Fowler and Alexandra Lea faced off against some of the finest young athletes in the country and held their own to continue the Bucknell tradition of excellent summer campaigns. 

Results

Fowler unlocked two top-ten finishes in the discus and shot put, capping her impressive freshmen campaign where she inscribed her name into multiple Bison top-ten lists. She placed sixth in the hammer throw, tossing 174-9. Her best mark arrived in her fourth attempt.

She rounded out her week with a tenth place finish in the shot put. Her 45-1 mark came in her second attempt and the distance narrowly missed inserting the rising sophomore into the finals. 

Lea’s first event was the 400-meter dash, her specialty, and she achieved a flat time of 55 seconds to finish 11th in the preliminaries. While the speed did not qualify the rising sophomore for the finals, it represented a solid time after not competing since the NCAA East First Round back in late May. Lea owns the Bucknell outdoor record in the event and finished first at the Patriot League Outdoor Championships where she established a new meet standard. 

Her second competition was the 200-meter dash where she placed 12th, racing 24.83. She also won that event at the Patriot League Outdoor Championships, while setting the Bison school record. 

The women’s track and field team will have more summer representation when Evelyn Bliss competes in the FISU World Championships and the USATF National Championships in the upcoming weeks. 



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2025 Coronado High School Jike Wong Award Recipient – Connor Gray | Coronado Island News

As the 2024-25 school year came to a close in Coronado, students from the Coronado High School (CHS) Class of 2025 were recognized at the recent Senior Class Awards ceremony. One of the most prominent awards given to a student each year is the Jike Wong Award, which was established in the 1940s to honor […]

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As the 2024-25 school year came to a close in Coronado, students from the Coronado High School (CHS) Class of 2025 were recognized at the recent Senior Class Awards ceremony. One of the most prominent awards given to a student each year is the Jike Wong Award, which was established in the 1940s to honor the memory of Wong, a fellow CHS student, and his legacy as an outstanding member and leader of the community. Connor Gray was selected as the Class of 2025 recipient of the award, adding his name to an ever-growing list of standout students.

Gray moved to Coronado with his family when he was around ten years old, where he’s been a Coronado student and community member since fourth grade. “My dad was in the Navy, and Coronado was his final shore duty, and he retired here,” Gray mentioned. “One of the things that I’ll probably miss [at college] is just knowing my classmates for so long.

“I think that’s one of the most interesting points about the Coronado Unified School District. Since we only have one middle school and one high school, and the two elementary schools, there’s a much higher chance, compared with some other school districts that, that if you go to primary school with someone you’re going to continue that with them for the rest of your middle and high school years. And I think that’s really special.”

Gray was not only surprised to receive the Jike Wong Award, but also to learn about its history in Coronado. “At first I didn’t really understand what it meant because I hadn’t been aware of the award beforehand,” he commented. “But doing more research into it, I thought it was really cool that I get to be a part of this group of people now that’s been going for over 50 years, and who have made a positive impact on their school’s community. It was very nice to be recognized for [what it represents].”

During his time at CHS, Gray was involved in junior varsity and varsity water polo, varsity rugby, the Navy Junior Reserve Officers Training Corps (NJROTC), the National Honor Society, mock trial, and the Eagle Scouts. Last summer, he completed an eight-week U.S. Navy Summer Flight Academy aviation program at Delaware State University to get his FAA Private Pilot’s License. As a CHS senior this past year, he also served as the commanding officer for the NJROTC unit, where he’s seen the value of service-based leadership in action.

“I hope to leave a legacy of always trying to put people first,” he mentioned when asked what example he hopes to have set from his role as a leader in the community. “It’s a very common thing, especially in the military, of servant style leadership and wanting to put the team above yourself. And I’ve been able to see the positive effects of putting others before yourself, in terms of either trying to lead a bunch of Boy Scouts in setting up camp, or trying to get a bunch of people in NJROTC to line up and make sure the uniforms are ready to go.”

He also recalled the early morning practices for water polo as something that brought people together. “In the moment it kind of sucks getting up so early, but then you’re together with everybody on the team and getting that team bonding. Looking back, it was a great experience.”

Gray’s favorite aspect of his involvement in these different groups throughout high school, however, has come from their inclusion of community outreach. “Working with communities is something I really like doing, and I try to build community with the teams and different clubs I’m a part of,” he told me.

As an Eagle Scout, Gray had to fulfill a service project requirement, and he chose to lead efforts to refurbish parts of the Veterans of Foreign Wars (VFW) building for the chapter in Coronado. “I installed a new sign at the front of the building and we did some other small renovations, doing some replanting, some power washing, and some painting,” he noted. “But the big project was that we designed and installed an entirely new sign at the front that had a metal plate as a replacement for the old wooden plate they had, which was rotting away. We replaced that and put in a cement base for it and just made the front look as pretty as we could.”

When reflecting on his time with classmates as a member of the Class of 2025, he brought up the pandemic as a turning point. “Coming out of the whole COVID-19 epidemic, we were getting back to in-person school after a year of not having it,” he explained. “I think that gave people an incentive to try stuff that maybe they wouldn’t have tried before because they were sick and tired of being cooped up in their house all day long.

“It personally made me more of an outgoing person because I wanted to reestablish those roots after that experience, along with the rest of my class,” Gray added. “And going into the future, I’d say I have more of an understanding of the importance of personal connections, and not just the people I interact with every day, but with people in the community in general.”

Gray will be attending the University of San Diego (USD) this fall, having also earned a Navy ROTC scholarship for their program. “I’ll be attending USD alongside my sister, who just finished her freshman year there, which will be pretty cool,” he said. “After that, the plan is to commission as a Navy Officer and go fly jets for the Navy. That’s what my dad did, and that’s what I would like to do as well.”

His dad is one of the people who has had the biggest impact on Gray’s life and who he said has helped him navigate his journey to join ROTC and the Navy. “He’s such a great influence on my life, and because that’s what he did as a kid, it’s been great to have someone who can help show me the ropes and things like that,” he mentioned.

One of his NJROTC instructors at CHS, Senior Chief Tom Hellwig, has also been a source of inspiration. “He’s been a really great influence on me over the last four years, too,” Gray said. “I’ve been taking NJROTC as a class for the last four years, and Chief Hellwig has made me a better person. He’s a really great guy who does a lot of good things for the community. One thing he’s always tried to teach us is that even if we mess something up, to have the wisdom to recognize that there’s always a bigger picture. [For him] it’s more about our development into becoming fully functioning adults in society, rather than just making sure his department looks the best at all possible times.”

At CHS, Gray also found a passion for history, and he has a great respect for CHS’ staff. “All of the history teachers at CHS show such a great passion for the subject and diving into their profession, and the way they engage a bunch of high schoolers who don’t necessarily want to sit there and learn a bunch of history has always been really impressive to me,” he stated.

As we finished our conversation, Gray further added that being this year’s recipient of the Jike Wong Award is a reflection of all of those people and more. “It’s been a great honor to receive it, but looking back, I’d definitely say that the biggest influence in my getting this award has been the people around me and who I’ve surrounded myself with,” he noted.

“I think, especially with my family, they have a right to also be proud of that because they helped teach me the things I needed to know in order to help other people. I want to recognize their accomplishments, as well as mine.”

The community is wishing for nothing but the best for Gray as he embarks on his next steps towards his career and life goals.

VOL. 115, NO. 25 – June 18, 2025



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Floréal adds Saatara to Track & Field staff

Story Links Austin, Texas – Texas Track & Field/Cross Country head coach Edrick Floréal has tabbed Olympic Champion and World Championship medalists coach Mohamad Saatara, who has developed World and NCAA Record holders, as the Longhorns assistant coach for throws, Floréal announced on Friday. A veteran of more than 20 years of […]

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Austin, Texas – Texas Track & Field/Cross Country head coach Edrick Floréal has tabbed Olympic Champion and World Championship medalists coach Mohamad Saatara, who has developed World and NCAA Record holders, as the Longhorns assistant coach for throws, Floréal announced on Friday. A veteran of more than 20 years of collegiate coaching experience and nearly 30 overall, Saatara was an All-American thrower himself. He has coached student-athletes that claimed 43 total All-American honors, four national championships, two NCAA records and a multitude of conference, meet and school records during his time as an assistant coach.

Saatara comes the Forty Acres after spending the last 12 seasons at the University of California-Berkeley, where he joined the track & field program in August of 2013 as assistant coach for throwing events. He also spent three years at Michigan, which followed eight at Northern Arizona during his collegiate coaching career.

“I’m so excited to be adding Coach Saatara to our staff. He is someone I’ve known and followed for a long time and has an incredible reputation in the coaching circles at every level,” said Floréal. “His ability to coach and develop throwers is world renowned and the success his athletes have had on the collegiate and international level is a tribute to the work he pours into them. Mo has coached throwers on the biggest stages – Olympic and World Championship medalists, a world record holder, as well as numerous National Champions and All-Americans – and what really stands out about him is his ability to bring out the best in every one of his throwers. He’s a great coach and person who is a tremendous technician of the throwing events. He absolutely checks all the boxes and is a perfect fit for the Forty Acres.”

“I’m extremely honored and excited to be a part of the Texas Track & Field program and work under the leadership of Coach Floréal, who is one of the best coaches in the world,” Saatara said. “Texas Track & Field has a long and proud history, and Coach Floréal has built a great program. I’m looking forward to joining such an innovative and high achieving team and excited to be a Longhorn.”

As of the end of the 2025 season, Saatara coached 31 USTFCCCA first and second-team All-American performances in his 12 years with the Bears, as well as six Honorable Mention All-American performances. At Cal, Saatara’s throwers reached 10 standing school records across all of the throwing events: men’s discus (Mykolas Alekna, 2022/23/24/25), men’s hammer (Rowan Hamilton, 2024), women’s shot put (Lucija Leko, 2025), women’s discus (Caisa-Marie Lindfors, 2025), women’s hammer (Camryn Rogers, 2021/22), women’s javelin (Carolina Visca, 2023), men’s indoor shot put (McKay Johnson, 2020), men’s weight throw (Rowan Hamilton, 2024), women’s indoor shot put (Caisa-Marie Lindfors, 2024) and women’s weight throw (Camryn Rogers, 2021/22). He coached student-athletes to nine Golden Bear freshman records. Saatara’s throwers produced four National Championships (Rogers, 2019/21/22 hammer throw; Hamilton, 2024 hammer throw), as well as two all-time NCAA records (Rogers, 2021/22 hammer throw; Alekna, 2022/23 discus).

This past season, Alekna was named the 2025 West Region Men’s Field Athlete of the Year by the U.S. Track & Field and Cross Country Coaches Association (USTFCCCA) and is one of the qualifiers that is a candidate to win the national award. He produced a superb season with the Golden Bears, which included a substantial improvement on his own world record in the discus, as well as three facility records, four meet records, an ACC title and an NCAA runner-up finish. Alekna appeared on The Bowerman Watch List eight times this season, bringing his career total to 23 – third-most by any man in history. He surpassed the 70-meter barrier on four occasions with two of those in Berkeley: a then-ACC-record 70.09m (229-11) at the Brutus Hamilton Invitational, his world-record effort of 75.56m (247-10) at the Oklahoma Throws Series World Invitational, a meet-record 71.29m (233-10) at The 130th Big Meet, and a meet-record 72.12m (236-7) at the NCAA West Regional, which was also a facility record. In all, Saatara had four men’s entries at the NCAA West Regionals, and his men’s athletes collected a total of three medals at the ACC Championships, along with five All-ACC honors. 

Saatara helped five women’s throwers reach Eugene, Ore., for the NCAA Outdoor Championships this season, which was tied for the most of any program nationally. Three of those were in the hammer, which marked the most by any school since 2012. In the discus, Lindfors set a school record and PR at 62.57m (205-3) to finish fourth, which is the second-best finish in Cal history. The program’s first women’s discus thrower to compete at the Olympic Games, Lindfors also represented Sweden in the finals at the 2024 European Championships and won a silver medal at her country’s national championships. In addition to Cal’s discus record, she owns the school’s indoor shot put record and ranks No. 2 on its outdoor list; she also broke the 41-year-old Big Meet record in May with her then-season best of 61.52m (201-10).

The ACC Champion in the hammer, Giavonna Meeks set a personal best of 68.94m (226-2) for a fifth-place NCAA finish that improved her own No. 4 program mark by over a meter. She was named First-Team All-American for the second time during the year after having also claimed recognition at the 2025 NCAA Indoor Championships, while it was the third time in her career (2024 Indoor). Valentina Savva posted a mark of 66.84m (219-3), missing out on the NCAA final by just one inch but posting the best finish by any Cal freshman in history to earn Second-Team All-America status for the first time in her career. She also finished second at the ACC Championships. Audrey Jacobs, competing in her second NCAA Championships, was named Honorable Mention All-America with a best throw of 63.74m (209-1). In the shot put, Lucija Leko registered a mark of 16.25m (53-3.75), which earned her Honorable Mention All-America after she finished second at the ACC Championships.

In 2024, Saatara’s athletes posted another impressive indoor campaign as Hamilton set the school weight throw record on the way to an NCAA Indoor Championships appearance (the first by a Cal men’s weight thrower) and a Second-Team All-America nod; Lindfors also set a new school record in the women’s indoor shot put. The throws group followed that up with yet another outstanding outdoor season filled with accolades: in the regular season alone, Hamilton and Lindfors respectively re-set the program’s men’s hammer and women’s discus records and combined for three meet records, while Jacobs set the Dutch U23 women’s hammer record. Hamilton was named Pac-12 Men’s Field Athlete of the Week twice during the season, while discus and hammer thrower Jasmine Blair earned the women’s equivalent once. At the Pac-12 Championships, Hamilton set another meet record on the way to the men’s hammer title (the first by a Cal man since 1919), while Jeff Duensing claimed his first conference title in the men’s shot put and Blair and Lindfors took second and third, respectively, in the women’s discus. For the first time in history, Cal sent two male hammer throwers to the NCAA Outdoor Championships (Hamilton and Ivar Moisander); the latter earned Second-Team All-America status, while the former followed up his conference title with an NCAA Championship – Cal’s first in the men’s event since 1922 and its first man to win any outdoor title since 2011. Hamilton also broke his own school record at the NCAA Championships to finish his career at No. 8 in collegiate history and became the first Canadian to win an NCAA men’s hammer title since 1979; he was subsequently named the USTFCCCA West Region Men’s Outdoor Field Athlete of the Year. Duensing also made his second-consecutive appearance at the NCAA Outdoor Championships and picked up a Second-Team All-America nod. Meanwhile, as he redshirted in preparation for the Olympic Games, discus thrower Alekna posted the best season of his career with a new world record, two stadium records and three meet records; the former broke the longest-standing record in men’s track & field.

Four of Saatara’s athletes appeared at the 2024 Olympic Games: Canada’s Rogers (women’s hammer, gold), Lithuania’s Alekna (men’s discus, silver), Canada’s Hamilton (men’s hammer, finalist) and Sweden’s Lindfors (women’s discus, semifinalist); two more of Saatara’s trainees also competed in the women’s discus at the U.S. Olympic Trials (Blair & Elena Bruckner). Several current and former Cal throwers earned additional medals on their respective national and international stages. Alekna took bronze at the European Championships, Rogers and Anna Purchase (UK) each won their national hammer titles and Lindfors claimed silver at the Swedish Championships. Adrianna Coleman also finished off her first year as a Golden Bear with an appearance at the USATF U20 Championships, finishing fourth in the women’s hammer.

After an indoor season that saw Rogers make one final appearance at the NCAA Championships to close out her Golden Bear career, the 2023 throws squad embarked on another historic outdoor campaign. Alekna shattered his own collegiate discus record with a European (and unofficial world) U23 record on the way to a second straight Pac-12 championship and semifinalist nod for The Bowerman; at the end of the year, he was named a semifinalist for the AAU James E. Sullivan Award. Purchase improved her all-time No. 2 British women’s hammer mark, later taking second at the Pac-12 Championships, and ended her collegiate career as the sixth-best hammer thrower in collegiate history. She and Alekna both took third place at the NCAA Outdoor Championships to earn First Team All-American nods – an honor that they shared with shot putter Duensing, who finished eighth. Three additional throwers (Jacobs – hammer; Visca – javelin; Ivar Moisander – hammer) were named Second Team All-Americans after a year in which Jacobs broke the Dutch U20 hammer record and Visca set a new program and freshman javelin record.

Following the 2023 season, Saatara’s athletes continued to post incredible results. Rogers moved up to No. 5 all-time on the world’s women’s hammer list with a new Canadian record and Olympic-qualifying performance in her first pro season, later recording another Canadian title and winning gold at the World Athletics Championships – the first time that any Cal track & field athlete, past or present, has won a world title. Alekna took home the gold medal at the European U23 Championships with his own Olympic-qualifying performance, afterward winning the Lithuanian Championships and earning a bronze medal at the World Championships. For her part, Jacobs took first at the Dutch Championships, while Visca became Italian champion. Purchase and Moisander each earned silver medals at the UK Athletics Championships and Swedish Championships, respectively; the former later went on to make the final at the World Championships, where she finished 11th. Saatara also coached Cal volunteer assistant coach Elena Bruckner to a third-place discus finish at the USATF Outdoor Championships and a World Championships appearance, while redshirt freshman Nick Godbehere also took third in the U20 shot put.

The 2022 track & field season was one of Saatara’s best, as he was named both the Men’s and Women’s USTFCCCA West Region Assistant Coach of the Year after coaching senior Rogers to her third straight national championship (and new NCAA record, No. 9 in the world all-time) in the hammer throw and qualifying five additional athletes (seniors Josh Johnson and Iffy Joyner, junior Purchase, sophomore Moisander and freshman Mykolas Alekna) to the NCAA Outdoor Championships. Alekna (2nd), Joyner (4th) and Purchase (7th) each earned First Team All-American status – the first time since 1922 that four throwers received that honor at Cal – while Johnson finished his senior year as a Second Team All-American. At the Pac-12 Outdoor Championships, Rogers, Alekna, and Johnson (shot put) each won titles in their respective events, with Alekna surpassing the all-dates NCAA discus record for the first time and setting a new world record for a 19-year-old. The outdoor regular season was highly successful for many of Saatara’s athletes, including Purchase, who became just the second British woman in history to throw the hammer over 70 meters, and Amelia Flynt, who set a new Cal freshman record in the women’s shot put to rise to second in school history. Both Rogers and Johnson appeared at the NCAA Indoor Championships earlier that year, with Rogers finishing third in the weight throw after winning the Pac-12 title and setting a new school record to earn herself another First Team All-American nod; Johnson was also named Second Team All-American in the shot put.

Rogers ended the 2022 season with the top 11 hammer throws in NCAA history, while Alekna accumulated 6 of the NCAA’s all-time top 10 discus throws – both were named semifinalists for The Bowerman, with Rogers becoming the first Cal athlete to advance to the pool of finalists. Rogers was also named as the USTFCCCA West Region Women’s Field Athlete of the Year and a Honda Sport Award Finalist, while Alekna earned the USTFCCCA West Region Men’s Field Athlete of the Year, Pac-12 Men’s Field Athlete of the Year, and Pac-12 Men’s Freshman of the Year awards. In total, Saatara’s athletes collected 12 outdoor program Top 10 marks and 5 indoor Top 10 marks on the year.

Following the 2022 NCAA season, Rogers and Alekna went on to earn Canadian and Lithuanian championships in their respective events before each earning a silver medal at the World Athletics Championships. Flynt also made her mark on the postseason circuit, taking first place in the women’s shot put at the USATF U20 Championships to qualify her for the Junior World Championships. In August of 2022, Rogers became the reigning Commonwealth Games women’s hammer champion while Alekna earned his first ever European Championship title; the latter was subsequently named European Athletics’ Men’s Rising Star and Lithuania’s Male Athlete of the Year. Saatara himself was honored with BC Athletics’ High Performance Male Coach of the Year award.

In the 2021 track & field season, Pac-12 champion Camryn Rogers stamped her mark in collegiate history by breaking the all-time hammer record and meet record – twice – at the NCAA Outdoor Championships to earn All-American status, capping off the year with a fifth-place finish at the 2020 Tokyo Olympic Games, which was the highest-ever finish by a female Canadian hammer thrower; Saatara was subsequently recognized as an Olympic Coach and received an Olympic ring to acknowledge his presence and contribution. Rogers, Cal’s first track & field athlete to be named to The Bowerman Watch List, also qualified for the 2021 NCAA Indoor Championships in the weight throw and earned the first of her two All-American nods that year. On the men’s side, Iffy Joyner took third place in the discus throw at the Pac-12 Championships, eventually making his way to the NCAA Championships and winning himself an All-American spot.

Despite the lack of a 2020 outdoor season, Saatara’s student-athletes still found reason to celebrate. In his final year at Cal, McKay Johnson broke his own indoor shot put record, winning the MPSF Championship title and reaching his third straight All-American appearance. Teammate Josh Johnson finished right behind in the same event, taking second place as well as All-American honors of his own.

Saatara mentored Rogers on the way to her first National Championship (and All-American nod) as well as the usurpation of her own school record in the women’s hammer throw in 2019, a year in which she also first set Canada’s U23 record and placed sixth at the Pan Am Games. Rogers also took first place in that year’s MPSF Championships (weight throw) and the Pac-12 Championships (hammer throw). Not to be outdone, teammate Chrissy Glassmann set a school record of her own in the javelin throw. Under Saatara’s coaching, freshman Iffy Joyner took home a silver medal in the men’s discus throw at that year’s NACAC U23 Championship and qualified for the NCAA Outdoor Championships in that same event, while fellow thrower McKay Johnson broke his own school record in the indoor shot put on his way to a national appearance of his own (as well as a second-place MPSF Championships finish) along with teammate Silviu Bocancea in the hammer throw. Once again, both Johnson and Bocancea notched All-American honors.

In 2018, Saatara coached Rogers to that year’s U-20 World Championship in Finland, where she took gold in the hammer throw. That win was the first world championship at any level for a Cal track & field athlete, as well as the first-ever throwing gold medal for Canada. As a freshman, Rogers broke the school record in the hammer throw and finished third at that year’s Pac-12 Championships, also taking third in the weight throw at the MPSF Championships. On the men’s side, McKay Johnson broke the school record for the indoor shot put under Saatara’s guidance, qualifying for both the NCAA Indoor and Outdoor Championships (the latter for both shot put and discus throw after second-place conference finishes in each event), reaching All-American status in the former. Shot putter Peter Simon also qualified for the NCAA Outdoor Championships after placing third at the Pac-12 Championships, as did Bocancea in the hammer throw; both later reached All-American status. Two more discus throwers finished third for the Bears at the Pac-12 Championships – Malik McMorris for the men and Amarie Bremel for the women.

Saatara’s 2017 campaign featured a mix of both veteran and newcomer successes, topped by pupil McKay Johnson’s third-place finish in the shot put at the USATF Junior Championships. Simon also impressed once again, winning the Pac-12 men’s shot put title and earning All-American honors, while women Kendall Mader and Destiny Parker shined at the Pac-12 Championships (third in discus throw) and MPSF Championships (second in weight throw), respectively.

2016’s star thrower under Saatara’s tutelage was freshman Peter Simon, who qualified for both the Indoor and Outdoor NCAA Championships that year and earned All-American honors at the former. At the Pac-12 Championships, Simon placed third in the shot put; his teammate Isaac Dan also took home a trophy from that meet, finishing second in the hammer throw.

In 2015, Saatara helped another athlete – Ethan Cochran – qualify for the National Championships in the discus throw after Cochran placed second in the Pac-12 Championships. New addition Ilse Kaaja earned herself a spot on the podium in the Pac-12 women’s hammer throw, placing third at that meet, while the earlier MPSF Championships featured Amaechi’s second-place finish in the weight throw.

Saatara’s inaugural season with the Bears saw two National Championship qualifiers in Amaechi and Derek White. All-American Amaechi, who broke the school record in the weight throw earlier that year, placed first in the weight throw and third in the shot put at the MPSF Championships, while White took second place in the discus throw at that year’s Pac-12 Championships. Shelby Ashe, another thrower taught by Saatara, also reached the podium at the Pac-12 Championships, winning second in the hammer throw.

Saatara came to Berkeley after spending three seasons as an assistant coach at the University of Michigan, where he supervised all field events for the men’s team and specialized in the throws. Under his direction, the Michigan men set seven school records in the indoor and outdoor shot put, weight throw, hammer throw and the decathlon. In addition, they earned four All-Big Ten Honors in Indoor and Outdoor conference championships.

Prior to moving to Michigan, Saatara spent eight seasons at Northern Arizona University, helping the Lumberjacks to 12 Big Sky Conference men’s and women’s team championships. He has coached over 20 Big Sky individual champions, as well as multiple school record holders in the throws. During his career at NAU, he coached a multitude of student-athletes who competed at the NCAA Regional and National Championships, including six NCAA All-Americans and two NCAA Academic All-American awardees.

Saatara has coached and consulted nine Olympians. He has also coached national- and international-level athletes who have set national and international records. Athletes under his care have competed in the Indoor and Outdoor World Championships, USATF National Championships and Olympic Trials, Asian Games and Championships, and CAC Games. He was also retained as a consultant for several national track & field federations and world and Olympic medalists. One of his premier athletes is former Golden Bear and two-time Olympic shot putter Amin Nikfar, who he coached throughout his lengthy career.

Saatara previous served as interim head coach at his alma mater, California State University Los Angeles. He is a former All-American at CSULA where he finished second in the hammer throw at the 1995 NCAA Division II Championships. Saatara holds several national and international coaching certifications and diplomas, including the IAAF/World Athletics Level V Coach (With Distinction), USA Track & Field Level II and III-Throws. He has been a clinician and presenter for the USTFCCCA and other national and international coaching organizations.

Saatara lives with his wife Diane in Vallejo, Calif.



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Brian Musau named USTFCCCA Midwest Outdoor Track Athlete of the Year

STILLWATER – Oklahoma State distance runner Brian Musau was named U.S. Track & Field and Cross Country Coaches Association (USTFCCCA) Midwest Region Outdoor Track Athlete of the Year, the organization announced Friday. Musau completed one of the best athletic seasons in Oklahoma State history, claiming his third career NCAA title and second national title of […]

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STILLWATER – Oklahoma State distance runner Brian Musau was named U.S. Track & Field and Cross Country Coaches Association (USTFCCCA) Midwest Region Outdoor Track Athlete of the Year, the organization announced Friday.

Musau completed one of the best athletic seasons in Oklahoma State history, claiming his third career NCAA title and second national title of the athletic year in the 5,000 Meters at the NCAA Outdoor Championships last week. He defended his NCAA indoor title in the 5K with another dominant performance at the outdoor championships, taking the lead with 400 meters to go and fending off late challenges from Villanova’s Marco Langon and New Mexico’s Habtom Samuel.

Musau is the third Cowboy to be named USTFCCCA Midwest Region Outdoor Track Athlete of the Year, joining fellow distance runners German Fernandez in 2009 and Alex Maier in 2022. Musau also won the Midwest awards during both the cross country and indoor seasons, completing the trifecta with his outdoor award.

For more information on the Cowboys and Cowgirls, continue to check back with okstate.com. 



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